summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--7658-0.txt21310
-rw-r--r--7658-0.zipbin0 -> 435816 bytes
-rw-r--r--7658-h.zipbin0 -> 457893 bytes
-rw-r--r--7658-h/7658-h.htm25493
-rw-r--r--7658.txt21310
-rw-r--r--7658.zipbin0 -> 433461 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/b086w10.txt21844
-rw-r--r--old/b086w10.zipbin0 -> 443968 bytes
11 files changed, 89973 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/7658-0.txt b/7658-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0748486
--- /dev/null
+++ b/7658-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,21310 @@
+Project Gutenberg’s Kenelm Chillingly, Complete, by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Kenelm Chillingly, Complete
+
+Author: Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+Release Date: March 16, 2009 [EBook #7658]
+Last Updated: August 28, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KENELM CHILLINGLY, COMPLETE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger and Dagny
+
+
+
+
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY
+
+HIS ADVENTURES AND OPINIONS
+
+
+By Edward Bulwer Lytton
+
+(LORD LYTTON)
+
+
+
+
+BOOK I.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, of Exmundham, Baronet, F.R.S. and F.A.S., was the
+representative of an ancient family, and a landed proprietor of some
+importance. He had married young; not from any ardent inclination for
+the connubial state, but in compliance with the request of his parents.
+They took the pains to select his bride; and if they might have chosen
+better, they might have chosen worse, which is more than can be said for
+many men who choose wives for themselves. Miss Caroline Brotherton was
+in all respects a suitable connection. She had a pretty fortune, which
+was of much use in buying a couple of farms, long desiderated by the
+Chillinglys as necessary for the rounding of their property into a
+ring-fence. She was highly connected, and brought into the county that
+experience of fashionable life acquired by a young lady who has attended
+a course of balls for three seasons, and gone out in matrimonial
+honours, with credit to herself and her chaperon. She was handsome
+enough to satisfy a husband’s pride, but not so handsome as to keep
+perpetually on the _qui vive_ a husband’s jealousy. She was considered
+highly accomplished; that is, she played upon the pianoforte so that any
+musician would say she “was very well taught;” but no musician would
+go out of his way to hear her a second time. She painted in
+water-colours--well enough to amuse herself. She knew French and Italian
+with an elegance so lady-like that, without having read more than
+selected extracts from authors in those languages, she spoke them both
+with an accent more correct than we have any reason to attribute to
+Rousseau or Ariosto. What else a young lady may acquire in order to be
+styled highly accomplished I do not pretend to know; but I am sure that
+the young lady in question fulfilled that requirement in the opinion
+of the best masters. It was not only an eligible match for Sir
+Peter Chillingly,--it was a brilliant match. It was also a very
+unexceptionable match for Miss Caroline Brotherton. This excellent
+couple got on together as most excellent couples do. A short time after
+marriage, Sir Peter, by the death of his parents--who, having married
+their heir, had nothing left in life worth the trouble of living
+for--succeeded to the hereditary estates; he lived for nine months of
+the year at Exmundham, going to town for the other three months. Lady
+Chillingly and himself were both very glad to go to town, being bored at
+Exmundham; and very glad to go back to Exmundham, being bored in town.
+With one exception it was an exceedingly happy marriage, as marriages
+go. Lady Chillingly had her way in small things; Sir Peter his way in
+great. Small things happen every day; great things once in three years.
+Once in three years Lady Chillingly gave way to Sir Peter; households so
+managed go on regularly. The exception to their connubial happiness was,
+after all, but of a negative description. Their affection was such
+that they sighed for a pledge of it; fourteen years had he and Lady
+Chillingly remained unvisited by the little stranger.
+
+Now, in default of male issue, Sir Peter’s estates passed to a distant
+cousin as heir-at-law; and during the last four years this heir-at-law
+had evinced his belief that practically speaking he was already
+heir-apparent; and (though Sir Peter was a much younger man than
+himself, and as healthy as any man well can be) had made his
+expectations of a speedy succession unpleasantly conspicuous. He had
+refused his consent to a small exchange of lands with a neighbouring
+squire, by which Sir Peter would have obtained some good arable land,
+for an outlying unprofitable wood that produced nothing but fagots and
+rabbits, with the blunt declaration that he, the heir-at-law, was fond
+of rabbit-shooting, and that the wood would be convenient to him next
+season if he came into the property by that time, which he very possibly
+might. He disputed Sir Peter’s right to make his customary fall of
+timber, and had even threatened him with a bill in Chancery on that
+subject. In short, this heir-at-law was exactly one of those persons
+to spite whom a landed proprietor would, if single, marry at the age of
+eighty in the hope of a family.
+
+Nor was it only on account of his very natural wish to frustrate the
+expectations of this unamiable relation that Sir Peter Chillingly
+lamented the absence of the little stranger. Although belonging to that
+class of country gentlemen to whom certain political reasoners deny the
+intelligence vouchsafed to other members of the community, Sir Peter was
+not without a considerable degree of book-learning and a great taste
+for speculative philosophy. He sighed for a legitimate inheritor to the
+stores of his erudition, and, being a very benevolent man, for a more
+active and useful dispenser of those benefits to the human race which
+philosophers confer by striking hard against each other; just as, how
+full soever of sparks a flint may be, they might lurk concealed in the
+flint till doomsday, if the flint were not hit by the steel. Sir Peter,
+in short, longed for a son amply endowed with the combative quality, in
+which he himself was deficient, but which is the first essential to all
+seekers after renown, and especially to benevolent philosophers.
+
+Under these circumstances one may well conceive the joy that filled
+the household of Exmundham and extended to all the tenantry on that
+venerable estate, by whom the present possessor was much beloved and
+the prospect of an heir-at-law with a special eye to the preservation
+of rabbits much detested, when the medical attendant of the Chillinglys
+declared that ‘her ladyship was in an interesting way;’ and to what
+height that joy culminated when, in due course of time, a male baby was
+safely enthroned in his cradle. To that cradle Sir Peter was summoned.
+He entered the room with a lively bound and a radiant countenance: he
+quitted it with a musing step and an overclouded brow.
+
+Yet the baby was no monster. It did not come into the world with two
+heads, as some babies are said to have done; it was formed as babies are
+in general; was on the whole a thriving baby, a fine baby. Nevertheless,
+its aspect awed the father as already it had awed the nurse. The
+creature looked so unutterably solemn. It fixed its eyes upon Sir Peter
+with a melancholy reproachful stare; its lips were compressed and drawn
+downward as if discontentedly meditating its future destinies. The nurse
+declared in a frightened whisper that it had uttered no cry on facing
+the light. It had taken possession of its cradle in all the dignity of
+silent sorrow. A more saddened and a more thoughtful countenance a human
+being could not exhibit if he were leaving the world instead of entering
+it.
+
+“Hem!” said Sir Peter to himself on regaining the solitude of his
+library; “a philosopher who contributes a new inhabitant to this vale of
+tears takes upon himself very anxious responsibilities--”
+
+At that moment the joy-bells rang out from the neighbouring church
+tower, the summer sun shone into the windows, the bees hummed among the
+flowers on the lawn. Sir Peter roused himself and looked forth, “After
+all,” said he, cheerily, “the vale of tears is not without a smile.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+A FAMILY council was held at Exmundham Hall to deliberate on the name
+by which this remarkable infant should be admitted into the Christian
+community. The junior branches of that ancient house consisted, first,
+of the obnoxious heir-at-law--a Scotch branch named Chillingly Gordon.
+He was the widowed father of one son, now of the age of three, and
+happily unconscious of the injury inflicted on his future prospects by
+the advent of the new-born, which could not be truthfully said of his
+Caledonian father. Mr. Chillingly Gordon was one of those men who get on
+in the world with out our being able to discover why. His parents died
+in his infancy and left him nothing; but the family interest procured
+him an admission into the Charterhouse School, at which illustrious
+academy he obtained no remarkable distinction. Nevertheless, as soon as
+he left it the State took him under its special care, and appointed him
+to a clerkship in a public office. From that moment he continued to get
+on in the world, and was now a Commissioner of Customs, with a salary of
+L1500 a year. As soon as he had been thus enabled to maintain a wife,
+he selected a wife who assisted to maintain himself. She was an Irish
+peer’s widow, with a jointure of L2000 a year.
+
+A few months after his marriage, Chillingly Gordon effected insurances
+on his wife’s life, so as to secure himself an annuity of L1000 a year
+in case of her decease. As she appeared to be a fine healthy woman, some
+years younger than her husband, the deduction from his income effected
+by the annual payments for the insurance seemed an over-sacrifice of
+present enjoyment to future contingencies. The result bore witness to
+his reputation for sagacity, as the lady died in the second year of
+their wedding, a few months after the birth of her only child, and of a
+heart-disease which had been latent to the doctors, but which, no doubt,
+Gordon had affectionately discovered before he had insured a life too
+valuable not to need some compensation for its loss. He was now, then,
+in the possession of L2500 a year, and was therefore very well off,
+in the pecuniary sense of the phrase. He had, moreover, acquired a
+reputation which gave him a social rank beyond that accorded to him by
+a discerning State. He was considered a man of solid judgment, and
+his opinion upon all matters, private and public, carried weight. The
+opinion itself, critically examined, was not worth much, but the way he
+announced it was imposing. Mr. Fox said that ‘No one ever was so wise as
+Lord Thurlow looked.’ Lord Thurlow could not have looked wiser than Mr.
+Chillingly Gordon. He had a square jaw and large red bushy eyebrows,
+which he lowered down with great effect when he delivered judgment.
+He had another advantage for acquiring grave reputation. He was a very
+unpleasant man. He could be rude if you contradicted him; and as few
+persons wish to provoke rudeness, so he was seldom contradicted.
+
+Mr. Chillingly Mivers, another cadet of the house, was also
+distinguished, but in a different way. He was a bachelor, now about the
+age of thirty-five. He was eminent for a supreme well-bred contempt for
+everybody and everything. He was the originator and chief proprietor of
+a public journal called “The Londoner,” which had lately been set up on
+that principle of contempt, and we need not say, was exceedingly popular
+with those leading members of the community who admire nobody and
+believe in nothing. Mr. Chillingly Mivers was regarded by himself and
+by others as a man who might have achieved the highest success in any
+branch of literature, if he had deigned to exhibit his talents therein.
+But he did not so deign, and therefore he had full right to imply that,
+if he had written an epic, a drama, a novel, a history, a metaphysical
+treatise, Milton, Shakspeare, Cervantes, Hume, Berkeley would have been
+nowhere. He held greatly to the dignity of the anonymous; and even in
+the journal which he originated nobody could ever ascertain what he
+wrote. But, at all events, Mr. Chillingly Mivers was what Mr. Chillingly
+Gordon was not; namely, a very clever man, and by no means an unpleasant
+one in general society.
+
+The Rev. John Stalworth Chillingly was a decided adherent to the creed
+of what is called “muscular Christianity,” and a very fine specimen
+of it too. A tall stout man with broad shoulders, and that division of
+lower limb which intervenes between the knee and the ankle powerfully
+developed. He would have knocked down a deist as soon as looked at
+him. It is told by the Sieur de Joinville, in his Memoir of Louis, the
+sainted king, that an assembly of divines and theologians convened the
+Jews of an Oriental city for the purpose of arguing with them on the
+truths of Christianity, and a certain knight, who was at that time
+crippled, and supporting himself on crutches, asked and obtained
+permission to be present at the debate. The Jews flocked to the summons,
+when a prelate, selecting a learned rabbi, mildly put to him the leading
+question whether he owned the divine conception of our Lord. “Certainly
+not,” replied the rabbi; whereon the pious knight, shocked by such
+blasphemy, uplifted his crutch and felled the rabbi, and then flung
+himself among the other misbelievers, whom he soon dispersed in
+ignominious flight and in a very belaboured condition. The conduct of
+the knight was reported to the sainted king, with a request that it
+should be properly reprimanded; but the sainted king delivered himself
+of this wise judgment:--
+
+“If a pious knight is a very learned clerk, and can meet in fair
+argument the doctrines of the misbeliever, by all means let him argue
+fairly; but if a pious knight is not a learned clerk, and the argument
+goes against him, then let the pious knight cut the discussion short by
+the edge of his good sword.”
+
+The Rev. John Stalworth Chillingly was of the same opinion as Saint
+Louis; otherwise, he was a mild and amiable man. He encouraged cricket
+and other manly sports among his rural parishioners. He was a skilful
+and bold rider, but he did not hunt; a convivial man--and took his
+bottle freely. But his tastes in literature were of a refined and
+peaceful character, contrasting therein the tendencies some might have
+expected from his muscular development of Christianity. He was a great
+reader of poetry, but he disliked Scott and Byron, whom he considered
+flashy and noisy; he maintained that Pope was only a versifier, and that
+the greatest poet in the language was Wordsworth; he did not care much
+for the ancient classics; he refused all merit to the French poets; he
+knew nothing of the Italian, but he dabbled in German, and was inclined
+to bore one about the “Hermann and Dorothea” of Goethe. He was married
+to a homely little wife, who revered him in silence, and thought there
+would be no schism in the Church if he were in his right place as
+Archbishop of Canterbury; in this opinion he entirely agreed with his
+wife.
+
+Besides these three male specimens of the Chillingly race, the fairer
+sex was represented, in the absence of her ladyship, who still kept her
+room, by three female Chillinglys, sisters of Sir Peter, and all three
+spinsters. Perhaps one reason why they had remained single was, that
+externally they were so like each other that a suitor must have been
+puzzled which to choose, and may have been afraid that if he did choose
+one, he should be caught next day kissing another one in mistake. They
+were all tall, all thin, with long throats--and beneath the throats a
+fine development of bone. They had all pale hair, pale eyelids, pale
+eyes, and pale complexions. They all dressed exactly alike, and their
+favourite colour was a vivid green: they were so dressed on this
+occasion.
+
+As there was such similitude in their persons, so, to an ordinary
+observer, they were exactly the same in character and mind. Very
+well behaved, with proper notions of female decorum: very distant and
+reserved in manner to strangers; very affectionate to each other and
+their relations or favourites; very good to the poor, whom they looked
+upon as a different order of creation, and treated with that sort of
+benevolence which humane people bestow upon dumb animals. Their minds
+had been nourished on the same books--what one read the others had read.
+The books were mainly divided into two classes,--novels, and what they
+called “good books.” They had a habit of taking a specimen of each
+alternately; one day a novel, then a good book, then a novel again, and
+so on. Thus if the imagination was overwarmed on Monday, on Tuesday it
+was cooled down to a proper temperature; and if frost-bitten on Tuesday,
+it took a tepid bath on Wednesday. The novels they chose were indeed
+rarely of a nature to raise the intellectual thermometer into blood
+heat: the heroes and heroines were models of correct conduct. Mr.
+James’s novels were then in vogue, and they united in saying that those
+“were novels a father might allow his daughters to read.” But though an
+ordinary observer might have failed to recognize any distinction between
+these three ladies, and, finding them habitually dressed in green, would
+have said they were as much alike as one pea is to another, they had
+their idiosyncratic differences, when duly examined. Miss Margaret, the
+eldest, was the commanding one of the three; it was she who regulated
+their household (they all lived together), kept the joint purse, and
+decided every doubtful point that arose: whether they should or should
+not ask Mrs. So-and-so to tea; whether Mary should or should not be
+discharged; whether or not they should go to Broadstairs or to Sandgate
+for the month of October. In fact, Miss Margaret was the WILL of the
+body corporate.
+
+Miss Sibyl was of milder nature and more melancholy temperament; she had
+a poetic turn of mind, and occasionally wrote verses. Some of these
+had been printed on satin paper, and sold for objects of beneficence
+at charity bazaars. The county newspapers said that the verses “were
+characterized by all the elegance of a cultured and feminine mind.” The
+other two sisters agreed that Sibyl was the genius of the household,
+but, like all geniuses, not sufficiently practical for the world.
+Miss Sarah Chillingly, the youngest of the three, and now just in her
+forty-fourth year, was looked upon by the others as “a dear thing,
+inclined to be naughty, but such a darling that nobody could have the
+heart to scold her.” Miss Margaret said “she was a giddy creature.” Miss
+Sibyl wrote a poem on her, entitled, “Warning to a young Lady against
+the Pleasures of the World.” They all called her Sally; the other
+two sisters had no diminutive synonyms. Sally is a name indicative of
+fastness. But this Sally would not have been thought fast in another
+household, and she was now little likely to sally out of the one she
+belonged to. These sisters, who were all many years older than Sir
+Peter, lived in a handsome, old-fashioned, red-brick house, with a large
+garden at the back, in the principal street of the capital of their
+native county. They had each L10,000 for portion; and if he could have
+married all three, the heir-at-law would have married them, and settled
+the aggregate L30,000 on himself. But we have not yet come to recognize
+Mormonism as legal, though if our social progress continues to slide in
+the same grooves as at present, Heaven only knows what triumphs over
+the prejudices of our ancestors may not be achieved by the wisdom of our
+descendants!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SIR PETER stood on his hearthstone, surveyed the guests seated in
+semicircle, and said: “Friends,--in Parliament, before anything
+affecting the fate of a Bill is discussed, it is, I believe, necessary
+to introduce the Bill.” He paused a moment, rang the bell, and said to
+the servant who entered, “Tell Nurse to bring in the Baby.”
+
+Mr. CHILLINGLY GORDON.--“I don’t see the necessity for that, Sir Peter.
+We may take the existence of the Baby for granted.”
+
+Mr. MIVERS.--“It is an advantage to the reputation of Sir Peter’s work
+to preserve the incognito. _Omne ignotum pro magnifico_.”
+
+THE REV. JOHN STALWORTH CHILLINGLY.--“I don’t approve the cynical
+levity of such remarks. Of course we must all be anxious to see, in the
+earliest stage of being, the future representative of our name and race.
+Who would not wish to contemplate the source, however small, of the
+Tigris or the Nile!--”
+
+MISS SALLY (tittering).--“He! he!”
+
+MISS MARGARET.--“For shame, you giddy thing!”
+
+The Baby enters in the nurse’s arms. All rise and gather round the Baby
+with one exception,--Mr. Gordon, who has ceased to be heir-at-law.
+
+The Baby returned the gaze of its relations with the most contemptuous
+indifference. Miss Sibyl was the first to pronounce an opinion on the
+Baby’s attributes. Said she, in a solemn whisper, “What a heavenly
+mournful expression! it seems so grieved to have left the angels!”
+
+THE REV. JOHN.--“That is prettily said, Cousin Sibyl; but the infant
+must pluck up its courage and fight its way among mortals with a good
+heart, if it wants to get back to the angels again. And I think it will;
+a fine child.” He took it from the nurse, and moving it deliberately up
+and down, as if to weigh it, said cheerfully, “Monstrous heavy! by the
+time it is twenty it will be a match for a prize-fighter of fifteen
+stone!”
+
+Therewith he strode to Gordon, who as if to show that he now considered
+himself wholly apart from all interest in the affairs of a family who
+had so ill-treated him in the birth of that Baby, had taken up the
+“Times” newspaper and concealed his countenance beneath the ample sheet.
+The Parson abruptly snatched away the “Times” with one hand, and,
+with the other substituting to the indignant eyes of the _ci-devant_
+heir-at-law the spectacle of the Baby, said, “Kiss it.”
+
+“Kiss it!” echoed Chillingly Gordon, pushing back his chair--“kiss
+it! pooh, sir, stand off! I never kissed my own baby: I shall not kiss
+another man’s. Take the thing away, sir: it is ugly; it has black eyes.”
+
+Sir Peter, who was near-sighted, put on his spectacles and examined
+the face of the new-born. “True,” said he, “it has black eyes,--very
+extraordinary: portentous: the first Chillingly that ever had black
+eyes.”
+
+“Its mamma has black eyes,” said Miss Margaret: “it takes after its
+mamma; it has not the fair beauty of the Chillinglys, but it is not
+ugly.”
+
+“Sweet infant!” sighed Sibyl; “and so good; does not cry.”
+
+“It has neither cried nor crowed since it was born,” said the nurse;
+“bless its little heart.”
+
+She took the Baby from the Parson’s arms, and smoothed back the frill of
+its cap, which had got ruffled.
+
+“You may go now, Nurse,” said Sir Peter.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+“I AGREE with Mr. Shandy,” said Sir Peter, resuming his stand on the
+hearthstone, “that among the responsibilities of a parent the choice of
+the name which his child is to bear for life is one of the gravest. And
+this is especially so with those who belong to the order of baronets.
+In the case of a peer his Christian name, fused into his titular
+designation, disappears. In the case of a Mister, if his baptismal
+be cacophonous or provocative of ridicule, he need not ostentatiously
+parade it: he may drop it altogether on his visiting cards, and may be
+imprinted as Mr. Jones instead of Mr. Ebenezer Jones. In his signature,
+save where the forms of the law demand Ebenezer in full, he may only
+use an initial and be your obedient servant E. Jones, leaving it to be
+conjectured that E. stands for Edward or Ernest,--names inoffensive, and
+not suggestive of a Dissenting Chapel, like Ebenezer. If a man called
+Edward or Ernest be detected in some youthful indiscretion, there is
+no indelible stain on his moral character: but if an Ebenezer be so
+detected he is set down as a hypocrite; it produces that shock on the
+public mind which is felt when a professed saint is proved to be a
+bit of a sinner. But a baronet never can escape from his baptismal: it
+cannot lie _perdu_; it cannot shrink into an initial, it stands forth
+glaringly in the light of day; christen him Ebenezer, and he is Sir
+Ebenezer in full, with all its perilous consequences if he ever succumb
+to those temptations to which even baronets are exposed. But, my
+friends, it is not only the effect that the sound of a name has upon
+others which is to be thoughtfully considered: the effect that his name
+produces on the man himself is perhaps still more important. Some names
+stimulate and encourage the owner; others deject and paralyze him: I
+am a melancholy instance of that truth. Peter has been for many
+generations, as you are aware, the baptismal to which the eldest-born
+of our family has been devoted. On the altar of that name I have been
+sacrificed. Never has there been a Sir Peter Chillingly who has, in any
+way, distinguished himself above his fellows. That name has been a dead
+weight on my intellectual energies. In the catalogue of illustrious
+Englishmen there is, I think, no immortal Sir Peter, except Sir Peter
+Teazle, and he only exists on the comic stage.”
+
+MISS SIBYL.--“Sir Peter Lely?”
+
+SIR PETER CHILLINGLY.--“That painter was not an Englishman. He was born
+in Westphalia, famous for hams. I confine my remarks to the children of
+our native land. I am aware that in foreign countries the name is not an
+extinguisher to the genius of its owner. But why? In other countries its
+sound is modified. Pierre Corneille was a great man; but I put it to
+you whether, had he been an Englishman, he could have been the father of
+European tragedy as Peter Crow?”
+
+MISS SIBYL.--“Impossible!”
+
+MISS SALLY.--“He! he!”
+
+MISS MARGARET.--“There is nothing to laugh at, you giddy child!”
+
+SIR PETER.--“My son shall not be petrified into Peter.”
+
+MR. CHILLINGLY GORDON.--“If a man is such a fool--and I don’t say your
+son will not be a fool, Cousin Peter--as to be influenced by the sound
+of his own name, and you want the booby to turn the world topsy-turvy,
+you had better call him Julius Caesar or Hannibal or Attila or
+Charlemagne.”
+
+SIR PETER, (who excels mankind in imperturbability of temper).--“On the
+contrary, if you inflict upon a man the burden of one of those names,
+the glory of which he cannot reasonably expect to eclipse or even to
+equal, you crush him beneath the weight. If a poet were called John
+Milton or William Shakspeare, he could not dare to publish even a
+sonnet. No: the choice of a name lies between the two extremes of
+ludicrous insignificance and oppressive renown. For this reason I have
+ordered the family pedigree to be suspended on yonder wall. Let us
+examine it with care, and see whether, among the Chillinglys themselves
+or their alliances, we can discover a name that can be borne with
+becoming dignity by the destined head of our house--a name neither too
+light nor too heavy.”
+
+Sir Peter here led the way to the family tree--a goodly roll of
+parchment, with the arms of the family emblazoned at the top. Those arms
+were simple, as ancient heraldic coats are,--three fishes _argent_ on
+a field _azure_; the crest a mermaid’s head. All flocked to inspect the
+pedigree except Mr. Gordon, who resumed the “Times” newspaper.
+
+“I never could quite make out what kind of fishes these are,” said
+the Rev. John Stalworth. “They are certainly not pike which formed the
+emblematic blazon of the Hotofts, and are still grim enough to frighten
+future Shakspeares on the scutcheon of the Warwickshire Lucys.”
+
+“I believe they are tenches,” said Mr. Mivers. “The tench is a fish that
+knows how to keep itself safe by a philosophical taste for an obscure
+existence in deep holes and slush.”
+
+SIR PETER.--“No, Mivers; the fishes are dace, a fish that, once
+introduced into any pond, never can be got out again. You may drag
+the water; you may let off the water; you may say, ‘Those dace are
+extirpated,’--vain thought!--the dace reappear as before; and in this
+respect the arms are really emblematic of the family. All the disorders
+and revolutions that have occurred in England since the Heptarchy have
+left the Chillinglys the same race in the same place. Somehow or other
+the Norman Conquest did not despoil them; they held fiefs under Eudo
+Dapifer as peacefully as they had held them under King Harold; they took
+no part in the Crusades, nor the Wars of the Roses, nor the Civil Wars
+between Charles the First and the Parliament. As the dace sticks to the
+water and the water sticks by the dace, so the Chillinglys stuck to the
+land and the land stuck by the Chillinglys. Perhaps I am wrong to wish
+that the new Chillingly may be a little less like a dace.”
+
+“Oh!” cried Miss Margaret, who, mounted on a chair, had been inspecting
+the pedigree through an eye-glass, “I don’t see a fine Christian name
+from the beginning, except Oliver.”
+
+SIR PETER.--“That Chillingly was born in Oliver Cromwell’s Protectorate,
+and named Oliver in compliment to him, as his father, born in the reign
+of James I., was christened James. The three fishes always swam with
+the stream. Oliver!--Oliver not a bad name, but significant of radical
+doctrines.”
+
+Mr. MIVERS.--“I don’t think so. Oliver Cromwell made short work of
+radicals and their doctrines; but perhaps we can find a name less awful
+and revolutionary.”
+
+“I have it! I have it!” cried the Parson. “Here is a descent from Sir
+Kenelm Digby and Venetia Stanley. Sir Kenelm Digby! No finer specimen of
+muscular Christianity. He fought as well as he wrote; eccentric, it is
+true, but always a gentleman. Call the boy Kenelm!”
+
+“A sweet name,” said Miss Sibyl: “it breathes of romance.”
+
+“Sir Kenelm Chillingly! It sounds well,--imposing!” said Miss Margaret.
+
+“And,” remarked Mr. Mivers, “it has this advantage--that while it has
+sufficient association with honourable distinction to affect the mind of
+the namesake and rouse his emulation, it is not that of so stupendous
+a personage as to defy rivalry. Sir Kenelm Digby was certainly an
+accomplished and gallant gentleman; but what with his silly superstition
+about sympathetic powders, etc., any man nowadays might be clever in
+comparison without being a prodigy. Yes, let us decide on Kenelm.”
+
+Sir Peter meditated. “Certainly,” said he, after a pause, “certainly
+the name of Kenelm carries with it very crotchety associations; and I am
+afraid that Sir Kenelm Digby did not make a prudent choice in marriage.
+The fair Venetia was no better than she should be; and I should wish
+my heir not to be led away by beauty but wed a woman of respectable
+character and decorous conduct.”
+
+Miss MARGARET.--“A British matron, of course!”
+
+THREE SISTERS (in chorus).--“Of course! of course!”
+
+“But,” resumed Sir Peter, “I am crotchety myself, and crotchets are
+innocent things enough; and as for marriage the Baby cannot marry
+to-morrow, so that we have ample time to consider that matter. Kenelm
+Digby was a man any family might be proud of; and, as you say, sister
+Margaret, Kenelm Chillingly does not sound amiss: Kenelm Chillingly it
+shall be!”
+
+The Baby was accordingly christened Kenelm, after which ceremony its
+face grew longer than before.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+BEFORE his relations dispersed, Sir Peter summoned Mr. Gordon into his
+library.
+
+“Cousin,” said he, kindly, “I do not blame you for the want of family
+affection, or even of humane interest, which you exhibit towards the
+New-born.”
+
+“Blame me, Cousin Peter! I should think not. I exhibit as much
+family affection and humane interest as could be expected from
+me,--circumstances considered.”
+
+“I own,” said Sir Peter, with all his wonted mildness, “that after
+remaining childless for fourteen years of wedded life, the advent of
+this little stranger must have occasioned you a disagreeable surprise.
+But, after all, as I am many years younger than you, and in the course
+of nature shall outlive you, the loss is less to yourself than to your
+son, and upon that I wish to say a few words. You know too well the
+conditions on which I hold my estate not to be aware that I have
+not legally the power to saddle it with any bequest to your boy. The
+New-born succeeds to the fee-simple as last in tail. But I intend,
+from this moment, to lay by something every year for your son out of my
+income; and, fond as I am of London for a part of the year, I shall now
+give up my town-house. If I live to the years the Psalmist allots to
+man, I shall thus accumulate something handsome for your son, which may
+be taken in the way of compensation.”
+
+Mr. Gordon was by no means softened by this generous speech. However,
+he answered more politely than was his wont, “My son will be very much
+obliged to you, should he ever need your intended bequest.” Pausing a
+moment, he added with a cheerful smile, “A large percentage of infants
+die before attaining the age of twenty-one.”
+
+“Nay, but I am told your son is an uncommonly fine healthy child.”
+
+“My son, Cousin Peter! I was not thinking of my son, but of yours. Yours
+has a big head. I should not wonder if he had water in it. I don’t wish
+to alarm you, but he may go off any day, and in that case it is not
+likely that Lady Chillingly will condescend to replace him. So you will
+excuse me if I still keep a watchful eye on my rights; and, however
+painful to my feelings, I must still dispute your right to cut a stick
+of the field timber.”
+
+“That is nonsense, Gordon. I am tenant for life without impeachment of
+waste, and can cut down all timber not ornamental.”
+
+“I advise you not, Cousin Peter. I have told you before that I shall try
+the question at law, should you provoke it, amicably, of course. Rights
+are rights; and if I am driven to maintain mine, I trust that you are of
+a mind too liberal to allow your family affection for me and mine to be
+influenced by a decree of the Court of Chancery. But my fly is waiting.
+I must not miss the train.”
+
+“Well, good-by, Gordon. Shake hands.”
+
+“Shake hands!--of course, of course. By the by, as I came through the
+lodge, it seemed to me sadly out of repair. I believe you are liable for
+dilapidations. Good-by.”
+
+“The man is a hog in armour,” soliloquized Sir Peter, when his cousin
+was gone; “and if it be hard to drive a common pig in the way he don’t
+choose to go, a hog in armour is indeed undrivable. But his boy ought
+not to suffer for his father’s hoggishness; and I shall begin at once to
+see what I can lay by for him. After all, it is hard upon Gordon. Poor
+Gordon; poor fellow! poor fellow! Still I hope he will not go to law
+with me. I hate law. And a worm will turn, especially a worm that is put
+into Chancery.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+DESPITE the sinister semi-predictions of the _ci-devant_ heir-at-law,
+the youthful Chillingly passed with safety, and indeed with dignity,
+through the infant stages of existence. He took his measles and
+whooping-cough with philosophical equanimity. He gradually acquired
+the use of speech, but he did not too lavishly exercise that special
+attribute of humanity. During the earlier years of childhood he spoke
+as little as if he had been prematurely trained in the school of
+Pythagoras. But he evidently spoke the less in order to reflect the
+more. He observed closely and pondered deeply over what he observed. At
+the age of eight he began to converse more freely, and it was in that
+year that he startled his mother with the question, “Mamma, are you not
+sometimes overpowered by the sense of your own identity?”
+
+Lady Chillingly,--I was about to say rushed, but Lady Chillingly never
+rushed,--Lady Chillingly glided less sedately than her wont to Sir
+Peter, and repeating her son’s question, said, “The boy is growing
+troublesome, too wise for any woman: he must go to school.”
+
+Sir Peter was of the same opinion. But where on earth did the child get
+hold of so long a word as “identity,” and how did so extraordinary and
+puzzling a metaphysical question come into his head? Sir Peter summoned
+Kenelm, and ascertained that the boy, having free access to the library,
+had fastened upon Locke on the Human Understanding, and was prepared to
+dispute with that philosopher upon the doctrine of innate ideas. Quoth
+Kenelm, gravely, “A want is an idea; and if, as soon as I was born, I
+felt the want of food and knew at once where to turn for it, without
+being taught, surely I came into the world with an ‘innate idea.’”
+
+Sir Peter, though he dabbled in metaphysics, was posed, and scratched
+his head without getting out a proper answer as to the distinction
+between ideas and instincts. “My child,” he said at last, “you don’t
+know what you are talking about: go and take a good gallop on your black
+pony; and I forbid you to read any books that are not given to you by
+myself or your mamma. Stick to ‘Puss in Boots.’”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+SIR PETER ordered his carriage and drove to the house of the stout
+parson. That doughty ecclesiastic held a family living a few miles
+distant from the Hall, and was the only one of the cousins with whom Sir
+Peter habitually communed on his domestic affairs.
+
+He found the Parson in his study, which exhibited tastes other
+than clerical. Over the chimney-piece were ranged fencing-foils,
+boxing-gloves, and staffs for the athletic exercise of single-stick;
+cricket-bats and fishing-rods filled up the angles. There were
+sundry prints on the walls: one of Mr. Wordsworth, flanked by two of
+distinguished race-horses; one of a Leicestershire short-horn, with
+which the Parson, who farmed his own glebe and bred cattle in its rich
+pastures, had won a prize at the county show; and on either side of that
+animal were the portraits of Hooker and Jeremy Taylor. There were dwarf
+book-cases containing miscellaneous works very handsomely bound; at
+the open window, a stand of flower-pots, the flowers in full bloom. The
+Parson’s flowers were famous.
+
+The appearance of the whole room was that of a man who is tidy and neat
+in his habits.
+
+“Cousin,” said Sir Peter, “I have come to consult you.” And therewith he
+related the marvellous precocity of Kenelm Chillingly. “You see the name
+begins to work on him rather too much. He must go to school; and now
+what school shall it be? Private or public?”
+
+THE REV. JOHN STALWORTH.--“There is a great deal to be said for or
+against either. At a public school the chances are that Kenelm will
+no longer be overpowered by a sense of his own identity; he will more
+probably lose identity altogether. The worst of a public school is that
+a sort of common character is substituted for individual character.
+The master, of course, can’t attend to the separate development of each
+boy’s idiosyncrasy. All minds are thrown into one great mould, and come
+out of it more or less in the same form. An Etonian may be clever or
+stupid, but, as either, he remains emphatically Etonian. A public school
+ripens talent, but its tendency is to stifle genius. Then, too, a public
+school for an only son, heir to a good estate, which will be entirely at
+his own disposal, is apt to encourage reckless and extravagant habits;
+and your estate requires careful management, and leaves no margin for an
+heir’s notes-of-hand and post-obits. On the whole, I am against a public
+school for Kenelm.”
+
+“Well then, we will decide on a private one.”
+
+“Hold!” said the Parson: “a private school has its drawbacks. You can
+seldom produce large fishes in small ponds. In private schools the
+competition is narrowed, the energies stinted. The schoolmaster’s wife
+interferes, and generally coddles the boys. There is not manliness
+enough in those academies; no fagging, and very little fighting. A
+clever boy turns out a prig; a boy of feebler intellect turns out a
+well-behaved young lady in trousers. Nothing muscular in the system.
+Decidedly the namesake and descendant of Kenelm Digby should not go to a
+private seminary.”
+
+“So far as I gather from your reasoning,” said Sir Peter, with
+characteristic placidity, “Kenelm Chillingly is not to go to school at
+all.”
+
+“It does look like it,” said the Parson, candidly; “but, on
+consideration, there is a medium. There are schools which unite the best
+qualities of public and private schools, large enough to stimulate and
+develop energies mental and physical, yet not so framed as to melt all
+character in one crucible. For instance, there is a school which has
+at this moment one of the first scholars in Europe for head-master,--a
+school which has turned out some of the most remarkable men of the
+rising generation. The master sees at a glance if a boy be clever, and
+takes pains with him accordingly. He is not a mere teacher of hexameters
+and sapphics. His learning embraces all literature, ancient and modern.
+He is a good writer and a fine critic; admires Wordsworth. He winks at
+fighting: his boys know how to use their fists; and they are not in the
+habit of signing post-obits before they are fifteen. Merton School is
+the place for Kenelm.”
+
+“Thank you,” said Sir Peter. “It is a great comfort in life to find
+somebody who can decide for one. I am an irresolute man myself, and in
+ordinary matters willingly let Lady Chillingly govern me.”
+
+“I should like to see a wife govern _me_,” said the stout Parson.
+
+“But you are not married to Lady Chillingly. And now let us go into the
+garden and look at your dahlias.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE youthful confuter of Locke was despatched to Merton School, and
+ranked, according to his merits, as lag of the penultimate form. When he
+came home for the Christmas holidays he was more saturnine than ever;
+in fact, his countenance bore the impression of some absorbing grief.
+He said, however, that he liked school very well, and eluded all other
+questions. But early the next morning he mounted his black pony and
+rode to the Parson’s rectory. The reverend gentleman was in his farmyard
+examining his bullocks when Kenelm accosted him thus briefly,--
+
+“Sir, I am disgraced, and I shall die of it if you cannot help to set me
+right in my own eyes.”
+
+“My dear boy, don’t talk in that way. Come into my study.”
+
+As soon as they entered that room, and the Parson had carefully closed
+the door, he took the boy’s arm, turned him round to the light, and saw
+at once that there was something very grave on his mind. Chucking him
+under the chin, the Parson said cheerily, “Hold up your head, Kenelm. I
+am sure you have done nothing unworthy of a gentleman.”
+
+“I don’t know that. I fought a boy very little bigger than myself, and
+I have been licked. I did not give in, though; but the other boys picked
+me up, for I could not stand any longer; and the fellow is a great
+bully; and his name is Butt; and he’s the son of a lawyer; and he got my
+head into chancery; and I have challenged him to fight again next
+half; and unless you can help me to lick him, I shall never be good for
+anything in the world,--never. It will break my heart.”
+
+“I am very glad to hear you have had the pluck to challenge him. Just
+let me see how you double your fist. Well, that’s not amiss. Now, put
+yourself into a fighting attitude, and hit out at me,--hard! harder!
+Pooh! that will never do. You should make your blows as straight as
+an arrow. And that’s not the way to stand. Stop,--so: well on your
+haunches; weight on the left leg; good! Now, put on these gloves, and
+I’ll give you a lesson in boxing.”
+
+Five minutes afterwards Mrs. John Chillingly, entering the room to
+summon her husband to breakfast, stood astounded to see him with his
+coat off, and parrying the blows of Kenelm, who flew at him like a young
+tiger. The good pastor at that moment might certainly have appeared a
+fine type of muscular Christianity, but not of that kind of Christianity
+out of which one makes Archbishops of Canterbury.
+
+“Good gracious me!” faltered Mrs. John Chillingly; and then, wife-like,
+flying to the protection of her husband, she seized Kenelm by the
+shoulders, and gave him a good shaking. The Parson, who was sadly out
+of breath, was not displeased at the interruption, but took that
+opportunity to put on his coat, and said, “We’ll begin again to-morrow.
+Now, come to breakfast.” But during breakfast Kenelm’s face still
+betrayed dejection, and he talked little and ate less.
+
+As soon as the meal was over, he drew the Parson into the garden and
+said, “I have been thinking, sir, that perhaps it is not fair to Butt
+that I should be taking these lessons; and if it is not fair, I’d rather
+not--”
+
+“Give me your hand, my boy!” cried the Parson, transported. “The name
+of Kenelm is not thrown away upon you. The natural desire of man in
+his attribute of fighting animal (an attribute in which, I believe, he
+excels all other animated beings, except a quail and a gamecock) is to
+beat his adversary. But the natural desire of that culmination of man
+which we call gentleman is to beat his adversary fairly. A gentleman
+would rather be beaten fairly than beat unfairly. Is not that your
+thought?”
+
+“Yes,” replied Kenelm, firmly; and then, beginning to philosophize, he
+added, “And it stands to reason; because if I beat a fellow unfairly, I
+don’t really beat him at all.”
+
+“Excellent! But suppose that you and another boy go into examination
+upon Caesar’s Commentaries or the multiplication table, and the other
+boy is cleverer than you, but you have taken the trouble to learn the
+subject and he has not: should you say you beat him unfairly?”
+
+Kenelm meditated a moment, and then said decidedly, “No.”
+
+“That which applies to the use of your brains applies equally to the use
+of your fists. Do you comprehend me?”
+
+“Yes, sir; I do now.”
+
+“In the time of your namesake, Sir Kenelm Digby, gentlemen wore swords,
+and they learned how to use them, because, in case of quarrel, they had
+to fight with them. Nobody, at least in England, fights with swords
+now. It is a democratic age, and if you fight at all, you are reduced to
+fists; and if Kenelm Digby learned to fence, so Kenelm Chillingly must
+learn to box; and if a gentleman thrashes a drayman twice his size, who
+has not learned to box, it is not unfair; it is but an exemplification
+of the truth that knowledge is power. Come and take another lesson on
+boxing to-morrow.”
+
+Kenelm remounted his pony and returned home. He found his father
+sauntering in the garden with a book in his hand. “Papa,” said Kenelm,
+“how does one gentleman write to another with whom he has a quarrel,
+and he don’t want to make it up, but he has something to say about the
+quarrel which it is fair the other gentleman should know?”
+
+“I don’t understand what you mean.”
+
+“Well, just before I went to school I remember hearing you say that you
+had a quarrel with Lord Hautfort, and that he was an ass, and you would
+write and tell him so. When you wrote did you say, ‘You are an ass’? Is
+that the way one gentleman writes to another?”
+
+“Upon my honour, Kenelm, you ask very odd questions. But you cannot
+learn too early this fact, that irony is to the high-bred what
+Billingsgate is to the vulgar; and when one gentleman thinks another
+gentleman an ass, he does not say it point-blank: he implies it in the
+politest terms he can invent. Lord Hautfort denies my right of free
+warren over a trout-stream that runs through his lands. I don’t care a
+rush about the trout-stream, but there is no doubt of my right to fish
+in it. He was an ass to raise the question; for, if he had not, I
+should not have exercised the right. As he did raise the question, I was
+obliged to catch his trout.”
+
+“And you wrote a letter to him?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“How did you write, Papa? What did you say?”
+
+“Something like this. ‘Sir Peter Chillingly presents his compliments
+to Lord Hautfort, and thinks it fair to his lordship to say that he has
+taken the best legal advice with regard to his rights of free warren;
+and trusts to be forgiven if he presumes to suggest that Lord Hautfort
+might do well to consult his own lawyer before he decides on disputing
+them.’”
+
+“Thank you, Papa. I see.”
+
+That evening Kenelm wrote the following letter:--
+
+
+Mr. Chillingly presents his compliments to Mr. Butt, and thinks it fair
+to Mr. Butt to say that he is taking lessons in boxing; and trusts to be
+forgiven if he presumes to suggest that Mr. Butt might do well to take
+lessons himself before fighting with Mr. Chillingly next half.
+
+
+“Papa,” said Kenelm the next morning, “I want to write to a schoolfellow
+whose name is Butt; he is the son of a lawyer who is called a serjeant.
+I don’t know where to direct to him.”
+
+“That is easily ascertained,” said Sir Peter. “Serjeant Butt is an
+eminent man, and his address will be in the Court Guide.”
+
+The address was found,--Bloomsbury Square; and Kenelm directed his
+letter accordingly. In due course he received this answer,--
+
+
+You are an insolent little fool, and I’ll thrash you within an inch of
+your life.
+
+ROBERT BUTT.
+
+
+After the receipt of that polite epistle, Kenelm Chillingly’s scruples
+vanished, and he took daily lessons in muscular Christianity.
+
+Kenelm returned to school with a brow cleared from care, and three days
+after his return he wrote to the Reverend John,--
+
+
+DEAR SIR,--I have licked Butt. Knowledge is power.
+
+Your affectionate KENELM.
+
+P. S.--Now that I have licked Butt, I have made it up with him.
+
+
+From that time Kenelm prospered. Eulogistic letters from the illustrious
+head-master showered in upon Sir Peter. At the age of sixteen Kenelm
+Chillingly was the head of the school, and, quitting it finally,
+brought home the following letter from his Orbilius to Sir Peter, marked
+“confidential”:--
+
+
+DEAR SIR PETER CHILLINGLY,--I have never felt more anxious for the
+future career of any of my pupils than I do for that of your son. He is
+so clever that, with ease to himself, he may become a great man. He is
+so peculiar that it is quite as likely that he may only make himself
+known to the world as a great oddity. That distinguished teacher Dr.
+Arnold said that the difference between one boy and another was not so
+much talent as energy. Your son has talent, has energy: yet he wants
+something for success in life; he wants the faculty of amalgamation. He
+is of a melancholic and therefore unsocial temperament. He will not act
+in concert with others. He is lovable enough: the other boys like him,
+especially the smaller ones, with whom he is a sort of hero; but he
+has not one intimate friend. So far as school learning is concerned,
+he might go to college at once, and with the certainty of distinction
+provided he chose to exert himself. But if I may venture to offer an
+advice, I should say employ the next two years in letting him see
+a little more of real life and acquire a due sense of its practical
+objects. Send him to a private tutor who is not a pedant, but a man
+of letters or a man of the world, and if in the metropolis so much the
+better. In a word, my young friend is unlike other people; and, with
+qualities that might do anything in life, I fear, unless you can get
+him to be like other people, that he will do nothing. Excuse the freedom
+with which I write, and ascribe it to the singular interest with which
+your son has inspired me. I have the honour to be, dear Sir Peter,
+
+Yours truly, WILLIAM HORTON.
+
+
+Upon the strength of this letter Sir Peter did not indeed summon another
+family council; for he did not consider that his three maiden sisters
+could offer any practical advice on the matter. And as to Mr. Gordon,
+that gentleman having gone to law on the great timber question, and
+having been signally beaten thereon, had informed Sir Peter that he
+disowned him as a cousin and despised him as a man; not exactly in those
+words,--more covertly, and therefore more stingingly. But Sir Peter
+invited Mr. Mivers for a week’s shooting, and requested the Reverend
+John to meet him.
+
+Mr. Mivers arrived. The sixteen years that had elapsed since he was
+first introduced to the reader had made no perceptible change in his
+appearance. It was one of his maxims that in youth a man of the world
+should appear older than he is; and in middle age, and thence to his
+dying day, younger. And he announced one secret for attaining that art
+in these words: “Begin your wig early, thus you never become gray.”
+
+Unlike most philosophers, Mivers made his practice conform to his
+precepts; and while in the prime of youth inaugurated a wig in a
+fashion that defied the flight of time, not curly and hyacinthine, but
+straight-haired and unassuming. He looked five-and-thirty from the day
+he put on that wig at the age of twenty-five. He looked five-and-thirty
+now at the age of fifty-one.
+
+“I mean,” said he, “to remain thirty-five all my life. No better age to
+stick at. People may choose to say I am more, but I shall not own it. No
+one is bound to criminate himself.”
+
+Mr. Mivers had some other aphorisms on this important subject. One
+was, “Refuse to be ill. Never tell people you are ill; never own it to
+yourself. Illness is one of those things which a man should resist on
+principle at the onset. It should never be allowed to get in the thin
+end of the wedge. But take care of your constitution, and, having
+ascertained the best habits for it, keep to them like clockwork.” Mr.
+Mivers would not have missed his constitutional walk in the Park before
+breakfast if, by going in a cab to St. Giles’s, he could have saved the
+city of London from conflagration.
+
+Another aphorism of his was, “If you want to keep young, live in a
+metropolis; never stay above a few weeks at a time in the country. Take
+two men of similar constitution at the age of twenty-five; let one live
+in London and enjoy a regular sort of club life; send the other to some
+rural district, preposterously called ‘salubrious.’ Look at these men
+when they have both reached the age of forty-five. The London man has
+preserved his figure: the rural man has a paunch. The London man has
+an interesting delicacy of complexion: the face of the rural man is
+coarse-grained and perhaps jowly.”
+
+A third axiom was, “Don’t be a family man; nothing ages one like
+matrimonial felicity and paternal ties. Never multiply cares, and pack
+up your life in the briefest compass you can. Why add to your carpet-bag
+of troubles the contents of a lady’s imperials and bonnet-boxes, and the
+travelling _fourgon_ required by the nursery? Shun ambition: it is so
+gouty. It takes a great deal out of a man’s life, and gives him nothing
+worth having till he has ceased to enjoy it.” Another of his aphorisms
+was this, “A fresh mind keeps the body fresh. Take in the ideas of the
+day, drain off those of yesterday. As to the morrow, time enough to
+consider it when it becomes to-day.”
+
+Preserving himself by attention to these rules, Mr. Mivers appeared at
+Exmundham _totus, teres_, but not _rotundus_,--a man of middle height,
+slender, upright, with well-cut, small, slight features, thin lips,
+enclosing an excellent set of teeth, even, white, and not indebted
+to the dentist. For the sake of those teeth he shunned acid wines,
+especially hock in all its varieties, culinary sweets, and hot drinks.
+He drank even his tea cold.
+
+“There are,” he said, “two things in life that a sage must preserve at
+every sacrifice, the coats of his stomach and the enamel of his teeth.
+Some evils admit of consolations: there are no comforters for dyspepsia
+and toothache.” A man of letters, but a man of the world, he had so
+cultivated his mind as both that he was feared as the one and liked as
+the other. As a man of letters he despised the world; as a man of the
+world he despised letters. As the representative of both he revered
+himself.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ON the evening of the third day from the arrival of Mr. Mivers, he, the
+Parson, and Sir Peter were seated in the host’s parlour, the Parson in
+an armchair by the ingle, smoking a short cutty-pipe; Mivers at length
+on the couch, slowly inhaling the perfumes of one of his own choice
+_trabucos_. Sir Peter never smoked. There were spirits and hot water and
+lemons on the table. The Parson was famed for skill in the composition
+of toddy. From time to time the Parson sipped his glass, and Sir Peter
+less frequently did the same. It is needless to say that Mr. Mivers
+eschewed toddy; but beside him, on a chair, was a tumbler and a large
+carafe of iced water.
+
+SIR PETER.--“Cousin Mivers, you have now had time to study Kenelm,
+and to compare his character with that assigned to him in the Doctor’s
+letter.”
+
+MIVERS (languidly).--“Ay.”
+
+SIR PETER.--“I ask you, as a man of the world, what you think I had
+best do with the boy. Shall I send him to such a tutor as the Doctor
+suggests? Cousin John is not of the same mind as the Doctor, and thinks
+that Kenelm’s oddities are fine things in their way, and should not be
+prematurely ground out of him by contact with worldly tutors and London
+pavements.”
+
+“Ay,” repeated Mr. Mivers more languidly than before. After a pause he
+added, “Parson John, let us hear you.”
+
+The Parson laid aside his cutty-pipe and emptied his fourth tumbler of
+toddy; then, throwing back his head in the dreamy fashion of the great
+Coleridge when he indulged in a monologue, he thus began, speaking
+somewhat through his nose,--
+
+“At the morning of life--”
+
+Here Mivers shrugged his shoulders, turned round on his couch, and
+closed his eyes with the sigh of a man resigning himself to a homily.
+
+“At the morning of life, when the dews--”
+
+“I knew the dews were coming,” said Mivers. “Dry them, if you please;
+nothing so unwholesome. We anticipate what you mean to say, which is
+plainly this, When a fellow is sixteen he is very fresh: so he is; pass
+on; what then?”
+
+“If you mean to interrupt me with your habitual cynicism,” said the
+Parson, “why did you ask to hear me?”
+
+“That was a mistake I grant; but who on earth could conceive that you
+were going to commence in that florid style? Morning of life indeed!
+bosh!”
+
+“Cousin Mivers,” said Sir Peter, “you are not reviewing John’s style in
+‘The Londoner;’ and I will beg you to remember that my son’s morning of
+life is a serious thing to his father, and not to be nipped in its bud
+by a cousin. Proceed, John!”
+
+Quoth the Parson, good-humouredly, “I will adapt my style to the taste
+of my critic. When a fellow is at the age of sixteen, and very fresh
+to life, the question is whether he should begin thus prematurely to
+exchange the ideas that belong to youth for the ideas that properly
+belong to middle age,--whether he should begin to acquire that knowledge
+of the world which middle-aged men have acquired and can teach. I think
+not. I would rather have him yet a while in the company of the poets;
+in the indulgence of glorious hopes and beautiful dreams, forming to
+himself some type of the Heroic, which he will keep before his eyes as
+a standard when he goes into the world as man. There are two schools of
+thought for the formation of character,--the Real and the Ideal. I would
+form the character in the Ideal school, in order to make it bolder and
+grander and lovelier when it takes its place in that every-day life
+which is called Real. And therefore I am not for placing the descendant
+of Sir Kenelm Digby, in the interval between school and college, with a
+man of the world, probably as cynical as Cousin Mivers and living in the
+stony thoroughfares of London.”
+
+MR. MIVERS (rousing himself).--“Before we plunge into that Serbonian
+bog--the controversy between the Realistic and the Idealistic
+academicians--I think the first thing to decide is what you want Kenelm
+to be hereafter. When I order a pair of shoes, I decide beforehand what
+kind of shoes they are to be,--court pumps or strong walking shoes;
+and I don’t ask the shoemaker to give me a preliminary lecture upon the
+different purposes of locomotion to which leather can be applied. If,
+Sir Peter, you want Kenelm to scribble lackadaisical poems, listen to
+Parson John; if you want to fill his head with pastoral rubbish about
+innocent love, which may end in marrying the miller’s daughter, listen
+to Parson John; if you want him to enter life a soft-headed greenhorn,
+who will sign any bill carrying 50 per cent to which a young scamp asks
+him to be security, listen to Parson John; in fine, if you wish a clever
+lad to become either a pigeon or a ring-dove, a credulous booby or a
+sentimental milksop, Parson John is the best adviser you can have.”
+
+“But I don’t want my son to ripen into either of those imbecile
+developments of species.”
+
+“Then don’t listen to Parson John; and there’s an end of the
+discussion.”
+
+“No, there is not. I have not heard your advice what to do if John’s
+advice is not to be taken.”
+
+Mr. Mivers hesitated. He seemed puzzled.
+
+“The fact is,” said the Parson, “that Mivers got up ‘The Londoner’
+upon a principle that regulates his own mind,--find fault with the way
+everything is done, but never commit yourself by saying how anything can
+be done better.”
+
+“That is true,” said Mivers, candidly. “The destructive order of mind is
+seldom allied to the constructive. I and ‘The Londoner’ are destructive
+by nature and by policy. We can reduce a building into rubbish, but we
+don’t profess to turn rubbish into a building. We are critics, and, as
+you say, not such fools as to commit ourselves to the proposition of
+amendments that can be criticised by others. Nevertheless, for your
+sake, Cousin Peter, and on the condition that if I give my advice you
+will never say that I gave it, and if you take it that you will never
+reproach me if it turns out, as most advice does, very ill,--I will
+depart from my custom and hazard my opinion.”
+
+“I accept the conditions.”
+
+“Well then, with every new generation there springs up a new order of
+ideas. The earlier the age at which a man seizes the ideas that will
+influence his own generation, the more he has a start in the race with
+his contemporaries. If Kenelm comprehends at sixteen those intellectual
+signs of the time which, when he goes up to college, he will find young
+men of eighteen or twenty only just _prepared_ to comprehend, he
+will produce a deep impression of his powers for reasoning and their
+adaptation to actual life, which will be of great service to him later.
+Now the ideas that influence the mass of the rising generation never
+have their well-head in the generation itself. They have their source in
+the generation before them, generally in a small minority, neglected or
+contemned by the great majority which adopt them later. Therefore a lad
+at the age of sixteen, if he wants to get at such ideas, must come
+into close contact with some superior mind in which they were conceived
+twenty or thirty years before. I am consequently for placing Kenelm with
+a person from whom the new ideas can be learned. I am also for his being
+placed in the metropolis during the process of this initiation. With
+such introductions as are at our command, he may come in contact not
+only with new ideas, but with eminent men in all vocations. It is a
+great thing to mix betimes with clever people. One picks their brains
+unconsciously. There is another advantage, and not a small one, in
+this early entrance into good society. A youth learns manners,
+self-possession, readiness of resource; and he is much less likely to
+get into scrapes and contract tastes for low vices and mean dissipation,
+when he comes into life wholly his own master, after having acquired
+a predilection for refined companionship under the guidance of those
+competent to select it. There, I have talked myself out of breath. And
+you had better decide at once in favour of my advice; for as I am of a
+contradictory temperament, myself of to-morrow may probably contradict
+myself of to-day.”
+
+Sir Peter was greatly impressed with his cousin’s argumentative
+eloquence.
+
+The Parson smoked his cutty-pipe in silence until appealed to by Sir
+Peter, and he then said, “In this programme of education for a Christian
+gentleman, the part of Christian seems to me left out.”
+
+“The tendency of the age,” observed Mr. Mivers, calmly, “is towards that
+omission. Secular education is the necessary reaction from the special
+theological training which arose in the dislike of one set of Christians
+to the teaching of another set; and as these antagonists will not agree
+how religion is to be taught, either there must be no teaching at all,
+or religion must be eliminated from the tuition.”
+
+“That may do very well for some huge system of national education,” said
+Sir Peter, “but it does not apply to Kenelm, as one of a family all of
+whose members belong to the Established Church. He may be taught the
+creed of his forefathers without offending a Dissenter.”
+
+“Which Established Church is he to belong to?” asked Mr. Mivers,--“High
+Church, Low Church, Broad Church, Puseyite Church, Ritualistic Church,
+or any other Established Church that may be coming into fashion?”
+
+“Pshaw!” said the Parson. “That sneer is out of place. You know very
+well that one merit of our Church is the spirit of toleration, which
+does not magnify every variety of opinion into a heresy or a schism.
+But if Sir Peter sends his son at the age of sixteen to a tutor who
+eliminates the religion of Christianity from his teaching, he deserves
+to be thrashed within an inch of his life; and,” continued the Parson,
+eying Sir Peter sternly, and mechanically turning up his cuffs, “I
+should _like_ to thrash him.”
+
+“Gently, John,” said Sir Peter, recoiling; “gently, my dear kinsman. My
+heir shall not be educated as a heathen, and Mivers is only bantering
+us. Come, Mivers, do you happen to know among your London friends some
+man who, though a scholar and a man of the world, is still a Christian?”
+
+“A Christian as by law established?”
+
+“Well--yes.”
+
+“And who will receive Kenelm as a pupil?”
+
+“Of course I am not putting such questions to you out of idle
+curiosity.”
+
+“I know exactly the man. He was originally intended for orders, and is
+a very learned theologian. He relinquished the thought of the clerical
+profession on succeeding to a small landed estate by the sudden death of
+an elder brother. He then came to London and bought experience: that
+is, he was naturally generous; he became easily taken in; got into
+difficulties; the estate was transferred to trustees for the benefit of
+creditors, and on the payment of L400 a year to himself. By this time
+he was married and had two children. He found the necessity of employing
+his pen in order to add to his income, and is one of the ablest
+contributors to the periodical press. He is an elegant scholar, an
+effective writer, much courted by public men, a thorough gentleman, has
+a pleasant house, and receives the best society. Having been once taken
+in, he defies any one to take him in again. His experience was not
+bought too dearly. No more acute and accomplished man of the world. The
+three hundred a year or so that you would pay for Kenelm would suit him
+very well. His name is Welby, and he lives in Chester Square.”
+
+“No doubt he is a contributor to ‘The Londoner,’” said the Parson,
+sarcastically.
+
+“True. He writes our classical, theological, and metaphysical articles.
+Suppose I invite him to come here for a day or two, and you can see him
+and judge for yourself, Sir Peter?”
+
+“Do.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MR. WELBY arrived, and pleased everybody. A man of the happiest manners,
+easy and courteous. There was no pedantry in him, yet you could soon see
+that his reading covered an extensive surface, and here and there
+had dived deeply. He enchanted the Parson by his comments on Saint
+Chrysostom; he dazzled Sir Peter with his lore in the antiquities of
+ancient Britain; he captivated Kenelm by his readiness to enter into
+that most disputatious of sciences called metaphysics; while for Lady
+Chillingly, and the three sisters who were invited to meet him, he was
+more entertaining, but not less instructive. Equally at home in novels
+and in good books, he gave to the spinsters a list of innocent works
+in either; while for Lady Chillingly he sparkled with anecdotes of
+fashionable life, the newest _bons mots_, the latest scandals. In fact,
+Mr. Welby was one of those brilliant persons who adorn any society
+amidst which they are thrown. If at heart he was a disappointed man,
+the disappointment was concealed by an even serenity of spirits; he
+had entertained high and justifiable hopes of a brilliant career and a
+lasting reputation as a theologian and a preacher; the succession to
+his estate at the age of twenty-three had changed the nature of his
+ambition. The charm of his manner was such that he sprang at once into
+the fashion, and became beguiled by his own genial temperament into that
+lesser but pleasanter kind of ambition which contents itself with social
+successes and enjoys the present hour. When his circumstances compelled
+him to eke out his income by literary profits, he slid into the grooves
+of periodical composition, and resigned all thoughts of the labour
+required for any complete work, which might take much time and be
+attended with scanty profits. He still remained very popular in society,
+and perhaps his general reputation for ability made him fearful to
+hazard it by any great undertaking. He was not, like Mivers, a despiser
+of all men and all things; but he regarded men and things as an
+indifferent though good-natured spectator regards the thronging streets
+from a drawing-room window. He could not be called _blase_, but he was
+thoroughly _desillusionne_. Once over-romantic, his character now was so
+entirely imbued with the neutral tints of life that romance offended his
+taste as an obtrusion of violent colour into a sober woof. He was become
+a thorough Realist in his code of criticism, and in his worldly mode
+of action and thought. But Parson John did not perceive this, for
+Welby listened to that gentleman’s eulogies on the Ideal school without
+troubling himself to contradict them. He had grown too indolent to be
+combative in conversation, and only as a critic betrayed such pugnacity
+as remained to him by the polished cruelty of sarcasm.
+
+He came off with flying colours through an examination into his Church
+orthodoxy instituted by the Parson and Sir Peter. Amid a cloud of
+ecclesiastical erudition, his own opinions vanished in those of the
+Fathers. In truth, he was a Realist, in religion as in everything else.
+He regarded Christianity as a type of existent civilization, which
+ought to be reverenced, as one might recognize the other types of that
+civilization; such as the liberty of the press, the representative
+system, white neckcloths and black coats of an evening, etc. He
+belonged, therefore, to what he himself called the school of Eclectical
+Christiology; and accommodated the reasonings of Deism to the doctrines
+of the Church, if not as a creed, at least as an institution. Finally,
+he united all the Chillingly votes in his favour; and when he departed
+from the Hall carried off Kenelm for his initiation into the new ideas
+that were to govern his generation.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+KENELM remained a year and a half with this distinguished preceptor.
+During that time he learned much in book-lore; he saw much, too, of the
+eminent men of the day, in literature, the law, and the senate. He saw,
+also, a good deal of the fashionable world. Fine ladies, who had been
+friends of his mother in her youth, took him up, counselled and petted
+him,--one in especial, the Marchioness of Glenalvon, to whom he was
+endeared by grateful association, for her youngest son had been a
+fellow-pupil of Kenelm at Merton School, and Kenelm had saved his life
+from drowning. The poor boy died of consumption later, and her grief for
+his loss made her affection for Kenelm yet more tender. Lady Glenalvon
+was one of the queens of the London world. Though in the fiftieth
+year she was still very handsome: she was also very accomplished, very
+clever, and very kind-hearted, as some of such queens are; just one
+of those women invaluable in forming the manners and elevating the
+character of young men destined to make a figure in after-life. But she
+was very angry with herself in thinking that she failed to arouse any
+such ambition in the heir of the Chillinglys.
+
+It may here be said that Kenelm was not without great advantages of form
+and countenance. He was tall, and the youthful grace of his proportions
+concealed his physical strength, which was extraordinary rather from the
+iron texture than the bulk of his thews and sinews. His face, though it
+certainly lacked the roundness of youth, had a grave, sombre, haunting
+sort of beauty, not artistically regular, but picturesque, peculiar,
+with large dark expressive eyes, and a certain indescribable combination
+of sweetness and melancholy in his quiet smile. He never laughed
+audibly, but he had a quick sense of the comic, and his eye would laugh
+when his lips were silent. He would say queer, droll, unexpected things
+which passed for humour; but, save for that gleam in the eye, he could
+not have said them with more seeming innocence of intentional joke if he
+had been a monk of La Trappe looking up from the grave he was digging in
+order to utter “memento mori.”
+
+That face of his was a great “take in.” Women thought it full of
+romantic sentiment; the face of one easily moved to love, and whose love
+would be replete alike with poetry and passion. But he remained as proof
+as the youthful Hippolytus to all female attraction. He delighted the
+Parson by keeping up his practice in athletic pursuits; and obtained a
+reputation at the pugilistic school, which he attended regularly, as the
+best gentleman boxer about town.
+
+He made many acquaintances, but still formed no friendships. Yet every
+one who saw him much conceived affection for him. If he did not return
+that affection, he did not repel it. He was exceedingly gentle in voice
+and manner, and had all his father’s placidity of temper: children and
+dogs took to him as by instinct.
+
+On leaving Mr. Welby’s, Kenelm carried to Cambridge a mind largely
+stocked with the new ideas that were budding into leaf. He certainly
+astonished the other freshmen, and occasionally puzzled the mighty
+Fellows of Trinity and St. John’s. But he gradually withdrew himself
+much from general society. In fact, he was too old in mind for his
+years; and after having mixed in the choicest circles of a metropolis,
+college suppers and wine parties had little charm for him. He maintained
+his pugilistic renown; and on certain occasions, when some delicate
+undergraduate had been bullied by some gigantic bargeman, his muscular
+Christianity nobly developed itself. He did not do as much as he might
+have done in the more intellectual ways of academical distinction.
+Still, he was always among the first in the college examinations; he won
+two university prizes, and took a very creditable degree, after which
+he returned home, more odd, more saturnine--in short, less like other
+people--than when he had left Merton School. He had woven a solitude
+round him out of his own heart, and in that solitude he sat still and
+watchful as a spider sits in his web.
+
+Whether from natural temperament or from his educational training under
+such teachers as Mr. Mivers, who carried out the new ideas of reform by
+revering nothing in the past, and Mr. Welby, who accepted the routine of
+the present as realistic, and pooh-poohed all visions of the future as
+idealistic, Kenelm’s chief mental characteristic was a kind of tranquil
+indifferentism. It was difficult to detect in him either of those
+ordinary incentives to action,--vanity or ambition, the yearning for
+applause or the desire of power. To all female fascinations he had been
+hitherto star-proof. He had never experienced love, but he had read
+a good deal about it; and that passion seemed to him an unaccountable
+aberration of human reason, and an ignominious surrender of the
+equanimity of thought which it should be the object of masculine natures
+to maintain undisturbed. A very eloquent book in praise of celibacy, and
+entitled “The Approach to the Angels,” written by that eminent Oxford
+scholar, Decimus Roach, had produced so remarkable an effect upon his
+youthful mind that, had he been a Roman Catholic, he might have become
+a monk. Where he most evinced ardour it was a logician’s ardour for
+abstract truth; that is, for what he considered truth: and, as what
+seems truth to one man is sure to seem falsehood to some other man, this
+predilection of his was not without its inconveniences and dangers, as
+may probably be seen in the following chapter.
+
+Meanwhile, rightly to appreciate his conduct therein, I entreat thee, O
+candid reader (not that any reader ever is candid), to remember that he
+is brimful of new ideas, which, met by a deep and hostile undercurrent
+of old ideas, become more provocatively billowy and surging.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THERE had been great festivities at Exmundham, in celebration of the
+honour bestowed upon the world by the fact that Kenelm Chillingly had
+lived twenty-one years in it.
+
+The young heir had made a speech to the assembled tenants and other
+admitted revellers, which had by no means added to the exhilaration of
+the proceedings. He spoke with a fluency and self-possession which were
+surprising in a youth addressing a multitude for the first time. But his
+speech was not cheerful.
+
+The principal tenant on the estate, in proposing his health, had
+naturally referred to the long line of his ancestors. His father’s
+merits as man and landlord had been enthusiastically commemorated; and
+many happy auguries for his own future career had been drawn, partly
+from the excellences of his parentage, partly from his own youthful
+promise in the honours achieved at the University.
+
+Kenelm Chillingly in reply largely availed himself of those new ideas
+which were to influence the rising generation, and with which he had
+been rendered familiar by the journal of Mr. Mivers and the conversation
+of Mr. Welby.
+
+He briefly disposed of the ancestral part of the question. He observed
+that it was singular to note how long any given family or dynasty could
+continue to flourish in any given nook of matter in creation, without
+any exhibition of intellectual powers beyond those displayed by a
+succession of vegetable crops. “It is certainly true,” he said, “that
+the Chillinglys have lived in this place from father to son for about a
+fourth part of the history of the world, since the date which Sir Isaac
+Newton assigns to the Deluge. But, so far as can be judged by existent
+records, the world has not been in any way wiser or better for their
+existence. They were born to eat as long as they could eat, and when
+they could eat no longer they died. Not that in this respect they were
+a whit less insignificant than the generality of their fellow-creatures.
+Most of us now present,” continued the youthful orator, “are only born
+in order to die; and the chief consolation of our wounded pride in
+admitting this fact is in the probability that our posterity will not
+be of more consequence to the scheme of Nature than we ourselves are.”
+ Passing from that philosophical view of his own ancestors in particular,
+and of the human race in general, Kenelm Chillingly then touched with
+serene analysis on the eulogies lavished on his father as man and
+landlord.
+
+“As man,” he said, “my father no doubt deserves all that can be said
+by man in favour of man. But what, at the best, is man? A crude,
+struggling, undeveloped embryo, of whom it is the highest attribute that
+he feels a vague consciousness that he is only an embryo, and cannot
+complete himself till he ceases to be a man; that is, until he becomes
+another being in another form of existence. We can praise a dog as
+a dog, because a dog is a completed _ens_, and not an embryo. But to
+praise a man as man, forgetting that he is only a germ out of which a
+form wholly different is ultimately to spring, is equally opposed
+to Scriptural belief in his present crudity and imperfection, and to
+psychological or metaphysical examination of a mental construction
+evidently designed for purposes that he can never fulfil as man. That my
+father is an embryo not more incomplete than any present is quite true;
+but that, you will see on reflection, is saying very little on his
+behalf. Even in the boasted physical formation of us men, you are
+aware that the best-shaped amongst us, according to the last scientific
+discoveries, is only a development of some hideous hairy animal, such
+as a gorilla; and the ancestral gorilla itself had its own aboriginal
+forefather in a small marine animal shaped like a two-necked bottle. The
+probability is that, some day or other, we shall be exterminated by a
+new development of species.
+
+“As for the merits assigned to my father as landlord, I must
+respectfully dissent from the panegyrics so rashly bestowed on him. For
+all sound reasoners must concur in this, that the first duty of an owner
+of land is not to the occupiers to whom he leases it, but to the nation
+at large. It is his duty to see that the land yields to the community
+the utmost it can yield. In order to effect this object, a landlord
+should put up his farms to competition, exacting the highest rent he can
+possibly get from responsible competitors. Competitive examination is
+the enlightened order of the day, even in professions in which the best
+men would have qualities that defy examination. In agriculture, happily,
+the principle of competitive examination is not so hostile to the choice
+of the best man as it must be, for instance, in diplomacy, where a
+Talleyrand would be excluded for knowing no language but his own; and
+still more in the army, where promotion would be denied to an officer
+who, like Marlborough, could not spell. But in agriculture a landlord
+has only to inquire who can give the highest rent, having the largest
+capital, subject by the strictest penalties of law to the conditions of
+a lease dictated by the most scientific agriculturists under penalties
+fixed by the most cautious conveyancers. By this mode of procedure,
+recommended by the most liberal economists of our age,--barring those
+still more liberal who deny that property in land is any property at
+all,--by this mode of procedure, I say, a landlord does his duty to his
+country. He secures tenants who can produce the most to the community by
+their capital, tested through competitive examination in their bankers’
+accounts and the security they can give, and through the rigidity of
+covenants suggested by a Liebig and reduced into law by a Chitty. But on
+my father’s land I see a great many tenants with little skill and less
+capital, ignorant of a Liebig and revolting from a Chitty, and no
+filial enthusiasm can induce me honestly to say that my father is a good
+landlord. He has preferred his affection for individuals to his duties
+to the community. It is not, my friends, a question whether a handful of
+farmers like yourselves go to the workhouse or not. It is a consumer’s
+question. Do you produce the maximum of corn to the consumer?
+
+“With respect to myself,” continued the orator, warming as the cold
+he had engendered in his audience became more freezingly felt,--“with
+respect to myself, I do not deny that, owing to the accident of training
+for a very faulty and contracted course of education, I have obtained
+what are called ‘honours’ at the University of Cambridge; but you must
+not regard that fact as a promise of any worth in my future passage
+through life. Some of the most useless persons--especially narrow-minded
+and bigoted--have acquired far higher honours at the University than
+have fallen to my lot.
+
+“I thank you no less for the civil things you have said of me and of my
+family; but I shall endeavour to walk to that grave to which we are all
+bound with a tranquil indifference as to what people may say of me in
+so short a journey. And the sooner, my friends, we get to our journey’s
+end, the better our chance of escaping a great many pains, troubles,
+sins, and diseases. So that when I drink to your good healths, you must
+feel that in reality I wish you an early deliverance from the ills to
+which flesh is exposed, and which so generally increase with our years
+that good health is scarcely compatible with the decaying faculties of
+old age. Gentlemen, your good healths!”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE morning after these birthday rejoicings, Sir Peter and Lady
+Chillingly held a long consultation on the peculiarities of their heir,
+and the best mode of instilling into his mind the expediency either
+of entertaining more pleasing views, or at least of professing less
+unpopular sentiments; compatibly of course, though they did not say it,
+with the new ideas that were to govern his century. Having come to an
+agreement on this delicate subject, they went forth, arm in arm, in
+search of their heir. Kenelm seldom met them at breakfast. He was an
+early riser, and accustomed to solitary rambles before his parents were
+out of bed.
+
+The worthy pair found Kenelm seated on the banks of a trout-stream that
+meandered through Chillingly Park, dipping his line into the water, and
+yawning, with apparent relief in that operation.
+
+“Does fishing amuse you, my boy?” said Sir Peter, heartily.
+
+“Not in the least, sir,” answered Kenelm.
+
+“Then why do you do it?” asked Lady Chillingly.
+
+“Because I know nothing else that amuses me more.”
+
+“Ah! that is it,” said Sir Peter: “the whole secret of Kenelm’s oddities
+is to be found in these words, my dear; he needs amusement. Voltaire
+says truly, ‘Amusement is one of the wants of man.’ And if Kenelm could
+be amused like other people, he would be like other people.”
+
+“In that case,” said Kenelm, gravely, and extracting from the water
+a small but lively trout, which settled itself in Lady Chillingly’s
+lap,--“in that case I would rather not be amused. I have no interest
+in the absurdities of other people. The instinct of self-preservation
+compels me to have some interest in my own.”
+
+“Kenelm, sir,” exclaimed Lady Chillingly, with an animation into which
+her tranquil ladyship was very rarely betrayed, “take away that horrid
+damp thing! Put down your rod and attend to what your father says. Your
+strange conduct gives us cause of serious anxiety.”
+
+Kenelm unhooked the trout, deposited the fish in his basket, and raising
+his large eyes to his father’s face, said, “What is there in my conduct
+that occasions you displeasure?”
+
+“Not displeasure, Kenelm,” said Sir Peter, kindly, “but anxiety; your
+mother has hit upon the right word. You see, my dear son, that it is
+my wish that you should distinguish yourself in the world. You might
+represent this county, as your ancestors have done before. I have looked
+forward to the proceedings of yesterday as an admirable occasion for
+your introduction to your future constituents. Oratory is the talent
+most appreciated in a free country, and why should you not be an orator?
+Demosthenes says that delivery, delivery, delivery, is the art of
+oratory; and your delivery is excellent, graceful, self-possessed,
+classical.”
+
+“Pardon me, my dear father, Demosthenes does not say delivery,
+nor action, as the word is commonly rendered; he says, ‘acting, or
+stage-play,’--the art by which a man delivers a speech in a feigned
+character, whence we get the word hypocrisy. Hypocrisy, hypocrisy,
+hypocrisy! is, according to Demosthenes, the triple art of the orator.
+Do you wish me to become triply a hypocrite?”
+
+“Kenelm, I am ashamed of you. You know as well as I do that it is only
+by metaphor that you can twist the word ascribed to the great Athenian
+into the sense of hypocrisy. But assuming it, as you say, to mean not
+delivery, but acting, I understand why your debut as an orator was
+not successful. Your delivery was excellent, your acting defective.
+An orator should please, conciliate, persuade, prepossess. You did the
+reverse of all this; and though you produced a great effect, the effect
+was so decidedly to your disadvantage that it would have lost you an
+election on any hustings in England.”
+
+“Am I to understand, my dear father,” said Kenelm, in the mournful and
+compassionate tones with which a pious minister of the Church reproves
+some abandoned and hoary sinner,--“am I to understand that you would
+commend to your son the adoption of deliberate falsehood for the gain of
+a selfish advantage?”
+
+“Deliberate falsehood! you impertinent puppy!”
+
+“Puppy!” repeated Kenelm, not indignantly but musingly,--“puppy! a
+well-bred puppy takes after its parents.”
+
+Sir Peter burst out laughing.
+
+Lady Chillingly rose with dignity, shook her gown, unfolded her parasol,
+and stalked away speechless.
+
+“Now, look you, Kenelm,” said Sir Peter, as soon as he had composed
+himself. “These quips and humours of yours are amusing enough to an
+eccentric man like myself, but they will not do for the world; and
+how at your age, and with the rare advantages you have had in an early
+introduction to the best intellectual society, under the guidance of a
+tutor acquainted with the new ideas which are to influence the
+conduct of statesmen, you could have made so silly a speech as you did
+yesterday, I cannot understand.”
+
+“My dear father, allow me to assure you that the ideas I expressed are
+the new ideas most in vogue,--ideas expressed in still plainer, or, if
+you prefer the epithet, still sillier terms than I employed. You will
+find them instilled into the public mind by ‘The Londoner’ and by most
+intellectual journals of a liberal character.”
+
+“Kenelm, Kenelm, such ideas would turn the world topsy-turvy.”
+
+“New ideas always do tend to turn old ideas topsy-turvy. And the world,
+after all, is only an idea, which is turned topsy-turvy with every
+successive century.”
+
+“You make me sick of the word ‘ideas.’ Leave off your metaphysics and
+study real life.”
+
+“It is real life which I did study under Mr. Welby. He is the
+Archimandrite of Realism. It is sham life which you wish me to study. To
+oblige you I am willing to commence it. I dare say it is very pleasant.
+Real life is not; on the contrary--dull,” and Kenelm yawned again.
+
+“Have you no young friends among your fellow-collegians?”
+
+“Friends! certainly not, sir. But I believe I have some enemies, who
+answer the same purpose as friends, only they don’t hurt one so much.”
+
+“Do you mean to say that you lived alone at Cambridge?”
+
+“No, I lived a good deal with Aristophanes, and a little with Conic
+Sections and Hydrostatics.”
+
+“Books. Dry company.”
+
+“More innocent, at least, than moist company. Did you ever get drunk,
+sir?”
+
+“Drunk!”
+
+“I tried to do so once with the young companions whom you would commend
+to me as friends. I don’t think I succeeded, but I woke with a headache.
+Real life at college abounds with headache.”
+
+“Kenelm, my boy, one thing is clear: you must travel.”
+
+“As you please, sir. Marcus Antoninus says that it is all one to a stone
+whether it be thrown upwards or downwards. When shall I start?”
+
+“Very soon. Of course there are preparations to make; you should have a
+travelling companion. I don’t mean a tutor,--you are too clever and
+too steady to need one,--but a pleasant, sensible, well-mannered young
+person of your own age.”
+
+“My own age,--male or female?”
+
+Sir Peter tried hard to frown. The utmost he could do was to reply
+gravely, “FEMALE! If I said you were too steady to need a tutor, it was
+because you have hitherto seemed little likely to be led out of your
+way by female allurements. Among your other studies may I inquire if you
+have included that which no man has ever yet thoroughly mastered,--the
+study of women?”
+
+“Certainly. Do you object to my catching another trout?”
+
+“Trout be--blessed, or the reverse. So you have studied woman. I should
+never have thought it. Where and when did you commence that department
+of science?”
+
+“When? ever since I was ten years old. Where? first in your own house,
+then at college. Hush!--a bite,” and another trout left its native
+element and alighted on Sir Peter’s nose, whence it was solemnly
+transferred to the basket.
+
+“At ten years old, and in my own house! That flaunting hussy Jane, the
+under-housemaid--”
+
+“Jane! No, sir. Pamela, Miss Byron, Clarissa,--females in Richardson,
+who, according to Dr. Johnson, ‘taught the passions to move at the
+command of virtue.’ I trust for your sake that Dr. Johnson did not err
+in that assertion, for I found all these females at night in your own
+private apartments.”
+
+“Oh!” said Sir Peter, “that’s all?”
+
+“All I remember at ten years old,” replied Kenelm.
+
+“And at Mr. Welby’s or at college,” proceeded Sir Peter, timorously,
+“was your acquaintance with females of the same kind?”
+
+Kenelm shook his head. “Much worse: they were very naughty indeed at
+college.”
+
+“I should think so, with such a lot of young fellows running after
+them.”
+
+“Very few fellows run after the females. I mean--rather avoid them.”
+
+“So much the better.”
+
+“No, my father, so much the worse; without an intimate knowledge of
+those females there is little use going to college at all.”
+
+“Explain yourself.”
+
+“Every one who receives a classical education is introduced into their
+society,--Pyrrha and Lydia, Glycera and Corinna, and many more of the
+same sort; and then the females in Aristophanes, what do you say to
+them, sir?”
+
+“Is it only females who lived two thousand or three thousand years ago,
+or more probably never lived at all, whose intimacy you have cultivated?
+Have you never admired any real women?”
+
+“Real women! I never met one. Never met a woman who was not a sham,
+a sham from the moment she is told to be pretty-behaved, conceal her
+sentiments, and look fibs when she does not speak them. But if I am to
+learn sham life, I suppose I must put up with sham women.”
+
+“Have you been crossed in love that you speak so bitterly of the sex?”
+
+“I don’t speak bitterly of the sex. Examine any woman on her oath, and
+she’ll own she is a sham, always has been, and always will be, and is
+proud of it.”
+
+“I am glad your mother is not by to hear you. You will think differently
+one of these days. Meanwhile, to turn to the other sex, is there no
+young man of your own rank with whom you would like to travel?”
+
+“Certainly not. I hate quarrelling.”
+
+“As you please. But you cannot go quite alone: I will find you a good
+travelling-servant. I must write to town to-day about your preparations,
+and in another week or so I hope all will be ready. Your allowance will
+be whatever you like to fix it at; you have never been extravagant,
+and--boy--I love you. Amuse yourself, enjoy yourself, and come back
+cured of your oddities, but preserving your honour.”
+
+Sir Peter bent down and kissed his son’s brow. Kenelm was moved; he
+rose, put his arm round his father’s shoulder, and lovingly said, in
+an undertone, “If ever I am tempted to do a base thing, may I remember
+whose son I am: I shall be safe then.” He withdrew his arm as he said
+this, and took his solitary way along the banks of the stream, forgetful
+of rod and line.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE young man continued to skirt the side of the stream until he reached
+the boundary pale of the park. Here, placed on a rough grass mound,
+some former proprietor, of a social temperament, had built a kind of
+belvidere, so as to command a cheerful view of the high road below.
+Mechanically the heir of the Chillinglys ascended the mound, seated
+himself within the belvidere, and leaned his chin on his hand in a
+thoughtful attitude. It was rarely that the building was honoured by a
+human visitor: its habitual occupants were spiders. Of those industrious
+insects it was a well-populated colony. Their webs, darkened with
+dust and ornamented with the wings and legs and skeletons of many an
+unfortunate traveller, clung thick to angle and window-sill, festooned
+the rickety table on which the young man leaned his elbow, and described
+geometrical circles and rhomboids between the gaping rails that formed
+the backs of venerable chairs. One large black spider--who was probably
+the oldest inhabitant, and held possession of the best place by the
+window, ready to offer perfidious welcome to every winged itinerant
+who might be tempted to turn aside from the high road for the sake of
+a little cool and repose--rushed from its innermost penetralia at the
+entrance of Kenelm, and remained motionless in the centre of its meshes,
+staring at him. It did not seem quite sure whether the stranger was too
+big or not.
+
+“It is a wonderful proof of the wisdom of Providence,” said Kenelm,
+“that whenever any large number of its creatures forms a community
+or class, a secret element of disunion enters into the hearts of the
+individuals forming the congregation, and prevents their co-operating
+heartily and effectually for their common interest. ‘The fleas would
+have dragged me out of bed if they had been unanimous,’ said the great
+Mr. Curran; and there can be no doubt that if all the spiders in this
+commonwealth would unite to attack me in a body, I should fall a victim
+to their combined nippers. But spiders, though inhabiting the same
+region, constituting the same race, animated by the same instincts,
+do not combine even against a butterfly: each seeks his own special
+advantage, and not that of the community at large. And how completely
+the life of each thing resembles a circle in this respect, that it can
+never touch another circle at more than one point. Nay, I doubt if it
+quite touches it even there,--there is a space between every atom; self
+is always selfish: and yet there are eminent masters in the Academe of
+New Ideas who wish to make us believe that all the working classes of a
+civilized world could merge every difference of race, creed, intellect,
+individual propensities and interests into the construction of a single
+web, stocked as a larder in common!” Here the soliloquist came to a dead
+stop, and, leaning out of the window, contemplated the high road. It was
+a very fine high road, straight and level, kept in excellent order by
+turn pikes at every eight miles. A pleasant greensward bordered it on
+either side, and under the belvidere the benevolence of some mediaeval
+Chillingly had placed a little drinking-fountain for the refreshment of
+wayfarers. Close to the fountain stood a rude stone bench, overshadowed
+by a large willow, and commanding from the high table-ground on which
+it was placed a wide view of cornfields, meadows, and distant hills,
+suffused in the mellow light of the summer sun. Along that road there
+came successively a wagon filled with passengers seated on straw,--an
+old woman, a pretty girl, two children; then a stout farmer going to
+market in his dog-cart; then three flies carrying fares to the nearest
+railway station; then a handsome young man on horseback, a handsome
+young lady by his side, a groom behind. It was easy to see that the
+young man and young lady were lovers. See it in his ardent looks and
+serious lips parted but for whispers only to be heard by her; see it
+in her downcast eyes and heightened colour. “‘Alas! regardless of
+their doom,’” muttered Kenelm, “what trouble those ‘little victims’
+are preparing for themselves and their progeny! Would I could lend them
+Decimus Roach’s ‘Approach to the Angels’!” The road now for some minutes
+became solitary and still, when there was heard to the right a sprightly
+sort of carol, half sung, half recited, in musical voice, with a
+singularly clear enunciation, so that the words reached Kenelm’s ear
+distinctly. They ran thus:--
+
+
+ “Black Karl looked forth from his cottage door,
+ He looked on the forest green;
+ And down the path, with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Neirestein:
+ Singing, singing, lustily singing,
+ Down the path with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Neirestein.”
+
+
+At a voice so English, attuned to a strain so Germanic, Kenelm pricked
+up attentive ears, and, turning his eye down the road, beheld, emerging
+from the shade of beeches that overhung the park pales, a figure that
+did not altogether harmonize with the idea of a Ritter of Neirestein. It
+was, nevertheless, a picturesque figure enough. The man was attired in a
+somewhat threadbare suit of Lincoln green, with a high-crowned Tyrolese
+hat; a knapsack was slung behind his shoulders, and he was attended by a
+white Pomeranian dog, evidently foot-sore, but doing his best to appear
+proficient in the chase by limping some yards in advance of his master,
+and sniffing into the hedges for rats and mice, and such small deer.
+
+By the time the pedestrian had reached to the close of his refrain he
+had gained the fountain, and greeted it with an exclamation of pleasure.
+Slipping the knapsack from his shoulder, he filled the iron ladle
+attached to the basin. He then called the dog by the name of Max, and
+held the ladle for him to drink. Not till the animal had satisfied his
+thirst did the master assuage his own. Then, lifting his hat and bathing
+his temples and face, the pedestrian seated himself on the bench,
+and the dog nestled on the turf at his feet. After a little pause the
+wayfarer began again, though in a lower and slower tone, to chant his
+refrain, and proceeded, with abrupt snatches, to link the verse on
+to another stanza. It was evident that he was either endeavouring to
+remember or to invent, and it seemed rather like the latter and more
+laborious operation of mind.
+
+
+ “‘Why on foot, why on foot, Ritter Karl,’ quoth he,
+ ‘And not on thy palfrey gray?’
+
+
+Palfrey gray--hum--gray.
+
+
+ “‘The run of ill-luck was too strong for me,
+ ‘And has galloped my steed away.’
+
+
+That will do: good!”
+
+“Good indeed! He is easily satisfied,” muttered Kenelm. “But such
+pedestrians don’t pass the road every day. Let us talk to him.” So
+saying he slipped quietly out of the window, descended the mound,
+and letting himself into the road by a screened wicket-gate, took his
+noiseless stand behind the wayfarer and beneath the bowery willow.
+
+The man had now sunk into silence. Perhaps he had tired himself of
+rhymes; or perhaps the mechanism of verse-making had been replaced by
+that kind of sentiment, or that kind of revery, which is common to the
+temperaments of those who indulge in verse-making. But the loveliness
+of the scene before him had caught his eye, and fixed it into an intent
+gaze upon wooded landscapes stretching farther and farther to the range
+of hills on which the heaven seemed to rest.
+
+“I should like to hear the rest of that German ballad,” said a voice,
+abruptly.
+
+The wayfarer started, and, turning round, presented to Kenelm’s view
+a countenance in the ripest noon of manhood, with locks and beard of a
+deep rich auburn, bright blue eyes, and a wonderful nameless charm both
+of feature and expression, very cheerful, very frank, and not without a
+certain nobleness of character which seemed to exact respect.
+
+“I beg your pardon for my interruption,” said Kenelm, lifting his hat:
+“but I overheard you reciting; and though I suppose your verses are a
+translation from the German, I don’t remember anything like them in such
+popular German poets as I happen to have read.”
+
+“It is not a translation, sir,” replied the itinerant. “I was only
+trying to string together some ideas that came into my head this fine
+morning.”
+
+“You are a poet, then?” said Kenelm, seating himself on the bench.
+
+“I dare not say poet. I am a verse-maker.”
+
+“Sir, I know there is a distinction. Many poets of the present day,
+considered very good, are uncommonly bad verse-makers. For my part, I
+could more readily imagine them to be good poets if they did not make
+verses at all. But can I not hear the rest of the ballad?”
+
+“Alas! the rest of the ballad is not yet made. It is rather a long
+subject, and my flights are very brief.”
+
+“That is much in their favour, and very unlike the poetry in fashion.
+You do not belong, I think, to this neighbourhood. Are you and your dog
+travelling far?”
+
+“It is my holiday time, and I ramble on through the summer. I am
+travelling far, for I travel till September. Life amid summer fields is
+a very joyous thing.”
+
+“Is it indeed?” said Kenelm, with much _naivete_. “I should have thought
+that long before September you would have got very much bored with the
+fields and the dog and yourself altogether. But, to be sure, you
+have the resource of verse-making, and that seems a very pleasant and
+absorbing occupation to those who practise it,--from our old friend
+Horace, kneading laboured Alcaics into honey in his summer rambles among
+the watered woodlands of Tibur, to Cardinal Richelieu, employing himself
+on French rhymes in the intervals between chopping off noblemen’s heads.
+It does not seem to signify much whether the verses be good or bad,
+so far as the pleasure of the verse-maker himself is concerned; for
+Richelieu was as much charmed with his occupation as Horace was, and his
+verses were certainly not Horatian.”
+
+“Surely at your age, sir, and with your evident education--”
+
+“Say culture; that’s the word in fashion nowadays.”
+
+“Well, your evident culture, you must have made verses.”
+
+“Latin verses, yes; and occasionally Greek. I was obliged to do so at
+school. It did not amuse me.”
+
+“Try English.”
+
+Kenelm shook his head. “Not I. Every cobbler should stick to his last.”
+
+“Well, put aside the verse-making: don’t you find a sensible
+enjoyment in those solitary summer walks, when you have Nature all to
+yourself,--enjoyment in marking all the mobile evanescent changes in her
+face,--her laugh, her smile, her tears, her very frown!”
+
+“Assuming that by Nature you mean a mechanical series of external
+phenomena, I object to your speaking of a machinery as if it were a
+person of the feminine gender,--_her_ laugh, _her_ smile, etc. As
+well talk of the laugh and smile of a steam-engine. But to descend to
+common-sense. I grant there is some pleasure in solitary rambles in fine
+weather and amid varying scenery. You say that it is a holiday excursion
+that you are enjoying. I presume, therefore, that you have some
+practical occupation which consumes the time that you do not devote to a
+holiday?”
+
+“Yes; I am not altogether an idler. I work sometimes, though not so hard
+as I ought. ‘Life is earnest,’ as the poet says. But I and my dog are
+rested now, and as I have still a long walk before me I must wish you
+good-day.”
+
+“I fear,” said Kenelm, with a grave and sweet politeness of tone and
+manner, which he could command at times, and which, in its difference
+from merely conventional urbanity, was not without fascination,--“I
+fear that I have offended you by a question that must have seemed to you
+inquisitive, perhaps impertinent; accept my excuse: it is very rarely
+that I meet any one who interests me; and you do.” As he spoke he
+offered his hand, which the wayfarer shook very cordially.
+
+“I should be a churl indeed if your question could have given me
+offence. It is rather perhaps I who am guilty of impertinence, if I
+take advantage of my seniority in years and tender you a counsel. Do not
+despise Nature or regard her as a steam-engine; you will find in her
+a very agreeable and conversable friend if you will cultivate her
+intimacy. And I don’t know a better mode of doing so at your age, and
+with your strong limbs, than putting a knapsack on your shoulders and
+turning foot-traveller like myself.”
+
+“Sir, I thank you for your counsel; and I trust we may meet again
+and interchange ideas as to the thing you call Nature,--a thing which
+science and art never appear to see with the same eyes. If to an artist
+Nature has a soul, why, so has a steam-engine. Art gifts with soul all
+matter that it contemplates: science turns all that is already gifted
+with soul into matter. Good-day, sir.”
+
+Here Kenelm turned back abruptly, and the traveller went his way,
+silently and thoughtfully.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+KENELM retraced his steps homeward under the shade of his “old
+hereditary trees.” One might have thought his path along the
+greenswards, and by the side of the babbling rivulet, was pleasanter and
+more conducive to peaceful thoughts than the broad, dusty thoroughfare
+along which plodded the wanderer he had quitted. But the man addicted to
+revery forms his own landscapes and colours his own skies.
+
+“It is,” soliloquized Kenelm Chillingly, “a strange yearning I have
+long felt,--to get out of myself, to get, as it were, into another man’s
+skin, and have a little variety of thought and emotion. One’s self is
+always the same self; and that is why I yawn so often. But if I can’t
+get into another man’s skin, the next best thing is to get as unlike
+myself as I possibly can do. Let me see what is myself. Myself is
+Kenelm Chillingly, son and heir to a rich gentleman. But a fellow with
+a knapsack on his back, sleeping at wayside inns, is not at all like
+Kenelm Chillingly; especially if he is very short of money and may come
+to want a dinner. Perhaps that sort of fellow may take a livelier view
+of things: he can’t take a duller one. Courage, Myself: you and I can
+but try.”
+
+For the next two days Kenelm was observed to be unusually pleasant. He
+yawned much less frequently, walked with his father, played piquet
+with his mother, was more like other people. Sir Peter was charmed:
+he ascribed this happy change to the preparations he was making
+for Kenelm’s travelling in style. The proud father was in active
+correspondence with his great London friends, seeking letters of
+introduction for Kenelm to all the courts of Europe. Portmanteaus, with
+every modern convenience, were ordered; an experienced courier, who
+could talk all languages and cook French dishes if required, was
+invited to name his terms. In short, every arrangement worthy a young
+patrician’s entrance into the great world was in rapid progress, when
+suddenly Kenelm Chillingly disappeared, leaving behind him on Sir
+Peter’s library table the following letter:--
+
+
+MY VERY DEAR FATHER,--Obedient to your desire, I depart in search of
+real life and real persons, or of the best imitations of them. Forgive
+me, I beseech you, if I commence that search in my own way. I have seen
+enough of ladies and gentlemen for the present: they must be all very
+much alike in every part of the world. You desired me to be amused. I
+go to try if that be possible. Ladies and gentlemen are not amusing; the
+more ladylike or gentlemanlike they are, the more insipid I find them.
+My dear father, I go in quest of adventure like Amadis of Gaul, like Don
+Quixote, like Gil Blas, like Roderick Random; like, in short, the only
+people seeking real life, the people who never existed except in books.
+I go on foot; I go alone. I have provided myself with a larger amount of
+money than I ought to spend, because every man must buy experience,
+and the first fees are heavy. In fact, I have put fifty pounds into my
+pocket-book and into my purse five sovereigns and seventeen shillings.
+This sum ought to last me a year; but I dare say inexperience will do
+me out of it in a month, so we will count it as nothing. Since you have
+asked me to fix my own allowance, I will beg you kindly to commence it
+this day in advance, by an order to your banker to cash my checks to the
+amount of five pounds, and to the same amount monthly; namely, at the
+rate of sixty pounds a year. With that sum I can’t starve, and if I
+want more it may be amusing to work for it. Pray don’t send after me,
+or institute inquiries, or disturb the household and set all the
+neighbourhood talking, by any mention either of my project or of your
+surprise at it. I will not fail to write to you from time to time.
+You will judge best what to say to my dear mother. If you tell her the
+truth, which of course I should do did I tell her anything, my request
+is virtually frustrated, and I shall be the talk of the county. You,
+I know, don’t think telling fibs is immoral when it happens to be
+convenient, as it would be in this case.
+
+I expect to be absent a year or eighteen months; if I prolong my travels
+it shall be in the way you proposed. I will then take my place in polite
+society, call upon you to pay all expenses, and fib on my own account
+to any extent required by that world of fiction which is peopled by
+illusions and governed by shams.
+
+Heaven bless you, my dear Father, and be quite sure that if I get into
+any trouble requiring a friend, it is to you I shall turn. As yet I have
+no other friend on earth, and with prudence and good luck I may escape
+the infliction of any other friend.
+
+ Yours ever affectionately,
+
+ KENELM.
+
+P. S.--Dear Father, I open my letter in your library to say again “Bless
+you,” and to tell you how fondly I kissed your old beaver gloves, which
+I found on the table.
+
+
+When Sir Peter came to that postscript he took off his spectacles and
+wiped them: they were very moist.
+
+Then he fell into a profound meditation. Sir Peter was, as I have said,
+a learned man; he was also in some things a sensible man, and he had a
+strong sympathy with the humorous side of his son’s crotchety character.
+What was to be said to Lady Chillingly? That matron was quite guiltless
+of any crime which should deprive her of a husband’s confidence in
+a matter relating to her only son. She was a virtuous matron; morals
+irreproachable, manners dignified, and _she-baronety_. Any one seeing
+her for the first time would intuitively say, “Your ladyship.” Was
+this a matron to be suppressed in any well-ordered domestic circle? Sir
+Peter’s conscience loudly answered, “No;” but when, putting conscience
+into his pocket, he regarded the question at issue as a man of the
+world, Sir Peter felt that to communicate the contents of his son’s
+letter to Lady Chillingly would be the foolishest thing he could
+possibly do. Did she know that Kenelm had absconded with the family
+dignity invested in his very name, no marital authority short of such
+abuses of power as constitute the offence of cruelty in a wife’s
+action for divorce from social board and nuptial bed could prevent Lady
+Chillingly from summoning all the grooms, sending them in all directions
+with strict orders to bring back the runaway dead or alive; the walls
+would be placarded with hand-bills, “Strayed from his home,” etc.; the
+police would be telegraphing private instructions from town to town;
+the scandal would stick to Kenelm Chillingly for life, accompanied with
+vague hints of criminal propensities and insane hallucinations; he would
+be ever afterwards pointed out as “THE MAN WHO HAD DISAPPEARED.” And to
+disappear and to turn up again, instead of being murdered, is the most
+hateful thing a man can do: all the newspapers bark at him, “Tray,
+Blanche, Sweetheart, and all;” strict explanations of the unseemly fact
+of his safe existence are demanded in the name of public decorum, and no
+explanations are accepted; it is life saved, character lost.
+
+Sir Peter seized his hat and walked forth, not to deliberate whether to
+fib or not to fib to the wife of his bosom, but to consider what kind of
+fib would the most quickly sink into the bosom of his wife.
+
+A few turns to and fro on the terrace sufficed for the conception and
+maturing of the fib selected; a proof that Sir Peter was a practised
+fibber. He re-entered the house, passed into her ladyship’s habitual
+sitting-room, and said with careless gayety, “My old friend the Duke of
+Clareville is just setting off on a tour to Switzerland with his family.
+His youngest daughter, Lady Jane, is a pretty girl, and would not be a
+bad match for Kenelm.”
+
+“Lady Jane, the youngest daughter with fair hair, whom I saw last as
+a very charming child, nursing a lovely doll presented to her by the
+Empress Eugenie,--a good match indeed for Kenelm.”
+
+“I am glad you agree with me. Would it not be a favourable step towards
+that alliance, and an excellent thing for Kenelm generally, if he were
+to visit the Continent as one of the Duke’s travelling party?”
+
+“Of course it would.”
+
+“Then you approve what I have done; the Duke starts the day after
+to-morrow, and I have packed Kenelm off to town, with a letter to my old
+friend. You will excuse all leave taking. You know that though the best
+of sons he is an odd fellow; and seeing that I had talked him into it,
+I struck while the iron was hot, and sent him off by the express at nine
+o’clock this morning, for fear that if I allowed any delay he would talk
+himself out of it.”
+
+“Do you mean to say Kenelm is actually gone? Good gracious.”
+
+Sir Peter stole softly from the room, and summoning his valet, said, “I
+have sent Mr. Chillingly to London. Pack up the clothes he is likely
+to want, so that he can have them sent at once, whenever he writes for
+them.”
+
+And thus, by a judicious violation of truth on the part of his father,
+that exemplary truth-teller Kenelm Chillingly saved the honour of
+his house and his own reputation from the breath of scandal and the
+inquisition of the police. He was not “THE MAN WHO HAD DISAPPEARED.”
+
+
+
+
+BOOK II.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY had quitted the paternal home at daybreak before any
+of the household was astir. “Unquestionably,” said he, as he walked
+along the solitary lanes,--“unquestionably I begin the world as poets
+begin poetry, an imitator and a plagiarist. I am imitating an itinerant
+verse-maker, as, no doubt, he began by imitating some other maker
+of verse. But if there be anything in me, it will work itself out in
+original form. And, after all, the verse-maker is not the inventor of
+ideas. Adventure on foot is a notion that remounts to the age of fable.
+Hercules, for instance; that was the way in which he got to heaven, as
+a foot-traveller. How solitary the world is at this hour! Is it not for
+that reason that this is of all hours the most beautiful?”
+
+Here he paused, and looked around and above. It was the very height of
+summer. The sun was just rising over gentle sloping uplands. All the
+dews on the hedgerows sparkled. There was not a cloud in the heavens. Up
+rose from the green blades of corn a solitary skylark. His voice woke up
+the other birds. A few minutes more and the joyous concert began.
+Kenelm reverently doffed his hat, and bowed his head in mute homage and
+thanksgiving.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ABOUT nine o’clock Kenelm entered a town some twelve miles distant from
+his father’s house, and towards which he had designedly made his way,
+because in that town he was scarcely if at all known by sight, and he
+might there make the purchases he required without attracting any
+marked observation. He had selected for his travelling costume a
+shooting-dress, as the simplest and least likely to belong to his
+rank as a gentleman. But still in its very cut there was an air of
+distinction, and every labourer he had met on the way had touched his
+hat to him. Besides, who wears a shooting-dress in the middle of June,
+or a shooting-dress at all, unless he be either a game-keeper or a
+gentleman licensed to shoot?
+
+Kenelm entered a large store-shop for ready-made clothes and purchased
+a suit such as might be worn on Sundays by a small country yeoman or
+tenant-farmer of a petty holding,--a stout coarse broadcloth upper
+garment, half coat, half jacket, with waistcoat to match, strong
+corduroy trousers, a smart Belcher neckcloth, with a small stock of
+linen and woollen socks in harmony with the other raiment. He bought
+also a leathern knapsack, just big enough to contain this wardrobe, and
+a couple of books, which with his combs and brushes he had brought away
+in his pockets; for among all his trunks at home there was no knapsack.
+
+These purchases made and paid for, he passed quickly through the town,
+and stopped at a humble inn at the outskirt, to which he was attracted
+by the notice, “Refreshment for man and beast.” He entered a little
+sanded parlour, which at that hour he had all to himself, called for
+breakfast, and devoured the best part of a fourpenny loaf with a couple
+of hard eggs.
+
+Thus recruited, he again sallied forth, and deviating into a thick wood
+by the roadside, he exchanged the habiliments with which he had left
+home for those he had purchased, and by the help of one or two big
+stones sunk the relinquished garments into a small but deep pool which
+he was lucky enough to find in a bush-grown dell much haunted by snipes
+in the winter.
+
+“Now,” said Kenelm, “I really begin to think I have got out of myself.
+I am in another man’s skin; for what, after all, is a skin but a soul’s
+clothing, and what is clothing but a decenter skin? Of its own natural
+skin every civilized soul is ashamed. It is the height of impropriety
+for any one but the lowest kind of savage to show it. If the purest
+soul now existent upon earth, the Pope of Rome’s or the Archbishop of
+Canterbury’s, were to pass down the Strand with the skin which Nature
+gave to it bare to the eye, it would be brought up before a magistrate,
+prosecuted by the Society for the Suppression of Vice, and committed to
+jail as a public nuisance.
+
+“Decidedly I am now in another man’s skin. Kenelm Chillingly, I no
+longer
+
+ “Remain
+
+ “Yours faithfully;
+
+“But am,
+
+ “With profound consideration,
+
+ “Your obedient humble servant.”
+
+With light step and elated crest, the wanderer, thus transformed, sprang
+from the wood into the dusty thoroughfare. He had travelled on for about
+an hour, meeting but few other passengers, when he heard to the right a
+loud shrill young voice, “Help! help! I will not go; I tell you, I will
+not!” Just before him stood, by a high five-barred gate, a pensive gray
+cob attached to a neat-looking gig. The bridle was loose on the cob’s
+neck. The animal was evidently accustomed to stand quietly when ordered
+to do so, and glad of the opportunity.
+
+The cries, “Help, help!” were renewed, mingled with louder tones in a
+rougher voice, tones of wrath and menace. Evidently these sounds did
+not come from the cob. Kenelm looked over the gate, and saw a few yards
+distant in a grass field a well-dressed boy struggling violently against
+a stout middle-aged man who was rudely hauling him along by the arm.
+
+The chivalry natural to a namesake of the valiant Sir Kenelm Digby
+was instantly aroused. He vaulted over the gate, seized the man by the
+collar, and exclaimed, “For shame! what are you doing to that poor boy?
+let him go!”
+
+“Why the devil do you interfere?” cried the stout man, his eyes glaring
+and his lips foaming with rage. “Ah, are you the villain? yes, no doubt
+of it. I’ll give it to you, jackanapes,” and still grasping the boy with
+one hand, with the other the stout man darted a blow at Kenelm, from
+which nothing less than the practised pugilistic skill and natural
+alertness of the youth thus suddenly assaulted could have saved his eyes
+and nose. As it was, the stout man had the worst of it: the blow was
+parried, returned with a dexterous manoeuvre of Kenelm’s right foot in
+Cornish fashion, and _procumbit humi bos_; the stout man lay sprawling
+on his back. The boy, thus released, seized hold of Kenelm by the arm,
+and hurrying him along up the field, cried, “Come, come before he gets
+up! save me! save me!” Ere he had recovered his own surprise, the boy
+had dragged Kenelm to the gate, and jumped into the gig, sobbing forth,
+“Get in, get in, I can’t drive; get in, and drive--you. Quick! Quick!”
+
+“But--” began Kenelm.
+
+“Get in, or I shall go mad.” Kenelm obeyed; the boy gave him the reins,
+and seizing the whip himself, applied it lustily to the cob. On sprang
+the cob. “Stop, stop, stop, thief! villain! Holloa! thieves! thieves!
+thieves! stop!” cried a voice behind. Kenelm involuntarily turned his
+head and beheld the stout man perched upon the gate and gesticulating
+furiously. It was but a glimpse; again the whip was plied, the cob
+frantically broke into a gallop, the gig jolted and bumped and swerved,
+and it was not till they had put a good mile between themselves and the
+stout man that Kenelm succeeded in obtaining possession of the whip and
+calming the cob into a rational trot.
+
+“Young gentleman,” then said Kenelm, “perhaps you will have the goodness
+to explain.”
+
+“By and by; get on, that’s a good fellow; you shall be well paid for it,
+well and handsomely.”
+
+Quoth Kenelm, gravely, “I know that in real life payment and service
+naturally go together. But we will put aside the payment till you tell
+me what is to be the service. And first, whither am I to drive you? We
+are coming to a place where three roads meet; which of the three shall I
+take?”
+
+“Oh, I don’t know; there is a finger-post. I want to get to,--but it is
+a secret; you’ll not betray me? Promise,--swear.”
+
+“I don’t swear except when I am in a passion, which, I am sorry to say,
+is very seldom; and I don’t promise till I know what I promise; neither
+do I go on driving runaway boys in other men’s gigs unless I know that I
+am taking them to a safe place, where their papas and mammas can get at
+them.”
+
+“I have no papa, no mamma,” said the boy, dolefully and with quivering
+lips.
+
+“Poor boy! I suppose that burly brute is your schoolmaster, and you are
+running away home for fear of a flogging.”
+
+The boy burst out laughing; a pretty, silvery, merry laugh: it thrilled
+through Kenelm Chillingly. “No, he would not flog me: he is not a
+schoolmaster; he is worse than that.”
+
+“Is it possible? What is he?”
+
+“An uncle.”
+
+“Hum! uncles are proverbial for cruelty; were so in the classical days,
+and Richard III. was the only scholar in his family.”
+
+“Eh! classical and Richard III.!” said the boy, startled, and looking
+attentively at the pensive driver. “Who are you? you talk like a
+gentleman.”
+
+“I beg pardon. I’ll not do so again if I can help it.”--“Decidedly,”
+ thought Kenelm, “I am beginning to be amused. What a blessing it is to
+get into another man’s skin, and another man’s gig too!” Aloud, “Here
+we are at the fingerpost. If you are running away from your uncle, it is
+time to inform me where you are running to.”
+
+Here the boy leaned over the gig and examined the fingerpost. Then he
+clapped his hands joyfully.
+
+“All right! I thought so, ‘To Tor-Hadham, eighteen miles.’ That’s the
+road to Tor-Hadham.”
+
+“Do you mean to say I am to drive you all that way,--eighteen miles?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“And to whom are you going?”
+
+“I will tell you by and by. Do go on; do, pray. I can’t drive--never
+drove in my life--or I would not ask you. Pray, pray, don’t desert me!
+If you are a gentleman you will not; and if you are not a gentleman,
+I have got L10 in my purse, which you shall have when I am safe at
+Tor-Hadham. Don’t hesitate: my whole life is at stake!” And the boy
+began once more to sob.
+
+Kenelm directed the pony’s head towards Tor-Hadham, and the boy ceased
+to sob.
+
+“You are a good, dear fellow,” said the boy, wiping his eyes. “I am
+afraid I am taking you very much out of your road.”
+
+“I have no road in particular, and would as soon go to Tor-Hadham, which
+I have never seen, as anywhere else. I am but a wanderer on the face of
+the earth.”
+
+“Have you lost your papa and mamma too? Why, you are not much older than
+I am.”
+
+“Little gentleman,” said Kenelm, gravely, “I am just of age, and you, I
+suppose, are about fourteen.”
+
+“What fun!” cried the boy, abruptly. “Isn’t it fun?”
+
+“It will not be fun if I am sentenced to penal servitude for stealing
+your uncle’s gig, and robbing his little nephew of L10. By the by, that
+choleric relation of yours meant to knock down somebody else when he
+struck at me. He asked, ‘Are you the villain?’ Pray who is the villain?
+he is evidently in your confidence.”
+
+“Villain! he is the most honourable, high-minded--But no matter now:
+I’ll introduce you to him when we reach Tor-Hadham. Whip that pony: he
+is crawling.”
+
+“It is up hill: a good man spares his beast.”
+
+No art and no eloquence could extort from his young companion any
+further explanation than Kenelm had yet received; and indeed, as the
+journey advanced, and they approached their destination, both parties
+sank into silence. Kenelm was seriously considering that his first day’s
+experience of real life in the skin of another had placed in some peril
+his own. He had knocked down a man evidently respectable and well to do,
+had carried off that man’s nephew, and made free with that man’s goods
+and chattels; namely, his gig and horse. All this might be explained
+satisfactorily to a justice of the peace, but how? By returning to his
+former skin; by avowing himself to be Kenelm Chillingly, a distinguished
+university medalist, heir to no ignoble name and some L10,000 a year.
+But then what a scandal! he who abhorred scandal; in vulgar parlance,
+what a “row!” he who denied that the very word “row” was sanctioned
+by any classic authorities in the English language. He would have to
+explain how he came to be found disguised, carefully disguised, in
+garments such as no baronet’s eldest son--even though that baronet be
+the least ancestral man of mark whom it suits the convenience of a First
+Minister to recommend to the Sovereign for exaltation over the rank
+of Mister--was ever beheld in, unless he had taken flight to the
+gold-diggings. Was this a position in which the heir of the Chillinglys,
+a distinguished family, whose coat-of-arms dated from the earliest
+authenticated period of English heraldry under Edward III. as Three
+Fishes _azure_, could be placed without grievous slur on the cold and
+ancient blood of the Three Fishes?
+
+And then individually to himself, Kenelm, irrespectively of the Three
+Fishes,--what a humiliation! He had put aside his respected father’s
+deliberate preparations for his entrance into real life; he had
+perversely chosen his own walk on his own responsibility; and here,
+before half the first day was over, what an infernal scrape he had
+walked himself into! and what was his excuse? A wretched little boy,
+sobbing and chuckling by turns, and yet who was clever enough to twist
+Kenelm Chillingly round his finger; twist _him_, a man who thought
+himself so much wiser than his parents,--a man who had gained honours at
+the University,--a man of the gravest temperament,--a man of so nicely
+critical a turn of mind that there was not a law of art or nature in
+which he did not detect a flaw; that he should get himself into this
+mess was, to say the least of it, an uncomfortable reflection.
+
+The boy himself, as Kenelm glanced at him from time to time, became
+impish and Will-of-the-Wisp-ish. Sometimes he laughed to himself loudly,
+sometimes he wept to himself quietly; sometimes, neither laughing nor
+weeping, he seemed absorbed in reflection. Twice as they came nearer to
+the town of Tor-Hadham, Kenelm nudged the boy, and said, “My boy, I must
+talk with you;” and twice the boy, withdrawing his arm from the nudge,
+had answered dreamily, “Hush! I am thinking.”
+
+And so they entered the town of Tor-Hadham, the cob very much done up.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+“NOW, young sir,” said Kenelm, in a tone calm, but peremptory,--“now we
+are in the town, where am I to take you? and wherever it be, there to
+say good-by.”
+
+“No, not good-by. Stay with me a little bit. I begin to feel frightened,
+and I am so friendless;” and the boy, who had before resented the
+slightest nudge on the part of Kenelm, now wound his arm into Kenelm’s,
+and clung to him caressingly.
+
+I don’t know what my readers have hitherto thought of Kenelm Chillingly:
+but, amid all the curves and windings of his whimsical humour, there was
+one way that went straight to his heart; you had only to be weaker than
+himself and ask his protection.
+
+He turned round abruptly; he forgot all the strangeness of his position,
+and replied: “Little brute that you are, I’ll be shot if I forsake you
+if in trouble. But some compassion is also due to the cob: for his sake
+say where we are to stop.”
+
+“I am sure I can’t say: I never was here before. Let us go to a nice
+quiet inn. Drive slowly: we’ll look out for one.”
+
+Tor-Hadham was a large town, not nominally the capital of the county,
+but, in point of trade and bustle and life, virtually the capital. The
+straight street, through which the cob went as slowly as if he had
+been drawing a Triumphal Car up the Sacred Hill, presented an animated
+appearance. The shops had handsome facades and plate-glass windows;
+the pavements exhibited a lively concourse, evidently not merely of
+business, but of pleasure, for a large proportion of the passers-by was
+composed of the fair sex, smartly dressed, many of them young and some
+pretty. In fact a regiment of her Majesty’s -----th Hussars had been
+sent into the town two days before; and, between the officers of that
+fortunate regiment and the fair sex in that hospitable town, there was
+a natural emulation which should make the greater number of slain and
+wounded. The advent of these heroes, professional subtracters from
+hostile and multipliers of friendly populations, gave a stimulus to
+the caterers for those amusements which bring young folks
+together,--archery-meetings, rifle-shootings, concerts, balls, announced
+in bills attached to boards and walls and exposed at shop-windows.
+
+The boy looked eagerly forth from the gig, scanning especially these
+advertisements, till at length he uttered an excited exclamation, “Ah, I
+was right: there it is!”
+
+“There what is?” asked Kenelm,--“the inn?” His companion did not answer,
+but Kenelm following the boy’s eye perceived an immense hand-bill.
+
+
+ “TO-MORROW NIGHT THEATRE OPENS.
+
+ “RICHARD III. Mr. COMPTON.”
+
+
+“Do just ask where the theatre is,” said the boy, in a whisper, turning
+away his head.
+
+Kenelm stopped the cob, made the inquiry, and was directed to take the
+next turning to the right. In a few minutes the compo portico of an ugly
+dilapidated building, dedicated to the Dramatic Muses, presented itself
+at the angle of a dreary, deserted lane. The walls were placarded with
+play-bills, in which the name of Compton stood forth as gigantic as
+capitals could make it. The boy drew a sigh. “Now,” said he, “let us
+look out for an inn near here,--the nearest.”
+
+No inn, however, beyond the rank of a small and questionable looking
+public-house was apparent, until at a distance somewhat remote from the
+theatre, and in a quaint, old-fashioned, deserted square, a neat,
+newly whitewashed house displayed upon its frontispiece, in large black
+letters of funereal aspect, “Temperance Hotel.”
+
+“Stop,” said the boy; “don’t you think that would suit us? it looks
+quiet.”
+
+“Could not look more quiet if it were a tombstone,” replied Kenelm.
+
+The boy put his hand upon the reins and stopped the cob. The cob was in
+that condition that the slightest touch sufficed to stop him, though he
+turned his head somewhat ruefully as if in doubt whether hay and corn
+would be within the regulations of a Temperance Hotel. Kenelm descended
+and entered the house. A tidy woman emerged from a sort of glass
+cupboard which constituted the bar, minus the comforting drinks
+associated with the _beau ideal_ of a bar, but which displayed instead
+two large decanters of cold water with tumblers _a discretion_, and
+sundry plates of thin biscuits and sponge-cakes. This tidy woman
+politely inquired what was his “pleasure.”
+
+“Pleasure,” answered Kenelm, with his usual gravity, “is not the word I
+should myself have chosen. But could you oblige my horse--I mean _that_
+horse--with a stall and a feed of oats, and that young gentleman and
+myself with a private room and a dinner?”
+
+“Dinner!” echoed the hostess,--“dinner!”
+
+“A thousand pardons, ma’am. But if the word ‘dinner’ shock you I retract
+it, and would say instead something to eat and drink.’”
+
+“Drink! This is strictly a Temperance Hotel, sir.”
+
+“Oh, if you don’t eat and drink here,” exclaimed Kenelm, fiercely, for
+he was famished, “I wish you good morning.”
+
+“Stay a bit, sir. We do eat and drink here. But we are very simple
+folks. We allow no fermented liquors.”
+
+“Not even a glass of beer?”
+
+“Only ginger-beer. Alcohols are strictly forbidden. We have tea and
+coffee and milk. But most of our customers prefer the pure liquid. As
+for eating, sir,--anything you order, in reason.”
+
+Kenelm shook his head and was retreating, when the boy, who had sprung
+from the gig and overheard the conversation, cried petulantly, “What
+does it signify? Who wants fermented liquors? Water will do very well.
+And as for dinner,--anything convenient. Please, ma’am, show us into a
+private room: I am so tired.” The last words were said in a caressing
+manner, and so prettily, that the hostess at once changed her tone,
+and muttering, “Poor boy!” and, in a still more subdued mutter, “What
+a pretty face he has!” nodded, and led the way up a very clean
+old-fashioned staircase.
+
+“But the horse and gig, where are they to go?” said Kenelm, with a pang
+of conscience on reflecting how ill treated hitherto had been both horse
+and owner.
+
+“Oh, as for the horse and gig, sir, you will find Jukes’s livery-stables
+a few yards farther down. We don’t take in horses ourselves; our
+customers seldom keep them: but you will find the best of accommodation
+at Jukes’s.”
+
+Kenelm conducted the cob to the livery-stables thus indicated, and
+waited to see him walked about to cool, well rubbed down, and made
+comfortable over half a peck of oats,--for Kenelm Chillingly was a
+humane man to the brute creation,--and then, in a state of ravenous
+appetite, returned to the Temperance Hotel, and was ushered into a small
+drawing-room, with a small bit of carpet in the centre, six small chairs
+with cane seats, prints on the walls descriptive of the various
+effects of intoxicating liquors upon sundry specimens of mankind,--some
+resembling ghosts, others fiends, and all with a general aspect of
+beggary and perdition; contrasted by Happy-Family pictures,--smiling
+wives, portly husbands, rosy infants, emblematic of the beatified
+condition of members of the Temperance Society.
+
+A table with a spotless cloth, and knives and forks for two, chiefly,
+however, attracted Kenelm’s attention.
+
+The boy was standing by the window, seemingly gazing on a small aquarium
+which was there placed, and contained the usual variety of small fishes,
+reptiles, and insects, enjoying the pleasures of Temperance in its
+native element, including, of course, an occasional meal upon each
+other.
+
+“What are they going to give us to eat?” inquired Kenelm. “It must be
+ready by this time I should think.”
+
+Here he gave a brisk tug at the bell-pull. The boy advanced from
+the window, and as he did so Kenelm was struck with the grace of his
+bearing, and the improvement in his looks, now that he was without his
+hat, and rest and ablution had refreshed from heat and dust the delicate
+bloom of his complexion. There was no doubt about it that he was an
+exceedingly pretty boy, and if he lived to be a man would make many a
+lady’s heart ache. It was with a certain air of gracious superiority
+such as is seldom warranted by superior rank if it be less than royal,
+and chiefly becomes a marked seniority in years, that this young
+gentleman, approaching the solemn heir of the Chillinglys, held out his
+hand and said,--
+
+“Sir, you have behaved extremely well, and I thank you very much.”
+
+“Your Royal Highness is condescending to say so,” replied Kenelm
+Chillingly, bowing low, “but have you ordered dinner? and what are
+they going to give us? No one seems to answer the bell here. As it is a
+Temperance Hotel, probably all the servants are drunk.”
+
+“Why should they be drunk at a Temperance Hotel?”
+
+“Why! because, as a general rule, people who flagrantly pretend to
+anything are the reverse of that which they pretend to. A man who sets
+up for a saint is sure to be a sinner, and a man who boasts that he is a
+sinner is sure to have some feeble, maudlin, snivelling bit of saintship
+about him which is enough to make him a humbug. Masculine honesty,
+whether it be saint-like or sinner-like, does not label itself either
+saint or sinner. Fancy Saint Augustine labelling himself saint, or
+Robert Burns sinner; and therefore, though, little boy, you have
+probably not read the poems of Robert Burns, and have certainly not read
+the ‘Confessions’ of Saint Augustine, take my word for it, that both
+those personages were very good fellows; and with a little difference of
+training and experience, Burns might have written the ‘Confessions’ and
+Augustine the poems. Powers above! I am starving. What did you order for
+dinner, and when is it to appear?”
+
+The boy, who had opened to an enormous width a naturally large pair of
+hazel eyes, while his tall companion in fustian trousers and Belcher
+neckcloth spoke thus patronizingly of Robert Burns and Saint Augustine,
+now replied, with rather a deprecatory and shamefaced aspect, “I am
+sorry I was not thinking of dinner. I was not so mindful of you as I
+ought to have been. The landlady asked me what we would have. I said,
+‘What you like;’ and the landlady muttered something about--” here the
+boy hesitated.
+
+“Yes. About what? Mutton-chops?”
+
+“No. Cauliflowers and rice-pudding.”
+
+Kenelm Chillingly never swore, never raged. Where ruder beings of
+human mould swore or raged, he vented displeasure in an expression of
+countenance so pathetically melancholic and lugubrious that it would
+have melted the heart of an Hyrcanian tiger. He turned his countenance
+now on the boy, and murmuring “Cauliflower!--Starvation!” sank into
+one of the cane-bottomed chairs, and added quietly, “so much for human
+gratitude.”
+
+The boy was evidently smitten to the heart by the bitter sweetness
+of this reproach. There were almost tears in his voice, as he said
+falteringly, “Pray forgive me, I _was_ ungrateful. I’ll run down and see
+what there is;” and, suiting the action to the word, he disappeared.
+
+Kenelm remained motionless; in fact he was plunged into one of those
+reveries, or rather absorptions of inward and spiritual being, into
+which it is said that the consciousness of the Indian dervish can be by
+prolonged fasting preternaturally resolved. The appetite of all men
+of powerful muscular development is of a nature far exceeding the
+properties of any reasonable number of cauliflowers and rice-puddings
+to satisfy. Witness Hercules himself, whose cravings for substantial
+nourishment were the standing joke of the classic poets. I don’t know
+that Kenelm Chillingly would have beaten the Theban Hercules either in
+fighting or in eating; but, when he wanted to fight or when he wanted
+to eat, Hercules would have had to put forth all his strength not to be
+beaten.
+
+After ten minutes’ absence, the boy came back radiant. He tapped Kenelm
+on the shoulder, and said playfully, “I made them cut a whole loin into
+chops, besides the cauliflower; and such a big rice-pudding, and eggs
+and bacon too! Cheer up! it will be served in a minute.”
+
+“A-h!” said Kenelm.
+
+“They are good people; they did not mean to stint you: but most of their
+customers, it seems, live upon vegetables and farinaceous food. There
+is a society here formed upon that principle; the landlady says they are
+philosophers!”
+
+At the word “philosophers” Kenelm’s crest rose as that of a practised
+hunter at the cry of “Yoiks! Tally-ho!” “Philosophers!” said he,
+“philosophers indeed! O ignoramuses, who do not even know the structure
+of the human tooth! Look you, little boy, if nothing were left on this
+earth of the present race of man, as we are assured upon great authority
+will be the case one of these days,--and a mighty good riddance it will
+be,--if nothing, I say, of man were left except fossils of his teeth and
+his thumbs, a philosopher of that superior race which will succeed to
+man would at once see in those relics all his characteristics and all
+his history; would say, comparing his thumb with the talons of an eagle,
+the claws of a tiger, the hoof of a horse, the owner of that thumb must
+have been lord over creatures with talons and claws and hoofs. You may
+say the monkey tribe has thumbs. True; but compare an ape’s thumb with
+a man’s: could the biggest ape’s thumb have built Westminster Abbey? But
+even thumbs are trivial evidence of man as compared with his teeth.
+Look at his teeth!”--here Kenelm expanded his jaws from ear to ear
+and displayed semicircles of ivory, so perfect for the purposes of
+mastication that the most artistic dentist might have despaired of
+his power to imitate them,--“look, I say, at his teeth!” The
+boy involuntarily recoiled. “Are the teeth those of a miserable
+cauliflower-eater? or is it purely by farinaceous food that the
+proprietor of teeth like man’s obtains the rank of the sovereign
+destroyer of creation? No, little boy, no,” continued Kenelm, closing
+his jaws, but advancing upon the infant, who at each stride receded
+towards the aquarium,--“no; man is the master of the world, because
+of all created beings he devours the greatest variety and the greatest
+number of created things. His teeth evince that man can live upon every
+soil from the torrid to the frozen zone, because man can eat everything
+that other creatures cannot eat. And the formation of his teeth proves
+it. A tiger can eat a deer; so can man: but a tiger can’t eat an eel;
+man can. An elephant can eat cauliflowers and rice-pudding; so can man!
+but an elephant can’t eat a beefsteak; man can. In sum, man can
+live everywhere, because he can eat anything, thanks to his dental
+formation!” concluded Kenelm, making a prodigious stride towards the
+boy. “Man, when everything else fails him, eats his own species.”
+
+“Don’t; you frighten me,” said the boy. “Aha!” clapping his hands with a
+sensation of gleeful relief, “here come the mutton-chops!”
+
+A wonderfully clean, well-washed, indeed well-washed-out, middle-aged
+parlour-maid now appeared, dish in hand. Putting the dish on the table
+and taking off the cover, the handmaiden said civilly, though frigidly,
+like one who lived upon salad and cold water, “Mistress is sorry to have
+kept you waiting, but she thought you were Vegetarians.”
+
+After helping his young friend to a mutton-chop, Kenelm helped himself,
+and replied gravely, “Tell your mistress that if she had only given
+us vegetables, I should have eaten you. Tell her that though man is
+partially graminivorous, he is principally carnivorous. Tell her that
+though a swine eats cabbages and such like, yet where a swine can get
+a baby, it eats the baby. Tell her,” continued Kenelm (now at his third
+chop), “that there is no animal that in digestive organs more resembles
+man than a swine. Ask her if there is any baby in the house; if so, it
+would be safe for the baby to send up some more chops.”
+
+As the acutest observer could rarely be quite sure when Kenelm
+Chillingly was in jest or in earnest, the parlour-maid paused a moment
+and attempted a pale smile. Kenelm lifted his dark eyes, unspeakably sad
+and profound, and said mournfully, “I should be so sorry for the baby.
+Bring the chops!” The parlour-maid vanished. The boy laid down his
+knife and fork, and looked fixedly and inquisitively on Kenelm. Kenelm,
+unheeding the look, placed the last chop on the boy’s plate.
+
+“No more,” cried the boy, impulsively, and returned the chop to the
+dish. “I have dined: I have had enough.”
+
+“Little boy, you lie,” said Kenelm; “you have not had enough to keep
+body and soul together. Eat that chop or I shall thrash you: whatever I
+say I do.”
+
+Somehow or other the boy felt quelled; he ate the chop in silence, again
+looked at Kenelm’s face, and said to himself, “I am afraid.”
+
+The parlour-maid here entered with a fresh supply of chops and a dish of
+bacon and eggs, soon followed by a rice-pudding baked in a tin dish, and
+of size sufficient to have nourished a charity school. When the repast
+was finished, Kenelm seemed to forget the dangerous properties of the
+carnivorous animal; and stretching himself indolently out, appeared
+to be as innocently ruminative as the most domestic of animals
+graminivorous.
+
+Then said the boy, rather timidly, “May I ask you another favour?”
+
+“Is it to knock down another uncle, or to steal another gig and cob?”
+
+“No, it is very simple: it is merely to find out the address of a friend
+here; and when found to give him a note from me.”
+
+“Does the commission press? ‘After dinner, rest a while,’ saith the
+proverb; and proverbs are so wise that no one can guess the author
+of them. They are supposed to be fragments of the philosophy of the
+antediluvians: came to us packed up in the ark.”
+
+“Really, indeed,” said the boy, seriously. “How interesting! No, my
+commission does not press for an hour or so. Do you think, sir, they had
+any drama before the Deluge?”
+
+“Drama! not a doubt of it. Men who lived one or two thousand years had
+time to invent and improve everything; and a play could have had its
+natural length then. It would not have been necessary to crowd the
+whole history of Macbeth, from his youth to his old age, into an absurd
+epitome of three hours. One cannot trace a touch of real human nature in
+any actor’s delineation of that very interesting Scotchman, because
+the actor always comes on the stage as if he were the same age when he
+murdered Duncan, and when, in his sear and yellow leaf, he was lopped
+off by Macduff.”
+
+“Do you think Macbeth was young when he murdered Duncan?”
+
+“Certainly. No man ever commits a first crime of violent nature, such as
+murder, after thirty; if he begins before, he may go on up to any age.
+But youth is the season for commencing those wrong calculations which
+belong to irrational hope and the sense of physical power. You thus
+read in the newspapers that the persons who murder their sweethearts are
+generally from two to six and twenty; and persons who murder from other
+motives than love--that is, from revenge, avarice, or ambition--are
+generally about twenty-eight,--Iago’s age. Twenty-eight is the usual
+close of the active season for getting rid of one’s fellow-creatures; a
+prize-fighter falls off after that age. I take it that Macbeth was about
+twenty-eight when he murdered Duncan, and from about fifty-four to sixty
+when he began to whine about missing the comforts of old age. But
+can any audience understand that difference of years in seeing a
+three-hours’ play? or does any actor ever pretend to impress it on the
+audience, and appear as twenty-eight in the first act and a sexagenarian
+in the fifth?”
+
+“I never thought of that,” said the boy, evidently interested. “But I
+never saw ‘Macbeth.’ I have seen ‘Richard III.:’ is not that nice? Don’t
+you dote on the play? I do. What a glorious life an actor’s must be!”
+
+Kenelm, who had been hitherto rather talking to himself than to his
+youthful companion, here roused his attention, looked on the boy
+intently, and said,--
+
+“I see you are stage-stricken. You have run away from home in order to
+turn player, and I should not wonder if this note you want me to give is
+for the manager of the theatre or one of his company.”
+
+The young face that encountered Kenelm’s dark eye became very flushed,
+but set and defiant in its expression.
+
+“And what if it were? would not you give it?”
+
+“What! help a child of your age run away from his home, to go upon the
+stage against the consent of his relations? Certainly not.”
+
+“I am not a child; but that has nothing to do with it. I don’t want to
+go on the stage, at all events without the consent of the person who
+has a right to dictate my actions. My note is not to the manager of
+the theatre, nor to one of his company; but it is to a gentleman who
+condescends to act here for a few nights; a thorough gentleman,--a great
+actor,--my friend, the only friend I have in the world. I say frankly I
+have run away from home so that he may have that note, and if you will
+not give it some one else will!”
+
+The boy had risen while he spoke, and he stood erect beside the
+recumbent Kenelm, his lips quivering, his eyes suffused with suppressed
+tears, but his whole aspect resolute and determined. Evidently, if he
+did not get his own way in this world, it would not be for want of will.
+
+“I will take your note,” said Kenelm.
+
+“There it is; give it into the hands of the person it is addressed
+to,--Mr. Herbert Compton.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+KENELM took his way to the theatre, and inquired of the door-keeper for
+Mr. Herbert Compton. That functionary replied, “Mr. Compton does not act
+to-night, and is not in the house.”
+
+“Where does he lodge?”
+
+The door-keeper pointed to a grocer’s shop on the other side of the way,
+and said tersely, “There, private door; knock and ring.”
+
+Kenelm did as he was directed. A slatternly maid-servant opened the
+door, and, in answer to his interrogatory, said that Mr. Compton was at
+home, but at supper.
+
+“I am sorry to disturb him,” said Kenelm, raising his voice, for he
+heard a clatter of knives and plates within a room hard by at his left,
+“but my business requires to see him forthwith;” and, pushing the maid
+aside, he entered at once the adjoining banquet-hall.
+
+Before a savoury stew smelling strongly of onions sat a man very much at
+his ease, without coat or neckcloth,--a decidedly handsome man, his hair
+cut short and his face closely shaven, as befits an actor who has wigs
+and beards of all hues and forms at his command. The man was not alone;
+opposite to him sat a lady, who might be a few years younger, of a
+somewhat faded complexion, but still pretty, with good stage features
+and a profusion of blond ringlets.
+
+“Mr. Compton, I presume,” said Kenelm, with a solemn bow.
+
+“My name is Compton: any message from the theatre? or what do you want
+with me?”
+
+“I--nothing!” replied Kenelm; and then deepening his naturally mournful
+voice into tones ominous and tragic, continued, “By whom you are wanted
+let this explain;” therewith he placed in Mr. Compton’s hand the letter
+with which he was charged, and stretching his arms and interlacing his
+fingers in the _pose_ of Talma as Julius Caesar, added, “‘Qu’en dis-tu,
+Brute?’”
+
+Whether it was from the sombre aspect and awe-inspiring delivery of
+the messenger, or the sight of the handwriting on the address of the
+missive, Mr. Compton’s countenance suddenly fell, and his hand rested
+irresolute, as if not daring to open the letter.
+
+“Never mind me, dear,” said the lady with blond ringlets, in a tone of
+stinging affability: “read your _billet-doux_; don’t keep the young man
+waiting, love!”
+
+“Nonsense, Matilda, nonsense! _billet-doux_ indeed! more likely a bill
+from Duke the tailor. Excuse me for a moment, my dear. Follow me, sir,”
+ and rising, still with shirtsleeves uncovered, he quitted the room,
+closing the door after him, motioned Kenelm into a small parlour on the
+opposite side of the passage, and by the light of a suspended gas-lamp
+ran his eye hastily over the letter, which, though it seemed very short,
+drew from him sundry exclamations. “Good heavens, how very absurd!
+what’s to be done?” Then, thrusting the letter into his trousers-pocket,
+he fixed upon Kenelm a very brilliant pair of dark eyes, which soon
+dropped before the steadfast look of that saturnine adventurer.
+
+“Are you in the confidence of the writer of this letter?” asked Mr.
+Compton, rather confusedly.
+
+“I am not the confidant of the writer,” answered Kenelm, “but for the
+time being I am the protector!”
+
+“Protector!”
+
+“Protector.”
+
+Mr. Compton again eyed the messenger, and this time fully realizing the
+gladiatorial development of that dark stranger’s physical form, he grew
+many shades paler, and involuntarily retreated towards the bell-pull.
+
+After a short pause, he said, “I am requested to call on the writer. If
+I do so, may I understand that the interview will be strictly private?”
+
+“So far as I am concerned, yes: on the condition that no attempt be made
+to withdraw the writer from the house.”
+
+“Certainly not, certainly not; quite the contrary,” exclaimed Mr.
+Compton, with genuine animation. “Say I will call in half an hour.”
+
+“I will give your message,” said Kenelm, with a polite inclination of
+his head; “and pray pardon me if I remind you that I styled myself the
+protector of your correspondent, and if the slightest advantage be
+taken of that correspondent’s youth and inexperience or the smallest
+encouragement be given to plans of abduction from home and friends, the
+stage will lose an ornament and Herbert Compton vanish from the scene.”
+ With these words Kenelm left the player standing aghast. Gaining the
+street-door, a lad with a band-box ran against him and was nearly upset.
+
+“Stupid,” cried the lad, “can’t you see where you are going? Give this
+to Mrs. Compton.”
+
+“I should deserve the title you give if I did for nothing the business
+for which you are paid,” replied Kenelm, sententiously, and striding on.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+“I HAVE fulfilled my mission,” said Kenelm, on rejoining his travelling
+companion. “Mr. Compton said he would be here in half an hour.”
+
+“You saw him?”
+
+“Of course: I promised to give your letter into his own hands.”
+
+“Was he alone?”
+
+“No; at supper with his wife.”
+
+“His wife! what do you mean, sir?--wife! he has no wife.”
+
+“Appearances are deceitful. At least he was with a lady who called him
+‘dear’ and ‘love’ in as spiteful a tone of voice as if she had been his
+wife; and as I was coming out of his street-door a lad who ran against
+me asked me to give a band-box to Mrs. Compton.”
+
+The boy turned as white as death, staggered back a few steps, and
+dropped into a chair.
+
+A suspicion which during his absence had suggested itself to Kenelm’s
+inquiring mind now took strong confirmation. He approached softly, drew
+a chair close to the companion whom fate had forced upon him, and said
+in a gentle whisper,--
+
+“This is no boy’s agitation. If you have been deceived or misled, and
+I can in any way advise or aid you, count on me as women under the
+circumstances count on men and gentlemen.”
+
+The boy started to his feet, and paced the room with disordered steps,
+and a countenance working with passions which he attempted vainly to
+suppress. Suddenly arresting his steps, he seized Kenelm’s hand, pressed
+it convulsively, and said, in a voice struggling against a sob,--
+
+“I thank you,--I bless you. Leave me now: I would be alone. Alone, too,
+I must face this man. There may be some mistake yet; go.”
+
+“You will promise not to leave the house till I return?”
+
+“Yes, I promise that.”
+
+“And if it be as I fear, you will then let me counsel with and advise
+you?”
+
+“Heaven help me, if so! Whom else should I trust to? Go, go!”
+
+Kenelm once more found himself in the streets, beneath the mingled light
+of gas-lamps and the midsummer moon. He walked on mechanically till he
+reached the extremity of the town. There he halted, and seating himself
+on a milestone, indulged in these meditations:--
+
+“Kenelm, my friend, you are in a still worse scrape than I thought you
+were an hour ago. You have evidently now got a woman on your hands. What
+on earth are you to do with her? A runaway woman, who, meaning to run
+off with somebody else--such are the crosses and contradictions in human
+destiny--has run off with you instead. What mortal can hope to be safe?
+The last thing I thought could befall me when I got up this morning was
+that I should have any trouble about the other sex before the day was
+over. If I were of an amatory temperament, the Fates might have some
+justification for leading me into this snare, but, as it is, those
+meddling old maids have none. Kenelm, my friend, do you think you ever
+can be in love? and, if you were in love, do you think you could be a
+greater fool than you are now?”
+
+Kenelm had not decided this knotty question in the conference held with
+himself, when a light and soft strain of music came upon his ear. It was
+but from a stringed instrument, and might have sounded thin and tinkling
+but for the stillness of the night, and that peculiar addition of
+fulness which music acquires when it is borne along a tranquil air.
+Presently a voice in song was heard from the distance accompanying
+the instrument. It was a man’s voice, a mellow and a rich voice, but
+Kenelm’s ear could not catch the words. Mechanically he moved on towards
+the quarter from which the sounds came, for Kenelm Chillingly had music
+in his soul, though he was not quite aware of it himself. He saw before
+him a patch of greensward, on which grew a solitary elm with a seat
+for wayfarers beneath it. From this sward the ground receded in a wide
+semicircle bordered partly by shops, partly by the tea-gardens of a
+pretty cottage-like tavern. Round the tables scattered throughout the
+gardens were grouped quiet customers, evidently belonging to the class
+of small tradespeople or superior artisans. They had an appearance of
+decorous respectability, and were listening intently to the music. So
+were many persons at the shop-doors and at the windows of upper rooms.
+On the sward, a little in advance of the tree, but beneath its shadow,
+stood the musician, and in that musician Kenelm recognized the wanderer
+from whose talk he had conceived the idea of the pedestrian excursion
+which had already brought him into a very awkward position. The
+instrument on which the singer accompanied himself was a guitar, and his
+song was evidently a love-song, though, as it was now drawing near to
+its close, Kenelm could but imperfectly guess at its general meaning.
+He heard enough to perceive that its words were at least free from the
+vulgarity which generally characterizes street ballads, and were yet
+simple enough to please a very homely audience.
+
+When the singer ended there was no applause; but there was evident
+sensation among the audience,--a feeling as if something that had given
+a common enjoyment had ceased. Presently the white Pomeranian dog, who
+had hitherto kept himself out of sight under the seat of the elm-tree,
+advanced, with a small metal tray between his teeth, and, after looking
+round him deliberately, as if to select whom of the audience should
+be honoured with the commencement of a general subscription, gravely
+approached Kenelm, stood on his hind legs, stared at him, and presented
+the tray.
+
+Kenelm dropped a shilling into that depository, and the dog, looking
+gratified, took his way towards the tea-gardens. Lifting his hat, for he
+was, in his way, a very polite man, Kenelm approached the singer, and,
+trusting to the alteration in his dress for not being recognized by a
+stranger who had only once before encountered him he said,--
+
+“Judging by the little I heard, you sing very well, sir. May I ask who
+composed the words?”
+
+“They are mine,” replied the singer.
+
+“And the air?”
+
+“Mine too.”
+
+“Accept my compliments. I hope you find these manifestations of genius
+lucrative?”
+
+The singer, who had not hitherto vouchsafed more than a careless glance
+at the rustic garb of the questioner, now fixed his eyes full upon
+Kenelm, and said, with a smile, “Your voice betrays you, sir. We have
+met before.”
+
+“True; but I did not then notice your guitar, nor, though acquainted
+with your poetical gifts, suppose that you selected this primitive
+method of making them publicly known.”
+
+“Nor did I anticipate the pleasure of meeting you again in the character
+of Hobnail. Hist! let us keep each other’s secret. I am known hereabouts
+by no other designation than that of the ‘Wandering Minstrel.’”
+
+“It is in the capacity of minstrel that I address you. If it be not an
+impertinent question, do you know any songs which take the other side of
+the case?”
+
+“What case? I don’t understand you, sir.”
+
+“The song I heard seemed in praise of that sham called love. Don’t you
+think you could say something more new and more true, treating that
+aberration from reason with the contempt it deserves?”
+
+“Not if I am to get my travelling expenses paid.”
+
+“What! the folly is so popular?”
+
+“Does not your own heart tell you so?”
+
+“Not a bit of it,--rather the contrary. Your audience at present
+seem folks who live by work, and can have little time for such idle
+phantasies; for, as it is well observed by Ovid, a poet who wrote much
+on that subject, and professed the most intimate acquaintance with it,
+‘Idleness is the parent of love.’ Can’t you sing something in praise of
+a good dinner? Everybody who works hard has an appetite for food.”
+
+The singer again fixed on Kenelm his inquiring eye, but not detecting a
+vestige of humour in the grave face he contemplated, was rather puzzled
+how to reply, and therefore remained silent.
+
+“I perceive,” resumed Kenelm, “that my observations surprise you: the
+surprise will vanish on reflection. It has been said by another poet,
+more reflective than Ovid, that ‘the world is governed by love and
+hunger.’ But hunger certainly has the lion’s share of the government;
+and if a poet is really to do what he pretends to do,--namely, represent
+nature,--the greater part of his lays should be addressed to the
+stomach.” Here, warming with his subject, Kenelm familiarly laid his
+hand on the musician’s shoulder, and his voice took a tone bordering on
+enthusiasm. “You will allow that a man in the normal condition of health
+does not fall in love every day. But in the normal condition of health
+he is hungry every day. Nay, in those early years when you poets say he
+is most prone to love, he is so especially disposed to hunger that
+less than three meals a day can scarcely satisfy his appetite. You may
+imprison a man for months, for years, nay, for his whole life,--from
+infancy to any age which Sir Cornewall Lewis may allow him to
+attain,--without letting him be in love at all. But if you shut him up
+for a week without putting something into his stomach, you will find him
+at the end of it as dead as a door-nail.”
+
+Here the singer, who had gradually retreated before the energetic
+advance of the orator, sank into the seat by the elm-tree and said
+pathetically, “Sir, you have fairly argued me down. Will you please to
+come to the conclusion which you deduce from your premises?”
+
+“Simply this, that where you find one human being who cares about love,
+you will find a thousand susceptible to the charms of a dinner; and if
+you wish to be the popular minne-singer or troubadour of the age, appeal
+to nature, sir,--appeal to nature; drop all hackneyed rhapsodies about a
+rosy cheek, and strike your lyre to the theme of a beefsteak.”
+
+The dog had for some minutes regained his master’s side, standing on
+his hind legs, with the tray, tolerably well filled with copper coins,
+between his teeth; and now, justly aggrieved by the inattention which
+detained him in that artificial attitude, dropped the tray and growled
+at Kenelm.
+
+At the same time there came an impatient sound from the audience in the
+tea-garden. They wanted another song for their money.
+
+The singer rose, obedient to the summons. “Excuse me, sir; but I am
+called upon to--”
+
+“To sing again?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“And on the subject I suggest?”
+
+“No, indeed.”
+
+“What! love, again?”
+
+“I am afraid so.”
+
+“I wish you good evening then. You seem a well-educated man,--more shame
+to you. Perhaps we may meet once more in our rambles, when the question
+can be properly argued out.”
+
+Kenelm lifted his hat, and turned on his heel. Before he reached the
+street, the sweet voice of the singer again smote his ears; but the only
+word distinguishable in the distance, ringing out at the close of the
+refrain, was “love.”
+
+“Fiddle-de-dee,” said Kenelm.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+AS Kenelm regained the street dignified by the edifice of the Temperance
+Hotel, a figure, dressed picturesquely in a Spanish cloak, brushed
+hurriedly by him, but not so fast as to be unrecognized as the
+tragedian. “Hem!” muttered Kenelm, “I don’t think there is much triumph
+in that face. I suspect he has been scolded.”
+
+The boy--if Kenelm’s travelling companion is still to be so
+designated--was leaning against the mantelpiece as Kenelm re-entered
+the dining-room. There was an air of profound dejection about the boy’s
+listless attitude and in the drooping tearless eyes.
+
+“My dear child,” said Kenelm, in the softest tones of his plaintive
+voice, “do not honour me with any confidence that may be painful. But
+let me hope that you have dismissed forever all thoughts of going on the
+stage.”
+
+“Yes,” was the scarce audible answer.
+
+“And now only remains the question, ‘What is to be done?’”
+
+“I am sure I don’t know, and I don’t care.”
+
+“Then you leave it to me to know and to care; and assuming for the
+moment as a fact that which is one of the greatest lies in this
+mendacious world--namely, that all men are brothers--you will consider
+me as an elder brother, who will counsel and control you as he would
+an imprudent young--sister. I see very well how it is. Somehow or other
+you, having first admired Mr. Compton as Romeo or Richard III., made his
+acquaintance as Mr. Compton. He allowed you to believe him a single
+man. In a romantic moment you escaped from your home, with the design of
+adopting the profession of the stage and of becoming Mrs. Compton.”
+
+“Oh,” broke out the girl, since her sex must now be declared, “oh,” she
+exclaimed, with a passionate sob, “what a fool I have been! Only do not
+think worse of me than I deserve. The man did deceive me; he did not
+think I should take him at his word, and follow him here, or his wife
+would not have appeared. I should not have known he had one and--and--”
+ here her voice was choked under her passion.
+
+“But now you have discovered the truth, let us thank Heaven that you are
+saved from shame and misery. I must despatch a telegram to your uncle:
+give me his address.”
+
+“No, no.”
+
+“There is not a ‘No’ possible in this case, my child. Your reputation
+and your future must be saved. Leave me to explain all to your uncle.
+He is your guardian. I must send for him; nay, nay, there is no option.
+Hate me now for enforcing your will: you will thank me hereafter. And
+listen, young lady; if it does pain you to see your uncle, and encounter
+his reproaches, every fault must undergo its punishment. A brave nature
+undergoes it cheerfully, as a part of atonement. You are brave. Submit,
+and in submitting rejoice!”
+
+There was something in Kenelm’s voice and manner at once so kindly and
+so commanding that the wayward nature he addressed fairly succumbed.
+She gave him her uncle’s address, “John Bovill, Esq., Oakdale, near
+Westmere.” And after giving it, she fixed her eyes mournfully upon her
+young adviser, and said with a simple, dreary pathos, “Now, will you
+esteem me more, or rather despise me less?”
+
+She looked so young, nay, so childlike, as she thus spoke, that Kenelm
+felt a parental inclination to draw her on his lap and kiss away
+her tears. But he prudently conquered that impulse, and said, with a
+melancholy half-smile,--
+
+“If human beings despise each other for being young and foolish, the
+sooner we are exterminated by that superior race which is to succeed us
+on earth the better it will be. Adieu, till your uncle comes.”
+
+“What! you leave me here--alone?”
+
+“Nay, if your uncle found me under the same roof, now that I know you
+are his niece, don’t you think he would have a right to throw me out
+of the window? Allow me to practise for myself the prudence I preach
+to you. Send for the landlady to show you your room, shut yourself in
+there, go to bed, and don’t cry more than you can help.”
+
+Kenelm shouldered the knapsack he had deposited in a corner of the room,
+inquired for the telegraph-office, despatched a telegram to Mr. Bovill,
+obtained a bedroom at the Commercial Hotel, and fell asleep, muttering
+these sensible words,--
+
+“Rouchefoucauld was perfectly right when he said, ‘Very few people would
+fall in love if they had not heard it so much talked about.’”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY rose with the sun, according to his usual custom, and
+took his way to the Temperance Hotel. All in that sober building seemed
+still in the arms of Morpheus. He turned towards the stables in which he
+had left the gray cob, and had the pleasure to see that ill-used animal
+in the healthful process of rubbing down.
+
+“That’s right,” said he to the hostler. “I am glad to see you are so
+early a riser.”
+
+“Why,” quoth the hostler, “the gentleman as owns the pony knocked me
+up at two o’clock in the morning, and pleased enough he was to see the
+creature again lying down in the clean straw.”
+
+“Oh, he has arrived at the hotel, I presume?--a stout gentleman?”
+
+“Yes, stout enough; and a passionate gentleman too. Came in a yellow and
+two posters, knocked up the Temperance and then knocked up me to see
+for the pony, and was much put out as he could not get any grog at the
+Temperance.”
+
+“I dare say he was. I wish he had got his grog: it might have put him in
+better humour. Poor little thing!” muttered Kenelm, turning away; “I am
+afraid she is in for a regular vituperation. My turn next, I suppose.
+But he must be a good fellow to have come at once for his niece in the
+dead of the night.”
+
+About nine o’clock Kenelm presented himself again at the Temperance
+Hotel, inquired for Mr. Bovill, and was shown by the prim maid-servant
+into the drawing-room, where he found Mr. Bovill seated amicably at
+breakfast with his niece, who of course was still in boy’s clothing,
+having no other costume at hand. To Kenelm’s great relief, Mr. Bovill
+rose from the table with a beaming countenance, and extending his hand
+to Kenelm, said,--
+
+“Sir, you are a gentleman; sit down, sit down and take breakfast.”
+
+Then, as soon as the maid was out of the room, the uncle continued,--
+
+“I have heard all your good conduct from this young simpleton. Things
+might have been worse, sir.”
+
+Kenelm bowed his head, and drew the loaf towards him in silence. Then,
+considering that some apology was due to his entertainer, he said,--
+
+“I hope you forgive me for that unfortunate mistake, when--”
+
+“You knocked me down, or rather tripped me up. All right now. Elsie,
+give the gentleman a cup of tea. Pretty little rogue, is she not? and a
+good girl, in spite of her nonsense. It was all my fault letting her go
+to the play and be intimate with Miss Lockit, a stage-stricken, foolish
+old maid, who ought to have known better than to lead her into all this
+trouble.”
+
+“No, uncle,” cried the girl, resolutely; “don’t blame her, nor any one
+but me.”
+
+Kenelm turned his dark eyes approvingly towards the girl, and saw that
+her lips were firmly set; there was an expression, not of grief nor
+shame, but compressed resolution in her countenance. But when her eyes
+met his they fell softly, and a blush mantled over her cheeks up to her
+very forehead.
+
+“Ah!” said the uncle, “just like you, Elsie; always ready to take
+everybody’s fault on your own shoulders. Well, well, say no more about
+that. Now, my young friend, what brings you across the country tramping
+it on foot, eh? a young man’s whim?” As he spoke, he eyed Kenelm very
+closely, and his look was that of an intelligent man not unaccustomed to
+observe the faces of those he conversed with. In fact a more shrewd man
+of business than Mr. Bovill is seldom met with on ‘Change or in market.
+
+“I travel on foot to please myself, sir,” answered Kenelm, curtly, and
+unconsciously set on his guard.
+
+“Of course you do,” cried Mr. Bovill, with a jovial laugh. “But it seems
+you don’t object to a chaise and pony whenever you can get them for
+nothing,--ha, ha!--excuse me,--a joke.”
+
+Herewith Mr. Bovill, still in excellent good-humour, abruptly changed
+the conversation to general matters,--agricultural prospects, chance of
+a good harvest, corn trade, money market in general, politics, state of
+the nation. Kenelm felt there was an attempt to draw him out, to sound,
+to pump him, and replied only by monosyllables, generally significant
+of ignorance on the questions broached; and at the close, if the
+philosophical heir of the Chillinglys was in the habit of allowing
+himself to be surprised he would certainly have been startled when Mr.
+Bovill rose, slapped him on the shoulder, and said in a tone of great
+satisfaction, “Just as I thought, sir; you know nothing of these
+matters: you are a gentleman born and bred; your clothes can’t disguise
+you, sir. Elsie was right. My dear, just leave us for a few minutes: I
+have something to say to our young friend. You can get ready meanwhile
+to go with me.” Elsie left the table and walked obediently towards the
+doorway. There she halted a moment, turned round, and looked timidly
+towards Kenelm. He had naturally risen from his seat as she rose, and
+advanced some paces as if to open the door for her. Thus their looks
+encountered. He could not interpret that shy gaze of hers: it was
+tender, it was deprecating, it was humble, it was pleading; a man
+accustomed to female conquests might have thought it was something more,
+something in which was the key to all. But that something more was an
+unknown tongue to Kenelm Chillingly.
+
+When the two men were alone, Mr. Bovill reseated himself and motioned to
+Kenelm to do the same. “Now, young sir,” said the former, “you and I can
+talk at our ease. That adventure of yours yesterday may be the luckiest
+thing that could happen to you.”
+
+“It is sufficiently lucky if I have been of any service to your niece.
+But her own good sense would have been her safeguard if she had been
+alone, and discovered, as she would have done, that Mr. Compton had,
+knowingly or not, misled her to believe that he was a single man.”
+
+“Hang Mr. Compton! we have done with him. I am a plain man, and I come
+to the point. It is you who have carried off my niece; it is with you
+that she came to this hotel. Now when Elsie told me how well you
+had behaved, and that your language and manners were those of a real
+gentleman, my mind was made up. I guess pretty well what you are; you
+are a gentleman’s son; probably a college youth; not overburdened with
+cash; had a quarrel with your governor, and he keeps you short. Don’t
+interrupt me. Well, Elsie is a good girl and a pretty girl, and will
+make a good wife, as wives go; and, hark ye, she has L20,000. So just
+confide in me; and if you don’t like your parents to know about it till
+the thing’s done and they be only got to forgive and bless you, why, you
+shall marry Elsie before you can say Jack Robinson.”
+
+For the first time in his life Kenelm Chillingly was seized with
+terror,--terror and consternation. His jaw dropped; his tongue was
+palsied. If hair ever stands on end, his hair did. At last, with
+superhuman effort, he gasped out the word, “Marry!”
+
+“Yes; marry. If you are a gentleman you are bound to it. You have
+compromised my niece,--a respectable, virtuous girl, sir; an orphan, but
+not unprotected. I repeat, it is you who have plucked her from my very
+arms, and with violence and assault eloped with her; and what would the
+world say if it knew? Would it believe in your prudent conduct?--conduct
+only to be explained by the respect you felt due to your future wife.
+And where will you find a better? Where will you find an uncle who will
+part with his ward and L20,000 without asking if you have a sixpence?
+and the girl has taken a fancy to you; I see it: would she have given up
+that player so easily if you had not stolen her heart? Would you break
+that heart? No, young man: you are not a villain. Shake hands on it!”
+
+“Mr. Bovill,” said Kenelm, recovering his wonted equanimity, “I am
+inexpressibly flattered by the honour you propose to me, and I do not
+deny that Miss Elsie is worthy of a much better man than myself. But
+I have inconceivable prejudices against the connubial state. If it be
+permitted to a member of the Established Church to cavil at any sentence
+written by Saint Paul,--and I think that liberty may be permitted to a
+simple layman, since eminent members of the clergy criticise the whole
+Bible as freely as if it were the history of Queen Elizabeth by Mr.
+Froude,--I should demur at the doctrine that it is better to marry than
+to burn: I myself should prefer burning. With these sentiments it would
+ill become any one entitled to that distinction of ‘gentleman’ which you
+confer on me to lead a fellow-victim to the sacrificial altar. As for
+any reproach attached to Miss Elsie, since in my telegram I directed you
+to ask for a young gentleman at this hotel, her very sex is not known in
+this place unless you divulge it. And--”
+
+Here Kenelm was interrupted by a violent explosion of rage from the
+uncle. He stamped his feet; he almost foamed at the mouth; he doubled
+his fist, and shook it in Kenelm’s face.
+
+“Sir, you are mocking me: John Bovill is not a man to be jeered in this
+way. You _shall_ marry the girl. I’ll not have her thrust back upon me
+to be the plague of my life with her whims and tantrums. You have taken
+her, and you shall keep her, or I’ll break every bone in your skin.”
+
+“Break them,” said Kenelm, resignedly, but at the same time falling back
+into a formidable attitude of defence, which cooled the pugnacity of his
+accuser. Mr. Bovill sank into his chair, and wiped his forehead. Kenelm
+craftily pursued the advantage he had gained, and in mild accents
+proceeded to reason,--
+
+“When you recover your habitual serenity of humour, Mr. Bovill, you
+will see how much your very excusable desire to secure your niece’s
+happiness, and, I may add, to reward what you allow to have been
+forbearing and well-bred conduct on my part, has hurried you into an
+error of judgment. You know nothing of me. I may be, for what you know,
+an impostor or swindler; I may have every bad quality, and yet you are
+to be contented with my assurance, or rather your own assumption, that
+I am born a gentleman, in order to give me your niece and her L20,000.
+This is temporary insanity on your part. Allow me to leave you to
+recover from your excitement.”
+
+“Stop, sir,” said Mr. Bovill, in a changed and sullen tone; “I am not
+quite the madman you think me. But I dare say I have been too hasty and
+too rough. Nevertheless the facts are as I have stated them, and I do
+not see how, as a man of honour, you can get off marrying my niece. The
+mistake you made in running away with her was, no doubt, innocent on
+your part: but still there it is; and supposing the case came before a
+jury, it would be an ugly one for you and your family. Marriage alone
+could mend it. Come, come, I own I was too business-like in rushing to
+the point at once, and I no longer say, ‘Marry my niece off-hand.’ You
+have only seen her disguised and in a false position. Pay me a visit at
+Oakdale; stay with me a month; and if at the end of that time you do not
+like her well enough to propose, I’ll let you off and say no more about
+it.”
+
+While Mr. Bovill thus spoke, and Kenelm listened, neither saw that the
+door had been noiselessly opened and that Elsie stood at the threshold.
+Now, before Kenelm could reply, she advanced into the middle of the
+room, and, her small figure drawn up to its fullest height, her cheeks
+glowing, her lips quivering, exclaimed,--
+
+“Uncle, for shame!” Then addressing Kenelm in a sharp tone of anguish,
+“Oh, do not believe I knew anything of this!” she covered her face with
+both hands and stood mute.
+
+All of chivalry that Kenelm had received with his baptismal appellation
+was aroused. He sprang up, and, bending his knee as he drew one of her
+hands into his own, he said,--
+
+“I am as convinced that your uncle’s words are abhorrent to you as I am
+that you are a pure-hearted and high-spirited woman, of whose friendship
+I shall be proud. We meet again.” Then releasing her hand, he addressed
+Mr. Bovill: “Sir, you are unworthy the charge of your niece. Had you not
+been so, she would have committed no imprudence. If she have any female
+relation, to that relation transfer your charge.”
+
+“I have! I have!” cried Elsie; “my lost mother’s sister: let me go to
+her.”
+
+“The woman who keeps a school!” said Mr. Bovill sneeringly.
+
+“Why not?” asked Kenelm.
+
+“She never would go there. I proposed it to her a year ago. The minx
+would not go into a school.”
+
+“I will now, Uncle.”
+
+“Well, then, you shall at once; and I hope you’ll be put on bread and
+water. Fool! fool! you have spoilt your own game. Mr. Chillingly, now
+that Miss Elsie has turned her back on herself, I can convince you that
+I am not the mad man you thought me. I was at the festive meeting held
+when you came of age: my brother is one of your father’s tenants. I did
+not recognize your face immediately in the excitement of our encounter
+and in your change of dress; but in walking home it struck me that I had
+seen it before, and I knew it at once when you entered the room to-day.
+It has been a tussle between us which should beat the other. You have
+beat me; and thanks to that idiot! If she had not put her spoke into my
+wheel, she would have lived to be ‘my lady.’ Now good-day, sir.”
+
+“Mr. Bovill, you offered to shake hands: shake hands now, and promise
+me, with the good grace of one honourable combatant to another, that
+Miss Elsie shall go to her aunt the schoolmistress at once if she wishes
+it. Hark ye, my friend” (this in Mr. Bovill’s ear): “a man can never
+manage a woman. Till a woman marries, a prudent man leaves her to women;
+when she does marry, she manages her husband, and there’s an end of it.”
+
+Kenelm was gone.
+
+“Oh, wise young man!” murmured the uncle. “Elsie, dear, how can you go
+to your aunt’s while you are in that dress?”
+
+Elsie started as from a trance, her eyes directed towards the
+doorway through which Kenelm had vanished. “This dress,” she said
+contemptuously, “this dress; is not that easily altered with shops in
+the town?”
+
+“Gad!” muttered Mr. Bovill, “that youngster is a second Solomon; and if
+I can’t manage Elsie, she’ll manage a husband--whenever she gets one.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+“BY the powers that guard innocence and celibacy,” soliloquized Kenelm
+Chillingly, “but I have had a narrow escape! and had that amphibious
+creature been in girl’s clothes instead of boy’s, when she intervened
+like the deity of the ancient drama, I might have plunged my armorial
+Fishes into hot water. Though, indeed, it is hard to suppose that a
+young lady head-over-ears in love with Mr. Compton yesterday could have
+consigned her affections to me to-day. Still she looked as if she could,
+which proves either that one is never to trust a woman’s heart or never
+to trust a woman’s looks. Decimus Roach is right. Man must never relax
+his flight from the women, if he strives to achieve an ‘Approach to the
+Angels.’”
+
+These reflections were made by Kenelm Chillingly as, having turned his
+back upon the town in which such temptations and trials had befallen
+him, he took his solitary way along a footpath that wound through meads
+and cornfields, and shortened by three miles the distance to a cathedral
+town at which he proposed to rest for the night.
+
+He had travelled for some hours, and the sun was beginning to slope
+towards a range of blue hills in the west, when he came to the margin
+of a fresh rivulet, overshadowed by feathery willows and the quivering
+leaves of silvery Italian poplars. Tempted by the quiet and cool of
+this pleasant spot, he flung himself down on the banks, drew from his
+knapsack some crusts of bread with which he had wisely provided himself,
+and, dipping them into the pure lymph as it rippled over its pebbly bed,
+enjoyed one of those luxurious repasts for which epicures would exchange
+their banquet in return for the appetite of youth. Then, reclining along
+the bank, and crushing the wild thyme that grows best and sweetest in
+wooded coverts, provided they be neighboured by water, no matter whether
+in pool or rill, he resigned himself to that intermediate state between
+thought and dream-land which we call “revery.” At a little distance he
+heard the low still sound of the mower’s scythe, and the air came to his
+brow sweet with the fragrance of new-mown hay.
+
+He was roused by a gentle tap on the shoulder, and turning lazily round,
+saw a good-humoured jovial face upon a pair of massive shoulders, and
+heard a hearty and winning voice say,--
+
+“Young man, if you are not too tired, will you lend a hand to get in
+my hay? We are very short of hands, and I am afraid we shall have rain
+pretty soon.”
+
+Kenelm rose and shook himself, gravely contemplated the stranger, and
+replied in his customary sententious fashion, “Man is born to help his
+fellow-man,--especially to get in hay while the sun shines. I am at your
+service.”
+
+“That’s a good fellow, and I’m greatly obliged to you. You see I had
+counted on a gang of roving haymakers, but they were bought up
+by another farmer. This way;” and leading on through a gap in the
+brushwood, he emerged, followed by Kenelm, into a large meadow,
+one-third of which was still under the scythe, the rest being occupied
+with persons of both sexes, tossing and spreading the cut grass. Among
+the latter, Kenelm, stripped to his shirt-sleeves, soon found himself
+tossing and spreading like the rest, with his usual melancholy
+resignation of mien and aspect. Though a little awkward at first in
+the use of his unfamiliar implements, his practice in all athletic
+accomplishments bestowed on him that invaluable quality which is termed
+“handiness,” and he soon distinguished himself by the superior activity
+and neatness with which he performed his work. Something--it might be in
+his countenance or in the charm of his being a stranger--attracted the
+attention of the feminine section of haymakers, and one very pretty girl
+who was nearer to him than the rest attempted to commence conversation.
+
+“This is new to you,” she said smiling.
+
+“Nothing is new to me,” answered Kenelm, mournfully. “But allow me to
+observe that to do things well you should only do one thing at a time. I
+am here to make hay and not conversation.”
+
+“My!” said the girl, in amazed ejaculation, and turned off with a toss
+of her pretty head.
+
+“I wonder if that jade has got an uncle,” thought Kenelm. The farmer,
+who took his share of work with the men, halting now and then to look
+round, noticed Kenelm’s vigorous application with much approval, and at
+the close of the day’s work shook him heartily by the hand, leaving a
+two-shilling piece in his palm. The heir of the Chillinglys gazed on
+that honorarium, and turned it over with the finger and thumb of the
+left hand.
+
+“Be n’t it eno’?” said the farmer, nettled.
+
+“Pardon me,” answered Kenelm. “But, to tell you the truth, it is the
+first money I ever earned by my own bodily labour; and I regard it with
+equal curiosity and respect. But if it would not offend you, I would
+rather that, instead of the money, you had offered me some supper; for I
+have tasted nothing but bread and water since the morning.”
+
+“You shall have the money and supper both, my lad,” said the farmer,
+cheerily. “And if you will stay and help till I have got in the hay, I
+dare say my good woman can find you a better bed than you’ll get in the
+village inn; if, indeed, you can get one there at all.”
+
+“You are very kind. But before I accept your hospitality excuse one
+question: have you any nieces about you?”
+
+“Nieces!” echoed the farmer, mechanically thrusting his hands into his
+breeches-pockets as if in search of something there, “nieces about me!
+what do you mean? Be that a newfangled word for coppers?”
+
+“Not for coppers, though perhaps for brass. But I spoke without
+metaphor. I object to nieces upon abstract principle, confirmed by the
+test of experience.”
+
+The farmer stared, and thought his new friend not quite so sound in his
+mental as he evidently was in his physical conformation, but replied,
+with a laugh, “Make yourself easy, then. I have only one niece, and she
+is married to an iron-monger and lives in Exeter.”
+
+On entering the farmhouse, Kenelm’s host conducted him straight into the
+kitchen, and cried out, in a hearty voice, to a comely middle-aged dame,
+who, with a stout girl, was intent on culinary operations, “Hulloa! old
+woman, I have brought you a guest who has well earned his supper, for he
+has done the work of two, and I have promised him a bed.”
+
+The farmer’s wife turned sharply round. “He is heartily welcome to
+supper. As to a bed,” she said doubtfully, “I don’t know.” But here her
+eyes settled on Kenelm; and there was something in his aspect so
+unlike what she expected to see in an itinerant haymaker, that she
+involuntarily dropped a courtesy, and resumed, with a change of tone,
+“The gentleman shall have the guest-room: but it will take a little time
+to get ready; you know, John, all the furniture is covered up.”
+
+“Well, wife, there will be leisure eno’ for that. He don’t want to go to
+roost till he has supped.”
+
+“Certainly not,” said Kenelm, sniffing a very agreeable odour.
+
+“Where are the girls?” asked the farmer.
+
+“They have been in these five minutes, and gone upstairs to tidy
+themselves.”
+
+“What girls?” faltered Kenelm, retreating towards the door. “I thought
+you said you had no nieces.”
+
+“But I did not say I had no daughters. Why, you are not afraid of them,
+are you?”
+
+“Sir,” replied Kenelm, with a polite and politic evasion of that
+question, “if your daughters are like their mother, you can’t say that
+they are not dangerous.”
+
+“Come,” cried the farmer, looking very much pleased, while his dame
+smiled and blushed, “come, that’s as nicely said as if you were
+canvassing the county. ‘Tis not among haymakers that you learned
+manners, I guess; and perhaps I have been making too free with my
+betters.”
+
+“What!” quoth the courteous Kenelm, “do you mean to imply that you were
+too free with your shillings? Apologize for that, if you like, but I
+don’t think you’ll get back the shillings. I have not seen so much of
+this life as you have, but, according to my experience, when a man once
+parts with his money, whether to his betters or his worsers, the chances
+are that he’ll never see it again.”
+
+At this aphorism the farmer laughed ready to kill himself, his wife
+chuckled, and even the maid-of-all-work grinned. Kenelm, preserving his
+unalterable gravity, said to himself,--
+
+“Wit consists in the epigrammatic expression of a commonplace truth, and
+the dullest remark on the worth of money is almost as sure of successful
+appreciation as the dullest remark on the worthlessness of women.
+Certainly I am a wit without knowing it.”
+
+Here the farmer touched him on the shoulder--touched it, did not slap
+it, as he would have done ten minutes before--and said,--
+
+“We must not disturb the Missis or we shall get no supper. I’ll just go
+and give a look into the cow-sheds. Do you know much about cows?”
+
+“Yes, cows produce cream and butter. The best cows are those which
+produce at the least cost the best cream and butter. But how the best
+cream and butter can be produced at a price which will place them free
+of expense on a poor man’s breakfast-table is a question to be settled
+by a Reformed Parliament and a Liberal Administration. In the meanwhile
+let us not delay the supper.”
+
+The farmer and his guest quitted the kitchen and entered the farmyard.
+
+“You are quite a stranger in these parts?”
+
+“Quite.”
+
+“You don’t even know my name?”
+
+“No, except that I heard your wife call you John.”
+
+“My name is John Saunderson.”
+
+“Ah! you come from the North, then? That’s why you are so sensible and
+shrewd. Names that end in ‘son’ are chiefly borne by the descendants of
+the Danes, to whom King Alfred, Heaven bless him! peacefully assigned
+no less than sixteen English counties. And when a Dane was called
+somebody’s son, it is a sign that he was the son of a somebody.”
+
+“By gosh! I never heard that before.”
+
+“If I thought you had I should not have said it.”
+
+“Now I have told you my name, what is yours?”
+
+“A wise man asks questions and a fool answers them. Suppose for a moment
+that I am not a fool.”
+
+Farmer Saunderson scratched his head, and looked more puzzled than
+became the descendant of a Dane settled by King Alfred in the north of
+England.
+
+“Dash it,” said he at last, “but I think you are Yorkshire too.”
+
+“Man, who is the most conceited of all animals, says that he alone has
+the prerogative of thought, and condemns the other animals to the meaner
+mechanical operation which he calls instinct. But as instincts are
+unerring and thoughts generally go wrong, man has not much to boast of
+according to his own definition. When you say you think, and take it
+for granted, that I am Yorkshire, you err. I am not Yorkshire. Confining
+yourself to instinct, can you divine when we shall sup? The cows you are
+about to visit divine to a moment when they shall be fed.”
+
+Said the farmer, recovering his sense of superiority to the guest whom
+he obliged with a supper, “In ten minutes.” Then, after a pause, and
+in a tone of deprecation, as if he feared he might be thought fine, he
+continued, “We don’t sup in the kitchen. My father did, and so did I
+till I married; but my Bess, though she’s as good a farmer’s wife as
+ever wore shoe-leather, was a tradesman’s daughter, and had been brought
+up different. You see she was not without a good bit of money: but even
+if she had been, I should not have liked her folks to say I had lowered
+her; so we sup in the parlour.”
+
+Quoth Kenelm, “The first consideration is to sup at all. Supper
+conceded, every man is more likely to get on in life who would rather
+sup in his parlour than his kitchen. Meanwhile, I see a pump; while you
+go to the cows I will stay here and wash my hands of them.”
+
+“Hold! you seem a sharp fellow, and certainly no fool. I have a son,
+a good smart chap, but stuck up; crows it over us all; thinks no small
+beer of himself. You’d do me a service, and him too, if you’d let him
+down a peg or two.”
+
+Kenelm, who was now hard at work at the pump-handle, only replied by a
+gracious nod. But as he seldom lost an opportunity for reflection, he
+said to himself, while he laved his face in the stream from the spout,
+“One can’t wonder why every small man thinks it so pleasant to let down
+a big one, when a father asks a stranger to let down his own son for
+even fancying that he is not small beer. It is upon that principle in
+human nature that criticism wisely relinquishes its pretensions as an
+analytical science, and becomes a lucrative profession. It relies on the
+pleasure its readers find in letting a man down.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+IT was a pretty, quaint farmhouse, such as might well go with two or
+three hundred acres of tolerably good land, tolerably well farmed by an
+active old-fashioned tenant, who, though he did not use mowing-machines
+nor steam-ploughs nor dabble in chemical experiments, still brought
+an adequate capital to his land and made the capital yield a very fair
+return of interest. The supper was laid out in a good-sized though
+low-pitched parlour with a glazed door, now wide open, as were all the
+latticed windows, looking into a small garden, rich in those straggling
+old English flowers which are nowadays banished from gardens more
+pretentious and; infinitely less fragrant. At one corner was an arbour
+covered with honeysuckle, and opposite to it a row of beehives. The room
+itself had an air of comfort, and that sort of elegance which indicates
+the presiding genius of feminine taste. There were shelves suspended
+to the wall by blue ribbons, and filled with small books neatly bound;
+there were flower-pots in all the window-sills; there was a small
+cottage piano; the walls were graced partly with engraved portraits of
+county magnates and prize oxen; partly with samplers in worsted-work,
+comprising verses of moral character and the names and birthdays of
+the farmer’s grandmother, mother, wife, and daughters. Over the
+chimney-piece was a small mirror, and above that the trophy of a fox’s
+brush; while niched into an angle in the room was a glazed cupboard,
+rich with specimens of old china, Indian and English.
+
+The party consisted of the farmer, his wife, three buxom daughters, and
+a pale-faced slender lad of about twenty, the only son, who did not take
+willingly to farming: he had been educated at a superior grammar school,
+and had high notions about the March of Intellect and the Progress of
+the Age.
+
+Kenelm, though among the gravest of mortals, was one of the least shy.
+In fact shyness is the usual symptom of a keen _amour propre_; and of
+that quality the youthful Chillingly scarcely possessed more than did
+the three Fishes of his hereditary scutcheon. He felt himself perfectly
+at home with his entertainers; taking care, however, that his attentions
+were so equally divided between the three daughters as to prevent all
+suspicion of a particular preference. “There is safety in numbers,”
+ thought he, “especially in odd numbers. The three Graces never married,
+neither did the nine Muses.”
+
+“I presume, young ladies, that you are fond of music,” said Kenelm,
+glancing at the piano.
+
+“Yes, I love it dearly,” said the eldest girl, speaking for the others.
+
+Quoth the farmer, as he heaped the stranger’s plate with boiled beef and
+carrots, “Things are not what they were when I was a boy; then it was
+only great tenant-farmers who had their girls taught the piano, and
+sent their boys to a good school. Now we small folks are for helping our
+children a step or two higher than our own place on the ladder.”
+
+“The schoolmaster is abroad,” said the son, with the emphasis of a sage
+adding an original aphorism to the stores of philosophy.
+
+“There is, no doubt, a greater equality of culture than there was in
+the last generation,” said Kenelm. “People of all ranks utter the same
+commonplace ideas in very much the same arrangements of syntax. And in
+proportion as the democracy of intelligence extends--a friend of mine,
+who is a doctor, tells me that complaints formerly reserved to what is
+called aristocracy (though what that word means in plain English I don’t
+know) are equally shared by the commonalty--_tic-douloureux_ and other
+neuralgic maladies abound. And the human race, in England at least, is
+becoming more slight and delicate. There is a fable of a man who, when
+he became exceedingly old, was turned into a grasshopper. England
+is very old, and is evidently approaching the grasshopper state of
+development. Perhaps we don’t eat as much beef as our forefathers did.
+May I ask you for another slice?”
+
+Kenelm’s remarks were somewhat over the heads of his audience. But
+the son, taking them as a slur upon the enlightened spirit of the age,
+coloured up and said, with a knitted brow, “I hope, sir, that you are
+not an enemy to progress.”
+
+“That depends: for instance, I prefer staying here, where I am well off,
+to going farther and faring worse.”
+
+“Well said!” cried the farmer.
+
+Not deigning to notice that interruption, the son took up Kenelm’s reply
+with a sneer, “I suppose you mean that it is to fare worse, if you march
+with the time.”
+
+“I am afraid we have no option but to march with the time; but when we
+reach that stage when to march any farther is to march into old age, we
+should not be sorry if time would be kind enough to stand still; and all
+good doctors concur in advising us to do nothing to hurry him.”
+
+“There is no sign of old age in this country, sir; and thank Heaven we
+are not standing still!”
+
+“Grasshoppers never do; they are always hopping and jumping, and making
+what they think ‘progress,’ till (unless they hop into the water and are
+swallowed up prematurely by a carp or a frog) they die of the exhaustion
+which hops and jumps unremitting naturally produce. May I ask you, Mrs.
+Saunderson, for some of that rice-pudding?”
+
+The farmer, who, though he did not quite comprehend Kenelm’s
+metaphorical mode of arguing, saw delightedly that his wise son looked
+more posed than himself, cried with great glee, “Bob, my boy,--Bob, our
+visitor is a little too much for you!”
+
+“Oh, no,” said Kenelm, modestly. “But I honestly think Mr. Bob would be
+a wiser man, and a weightier man, and more removed from the grasshopper
+state, if he would think less and eat more pudding.”
+
+When the supper was over the farmer offered Kenelm a clay pipe filled
+with shag, which that adventurer accepted with his habitual resignation
+to the ills of life; and the whole party, excepting Mrs. Saunderson,
+strolled into the garden. Kenelm and Mr. Saunderson seated themselves
+in the honeysuckle arbour: the girls and the advocate of progress stood
+without among the garden flowers. It was a still and lovely night, the
+moon at her full. The farmer, seated facing his hayfields, smoked on
+placidly. Kenelm, at the third whiff, laid aside his pipe, and glanced
+furtively at the three Graces. They formed a pretty group, all clustered
+together near the silenced beehives, the two younger seated on the
+grass strip that bordered the flower-beds, their arms over each other’s
+shoulders, the elder one standing behind them, with the moonlight
+shining soft on her auburn hair.
+
+Young Saunderson walked restlessly by himself to and fro the path of
+gravel.
+
+“It is a strange thing,” ruminated Kenelm, “that girls are not
+unpleasant to look at if you take them collectively,--two or three bound
+up together; but if you detach any one of them from the bunch, the odds
+are that she is as plain as a pikestaff. I wonder whether that bucolical
+grasshopper, who is so enamoured of the hop and jump that he calls
+‘progress,’ classes the society of the Mormons among the evidences of
+civilized advancement? There is a good deal to be said in favour of
+taking a whole lot of wives as one may buy a whole lot of cheap razors.
+For it is not impossible that out of a dozen a good one may be found.
+And then, too, a whole nosegay of variegated blooms, with a faded
+leaf here and there, must be more agreeable to the eye than the same
+monotonous solitary lady’s smock. But I fear these reflections are
+naughty; let us change them. Farmer,” he said aloud, “I suppose your
+handsome daughters are too fine to assist you much. I did not see them
+among the haymakers.”
+
+“Oh, they were there, but by themselves, in the back part of the
+field. I did not want them to mix with all the girls, many of whom are
+strangers from other places. I don’t know anything against them; but as
+I don’t know anything for them, I thought it as well to keep my lasses
+apart.”
+
+“But I should have supposed it wiser to keep your son apart from them. I
+saw him in the thick of those nymphs.”
+
+“Well,” said the farmer, musingly, and withdrawing his pipe from his
+lips, “I don’t think lasses not quite well brought up, poor things!
+do as much harm to the lads as they can do to proper-behaved lasses;
+leastways my wife does not think so. ‘Keep good girls from bad girls,’
+says she, ‘and good girls will never go wrong.’ And you will find there
+is something in that when you have girls of your own to take care of.”
+
+“Without waiting for that time, which I trust may never occur, I can
+recognize the wisdom of your excellent wife’s observation. My own
+opinion is, that a woman can more easily do mischief to her own sex than
+to ours; since, of course, she cannot exist without doing mischief to
+somebody or other.”
+
+“And good, too,” said the jovial farmer, thumping his fist on the table.
+“What should we be without women?”
+
+“Very much better, I take it, sir. Adam was as good as gold, and never
+had a qualm of conscience or stomach till Eve seduced him into eating
+raw apples.”
+
+“Young man, thou’st been crossed in love. I see it now. That’s why thou
+look’st so sorrowful.”
+
+“Sorrowful! Did you ever know a man crossed in love who looked less
+sorrowful when he came across a pudding?”
+
+“Hey! but thou canst ply a good knife and fork, that I will say for
+thee.” Here the farmer turned round, and gazed on Kenelm with deliberate
+scrutiny. That scrutiny accomplished, his voice took a somewhat
+more respectful tone, as he resumed, “Do you know that you puzzle me
+somewhat?”
+
+“Very likely. I am sure that I puzzle myself. Say on.”
+
+“Looking at your dress and--and--”
+
+“The two shillings you gave me? Yes--”
+
+“I took you for the son of some small farmer like myself. But now I
+judge from your talk that you are a college chap,--anyhow, a gentleman.
+Be n’t it so?”
+
+“My dear Mr. Saunderson, I set out on my travels, which is not long
+ago, with a strong dislike to telling lies. But I doubt if a man can get
+along through this world without finding that the faculty of lying was
+bestowed on him by Nature as a necessary means of self-preservation.
+If you are going to ask me any questions about myself, I am sure that
+I shall tell you lies. Perhaps, therefore, it may be best for both if
+I decline the bed you proffered me, and take my night’s rest under a
+hedge.”
+
+“Pooh! I don’t want to know more of a man’s affairs than he thinks fit
+to tell me. Stay and finish the haymaking. And I say, lad, I’m glad you
+don’t seem to care for the girls; for I saw a very pretty one trying to
+flirt with you, and if you don’t mind she’ll bring you into trouble.”
+
+“How? Does she want to run away from her uncle?”
+
+“Uncle! Bless you, she don’t live with him! She lives with her
+father; and I never knew that she wants to run away. In fact, Jessie
+Wiles--that’s her name--is, I believe, a very good girl, and everybody
+likes her,--perhaps a little too much; but then she knows she’s a
+beauty, and does not object to admiration.”
+
+“No woman ever does, whether she’s a beauty or not. But I don’t yet
+understand why Jessie Wiles should bring me into trouble.”
+
+“Because there is a big hulking fellow who has gone half out of his wits
+for her; and when he fancies he sees any other chap too sweet on her he
+thrashes him into a jelly. So, youngster, you just keep your skin out of
+that trap.”
+
+“Hem! And what does the girl say to those proofs of affection? Does she
+like the man the better for thrashing other admirers into jelly?”
+
+“Poor child! No; she hates the very sight of him. But he swears she
+shall marry nobody else if he hangs for it. And, to tell you the truth,
+I suspect that if Jessie does seem to trifle with others a little too
+lightly, it is to draw away this bully’s suspicion from the only man I
+think she does care for,--a poor sickly young fellow who was crippled by
+an accident, and whom Tom Bowles could brain with his little finger.”
+
+“This is really interesting,” cried Kenelm, showing something like
+excitement. “I should like to know this terrible suitor.”
+
+“That’s easy eno’,” said the farmer, dryly. “You have only to take
+a stroll with Jessie Wiles after sunset, and you’ll know more of Tom
+Bowles than you are likely to forget in a month.”
+
+“Thank you very much for your information,” said Kenelm, in a soft tone,
+grateful but pensive. “I hope to profit by it.”
+
+“Do. I should be sorry if any harm came to thee; and Tom Bowles in one
+of his furies is as bad to cross as a mad bull. So now, as we must be up
+early, I’ll just take a look round the stables, and then off to bed; and
+I advise you to do the same.”
+
+“Thank you for the hint. I see the young ladies have already gone in.
+Good-night.”
+
+Passing through the garden, Kenelm encountered the junior Saunderson.
+
+“I fear,” said the Votary of Progress, “that you have found the governor
+awful slow. What have you been talking about?”
+
+“Girls,” said Kenelm, “a subject always awful, but not necessarily
+slow.”
+
+“Girls,--the governor been talking about girls? You joke.”
+
+“I wish I did joke, but that is a thing I could never do since I came
+upon earth. Even in the cradle, I felt that life was a very serious
+matter, and did not allow of jokes. I remember too well my first dose
+of castor-oil. You too, Mr. Bob, have doubtless imbibed that initiatory
+preparation to the sweets of existence. The corners of your mouth have
+not recovered from the downward curves into which it so rigidly dragged
+them. Like myself, you are of grave temperament, and not easily moved
+to jocularity,--nay, an enthusiast for Progress is of necessity a man
+eminently dissatisfied with the present state of affairs. And chronic
+dissatisfaction resents the momentary relief of a joke.”
+
+“Give off chaffing, if you please,” said Bob, lowering the didascular
+intonations of his voice, “and just tell me plainly, did not my father
+say anything particular about me?”
+
+“Not a word: the only person of the male sex of whom he said anything
+particular was Tom Bowles.”
+
+“What, fighting Tom! the terror of the whole neighbourhood! Ah, I guess
+the old gentleman is afraid lest Tom may fall foul upon me. But Jessie
+Wiles is not worth a quarrel with that brute. It is a crying shame in
+the Government--”
+
+“What! has the Government failed to appreciate the heroism of Tom
+Bowles, or rather to restrain the excesses of its ardour?”
+
+“Stuff! it is a shame in the Government not to have compelled his father
+to put him to school. If education were universal--”
+
+“You think there would be no brutes in particular. It may be so; but
+education is universal in China, and so is the bastinado. I thought,
+however, that you said the schoolmaster was abroad, and that the age of
+enlightenment was in full progress.”
+
+“Yes, in the towns, but not in these obsolete rural districts; and that
+brings me to the point. I feel lost, thrown away here. I have something
+in me, sir, and it can only come out by collision with equal minds. So
+do me a favour, will you?”
+
+“With the greatest pleasure.”
+
+“Give the governor a hint that he can’t expect me, after the education
+I have had, to follow the plough and fatten pigs; and that Manchester is
+the place for ME.”
+
+“Why Manchester?”
+
+“Because I have a relation in business there who will give me a
+clerkship if the governor will consent. And Manchester rules England.”
+
+“Mr. Bob Saunderson, I will do my best to promote your wishes. This is
+a land of liberty, and every man should choose his own walk in it, so
+that, at the last, if he goes to the dogs, he goes to them without that
+disturbance of temper which is naturally occasioned by the sense of
+being driven to their jaws by another man against his own will. He has
+then no one to blame but himself. And that, Mr. Bob, is a great comfort.
+When, having got into a scrape, we blame others, we unconsciously
+become unjust, spiteful, uncharitable, malignant, perhaps revengeful.
+We indulge in feelings which tend to demoralize the whole character.
+But when we only blame ourselves, we become modest and penitent. We make
+allowances for others. And indeed self-blame is a salutary exercise of
+conscience, which a really good man performs every day of his life. And
+now, will you show me the room in which I am to sleep, and forget for a
+few hours that I am alive at all: the best thing that can happen to us
+in this world, my dear Mr. Bob! There’s never much amiss with our days,
+so long as we can forget about them the moment we lay our heads on the
+pillow.”
+
+The two young men entered the house amicably, arm in arm. The girls had
+already retired, but Mrs. Saunderson was still up to conduct her
+visitor to the guest’s chamber,--a pretty room which had been furnished
+twenty-two years ago on the occasion of the farmer’s marriage, at the
+expense of Mrs. Saunderson’s mother, for her own occupation when she
+paid them a visit, and with its dimity curtains and trellised paper it
+still looked as fresh and new as if decorated and furnished yesterday.
+
+Left alone, Kenelm undressed, and before he got into bed, bared
+his right arm, and doubling it, gravely contemplated its muscular
+development, passing his left hand over that prominence in the upper
+part which is vulgarly called the ball. Satisfied apparently with the
+size and the firmness of that pugilistic protuberance, he gently sighed
+forth, “I fear I shall have to lick Thomas Bowles.” In five minutes more
+he was asleep.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE next day the hay-mowing was completed, and a large portion of the
+hay already made carted away to be stacked. Kenelm acquitted himself
+with a credit not less praiseworthy than had previously won Mr.
+Saunderson’s approbation. But instead of rejecting as before the
+acquaintance of Miss Jessie Wiles, he contrived towards noon to place
+himself near to that dangerous beauty, and commenced conversation. “I am
+afraid I was rather rude to you yesterday, and I want to beg pardon.”
+
+“Oh,” answered the girl, in that simple intelligible English which
+is more frequent among our village folks nowadays than many popular
+novelists would lead us into supposing, “oh, I ought to ask pardon for
+taking a liberty in speaking to you. But I thought you’d feel strange,
+and I intended it kindly.”
+
+“I’m sure you did,” returned Kenelm, chivalrously raking her portion of
+hay as well as his own, while he spoke. “And I want to be good friends
+with you. It is very near the time when we shall leave off for
+dinner, and Mrs. Saunderson has filled my pockets with some excellent
+beef-sandwiches, which I shall be happy to share with you, if you do not
+object to dine with me here, instead of going home for your dinner.”
+
+The girl hesitated, and then shook her head in dissent from the
+proposition.
+
+“Are you afraid that your neighbours will think it wrong?”
+
+Jessie curled up her lips with a pretty scorn, and said, “I don’t much
+care what other folks say, but is n’t it wrong?”
+
+“Not in the least. Let me make your mind easy. I am here but for a day
+or two: we are not likely ever to meet again; but, before I go, I should
+be glad if I could do you some little service.” As he spoke he had
+paused from his work, and, leaning on his rake, fixed his eyes, for the
+first time attentively, on the fair haymaker.
+
+Yes, she was decidedly pretty,--pretty to a rare degree: luxuriant brown
+hair neatly tied up, under a straw hat doubtless of her own plaiting;
+for, as a general rule, nothing more educates the village maid for the
+destinies of flirt than the accomplishment of straw-plaiting. She had
+large, soft blue eyes, delicate small features, and a complexion more
+clear in its healthful bloom than rural beauties generally retain
+against the influences of wind and sun. She smiled and slightly coloured
+as he gazed on her, and, lifting her eyes, gave him one gentle, trustful
+glance, which might have bewitched a philosopher and deceived a _roue_.
+And yet Kenelm by that intuitive knowledge of character which is often
+truthfulest where it is least disturbed by the doubts and cavils of
+acquired knowledge, felt at once that in that girl’s mind coquetry,
+perhaps unconscious, was conjoined with an innocence of anything
+worse than coquetry as complete as a child’s. He bowed his head, in
+withdrawing his gaze, and took her into his heart as tenderly as if she
+had been a child appealing to it for protection.
+
+“Certainly,” he said inly, “certainly I must lick Tom Bowles; yet stay,
+perhaps after all she likes him.”
+
+“But,” he continued aloud, “you do not see how I can be of any service
+to you. Before I explain, let me ask which of the men in the field is
+Tom Bowles?”
+
+“Tom Bowles?” exclaimed Jessie, in a tone of surprise and alarm, and
+turning pale as she looked hastily round; “you frightened me, sir: but
+he is not here; he does not work in the fields. But how came you to hear
+of Tom Bowles?”
+
+“Dine with me and I’ll tell you. Look, there is a quiet place in yon
+corner under the thorn-trees by that piece of water. See, they are
+leaving off work: I will go for a can of beer, and then, pray, let me
+join you there.”
+
+Jessie paused for a moment as if doubtful still; then again glancing at
+Kenelm, and assured by the grave kindness of his countenance, uttered a
+scarce audible assent and moved away towards the thorn-trees.
+
+As the sun now stood perpendicularly over their heads, and the hand
+of the clock in the village church tower, soaring over the hedgerows,
+reached the first hour after noon, all work ceased in a sudden silence:
+some of the girls went back to their homes; those who stayed grouped
+together, apart from the men, who took their way to the shadows of a
+large oak-tree in the hedgerow, where beer kegs and cans awaited them.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+“AND now,” said Kenelm, as the two young persons, having finished their
+simple repast, sat under the thorn-trees and by the side of the water,
+fringed at that part with tall reeds through which the light summer
+breeze stirred with a pleasant murmur, “now I will talk to you about Tom
+Bowles. Is it true that you don’t like that brave young fellow? I say
+young, as I take his youth for granted.”
+
+“Like him! I hate the sight of him.”
+
+“Did you always hate the sight of him? You must surely at one time have
+allowed him to think that you did not?”
+
+The girl winced, and made no answer, but plucked a daffodil from the
+soil, and tore it ruthlessly to pieces.
+
+“I am afraid you like to serve your admirers as you do that ill-fated
+flower,” said Kenelm, with some severity of tone. “But concealed in
+the flower you may sometimes find the sting of a bee. I see by your
+countenance that you did not tell Tom Bowles that you hated him till it
+was too late to prevent his losing his wits for you.”
+
+“No; I was n’t so bad as that,” said Jessie, looking, nevertheless,
+rather ashamed of herself; “but I was silly and giddy-like, I own; and,
+when he first took notice of me, I was pleased, without thinking much of
+it, because, you see, Mr. Bowles (emphasis on _Mr._) is higher up than
+a poor girl like me. He is a tradesman, and I am only a shepherd’s
+daughter; though, indeed, Father is more like Mr. Saunderson’s foreman
+than a mere shepherd. But I never thought anything serious of it, and
+did not suppose he did; that is, at first.”
+
+“So Tom Bowles is a tradesman. What trade?”
+
+“A farrier, sir.”
+
+“And, I am told, a very fine young man.”
+
+“I don’t know as to that: he is very big.”
+
+“And what made you hate him?”
+
+“The first thing that made me hate him was that he insulted Father, who
+is a very quiet, timid man, and threatened I don’t know what if Father
+did not make me keep company with him. Make me indeed! But Mr. Bowles is
+a dangerous, bad-hearted, violent man, and--don’t laugh at me, sir, but
+I dreamed one night he was murdering me. And I think he will too, if he
+stays here: and so does his poor mother, who is a very nice woman, and
+wants him to go away; but he will not.”
+
+“Jessie,” said Kenelm, softly, “I said I wanted to make friends with
+you. Do you think you can make a friend of me? I can never be more than
+friend. But I should like to be that. Can you trust me as one?”
+
+“Yes,” answered the girl, firmly, and, as she lifted her eyes to him,
+their look was pure from all vestige of coquetry,--guileless, frank,
+grateful.
+
+“Is there not another young man who courts you more civilly than Tom
+Bowles does, and whom you really could find it in your heart to like?”
+
+Jessie looked round for another daffodil, and not finding one, contented
+herself with a bluebell, which she did not tear to pieces, but caressed
+with a tender hand. Kenelm bent his eyes down on her charming face
+with something in their gaze rarely seen there,--something of that
+unreasoning, inexpressible human fondness, for which philosophers of
+his school have no excuse. Had ordinary mortals, like you or myself, for
+instance, peered through the leaves of the thorn-trees, we should have
+sighed or frowned, according to our several temperaments; but we should
+all have said, whether spitefully or envyingly, “Happy young lovers!”
+ and should all have blundered lamentably in so saying.
+
+Still, there is no denying the fact that a pretty face has a very unfair
+advantage over a plain one. And, much to the discredit of Kenelm’s
+philanthropy, it may be reasonably doubted whether, had Jessie Wiles
+been endowed by nature with a snub nose and a squint, Kenelm would have
+volunteered his friendly services, or meditated battle with Tom Bowles
+on her behalf.
+
+But there was no touch of envy or jealousy in the tone with which he
+said,--
+
+“I see there is some one you would like well enough to marry, and
+that you make a great difference in the way you treat a daffodil and a
+bluebell. Who and what is the young man whom the bluebell represents?
+Come, confide.”
+
+“We were much brought up together,” said Jessie, still looking down,
+and still smoothing the leaves of the bluebell. “His mother lived in the
+next cottage; and my mother was very fond of him, and so was Father
+too; and, before I was ten years old, they used to laugh when poor Will
+called me his little wife.” Here the tears which had started to Jessie’s
+eyes began to fall over the flower. “But now Father would not hear of
+it; and it can’t be. And I’ve tried to care for some one else, and I
+can’t, and that’s the truth.”
+
+“But why? Has he turned out ill?--taken to poaching or drink?”
+
+“No, no, no; he’s as steady and good a lad as ever lived. But--but--”
+
+“Yes; but--”
+
+“He is a cripple now; and I love him all the better for it.” Here Jessie
+fairly sobbed.
+
+Kenelm was greatly moved, and prudently held his peace till she had a
+little recovered herself; then, in answer to his gentle questionings, he
+learned that Will Somers--till then a healthy and strong lad--had fallen
+from the height of a scaffolding, at the age of sixteen, and been so
+seriously injured that he was moved at once to the hospital. When he
+came out of it--what with the fall, and what with the long illness which
+had followed the effects of the accident--he was not only crippled for
+life, but of health so delicate and weakly that he was no longer fit for
+outdoor labour and the hard life of a peasant. He was an only son of a
+widowed mother, and his sole mode of assisting her was a very precarious
+one. He had taught himself basket-making; and though, Jessie said, his
+work was very ingenious and clever, still there were but few customers
+for it in that neighbourhood. And, alas! even if Jessie’s father would
+consent to give his daughter to the poor cripple, how could the poor
+cripple earn enough to maintain a wife?
+
+“And,” said Jessie, “still I was happy, walking out with him on Sunday
+evenings, or going to sit with him and his mother; for we are both
+young, and can wait. But I dare n’t do it any more now: for Tom Bowles
+has sworn that if I do he will beat him before my eyes; and Will has a
+high spirit, and I should break my heart if any harm happened to him on
+my account.”
+
+“As for Mr. Bowles, we’ll not think of him at present. But if Will could
+maintain himself and you, your father would not object nor you either to
+a marriage with the poor cripple?”
+
+“Father would not; and as for me, if it weren’t for disobeying Father,
+I’d marry him to-morrow. _I_ can work.”
+
+“They are going back to the hay now; but after that task is over, let me
+walk home with you, and show me Will’s cottage and Mr. Bowles’s shop or
+forge.”
+
+“But you’ll not say anything to Mr. Bowles. He would n’t mind your being
+a gentleman, as I now see you are, sir; and he’s dangerous,--oh, so
+dangerous!--and so strong.”
+
+“Never fear,” answered Kenelm, with the nearest approach to a laugh he
+had ever made since childhood; “but when we are relieved, wait for me a
+few minutes at yon gate.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+KENELM spoke no more to his new friend in the hayfields; but when the
+day’s work was over he looked round for the farmer to make an excuse
+for not immediately joining the family supper. However, he did not see
+either Mr. Saunderson or his son. Both were busied in the stackyard.
+Well pleased to escape excuse and the questions it might provoke, Kenelm
+therefore put on the coat he had laid aside and joined Jessie, who
+had waited for him at the gate. They entered the lane side by side,
+following the stream of villagers who were slowly wending their homeward
+way. It was a primitive English village, not adorned on the one hand
+with fancy or model cottages, nor on the other hand indicating penury
+and squalor. The church rose before them gray and Gothic, backed by the
+red clouds in which the sun had set, and bordered by the glebe-land
+of the half-seen parsonage. Then came the village green, with a
+pretty schoolhouse; and to this succeeded a long street of scattered
+whitewashed cottages, in the midst of their own little gardens.
+
+As they walked the moon rose in full splendour, silvering the road
+before them.
+
+“Who is the Squire here?” asked Kenelm. “I should guess him to be a good
+sort of man, and well off.”
+
+“Yes, Squire Travers; he is a great gentleman, and they say very rich.
+But his place is a good way from this village. You can see it if you
+stay, for he gives a harvest-home supper on Saturday, and Mr. Saunderson
+and all his tenants are going. It is a beautiful park, and Miss Travers
+is a sight to look at. Oh, she is lovely!” continued Jessie, with an
+unaffected burst of admiration; for women are more sensible of the charm
+of each other’s beauty than men give them credit for.
+
+“As pretty as yourself?”
+
+“Oh, pretty is not the word. She is a thousand times handsomer!”
+
+“Humph!” said Kenelm, incredulously.
+
+There was a pause, broken by a quick sigh from Jessie.
+
+“What are you sighing for?--tell me.”
+
+“I was thinking that a very little can make folks happy, but that
+somehow or other that very little is as hard to get as if one set one’s
+heart on a great deal.”
+
+“That’s very wisely said. Everybody covets a little something for which,
+perhaps, nobody else would give a straw. But what’s the very little
+thing for which you are sighing?”
+
+“Mrs. Bawtrey wants to sell that shop of hers. She is getting old, and
+has had fits; and she can get nobody to buy; and if Will had that shop
+and I could keep it,--but ‘tis no use thinking of that.”
+
+“What shop do you mean?”
+
+“There!”
+
+“Where? I see no shop.”
+
+“But it is _the_ shop of the village,--the only one,--where the
+post-office is.”
+
+“Ah! I see something at the windows like a red cloak. What do they
+sell?”
+
+“Everything,--tea and sugar and candles and shawls and gowns and cloaks
+and mouse-traps and letter-paper; and Mrs. Bawtrey buys poor Will’s
+baskets, and sells them for a good deal more than she pays.”
+
+“It seems a nice cottage, with a field and orchard at the back.”
+
+“Yes. Mrs. Bawtrey pays L8 a year for it; but the shop can well afford
+it.”
+
+Kenelm made no reply. They both walked on in silence, and had now
+reached the centre of the village street when Jessie, looking up,
+uttered an abrupt exclamation, gave an affrighted start, and then came
+to a dead stop.
+
+Kenelm’s eye followed the direction of hers, and saw, a few yards
+distant, at the other side of the way, a small red brick house, with
+thatched sheds adjoining it, the whole standing in a wide yard, over
+the gate of which leaned a man smoking a small cutty-pipe. “It is Tom
+Bowles,” whispered Jessie, and instinctively she twined her arm into
+Kenelm’s; then, as if on second thoughts, withdrew it, and said, still
+in a whisper, “Go back now, sir; do.”
+
+“Not I. It is Tom Bowles whom I want to know. Hush!”
+
+For here Tom Bowles had thrown down his pipe and was coming slowly
+across the road towards them.
+
+Kenelm eyed him with attention. A singularly powerful man, not so tall
+as Kenelm by some inches, but still above the middle height, herculean
+shoulders and chest, the lower limbs not in equal proportion,--a sort
+of slouching, shambling gait. As he advanced the moonlight fell on his
+face; it was a handsome one. He wore no hat, and his hair, of a
+light brown, curled close. His face was fresh-coloured, with aquiline
+features; his age apparently about six or seven and twenty. Coming
+nearer and nearer, whatever favourable impression the first glance
+at his physiognomy might have made on Kenelm was dispelled, for the
+expression of his face changed and became fierce and lowering.
+
+Kenelm was still walking on, Jessie by his side, when Bowles rudely
+thrust himself between them, and seizing the girl’s arm with one hand,
+he turned his face full on Kenelm, with a menacing wave of the other
+hand, and said in a deep burly voice,
+
+“Who be you?”
+
+“Let go that young woman before I tell you.”
+
+“If you weren’t a stranger,” answered Bowles, seeming as if he tried to
+suppress a rising fit of wrath, “you’d be in the kennel for those words.
+But I s’pose you don’t know that I’m Tom Bowles, and I don’t choose the
+girl as I’m after to keep company with any other man. So you be off.”
+
+“And I don’t choose any other man to lay violent hands on any girl
+walking by my side without telling him that he’s a brute; and that I
+only wait till he has both his hands at liberty to let him know that he
+has not a poor cripple to deal with.”
+
+Tom Bowles could scarcely believe his ears. Amaze swallowed up for
+the moment every other sentiment. Mechanically he loosened his hold of
+Jessie, who fled off like a bird released. But evidently she thought
+of her new friend’s danger more than her own escape; for instead of
+sheltering herself in her father’s cottage, she ran towards a group
+of labourers who, near at hand, had stopped loitering before the
+public-house, and returned with those allies towards the spot in which
+she had left the two men. She was very popular with the villagers, who,
+strong in the sense of numbers, overcame their awe of Tom Bowles, and
+arrived at the place half running, half striding, in time, they hoped,
+to interpose between his terrible arm and the bones of the unoffending
+stranger.
+
+Meanwhile Bowles, having recovered his first astonishment, and scarcely
+noticing Jessie’s escape, still left his right arm extended towards the
+place she had vacated, and with a quick back-stroke of the left levelled
+at Kenelm’s face, growled contemptuously, “Thou’lt find one hand enough
+for thee.”
+
+But quick as was his aim, Kenelm caught the lifted arm just above the
+elbow, causing the blow to waste itself on air, and with a simultaneous
+advance of his right knee and foot dexterously tripped up his bulky
+antagonist, and laid him sprawling on his back. The movement was
+so sudden, and the stun it occasioned so utter, morally as well as
+physically, that a minute or more elapsed before Tom Bowles picked
+himself up. And he then stood another minute glowering at his
+antagonist, with a vague sentiment of awe almost like a superstitious
+panic. For it is noticeable that, however fierce and fearless a man or
+even a wild beast may be, yet if either has hitherto been only familiar
+with victory and triumph, never yet having met with a foe that could
+cope with its force, the first effect of a defeat, especially from
+a despised adversary, unhinges and half paralyzes the whole nervous
+system. But as fighting Tom gradually recovered to the consciousness of
+his own strength, and the recollection that it had been only foiled by
+the skilful trick of a wrestler, and not the hand-to-hand might of a
+pugilist, the panic vanished, and Tom Bowles was himself again. “Oh,
+that’s your sort, is it? We don’t fight with our heels hereabouts, like
+Cornishers and donkeys: we fight with our fists, youngster; and since
+you _will_ have a bout at that, why, you must.”
+
+“Providence,” answered Kenelm, solemnly, “sent me to this village
+for the express purpose of licking Tom Bowles. It is a signal mercy
+vouchsafed to yourself, as you will one day acknowledge.”
+
+Again a thrill of awe, something like that which the demagogue in
+Aristophanes might have felt when braved by the sausage-maker, shot
+through the valiant heart of Tom Bowles. He did not like those ominous
+words, and still less the lugubrious tone of voice in which they
+were uttered, But resolved, at least, to proceed to battle with
+more preparation than he had at first designed, he now deliberately
+disencumbered himself of his heavy fustian jacket and vest, rolled up
+his shirt-sleeves, and then slowly advanced towards the foe.
+
+Kenelm had also, with still greater deliberation, taken off his
+coat--which he folded up with care, as being both a new and an only one,
+and deposited by the hedge-side--and bared arms, lean indeed and almost
+slight, as compared with the vast muscle of his adversary, but firm in
+sinew as the hind leg of a stag.
+
+By this time the labourers, led by Jessie, had arrived at the spot, and
+were about to crowd in between the combatants, when Kenelm waved them
+back and said in a calm and impressive voice,--
+
+“Stand round, my good friends, make a ring, and see that it is fair play
+on my side. I am sure it will be fair on Mr. Bowles’s. He is big enough
+to scorn what is little. And now, Mr. Bowles, just a word with you in
+the presence of your neighbours. I am not going to say anything uncivil.
+If you are rather rough and hasty, a man is not always master of
+himself--at least so I am told--when he thinks more than he ought to
+do about a pretty girl. But I can’t look at your face even by this
+moonlight, and though its expression at this moment is rather cross,
+without being sure that you are a fine fellow at bottom, and that if you
+give a promise as man to man you will keep it. Is that so?”
+
+One or two of the bystanders murmured assent; the others pressed round
+in silent wonder.
+
+“What’s all that soft-sawder about?” said Tom Bowles, somewhat
+falteringly.
+
+“Simply this: if in the fight between us I beat you, I ask you to
+promise before your neighbours that you will not by word or deed molest
+or interfere again with Miss Jessie Wiles.”
+
+“Eh!” roared Tom. “Is it that you are after her?”
+
+“Suppose I am, if that pleases you; and on my side, I promise that if
+you beat me, I quit this place as soon as you leave me well enough to do
+so, and will never visit it again. What! do you hesitate to promise? Are
+you really afraid I shall lick you?”
+
+“You! I’d smash a dozen of you to powder.”
+
+“In that case, you are safe to promise. Come, ‘tis a fair bargain. Is
+n’t it, neighbours?”
+
+Won over by Kenelm’s easy show of good temper, and by the sense of
+justice, the bystanders joined in a common exclamation of assent.
+
+“Come, Tom,” said an old fellow, “the gentleman can’t speak fairer; and
+we shall all think you be afeard if you hold back.”
+
+Tom’s face worked: but at last he growled, “Well, I promise; that is, if
+he beats me.”
+
+“All right,” said Kenelm. “You hear, neighbours; and Tom Bowles could
+not show that handsome face of his among you if he broke his word. Shake
+hands on it.”
+
+Fighting Tom sulkily shook hands.
+
+“Well now, that’s what I call English,” said Kenelm, “all pluck and no
+malice. Fall back, friends, and leave a clear space for us.”
+
+The men all receded; and as Kenelm took his ground, there was a supple
+ease in his posture which at once brought out into clearer evidence the
+nervous strength of his build, and, contrasted with Tom’s bulk of chest,
+made the latter look clumsy and topheavy.
+
+The two men faced each other a minute, the eyes of both vigilant and
+steadfast. Tom’s blood began to fire up as he gazed; nor, with all his
+outward calm; was Kenelm insensible of that proud beat of the heart
+which is aroused by the fierce joy of combat. Tom struck out first and
+a blow was parried, but not returned; another and another blow,--still
+parried, still unreturned. Kenelm, acting evidently on the defensive,
+took all the advantages for that strategy which he derived from superior
+length of arm and lighter agility of frame. Perhaps he wished to
+ascertain the extent of his adversary’s skill, or to try the endurance
+of his wind, before he ventured on the hazards of attack. Tom, galled to
+the quick that blows which might have felled an ox were thus warded
+off from their mark, and dimly aware that he was encountering some
+mysterious skill which turned his brute strength into waste force and
+might overmaster him in the long run, came to a rapid conclusion that
+the sooner he brought that brute strength to bear the better it would be
+for him. Accordingly, after three rounds, in which without once breaking
+the guard of his antagonist he had received a few playful taps on
+the nose and mouth, he drew back and made a bull-like rush at his
+foe,--bull-like, for it butted full at him with the powerful down-bent
+head, and the two fists doing duty as horns. The rush spent, he found
+himself in the position of a man milled. I take it for granted that
+every Englishman who can call himself a man--that is, every man who
+has been an English boy, and, as such, been compelled to the use of
+his fists--knows what a “mill” is. But I sing not only “pueris,” but
+“virginibus.” Ladies, “a mill,”--using with reluctance and contempt for
+myself that slang in which ladywriters indulge, and Girls of the Period
+know much better than they do their Murray,--“a mill,”--speaking not to
+ladywriters, not to Girls of the Period, but to innocent damsels, and in
+explanation to those foreigners who only understand the English language
+as taught by Addison and Macaulay,--a “mill” periphrastically means
+this: your adversary, in the noble encounter between fist and fist, has
+so plunged his head that it gets caught, as in a vice, between the side
+and doubled left arm of the adversary, exposing that head, unprotected
+and helpless, to be pounded out of recognizable shape by the right fist
+of the opponent. It is a situation in which raw superiority of force
+sometimes finds itself, and is seldom spared by disciplined superiority
+of skill. Kenelm, his right fist raised, paused for a moment, then,
+loosening the left arm, releasing the prisoner, and giving him a
+friendly slap on the shoulder, he turned round to the spectators and
+said apologetically, “He has a handsome face: it would be a shame to
+spoil it.”
+
+Tom’s position of peril was so obvious to all, and that good-humoured
+abnegation of the advantage which the position gave to the adversary
+seemed so generous, that the labourers actually hurrahed. Tom, himself
+felt as if treated like a child; and alas, and alas for him! in wheeling
+round, and regathering himself up, his eye rested on Jessie’s face. Her
+lips were apart with breathless terror: he fancied they were apart with
+a smile of contempt. And now he became formidable. He fought as fights
+the bull in the presence of the heifer, who, as he knows too well, will
+go with the conqueror.
+
+If Tom had never yet fought with a man taught by a prizefighter, so
+never yet had Kenelm encountered a strength which, but for the lack of
+that teaching, would have conquered his own. He could act no longer on
+the defensive; he could no longer play, like a dexterous fencer, with
+the sledge-hammers of those mighty arms. They broke through his guard;
+they sounded on his chest as on an anvil. He felt that did they alight
+on his head he was a lost man. He felt also that the blows spent on the
+chest of his adversary were idle as the stroke of a cane on the hide
+of a rhinoceros. But now his nostrils dilated; his eyes flashed fire:
+Kenelm Chillingly had ceased to be a philosopher. Crash came his
+blow--how unlike the swinging roundabout hits of Tom Bowles!--straight
+to its aim as the rifle-ball of a Tyrolese or a British marksman
+at Aldershot,--all the strength of nerve, sinew, purpose, and mind
+concentred in its vigour,--crash just at that part of the front where
+the eyes meet, and followed up with the rapidity of lightning, flash
+upon flash, by a more restrained but more disabling blow with the left
+hand just where the left ear meets throat and jaw-bone.
+
+At the first blow Tom Bowles had reeled and staggered, at the second he
+threw up his hands, made a jump in the air as if shot through the heart,
+and then heavily fell forwards, an inert mass.
+
+The spectators pressed round him in terror. They thought he was dead.
+Kenelm knelt, passed quickly his hand over Tom’s lips, pulse, and heart,
+and then rising, said, humbly and with an air of apology,--
+
+“If he had been a less magnificent creature, I assure you on my honour
+that I should never have ventured that second blow. The first would have
+done for any man less splendidly endowed by nature. Lift him gently;
+take him home. Tell his mother, with my kind regards, that I’ll call and
+see her and him to-morrow. And, stop, does he ever drink too much beer?”
+
+“Well,” said one of the villagers, “Tom _can_ drink.”
+
+“I thought so. Too much flesh for that muscle. Go for the nearest
+doctor. You, my lad? good; off with you; quick. No danger, but perhaps
+it may be a case for the lancet.”
+
+Tom Bowles was lifted tenderly by four of the stoutest men present and
+borne into his home, evincing no sign of consciousness; but his face,
+where not clouted with blood, was very pale, very calm, with a slight
+froth at the lips.
+
+Kenelm pulled down his shirt-sleeves, put on his coat, and turned to
+Jessie,--
+
+“Now, my young friend, show me Will’s cottage.”
+
+The girl came to him, white and trembling. She did not dare to speak.
+The stranger had become a new man in her eyes. Perhaps he frightened her
+as much as Tom Bowles had done. But she quickened her pace, leaving the
+public-house behind till she came to the farther end of the village.
+Kenelm walked beside her, muttering to himself: and though Jessie caught
+his words, happily she did not understand; for they repeated one of
+those bitter reproaches on her sex as the main cause of all strife,
+bloodshed, and mischief in general, with which the classic authors
+abound. His spleen soothed by that recourse to the lessons of the
+ancients, Kenelm turned at last to his silent companion, and said kindly
+but gravely,--
+
+“Mr. Bowles has given me his promise, and it is fair that I should now
+ask a promise from you. It is this: just consider how easily a girl so
+pretty as you can be the cause of a man’s death. Had Bowles struck me
+where I struck him I should have been past the help of a surgeon.”
+
+“Oh!” groaned Jessie, shuddering, and covering her face with both hands.
+
+“And, putting aside that danger, consider that a man may be hit mortally
+on the heart as well as on the head, and that a woman has much to answer
+for who, no matter what her excuse, forgets what misery and what guilt
+can be inflicted by a word from her lip and a glance from her eye.
+Consider this, and promise that, whether you marry Will Somers or not,
+you will never again give a man fair cause to think you can like him
+unless your own heart tells you that you can. Will you promise that?”
+
+“I will, indeed,--indeed.” Poor Jessie’s voice died in sobs.
+
+“There, my child, I don’t ask you not to cry, because I know how much
+women like crying; and in this instance it does you a great deal
+of good. But we are just at the end of the village; which is Will’s
+cottage?”
+
+Jessie lifted her head, and pointed to a solitary, small thatched
+cottage.
+
+“I would ask you to come in and introduce me; but that might look too
+much like crowing over poor Tom Bowles. So good-night to you, Jessie,
+and forgive me for preaching.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+KENELM knocked at the cottage door; a voice said faintly, “Come in.”
+
+He stooped his head, and stepped over the threshold.
+
+Since his encounter with Tom Bowles his sympathies had gone with that
+unfortunate lover: it is natural to like a man after you have beaten
+him; and he was by no means predisposed to favour Jessie’s preference
+for a sickly cripple.
+
+Yet, when two bright, soft, dark eyes, and a pale intellectual
+countenance, with that nameless aspect of refinement which delicate
+health so often gives, especially to the young, greeted his quiet gaze,
+his heart was at once won over to the side of the rival. Will Somers was
+seated by the hearth, on which a few live embers despite the warmth of
+the summer evening still burned; a rude little table was by his side,
+on which were laid osier twigs and white peeled chips, together with an
+open book. His hands, pale and slender, were at work on a small basket
+half finished. His mother was just clearing away the tea-things from
+another table that stood by the window. Will rose, with the good
+breeding that belongs to the rural peasant, as the stranger entered; the
+widow looked round with surprise, and dropped her simple courtesy,--a
+little thin woman, with a mild, patient face.
+
+The cottage was very tidily kept, as it is in most village homes where
+the woman has it her own way. The deal dresser opposite the door had
+its display of humble crockery. The whitewashed walls were relieved with
+coloured prints, chiefly Scriptural subjects from the New Testament,
+such as the Return of the Prodigal Son, in a blue coat and yellow
+inexpressibles, with his stockings about his heels.
+
+At one corner there were piled up baskets of various sizes, and at
+another corner was an open cupboard containing books,--an article of
+decorative furniture found in cottages much more rarely than coloured
+prints and gleaming crockery.
+
+All this, of course, Kenelm could not at a glance comprehend in detail.
+But as the mind of a man accustomed to generalization is marvellously
+quick in forming a sound judgment, whereas a mind accustomed to dwell
+only on detail is wonderfully slow at arriving at any judgment at all,
+and when it does, the probability is that it will arrive at a wrong one,
+Kenelm judged correctly when he came to this conclusion: “I am among
+simple English peasants; but, for some reason or other, not to be
+explained by the relative amount of wages, it is a favourable specimen
+of that class.”
+
+“I beg your pardon for intruding at this hour, Mrs. Somers,” said
+Kenelm, who had been too familiar with peasants from his earliest
+childhood not to know how quickly, when in the presence of their
+household gods, they appreciate respect, and how acutely they feel the
+want of it. “But my stay in the village is very short, and I should not
+like to leave without seeing your son’s basket-work, of which I have
+heard much.”
+
+“You are very good, sir,” said Will, with a pleased smile that
+wonderfully brightened up his face. “It is only just a few common things
+that I keep by me. Any finer sort of work I mostly do by order.”
+
+“You see, sir,” said Mrs. Somers, “it takes so much more time for pretty
+work-baskets, and such like; and unless done to order, it might be
+a chance if he could get it sold. But pray be seated, sir,” and Mrs.
+Somers placed a chair for her visitor, “while I just run up stairs for
+the work-basket which my son has made for Miss Travers. It is to go home
+to-morrow, and I put it away for fear of accidents.”
+
+Kenelm seated himself, and, drawing his chair near to Will’s, took up
+the half-finished basket which the young man had laid down on the table.
+
+“This seems to me very nice and delicate workmanship,” said Kenelm; “and
+the shape, when you have finished it, will be elegant enough to please
+the taste of a lady.”
+
+“It is for Mrs. Lethbridge,” said Will: “she wanted something to hold
+cards and letters; and I took the shape from a book of drawings which
+Mr. Lethbridge kindly lent me. You know Mr. Lethbridge, sir? He is a
+very good gentleman.”
+
+“No, I don’t know him. Who is he?”
+
+“Our clergyman, sir. This is the book.”
+
+To Kenelm’s surprise, it was a work on Pompeii, and contained woodcuts
+of the implements and ornaments, mosaics and frescos, found in that
+memorable little city.
+
+“I see this is your model,” said Kenelm; “what they call a _patera_,
+and rather a famous one. You are copying it much more truthfully than I
+should have supposed it possible to do in substituting basket-work for
+bronze. But you observe that much of the beauty of this shallow bowl
+depends on the two doves perched on the brim. You can’t manage that
+ornamental addition.”
+
+“Mrs. Lethbridge thought of putting there two little stuffed
+canary-birds.”
+
+“Did she? Good heavens!” exclaimed Kenelm.
+
+“But somehow,” continued Will, “I did not like that, and I made bold to
+say so.”
+
+“Why did not you do it?”
+
+“Well, I don’t know; but I did not think it would be the right thing.”
+
+“It would have been very bad taste, and spoiled the effect of your
+basket-work; and I’ll endeavour to explain why. You see here, in the
+next page, a drawing of a very beautiful statue. Of course this statue
+is intended to be a representation of nature, but nature idealized. You
+don’t know the meaning of that hard word, idealized, and very few people
+do. But it means the performance of a something in art according to the
+idea which a man’s mind forms to itself out of a something in nature.
+That something in nature must, of course, have been carefully studied
+before the man can work out anything in art by which it is faithfully
+represented. The artist, for instance, who made that statue, must have
+known the proportions of the human frame. He must have made studies
+of various parts of it,--heads and hands, and arms and legs, and so
+forth,--and having done so, he then puts together all his various
+studies of details, so as to form a new whole, which is intended to
+personate an idea formed in his own mind. Do you go with me?”
+
+“Partly, sir; but I am puzzled a little still.”
+
+“Of course you are; but you’ll puzzle yourself right if you think over
+what I say. Now if, in order to make this statue, which is composed of
+metal or stone, more natural, I stuck on it a wig of real hair, would
+not you feel at once that I had spoilt the work; that as you clearly
+express it, ‘it would not be the right thing’? and instead of making the
+work of art more natural, I should have made it laughably unnatural, by
+forcing insensibly upon the mind of him who looked at it the contrast
+between the real life, represented by a wig of actual hair, and the
+artistic life, represented by an idea embodied in stone or metal. The
+higher the work of art (that is, the higher the idea it represents as a
+new combination of details taken from nature), the more it is degraded
+or spoilt by an attempt to give it a kind of reality which is out
+of keeping with the materials employed. But the same rule applies to
+everything in art, however humble. And a couple of stuffed canary-birds
+at the brim of a basket-work imitation of a Greek drinking-cup would be
+as bad taste as a wig from the barber’s on the head of a marble statue
+of Apollo.”
+
+“I see,” said Will, his head downcast, like a man pondering,--“at least
+I think I see; and I’m very much obliged to you, sir.”
+
+Mrs. Somers had long since returned with the work-basket, but stood with
+it in her hands, not daring to interrupt the gentleman, and listening to
+his discourse with as much patience and as little comprehension as if it
+had been one of the controversial sermons upon Ritualism with which on
+great occasions Mr. Lethbridge favoured his congregation.
+
+Kenelm having now exhausted his critical lecture--from which certain
+poets and novelists who contrive to caricature the ideal by their
+attempt to put wigs of real hair upon the heads of stone statues might
+borrow a useful hint or two if they would condescend to do so, which
+is not likely--perceived Mrs. Somers standing by him, took from her
+the basket, which was really very pretty and elegant, subdivided
+into various compartments for the implements in use among ladies, and
+bestowed on it a well-merited eulogium.
+
+“The young lady means to finish it herself with ribbons, and line it
+with satin,” said Mrs. Somers, proudly.
+
+“The ribbons will not be amiss, sir?” said Will, interrogatively.
+
+“Not at all. Your natural sense of the fitness of things tells you
+that ribbons go well with straw and light straw-like work such as this;
+though you would not put ribbons on those rude hampers and game-baskets
+in the corner. Like to like; a stout cord goes suitably with them: just
+as a poet who understands his art employs pretty expressions for poems
+intended to be pretty and suit a fashionable drawing-room, and carefully
+shuns them to substitute a simple cord for poems intended to be strong
+and travel far, despite of rough usage by the way. But you really
+ought to make much more money by this fancy-work than you could as a
+day-labourer.”
+
+Will sighed. “Not in this neighbourhood, sir; I might in a town.”
+
+“Why not move to a town, then?”
+
+The young man coloured, and shook his head.
+
+Kenelm turned appealingly to Mrs. Somers. “I’ll be willing to go
+wherever it would be best for my boy, sir. But--” and here she checked
+herself, and a tear trickled silently down her cheeks.
+
+Will resumed, in a more cheerful tone, “I am getting a little known
+now, and work will come if one waits for it.” Kenelm did not deem it
+courteous or discreet to intrude further on Will’s confidence in the
+first interview; and he began to feel, more than he had done at first,
+not only the dull pain of the bruises he had received in the recent
+combat, but also somewhat more than the weariness which follows long
+summer-day’s work in the open air. He therefore, rather abruptly, now
+took his leave, saying that he should be very glad of a few specimens of
+Will’s ingenuity and skill, and would call or write to give directions
+about them.
+
+Just as he came in sight of Tom Bowles’s house on his way back to Mr.
+Saunderson’s, Kenelm saw a man mounting a pony that stood tied up at the
+gate, and exchanging a few words with a respectable-looking woman
+before he rode on. He was passing by Kenelm without notice, when that
+philosophical vagrant stopped him, saying, “If I am not mistaken, sir,
+you are the doctor. There is not much the matter with Mr. Bowles?”
+
+The doctor shook his head. “I can’t say yet. He has had a very ugly blow
+somewhere.”
+
+“It was just under the left ear. I did not aim at that exact spot:
+but Bowles unluckily swerved a little aside at the moment, perhaps in
+surprise at a tap between his eyes immediately preceding it: and so, as
+you say, it was an ugly blow that he received. But if it cures him of
+the habit of giving ugly blows to other people who can bear them less
+safely, perhaps it may be all for his good, as, no doubt, sir, your
+schoolmaster said when he flogged you.”
+
+“Bless my soul! are you the man who fought with him,--you? I can’t
+believe it.”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“Why not! So far as I can judge by this light, though you are a tall
+fellow, Tom Bowles must be a much heavier weight than you are.”
+
+“Tom Spring was the champion of England; and according to the records of
+his weight, which history has preserved in her archives, Tom Spring was
+a lighter weight than I am.”
+
+“But are you a prize-fighter?”
+
+“I am as much that as I am anything else. But to return to Mr. Bowles,
+was it necessary to bleed him?”
+
+“Yes; he was unconscious, or nearly so, when I came. I took away a few
+ounces; and I am happy to say he is now sensible, but must be kept very
+quiet.”
+
+“No doubt; but I hope he will be well enough to see me to-morrow.”
+
+“I hope so too; but I can’t say yet. Quarrel about a girl,--eh?”
+
+“It was not about money. And I suppose if there were no money and no
+women in the world, there would be no quarrels and very few doctors.
+Good-night, Sir.”
+
+“It is a strange thing to me,” said Kenelm, as he now opened the
+garden-gate of Mr. Saunderson’s homestead, “that though I’ve had nothing
+to eat all day, except a few pitiful sandwiches, I don’t feel the least
+hungry. Such arrest of the lawful duties of the digestive organs never
+happened to me before. There must be something weird and ominous in it.”
+
+On entering the parlour, the family party, though they had long since
+finished supper, were still seated round the table. They all rose at
+the sight of Kenelm. The fame of his achievements had preceded him. He
+checked the congratulations, the compliments, and the questions
+which the hearty farmer rapidly heaped upon him, with a melancholic
+exclamation, “But I have lost my appetite! No honours can compensate for
+that. Let me go to bed peaceably, and perhaps in the magic land of sleep
+Nature may restore me by a dream of supper.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+KENELM rose betimes the next morning somewhat stiff and uneasy, but
+sufficiently recovered to feel ravenous. Fortunately, one of the
+young ladies, who attended specially to the dairy, was already up, and
+supplied the starving hero with a vast bowl of bread and milk. He then
+strolled into the hayfield, in which there was now very little left
+to do, and but few hands besides his own were employed. Jessie was not
+there. Kenelm was glad of that. By nine o’clock his work was over, and
+the farmer and his men were in the yard completing the ricks. Kenelm
+stole away unobserved, bent on a round of visits. He called first at the
+village shop kept by Mrs. Bawtrey, which Jessie had pointed out to
+him, on pretence of buying a gaudy neckerchief; and soon, thanks to his
+habitual civility, made familiar acquaintance with the shopwoman. She
+was a little sickly old lady, her head shaking, as with palsy, somewhat
+deaf, but still shrewd and sharp, rendered mechanically so by long
+habits of shrewdness and sharpness. She became very communicative, spoke
+freely of her desire to give up the shop, and pass the rest of her days
+with a sister, widowed like herself, in a neighbouring town. Since she
+had lost her husband, the field and orchard attached to the shop had
+ceased to be profitable, and become a great care and trouble; and the
+attention the shop required was wearisome. But she had twelve years
+unexpired of the lease granted for twenty-one years to her husband on
+low terms, and she wanted a premium for its transfer, and a purchaser
+for the stock of the shop. Kenelm soon drew from her the amount of the
+sum she required for all,--L45.
+
+“You be n’t thinking of it for yourself?” she asked, putting on her
+spectacles, and examining him with care.
+
+“Perhaps so, if one could get a decent living out of it. Do you keep a
+book of your losses and your gains?”
+
+“In course, sir,” she said proudly. “I kept the books in my goodman’s
+time, and he was one who could find out if there was a farthing wrong,
+for he had been in a lawyer’s office when a lad.”
+
+“Why did he leave a lawyer’s office to keep a little shop?”
+
+“Well, he was born a farmer’s son in this neighbourhood, and he always
+had a hankering after the country, and--and besides that--”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“I’ll tell you the truth; he had got into a way of drinking speerrits,
+and he was a good young man, and wanted to break himself of it, and he
+took the temperance oath; but it was too hard on him, for he could not
+break himself of the company that led him into liquor. And so, one time
+when he came into the neighbourhood to see his parents for the Christmas
+holiday, he took a bit of liking to me; and my father, who was Squire
+Travers’s bailiff, had just died, and left me a little money. And so,
+somehow or other, we came together, and got this house and the land
+from the Squire on lease very reasonable; and my goodman being well
+eddyeated, and much thought of, and never being tempted to drink, now
+that he had a missis to keep him in order, had a many little things put
+into his way. He could help to measure timber, and knew about draining,
+and he got some bookkeeping from the farmers about; and we kept cows
+and pigs and poultry, and so we did very well, specially as the Lord was
+merciful and sent us no children.”
+
+“And what does the shop bring in a year since your husband died?”
+
+“You had best judge for yourself. Will you look at the book, and take
+a peep at the land and apple-trees? But they’s been neglected since my
+goodman died.”
+
+In another minute the heir of the Chillinglys was seated in a neat
+little back parlour, with a pretty though confined view of the orchard
+and grass slope behind it, and bending over Mrs. Bawtrey’s ledger.
+
+Some customers for cheese and bacon coming now into the shop, the old
+woman left him to his studies. Though they were not of a nature familiar
+to him, he brought to them, at least, that general clearness of head and
+quick seizure of important points which are common to most men who have
+gone through some disciplined training of intellect, and been accustomed
+to extract the pith and marrow out of many books on many subjects. The
+result of his examination was satisfactory; there appeared to him a
+clear balance of gain from the shop alone of somewhat over L40 a year,
+taking the average of the last three years. Closing the book, he then
+let himself out of the window into the orchard, and thence into the
+neighbouring grass field. Both were, indeed, much neglected; the trees
+wanted pruning, the field manure. But the soil was evidently of rich
+loam, and the fruit-trees were abundant and of ripe age, generally
+looking healthy in spite of neglect. With the quick intuition of a man
+born and bred in the country, and picking up scraps of rural knowledge
+unconsciously, Kenelm convinced himself that the land, properly managed,
+would far more than cover the rent, rates, tithes, and all incidental
+outgoings, leaving the profits of the shop as the clear income of the
+occupiers. And no doubt with clever young people to manage the shop, its
+profits might be increased.
+
+Not thinking it necessary to return at present to Mrs. Bawtrey’s, Kenelm
+now bent his way to Tom Bowles’s.
+
+The house-door was closed. At the summons of his knock it was quickly
+opened by a tall, stout, remarkably fine-looking woman, who might have
+told fifty years, and carried them off lightly on her ample shoulders.
+She was dressed very respectably in black, her brown hair braided simply
+under a neat tight-fitting cap. Her features were aquiline and
+very regular: altogether there was something about her majestic and
+Cornelia-like. She might have sat for the model of that Roman matron,
+except for the fairness of her Anglo-Saxon complexion.
+
+“What’s your pleasure?” she asked, in a cold and somewhat stern voice.
+
+“Ma’am,” answered Kenelm, uncovering, “I have called to see Mr. Bowles,
+and I sincerely hope he is well enough to let me do so.”
+
+“No, sir, he is not well enough for that; he is lying down in his own
+room, and must be kept quiet.”
+
+“May I then ask you the favour to let me in? I would say a few words to
+you, who are his mother if I mistake not.” Mrs. Bowles paused a moment
+as if in doubt; but she was at no loss to detect in Kenelm’s manner
+something superior to the fashion of his dress, and supposing the visit
+might refer to her son’s professional business, she opened the door
+wider, drew aside to let him pass first, and when he stood midway in
+the parlour, requested him to take a seat, and, to set him the example,
+seated herself.
+
+“Ma’am,” said Kenelm, “do not regret to have admitted me, and do not
+think hardly of me when I inform you that I am the unfortunate cause of
+your son’s accident.”
+
+Mrs. Bowles rose with a start. “You’re the man who beat my boy?”
+
+“No, ma’am, do not say I beat him. He is not beaten. He is so brave
+and so strong that he would easily have beaten me if I had not, by good
+luck, knocked him down before he had time to do so. Pray, ma’am, retain
+your seat and listen to me patiently for a few moments.”
+
+Mrs. Bowles, with an indignant heave of her Juno-like bosom, and with
+a superbly haughty expression of countenance which suited well with its
+aquiline formation, tacitly obeyed.
+
+“You will allow, ma’am,” recommenced Kenelm, “that this is not the first
+time by many that Mr. Bowles has come to blows with another man. Am I
+not right in that assumption?”
+
+“My son is of hasty temper,” replied Mrs. Bowles, reluctantly, “and
+people should not aggravate him.”
+
+“You grant the fact, then?” said Kenelm, imperturbably, but with a
+polite inclination of head. “Mr. Bowles has often been engaged in these
+encounters, and in all of them it is quite clear that he provoked the
+battle; for you must be aware that he is not the sort of man to whom any
+other would be disposed to give the first blow. Yet, after these little
+incidents had occurred, and Mr. Bowles had, say, half killed the person
+who aggravated him, you did not feel any resentment against that person,
+did you? Nay, if he had wanted nursing, you would have gone and nursed
+him.”
+
+“I don’t know as to nursing,” said Mrs. Bowles, beginning to lose her
+dignity of mien; “but certainly I should have been very sorry for him.
+And as for Tom,--though I say it who should not say,--he has no more
+malice than a baby: he’d go and make it up with any man, however badly
+he had beaten him.”
+
+“Just as I supposed; and if the man had sulked and would not make it up,
+Tom would have called him a bad fellow, and felt inclined to beat him
+again.”
+
+Mrs. Bowles’s face relaxed into a stately smile.
+
+“Well, then,” pursued Kenelm, “I do but humbly imitate Mr. Bowles, and I
+come to make it up and shake hands with him.”
+
+“No, sir,--no,” exclaimed Mrs. Bowles, though in a low voice, and
+turning pale. “Don’t think of it. ‘Tis not the blows; he’ll get over
+those fast enough: ‘tis his pride that’s hurt; and if he saw you there
+might be mischief. But you’re a stranger, and going away: do go soon; do
+keep out of his way; do!” And the mother clasped her hands.
+
+“Mrs. Bowles,” said Kenelm, with a change of voice and aspect,--a
+voice and aspect so earnest and impressive that they stilled and awed
+her,--“will you not help me to save your son from the dangers into which
+that hasty temper and that mischievous pride may at any moment hurry
+him? Does it never occur to you that these are the causes of terrible
+crime, bringing terrible punishment; and that against brute force,
+impelled by savage passions, society protects itself by the hulks and
+the gallows?”
+
+“Sir; how dare you--”
+
+“Hush! If one man kill another in a moment of ungovernable wrath, that
+is a crime which, though heavily punished by the conscience, is gently
+dealt with by the law, which calls it only manslaughter; but if a motive
+to the violence, such as jealousy or revenge, can be assigned, and there
+should be no witness by to prove that the violence was not premeditated,
+then the law does not call it manslaughter, but murder. Was it not that
+thought which made you so imploringly exclaim, ‘Go soon; keep out of his
+way’?”
+
+The woman made no answer, but, sinking back in her chair, gasped for
+breath.
+
+“Nay, madam,” resumed Kenelm, mildly; “banish your fears. If you will
+help me I feel sure that I can save your son from such perils, and I
+only ask you to let me save him. I am convinced that he has a good and
+a noble nature, and he is worth saving.” And as he thus said he took her
+hand. She resigned it to him and returned the pressure, all her pride
+softening as she began to weep.
+
+At length, when she recovered voice, she said,--
+
+“It is all along of that girl. He was not so till she crossed him, and
+made him half mad. He is not the same man since then,--my poor Tom!”
+
+“Do you know that he has given me his word, and before his
+fellow-villagers, that if he had the worst of the fight he would never
+molest Jessie Wiles again?”
+
+“Yes, he told me so himself; and it is that which weighs on him now. He
+broods and broods and mutters, and will not be comforted; and--and I do
+fear that he means revenge. And again, I implore you to keep out of his
+way.”
+
+“It is not revenge on me that he thinks of. Suppose I go and am seen no
+more, do you think in your own heart that that girl’s life is safe?”
+
+“What! My Tom kill a woman!”
+
+“Do you never read in your newspaper of a man who kills his sweetheart,
+or the girl who refuses to be his sweetheart? At all events, you
+yourself do not approve this frantic suit of his. If I have heard
+rightly, you have wished to get Tom out of the village for some time,
+till Jessie Wiles is--we’ll say, married, or gone elsewhere for good.”
+
+“Yes, indeed, I have wished and prayed for it many’s the time, both for
+her sake and for his. And I am sure I don’t know what we shall do if
+he stays, for he has been losing custom fast. The Squire has taken away
+his, and so have many of the farmers; and such a trade as it was in his
+good father’s time! And if he would go, his uncle, the veterinary at
+Luscombe, would take him into partnership; for he has no son of his own,
+and he knows how clever Tom is: there be n’t a man who knows more about
+horses; and cows, too, for the matter of that.”
+
+“And if Luscombe is a large place, the business there must be more
+profitable than it can be here, even if Tom got back his custom?”
+
+“Oh yes! five times as good,--if he would but go; but he’ll not hear of
+it.”
+
+“Mrs. Bowles, I am very much obliged to you for your confidence, and I
+feel sure that all will end happily now we have had this talk. I’ll not
+press further on you at present. Tom will not stir out, I suppose, till
+the evening.”
+
+“Ah, sir, he seems as if he had no heart to stir out again, unless for
+something dreadful.”
+
+“Courage! I will call again in the evening, and then you just take me
+up to Tom’s room, and leave me there to make friends with him, as I have
+with you. Don’t say a word about me in the meanwhile.”
+
+“But--”
+
+“‘But,’ Mrs. Bowles, is a word that cools many a warm impulse, stifles
+many a kindly thought, puts a dead stop to many a brotherly deed. Nobody
+would ever love his neighbour as himself if he listened to all the Buts
+that could be said on the other side of the question.”
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+KENELM now bent his way towards the parsonage, but just as he neared
+its glebe-lands he met a gentleman whose dress was so evidently clerical
+that he stopped and said,--
+
+“Have I the honour to address Mr. Lethbridge?”
+
+“That is my name,” said the clergyman, smiling pleasantly. “Anything I
+can do for you?”
+
+“Yes, a great deal, if you will let me talk to you about a few of your
+parishioners.”
+
+“My parishioners! I beg your pardon, but you are quite a stranger to me,
+and, I should think, to the parish.”
+
+“To the parish,--no, I am quite at home in it; and I honestly believe
+that it has never known a more officious busybody, thrusting himself
+into its most private affairs.”
+
+Mr. Lethbridge stared, and, after a short pause, said, “I have heard of
+a young man who has been staying at Mr. Saunderson’s, and is indeed at
+this moment the talk of the village. You are--”
+
+“That young man. Alas! yes.”
+
+“Nay,” said Mr. Lethbridge, kindly, “I cannot myself, as a minister
+of the Gospel, approve of your profession, and, if I might take the
+liberty, I would try and dissuade you from it; but still, as for the
+one act of freeing a poor girl from the most scandalous persecution, and
+administering, though in a rough way, a lesson to a savage brute who
+has long been the disgrace and terror of the neighbourhood, I cannot
+honestly say that it has my condemnation. The moral sense of a community
+is generally a right one: you have won the praise of the village. Under
+all the circumstances, I do not withhold mine. You woke this morning and
+found yourself famous. Do not sigh ‘Alas.’”
+
+“Lord Byron woke one morning and found himself famous, and the result
+was that he sighed ‘Alas’ for the rest of his life. If there be two
+things which a wise man should avoid, they are fame and love. Heaven
+defend me from both!”
+
+Again the parson stared; but being of compassionate nature, and inclined
+to take mild views of everything that belongs to humanity, he said, with
+a slight inclination of his head,--
+
+“I have always heard that the Americans in general enjoy the advantage
+of a better education than we do in England, and their reading public
+is infinitely larger than ours; still, when I hear one of a calling
+not highly considered in this country for intellectual cultivation or
+ethical philosophy cite Lord Byron, and utter a sentiment at variance
+with the impetuosity of inexperienced youth, but which has much to
+commend it in the eyes of a reflective Christian impressed with the
+nothingness of the objects mostly coveted by the human heart, I am
+surprised, and--oh, my dear young friend, surely your education might
+fit you for something better!”
+
+It was among the maxims of Kenelm Chillingly’s creed that a sensible man
+should never allow himself to be surprised; but here he was, to use
+a popular idiom, “taken aback,” and lowered himself to the rank of
+ordinary minds by saying, simply, “I don’t understand.”
+
+“I see,” resumed the clergyman, shaking his head gently, “as I always
+suspected, that in the vaunted education bestowed on Americans, the
+elementary principles of Christian right and wrong are more neglected
+than they are among our own humble classes. Yes, my young friend, you
+may quote poets, you may startle me by remarks on the nothingness of
+human fame and human love, derived from the precepts of heathen poets,
+and yet not understand with what compassion, and, in the judgment
+of most sober-minded persons, with what contempt, a human being who
+practises your vocation is regarded.”
+
+“Have I a vocation?” said Kenelm. “I am very glad to hear it. What is my
+vocation? And why must I be an American?”
+
+“Why, surely I am not misinformed? You are the American--I forget his
+name--who has come over to contest the belt of prize-fighting with
+the champion of England. You are silent; you hang your head. By your
+appearance, your length of limb, your gravity of countenance, your
+evident education, you confirm the impression of your birth. Your
+prowess has proved your profession.”
+
+“Reverend sir,” said Kenelm, with his unutterable seriousness of aspect,
+“I am on my travels in search of truth and in flight from shams, but
+so great a take-in as myself I have not yet encountered. Remember me in
+your prayers. I am not an American; I am not a prize-fighter. I
+honour the first as the citizen of a grand republic trying his best to
+accomplish an experiment in government in which he will find the
+very prosperity he tends to create will sooner or later destroy his
+experiment. I honour the last because strength, courage, and sobriety
+are essential to the prize-fighter, and are among the chiefest ornaments
+of kings and heroes. But I am neither one nor the other. And all I
+can say for myself is, that I belong to that very vague class commonly
+called English gentlemen, and that, by birth and education, I have a
+right to ask you to shake hands with me as such.”
+
+Mr. Lethbridge stared again, raised his hat, bowed, and shook hands.
+
+“You will allow me now to speak to you about your parishioners. You take
+an interest in Will Somers; so do I. He is clever and ingenious. But it
+seems there is not sufficient demand here for his baskets, and he would,
+no doubt, do better in some neighbouring town. Why does he object to
+move?”
+
+“I fear that poor Will would pine away to death if he lost sight of that
+pretty girl for whom you did such chivalrous battle with Tom Bowles.”
+
+“The unhappy man, then, is really in love with Jessie Wiles? And do you
+think she no less really cares for him?”
+
+“I am sure of it.”
+
+“And would make him a good wife; that is, as wives go?”
+
+“A good daughter generally makes a good wife. And there is not a father
+in the place who has a better child than Jessie is to hers. She really
+is a girl of a superior nature. She was the cleverest pupil at our
+school, and my wife is much attached to her. But she has something
+better than mere cleverness: she has an excellent heart.”
+
+“What you say confirms my own impressions. And the girl’s father has no
+other objection to Will Somers than his fear that Will could not support
+a wife and family comfortably.
+
+“He can have no other objection save that which would apply equally to
+all suitors. I mean his fear lest Tom Bowles might do her some mischief,
+if he knew she was about to marry any one else.”
+
+“You think, then, that Mr. Bowles is a thoroughly bad and dangerous
+person?”
+
+“Thoroughly bad and dangerous, and worse since he has taken to
+drinking.”
+
+“I suppose he did not take to drinking till he lost his wits for Jessie
+Wiles?”
+
+“No, I don’t think he did.”
+
+“But, Mr. Lethbridge, have you never used your influence over this
+dangerous man?”
+
+“Of course, I did try, but I only got insulted. He is a godless animal,
+and has not been inside a church for years. He seems to have got
+a smattering of such vile learning as may be found in infidel
+publications, and I doubt if he has any religion at all.”
+
+“Poor Polyphemus! no wonder his Galatea shuns him.”
+
+“Old Wiles is terribly frightened, and asked my wife to find Jessie a
+place as servant at a distance. But Jessie can’t bear the thoughts of
+leaving.”
+
+“For the same reason which attaches Will Somers to the native soil?”
+
+“My wife thinks so.”
+
+“Do you believe that if Tom Bowles were out of the way, and Jessie
+and Will were man and wife, they could earn a sufficient livelihood as
+successors to Mrs. Bawtrey, Will adding the profits of his basket-work
+to those of the shop and land?”
+
+“A sufficient livelihood! of course. They would be quite rich. I know
+the shop used to turn a great deal of money. The old woman, to be sure,
+is no longer up to the business, but still she retains a good custom.”
+
+“Will Somers seems in delicate health. Perhaps if he had a less weary
+struggle for a livelihood, and no fear of losing Jessie, his health
+would improve.”
+
+“His life would be saved, sir.”
+
+“Then,” said Kenelm, with a heavy sigh and a face as long as an
+undertaker’s, “though I myself entertain a profound compassion for that
+disturbance to our mental equilibrium which goes by the name of ‘love,’
+and I am the last person who ought to add to the cares and sorrows which
+marriage entails upon its victims,--I say nothing of the woes
+destined to those whom marriage usually adds to a population already
+overcrowded,--I fear that I must be the means of bringing these two
+love-birds into the same cage. I am ready to purchase the shop and its
+appurtenances on their behalf, on the condition that you will kindly
+obtain the consent of Jessie’s father to their union. As for my brave
+friend Tom Bowles, I undertake to deliver them and the village from that
+exuberant nature, which requires a larger field for its energies. Pardon
+me for not letting you interrupt me. I have not yet finished what I have
+to say. Allow me to ask if Mrs. Grundy resides in this village.”
+
+“Mrs. Grundy! Oh, I understand. Of course; wherever a woman has a
+tongue, there Mrs. Grundy has a home.”
+
+“And seeing that Jessie is very pretty, and that in walking with her I
+encountered Mr. Bowles, might not Mrs. Grundy say, with a toss of her
+head, ‘that it was not out of pure charity that the stranger had been so
+liberal to Jessie Wiles’? But if the money for the shop be paid through
+you to Mrs. Bawtrey, and you kindly undertake all the contingent
+arrangements, Mrs. Grundy will have nothing to say against any one.”
+
+Mr. Lethbridge gazed with amaze at the solemn countenance before him.
+
+“Sir,” he said, after a long pause, “I scarcely know how to express my
+admiration of a generosity so noble, so thoughtful, and accompanied with
+a delicacy, and, indeed, with a wisdom, which--which--”
+
+“Pray, my dear sir, do not make me still more ashamed of myself than I
+am at present for an interference in love matters quite alien to my own
+convictions as to the best mode of making an ‘Approach to the Angels.’
+To conclude this business, I think it better to deposit in your hands
+the sum of L45, for which Mrs. Bawtrey has agreed to sell the remainder
+of her lease and stock-in-hand; but, of course, you will not make
+anything public till I am gone, and Tom Bowles too. I hope I may get
+him away to-morrow; but I shall know to-night when I can depend on his
+departure, and till he goes I must stay.”
+
+As he spoke, Kenelm transferred from his pocket-book to Mr. Lethbridge’s
+hand bank-notes to the amount specified.
+
+“May I at least ask the name of the gentleman who honours me with his
+confidence, and has bestowed so much happiness on members of my flock?”
+
+“There is no great reason why I should not tell you my name, but I see
+no reason why I should. You remember Talleyrand’s advice, ‘If you are
+in doubt whether to write a letter or not, don’t.’ The advice applies to
+many doubts in life besides that of letter-writing. Farewell, sir!”
+
+“A most extraordinary young man,” muttered the parson, gazing at the
+receding form of the tall stranger; then gently shaking his head, he
+added, “Quite an original.” He was contented with that solution of the
+difficulties which had puzzled him. May the reader be the same.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+AFTER the family dinner, at which the farmer’s guest displayed more
+than his usual powers of appetite, Kenelm followed his host towards the
+stackyard, and said,--
+
+“My dear Mr. Saunderson, though you have no longer any work for me to
+do, and I ought not to trespass further on your hospitality, yet if I
+might stay with you another day or so, I should be very grateful.”
+
+“My dear lad,” cried the farmer, in whose estimation Kenelm had risen
+prodigiously since the victory over Tom Bowles, “you are welcome to stay
+as long as you like, and we shall be all sorry when you go. Indeed, at
+all events, you must stay over Saturday, for you shall go with us to
+the squire’s harvest-supper. It will be a pretty sight, and my girls are
+already counting on you for a dance.”
+
+“Saturday,--the day after to-morrow. You are very kind; but merrymakings
+are not much in my way, and I think I shall be on my road before you set
+off to the Squire’s supper.”
+
+“Pooh! you shall stay; and, I say, young ‘un, if you want more to do, I
+have a job for you quite in your line.”
+
+“What is it?”
+
+“Thrash my ploughman. He has been insolent this morning, and he is the
+biggest fellow in the county, next to Tom Bowles.”
+
+Here the farmer laughed heartily, enjoying his own joke.
+
+“Thank you for nothing,” said Kenelm, rubbing his bruises. “A burnt
+child dreads the fire.”
+
+The young man wandered alone into the fields. The day was becoming
+overcast, and the clouds threatened rain. The air was exceedingly still;
+the landscape, missing the sunshine, wore an aspect of gloomy solitude.
+Kenelm came to the banks of the rivulet not far from the spot on which
+the farmer had first found him. There he sat down, and leaned his cheek
+on his hand, with eyes fixed on the still and darkened stream lapsing
+mournfully away: sorrow entered into his heart and tinged its musings.
+
+“Is it then true,” said he, soliloquizing, “that I am born to pass
+through life utterly alone; asking, indeed, for no sister-half of
+myself, disbelieving its possibility, shrinking from the thought
+of it,--half scorning, half pitying those who sigh for it?--thing
+unattainable,--better sigh for the moon!
+
+“Yet if other men sigh for it, why do I stand apart from them? If the
+world be a stage, and all the men and women in it merely players, am I
+to be the solitary spectator, with no part in the drama and no interest
+in the vicissitudes of its plot? Many there are, no doubt, who covet as
+little as I do the part of ‘Lover,’ ‘with a woful ballad, made to his
+mistress’s eyebrow;’ but then they covet some other part in the drama,
+such as that of Soldier ‘bearded as a pard,’ or that of Justice ‘in fair
+round belly with fat capon lined.’ But me no ambition fires: I have no
+longing either to rise or to shine. I don’t desire to be a colonel, nor
+an admiral, nor a member of Parliament, nor an alderman; I do not yearn
+for the fame of a wit, or a poet, or a philosopher, or a diner-out, or
+a crack shot at a rifle-match or a _battue_. Decidedly, I am the one
+looker-on, the one bystander, and have no more concern with the active
+world than a stone has. It is a horrible phantasmal crotchet of Goethe,
+that originally we were all monads, little segregated atoms adrift in
+the atmosphere, and carried hither and thither by forces over which we
+had no control, especially by the attraction of other monads, so
+that one monad, compelled by porcine monads, crystallizes into a pig;
+another, hurried along by heroic monads, becomes a lion or an Alexander.
+Now it is quite clear,” continued Kenelm, shifting his position and
+crossing the right leg over the left, “that a monad intended or
+fitted for some other planet may, on its way to that destination, be
+encountered by a current of other monads blowing earthward, and be
+caught up in the stream and whirled on, till, to the marring of
+its whole proper purpose and scene of action, it settles
+here,--conglomerated into a baby. Probably that lot has befallen me: my
+monad, meant for another region in space, has been dropped into this,
+where it can never be at home, never amalgamate with other monads nor
+comprehend why they are in such a perpetual fidget. I declare I know
+no more why the minds of human beings should be so restlessly agitated
+about things which, as most of them own, give more pain than pleasure,
+than I understand why that swarm of gnats, which has such a very short
+time to live, does not give itself a moment’s repose, but goes up and
+down, rising and falling as if it were on a seesaw, and making as much
+noise about its insignificant alternations of ascent and descent as if
+it were the hum of men. And yet, perhaps, in another planet my monad
+would have frisked and jumped and danced and seesawed with congenial
+monads, as contentedly and as sillily as do the monads of men and gnats
+in this alien Vale of Tears.”
+
+Kenelm had just arrived at that conjectural solution of his perplexities
+when a voice was heard singing, or rather modulated to that kind of
+chant between recitative and song, which is so pleasingly effective
+where the intonations are pure and musical. They were so in this
+instance, and Kenelm’s ear caught every word in the following song:--
+
+
+ CONTENT.
+
+ “There are times when the troubles of life are still;
+ The bees wandered lost in the depths of June,
+ And I paused where the chime of a silver rill
+ Sang the linnet and lark to their rest at noon.
+
+ “Said my soul, ‘See how calmly the wavelets glide,
+ Though so narrow their way to their ocean vent;
+ And the world that I traverse is wide, is wide,
+ And yet is too narrow to hold content’
+
+ “O my son, never say that the world is wide;
+ The rill in its banks is less closely pent:
+ It is thou who art shoreless on every side,
+ And thy width will not let thee enclose content.”
+
+
+As the voice ceased Kenelm lifted his head. But the banks of the brook
+were so curving and so clothed with brushwood that for some minutes the
+singer was invisible. At last the boughs before him were put aside, and
+within a few paces of himself paused the man to whom he had commended
+the praises of a beefsteak, instead of those which minstrelsy in its
+immemorial error dedicates to love.
+
+“Sir,” said Kenelm, half rising, “well met once more. Have you ever
+listened to the cuckoo?”
+
+“Sir,” answered the minstrel, “have you ever felt the presence of the
+summer?”
+
+“Permit me to shake hands with you. I admire the question by which you
+have countermet and rebuked my own. If you are not in a hurry, will you
+sit down and let us talk?”
+
+The minstrel inclined his head and seated himself. His dog--now emerged
+from the brushwood--gravely approached Kenelm, who with greater gravity
+regarded him; then, wagging his tail, reposed on his haunches,
+intent with ear erect on a stir in the neighbouring reeds, evidently
+considering whether it was caused by a fish or a water-rat.
+
+“I asked you, sir, if you had ever listened to the cuckoo from no
+irrelevant curiosity; for often on summer days, when one is talking with
+one’s self,--and, of course, puzzling one’s self,--a voice breaks out,
+as it were from the heart of Nature, so far is it and yet so near; and
+it says something very quieting, very musical, so that one is tempted
+inconsiderately and foolishly to exclaim, ‘Nature replies to me.’ The
+cuckoo has served me that trick pretty often. Your song is a better
+answer to a man’s self-questionings than he can ever get from a cuckoo.”
+
+“I doubt that,” said the minstrel. “Song, at the best, is but the echo
+of some voice from the heart of Nature. And if the cuckoo’s note seemed
+to you such a voice, it was an answer to your questionings perhaps more
+simply truthful than man can utter, if you had rightly construed the
+language.”
+
+“My good friend,” answered Kenelm, “what you say sounds very prettily;
+and it contains a sentiment which has been amplified by certain critics
+into that measureless domain of dunderheads which is vulgarly called
+BOSH. But though Nature is never silent, though she abuses the privilege
+of her age in being tediously gossiping and garrulous, Nature never
+replies to our questions: she can’t understand an argument; she has
+never read Mr. Mill’s work on Logic. In fact, as it is truly said by a
+great philosopher, ‘Nature has no mind.’ Every man who addresses her is
+compelled to force upon her for a moment the loan of his own mind. And
+if she answers a question which his own mind puts to her, it is only
+by such a reply as his own mind teaches to her parrot-like lips. And as
+every man has a different mind, so every man gets a different answer.
+Nature is a lying old humbug.”
+
+The minstrel laughed merrily; and his laugh was as sweet as his chant.
+
+“Poets would have a great deal to unlearn if they are to look upon
+Nature in that light.”
+
+“Bad poets would, and so much the better for them and their readers.”
+
+“Are not good poets students of Nature?”
+
+“Students of Nature, certainly, as surgeons study anatomy by dissecting
+a dead body. But the good poet, like the good surgeon, is the man who
+considers that study merely as the necessary A B C, and not as the
+all-in-all essential to skill in his practice. I do not give the fame
+of a good surgeon to a man who fills a book with details, more or less
+accurate, of fibres and nerves and muscles; and I don’t give the fame of
+a good poet to a man who makes an inventory of the Rhine or the Vale of
+Gloucester. The good surgeon and the good poet are they who understand
+the living man. What is that poetry of drama which Aristotle justly
+ranks as the highest? Is it not a poetry in which description of
+inanimate Nature must of necessity be very brief and general; in which
+even the external form of man is so indifferent a consideration that it
+will vary with each actor who performs the part? A Hamlet may be fair
+or dark. A Macbeth may be short or tall. The merit of dramatic poetry
+consists in the substituting for what is commonly called Nature (namely,
+external and material Nature) creatures intellectual, emotional, but
+so purely immaterial that they may be said to be all mind and soul,
+accepting the temporary loans of any such bodies at hand as actors may
+offer, in order to be made palpable and visible to the audience, but
+needing no such bodies to be palpable and visible to readers. The
+highest kind of poetry is therefore that which has least to do with
+external Nature. But every grade has its merit more or less genuinely
+great, according as it instils into Nature that which is not there,--the
+reason and the soul of man.”
+
+“I am not much disposed,” said the minstrel, “to acknowledge any one
+form of poetry to be practically higher than another; that is, so far as
+to elevate the poet who cultivates what you call the highest with some
+success above the rank of the poet who cultivates what you call a very
+inferior school with a success much more triumphant. In theory, dramatic
+poetry may be higher than lyric, and ‘Venice Preserved’ is a very
+successful drama; but I think Burns a greater poet than Otway.”
+
+“Possibly he may be; but I know of no lyrical poet, at least among the
+moderns, who treats less of Nature as the mere outward form of things,
+or more passionately animates her framework with his own human heart,
+than does Robert Burns. Do you suppose when a Greek, in some perplexity
+of reason or conscience, addressed a question to the oracular oak-leaves
+of Dodona that the oak-leaves answered him? Don’t you rather believe
+that the question suggested by his mind was answered by the mind of
+his fellow-man, the priest, who made the oak-leaves the mere vehicle
+of communication, as you and I might make such vehicle in a sheet of
+writing-paper? Is not the history of superstition a chronicle of the
+follies of man in attempting to get answers from external Nature?”
+
+“But,” said the minstrel, “have I not somewhere heard or read that the
+experiments of Science are the answers made by Nature to the questions
+put to her by man?”
+
+“They are the answers which his own mind suggests to her,--nothing more.
+His mind studies the laws of matter, and in that study makes experiments
+on matter; out of those experiments his mind, according to its previous
+knowledge or natural acuteness, arrives at its own deductions, and
+hence arise the sciences of mechanics and chemistry, etc. But the matter
+itself gives no answer: the answer varies according to the mind that
+puts the question; and the progress of science consists in the perpetual
+correction of the errors and falsehoods which preceding minds conceived
+to be the correct answers they received from Nature. It is the
+supernatural within us,--namely, Mind,--which can alone guess at the
+mechanism of the natural, namely, Matter. A stone cannot question a
+stone.”
+
+The minstrel made no reply. And there was a long silence, broken but by
+the hum of the insects, the ripple of onward waves, and the sigh of the
+wind through reeds.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+SAID Kenelm, at last breaking silence--
+
+
+ “‘Rapiamus, amici,
+ Occasionem de die, dumque virent genua,
+ Et decet, obducta solvatur fronte senectus!’”
+
+
+“Is not that quotation from Horace?” asked the minstrel.
+
+“Yes; and I made it insidiously, in order to see if you had not acquired
+what is called a classical education.”
+
+“I might have received such education, if my tastes and my destinies
+had not withdrawn me in boyhood from studies of which I did not then
+comprehend the full value. But I did pick up a smattering of Latin at
+school; and from time to time since I left school I have endeavoured to
+gain some little knowledge of the most popular Latin poets; chiefly, I
+own to my shame, by the help of literal English translations.”
+
+“As a poet yourself, I am not sure that it would be an advantage to know
+a dead language so well that its forms and modes of thought ran,
+though perhaps unconsciously, into those of the living one in which you
+compose. Horace might have been a still better poet if he had not known
+Greek better than you know Latin.”
+
+“It is at least courteous in you to say so,” answered the singer, with a
+pleased smile.
+
+“You would be still more courteous,” said Kenelm, “if you would pardon
+an impertinent question, and tell me whether it is for a wager that you
+wander through the land, Homer-like, as a wandering minstrel, and allow
+that intelligent quadruped your companion to carry a tray in his mouth
+for the reception of pennies?”
+
+“No, it is not for a wager; it is a whim of mine, which I fancy from
+the tone of your conversation you could understand, being apparently
+somewhat whimsical yourself.”
+
+“So far as whim goes, be assured of my sympathy.”
+
+“Well, then, though I follow a calling by the exercise of which I secure
+a modest income, my passion is verse. If the seasons were always summer,
+and life were always youth, I should like to pass through the world
+singing. But I have never ventured to publish any verses of mine. If
+they fell still-born it would give me more pain than such wounds to
+vanity ought to give to a bearded man; and if they were assailed or
+ridiculed it might seriously injure me in my practical vocation. That
+last consideration, were I quite alone in the world, might not much
+weigh on me; but there are others for whose sake I should like to make
+fortune and preserve station. Many years ago--it was in Germany--I fell
+in with a German student who was very poor, and who did make money by
+wandering about the country with lute and song. He has since become a
+poet of no mean popularity, and he has told me that he is sure he found
+the secret of that popularity in habitually consulting popular tastes
+during his roving apprenticeship to song. His example strongly impressed
+me. So I began this experiment; and for several years my summers have
+been all partly spent in this way. I am only known, as I think I told
+you before, in the rounds I take as ‘The Wandering Minstrel;’ I receive
+the trifling moneys that are bestowed on me as proofs of a certain
+merit. I should not be paid by poor people if I did not please; and the
+songs which please them best are generally those I love best myself.
+For the rest, my time is not thrown away,--not only as regards bodily
+health, but healthfulness of mind: all the current of one’s ideas
+becomes so freshened by months of playful exercise and varied
+adventure.”
+
+“Yes, the adventure is varied enough,” said Kenelm, somewhat ruefully;
+for he felt, in shifting his posture, a sharp twinge of his bruised
+muscles. “But don’t you find those mischief-makers, the women, always
+mix themselves up with adventure?”
+
+“Bless them! of course,” said the minstrel, with a ringing laugh. “In
+life, as on the stage, the petticoat interest is always the strongest.”
+
+“I don’t agree with you there,” said Kenelm, dryly. “And you seem to
+me to utter a claptrap beneath the rank of your understanding. However,
+this warm weather indisposes one to disputation; and I own that a
+petticoat, provided it be red, is not without the interest of colour in
+a picture.”
+
+“Well, young gentleman,” said the minstrel, rising, “the day is wearing
+on, and I must wish you good-by; probably, if you were to ramble about
+the country as I do, you would see too many pretty girls not to teach
+you the strength of petticoat interest,--not in pictures alone; and
+should I meet you again I may find you writing love-verses yourself.”
+
+“After a conjecture so unwarrantable, I part company with you less
+reluctantly than I otherwise might do. But I hope we shall meet again.”
+
+“Your wish flatters me much; but, if we do, pray respect the confidence
+I have placed in you, and regard my wandering minstrelsy and my dog’s
+tray as sacred secrets. Should we not so meet, it is but a prudent
+reserve on my part if I do not give you my right name and address.”
+
+“There you show the cautious common-sense which belongs rarely to lovers
+of verse and petticoat interest. What have you done with your guitar?”
+
+“I do not pace the roads with that instrument: it is forwarded to me
+from town to town under a borrowed name, together with other raiment
+that this, should I have cause to drop my character of wandering
+minstrel.”
+
+The two men here exchanged a cordial shake of the hand. And as the
+minstrel went his way along the river-side, his voice in chanting seemed
+to lend to the wavelets a livelier murmur, to the reeds a less plaintive
+sigh.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+IN his room, solitary and brooding, sat the defeated hero of a hundred
+fights. It was now twilight; but the shutters had been partially closed
+all day, in order to exclude the sun, which had never before been
+unwelcome to Tom Bowles, and they still remained so, making the twilight
+doubly twilight, till the harvest moon, rising early, shot its ray
+through the crevice, and forced a silvery track amid the shadows of the
+floor.
+
+The man’s head drooped on his breast; his strong hands rested
+listlessly on his knees: his attitude was that of utter despondency and
+prostration. But in the expression of his face there were the signs of
+some dangerous and restless thought which belied not the gloom but the
+stillness of the posture. His brow, which was habitually open and
+frank, in its defying aggressive boldness, was now contracted into deep
+furrows, and lowered darkly over his downcast, half-closed eyes. His
+lips were so tightly compressed that the face lost its roundness, and
+the massive bone of the jaw stood out hard and salient. Now and then,
+indeed, the lips opened, giving vent to a deep, impatient sigh, but they
+reclosed as quickly as they had parted. It was one of those crises in
+life which find all the elements that make up a man’s former self in
+lawless anarchy; in which the Evil One seems to enter and direct the
+storm; in which a rude untutored mind, never before harbouring a thought
+of crime, sees the crime start up from an abyss, feels it to be an
+enemy, yet yields to it as a fate. So that when, at the last, some
+wretch, sentenced to the gibbet, shudderingly looks back to the moment
+“that trembled between two worlds,”--the world of the man guiltless,
+the world of the man guilty,--he says to the holy, highly educated,
+rational, passionless priest who confesses him and calls him “brother,”
+ “The devil put it into my head.”
+
+At that moment the door opened; at its threshold there stood the man’s
+mother--whom he had never allowed to influence his conduct, though he
+loved her well in his rough way--and the hated fellow-man whom he longed
+to see dead at his feet. The door reclosed: the mother was gone, without
+a word, for her tears choked her; the fellow-man was alone with him. Tom
+Bowles looked up, recognized his visitor, cleared his brow, and rubbed
+his mighty hands.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY drew a chair close to his antagonist’s, and silently
+laid a hand on his.
+
+Tom Bowles took up the hand in both his own, turned it curiously towards
+the moonlight, gazed at it, poised it, then with a sound between groan
+and laugh tossed it away as a thing hostile but trivial, rose and locked
+the door, came back to his seat and said bluffly,--
+
+“What do you want with me now?”
+
+“I want to ask you a favour.”
+
+“Favour?”
+
+“The greatest which man can ask from man,--friendship. You see, my dear
+Tom,” continued Kenelm, making himself quite at home, throwing his arm
+over the back of Tom’s chair, and stretching his legs comfortably as
+one does by one’s own fireside; “you see, my dear Tom, that men like
+us--young, single, not on the whole bad-looking as men go--can
+find sweethearts in plenty. If one does not like us, another will;
+sweethearts are sown everywhere like nettles and thistles. But the
+rarest thing in life is a friend. Now, tell me frankly, in the course
+of your wanderings did you ever come into a village where you could not
+have got a sweetheart if you had asked for one; and if, having got
+a sweetheart, you had lost her, do you think you would have had any
+difficulty in finding another? But have you such a thing in the world,
+beyond the pale of your own family, as a true friend,--a man friend; and
+supposing that you had such a friend,--a friend who would stand by you
+through thick and thin; who would tell you your faults to your face, and
+praise you for your good qualities behind your back; who would do all
+he could to save you from a danger, and all he could to get you out of
+one,--supposing you had such a friend and lost him, do you believe that
+if you lived to the age of Methuselah you could find another? You don’t
+answer me; you are silent. Well, Tom, I ask you to be such a friend to
+me, and I will be such a friend to you.”
+
+Tom was so thoroughly “taken aback” by this address that he remained
+dumfounded. But he felt as if the clouds in his soul were breaking, and
+a ray of sunlight were forcing its way through the sullen darkness.
+At length, however, the receding rage within him returned, though with
+vacillating step, and he growled between his teeth,--
+
+“A pretty friend indeed, robbing me of my girl! Go along with you!”
+
+“She was not your girl any more than she was or ever can be mine.”
+
+“What, you be n’t after her?”
+
+“Certainly not; I am going to Luscombe, and I ask you to come with me.
+Do you think I am going to leave you here?”
+
+“What is it to you?”
+
+“Everything. Providence has permitted me to save you from the most
+lifelong of all sorrows. For--think! Can any sorrow be more lasting
+than had been yours if you had attained your wish; if you had forced or
+frightened a woman to be your partner till death do part,--you loving
+her, she loathing you; you conscious, night and day, that your very love
+had insured her misery, and that misery haunting you like a ghost!--that
+sorrow I have saved you. May Providence permit me to complete my work,
+and save you also from the most irredeemable of all crimes! Look into
+your soul, then recall the thoughts which all day long, and not least at
+the moment I crossed this threshold, were rising up, making reason dumb
+and conscience blind, and then lay your hand on your heart and say, ‘I
+am guiltless of a dream of murder.’”
+
+The wretched man sprang up erect, menacing, and, meeting Kenelm’s calm,
+steadfast, pitying gaze, dropped no less suddenly,--dropped on the
+floor, covered his face with his hands, and a great cry came forth
+between sob and howl.
+
+“Brother,” said Kenelm, kneeling beside him, and twining his arm round
+the man’s heaving breast, “it is over now; with that cry the demon that
+maddened you has fled forever.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+WHEN, some time after, Kenelm quitted the room and joined Mrs. Bowles
+below, he said cheerily, “All right; Tom and I are sworn friends. We are
+going together to Luscombe the day after to-morrow,--Sunday; just write
+a line to his uncle to prepare him for Tom’s visit, and send thither
+his clothes, as we shall walk, and steal forth unobserved betimes in
+the morning. Now go up and talk to him; he wants a mother’s soothing and
+petting. He is a noble fellow at heart, and we shall be all proud of him
+some day or other.”
+
+As he walked towards the farmhouse, Kenelm encountered Mr. Lethbridge,
+who said, “I have come from Mr. Saunderson’s, where I went in search of
+you. There is an unexpected hitch in the negotiation for Mrs. Bawtrey’s
+shop. After seeing you this morning I fell in with Mr. Travers’s
+bailiff, and he tells me that her lease does not give her the power
+to sublet without the Squire’s consent; and that as the premises were
+originally let on very low terms to a favoured and responsible tenant,
+Mr. Travers cannot be expected to sanction the transfer of the lease
+to a poor basket-marker: in fact, though he will accept Mrs. Bawtrey’s
+resignation, it must be in favour of an applicant whom he desires to
+oblige. On hearing this, I rode over to the Park and saw Mr. Travers
+himself. But he was obdurate to my pleadings. All I could get him to say
+was, ‘Let the stranger who interests himself in the matter come and talk
+to me. I should like to see the man who thrashed that brute Tom Bowles:
+if he got the better of him perhaps he may get the better of me. Bring
+him with you to my harvest-supper to-morrow evening.’ Now, will you
+come?”
+
+“Nay,” said Kenelm, reluctantly; “but if he only asks me in order to
+gratify a very vulgar curiosity, I don’t think I have much chance of
+serving Will Somers. What do you say?”
+
+“The Squire is a good man of business, and, though no one can call him
+unjust or grasping, still he is very little touched by sentiment; and
+we must own that a sickly cripple like poor Will is not a very eligible
+tenant. If, therefore, it depended only on your chance with the Squire,
+I should not be very sanguine. But we have an ally in his daughter. She
+is very fond of Jessie Wiles, and she has shown great kindness to Will.
+In fact, a sweeter, more benevolent, sympathizing nature than that of
+Cecilia Travers does not exist. She has great influence with her father,
+and through her you may win him.”
+
+“I particularly dislike having anything to do with women,” said Kenelm,
+churlishly. “Parsons are accustomed to get round them. Surely, my dear
+sir, you are more fit for that work than I am.”
+
+“Permit me humbly to doubt that proposition; one does n’t get very
+quickly round the women when one carries the weight of years on one’s
+back. But whenever you want the aid of a parson to bring your own wooing
+to a happy conclusion, I shall be happy, in my special capacity of
+parson, to perform the ceremony required.”
+
+“_Dii meliora_!” said Kenelm, gravely. “Some ills are too serious to be
+approached even in joke. As for Miss Travers, the moment you call her
+benevolent you inspire me with horror. I know too well what a benevolent
+girl is,--officious, restless, fidgety, with a snub nose, and her pocket
+full of tracts. I will not go to the harvest-supper.”
+
+“Hist!” said the Parson, softly. They were now passing the cottage of
+Mrs. Somers; and while Kenelm was haranguing against benevolent girls,
+Mr. Lethbridge had paused before it, and was furtively looking in at the
+window. “Hist! and come here,--gently.”
+
+Kenelm obeyed, and looked in through the window. Will was seated; Jessie
+Wiles had nestled herself at his feet, and was holding his hand in both
+hers, looking up into his face. Her profile alone was seen, but its
+expression was unutterably soft and tender. His face, bent downwards
+towards her, wore a mournful expression; nay, the tears were rolling
+silently down his cheeks. Kenelm listened and heard her say, “Don’t talk
+so, Will, you break my heart; it is I who am not worthy of you.”
+
+“Parson,” said Kenelm, as they walked on, “I must go to that confounded
+harvest-supper. I begin to think there is something true in the
+venerable platitude about love in a cottage. And Will Somers must be
+married in haste, in order to repent at leisure.”
+
+“I don’t see why a man should repent having married a good girl whom he
+loves.”
+
+“You don’t? Answer me candidly. Did you ever meet a man who repented
+having married?”
+
+“Of course I have; very often.”
+
+“Well, think again, and answer as candidly. Did you ever meet a man who
+repented not having married?”
+
+The Parson mused, and was silent.
+
+“Sir,” said Kenelm, “your reticence proves your honesty, and I respect
+it.” So saying, he bounded off, and left the Parson crying out wildly,
+“But--but--”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+MR. SAUNDERSON and Kenelm sat in the arbour: the former sipping his grog
+and smoking his pipe; the latter looking forth into the summer night
+skies with an earnest yet abstracted gaze, as if he were trying to count
+the stars in the Milky Way.
+
+“Ha!” said Mr. Saunderson, who was concluding an argument; “you see it
+now, don’t you?”
+
+“I? not a bit of it. You tell me that your grandfather was a farmer,
+and your father was a farmer, and that you have been a farmer for thirty
+years; and from these premises you deduce the illogical and irrational
+conclusion that therefore your son must be a farmer.”
+
+“Young man, you may think yourself very knowing ‘cause you have been at
+the ‘Varsity, and swept away a headful of book-learning.”
+
+“Stop,” quoth Kenelm. “You grant that a university is learned.”
+
+“Well, I suppose so.”
+
+“But how could it be learned if those who quitted it brought the
+learning away? We leave it all behind us in the care of the tutors. But
+I know what you were going to say,--that it is not because I had read
+more books than you have that I was to give myself airs and pretend to
+have more knowledge of life than a man of your years and experience.
+Agreed, as a general rule. But does not every doctor, however wise and
+skilful, prefer taking another doctor’s opinion about himself, even
+though that other doctor has just started in practice? And seeing that
+doctors, taking them as a body, are monstrous clever fellows, is not
+the example they set us worth following? Does it not prove that no man,
+however wise, is a good judge of his own case? Now, your son’s case
+is really your case: you see it through the medium of your likings and
+dislikings; and insist upon forcing a square peg into a round hole,
+because in a round hole you, being a round peg, feel tight and
+comfortable. Now I call that irrational.”
+
+“I don’t see why my son has any right to fancy himself a square peg,”
+ said the farmer, doggedly, “when his father and his grandfather and his
+great-grandfather have been round pegs; and it is agin’ nature for
+any creature not to take after its own kind. A dog is a pointer or
+a sheep-dog according as its forebears were pointers or sheep-dogs.
+There,” cried the farmer, triumphantly, shaking the ashes out of his
+pipe. “I think I have posed you, young master!”
+
+“No; for you have taken it for granted that the breeds have not been
+crossed. But suppose that a sheep-dog has married a pointer, are you
+sure that his son will not be more of a pointer than a sheep-dog?”
+
+Mr. Saunderson arrested himself in the task of refilling his pipe, and
+scratched his head.
+
+“You see,” continued Kenelm, “that you have crossed the breed. You
+married a tradesman’s daughter, and I dare say her grandfather and
+great-grandfather were tradesmen too. Now, most sons take after their
+mothers, and therefore Mr. Saunderson junior takes after his kind on the
+distaff side, and comes into the world a square peg, which can only be
+tight and comfortable in a square hole. It is no use arguing, Farmer:
+your boy must go to his uncle; and there’s an end of the matter.”
+
+“By goles!” said the farmer, “you seem to think you can talk me out of
+my senses.”
+
+“No; but I think if you had your own way you would talk your son into
+the workhouse.”
+
+“What! by sticking to the land like his father before him? Let a man
+stick by the land, and the land will stick by him.”
+
+“Let a man stick in the mud, and the mud will stick to him. You put
+your heart in your farm, and your son would only put his foot into it.
+Courage! Don’t you see that Time is a whirligig, and all things come
+round? Every day somebody leaves the land and goes off into trade. By
+and by he grows rich, and then his great desire is to get back to
+the land again. He left it the son of a farmer: he returns to it as a
+squire. Your son, when he gets to be fifty, will invest his savings in
+acres, and have tenants of his own. Lord, how he will lay down the law
+to them! I would not advise you to take a farm under him.”
+
+“Catch me at it!” said the farmer. “He would turn all the contents of
+the ‘pothecary’s shop into my fallows, and call it ‘progress.’”
+
+“Let him physic the fallows when he has farms of his own: keep yours out
+of his chemical clutches. Come, I shall tell him to pack up and be off
+to his uncle’s next week?”
+
+“Well, well,” said the farmer, in a resigned tone: “a wilful man must
+e’en have his way.”
+
+“And the best thing a sensible man can do is not to cross it. Mr.
+Saunderson, give me your honest hand. You are one of those men who put
+the sons of good fathers in mind of their own; and I think of mine when
+I say ‘God bless you!’”
+
+Quitting the farmer, Kenelm re-entered the house, and sought Mr.
+Saunderson junior in his own room. He found that young gentleman still
+up, and reading an eloquent tract on the Emancipation of the Human Race
+from all Tyrannical Control,--Political, Social, Ecclesiastical, and
+Domestic.
+
+The lad looked up sulkily, and said, on encountering Kenelm’s
+melancholic visage, “Ah! I see you have talked with the old governor,
+and he’ll not hear of it.”
+
+“In the first place,” answered Kenelm, “since you value yourself on
+a superior education, allow me to advise you to study the English
+language, as the forms of it are maintained by the elder authors, whom,
+in spite of an Age of Progress, men of superior education esteem. No one
+who has gone through that study; no one, indeed, who has studied the Ten
+Commandments in the vernacular,--commits the mistake of supposing that
+‘the old governor’ is a synonymous expression for ‘father.’ In the
+second place, since you pretend to the superior enlightenment which
+results from a superior education, learn to know better your own self
+before you set up as a teacher of mankind. Excuse the liberty I take,
+as your sincere well-wisher, when I tell you that you are at present
+a conceited fool,--in short, that which makes one boy call another an
+‘ass.’ But when one has a poor head he may redeem the average balance of
+humanity by increasing the wealth of the heart. Try and increase yours.
+Your father consents to your choice of your lot at the sacrifice of
+all his own inclinations. This is a sore trial to a father’s pride, a
+father’s affection; and few fathers make such sacrifices with a good
+grace. I have thus kept my promise to you, and enforced your wishes on
+Mr. Saunderson’s judgment, because I am sure you would have been a very
+bad farmer. It now remains for you to show that you can be a very good
+tradesman. You are bound in honour to me and to your father to try your
+best to be so; and meanwhile leave the task of upsetting the world
+to those who have no shop in it, which would go crash in the general
+tumble. And so good-night to you.”
+
+To these admonitory words, _sacro digna silentio_, Saunderson junior
+listened with a dropping jaw and fascinated staring eyes. He felt like
+an infant to whom the nurse has given a hasty shake, and who is too
+stupefied by that operation to know whether he is hurt or not.
+
+A minute after Kenelm had quitted the room he reappeared at the door,
+and said in a conciliatory whisper, “Don’t take it to heart that I
+called you a conceited fool and an ass. These terms are no doubt just as
+applicable to myself. But there is a more conceited fool and a greater
+ass than either of us; and that is the Age in which we have the
+misfortune to be born,--an Age of Progress, Mr. Saunderson, junior!--an
+Age of Prigs.”
+
+
+
+
+BOOK III.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IF there were a woman in the world who might be formed and fitted
+to reconcile Kenelm Chillingly to the sweet troubles of love and the
+pleasant bickerings of wedded life, one might reasonably suppose that
+that woman could be found in Cecilia Travers. An only daughter and
+losing her mother in childhood, she had been raised to the mistress-ship
+of a household at an age in which most girls are still putting their
+dolls to bed; and thus had early acquired that sense of responsibility,
+accompanied with the habits of self-reliance, which seldom fails to give
+a certain nobility to character; though almost as often, in the case of
+women, it steals away the tender gentleness which constitutes the charm
+of their sex.
+
+It had not done so in the instance of Cecilia Travers, because she was
+so womanlike that even the exercise of power could not make her manlike.
+There was in the depth of her nature such an instinct of sweetness that
+wherever her mind toiled and wandered it gathered and hoarded honey.
+
+She had one advantage over most girls in the same rank of life,--she
+had not been taught to fritter away such capacities for culture as
+Providence gave her in the sterile nothingnesses which are called
+feminine accomplishments. She did not paint figures out of drawing
+in meagre water-colours; she had not devoted years of her life to the
+inflicting on polite audiences the boredom of Italian bravuras, which
+they could hear better sung by a third-rate professional singer in
+a metropolitan music-hall. I am afraid she had no other female
+accomplishments than those by which the sempstress or embroideress earns
+her daily bread. That sort of work she loved, and she did it deftly.
+
+But if she had not been profitlessly plagued by masters, Cecilia Travers
+had been singularly favoured by her father’s choice of a teacher: no
+great merit in him either. He had a prejudice against professional
+governesses, and it chanced that among his own family connections was a
+certain Mrs. Campion, a lady of some literary distinction, whose husband
+had held a high situation in one of our public offices, and living, much
+to his satisfaction, up to a very handsome income, had died, much to the
+astonishment of others, without leaving a farthing behind him.
+
+Fortunately, there were no children to provide for. A small government
+pension was allotted to the widow; and as her husband’s house had been
+made by her one of the pleasantest in London, she was popular enough to
+be invited by numerous friends to their country seats; among others, by
+Mr. Travers. She came intending to stay a fortnight. At the end of that
+time she had grown so attached to Cecilia, and Cecilia to her, and her
+presence had become so pleasant and so useful to her host, that
+the Squire entreated her to stay and undertake the education of his
+daughter. Mrs. Campion, after some hesitation, gratefully consented; and
+thus Cecilia, from the age of eight to her present age of nineteen, had
+the inestimable advantage of living in constant companionship with a
+woman of richly cultivated mind, accustomed to hear the best criticisms
+on the best books, and adding to no small accomplishment in literature
+the refinement of manners and that sort of prudent judgment which result
+from habitual intercourse with an intellectual and gracefully world-wise
+circle of society: so that Cecilia herself, without being at all blue or
+pedantic, became one of those rare young women with whom a well-educated
+man can converse on equal terms; from whom he gains as much as he can
+impart to her; while a man who, not caring much about books, is still
+gentleman enough to value good breeding, felt a relief in exchanging the
+forms of his native language without the shock of hearing that a bishop
+was “a swell” or a croquet-party “awfully jolly.”
+
+In a word, Cecilia was one of those women whom Heaven forms for man’s
+helpmate; who, if he were born to rank and wealth, would, as his
+partner, reflect on them a new dignity, and add to their enjoyment by
+bringing forth their duties; who, not less if the husband she chose were
+poor and struggling, would encourage, sustain, and soothe him, take her
+own share of his burdens, and temper the bitterness of life with the
+all-recompensing sweetness of her smile.
+
+Little, indeed, as yet had she ever thought of love or of lovers. She
+had not even formed to herself any of those ideals which float before
+the eyes of most girls when they enter their teens. But of two things
+she felt inly convinced: first, that she could never wed where she did
+not love; and secondly, that where she did love it would be for life.
+
+And now I close this sketch with a picture of the girl herself. She has
+just come into her room from inspecting the preparations for the evening
+entertainment which her father is to give to his tenants and rural
+neighbours.
+
+She has thrown aside her straw hat, and put down the large basket which
+she has emptied of flowers. She pauses before the glass, smoothing back
+the ruffled bands of her hair,--hair of a dark, soft chestnut, silky
+and luxuriant,--never polluted, and never, so long as she lives, to be
+polluted by auricomous cosmetics, far from that delicate darkness, every
+tint of the colours traditionally dedicated to the locks of Judas.
+
+Her complexion, usually of that soft bloom which inclines to paleness,
+is now heightened into glow by exercise and sunlight. The features are
+small and feminine; the eyes dark with long lashes; the mouth singularly
+beautiful, with a dimple on either side, and parted now in a half-smile
+at some pleasant recollection, giving a glimpse of small teeth
+glistening as pearls. But the peculiar charm of her face is in an
+expression of serene happiness, that sort of happiness which seems as if
+it had never been interrupted by a sorrow, had never been troubled by a
+sin,--that holy kind of happiness which belongs to innocence, the light
+reflected from a heart and conscience alike at peace.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+IT was a lovely summer evening for the Squire’s rural entertainment. Mr.
+Travers had some guests staying with him: they had dined early for
+the occasion, and were now grouped with their host a little before six
+o’clock on the lawn. The house was of irregular architecture, altered
+or added to at various periods from the reign of Elizabeth to that of
+Victoria: at one end, the oldest part, a gable with mullion windows;
+at the other, the newest part, a flat-roofed wing, with modern sashes
+opening to the ground, the intermediate part much hidden by a veranda
+covered with creepers in full bloom. The lawn was a spacious table-land
+facing the west, and backed by a green and gentle hill, crowned with
+the ruins of an ancient priory. On one side of the lawn stretched a
+flower-garden and pleasure-ground, originally planned by Repton; on the
+opposite angles of the sward were placed two large marquees,--one for
+dancing, the other for supper. Towards the south the view was left open,
+and commanded the prospect of an old English park, not of the stateliest
+character; not intersected with ancient avenues, nor clothed
+with profitless fern as lairs for deer: but the park of a careful
+agriculturist, uniting profit with show, the sward duly drained and
+nourished, fit to fatten bullocks in an incredibly short time, and
+somewhat spoilt to the eye by subdivisions of wire fence. Mr. Travers
+was renowned for skilful husbandry, and the general management of
+land to the best advantage. He had come into the estate while still in
+childhood, and thus enjoyed the accumulations of a long minority. He had
+entered the Guards at the age of eighteen, and having more command of
+money than most of his contemporaries, though they might be of higher
+rank and the sons of richer men, he had been much courted and much
+plundered. At the age of twenty-five he found himself one of the leaders
+of fashion, renowned chiefly for reckless daring where-ever honour could
+be plucked out of the nettle danger: a steeple-chaser, whose exploits
+made a quiet man’s hair stand on end; a rider across country, taking
+leaps which a more cautious huntsman carefully avoided. Known at Paris
+as well as in London, he had been admired by ladies whose smiles had
+cost him duels, the marks of which still remained in glorious scars
+on his person. No man ever seemed more likely to come to direst
+grief before attaining the age of thirty, for at twenty-seven all the
+accumulations of his minority were gone; and his estate, which, when he
+came of age, was scarcely three thousand a year, but entirely at his own
+disposal, was mortgaged up to its eyes.
+
+His friends began to shake their heads and call him “poor fellow;” but,
+with all his wild faults, Leopold Travers had been wholly pure from the
+two vices out of which a man does not often redeem himself. He had never
+drunk and he had never gambled. His nerves were not broken, his brain
+was not besotted. There was plenty of health in him yet, mind and body.
+At the critical period of his life he married for love, and his choice
+was a most felicitous one. The lady had no fortune; but though handsome
+and high-born, she had no taste for extravagance, and no desire for
+other society than that of the man she loved. So when he said, “Let us
+settle in the country and try our best to live on a few hundreds, lay
+by, and keep the old place out of the market,” she consented with a
+joyful heart: and marvel it was to all how this wild Leopold Travers
+did settle down; did take to cultivating his home farm with his men from
+sunrise to sunset like a common tenant-farmer; did contrive to pay the
+interest on the mortgages, and keep his head above water. After some
+years of pupilage in this school of thrift, during which his habits
+became formed and his whole character braced, Leopold Travers suddenly
+found himself again rich, through the wife whom he had so prudently
+married without other dower than her love and her virtues. Her only
+brother, Lord Eagleton, a Scotch peer, had been engaged in marriage to a
+young lady, considered to be a rare prize in the lottery of wedlock.
+The marriage was broken off under very disastrous circumstances; but the
+young lord, good-looking and agreeable, was naturally expected to seek
+speedy consolation in some other alliance. Nevertheless he did not
+do so: he became a confirmed invalid, and died single, leaving to his
+sister all in his power to save from the distant kinsman who succeeded
+to his lands and title,--a goodly sum, which not only sufficed to pay
+off the mortgages on Neesdale Park but bestowed on its owner a surplus
+which the practical knowledge of country life that he had acquired
+enabled him to devote with extraordinary profit to the general
+improvement of his estate. He replaced tumble-down old farm buildings
+with new constructions on the most approved principles; bought or
+pensioned off certain slovenly incompetent tenants; threw sundry petty
+holdings into large farms suited to the buildings he constructed;
+purchased here and there small bits of land, commodious to the farms
+they adjoined, and completing the integrity of his ring-fence; stubbed
+up profitless woods which diminished the value of neighbouring arables
+by obstructing sun and air and harbouring legions of rabbits; and
+then, seeking tenants of enterprise and capital, more than doubled his
+original yearly rental, and perhaps more than tripled the market value
+of his property. Simultaneously with this acquisition of fortune, he
+emerged from the inhospitable and unsocial obscurity which his previous
+poverty had compelled, took an active part in county business, proved
+himself an excellent speaker at public meetings, subscribed liberally to
+the hunt, and occasionally joined in it,--a less bold but a wiser rider
+than of yore. In short, as Themistocles boasted that he could make a
+small state great, so Leopold Travers might boast with equal truth,
+that, by his energies, his judgment, and the weight of his personal
+character, he had made the owner of a property which had been at
+his accession to it of third-rate rank in the county a personage so
+considerable that no knight of the shire against whom he declared could
+have been elected, and if he had determined to stand himself he would
+have been chosen free of expense.
+
+But he said, on being solicited to become a candidate, “When a man once
+gives himself up to the care and improvement of a landed estate, he
+has no time and no heart for anything else. An estate is an income or
+a kingdom, according as the owner chooses to take it. I take it as a
+kingdom, and I cannot be _roi faineant_, with a steward for _maire du
+palais_. A king does not go into the House of Commons.”
+
+Three years after this rise in the social ladder, Mrs. Travers was
+seized with congestion of the lungs followed by pleurisy, and died after
+less than a week’s illness. Leopold never wholly recovered her loss.
+Though still young and always handsome, the idea of another wife, the
+love of another woman, were notions which he dismissed from his, mind
+with a quiet scorn. He was too masculine a creature to parade grief.
+For some weeks, indeed, he shut himself up in his own room, so rigidly
+secluded that he would not see even his daughter. But one morning he
+appeared in his fields as usual, and from that day resumed his old
+habits, and gradually renewed that cordial interchange of hospitalities
+which had popularly distinguished him since his accession to wealth.
+Still people felt that the man was changed; he was more taciturn,
+more grave: if always just in his dealings, he took the harder side of
+justice, where in his wife’s time he had taken the gentler. Perhaps, to
+a man of strong will, the habitual intercourse with an amiable woman is
+essential for those occasions in which Will best proves the fineness of
+its temper by the facility with which it can be bent.
+
+It may be said that Leopold Travers might have found such intercourse in
+the intimate companionship of his own daughter. But she was a mere child
+when his wife died, and she grew up to womanhood too insensibly for
+him to note the change. Besides, where a man has found a wife his
+all-in-all, a daughter can never supply her place. The very reverence
+due to children precludes unrestrained confidence; and there is not
+that sense of permanent fellowship in a daughter which a man has in a
+wife,--any day a stranger may appear and carry her off from him. At all
+events Leopold did not own in Cecilia the softening influence to
+which he had yielded in her mother. He was fond of her, proud of her,
+indulgent to her; but the indulgence had its set limits. Whatever she
+asked solely for herself he granted; whatever she wished for matters
+under feminine control--the domestic household, the parish school, the
+alms-receiving poor--obtained his gentlest consideration. But when she
+had been solicited by some offending out-of-door dependant or some petty
+defaulting tenant to use her good offices in favour of the culprit, Mr.
+Travers checked her interference by a firm “No,” though uttered in a
+mild accent, and accompanied with a masculine aphorism to the effect
+that “there would be no such things as strict justice and disciplined
+order in the world if a man yielded to a woman’s pleadings in any matter
+of business between man and man.” From this it will be seen that
+Mr. Lethbridge had overrated the value of Cecilia’s alliance in the
+negotiation respecting Mrs. Bawtrey’s premium and shop.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+IF, having just perused what has thus been written on the biographical
+antecedents and mental characteristics of Leopold Travers, you, my dear
+reader, were to be personally presented to that gentleman as he now
+stands, the central figure of the group gathered round him, on his
+terrace, you would probably be surprised,--nay, I have no doubt you
+would say to yourself, “Not at all the sort of man I expected.” In that
+slender form, somewhat below the middle height; in that fair countenance
+which still, at the age of forty-eight, retains a delicacy of feature
+and of colouring which is of almost womanlike beauty, and, from the
+quiet placidity of its expression, conveys at first glance the notion of
+almost womanlike mildness,--it would be difficult to recognize a man who
+in youth had been renowned for reckless daring, in maturer years more
+honourably distinguished for steadfast prudence and determined purpose,
+and who, alike in faults or in merits, was as emphatically masculine as
+a biped in trousers can possibly be.
+
+Mr. Travers is listening to a young man of about two and twenty, the
+eldest son of the richest nobleman of the county, and who intends to
+start for the representation of the shire at the next general election,
+which is close at hand. The Hon. George Belvoir is tall, inclined to be
+stout, and will look well on the hustings. He has had those pains taken
+with his education which an English peer generally does take with the
+son intended to succeed to the representation of an honourable name and
+the responsibilities of high station. If eldest sons do not often make
+as great a figure in the world as their younger brothers, it is not
+because their minds are less cultivated, but because they have less
+motive power for action. George Belvoir was well read, especially
+in that sort of reading which befits a future senator,--history,
+statistics, political economy, so far as that dismal science is
+compatible with the agricultural interest. He was also well-principled,
+had a strong sense of discipline and duty, was prepared in politics
+firmly to uphold as right whatever was proposed by his own party, and
+to reject as wrong whatever was proposed by the other. At present he was
+rather loud and noisy in the assertion of his opinions,--young men fresh
+from the University generally are. It was the secret wish of Mr. Travers
+that George Belvoir should become his son-in-law; less because of his
+rank and wealth (though such advantages were not of a nature to be
+despised by a practical man like Leopold Travers) than on account of
+those qualities in his personal character which were likely to render
+him an excellent husband.
+
+Seated on wire benches, just without the veranda, but shaded by its
+fragrant festoons, were Mrs. Campion and three ladies, the wives of
+neighbouring squires. Cecilia stood a little apart from them, bending
+over a long-backed Skye terrier, whom she was teaching to stand on his
+hind legs.
+
+But see, the company are arriving! How suddenly that green space, ten
+minutes ago so solitary, has become animated and populous!
+
+Indeed the park now presented a very lively appearance: vans, carts, and
+farmers’ chaises were seen in crowded procession along the winding road;
+foot-passengers were swarming towards the house in all directions. The
+herds and flocks in the various enclosures stopped grazing to stare at
+the unwonted invaders of their pasture: yet the orderly nature of their
+host imparted a respect for order to his ruder visitors; not even a
+turbulent boy attempted to scale the fences, or creep through their
+wires; all threaded the narrow turnstiles which gave egress from one
+subdivision of the sward to another.
+
+Mr. Travers turned to George Belvoir: “I see old farmer Steen’s
+yellow gig. Mind how you talk to him, George. He is full of whims and
+crotchets, and if you once brush his feathers the wrong way he will be
+as vindictive as a parrot. But he is the man who must second you at
+the nomination. No other tenant-farmer carries the same weight with his
+class.”
+
+“I suppose,” said George, “that if Mr. Steen is the best man to second
+me at the hustings, he is a good speaker?”
+
+“A good speaker? in one sense he is. He never says a word too much. The
+last time he seconded the nomination of the man you are to succeed, this
+was his speech: ‘Brother Electors, for twenty years I have been one of
+the judges at our county cattle-show. I know one animal from another.
+Looking at the specimens before us to-day none of them are as good
+of their kind as I’ve seen elsewhere. But if you choose Sir John Hogg
+you’ll not get the wrong sow by the ear!’”
+
+“At least,” said George, after a laugh at this sample of eloquence
+unadorned, “Mr. Steen does not err on the side of flattery in his
+commendations of a candidate. But what makes him such an authority with
+the farmers? Is he a first-rate agriculturist?”
+
+“In thrift, yes!--in spirit, no! He says that all expensive experiments
+should be left to gentlemen farmers. He is an authority with other
+tenants: firstly, because he is a very keen censor of their landlords;
+secondly, because he holds himself thoroughly independent of his own;
+thirdly, because he is supposed to have studied the political bearings
+of questions that affect the landed interest, and has more than once
+been summoned to give his opinion on such subjects to Committees of both
+Houses of Parliament. Here he comes. Observe, when I leave you to talk
+to him: firstly, that you confess utter ignorance of practical farming;
+nothing enrages him like the presumption of a gentleman farmer like
+myself: secondly, that you ask his opinion on the publication of
+Agricultural Statistics, just modestly intimating that you, as at
+present advised, think that inquisitorial researches into a man’s
+business involve principles opposed to the British Constitution. And on
+all that he may say as to the shortcomings of landlords in general, and
+of your father in particular, make no reply, but listen with an air of
+melancholy conviction. How do you do, Mr. Steen, and how’s the mistress?
+Why have you not brought her with you?”
+
+“My good woman is in the straw again, Squire. Who is that youngster?”
+
+“Hist! let me introduce Mr. Belvoir.”
+
+Mr. Belvoir offers his hand.
+
+“No, sir!” vociferates Steen, putting both his own hands behind him. “No
+offence, young gentleman. But I don’t give my hand at first sight to
+a man who wants to shake a vote out of it. Not that I know anything
+against you. But, if you be a farmer’s friend rabbits are not, and my
+lord your father is a great one for rabbits.”
+
+“Indeed you are mistaken there!” cries George, with vehement
+earnestness. Mr. Travers gave him a nudge, as much as to say, “Hold your
+tongue.” George understood the hint, and is carried off meekly by Mr.
+Steen down the solitude of the plantations.
+
+The guests now arrived fast and thick. They consisted chiefly not only
+of Mr. Travers’s tenants, but of farmers and their families within
+the range of eight or ten miles from the Park, with a few of the
+neighbouring gentry and clergy.
+
+It was not a supper intended to include the labouring class; for Mr.
+Travers had an especial dislike to the custom of exhibiting peasants
+at feeding-time, as if they were so many tamed animals of an inferior
+species. When he entertained work-people, he made them comfortable in
+their own way; and peasants feel more comfortable when not invited to be
+stared out of countenance.
+
+“Well, Lethbridge,” said Mr. Travers, “where is the young gladiator you
+promised to bring?”
+
+“I did bring him, and he was by my side not a minute ago. He has
+suddenly given me the slip: ‘abiit, evasit, erupit.’ I was looking round
+for him in vain when you accosted me.”
+
+“I hope he has not seen some guest of mine whom he wants to fight.”
+
+“I hope not,” answered the Parson, doubtfully. “He’s a strange fellow.
+But I think you will be pleased with him; that is, if he can be found.
+Oh, Mr. Saunderson, how do you do? Have you seen your visitor?”
+
+“No, sir, I have just come. My mistress, Squire, and my three girls; and
+this is my son.”
+
+“A hearty welcome to all,” said the graceful Squire; (turning to
+Saunderson junior), “I suppose you are fond of dancing. Get yourself a
+partner. We may as well open the ball.”
+
+“Thank you, sir, but I never dance,” said Saunderson junior, with an air
+of austere superiority to an amusement which the March of Intellect had
+left behind.
+
+“Then you’ll have less to regret when you are grown old. But the band
+is striking up; we must adjourn to the marquee. George” (Mr. Belvoir,
+escaped from Mr. Steen, had just made his appearance), “will you give
+your arm to Cecilia, to whom I think you are engaged for the first
+quadrille?”
+
+“I hope,” said George to Cecilia, as they walked towards the marquee,
+“that Mr. Steen is not an average specimen of the electors I shall have
+to canvass. Whether he has been brought up to honour his own father and
+mother I can’t pretend to say, but he seems bent upon teaching me not
+to honour mine. Having taken away my father’s moral character upon the
+unfounded allegation that he loved rabbits better than mankind, he then
+assailed my innocent mother on the score of religion, and inquired when
+she was going over to the Church of Rome, basing that inquiry on the
+assertion that she had taken away her custom from a Protestant grocer
+and conferred it on a Papist.”
+
+“Those are favourable signs, Mr. Belvoir. Mr. Steen always prefaces a
+kindness by a great deal of incivility. I asked him once to lend me a
+pony, my own being suddenly taken lame, and he seized that opportunity
+to tell me that my father was an impostor in pretending to be a judge of
+cattle; that he was a tyrant, screwing his tenants in order to indulge
+extravagant habits of hospitality; and implied that it would be a
+great mercy if we did not live to apply to him, not for a pony, but for
+parochial relief. I went away indignant. But he sent me the pony. I am
+sure he will give you his vote.”
+
+“Meanwhile,” said George, with a timid attempt at gallantry, as they now
+commenced the quadrille, “I take encouragement from the belief that I
+have the good wishes of Miss Travers. If ladies had votes, as Mr. Mill
+recommends, why, then--”
+
+“Why, then, I should vote as Papa does,” said Miss Travers, simply. “And
+if women had votes, I suspect there would be very little peace in any
+household where they did not vote as the man at the head of it wished
+them.”
+
+“But I believe, after all,” said the aspirant to Parliament, seriously,
+“that the advocates for female suffrage would limit it to women
+independent of masculine control, widows and spinsters voting in right
+of their own independent tenements.”
+
+“In that case,” said Cecilia, “I suppose they would still generally go
+by the opinion of some man they relied on, or make a very silly choice
+if they did not.”
+
+“You underrate the good sense of your sex.”
+
+“I hope not. Do you underrate the good sense of yours, if, in far more
+than half the things appertaining to daily life, the wisest men say,
+‘Better leave _them_ to the _women_’? But you’re forgetting the figure,
+_cavalier seul_.”
+
+“By the way,” said George, in another interval of the dance, “do
+you know a Mr. Chillingly, the son of Sir Peter, of Exmundham, in
+Westshire?”
+
+“No; why do you ask?”
+
+“Because I thought I caught a glimpse of his face: it was just as Mr.
+Steen was bearing me away down that plantation. From what you say, I
+must suppose I was mistaken.”
+
+“Chillingly! But surely some persons were talking yesterday at dinner
+about a young gentleman of that name as being likely to stand for
+Westshire at the next election, but who had made a very unpopular and
+eccentric speech on the occasion of his coming of age.”
+
+“The same man: I was at college with him,--a very singular character. He
+was thought clever; won a prize or two; took a good degree: but it was
+generally said that he would have deserved a much higher one if some of
+his papers had not contained covert jests either on the subject or the
+examiners. It is a dangerous thing to set up as a humourist in practical
+life,--especially public life. They say Mr. Pitt had naturally a great
+deal of wit and humour, but he wisely suppressed any evidence of those
+qualities in his Parliamentary speeches. Just like Chillingly, to turn
+into ridicule the important event of festivities in honour of his coming
+of age,--an occasion that can never occur again in the whole course of
+his life.”
+
+“It was bad taste,” said Cecilia, “if intentional. But perhaps he was
+misunderstood, or taken by surprise.”
+
+“Misunderstood,--possibly; but taken by surprise,--no. The coolest
+fellow I ever met. Not that I have met him very often. Latterly, indeed,
+at Cambridge he lived much alone. It was said that he read hard. I doubt
+that; for my rooms were just over his, and I know that he was much
+more frequently out of doors than in. He rambled a good deal about the
+country on foot. I have seen him in by-lanes a dozen miles distant from
+the town when I have been riding back from the hunt. He was fond of the
+water, and pulled a mighty strong oar, but declined to belong to our
+University crew; yet if ever there was a fight between undergraduates
+and bargemen, he was sure to be in the midst of it. Yes, a very great
+oddity indeed, full of contradictions, for a milder, quieter fellow in
+general intercourse you could not see; and as for the jests of which
+he was accused in his examination papers, his very face should
+have acquitted him of the charge before any impartial jury of his
+countrymen.”
+
+“You sketch quite an interesting picture of him,” said Cecilia. “I wish
+we did know him: he would be worth seeing.”
+
+“And, once seen, you would not easily forget him,--a dark, handsome
+face, with large melancholy eyes, and with one of those spare slender
+figures which enable a man to disguise his strength, as a fraudulent
+billiard-player disguises his play.”
+
+The dance had ceased during this conversation, and the speakers were now
+walking slowly to and fro the lawn amid the general crowd.
+
+“How well your father plays the part of host to these rural folks!” said
+George, with a secret envy. “Do observe how quietly he puts that shy
+young farmer at his ease, and now how kindly he deposits that lame old
+lady on the bench, and places the stool under her feet. What a canvasser
+he would be! and how young he still looks, and how monstrous handsome!”
+
+This last compliment was uttered as Travers, having made the old
+lady comfortable, had joined the three Miss Saundersons, dividing his
+pleasant smile equally between them; and seemingly unconscious of the
+admiring glances which many another rural beauty directed towards him
+as he passed along. About the man there was a certain indescribable
+elegance, a natural suavity free from all that affectation, whether
+of forced heartiness or condescending civility, which too often
+characterizes the well-meant efforts of provincial magnates to
+accommodate themselves to persons of inferior station and breeding. It
+is a great advantage to a man to have passed his early youth in that
+most equal and most polished of all democracies,--the best society of
+large capitals. And to such acquired advantage Leopold Travers added the
+inborn qualities that please.
+
+Later in the evening Travers, again accosting Mr. Lethbridge, said, “I
+have been talking much to the Saundersons about that young man who did
+us the inestimable service of punishing your ferocious parishioner,
+Tom Bowles; and all I hear so confirms the interest your own
+account inspired me with that I should really like much to make his
+acquaintance. Has not he turned up yet?”
+
+“No; I fear he must have gone. But in that case I hope you will take
+his generous desire to serve my poor basket-maker into benevolent
+consideration.”
+
+“Do not press me; I feel so reluctant to refuse any request of yours.
+But I have my own theory as to the management of an estate, and my
+system does not allow of favour. I should wish to explain that to the
+young stranger himself; for I hold courage in such honour that I do not
+like a brave man to leave these parts with an impression that Leopold
+Travers is an ungracious churl. However, he may not have gone. I will
+go and look for him myself. Just tell Cecilia that she has danced enough
+with the gentry, and that I have told Farmer Turby’s son, a fine young
+fellow and a capital rider across country, that I expect him to show my
+daughter that he can dance as well as he rides.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+QUITTING Mr. Lethbridge, Travers turned with quick step towards the more
+solitary part of the grounds. He did not find the object of his search
+in the walks of the plantation; and, on taking the circuit of his
+demesne, wound his way back towards the lawn through a sequestered rocky
+hollow in the rear of the marquee, which had been devoted to a fernery.
+Here he came to a sudden pause; for, seated a few yards before him on
+a gray crag, and the moonlight full on his face, he saw a solitary man,
+looking upwards with a still and mournful gaze, evidently absorbed in
+abstract contemplation.
+
+Recalling the description of the stranger which he had heard from Mr.
+Lethbridge and the Saundersons, Mr. Travers felt sure that he had come
+on him at last. He approached gently; and, being much concealed by the
+tall ferns, Kenelm (for that itinerant it was) did not see him advance,
+until he felt a hand on his shoulder, and, turning round, beheld a
+winning smile and heard a pleasant voice.
+
+“I think I am not mistaken,” said Leopold Travers, “in assuming you to
+be the gentleman whom Mr. Lethbridge promised to introduce to me, and
+who is staying with my tenant, Mr. Saunderson?”
+
+Kenelm rose and bowed. Travers saw at once that it was the bow of a man
+in his own world, and not in keeping with the Sunday costume of a petty
+farmer. “Nay,” said he, “let us talk seated;” and placing himself on the
+crag, he made room for Kenelm beside him.
+
+“In the first place,” resumed Travers, “I must thank you for having
+done a public service in putting down the brute force which has long
+tyrannized over the neighbourhood. Often in my young days I have felt
+the disadvantage of height and sinews, whenever it would have been a
+great convenience to terminate dispute or chastise insolence by a
+resort to man’s primitive weapons; but I never more lamented my physical
+inferiority than on certain occasions when I would have given my ears to
+be able to thrash Tom Bowles myself. It has been as great a disgrace to
+my estate that that bully should so long have infested it as it is
+to the King of Italy not to be able with all his armies to put down a
+brigand in Calabria.”
+
+“Pardon me, Mr. Travers, but I am one of those rare persons who do not
+like to hear ill of their friends. Mr. Thomas Bowles is a particular
+friend of mine.”
+
+“Eh!” cried Travers, aghast. “‘Friend!’ you are joking.
+
+“You would not accuse me of joking if you knew me better. But surely you
+have felt that there are few friends one likes more cordially, and ought
+to respect more heedfully, than the enemy with whom one has just made it
+up.”
+
+“You say well, and I accept the rebuke,” said Travers, more and more
+surprised. “And I certainly have less right to abuse Mr. Bowles than
+you have, since I had not the courage to fight him. To turn to another
+subject less provocative. Mr. Lethbridge has told me of your amiable
+desire to serve two of his young parishioners, Will Somers and Jessie
+Wiles, and of your generous offer to pay the money Mrs. Bawtrey demands
+for the transfer of her lease. To that negotiation my consent is
+necessary, and that consent I cannot give. Shall I tell you why?”
+
+“Pray do. Your reasons may admit of argument.”
+
+“Every reason admits of argument,” said Mr. Travers, amused at the calm
+assurance of a youthful stranger in anticipating argument with a skilful
+proprietor on the management of his own property. “I do not, however,
+tell you my reasons for the sake of argument, but in vindication of my
+seeming want of courtesy towards yourself. I have had a very hard and a
+very difficult task to perform in bringing the rental of my estate up
+to its proper value. In doing so, I have been compelled to adopt one
+uniform system, equally applied to my largest and my pettiest holdings.
+That system consists in securing the best and safest tenants I can,
+at the rents computed by a valuer in whom I have confidence. To this
+system, universally adopted on my estate, though it incurred much
+unpopularity at first, I have at length succeeded in reconciling the
+public opinion of my neighbourhood. People began by saying I was
+hard; they now acknowledge I am just. If I once give way to favour or
+sentiment, I unhinge my whole system. Every day I am subjected to moving
+solicitations. Lord Twostars, a keen politician, begs me to give a
+vacant farm to a tenant because he is an excellent canvasser, and has
+always voted straight with the party. Mrs. Fourstars, a most benevolent
+woman, entreats me not to dismiss another tenant, because he is in
+distressed circumstances and has a large family; very good reasons
+perhaps for my excusing him an arrear, or allowing him a retiring
+pension, but the worst reasons in the world for letting him continue to
+ruin himself and my land. Now, Mrs. Bawtrey has a small holding on lease
+at the inadequate rent of L8 a year. She asks L45 for its transfer, but
+she can’t transfer the lease without my consent; and I can get L12 a
+year as a moderate rental from a large choice of competent tenants. It
+will better answer me to pay her the L45 myself, which I have no doubt
+the incoming tenant would pay me back, at least in part; and if he did
+not, the additional rent would be good interest for my expenditure.
+Now, you happen to take a sentimental interest, as you pass through the
+village, in the loves of a needy cripple whose utmost industry has but
+served to save himself from parish relief, and a giddy girl without a
+sixpence, and you ask me to accept these very equivocal tenants instead
+of substantial ones, and at a rent one-third less than the market value.
+Suppose that I yielded to your request, what becomes of my reputation
+for practical, business-like justice? I shall have made an inroad into
+the system by which my whole estate is managed, and have invited all
+manner of solicitations on the part of friends and neighbours, which I
+could no longer consistently refuse, having shown how easily I can be
+persuaded into compliance by a stranger whom I may never see again. And
+are you sure, after all, that, if you did prevail on me, you would do
+the individual good you aim at? It is, no doubt, very pleasant to think
+one has made a young couple happy. But if that young couple fail in
+keeping the little shop to which you would transplant them (and
+nothing more likely: peasants seldom become good shopkeepers), and find
+themselves, with a family of children, dependent solely, not on the arm
+of a strong labourer, but the ten fingers of a sickly cripple, who makes
+clever baskets, for which there is but slight and precarious demand in
+the neighbourhood, may you not have insured the misery of the couple you
+wished to render happy?”
+
+“I withdraw all argument,” said Kenelm, with an aspect so humiliated and
+dejected, that it would have softened a Greenland bear, or a Counsel for
+the Prosecution. “I am more and more convinced that of all the shams in
+the world that of benevolence is the greatest. It seems so easy to
+do good, and it is so difficult to do it. Everywhere, in this hateful
+civilized life, one runs one’s head against a system. A system, Mr.
+Travers, is man’s servile imitation of the blind tyranny of what in our
+ignorance we call ‘Natural Laws,’ a mechanical something through which
+the world is ruled by the cruelty of General Principles, to the utter
+disregard of individual welfare. By Natural Laws creatures prey on each
+other, and big fishes eat little ones upon system. It is, nevertheless,
+a hard thing for the little fish. Every nation, every town, every
+hamlet, every occupation, has a system, by which, somehow or other, the
+pond swarms with fishes, of which a great many inferiors contribute to
+increase the size of a superior. It is an idle benevolence to keep
+one solitary gudgeon out of the jaws of a pike. Here am I doing what I
+thought the simplest thing in the world, asking a gentleman, evidently
+as good-natured as myself, to allow an old woman to let her premises to
+a deserving young couple, and paying what she asks for it out of my own
+money. And I find that I am running against a system, and invading all
+the laws by which a rental is increased and an estate improved. Mr.
+Travers, you have no cause for regret in not having beaten Tom Bowles.
+You have beaten his victor, and I now give up all dream of further
+interference with the Natural Laws that govern the village which I
+have visited in vain. I had meant to remove Tom Bowles from that quiet
+community. I shall now leave him to return to his former habits,--to
+marry Jessie Wiles, which he certainly will do, and--”
+
+“Hold!” cried Mr. Travers. “Do you mean to say that you can induce Tom
+Bowles to leave the village?”
+
+“I had induced him to do it, provided Jessie Wiles married the
+basket-maker; but, as that is out of the question, I am bound to tell
+him so, and he will stay.”
+
+“But if he left, what would become of his business? His mother could
+not keep it on; his little place is a freehold; the only house in the
+village that does not belong to me, or I should have ejected him long
+ago. Would he sell the premises to me?”
+
+“Not if he stays and marries Jessie Wiles. But if he goes with me to
+Luscombe and settles in that town as a partner to his uncle, I suppose
+he would be too glad to sell a house of which he can have no pleasant
+recollections. But what then? You cannot violate your system for the
+sake of a miserable forge.”
+
+“It would not violate my system if, instead of yielding to a sentiment,
+I gained an advantage; and, to say truth, I should be very glad to buy
+that forge and the fields that go with it.”
+
+“‘Tis your affair now, not mine, Mr. Travers. I no longer presume to
+interfere. I leave the neighbourhood to-morrow: see if you can negotiate
+with Mr. Bowles. I have the honour to wish you a good evening.”
+
+“Nay, young gentleman, I cannot allow you to quit me thus. You have
+declined apparently to join the dancers, but you will at least join the
+supper. Come!”
+
+“Thank you sincerely, no. I came here merely on the business which your
+system has settled.”
+
+“But I am not sure that it is settled.” Here Mr. Travers wound his arm
+within Kenelm’s, and looking him full in the face, said, “I know that
+I am speaking to a gentleman at least equal in rank to myself, but as
+I enjoy the melancholy privilege of being the older man, do not think
+I take an unwarrantable liberty in asking if you object to tell me your
+name. I should like to introduce you to my daughter, who is very partial
+to Jessie Wiles and to Will Somers. But I can’t venture to inflame her
+imagination by designating you as a prince in disguise.”
+
+“Mr. Travers, you express yourself with exquisite delicacy. But I
+am just starting in life, and I shrink from mortifying my father by
+associating my name with a signal failure. Suppose I were an anonymous
+contributor, say, to ‘The Londoner,’ and I had just brought that
+highly intellectual journal into discredit by a feeble attempt at
+a good-natured criticism or a generous sentiment, would that be the
+fitting occasion to throw off the mask, and parade myself to a mocking
+world as the imbecile violator of an established system? Should I not,
+in a moment so untoward, more than ever desire to merge my insignificant
+unit in the mysterious importance which the smallest Singular obtains
+when he makes himself a Plural, and speaks not as ‘I,’ but as ‘We’?
+_We_ are insensible to the charm of young ladies; _We_ are not bribed
+by suppers; _We_, like the witches of ‘Macbeth,’ have no name on earth;
+_We_ are the greatest wisdom of the greatest number; _We_ are so upon
+system; _We_ salute you, Mr. Travers, and depart unassailable.”
+
+Here Kenelm rose, doffed and replaced his hat in majestic salutation,
+turned towards the entrance of the fernery, and found himself suddenly
+face to face with George Belvoir, behind whom followed, with a throng
+of guests, the fair form of Cecilia. George Belvoir caught Kenelm by the
+hand, and exclaimed, “Chillingly! I thought I could not be mistaken.”
+
+“Chillingly!” echoed Leopold Travers from behind. “Are you the son of my
+old friend Sir Peter?”
+
+Thus discovered and environed, Kenelm did not lose his wonted presence
+of mind; he turned round to Leopold Travers, who was now close in his
+rear, and whispered, “If my father was your friend, do not disgrace his
+son. Do not say I am a failure. Deviate from your system, and let Will
+Somers succeed Mrs. Bawtrey.” Then reverting his face to Mr. Belvoir, he
+said tranquilly, “Yes; we have met before.”
+
+“Cecilia,” said Travers, now interposing, “I am happy to introduce to
+you as Mr. Chillingly, not only the son of an old friend of mine,
+not only the knight-errant of whose gallant conduct on behalf of your
+protegee Jessie Wiles we have heard so much, but the eloquent arguer who
+has conquered my better judgment in a matter on which I thought myself
+infallible. Tell Mr. Lethbridge that I accept Will Somers as a tenant
+for Mrs. Bawtrey’s premises.”
+
+Kenelm grasped the Squire’s hand cordially. “May it be in my power to do
+a kind thing to you, in spite of any system to the contrary!”
+
+“Mr. Chillingly, give your arm to my daughter. You will not now object
+to join the dancers?”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+CECILIA stole a shy glance at Kenelm as the two emerged from the fernery
+into the open space of the lawn. His countenance pleased her. She
+thought she discovered much latent gentleness under the cold and
+mournful gravity of its expression; and, attributing the silence he
+maintained to some painful sense of an awkward position in the abrupt
+betrayal of his incognito, sought with womanly tact to dispel his
+supposed embarrassment.
+
+“You have chosen a delightful mode of seeing the country this lovely
+summer weather, Mr. Chillingly. I believe such pedestrian exercises are
+very common with university students during the long vacation.”
+
+“Very common, though they generally wander in packs like wild dogs or
+Australian dingoes. It is only a tame dog that one finds on the road
+travelling by himself; and then, unless he behaves very quietly, it is
+ten to one that he is stoned as a mad dog.”
+
+“But I am afraid, from what I hear, that you have not been travelling
+very quietly.”
+
+“You are quite right, Miss Travers, and I am a sad dog if not a mad one.
+But pardon me: we are nearing the marquee; the band is striking up, and,
+alas! I am not a dancing dog.”
+
+He released Cecilia’s arm, and bowed.
+
+“Let us sit here a while, then,” said she, motioning to a garden-bench.
+“I have no engagement for the next dance, and, as I am a little tired, I
+shall be glad of a reprieve.”
+
+Kenelm sighed, and, with the air of a martyr stretching himself on the
+rack, took his place beside the fairest girl in the county.
+
+“You were at college with Mr. Belvoir?”
+
+“I was.”
+
+“He was thought clever there?”
+
+“I have not a doubt of it.”
+
+“You know he is canvassing our county for the next election. My father
+takes a warm interest in his success, and thinks he will be a useful
+member of Parliament.”
+
+“Of that I am certain. For the first five years he will be called
+pushing, noisy, and conceited, much sneered at by men of his own age,
+and coughed down on great occasions; for the five following years he
+will be considered a sensible man in committees, and a necessary feature
+in debate; at the end of those years he will be an under-secretary; in
+five years more he will be a Cabinet Minister, and the representative of
+an important section of opinions; he will be an irreproachable private
+character, and his wife will be seen wearing the family diamonds at all
+the great parties. She will take an interest in politics and theology;
+and if she die before him, her husband will show his sense of wedded
+happiness by choosing another lady, equally fitted to wear the family
+diamonds and to maintain the family consequences.”
+
+In spite of her laughter, Cecilia felt a certain awe at the solemnity of
+voice and manner with which Kenelm delivered these oracular sentences,
+and the whole prediction seemed strangely in unison with her own
+impressions of the character whose fate was thus shadowed out.
+
+“Are you a fortune-teller, Mr. Chillingly?” she asked, falteringly, and
+after a pause.
+
+“As good a one as any whose hand you could cross with a shilling.”
+
+“Will you tell me my fortune?”
+
+“No; I never tell the fortunes of ladies, because your sex is credulous,
+and a lady might believe what I tell her. And when we believe such and
+such is to be our fate, we are too apt to work out our life into the
+verification of the belief. If Lady Macbeth had disbelieved in the
+witches, she would never have persuaded her lord to murder Duncan.”
+
+“But can you not predict me a more cheerful fortune than that tragical
+illustration of yours seems to threaten?”
+
+“The future is never cheerful to those who look on the dark side of
+the question. Mr. Gray is too good a poet for people to read nowadays,
+otherwise I should refer you to his lines in the ‘Ode to Eton
+College,’--
+
+
+ “‘See how all around us wait
+ The ministers of human fate,
+ And black Misfortune’s baleful train.’
+
+
+“Meanwhile it is something to enjoy the present. We are young; we
+are listening to music; there is no cloud over the summer stars; our
+conscience is clear; our hearts untroubled: why look forward in search
+of happiness? shall we ever be happier than we are at this moment?”
+
+Here Mr. Travers came up. “We are going to supper in a few minutes,”
+ said he; “and before we lose sight of each other, Mr. Chillingly, I wish
+to impress on you the moral fact that one good turn deserves another. I
+have yielded to your wish, and now you must yield to mine. Come and stay
+a few days with me, and see your benevolent intentions carried out.”
+
+Kenelm paused. Now that he was discovered, why should he not pass a few
+days among his equals? Realities or shams might be studied with squires
+no less than with farmers; besides, he had taken a liking to Travers.
+That graceful _ci-devant_ Wildair, with the slight form and the delicate
+face, was unlike rural squires in general. Kenelm paused, and then said
+frankly,--
+
+“I accept your invitation. Would the middle of next week suit you?”
+
+“The sooner the better. Why not to-morrow?”
+
+“To-morrow I am pre-engaged to an excursion with Mr. Bowles. That may
+occupy two or three days, and meanwhile I must write home for other
+garments than those in which I am a sham.”
+
+“Come any day you like.”
+
+“Agreed.”
+
+“Agreed; and, hark! the supper-bell.”
+
+“Supper,” said Kenelm, offering his arm to Miss Travers,--“supper is a
+word truly interesting, truly poetical. It associates itself with the
+entertainments of the ancients, with the Augustan age, with Horace and
+Maecenas; with the only elegant but too fleeting period of the modern
+world; with the nobles and wits of Paris, when Paris had wits and
+nobles; with Moliere and the warm-hearted Duke who is said to have been
+the original of Moliere’s Misanthrope; with Madame de Sevigne and the
+Racine whom that inimitable letter-writer denied to be a poet; with
+Swift and Bolingbroke; with Johnson, Goldsmith, and Garrick. Epochs are
+signalized by their eatings. I honour him who revives the Golden Age of
+suppers.” So saying, his face brightened.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY, ESQ., TO SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, BART., ETC.
+
+MY DEAR FATHER,--I am alive and unmarried. Providence has watched over
+me in these respects; but I have had narrow escapes. Hitherto I have not
+acquired much worldly wisdom in my travels. It is true that I have been
+paid two shillings as a day labourer, and, in fact, have fairly earned
+at least six shillings more; but against that additional claim I
+generously set off, as an equivalent, my board and lodging. On the other
+hand, I have spent forty-five pounds out of the fifty which I devoted
+to the purchase of experience. But I hope you will be a gainer by
+that investment. Send an order to Mr. William Somers, basket-maker,
+Graveleigh, -----shire, for the hampers and game-baskets you require,
+and I undertake to say that you will save twenty per cent on that
+article (all expenses of carriage deducted) and do a good action into
+the bargain. You know, from long habit, what a good action is worth
+better than I do. I dare say you will be more pleased to learn than I
+am to record the fact that I have been again decoyed into the society of
+ladies and gentlemen, and have accepted an invitation to pass a few days
+at Neesdale Park with Mr. Travers,--christened Leopold, who calls you
+“his old friend,”--a term which I take for granted belongs to that class
+of poetic exaggeration in which the “dears” and “darlings” of conjugal
+intercourse may be categorized. Having for that visit no suitable
+garments in my knapsack, kindly tell Jenkes to forward me a portmanteau
+full of those which I habitually wore as Kenelm Chillingly, directed
+to me at “Neesdale Park, near Beaverston.” Let me find it there on
+Wednesday.
+
+I leave this place to-morrow morning in company with a friend of the
+name of Bowles: no relation to the reverend gentleman of that name who
+held the doctrine that a poet should bore us to death with fiddle-faddle
+minutia of natural objects in preference to that study of the
+insignificant creature Man, in his relations to his species, to which
+Mr. Pope limited the range of his inferior muse; and who, practising as
+he preached, wrote some very nice verses, to which the Lake school and
+its successors are largely indebted. My Mr. Bowles has exercised his
+faculty upon Man, and has a powerful inborn gift in that line which
+only requires cultivation to render him a match for any one. His more
+masculine nature is at present much obscured by that passing cloud
+which, in conventional language, is called “a hopeless attachment.” But
+I trust, in the course of our excursion, which is to be taken on foot,
+that this vapour may consolidate by motion, as some old-fashioned
+astronomers held that the nebula does consolidate into a matter-of-fact
+world. Is it Rochefoucauld who says that a man is never more likely to
+form a hopeful attachment for one than when his heart is softened by a
+hopeless attachment to another? May it be long, my dear father, before
+you condole with me on the first or congratulate me on the second.
+
+ Your affectionate son,
+
+ KENELM.
+
+Direct to me at Mr. Travers’s. Kindest love to my mother.
+
+
+The answer to this letter is here subjoined as the most convenient place
+for its insertion, though of course it was not received till some days
+after the date of my next chapter.
+
+
+SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, BART., TO KENELM CHILLINGLY, ESQ.
+
+MY DEAR Boy,--With this I despatch the portmanteau you require to the
+address that you give. I remember well Leopold Travers when he was in
+the Guards,--a very handsome and a very wild young fellow. But he
+had much more sense than people gave him credit for, and frequented
+intellectual society; at least I met him very often at my friend
+Campion’s, whose house was then the favourite rendezvous of
+distinguished persons. He had very winning manners, and one could not
+help taking an interest in him. I was very glad when I heard he had
+married and reformed. Here I beg to observe that a man who contracts a
+taste for low company may indeed often marry, but he seldom reforms when
+he does so. And, on the whole, I should be much pleased to hear that the
+experience which has cost you forty-five pounds had convinced you that
+you might be better employed than earning two, or even six shillings as
+a day-labourer.
+
+I have not given your love to your mother, as you requested. In fact,
+you have placed me in a very false position towards that other author of
+your eccentric being. I could only guard you from the inquisition of the
+police and the notoriety of descriptive hand-bills by allowing my lady
+to suppose that you had gone abroad with the Duke of Clairville and his
+family. It is easy to tell a fib, but it is very difficult to untell
+it. However, as soon as you have made up your mind to resume your normal
+position among ladies and gentlemen, I should be greatly obliged if
+you would apprise me. I don’t wish to keep a fib on my conscience a
+day longer than may be necessary to prevent the necessity of telling
+another.
+
+From what you say of Mr. Bowles’s study of Man, and his inborn talent
+for that scientific investigation, I suppose that he is a professed
+Metaphysician, and I should be glad of his candid opinion upon the
+Primary Basis of Morals, a subject upon which I have for three years
+meditated the consideration of a critical paper. But having lately read
+a controversy thereon between two eminent philosophers, in which each
+accuses the other of not understanding him, I have resolved for the
+present to leave the Basis in its unsettled condition.
+
+You rather alarm me when you say you have had a narrow escape from
+marriage. Should you, in order to increase the experience you set out
+to acquire, decide on trying the effect of a Mrs. Chillingly upon your
+nervous system, it would be well to let me know a little beforehand, so
+that I might prepare your mother’s mind for that event. Such household
+trifles are within her special province; and she would be much put out
+if a Mrs. Chillingly dropped on her unawares.
+
+This subject, however, is too serious to admit of a jest even between
+two persons who understand, so well as you and I do, the secret cipher
+by which each other’s outward style of jest is to be gravely interpreted
+into the irony which says one thing and means another. My dear boy, you
+are very young; you are wandering about in a very strange manner, and
+may, no doubt, meet with many a pretty face by the way, with which you
+may fancy that you fall in love. You cannot think me a barbarous, tyrant
+if I ask you to promise me, on your honour, that you will not propose
+to any young lady before you come first to me and submit the case to my
+examination and approval. You know me too well to suppose that I should
+unreasonably withhold my consent if convinced that your happiness was
+at stake. But while what a young man may fancy to be love is often a
+trivial incident in his life, marriage is the greatest event in it;
+if on one side it may involve his happiness, on the other side it
+may insure his misery. Dearest, best, and oddest of sons, give me the
+promise I ask, and you will free my breast from a terribly anxious
+thought which now sits on it like a nightmare.
+
+Your recommendation of a basket-maker comes opportunely. All such
+matters go through the bailiff’s hands, and it was but the other day
+that Green was complaining of the high prices of the man he employed for
+hampers and game-baskets. Green shall write to your protege.
+
+Keep me informed of your proceedings as much as your anomalous character
+will permit; so that nothing may diminish my confidence that the man who
+had the honour to be christened Kenelm will not disgrace his name, but
+acquire the distinction denied to a Peter.
+
+Your affectionate father.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+VILLAGERS lie abed on Sundays later than on workdays, and no shutter was
+unclosed in a window of the rural street through which Kenelm Chillingly
+and Tom Bowles went, side by side, in the still soft air of the Sabbath
+morn. Side by side they went on, crossing the pastoral glebe-lands,
+where the kine still drowsily reclined under the bowery shade of
+glinting chestnut leaves; and diving thence into a narrow lane or
+by-road, winding deep between lofty banks all tangled with convolvulus
+and wild-rose and honeysuckle.
+
+They walked in silence, for Kenelm, after one or two vain attempts at
+conversation, had the tact to discover that his companion was in no mood
+for talk; and being himself one of those creatures whose minds glide
+easily into the dreamy monologue of revery, he was not displeased to
+muse on undisturbed, drinking quietly into his heart the subdued joy of
+the summer morn, with the freshness of its sparkling dews, the wayward
+carol of its earliest birds, the serene quietude of its limpid breezy
+air. Only when they came to fresh turnings in the road that led towards
+the town to which they were bound, Tom Bowles stepped before his
+companion, indicating the way by a monosyllable or a gesture. Thus they
+journeyed for hours, till the sun attained power, and a little wayside
+inn near a hamlet invited Kenelm to the thought of rest and food.
+
+“Tom,” said he then, rousing from his revery, “what do you say to
+breakfast?”
+
+Answered Tom sullenly, “I am not hungry; but as you like.”
+
+“Thank you, then we will stop here a while. I find it difficult to
+believe that you are not hungry, for you are very strong, and there are
+two things which generally accompany great physical strength: the one is
+a keen appetite; the other is--though you may not suppose it, and it is
+not commonly known--a melancholic temperament.”
+
+“Eh!--a what?”
+
+“A tendency to melancholy. Of course you have heard of Hercules: you
+know the saying ‘as strong as Hercules’?”
+
+“Yes, of course.”
+
+“Well, I was first led to the connection between strength, appetite, and
+melancholy, by reading in an old author named Plutarch that Hercules
+was among the most notable instances of melancholy temperament which the
+author was enabled to quote. That must have been the traditional notion
+of the Herculean constitution; and as for appetite, the appetite of
+Hercules was a standard joke of the comic writers. When I read that
+observation it set me thinking, being myself melancholic and having
+an exceedingly good appetite. Sure enough, when I began to collect
+evidence, I found that the strongest men with whom I made acquaintance,
+including prize-fighters and Irish draymen, were disposed to look upon
+life more on the shady than the sunny side of the way; in short, they
+were melancholic. But the kindness of Providence allowed them to enjoy
+their meals, as you and I are about to do.” In the utterance of this
+extraordinary crotchet Kenelm had halted his steps; but now striding
+briskly forward he entered the little inn, and after a glance at its
+larder, ordered the whole contents to be brought out and placed within a
+honeysuckle arbour which he spied in the angle of a bowling-green at the
+rear of the house.
+
+In addition to the ordinary condiments of loaf and butter and eggs and
+milk and tea, the board soon groaned beneath the weight of pigeon-pie,
+cold ribs of beef, and shoulder of mutton, remains of a feast which the
+members of a monthly rustic club had held there the day before. Tom ate
+little at first; but example is contagious, and gradually he vied with
+his companion in the diminution of the solid viands before him. Then he
+called for brandy.
+
+“No,” said Kenelm. “No, Tom; you have promised me friendship, and that
+is not compatible with brandy. Brandy is the worst enemy a man like
+you can have; and would make you quarrel even with me. If you want a
+stimulus I allow you a pipe. I don’t smoke myself, as a rule, but there
+have been times in my life when I required soothing, and then I have
+felt that a whiff of tobacco stills and softens one like the kiss of a
+little child. Bring this gentleman a pipe.”
+
+Tom grunted, but took to the pipe kindly, and in a few minutes, during
+which Kenelm left him in silence, a lowering furrow between his brows
+smoothed itself away.
+
+Gradually he felt the sweetening influences of the day and the place, of
+the merry sunbeams at play amid the leaves of the arbour, of the frank
+perfume of the honeysuckle, of the warble of the birds before they sank
+into the taciturn repose of a summer noon.
+
+It was with a reluctant sigh that he rose at last, when Kenelm said, “We
+have yet far to go: we must push on.”
+
+The landlady, indeed, had already given them a hint that she and
+the family wanted to go to church, and to shut up the house in their
+absence. Kenelm drew out his purse, but Tom did the same with a return
+of cloud on his brow, and Kenelm saw that he would be mortally offended
+if suffered to be treated as an inferior; so each paid his due share,
+and the two men resumed their wandering. This time it was along a
+by-path amid fields, which was a shorter cut than the lane they had
+previously followed, to the main road to Luscombe. They walked
+slowly till they came to a rustic foot-bridge which spanned a gloomy
+trout-stream, not noisy, but with a low, sweet murmur, doubtless the
+same stream beside which, many miles away, Kenelm had conversed with the
+minstrel. Just as they came to this bridge there floated to their ears
+the distant sound of the hamlet church-bell.
+
+“Now let us sit here a while and listen,” said Kenelm, seating himself
+on the baluster of the bridge. “I see that you brought away your pipe
+from the inn, and provided yourself with tobacco: refill the pipe and
+listen.”
+
+Tom half smiled and obeyed.
+
+“O friend,” said Kenelm, earnestly, and after a long pause of thought,
+“do you not feel what a blessed thing it is in this mortal life to be
+ever and anon reminded that you have a soul?”
+
+Tom, startled, withdrew the pipe from his lips, and muttered,--
+
+“Eh!”
+
+Kenelm continued,--
+
+“You and I, Tom, are not so good as we ought to be: of that there is no
+doubt; and good people would say justly that we should now be within
+yon church itself rather than listening to its bell. Granted, my friend,
+granted; but still it is something to hear that bell, and to feel by the
+train of thought which began in our innocent childhood, when we said
+our prayers at the knees of a mother, that we were lifted beyond this
+visible Nature, beyond these fields and woods and waters, in which, fair
+though they be, you and I miss something; in which neither you nor I are
+as happy as the kine in the fields, as the birds on the bough, as the
+fishes in the water: lifted to a consciousness of a sense vouchsafed to
+you and to me, not vouchsafed to the kine, to the bird, and the fish,--a
+sense to comprehend that Nature has a God, and Man has a life hereafter.
+The bell says that to you and to me. Were that bell a thousand times
+more musical it could not say that to beast, bird, and fish. Do you
+understand me, Tom?”
+
+Tom remains silent for a minute, and then replies, “I never thought of
+it before; but, as you put it, I understand.”
+
+“Nature never gives to a living thing capacities not practically meant
+for its benefit and use. If Nature gives to us capacities to believe
+that we have a Creator whom we never saw, of whom we have no direct
+proof, who is kind and good and tender beyond all that we know of kind
+and good and tender on earth, it is because the endowment of capacities
+to conceive such a Being must be for our benefit and use: it would not
+be for our benefit and use if it were a lie. Again, if Nature has given
+to us a capacity to receive the notion that we live again, no matter
+whether some of us refuse so to believe, and argue against it,--why, the
+very capacity to receive the idea (for unless we receive it we could
+not argue against it) proves that it is for our benefit and use; and if
+there were no such life hereafter, we should be governed and influenced,
+arrange our modes of life, and mature our civilization, by obedience
+to a lie, which Nature falsified herself in giving us the capacity to
+believe. You still understand me?”
+
+“Yes; it bothers me a little, for you see I am not a parson’s man; but I
+do understand.”
+
+“Then, my friend, study to apply,--for it requires constant
+study,--study to apply that which you understand to your own case. You
+are something more than Tom Bowles, the smith and doctor of horses;
+something more than the magnificent animal who rages for his mate and
+fights every rival: the bull does that. You are a soul endowed with the
+capacity to receive the idea of a Creator so divinely wise and great
+and good that, though acting by the agency of general laws, He can
+accommodate them to all individual cases, so that--taking into account
+the life hereafter, which He grants to you the capacity to believe--all
+that troubles you now will be proved to you wise and great and good
+either in this life or the other. Lay that truth to your heart, friend,
+now--before the bell stops ringing; recall it every time you hear the
+church-bell ring again. And oh, Tom, you have such a noble nature!--”
+
+“I--I! don’t jeer me,--don’t.”
+
+“Such a noble nature; for you can love so passionately, you can war so
+fiercely, and yet, when convinced that your love would be misery to
+her you love, can resign it; and yet, when beaten in your war, can so
+forgive your victor that you are walking in this solitude with him as a
+friend, knowing that you have but to drop a foot behind him in order to
+take his life in an unguarded moment; and rather than take his life, you
+would defend it against an army. Do you think I am so dull as not to see
+all that? and is not all that a noble nature?”
+
+Tom Bowles covered his face with his hands, and his broad breast heaved.
+
+“Well, then, to that noble nature I now trust. I myself have done little
+good in life. I may never do much; but let me think that I have not
+crossed your life in vain for you and for those whom your life can
+colour for good or for bad. As you are strong, be gentle; as you
+can love one, be kind to all; as you have so much that is grand as
+Man,--that is, the highest of God’s works on earth,--let all your acts
+attach your manhood to the idea of Him, to whom the voice of the bell
+appeals. Ah! the bell is hushed; but not your heart, Tom,--that speaks
+still.”
+
+Tom was weeping like a child.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+NOW when our two travellers resumed their journey, the relationship
+between them had undergone a change; nay, you might have said that their
+characters were also changed. For Tom found himself pouring out his
+turbulent heart to Kenelm, confiding to this philosophical scoffer at
+love all the passionate humanities of love,--its hope, its anguish, its
+jealousy, its wrath,--the all that links the gentlest of emotions to
+tragedy and terror. And Kenelm, listening tenderly, with softened eyes,
+uttered not one cynic word,--nay, not one playful jest. He, felt that
+the gravity of all he heard was too solemn for mockery, too deep even
+for comfort. True love of this sort was a thing he had never known,
+never wished to know, never thought he could know, but he sympathized
+in it not the less. Strange, indeed, how much we do sympathize, on
+the stage, for instance, or in a book, with passions that have never
+agitated ourselves! Had Kenelm jested or reasoned or preached, Tom would
+have shrunk at once into dreary silence; but Kenelm said nothing, save
+now and then, as he rested his arm, brother-like, on the strong man’s
+shoulder, he murmured, “Poor fellow!” So, then, when Tom had finished
+his confessions, he felt wondrously relieved and comforted. He had
+cleansed his bosom of the perilous stuff that weighed upon the heart.
+
+Was this good result effected by Kenelm’s artful diplomacy, or by that
+insight into human passions vouchsafed unconsciously to himself, by
+gleams or in flashes, to this strange man who surveyed the objects and
+pursuits of his fellows with a yearning desire to share them, murmuring
+to himself, “I cannot, I do not stand in this world; like a ghost I
+glide beside it, and look on “?
+
+Thus the two men continued their way slowly, amid soft pastures and
+yellowing cornfields, out at length into the dusty thoroughfares of
+the main road. That gained, their talk insensibly changed its tone: it
+became more commonplace; and Kenelm permitted himself the license of
+those crotchets by which he extracted a sort of quaint pleasantry out of
+commonplace itself; so that from time to time Tom was startled into the
+mirth of laughter. This big fellow had one very agreeable gift, which
+is only granted, I think, to men of genuine character and affectionate
+dispositions,--a spontaneous and sweet laugh, manly and frank, but not
+boisterous, as you might have supposed it would be. But that sort of
+laugh had not before come from his lips, since the day on which his love
+for Jessie Wiles had made him at war with himself and the world.
+
+The sun was setting when from the brow of a hill they beheld the spires
+of Luscombe, imbedded amid the level meadows that stretched below,
+watered by the same stream that had wound along their more rural
+pathway, but which now expanded into stately width, and needed, to span
+it, a mighty bridge fit for the convenience of civilized traffic. The
+town seemed near, but it was full two miles off by road.
+
+“There is a short cut across the fields beyond that stile, which leads
+straight to my uncle’s house,” said Tom; “and I dare say, sir, that you
+will be glad to escape the dirty suburb by which the road passes before
+we get into the town.”
+
+“A good thought, Tom. It is very odd that fine towns always are
+approached by dirty suburbs; a covert symbolical satire, perhaps, on the
+ways to success in fine towns. Avarice or ambition go through very mean
+little streets before they gain the place which they jostle the crowd to
+win,--in the Townhall or on ‘Change. Happy the man who, like you, Tom,
+finds that there is a shorter and a cleaner and a pleasanter way to goal
+or to resting-place than that through the dirty suburbs!”
+
+They met but few passengers on their path through the fields,--a
+respectable, staid, elderly couple, who had the air of a Dissenting
+minister and his wife; a girl of fourteen leading a little boy seven
+years younger by the hand; a pair of lovers, evidently lovers at
+least to the eye of Tom Bowles; for, on regarding them as they passed
+unheeding him, he winced, and his face changed. Even after they had
+passed, Kenelm saw on the face that pain lingered there: the lips were
+tightly compressed, and their corners gloomily drawn down.
+
+Just at this moment a dog rushed towards them with a short quick
+bark,--a Pomeranian dog with pointed nose and pricked ears. It hushed
+its bark as it neared Kenelm, sniffed his trousers, and wagged its tail.
+
+“By the sacred Nine,” cried Kenelm, “thou art the dog with the tin tray!
+where is thy master?”
+
+The dog seemed to understand the question, for it turned its head
+significantly; and Kenelm saw, seated under a lime-tree, at a good
+distance from the path, a man, with book in hand, evidently employed in
+sketching.
+
+“Come this way,” he said to Tom: “I recognize an acquaintance. You
+will like him.” Tom desired no new acquaintance at that moment, but he
+followed Kenelm submissively.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+“YOU see we are fated to meet again,” said Kenelm, stretching himself
+at his ease beside the Wandering Minstrel, and motioning Tom to do the
+same. “But you seem to add the accomplishment of drawing to that of
+verse-making! You sketch from what you call Nature?”
+
+“From what I call Nature! yes, sometimes.”
+
+“And do you not find in drawing, as in verse-making, the truth that I
+have before sought to din into your reluctant ears; namely, that Nature
+has no voice except that which man breathes into her out of his mind?
+I would lay a wager that the sketch you are now taking is rather an
+attempt to make her embody some thought of your own, than to present her
+outlines as they appear to any other observer. Permit me to judge for
+myself.” And he bent over the sketch-book. It is often difficult for
+one who is not himself an artist nor a connoisseur to judge whether the
+pencilled jottings in an impromptu sketch are by the hand of a professed
+master or a mere amateur. Kenelm was neither artist nor connoisseur, but
+the mere pencil-work seemed to him much what might be expected from any
+man with an accurate eye who had taken a certain number of lessons from
+a good drawing-master. It was enough for him, however, that it furnished
+an illustration of his own theory. “I was right,” he cried triumphantly.
+“From this height there is a beautiful view, as it presents itself to
+me; a beautiful view of the town, its meadows, its river, harmonized by
+the sunset; for sunset, like gilding, unites conflicting colours, and
+softens them in uniting. But I see nothing of that view in your sketch.
+What I do see is to me mysterious.”
+
+“The view you suggest,” said the minstrel, “is no doubt very fine, but
+it is for a Turner or a Claude to treat it. My grasp is not wide enough
+for such a landscape.”
+
+“I see indeed in your sketch but one figure, a child.”
+
+“Hist! there she stands. Hist! while I put in this last touch.”
+
+Kenelm strained his sight, and saw far off a solitary little girl, who
+was tossing something in the air (he could not distinguish what), and
+catching it as it fell. She seemed standing on the very verge of the
+upland, backed by rose-clouds gathered round the setting sun; below lay
+in confused outlines the great town. In the sketch those outlines seemed
+infinitely more confused, being only indicated by a few bold strokes;
+but the figure and face of the child were distinct and lovely. There
+was an ineffable sentiment in her solitude; there was a depth of quiet
+enjoyment in her mirthful play, and in her upturned eyes.
+
+“But at that distance,” asked Kenelm, when the wanderer had finished his
+last touch, and, after contemplating it, silently closed his book, and
+turned round with a genial smile, “but at that distance, how can you
+distinguish the girl’s face? How can you discover that the dim object
+she has just thrown up and recaught is a ball made of flowers? Do you
+know the child?”
+
+“I never saw her before this evening; but as I was seated here she was
+straying around me alone, weaving into chains some wild-flowers which
+she had gathered by the hedgerows yonder, next the high road; and as she
+strung them she was chanting to herself some pretty nursery rhymes.
+You can well understand that when I heard her thus chanting I became
+interested, and as she came near me I spoke to her, and we soon made
+friends. She told me she was an orphan, and brought up by a very old man
+distantly related to her, who had been in some small trade and now lived
+in a crowded lane in the heart of the town. He was very kind to her, and
+being confined himself to the house by age or ailment he sent her out to
+play in the fields on summer Sundays. She had no companions of her own
+age. She said she did not like the other little girls in the lane; and
+the only little girl she liked at school had a grander station in life,
+and was not allowed to play with her, and so she came out to play alone;
+and as long as the sun shines and the flowers bloom, she says she never
+wants other society.”
+
+“Tom, do you hear that? As you will be residing in Luscombe, find out
+this strange little girl, and be kind to her, Tom, for my sake.”
+
+Tom put his large hand upon Kenelm’s, making no other answer; but he
+looked hard at the minstrel, recognized the genial charm of his voice
+and face, and slid along the grass nearer to him.
+
+The minstrel continued: “While the child was talking to me I
+mechanically took the flower-chains from her hands, and not thinking
+what I was about, gathered them up into a ball. Suddenly she saw what
+I had done, and instead of scolding me for spoiling her pretty chains,
+which I richly deserved, was delighted to find I had twisted them into a
+new plaything. She ran off with the ball, tossing it about till, excited
+with her own joy, she got to the brow of the hill, and I began my
+sketch.”
+
+“Is that charming face you have drawn like hers?”
+
+“No; only in part. I was thinking of another face while I sketched, but
+it is not like that either; in fact, it is one of those patchworks which
+we call ‘fancy heads,’ and I meant it to be another version of a thought
+that I had just put into rhyme when the child came across me.”
+
+“May we hear the rhyme?”
+
+“I fear that if it did not bore yourself it would bore your friend.”
+
+“I am sure not. Tom, do you sing?”
+
+“Well, I _have_ sung,” said Tom, hanging his head sheepishly, “and I
+should like to hear this gentleman.”
+
+“But I do not know these verses, just made, well enough to sing them; it
+is enough if I can recall them well enough to recite.” Here the minstrel
+paused a minute or so as if for recollection, and then, in the sweet
+clear tones and the rare purity of enunciation which characterized his
+utterance, whether in recital or song, gave to the following verses a
+touching and a varied expression which no one could discover in merely
+reading them.
+
+
+ THE FLOWER-GIRL BY THE CROSSING.
+
+ “By the muddy crossing in the crowded streets
+ Stands a little maid with her basket full of posies,
+ Proffering all who pass her choice of knitted sweets,
+ Tempting Age with heart’s-ease, courting Youth with roses.
+
+ “Age disdains the heart’s-ease,
+ Love rejects the roses;
+ London life is busy,--
+ Who can stop for posies?
+
+ “One man is too grave, another is too gay;
+ This man has his hothouse, that man not a penny:
+ Flowerets too are common in the month of May,
+ And the things most common least attract the many.
+
+ “Ill, on London crossings,
+ Fares the sale of posies;
+ Age disdains the heart’s-ease,
+ Youth rejects the roses.”
+
+
+When the verse-maker had done, he did not pause for approbation, nor
+look modestly down, as do most people who recite their own verses, but
+unaffectedly thinking much more of his art than his audience, hurried on
+somewhat disconsolately,--
+
+“I see with great grief that I am better at sketching than rhyming. Can
+you” (appealing to Kenelm) “even comprehend what I mean by the verses?”
+
+KENELM.--“Do you comprehend, Tom?”
+
+TOM (in a whisper).--“No.”
+
+KENELM.--“I presume that by his flower-girl our friend means to
+represent not only poetry, but a poetry like his own, which is not at
+all the sort of poetry now in fashion. I, however, expand his meaning,
+and by his flower-girl I understand any image of natural truth or beauty
+for which, when we are living the artificial life of crowded streets, we
+are too busy to give a penny.”
+
+“Take it as you please,” said the minstrel, smiling and sighing at the
+same time; “but I have not expressed in words that which I did mean half
+so well as I have expressed it in my sketch-book.”
+
+“Ah! and how?” asked Kenelm.
+
+“The image of my thought in the sketch, be it poetry or whatever you
+prefer to call it, does not stand forlorn in the crowded streets: the
+child stands on the brow of the green hill, with the city stretched in
+confused fragments below, and, thoughtless of pennies and passers-by,
+she is playing with the flowers she has gathered; but in play casting
+them heavenward, and following them with heavenward eyes.”
+
+“Good!” muttered Kenelm, “good!” and then, after a long pause, he added,
+in a still lower mutter, “Pardon me that remark of mine the other day
+about a beefsteak. But own that I am right: what you call a sketch from
+Nature is but a sketch of your own thought.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE child with the flower-ball had vanished from the brow of the hill;
+sinking down amid the streets below, the rose-clouds had faded from the
+horizon; and night was closing round, as the three men entered the
+thick of the town. Tom pressed Kenelm to accompany him to his uncle’s,
+promising him a hearty welcome and bed and board, but Kenelm declined.
+He entertained a strong persuasion that it would be better for the
+desired effect on Tom’s mind that he should be left alone with his
+relations that night, but proposed that they should spend the next day
+together, and agreed to call at the veterinary surgeon’s in the morning.
+
+When Tom quitted them at his uncle’s door, Kenelm said to the minstrel,
+“I suppose you are going to some inn; may I accompany you? We can sup
+together, and I should like to hear you talk upon poetry and Nature.”
+
+“You flatter me much; but I have friends in the town, with whom I lodge,
+and they are expecting me. Do you not observe that I have changed my
+dress? I am not known here as the ‘Wandering Minstrel.’”
+
+Kenelm glanced at the man’s attire, and for the first time observed
+the change. It was still picturesque in its way, but it was such as
+gentlemen of the highest rank frequently wear in the country,--the
+knickerbocker costume,--very neat, very new, and complete, to the
+square-toed shoes with their latchets and buckles.
+
+“I fear,” said Kenelm, gravely, “that your change of dress betokens
+the neighbourhood of those pretty girls of whom you spoke in an earlier
+meeting. According to the Darwinian doctrine of selection, fine plumage
+goes far in deciding the preference of Jenny Wren and her sex, only we
+are told that fine-feathered birds are very seldom songsters as well. It
+is rather unfair to rivals when you unite both attractions.”
+
+The minstrel laughed. “There is but one girl in my friend’s house,--his
+niece; she is very plain, and only thirteen. But to me the society of
+women, whether ugly or pretty, is an absolute necessity; and I have been
+trudging without it for so many days that I can scarcely tell you how
+my thoughts seemed to shake off the dust of travel when I found myself
+again in the presence of--”
+
+“Petticoat interest,” interrupted Kenelm. “Take care of yourself. My
+poor friend with whom you found me is a grave warning against petticoat
+interest, from which I hope to profit. He is passing through a great
+sorrow; it might have been worse than sorrow. My friend is going to stay
+in this town. If you are staying here too, pray let him see something
+of you. It will do him a wondrous good if you can beguile him from this
+real life into the gardens of poetland; but do not sing or talk of love
+to him.”
+
+“I honour all lovers,” said the minstrel, with real tenderness in his
+tone, “and would willingly serve to cheer or comfort your friend, if I
+could; but I am bound elsewhere, and must leave Luscombe, which I visit
+on business--money business--the day after to-morrow.”
+
+“So, too, must I. At least give us both some hours of your time
+to-morrow.”
+
+“Certainly; from twelve to sunset I shall be roving about,--a mere
+idler. If you will both come with me, it will be a great pleasure to
+myself. Agreed! Well, then, I will call at your inn to-morrow at twelve;
+and I recommend for your inn the one facing us,--The Golden Lamb. I have
+heard it recommended for the attributes of civil people and good fare.”
+
+Kenelm felt that he here received his _conge_, and well comprehended the
+fact that the minstrel, desiring to preserve the secret of his name, did
+not give the address of the family with whom he was a guest.
+
+“But one word more,” said Kenelm. “Your host or hostess, if resident
+here, can, no doubt, from your description of the little girl and the
+old man her protector, learn the child’s address. If so, I should like
+my companion to make friends with her. Petticoat interest there at least
+will be innocent and safe. And I know nothing so likely to keep a big,
+passionate heart like Tom’s, now aching with a horrible void,
+occupied and softened, and turned to directions pure and gentle, as an
+affectionate interest in a little child.”
+
+The minstrel changed colour: he even started. “Sir, are you a wizard
+that you say that to me?”
+
+“I am not a wizard, but I guess from your question that you have a
+little child of your own. So much the better: the child may keep you out
+of much mischief. Remember the little child. Good evening.”
+
+Kenelm crossed the threshold of The Golden Lamb, engaged his room, made
+his ablutions, ordered, and, with his usual zest, partook of his evening
+meal; and then, feeling the pressure of that melancholic temperament
+which he so strangely associated with Herculean constitutions, roused
+himself up, and, seeking a distraction from thought, sauntered forth
+into the gaslit streets.
+
+It was a large handsome town,--handsomer than Tor-Hadham, on account of
+its site in a valley surrounded by wooded hills, and watered by the fair
+stream whose windings we have seen as a brook,--handsomer, also, because
+it boasted a fair cathedral, well cleared to the sight, and surrounded
+by venerable old houses, the residences of the clergy or of the quiet
+lay gentry with mediaeval tastes. The main street was thronged with
+passengers,--some soberly returning home from the evening service; some,
+the younger, lingering in pleasant promenade with their sweethearts or
+families, or arm in arm with each other, and having the air of
+bachelors or maidens unattached. Through this street Kenelm passed with
+inattentive eye. A turn to the right took him towards the cathedral and
+its surroundings. There all was solitary. The solitude pleased him,
+and he lingered long, gazing on the noble church lifting its spires and
+turrets into the deep blue starry air.
+
+Musingly, then, he strayed on, entering a labyrinth of gloomy lanes, in
+which, though the shops were closed, many a door stood open, with men
+of the working class lolling against the threshold, idly smoking their
+pipes, or women seated on the doorsteps gossiping, while noisy children
+were playing or quarrelling in the kennel. The whole did not present the
+indolent side of an English Sabbath in the pleasantest and rosiest point
+of view. Somewhat quickening his steps, he entered a broader street,
+attracted to it involuntarily by a bright light in the centre. On
+nearing the light he found that it shone forth from a gin-palace, of
+which the mahogany doors opened and shut momently as customers went in
+and out. It was the handsomest building he had seen in his walk, next to
+that of the cathedral. “The new civilization versus the old,” murmured
+Kenelm. As he so murmured, a hand was laid on his arm with a sort
+of timid impudence. He looked down and saw a young face, but it had
+survived the look of youth; it was worn and hard, and the bloom on it
+was not that of Nature’s giving. “Are you kind to-night?” asked a husky
+voice.
+
+“Kind!” said Kenelm, with mournful tones and softened eyes, “kind! Alas,
+my poor sister mortal! if pity be kindness, who can see you and not be
+kind?”
+
+The girl released his arm, and he walked on. She stood some moments
+gazing after him till out of sight, then she drew her hand suddenly
+across her eyes, and retracing her steps, was, in her turn, caught hold
+of by a rougher hand than hers, as she passed the gin-palace. She shook
+off the grasp with a passionate scorn, and went straight home. Home! is
+that the right word? Poor sister mortal!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+AND now Kenelm found himself at the extremity of the town, and on the
+banks of the river. Small squalid houses still lined the bank for some
+way, till, nearing the bridge, they abruptly ceased, and he passed
+through a broad square again into the main street. On the other side
+of the street there was a row of villa-like mansions, with gardens
+stretching towards the river.
+
+All around in the thoroughfare was silent and deserted. By this time
+the passengers had gone home. The scent of night-flowers from the
+villa-gardens came sweet on the starlit air. Kenelm paused to inhale it,
+and then lifting his eyes, hitherto downcast, as are the eyes of men
+in meditative moods, he beheld, on the balcony of the nearest villa,
+a group of well-dressed persons. The balcony was unusually wide and
+spacious. On it was a small round table, on which were placed wine and
+fruits. Three ladies were seated round the table on wire-work chairs,
+and on the side nearest to Kenelm, one man. In that man, now slightly
+turning his profile, as if to look towards the river, Kenelm recognized
+the minstrel. He was still in his picturesque knickerbocker dress,
+and his clear-cut features, with the clustering curls of hair, and
+Rubens-like hue and shape of beard, had more than their usual beauty,
+softened in the light of skies, to which the moon, just risen, added
+deeper and fuller radiance. The ladies were in evening dress, but Kenelm
+could not distinguish their faces hidden behind the minstrel. He moved
+softly across the street, and took his stand behind a buttress in
+the low wall of the garden, from which he could have full view of the
+balcony, unseen himself. In this watch he had no other object than
+that of a vague pleasure. The whole grouping had in it a kind of scenic
+romance, and he stopped as one stops before a picture.
+
+He then saw that of the three ladies one was old; another was a
+slight girl of the age of twelve or thirteen; the third appeared to be
+somewhere about seven or eight and twenty. She was dressed with more
+elegance than the others. On her neck, only partially veiled by a thin
+scarf, there was the glitter of jewels; and, as she now turned her
+full face towards the moon, Kenelm saw that she was very handsome,--a
+striking kind of beauty, calculated to fascinate a poet or an
+artist,--not unlike Raphael’s Fornarina, dark, with warm tints.
+
+Now there appeared at the open window a stout, burly, middle-aged
+gentleman, looking every inch of him a family man, a moneyed man, sleek
+and prosperous. He was bald, fresh-coloured, and with light whiskers.
+
+“Holloa,” he said, in an accent very slightly foreign, and with a loud
+clear voice, which Kenelm heard distinctly, “is it not time for you to
+come in?”
+
+“Don’t be so tiresome, Fritz,” said the handsome lady, half petulantly,
+half playfully, in the way ladies address the tiresome spouses they lord
+it over. “Your friend has been sulking the whole evening, and is only
+just beginning to be pleasant as the moon rises.”
+
+“The moon has a good effect on poets and other mad folks, I dare say,”
+ said the bald man, with a good-humoured laugh. “But I can’t have my
+little niece laid up again just as she is on the mend: Annie, come in.”
+
+The girl obeyed reluctantly. The old lady rose too.
+
+“Ah, Mother, you are wise,” said the bald man; “and a game at euchre is
+safer than poetizing in night air.” He wound his arm round the old lady
+with a careful fondness, for she moved with some difficulty as if rather
+lame. “As for you two sentimentalists and moon-gazers, I give you ten
+minutes’ time,--not more, mind.”
+
+“Tyrant!” said the minstrel.
+
+The balcony now held only two forms,--the minstrel and the handsome
+lady. The window was closed, and partially veiled by muslin draperies,
+but Kenelm caught glimpses of the room within. He could see that the
+room, lit by a lamp on the centre table and candles elsewhere, was
+decorated and fitted up with cost and in a taste not English. He could
+see, for instance, that the ceiling was painted, and the walls were not
+papered, but painted in panels between arabesque pilasters.
+
+“They are foreigners,” thought Kenelm, “though the man does speak
+English so well. That accounts for playing euchre of a Sunday evening,
+as if there were no harm in it. Euchre is an American game. The man
+is called Fritz. Ah! I guess--Germans who have lived a good deal in
+America; and the verse-maker said he was at Luscombe on pecuniary
+business. Doubtless his host is a merchant, and the verse-maker in some
+commercial firm. That accounts for his concealment of name, and fear of
+its being known that he was addicted in his holiday to tastes and habits
+so opposed to his calling.”
+
+While he was thus thinking, the lady had drawn her chair close to the
+minstrel, and was speaking to him with evident earnestness, but in tones
+too low for Kenelm to hear. Still it seemed to him, by her manner and by
+the man’s look, as if she were speaking in some sort of reproach,
+which he sought to deprecate. Then he spoke, also in a whisper, and
+she averted her face for a moment; then she held out her hand, and the
+minstrel kissed it. Certainly, thus seen, the two might well be taken
+for lovers; and the soft night, the fragrance of the flowers, silence
+and solitude, stars and moon light, all girt them as with an atmosphere
+of love. Presently the man rose and leaned over the balcony, propping
+his cheek on his hand, and gazing on the river. The lady rose too,
+and also leaned over the balustrade, her dark hair almost touching the
+auburn locks of her companion.
+
+Kenelm sighed. Was it from envy, from pity, from fear? I know not; but
+he sighed.
+
+After a brief pause, the lady said, still in low tones, but not too low
+this time to escape Kenelm’s fine sense of hearing,--
+
+“Tell me those verses again. I must remember every word of them when you
+are gone.”
+
+The man shook his head gently, and answered, but inaudibly.
+
+“Do,” said the lady; “set them to music later; and the next time you
+come I will sing them. I have thought of a title for them.”
+
+“What?” asked the minstrel.
+
+“Love’s quarrel.”
+
+The minstrel turned his head, and their eyes met, and, in meeting,
+lingered long. Then he moved away, and with face turned from her
+and towards the river, gave the melody of his wondrous voice to the
+following lines:--
+
+
+ LOVE’S QUARREL.
+
+ “Standing by the river, gazing on the river,
+ See it paved with starbeams,--heaven is at our feet;
+ Now the wave is troubled, now the rushes quiver;
+ Vanished is the starlight: it was a deceit.
+
+ “Comes a little cloudlet ‘twixt ourselves and heaven,
+ And from all the river fades the silver track;
+ Put thine arms around me, whisper low, ‘Forgiven!’
+ See how on the river starlight settles back.”
+
+
+When he had finished, still with face turned aside, the lady did not,
+indeed, whisper “Forgiven,” nor put her arms around him; but, as if by
+irresistible impulse, she laid her hand lightly on his shoulder.
+
+The minstrel started.
+
+There came to his ear,--he knew not from whence, from whom,--
+
+“Mischief! mischief! Remember the little child!”
+
+“Hush!” he said, staring round. “Did you not hear a voice?”
+
+“Only yours,” said the lady.
+
+“It was our guardian angel’s, Amalie. It came in time. We will go
+within.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE next morning betimes Kenelm visited Tom at his uncle’s home. A
+comfortable and respectable home it was, like that of an owner in easy
+circumstances. The veterinary surgeon himself was intelligent, and
+apparently educated beyond the range of his calling; a childless
+widower, between sixty and seventy, living with a sister, an old maid.
+They were evidently much attached to Tom, and delighted by the hope of
+keeping him with them. Tom himself looked rather sad, but not sullen,
+and his face brightened wonderfully at first sight of Kenelm. That
+oddity made himself as pleasant and as much like other people as he
+could in conversing with the old widower and the old maid, and took
+leave, engaging Tom to be at his inn at half past twelve, and spend the
+day with him and the minstrel. He then returned to the Golden Lamb, and
+waited there for his first visitant; the minstrel. That votary of the
+muse arrived punctually at twelve o’clock. His countenance was less
+cheerful and sunny than usual. Kenelm made no allusion to the scene
+he had witnessed, nor did his visitor seem to suspect that Kenelm had
+witnessed it or been the utterer of that warning voice.
+
+KENELM.--“I have asked my friend Tom Bowles to come a little later,
+because I wished you to be of use to him, and, in order to be so, I
+should suggest how.”
+
+THE MINSTREL.--“Pray do.”
+
+KENELM.--“You know that I am not a poet, and I do not have much
+reverence for verse-making merely as a craft.”
+
+THE MINSTREL.--“Neither have I.”
+
+KENELM.--“But I have a great reverence for poetry as a priesthood. I
+felt that reverence for you when you sketched and talked priesthood
+last evening, and placed in my heart--I hope forever while it beats--the
+image of the child on the sunlit hill, high above the abodes of men,
+tossing her flower-ball heavenward and with heavenward eyes.”
+
+The singer’s cheek coloured high, and his lip quivered: he was very
+sensitive to praise; most singers are.
+
+Kenelm resumed, “I have been educated in the Realistic school, and with
+realism I am discontented, because in realism as a school there is no
+truth. It contains but a bit of truth, and that the coldest and hardest
+bit of it, and he who utters a bit of truth and suppresses the rest of
+it tells a lie.”
+
+THE MINSTREL (slyly).--“Does the critic who says to me, ‘Sing of
+beefsteak, because the appetite for food is a real want of daily life,
+and don’t sing of art and glory and love, because in daily life a man
+may do without such ideas,’--tell a lie?”
+
+KENELM.--“Thank you for that rebuke. I submit to it. No doubt I did tell
+a lie,--that is, if I were quite in earnest in my recommendation, and if
+not in earnest, why--”
+
+THE MINSTREL.--“You belied yourself.”
+
+KENELM.--“Very likely. I set out on my travels to escape from shams, and
+begin to discover that I am a sham _par excellence_. But I suddenly
+come across you, as a boy dulled by his syntax and his vulgar fractions
+suddenly comes across a pleasant poem or a picture-book, and feels his
+wits brighten up. I owe you much: you have done me a world of good.”
+
+“I cannot guess how.”
+
+“Possibly not, but you have shown me how the realism of Nature herself
+takes colour and life and soul when seen on the ideal or poetic side
+of it. It is not exactly the words that you say or sing that do me the
+good, but they awaken within me new trains of thought, which I seek
+to follow out. The best teacher is the one who suggests rather than
+dogmatizes, and inspires his listener with the wish to teach himself.
+Therefore, O singer! whatever be the worth in critical eyes of your
+songs, I am glad to remember that you would like to go through the world
+always singing.”
+
+“Pardon me: you forget that I added, ‘if life were always young, and the
+seasons were always summer.’”
+
+“I do not forget. But if youth and summer fade for you, you leave youth
+and summer behind you as you pass along,--behind in hearts which mere
+realism would make always old, and counting their slothful beats under
+the gray of a sky without sun or stars; wherefore I pray you to consider
+how magnificent a mission the singer’s is,--to harmonize your life with
+your song, and toss your flowers, as your child does, heavenward, with
+heavenward eyes. Think only of this when you talk with my sorrowing
+friend, and you will do him good, as you have done me, without being
+able to guess how a seeker after the Beautiful, such as you, carries us
+along with him on his way; so that we, too, look out for beauty, and see
+it in the wild-flowers to which we had been blind before.”
+
+Here Tom entered the little sanded parlour where this dialogue had been
+held, and the three men sallied forth, taking the shortest cut from the
+town into the fields and woodlands.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+WHETHER or not his spirits were raised by Kenelm’s praise and
+exhortations, the minstrel that day talked with a charm that spellbound
+Tom, and Kenelm was satisfied with brief remarks on his side tending to
+draw out the principal performer.
+
+The talk was drawn from outward things, from natural objects,--objects
+that interest children, and men who, like Tom Bowles, have been
+accustomed to view surroundings more with the heart’s eye than the
+mind’s eye. This rover about the country knew much of the habits of
+birds and beasts and insects, and told anecdotes of them with a mixture
+of humour and pathos, which fascinated Tom’s attention, made him laugh
+heartily, and sometimes brought tears into his big blue eyes.
+
+They dined at an inn by the wayside, and the dinner was mirthful; then
+they wended their way slowly back. By the declining daylight their talk
+grew somewhat graver, and Kenelm took more part in it. Tom listened
+mute,--still fascinated. At length, as the town came in sight, they
+agreed to halt a while, in a bosky nook soft with mosses and sweet with
+wild thyme.
+
+There, as they lay stretched at their ease, the birds hymning vesper
+songs amid the boughs above, or dropping, noiseless and fearless, for
+their evening food on the swards around them, the wanderer said to
+Kenelm, “You tell me that you are no poet, yet I am sure you have a
+poet’s perception: you must have written poetry?”
+
+“Not I; as I before told you, only school verses in dead languages: but
+I found in my knapsack this morning a copy of some rhymes, made by a
+fellow-collegian, which I put into my pocket meaning to read them to
+you both. They are not verses like yours, which evidently burst from you
+spontaneously, and are not imitated from any other poets. These verses
+were written by a Scotchman, and smack of imitation from the old ballad
+style. There is little to admire in the words themselves, but there
+is something in the idea which struck me as original, and impressed me
+sufficiently to keep a copy, and somehow or other it got into the leaves
+of one of the two books I carried with me from home.”
+
+“What are those books? Books of poetry both, I will venture to wager--”
+
+“Wrong! Both metaphysical, and dry as a bone. Tom, light your pipe, and
+you, sir, lean more at ease on your elbow; I should warn you that the
+ballad is long. Patience!”
+
+“Attention!” said the minstrel.
+
+“Fire!” added Tom.
+
+Kenelm began to read,--and he read well.
+
+
+ LORD RONALD’S BRIDE.
+
+ PART I.
+
+ “WHY gathers the crowd in the market-place
+ Ere the stars have yet left the sky?”
+ “For a holiday show and an act of grace,--
+ At the sunrise a witch shall die.”
+
+ “What deed has she done to deserve that doom?
+ Has she blighted the standing corn,
+ Or rifled for philters a dead man’s tomb,
+ Or rid mothers of babes new-born?”
+
+ “Her pact with the fiend was not thus revealed,
+ She taught sinners the Word to hear;
+ The hungry she fed, and the sick she healed,
+ And was held as a Saint last year.
+
+ “But a holy man, who at Rome had been,
+ Had discovered, by book and bell,
+ That the marvels she wrought were through arts unclean,
+ And the lies of the Prince of Hell.
+
+ “And our Mother the Church, for the dame was rich,
+ And her husband was Lord of Clyde,
+ Would fain have been mild to this saint-like witch
+ If her sins she had not denied.
+
+ “But hush, and come nearer to see the sight,
+ Sheriff, halberds, and torchmen,--look!
+ That’s the witch standing mute in her garb of white,
+ By the priest with his bell and book.”
+
+ So the witch was consumed on the sacred pyre,
+ And the priest grew in power and pride,
+ And the witch left a son to succeed his sire
+ In the halls and the lands of Clyde.
+
+ And the infant waxed comely and strong and brave,
+ But his manhood had scarce begun,
+ When his vessel was launched on the northern wave
+ To the shores which are near the sun.
+
+ PART II.
+
+ Lord Ronald has come to his halls in Clyde
+ With a bride of some unknown race;
+ Compared with the man who would kiss that bride
+ Wallace wight were a coward base.
+
+ Her eyes had the glare of the mountain-cat
+ When it springs on the hunter’s spear,
+ At the head of the board when that lady sate
+ Hungry men could not eat for fear.
+
+ And the tones of her voice had that deadly growl
+ Of the bloodhound that scents its prey;
+ No storm was so dark as that lady’s scowl
+ Under tresses of wintry gray.
+
+ “Lord Ronald! men marry for love or gold,
+ Mickle rich must have been thy bride!”
+ “Man’s heart may be bought, woman’s hand be sold,
+ On the banks of our northern Clyde.
+
+ “My bride is, in sooth, mickle rich to me
+ Though she brought not a groat in dower,
+ For her face, couldst thou see it as I do see,
+ Is the fairest in hall or bower!”
+
+ Quoth the bishop one day to our lord the king,
+ “Satan reigns on the Clyde alway,
+ And the taint in the blood of the witch doth cling
+ To the child that she brought to day.
+
+ “Lord Ronald hath come from the Paynim land
+ With a bride that appals the sight;
+ Like his dam she hath moles on her dread right hand,
+ And she turns to a snake at night.
+
+ “It is plain that a Scot who can blindly dote
+ On the face of an Eastern ghoul,
+ And a ghoul who was worth not a silver groat,
+ Is a Scot who has lost his soul.
+
+ “It were wise to have done with this demon tree
+ Which has teemed with such caukered fruit;
+ Add the soil where it stands to my holy See,
+ And consign to the flames its root.”
+
+ “Holy man!” quoth King James, and he laughed, “we know
+ That thy tongue never wags in vain,
+ But the Church cist is full, and the king’s is low,
+ And the Clyde is a fair domain.
+
+ “Yet a knight that’s bewitched by a laidly fere
+ Needs not much to dissolve the spell;
+ We will summon the bride and the bridegroom here
+ Be at hand with thy book and bell.”
+
+ PART III.
+
+ Lord Ronald stood up in King James’s court,
+ And his dame by his dauntless side;
+ The barons who came in the hopes of sport
+ Shook with fright when they saw the bride.
+
+ The bishop, though armed with his bell and book,
+ Grew as white as if turned to stone;
+ It was only our king who could face that look,
+ But he spoke with a trembling tone.
+
+ “Lord Ronald, the knights of thy race and mine
+ Should have mates in their own degree;
+ What parentage, say, hath that bride of thine
+ Who hath come from the far countree?
+
+ “And what was her dowry in gold or land,
+ Or what was the charm, I pray,
+ That a comely young gallant should woo the hand
+ Of the ladye we see to-day?”
+
+ And the lords would have laughed, but that awful dame
+ Struck them dumb with her thunder-frown:
+ “Saucy king, did I utter my father’s name,
+ Thou wouldst kneel as his liegeman down.
+
+ “Though I brought to Lord Ronald nor lands nor gold,
+ Nor the bloom of a fading cheek;
+ Yet, were I a widow, both young and old
+ Would my hand and my dowry seek.
+
+ “For the wish that he covets the most below,
+ And would hide from the saints above,
+ Which he dares not to pray for in weal or woe,
+ Is the dowry I bring my love.
+
+ “Let every man look in his heart and see
+ What the wish he most lusts to win,
+ And then let him fasten his eyes on me
+ While he thinks of his darling sin.”
+
+ And every man--bishop, and lord, and king
+ Thought of what he most wished to win,
+ And, fixing his eye on that grewsome thing,
+ He beheld his own darling sin.
+
+ No longer a ghoul in that face he saw;
+ It was fair as a boy’s first love:
+ The voice that had curdled his veins with awe
+ Was the coo of the woodland dove.
+
+ Each heart was on flame for the peerless dame
+ At the price of the husband’s life;
+ Bright claymores flash out, and loud voices shout,
+ “In thy widow shall be my wife.”
+
+ Then darkness fell over the palace hall,
+ More dark and more dark it fell,
+ And a death-groan boomed hoarse underneath the pall,
+ And was drowned amid roar and yell.
+
+ When light through the lattice-pane stole once more,
+ It was gray as a wintry dawn,
+ And the bishop lay cold on the regal floor,
+ With a stain on his robes of lawn.
+
+ Lord Ronald was standing beside the dead,
+ In the scabbard he plunged his sword,
+ And with visage as wan as the corpse, he said,
+ “Lo! my ladye hath kept her word.
+
+ “Now I leave her to others to woo and win,
+ For no longer I find her fair;
+ Could I look on the face of my darling sin,
+ I should see but a dead man’s there.
+
+ “And the dowry she brought me is here returned,
+ For the wish of my heart has died,
+ It is quenched in the blood of the priest who burned
+ My sweet mother, the Saint of Clyde.”
+
+ Lord Ronald strode over the stony floor,
+ Not a hand was outstretched to stay;
+ Lord Ronald has passed through the gaping door,
+ Not an eye ever traced the way.
+
+ And the ladye, left widowed, was prized above
+ All the maidens in hall and bower,
+ Many bartered their lives for that ladye’s love,
+ And their souls for that ladye’s dower.
+
+ God grant that the wish which I dare not pray
+ Be not that which I lust to win,
+ And that ever I look with my first dismay
+ On the face of my darling sin!
+
+
+As he ceased, Kenelm’s eye fell on Tom’s face upturned to his own, with
+open lips, an intent stare, and paled cheeks, and a look of that higher
+sort of terror which belongs to awe. The man, then recovering himself,
+tried to speak, and attempted a sickly smile, but neither would do.
+He rose abruptly and walked away, crept under the shadow of a dark
+beech-tree, and stood there leaning against the trunk.
+
+“What say you to the ballad?” asked Kenelm of the singer.
+
+“It is not without power,” answered he.
+
+“Ay, of a certain kind.”
+
+The minstrel looked hard at Kenelm, and dropped his eyes, with a
+heightened glow on his cheek.
+
+“The Scotch are a thoughtful race. The Scot who wrote this thing may
+have thought of a day when he saw beauty in the face of a darling sin;
+but, if so, it is evident that his sight recovered from that glamoury.
+Shall we walk on? Come, Tom.”
+
+The minstrel left them at the entrance of the town, saying, “I regret
+that I cannot see more of either of you, as I quit Luscombe at daybreak.
+Here, by the by, I forgot to give it before, is the address you wanted.”
+
+KENELM.--“Of the little child. I am glad you remembered her.”
+
+The minstrel again looked hard at Kenelm, this time without dropping his
+eyes. Kenelm’s expression of face was so simply quiet that it might be
+almost called vacant.
+
+Kenelm and Tom continued to walk on towards the veterinary surgeon’s
+house, for some minutes silently. Then Tom said in a whisper, “Did you
+not mean those rhymes to hit me here--_here_?” and he struck his breast.
+
+“The rhymes were written long before I saw you, Tom; but it is well if
+their meaning strike us all. Of you, my friend, I have no fear now. Are
+you not already a changed man?”
+
+“I feel as if I were going through a change,” answered Tom, in slow,
+dreary accents. “In hearing you and that gentleman talk so much of
+things that I never thought of, I felt something in me,--you will laugh
+when I tell you,--something like a bird.”
+
+“Like a bird,--good!--a bird has wings.”
+
+“Just so.”
+
+“And you felt wings that you were unconscious of before, fluttering and
+beating themselves as against the wires of a cage. You were true to
+your instincts then, my dear fellow-man,--instincts of space and Heaven.
+Courage!--the cage-door will open soon. And now, practically speaking,
+I give you this advice in parting: You have a quick and sensitive mind
+which you have allowed that strong body of yours to incarcerate and
+suppress. Give that mind fair play. Attend to the business of your
+calling diligently; the craving for regular work is the healthful
+appetite of mind: but in your spare hours cultivate the new ideas which
+your talk with men who have been accustomed to cultivate the mind more
+than the body has sown within you. Belong to a book-club, and interest
+yourself in books. A wise man has said, ‘Books widen the present by
+adding to it the past and the future.’ Seek the company of educated men
+and educated women too; and when you are angry with another, reason
+with him: don’t knock him down; and don’t be knocked down yourself by an
+enemy much stronger than yourself,--Drink. Do all this, and when I see
+you again you will be--”
+
+“Stop, sir,--you will see me again?”
+
+“Yes, if we both live, I promise it.”
+
+“When?”
+
+“You see, Tom, we have both of us something in our old selves which we
+must work off. You will work off your something by repose, and I must
+work off mine, if I can, by moving about. So I am on my travels. May
+we both have new selves better than the old selves, when we again shake
+hands! For your part try your best, dear Tom, and Heaven prosper you.”
+
+“And Heaven bless you!” cried Tom, fervently, with tears rolling
+unheeded from his bold blue eyes.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THOUGH Kenelm left Luscombe on Tuesday morning, he did not appear at
+Neesdale Park till the Wednesday, a little before the dressing-bell for
+dinner. His adventures in the interim are not worth repeating. He had
+hoped he might fall in again with the minstrel, but he did not.
+
+His portmanteau had arrived, and he heaved a sigh as he cased himself in
+a gentleman’s evening dress. “Alas! I have soon got back again into my
+own skin.”
+
+There were several other guests in the house, though not a
+large party,--they had been asked with an eye to the approaching
+election,--consisting of squires and clergy from remoter parts of the
+county. Chief among the guests in rank and importance, and rendered by
+the occasion the central object of interest, was George Belvoir.
+
+Kenelm bore his part in this society with a resignation that partook of
+repentance.
+
+The first day he spoke very little, and was considered a very dull young
+man by the lady he took in to dinner. Mr. Travers in vain tried to draw
+him out. He had anticipated much amusement from the eccentricities of
+his guest, who had talked volubly enough in the fernery, and was sadly
+disappointed. “I feel,” he whispered to Mrs. Campion, “like poor Lord
+Pomfret, who, charmed with Punch’s lively conversation, bought him, and
+was greatly surprised that, when he had once brought him home, Punch
+would not talk.”
+
+“But your Punch listens,” said Mrs. Campion, “and he observes.”
+
+George Belvoir, on the other hand, was universally declared to be very
+agreeable. Though not naturally jovial, he forced himself to appear
+so,--laughing loud with the squires, and entering heartily with
+their wives and daughters into such topics as county-balls and
+croquet-parties; and when after dinner he had, Cato-like, ‘warmed his
+virtue with wine,’ the virtue came out very lustily in praise of good
+men,--namely, men of his own party,--and anathemas on bad men,--namely,
+men of the other party.
+
+Now and then he appealed to Kenelm, and Kenelm always returned the same
+answer, “There is much in what you say.”
+
+The first evening closed in the usual way in country houses. There was
+some lounging under moonlight on the terrace before the house; then
+there was some singing by young lady amateurs, and a rubber of whist for
+the elders; then wine-and-water, hand-candlesticks, a smoking-room for
+those who smoked, and bed for those who did not.
+
+In the course of the evening, Cecilia, partly in obedience to the duties
+of hostess and partly from that compassion for shyness which kindly and
+high-bred persons entertain, had gone a little out of her way to allure
+Kenelm forth from the estranged solitude he had contrived to weave
+around him. In vain for the daughter as for the father. He replied to
+her with the quiet self-possession which should have convinced her that
+no man on earth was less entitled to indulgence for the gentlemanlike
+infirmity of shyness, and no man less needed the duties of any hostess
+for the augmentation of his comforts, or rather for his diminished sense
+of discomfort; but his replies were in monosyllables, and made with the
+air of a man who says in his heart, “If this creature would but leave me
+alone!”
+
+Cecilia, for the first time in her life, was piqued, and, strange to
+say, began to feel more interest about this indifferent stranger than
+about the popular, animated, pleasant George Belvoir, who she knew by
+womanly instinct was as much in love with her as he could be.
+
+Cecilia Travers that night on retiring to rest told her maid, smilingly,
+that she was too tired to have her hair done; and yet, when the maid
+was dismissed, she looked at herself in the glass more gravely and more
+discontentedly than she had ever looked there before; and, tired though
+she was, stood at the window gazing into the moonlit night for a good
+hour after the maid left her.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY has now been several days a guest at Neesdale Park.
+He has recovered speech; the other guests have gone, including George
+Belvoir. Leopold Travers has taken a great fancy to Kenelm. Leopold
+was one of those men, not uncommon perhaps in England, who, with great
+mental energies, have little book-knowledge, and when they come
+in contact with a book-reader who is not a pedant feel a pleasant
+excitement in his society, a source of interest in comparing notes with
+him, a constant surprise in finding by what venerable authorities the
+deductions which their own mother-wit has drawn from life are supported,
+or by what cogent arguments derived from books those deductions are
+contravened or upset. Leopold Travers had in him that sense of humour
+which generally accompanies a strong practical understanding (no man,
+for instance, has more practical understanding than a Scot, and no man
+has a keener susceptibility to humour), and not only enjoyed Kenelm’s
+odd way of expressing himself, but very often mistook Kenelm’s irony for
+opinion spoken in earnest.
+
+Since his early removal from the capital and his devotion to
+agricultural pursuits, it was so seldom that Leopold Travers met a man
+by whose conversation his mind was diverted to other subjects than those
+which were incidental to the commonplace routine of his life that he
+found in Kenelm’s views of men and things a source of novel amusement,
+and a stirring appeal to such metaphysical creeds of his own as had been
+formed unconsciously, and had long reposed unexamined in the recesses of
+an intellect shrewd and strong, but more accustomed to dictate than to
+argue. Kenelm, on his side, saw much in his host to like and to admire;
+but, reversing their relative positions in point of years, he conversed
+with Travers as with a mind younger than his own. Indeed, it was one
+of his crotchety theories that each generation is in substance mentally
+older than the generation preceding it, especially in all that relates
+to science; and, as he would say, “The study of life is a science, and
+not an art.”
+
+But Cecilia,--what impression did she create upon the young visitor?
+Was he alive to the charm of her rare beauty, to the grace of a mind
+sufficiently stored for commune with those who love to think and to
+imagine, and yet sufficiently feminine and playful to seize the sportive
+side of realities, and allow their proper place to the trifles which
+make the sum of human things? An impression she did make, and that
+impression was new to him and pleasing. Nay, sometimes in her presence
+and sometimes when alone, he fell into abstracted consultations with
+himself, saying, “Kenelm Chillingly, now that thou hast got back into
+thy proper skin, dost thou not think that thou hadst better remain
+there? Couldst thou not be contented with thy lot as erring descendant
+of Adam, if thou couldst win for thy mate so faultless a descendant of
+Eve as now flits before thee?” But he could not abstract from himself
+any satisfactory answer to the question he had addressed to himself.
+
+Once he said abruptly to Travers, as, on their return from their
+rambles, they caught a glimpse of Cecilia’s light form bending over the
+flower-beds on the lawn, “Do you admire Virgil?”
+
+“To say truth I have not read Virgil since I was a boy; and, between you
+and me, I then thought him rather monotonous.”
+
+“Perhaps because his verse is so smooth in its beauty?”
+
+“Probably. When one is very young one’s taste is faulty; and if a poet
+is not faulty, we are apt to think he wants vivacity and fire.”
+
+“Thank you for your lucid explanation,” answered Kenelm, adding musingly
+to himself, “I am afraid I should yawn very often if I were married to a
+Miss Virgil.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE house of Mr. Travers contained a considerable collection of family
+portraits, few of them well painted, but the Squire was evidently proud
+of such evidences of ancestry. They not only occupied a considerable
+space on the walls of the reception rooms, but swarmed into the
+principal sleeping-chambers, and smiled or frowned on the beholder from
+dark passages and remote lobbies. One morning, Cecilia, on her way
+to the china closet, found Kenelm gazing very intently upon a female
+portrait consigned to one of those obscure receptacles by which through
+a back staircase he gained the only approach from the hall to his
+chamber.
+
+“I don’t pretend to be a good judge of paintings,” said Kenelm, as
+Cecilia paused beside him; “but it strikes me that this picture is very
+much better than most of those to which places of honour are assigned in
+your collection. And the face itself is so lovely that it would add an
+embellishment to the princeliest galleries.”
+
+“Yes,” said Cecilia, with a half-sigh. “The face is lovely, and the
+portrait is considered one of Lely’s rarest masterpieces. It used to
+hang over the chimney-piece in the drawing-room. My father had it placed
+here many years ago.”
+
+“Perhaps because he discovered it was not a family portrait?”
+
+“On the contrary,--because it grieves him to think it is a family
+portrait. Hush! I hear his footstep: don’t speak of it to him; don’t let
+him see you looking at it. The subject is very painful to him.”
+
+Here Cecilia vanished into the china closet and Kenelm turned off to his
+own room.
+
+What sin committed by the original in the time of Charles II. but only
+discovered in the reign of Victoria could have justified Leopold Travers
+in removing the most pleasing portrait in the house from the honoured
+place it had occupied, and banishing it to so obscure a recess? Kenelm
+said no more on the subject, and indeed an hour afterwards had dismissed
+it from his thoughts. The next day he rode out with Travers and
+Cecilia. Their way passed through quiet shady lanes without any purposed
+direction, when suddenly, at the spot where three of those lanes met on
+an angle of common ground, a lonely gray tower, in the midst of a wide
+space of grass-land which looked as if it had once been a park, with
+huge boles of pollarded oak dotting the space here and there, rose
+before them.
+
+“Cissy!” cried Travers, angrily reining in his horse and stopping short
+in a political discussion which he had forced upon Kenelm, “Cissy!
+How comes this? We have taken the wrong turn! No matter, I see there,”
+ pointing to the right, “the chimney-pots of old Mondell’s homestead. He
+has not yet promised his vote to George Belvoir. I’ll go and have a talk
+with him. Turn back, you and Mr. Chillingly,--meet me at Terner’s Green,
+and wait for me there till I come. I need not excuse myself to you,
+Chillingly. A vote is a vote.” So saying, the Squire, whose ordinary
+riding-horse was an old hunter, halted, turned, and, no gate being
+visible, put the horse over a stiff fence and vanished in the direction
+of old Mondell’s chimney-pots. Kenelm, scarcely hearing his host’s
+instructions to Cecilia and excuses to himself, remained still and
+gazing on the old tower thus abruptly obtruded on his view.
+
+Though no learned antiquarian like his father, Kenelm had a strange
+fascinating interest in all relics of the past; and old gray towers,
+where they are not church towers, are very rarely to be seen in England.
+All around the old gray tower spoke with an unutterable mournfulness
+of a past in ruins: you could see remains of some large Gothic building
+once attached to it, rising here and there in fragments of deeply
+buttressed walls; you could see in a dry ditch, between high ridges,
+where there had been a fortified moat: nay, you could even see where
+once had been the bailey hill from which a baron of old had dispensed
+justice. Seldom indeed does the most acute of antiquarians discover
+that remnant of Norman times on lands still held by the oldest of
+Anglo-Norman families. Then, the wild nature of the demesne around;
+those ranges of sward, with those old giant oak-trunks, hollowed within
+and pollarded at top,--all spoke, in unison with the gray tower, of a
+past as remote from the reign of Victoria as the Pyramids are from the
+sway of the Viceroy of Egypt.
+
+“Let us turn back,” said Miss Travers; “my father would not like me to
+stay here.”
+
+“Pardon me a moment. I wish my father were here; he would stay till
+sunset. But what is the history of that old tower? a history it must
+have.”
+
+“Every home has a history, even a peasant’s hut,” said Cecilia. “But do
+pardon me if I ask you to comply with my father’s request. I at least
+must turn back.”
+
+Thus commanded, Kenelm reluctantly withdrew his gaze from the ruin and
+regained Cecilia, who was already some paces in return down the lane.
+
+“I am far from a very inquisitive man by temperament,” said Kenelm, “so
+far as the affairs of the living are concerned. But I should not care to
+open a book if I had no interest in the past. Pray indulge my curiosity
+to learn something about that old tower. It could not look more
+melancholy and solitary if I had built it myself.”
+
+“Its most melancholy associations are with a very recent past,” answered
+Cecilia. “The tower, in remote times, formed the keep of a castle
+belonging to the most ancient and once the most powerful family in these
+parts. The owners were barons who took active share in the Wars of the
+Roses. The last of them sided with Richard III., and after the battle
+of Bosworth the title was attainted, and the larger portion of the lands
+was confiscated. Loyalty to a Plantagenet was of course treason to
+a Tudor. But the regeneration of the family rested with their direct
+descendants, who had saved from the general wreck of their fortunes what
+may be called a good squire’s estate,--about, perhaps, the same rental
+as my father’s, but of much larger acreage. These squires, however,
+were more looked up to in the county than the wealthiest peer. They
+were still by far the oldest family in the county; and traced in their
+pedigree alliances with the most illustrious houses in English history.
+In themselves too for many generations they were a high-spirited,
+hospitable, popular race, living unostentatiously on their income, and
+contented with their rank of squires. The castle, ruined by time and
+siege, they did not attempt to restore. They dwelt in a house near to
+it, built about Elizabeth’s time, which you could not see, for it lies
+in a hollow behind the tower,--a moderate-sized, picturesque, country
+gentleman’s house. Our family intermarried with them,--the portrait you
+saw was a daughter of their house,--and very proud was any squire in the
+county of intermarriage with the Fletwodes.”
+
+“Fletwode,--that was their name? I have a vague recollection of having
+heard the name connected with some disastrous--oh, but it can’t be the
+same family: pray go on.”
+
+“I fear it is the same family. But I will finish the story as I have
+heard it. The property descended at last to one Bertram Fletwode, who,
+unfortunately, obtained the reputation of being a very clever man of
+business. There was some mining company in which, with other gentlemen
+in the county, he took great interest; invested largely in shares;
+became the head of the direction--”
+
+“I see; and was of course ruined.”
+
+“No; worse than that: he became very rich; and, unhappily, became
+desirous of being richer still. I have heard that there was a great
+mania for speculations just about that time. He embarked in these, and
+prospered, till at last he was induced to invest a large share of the
+fortune thus acquired in the partnership of a bank which enjoyed a high
+character. Up to that time he had retained popularity and esteem in
+the county; but the squires who shared in the adventures of the mining
+company, and knew little or nothing about other speculations in which
+his name did not appear, professed to be shocked at the idea of a
+Fletwode of Fletwode being ostensibly joined in partnership with a Jones
+of Clapham in a London bank.”
+
+“Slow folks, those country squires,--behind the progress of the age.
+Well?”
+
+“I have heard that Bertram Fletwode was himself very reluctant to take
+this step, but was persuaded to do so by his son. This son, Alfred, was
+said to have still greater talents for business than the father, and
+had been not only associated with but consulted by him in all the later
+speculations which had proved so fortunate. Mrs. Campion knew Alfred
+Fletwode very well. She describes him as handsome, with quick, eager
+eyes; showy and imposing in his talk; immensely ambitious, more
+ambitious than avaricious,--collecting money less for its own sake than
+for that which it could give,--rank and power. According to her it was
+the dearest wish of his heart to claim the old barony, but not before
+there could go with the barony a fortune adequate to the lustre of a
+title so ancient, and equal to the wealth of modern peers with higher
+nominal rank.”
+
+“A poor ambition at the best; of the two I should prefer that of a poet
+in a garret. But I am no judge. Thank Heaven I have no ambition.
+Still, all ambition, all desire to rise, is interesting to him who is
+ignominiously contented if he does not fall. So the son had his way,
+and Fletwode joined company with Jones on the road to wealth and the
+peerage; meanwhile did the son marry? if so, of course the daughter of
+a duke or a millionnaire. Tuft-hunting, or money-making, at the risk of
+degradation and the workhouse. Progress of the age!”
+
+“No,” replied Cecilia, smiling at this outburst, but smiling sadly,
+“Fletwode did not marry the daughter of a duke or a millionnaire; but
+still his wife belonged to a noble family,--very poor, but very proud.
+Perhaps he married from motives of ambition, though not of gain. Her
+father was of much political influence that might perhaps assist his
+claim to the barony. The mother, a woman of the world, enjoying a high
+social position, and nearly related to a connection of ours,--Lady
+Glenalvon.”
+
+“Lady Glenalvon, the dearest of my lady friends! You are connected with
+her?”
+
+“Yes; Lord Glenalvon was my mother’s uncle. But I wish to finish my
+story before my father joins us. Alfred Fletwode did not marry till long
+after the partnership in the bank. His father, at his desire, had bought
+up the whole business, Mr. Jones having died. The bank was carried on
+in the names of Fletwode and Son. But the father had become merely a
+nominal or what I believe is called a ‘sleeping’ partner. He had long
+ceased to reside in the county. The old house was not grand enough for
+him. He had purchased a palatial residence in one of the home counties;
+lived there in great splendour; was a munificent patron of science
+and art; and in spite of his earlier addictions to business-like
+speculations he appears to have been a singularly accomplished,
+high-bred gentleman. Some years before his son’s marriage, Mr. Fletwode
+had been afflicted with partial paralysis, and his medical attendant
+enjoined rigid abstention from business. From that time he never
+interfered with his son’s management of the bank. He had an only
+daughter, much younger than Alfred. Lord Eagleton, my mother’s brother,
+was engaged to be married to her. The wedding-day was fixed,--when the
+world was startled by the news that the great firm of Fletwode and Son
+had stopped payment; is that the right phrase?”
+
+“I believe so.”
+
+“A great many people were ruined in that failure. The public indignation
+was very great. Of course all the Fletwode property went to the
+creditors. Old Mr. Fletwode was legally acquitted of all other offence
+than that of overconfidence in his son. Alfred was convicted of
+fraud,--of forgery. I don’t, of course, know the particulars, they are
+very complicated. He was sentenced to a long term of servitude, but
+died the day he was condemned; apparently by poison, which he had long
+secreted about his person. Now you can understand why my father, who
+is almost gratuitously sensitive on the point of honour, removed into a
+dark corner the portrait of Arabella Fletwode,--his own ancestress, but
+also the ancestress of a convicted felon: you can understand why the
+whole subject is so painful to him. His wife’s brother was to have
+married the felon’s sister; and though, of course, that marriage was
+tacitly broken off by the terrible disgrace that had befallen the
+Fletwodes, yet I don’t think my poor uncle ever recovered the blow to
+his hopes. He went abroad, and died in Madeira of a slow decline.”
+
+“And the felon’s sister, did she die too?”
+
+“No; not that I know of. Mrs. Campion says that she saw in a newspaper
+the announcement of old Mr. Fletwode’s death, and a paragraph to the
+effect that after that event Miss Fletwode had sailed from Liverpool to
+New York.”
+
+“Alfred Fletwode’s wife went back, of course, to her family?”
+
+“Alas! no,--poor thing! She had not been many months married when the
+bank broke; and among his friends her wretched husband appears to have
+forged the names of the trustees to her marriage settlement, and sold
+out the sums which would otherwise have served her as a competence.
+Her father, too, was a great sufferer by the bankruptcy, having by
+his son-in-law’s advice placed a considerable portion of his moderate
+fortune in Alfred’s hands for investment, all of which was involved in
+the general wreck. I am afraid he was a very hard-hearted man: at all
+events his poor daughter never returned to him. She died, I think, even
+before the death of Bertram Fletwode. The whole story is very dismal.”
+
+“Dismal indeed, but pregnant with salutary warnings to those who live
+in an age of progress. Here you see a family of fair fortune, living
+hospitably, beloved, revered, more looked up to by their neighbours than
+the wealthiest nobles; no family not proud to boast alliance with it.
+All at once, in the tranquil record of this happy race, appears that
+darling of the age, that hero of progress,--a clever man of business. He
+be contented to live as his fathers! He be contented with such trifles
+as competence, respect, and love! Much too clever for that. The age is
+money-making,--go with the age! He goes with the age. Born a gentleman
+only, he exalts himself into a trader. But at least he, it seems, if
+greedy, was not dishonest. He was born a gentleman, but his son was
+born a trader. The son is a still cleverer man of business; the son is
+consulted and trusted. Aha! He too goes with the age; to greed he
+links ambition. The trader’s son wishes to return--what? to the rank of
+gentleman?--gentleman! nonsense! everybody is a gentleman nowadays,--to
+the title of Lord. How ends it all! Could I sit but for twelve hours in
+the innermost heart of that Alfred Fletwode; could I see how, step by
+step from his childhood, the dishonest son was avariciously led on by
+the honest father to depart from the old _vestigia_ of Fletwodes of
+Fletwode,--scorning The Enough to covet The More, gaining The More to
+sigh, ‘It is not The Enough,’--I think I might show that the age lives
+in a house of glass, and had better not for its own sake throw stones on
+the felon!”
+
+“Ah, but, Mr. Chillingly, surely this is a very rare exception in the
+general--”
+
+“Rare!” interrupted Kenelm, who was excited to a warmth of passion which
+would have startled his most intimate friend,-if indeed an intimate
+friend had ever been vouchsafed to him,--“rare! nay, how common--I don’t
+say to the extent of forgery and fraud, but to the extent of degradation
+and ruin--is the greed of a Little More to those who have The Enough! is
+the discontent with competence, respect, and love, when catching sight
+of a money-bag! How many well-descended county families, cursed with
+an heir who is called a clever man of business, have vanished from the
+soil! A company starts, the clever man joins it one bright day. Pouf!
+the old estates and the old name are powder. Ascend higher. Take nobles
+whose ancestral titles ought to be to English ears like the sound of
+clarions, awakening the most slothful to the scorn of money-bags and
+the passion for renown. Lo! in that mocking dance of death called
+the Progress of the Age, one who did not find Enough in a sovereign’s
+revenue, and seeks The Little More as a gambler on the turf by the
+advice of blacklegs! Lo! another, with lands wider than his greatest
+ancestors ever possessed, must still go in for The Little More, adding
+acre to acre, heaping debt upon debt! Lo! a third, whose name, borne by
+his ancestors, was once the terror of England’s foes,--the landlord of
+a hotel! A fourth,--but why go on through the list? Another and another
+still succeeds; each on the Road to Ruin, each in the Age of Progress.
+Ah, Miss Travers! in the old time it was through the Temple of Honour
+that one passed to the Temple of Fortune. In this wise age the process
+is reversed. But here comes your father.”
+
+“A thousand pardons!” said Leopold Travers. “That numskull Mondell kept
+me so long with his old-fashioned Tory doubts whether liberal politics
+are favourable to agricultural prospects. But as he owes a round sum to
+a Whig lawyer I had to talk with his wife, a prudent woman; convinced
+her that his own agricultural prospects were safest on the Whig side of
+the question; and, after kissing his baby and shaking his hand, booked
+his vote for George Belvoir,--a plumper.”
+
+“I suppose,” said Kenelm to himself, and with that candour which
+characterized him whenever he talked to himself, “that Travers has taken
+the right road to the Temple, not of Honour, but of honours, in every
+country, ancient or modern, which has adopted the system of popular
+suffrage.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+THE next day Mrs. Campion and Cecilia were seated under the veranda.
+They were both ostensibly employed on two several pieces of embroidery,
+one intended for a screen, the other for a sofa-cushion; but the mind of
+neither was on her work.
+
+MRS. CAMPION.--“Has Mr. Chillingly said when he means to take leave?”
+
+CECILIA.--“Not to me. How much my dear father enjoys his conversation!”
+
+MRS. CAMPION.--“Cynicism and mockery were not so much the fashion among
+young men in your father’s day as I suppose they are now, and therefore
+they seem new to Mr. Travers. To me they are not new, because I saw
+more of the old than the young when I lived in London, and cynicism and
+mockery are more natural to men who are leaving the world than to those
+who are entering it.”
+
+CECILIA.--“Dear Mrs. Campion, how bitter you are, and how unjust!
+You take much too literally the jesting way in which Mr. Chillingly
+expresses himself. There can be no cynicism in one who goes out of his
+way to make others happy.”
+
+MRS. CAMPION.--“You mean in the whim of making an ill-assorted marriage
+between a pretty village flirt and a sickly cripple, and settling a
+couple of peasants in a business for which they are wholly unfitted.”
+
+CECILIA.--“Jessie Wiles is not a flirt, and I am convinced that she will
+make Will Somers a very good wife, and that the shop will be a great
+success.”
+
+MRS. CAMPION.--“We shall see. Still, if Mr. Chillingly’s talk belies his
+actions, he may be a good man, but he is a very affected one.”
+
+CECILIA.--“Have I not heard you say that there are persons so natural
+that they seem affected to those who do not understand them?”
+
+Mrs. Campion raised her eyes to Cecilia’s face, dropped them again over
+her work, and said, in grave undertones,--“Take care, Cecilia.”
+
+“Take care of what?”
+
+“My dearest child, forgive me; but I do not like the warmth with which
+you defend Mr. Chillingly.”
+
+“Would not my father defend him still more warmly if he had heard you?”
+
+“Men judge of men in their relations to men. I am a woman, and judge of
+men in their relations to women. I should tremble for the happiness of
+any woman who joined her fate with that of Kenelm Chillingly.”
+
+“My dear friend, I do not understand you to-day.”
+
+“Nay; I did not mean to be so solemn, my love. After all, it is nothing
+to us whom Mr. Chillingly may or may not marry. He is but a passing
+visitor, and, once gone, the chances are that we may not see him again
+for years.”
+
+Thus speaking, Mrs. Campion again raised her eyes from her work,
+stealing a sidelong glance at Cecilia; and her mother-like heart sank
+within her, on noticing how suddenly pale the girl had become, and how
+her lips quivered. Mrs. Campion had enough knowledge of life to feel
+aware that she had committed a grievous blunder. In that earliest stage
+of virgin affection, when a girl is unconscious of more than a certain
+vague interest in one man which distinguishes him from others in her
+thoughts,--if she hears him unjustly disparaged, if some warning against
+him is implied, if the probability that he will never be more to her
+than a passing acquaintance is forcibly obtruded on her,--suddenly that
+vague interest, which might otherwise have faded away with many another
+girlish fancy, becomes arrested, consolidated; the quick pang it
+occasions makes her involuntarily, and for the first time, question
+herself, and ask, “Do I love?” But when a girl of a nature so delicate
+as that of Cecilia Travers can ask herself the question, “Do I love?”
+ her very modesty, her very shrinking from acknowledging that any power
+over her thoughts for weal or for woe can be acquired by a man, except
+through the sanction of that love which only becomes divine in her eyes
+when it is earnest and pure and self-devoted, makes her prematurely
+disposed to answer “yes.” And when a girl of such a nature in her own
+heart answers “yes” to such a question, even if she deceive herself at
+the moment, she begins to cherish the deceit till the belief in her love
+becomes a reality. She has adopted a religion, false or true, and she
+would despise herself if she could be easily converted.
+
+Mrs. Campion had so contrived that she had forced that question upon
+Cecilia, and she feared, by the girl’s change of countenance, that the
+girl’s heart had answered “yes.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+WHILE the conversation just narrated took place, Kenelm had walked forth
+to pay a visit to Will Somers. All obstacles to Will’s marriage were now
+cleared away; the transfer of lease for the shop had been signed, and
+the banns were to be published for the first time on the following
+Sunday. We need not say that Will was very happy. Kenelm then paid a
+visit to Mrs. Bowles, with whom he stayed an hour. On reentering the
+Park, he saw Travers, walking slowly, with downcast eyes and his hands
+clasped behind him (his habit when in thought). He did not observe
+Kenelm’s approach till within a few feet of him, and he then greeted his
+guest in listless accents, unlike his usual cheerful tones.
+
+“I have been visiting the man you have made so happy,” said Kenelm.
+
+“Who can that be?”
+
+“Will Somers. Do you make so many people happy that your reminiscence of
+them is lost in their number?”
+
+Travers smiled faintly, and shook his head.
+
+Kenelm went on. “I have also seen Mrs. Bowles, and you will be pleased
+to hear that Tom is satisfied with his change of abode: there is no
+chance of his returning to Graveleigh; and Mrs. Bowles took very kindly
+to my suggestion that the little property you wish for should be sold
+to you, and, in that case, she would remove to Luscombe to be near her
+son.”
+
+“I thank you much for your thought of me,” said Travers, “and the affair
+shall be seen to at once, though the purchase is no longer important to
+me. I ought to have told you three days ago, but it slipped my memory,
+that a neighbouring squire, a young fellow just come into his property,
+has offered to exchange a capital farm, much nearer to my residence,
+for the lands I hold in Graveleigh, including Saunderson’s farm and the
+cottages: they are quite at the outskirts of my estate, but run into
+his, and the exchange will be advantageous to both. Still I am glad that
+the neighbourhood should be thoroughly rid of a brute like Tom Bowles.”
+
+“You would not call him brute if you knew him; but I am sorry to hear
+that Will Somers will be under another landlord.”
+
+“It does not matter, since his tenure is secured for fourteen years.”
+
+“What sort of man is the new landlord?”
+
+“I don’t know much of him. He was in the army till his father died,
+and has only just made his appearance in the county. He has, however,
+already earned the character of being too fond of the other sex: it is
+well that pretty Jessie is to be safely married.”
+
+Travers then relapsed into a moody silence from which Kenelm found it
+difficult to rouse him. At length the latter said kindly,--
+
+“My dear Mr. Travers, do not think I take a liberty if I venture to
+guess that something has happened this morning which troubles or vexes
+you. When that is the case, it is often a relief to say what it is, even
+to a confidant so unable to advise or to comfort as myself.”
+
+“You are a good fellow, Chillingly, and I know not, at least in these
+parts, a man to whom I would unburden myself more freely. I am put out,
+I confess; disappointed unreasonably, in a cherished wish, and,” he
+added, with a slight laugh, “it always annoys me when I don’t have my
+own way.”
+
+“So it does me.”
+
+“Don’t you think that George Belvoir is a very fine young man?”
+
+“Certainly.”
+
+“_I_ call him handsome; he is steadier, too, than most men of his
+age, and of his command of money; and yet he does not want spirit nor
+knowledge of life. To every advantage of rank and fortune he adds the
+industry and the ambition which attain distinction in public life.”
+
+“Quite true. Is he going to withdraw from the election after all?”
+
+“Good heavens, no!”
+
+“Then how does he not let you have your own way?”
+
+“It is not he,” said Travers, peevishly; “it is Cecilia. Don’t you
+understand that George is precisely the husband I would choose for her;
+and this morning came a very well written manly letter from him, asking
+my permission to pay his addresses to her.”
+
+“But that is your own way so far.”
+
+“Yes, and here comes the balk. Of course I had to refer it to Cecilia,
+and she positively declines, and has no reasons to give; does not deny
+that George is good-looking and sensible, that he is a man of whose
+preference any girl might be proud; but she chooses to say she cannot
+love him, and when I ask why she cannot love him, has no other answer
+than that ‘she cannot say.’ It is too provoking.”
+
+“It is provoking,” answered Kenelm; “but then Love is the most
+dunderheaded of all the passions; it never will listen to reason. The
+very rudiments of logic are unknown to it. ‘Love has no wherefore,’ says
+one of those Latin poets who wrote love-verses called elegies,--a name
+which we moderns appropriate to funeral dirges. For my own part, I can’t
+understand how any one can be expected voluntarily to make up his mind
+to go out of his mind. And if Miss Travers cannot go out of her mind
+because George Belvoir does, you could not argue her into doing so if
+you talked till doomsday.”
+
+Travers smiled in spite of himself, but he answered gravely, “Certainly,
+I would not wish Cissy to marry any man she disliked, but she does not
+dislike George; no girl could: and where that is the case, a girl so
+sensible, so affectionate, so well brought up, is sure to love, after
+marriage, a thoroughly kind and estimable man, especially when she has
+no previous attachment,--which, of course, Cissy never had. In fact,
+though I do not wish to force my daughter’s will, I am not yet disposed
+to give up my own. Do you understand?”
+
+“Perfectly.”
+
+“I am the more inclined to a marriage so desirable in every way, because
+when Cissy comes out in London, which she has not yet done, she is
+sure to collect round her face and her presumptive inheritance all the
+handsome fortune-hunters and titled _vauriens_; and if in love there
+is no wherefore, how can I be sure that she may not fall in love with a
+scamp?”
+
+“I think you may be sure of that,” said Kenelm. “Miss Travers has too
+much mind.”
+
+“Yes, at present; but did you not say that in love people go out of
+their mind?”
+
+“True! I forgot that.”
+
+“I am not then disposed to dismiss poor George’s offer with a decided
+negative, and yet it would be unfair to mislead him by encouragement. In
+fact, I’ll be hanged if I know how to reply.”
+
+“You think Miss Travers does not dislike George Belvoir, and if she saw
+more of him may like him better, and it would be good for her as well as
+for him not to put an end to that, chance?”
+
+“Exactly so.”
+
+“Why not then write: ‘My dear George,--You have my best wishes, but my
+daughter does not seem disposed to marry at present. Let me consider
+your letter not written, and continue on the same terms as we were
+before.’ Perhaps, as George knows Virgil, you might find your own
+schoolboy recollections of that poet useful here, and add, _Varium et
+mutabile semper femina_; hackneyed, but true.”
+
+“My dear Chillingly, your suggestion is capital. How the deuce at your
+age have you contrived to know the world so well?”
+
+Kenelm answered in the pathetic tones so natural to his voice, “By being
+only a looker-on; alas!”
+
+Leopold Travers felt much relieved after he had written his reply
+to George. He had not been quite so ingenuous in his revelation to
+Chillingly as he may have seemed. Conscious, like all proud and
+fond fathers, of his daughter’s attractions, he was not without some
+apprehension that Kenelm himself might entertain an ambition at variance
+with that of George Belvoir: if so, he deemed it well to put an end to
+such ambition while yet in time: partly because his interest was already
+pledged to George; partly because, in rank and fortune, George was the
+better match; partly because George was of the same political party as
+himself,--while Sir Peter, and probably Sir Peter’s heir, espoused the
+opposite side; and partly also because, with all his personal liking to
+Kenelm, Leopold Travers, as a very sensible, practical man of the world,
+was not sure that a baronet’s heir who tramped the country on foot in
+the dress of a petty farmer, and indulged pugilistic propensities in
+martial encounters with stalwart farriers, was likely to make a safe
+husband and a comfortable son-in-law. Kenelm’s words, and still more his
+manner, convinced Travers that any apprehensions of rivalry that he had
+previously conceived were utterly groundless.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE same evening, after dinner (during that lovely summer month they
+dined at Neesdale Park at an unfashionably early hour), Kenelm, in
+company with Travers and Cecilia, ascended a gentle eminence at the back
+of the gardens, on which there were some picturesque ivy-grown ruins of
+an ancient priory, and commanding the best view of a glorious sunset and
+a subject landscape of vale and wood, rivulet and distant hills.
+
+“Is the delight in scenery,” said Kenelm, “really an acquired gift,
+as some philosophers tell us? Is it true that young children and rude
+savages do not feel it; that the eye must be educated to comprehend its
+charm, and that the eye can be only educated through the mind?”
+
+“I should think your philosophers are right,” said Travers. “When I was
+a schoolboy, I thought no scenery was like the flat of a cricket ground;
+when I hunted at Melton, I thought that unpicturesque country more
+beautiful than Devonshire. It is only of late years that I feel a
+sensible pleasure in scenery for its own sake, apart from associations
+of custom or the uses to which we apply them.”
+
+“And what say you, Miss Travers?”
+
+“I scarcely know what to say,” answered Cecilia, musingly. “I can
+remember no time in my childhood when I did not feel delight in that
+which seemed to me beautiful in scenery, but I suspect that I vaguely
+distinguished one kind of beauty from another. A common field with
+daisies and buttercups was beautiful to me then, and I doubt if I saw
+anything more beautiful in extensive landscapes.”
+
+“True,” said Kenelm: “it is not in early childhood that we carry the
+sight into distance: as is the mind so is the eye; in early childhood
+the mind revels in the present, and the eye rejoices most in the things
+nearest to it. I don’t think in childhood that we--
+
+ “‘Watched with wistful eyes the setting sun.’”
+
+“Ah! what a world of thought in that word ‘wistful’!” murmured Cecilia,
+as her gaze riveted itself on the western heavens, towards which Kenelm
+had pointed as he spoke, where the enlarging orb rested half its disk on
+the rim of the horizon.
+
+She had seated herself on a fragment of the ruin, backed by the hollows
+of a broken arch. The last rays of the sun lingered on her young face,
+and then lost themselves in the gloom of the arch behind. There was a
+silence for some minutes, during which the sun had sunk. Rosy clouds in
+thin flakes still floated, momently waning: and the eve-star stole forth
+steadfast, bright, and lonely,--nay, lonely not now; that sentinel has
+aroused a host.
+
+Said a voice, “No sign of rain yet, Squire. What will become of the
+turnips?”
+
+“Real life again! Who can escape it?” muttered Kenelm, as his eye rested
+on the burly figure of the Squire’s bailiff.
+
+“Ha! North,” said Travers, “what brings you here? No bad news, I hope?”
+
+“Indeed, yes, Squire. The Durham bull--”
+
+“The Durham bull! What of him? You frighten me.”
+
+“Taken bad. Colic.”
+
+“Excuse me, Chillingly,” cried Travers; “I must be off. A most valuable
+animal, and no one I can trust to doctor him but myself.”
+
+“That’s true enough,” said the bailiff, admiringly. “There’s not a
+veterinary in the county like the Squire.”
+
+Travers was already gone, and the panting bailiff had hard work to catch
+him up.
+
+Kenelm seated himself beside Cecilia on the ruined fragment.
+
+“How I envy your father!” said he.
+
+“Why just at this moment,--because he knows how to doctor the bull?”
+ said Cecilia, with a sweet low laugh.
+
+“Well, that is something to envy. It is a pleasure to relieve from pain
+any of God’s creatures,--even a Durham bull.”
+
+“Indeed, yes. I am justly rebuked.”
+
+“On the contrary you are to be justly praised. Your question suggested
+to me an amiable sentiment in place of the selfish one which was
+uppermost in my thoughts. I envied your father because he creates for
+himself so many objects of interest; because while he can appreciate the
+mere sensuous enjoyment of a landscape and a sunset, he can find mental
+excitement in turnip crops and bulls. Happy, Miss Travers, is the
+Practical Man.”
+
+“When my dear father was as young as you, Mr. Chillingly, I am sure that
+he had no more interest in turnips and bulls than you have. I do not
+doubt that some day you will be as practical as he is in that respect.”
+
+“Do you think so--sincerely?”
+
+Cecilia made no answer.
+
+Kenelm repeated the question.
+
+“Sincerely, then, I do not know whether you will take interest in
+precisely the same things that interest my father; but there are other
+things than turnips and cattle which belong to what you call ‘practical
+life,’ and in these you will take interest, as you took in the fortunes
+of Will Somers and Jessie Wiles.”
+
+“That was no practical interest. I got nothing by it. But even if that
+interest were practical,--I mean productive, as cattle and turnip crops
+are,--a succession of Somerses and Wileses is not to be hoped for.
+History never repeats itself.”
+
+“May I answer you, though very humbly?”
+
+“Miss Travers, the wisest man that ever existed never was wise enough
+to know woman; but I think most men ordinarily wise will agree in this,
+that woman is by no means a humble creature, and that when she says she
+‘answers very humbly,’ she does not mean what she says. Permit me to
+entreat you to answer very loftily.”
+
+Cecilia laughed and blushed. The laugh was musical; the blush was--what?
+Let any man, seated beside a girl like Cecilia at starry twilight, find
+the right epithet for that blush. I pass it by epithetless. But she
+answered, firmly though sweetly,--
+
+“Are there not things very practical, and affecting the happiness, not
+of one or two individuals, but of innumerable thousands, in which a man
+like Mr. Chillingly cannot fail to feel interest, long before he is my
+father’s age?”
+
+“Forgive me: you do not answer; you question. I imitate you, and ask
+what are those things as applicable to a man like Mr. Chillingly?”
+
+Cecilia gathered herself up, as with the desire to express a great deal
+in short substance, and then said,--
+
+“In the expression of thought, literature; in the conduct of action,
+politics.”
+
+Kenelm Chillingly stared, dumfounded. I suppose the greatest enthusiast
+for woman’s rights could not assert more reverentially than he did the
+cleverness of women; but among the things which the cleverness of woman
+did not achieve, he had always placed “laconics.” “No woman,” he was
+wont to say, “ever invented an axiom or a proverb.”
+
+“Miss Travers,” he said at last, “before we proceed further, vouchsafe
+to tell me if that very terse reply of yours is spontaneous and
+original; or whether you have not borrowed it from some book which I
+have not chanced to read?”
+
+Cecilia pondered honestly, and then said, “I don’t think it is from any
+book; but I owe so many of my thoughts to Mrs. Campion, and she lived so
+much among clever men, that--”
+
+“I see it all, and accept your definition, no matter whence it came.
+You think I might become an author or a politician. Did you ever read an
+essay by a living author called ‘Motive Power’?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“That essay is designed to intimate that without motive power a man,
+whatever his talents or his culture, does nothing practical. The
+mainsprings of motive power are Want and Ambition. They are absent
+from my mechanism. By the accident of birth I do not require bread and
+cheese; by the accident of temperament and of philosophical culture
+I care nothing about praise or blame. But without want of bread and
+cheese, and with a most stolid indifference to praise and blame, do you
+honestly think that a man will do anything practical in literature or
+politics? Ask Mrs. Campion.”
+
+“I will not ask her. Is the sense of duty nothing?”
+
+“Alas! we interpret duty so variously. Of mere duty, as we commonly
+understand the word, I do not think I shall fail more than other men.
+But for the fair development of all the good that is in us, do you
+believe that we should adopt some line of conduct against which our
+whole heart rebels? Can you say to the clerk, ‘Be a poet’? Can you say
+to the poet, ‘Be a clerk’? It is no more to the happiness of a man’s
+being to order him to take to one career when his whole heart is set
+on another, than it is to order him to marry one woman when it is to
+another woman that his heart will turn.”
+
+Cecilia here winced and looked away. Kenelm had more tact than most men
+of his age,--that is, a keener perception of subjects to avoid; but then
+Kenelm had a wretched habit of forgetting the person he talked to and
+talking to himself. Utterly oblivious of George Belvoir, he was talking
+to himself now. Not then observing the effect his _mal-a-propos_ dogma
+had produced on his listener, he went on, “Happiness is a word very
+lightly used. It may mean little; it may mean much. By the word
+happiness I would signify, not the momentary joy of a child who gets
+a plaything, but the lasting harmony between our inclinations and our
+objects; and without that harmony we are a discord to ourselves, we are
+incompletions, we are failures. Yet there are plenty of advisers who say
+to us, ‘It is a duty to be a discord.’ I deny it.”
+
+Here Cecilia rose and said in a low voice, “It is getting late. We must
+go homeward.”
+
+They descended the green eminence slowly, and at first in silence.
+The bats, emerging from the ivied ruins they left behind, flitted and
+skimmed before them, chasing the insects of the night. A moth, escaping
+from its pursuer, alighted on Cecilia’s breast, as if for refuge.
+
+“The bats are practical,” said Kenelm; “they are hungry, and their
+motive power to-night is strong. Their interest is in the insects they
+chase. They have no interest in the stars; but the stars lure the moth.”
+
+Cecilia drew her slight scarf over the moth, so that it might not
+fly off and become a prey to the bats. “Yet,” said she, “the moth is
+practical too.”
+
+“Ay, just now, since it has found an asylum from the danger that
+threatened it in its course towards the stars.”
+
+Cecilia felt the beating of her heart, upon which lay the moth
+concealed. Did she think that a deeper and more tender meaning than they
+outwardly expressed was couched in these words? If so, she erred. They
+now neared the garden gate, and Kenelm paused as he opened it. “See,”
+ he said, “the moon has just risen over those dark firs, making the still
+night stiller. Is it not strange that we mortals, placed amid perpetual
+agitation and tumult and strife, as if our natural element, conceive a
+sense of holiness in the images antagonistic to our real life; I mean
+in images of repose? I feel at the moment as if I suddenly were
+made better, now that heaven and earth have suddenly become yet more
+tranquil. I am now conscious of a purer and sweeter moral than either I
+or you drew from the insect you have sheltered. I must come to the poets
+to express it,--
+
+
+ “‘The desire of the moth for the star,
+ Of the night for the morrow;
+ The devotion to something afar
+ From the sphere of our sorrow.’
+
+
+“Oh, that something afar! that something afar! never to be reached on
+this earth,--never, never!”
+
+There was such a wail in that cry from the man’s heart that Cecilia
+could not resist the impulse of a divine compassion. She laid her hand
+on his, and looked on the dark wildness of his upward face with eyes
+that Heaven meant to be wells of comfort to grieving man. At the light
+touch of that hand Kenelm started, looked down, and met those soothing
+eyes.
+
+“I am happy to tell you that I have saved my Durham,” cried out Mr.
+Travers from the other side of the gate.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+AS Kenelm that night retired to his own room, he paused on the
+landing-place opposite to the portrait which Mr. Travers had consigned
+to that desolate exile. This daughter of a race dishonoured in its
+extinction might well have been the glory of the house she had entered
+as a bride. The countenance was singularly beautiful, and of a character
+of beauty eminently patrician; there was in its expression a gentleness
+and modesty not often found in the female portraits of Sir Peter
+Lely, and in the eyes and in the smile a wonderful aspect of innocent
+happiness.
+
+“What a speaking homily,” soliloquized Kenelm, addressing the picture,
+“against the ambition thy fair descendant would awake in me, art thou,
+O lovely image! For generations thy beauty lived in this canvas, a thing
+of joy, the pride of the race it adorned. Owner after owner said
+to admiring guests, ‘Yes, a fine portrait, by Lely; she was my
+ancestress,--a Fletwode of Fletwode.’ Now, lest guests should remember
+that a Fletwode married a Travers thou art thrust out of sight; not even
+Lely’s art can make thee of value, can redeem thine innocent self from
+disgrace. And the last of the Fletwodes, doubtless the most ambitious of
+all, the most bent on restoring and regilding the old lordly name, dies
+a felon; the infamy of one living man is so large that it can blot
+out the honour of the dead.” He turned his eyes from the smile of
+the portrait, entered his own room, and, seating himself by the
+writing-table, drew blotting-book and note-paper towards him, took
+up the pen, and instead of writing fell into deep revery. There was a
+slight frown on his brow, on which frowns were rare. He was very angry
+with himself.
+
+“Kenelm,” he said, entering into his customary dialogue with that self,
+“it becomes you, forsooth, to moralize about the honour of races which
+have no affinity with you. Son of Sir Peter Chillingly, look at home.
+Are you quite sure that you have not said or done or looked a something
+that may bring trouble to the hearth on which you are received as guest?
+What right had you to be moaning forth your egotisms, not remembering
+that your words fell on compassionate ears, and that such words, heard
+at moonlight by a girl whose heart they move to pity, may have dangers
+for her peace? Shame on you, Kenelm! shame! knowing too what her
+father’s wish is; and knowing too that you have not the excuse of
+desiring to win that fair creature for yourself. What do you mean,
+Kenelm? I don’t hear you; speak out. Oh, ‘that I am a vain coxcomb to
+fancy that she could take a fancy to me:’ well, perhaps I am; I hope so
+earnestly; and at all events, there has been and shall be no time for
+much mischief. We are off to-morrow, Kenelm; bestir yourself and pack
+up, write your letters, and then ‘put out the light,--put out _the_
+light!’”
+
+But this converser with himself did not immediately set to work, as
+agreed upon by that twofold one. He rose and walked restlessly to and
+fro the floor, stopping ever and anon to look at the pictures on the
+walls.
+
+Several of the worst painted of the family portraits had been consigned
+to the room tenanted by Kenelm, which, though both the oldest and
+largest bed-chamber in the house, was always appropriated to a bachelor
+male guest, partly because it was without dressing-room, remote, and
+only approached by the small back-staircase, to the landing-place of
+which Arabella had been banished in disgrace; and partly because it had
+the reputation of being haunted, and ladies are more alarmed by that
+superstition than men are supposed to be. The portraits on which Kenelm
+now paused to gaze were of various dates, from the reign of Elizabeth to
+that of George III., none of them by eminent artists, and none of them
+the effigies of ancestors who had left names in history,--in short, such
+portraits as are often seen in the country houses of well-born squires.
+One family type of features or expression pervaded most of these
+portraits; features clear-cut and hardy, expression open and honest.
+And though not one of those dead men had been famous, each of them had
+contributed his unostentatious share, in his own simple way, to the
+movements of his time. That worthy in ruff and corselet had manned his
+own ship at his own cost against the Armada; never had been repaid by
+the thrifty Burleigh the expenses which had harassed him and diminished
+his patrimony; never had been even knighted. That gentleman with short
+straight hair, which overhung his forehead, leaning on his sword
+with one hand, and a book open in the other hand, had served as
+representative of his county town in the Long Parliament, fought under
+Cromwell at Marston Moor, and, resisting the Protector when he removed
+the “bauble,” was one of the patriots incarcerated in “Hell hole.” He,
+too, had diminished his patrimony, maintaining two troopers and two
+horses at his own charge, and “Hell hole” was all he got in return.
+A third, with a sleeker expression of countenance, and a large wig,
+flourishing in the quiet times of Charles II., had only been a justice
+of the peace, but his alert look showed that he had been a very active
+one. He had neither increased nor diminished his ancestral fortune. A
+fourth, in the costume of William III.’s reign, had somewhat added to
+the patrimony by becoming a lawyer. He must have been a successful one.
+He is inscribed “Sergeant-at-law.” A fifth, a lieutenant in the army,
+was killed at Blenheim; his portrait was that of a very young and
+handsome man, taken the year before his death. His wife’s portrait is
+placed in the drawing-room because it was painted by Kneller. She was
+handsome too, and married again a nobleman, whose portrait, of course,
+was not in the family collection. Here there was a gap in chronological
+arrangement, the lieutenant’s heir being an infant; but in the time
+of George II. another Travers appeared as the governor of a West India
+colony. His son took part in a very different movement of the age. He is
+represented old, venerable, with white hair, and underneath his
+effigy is inscribed, “Follower of Wesley.” His successor completes the
+collection. He is in naval uniform; he is in full length, and one of his
+legs is a wooden one. He is Captain, R.N., and inscribed, “Fought under
+Nelson at Trafalgar.” That portrait would have found more dignified
+place in the reception-rooms if the face had not been forbiddingly ugly,
+and the picture itself a villanous daub.
+
+“I see,” said Kenelm, stopping short, “why Cecilia Travers has been
+reared to talk of duty as a practical interest in life. These men of a
+former time seem to have lived to discharge a duty, and not to follow
+the progress of the age in the chase of a money-bag,--except perhaps
+one, but then to be sure he was a lawyer. Kenelm, rouse up and listen
+to me; whatever we are, whether active or indolent, is not my favourite
+maxim a just and a true one; namely, ‘A good man does good by living’?
+But, for that, he must be a harmony and not a discord. Kenelm, you lazy
+dog, we must pack up.”
+
+Kenelm then refilled his portmanteau, and labelled and directed it to
+Exmundham, after which he wrote these three notes:--
+
+
+NOTE I.
+
+TO THE MARCHIONESS OF GLENALVON.
+
+MY DEAR FRIEND AND MONITRESS,--I have left your last letter a month
+unanswered. I could not reply to your congratulations on the event of my
+attaining the age of twenty-one. That event is a conventional sham,
+and you know how I abhor shams and conventions. The truth is that I am
+either much younger than twenty-one or much older. As to all designs on
+my peace in standing for our county at the next election, I wished to
+defeat them, and I have done so; and now I have commenced a course of
+travel. I had intended on starting to confine it to my native country.
+Intentions are mutable. I am going abroad. You shall hear of my
+whereabout. I write this from the house of Leopold Travers, who, I
+understand from his fair daughter, is a connection of yours; a man to be
+highly esteemed and cordially liked.
+
+No, in spite of all your flattering predictions, I shall never be
+anything in this life more distinguished than what I am now. Lady
+Glenalvon allows me to sign myself her grateful friend,
+
+K. C.
+
+
+NOTE II.
+
+DEAR COUSIN MIVERS,--I am going abroad. I may want money; for, in order
+to rouse motive power within me, I mean to want money if I can. When I
+was a boy of sixteen you offered me money to write attacks upon veteran
+authors for “The Londoner.” Will you give me money now for a similar
+display of that grand New Idea of our generation; namely, that the less
+a man knows of a subject the better he understands it? I am about to
+travel into countries which I have never seen, and among races I have
+never known. My arbitrary judgments on both will be invaluable to “The
+Londoner” from a Special Correspondent who shares your respect for the
+anonymous, and whose name is never to be divulged. Direct your answer by
+return to me, _poste restante_, Calais.
+
+Yours truly,
+
+K. C.
+
+
+NOTE III.
+
+MY DEAR FATHER,--I found your letter here, whence I depart to-morrow.
+Excuse haste. I go abroad, and shall write to you from Calais.
+
+I admire Leopold Travers very much. After all, how much of self-balance
+there is in a true English gentleman! Toss him up and down where you
+will, and he always alights on his feet,--a gentleman. He has one child,
+a daughter named Cecilia,--handsome enough to allure into wedlock any
+mortal whom Decimus Roach had not convinced that in celibacy lay the
+right “Approach to the Angels.” Moreover, she is a girl whom one can
+talk with. Even you could talk with her. Travers wishes her to marry
+a very respectable, good-looking, promising gentleman, in every way
+“suitable,” as they say. And if she does, she will rival that pink and
+perfection of polished womanhood, Lady Glenalvon. I send you back my
+portmanteau. I have pretty well exhausted my experience-money, but have
+not yet encroached on my monthly allowance. I mean still to live upon
+that, eking it out, if necessary, by the sweat of my brow or brains. But
+if any case requiring extra funds should occur,--a case in which that
+extra would do such real good to another that I feel _you_ would do
+it,--why, I must draw a check on your bankers. But understand that is
+your expense, not mine, and it is _you_ who are to be repaid in Heaven.
+Dear father, how I do love and honour you every day more and more!
+Promise you not to propose to any young lady till I come first to you
+for consent!--oh, my dear father, how could you doubt it? how doubt
+that I could not be happy with any wife whom you could not love as a
+daughter? Accept that promise as sacred. But I wish you had asked me
+something in which obedience was not much too facile to be a test of
+duty. I could not have obeyed you more cheerfully if you had asked me to
+promise never to propose to any young lady at all. Had you asked me to
+promise that I would renounce the dignity of reason for the frenzy of
+love, or the freedom of man for the servitude of husband, then I might
+have sought to achieve the impossible; but I should have died in the
+effort!--and thou wouldst have known that remorse which haunts the bed
+of the tyrant.
+
+Your affectionate son,
+
+K. C.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE next morning Kenelm surprised the party at breakfast by appearing
+in the coarse habiliments in which he had first made his host’s
+acquaintance. He did not glance towards Cecilia when he announced his
+departure; but, his eye resting on Mrs. Campion, he smiled, perhaps a
+little sadly, at seeing her countenance brighten up and hearing her give
+a short sigh of relief. Travers tried hard to induce him to stay a few
+days longer, but Kenelm was firm. “The summer is wearing away,” said he,
+“and I have far to go before the flowers fade and the snows fall. On the
+third night from this I shall sleep on foreign soil.”
+
+“You are going abroad, then?” asked Mrs. Campion.
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“A sudden resolution, Mr. Chillingly. The other day you talked of
+visiting the Scotch lakes.”
+
+“True; but, on reflection, they will be crowded with holiday tourists,
+many of whom I shall probably know. Abroad I shall be free, for I shall
+be unknown.”
+
+“I suppose you will be back for the hunting season,” said Travers.
+
+“I think not. I do not hunt foxes.”
+
+“Probably we shall at all events meet in London,” said Travers. “I
+think, after long rustication, that a season or two in the bustling
+capital may be a salutary change for mind as well as for body; and it
+is time that Cecilia were presented and her court-dress specially
+commemorated in the columns of the ‘Morning Post.’”
+
+Cecilia was seemingly too busied behind the tea-urn to heed this
+reference to her debut.
+
+“I shall miss you terribly,” cried Travers, a few moments afterwards,
+and with a hearty emphasis. “I declare that you have quite unsettled me.
+Your quaint sayings will be ringing in my ears long after you are gone.”
+
+There was a rustle as of a woman’s dress in sudden change of movement
+behind the tea-urn.
+
+“Cissy,” said Mrs. Campion, “are we ever to have our tea?”
+
+“I beg pardon,” answered a voice behind the urn. “I hear Pompey” (the
+Skye terrier) “whining on the lawn. They have shut him out. I will be
+back presently.”
+
+Cecilia rose and was gone. Mrs. Campion took her place at the tea-urn.
+
+“It is quite absurd of Cissy to be so fond of that hideous dog,” said
+Travers, petulantly.
+
+“Its hideousness is its beauty,” returned Mrs. Campion, laughing. “Mr.
+Belvoir selected it for her as having the longest back and the shortest
+legs of any dog he could find in Scotland.”
+
+“Ah, George gave it to her; I forgot that,” said Travers, laughing
+pleasantly.
+
+It was some minutes before Miss Travers returned with the Skye
+terrier, and she seemed to have recovered her spirits in regaining that
+ornamental accession to the party; talking very quickly and gayly, and
+with flushed cheeks, like a young person excited by her own overflow of
+mirth.
+
+But when, half an hour afterwards, Kenelm took leave of her and Mrs.
+Campion at the hall-door, the flush was gone, her lips were tightly
+compressed, and her parting words were not audible. Then, as his figure
+(side by side with her father, who accompanied his guest to the lodge)
+swiftly passed across the lawn and vanished amid the trees beyond, Mrs.
+Campion wound a mother-like arm around her waist and kissed her.
+Cecilia shivered and turned her face to her friend smiling; but such a
+smile,--one of those smiles that seem brimful of tears.
+
+“Thank you, dear,” she said meekly; and, gliding away towards the
+flower-garden, lingered a while by the gate which Kenelm had opened
+the night before. Then she went with languid steps up the green slopes
+towards the ruined priory.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK IV.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IT is somewhat more than a year and a half since Kenelm Chillingly left
+England, and the scene now is in London, during that earlier and more
+sociable season which precedes the Easter holidays,--season in which
+the charm of intellectual companionship is not yet withered away in the
+heated atmosphere of crowded rooms,--season in which parties are small,
+and conversation extends beyond the interchange of commonplace with
+one’s next neighbour at a dinner-table,--season in which you have a
+fair chance of finding your warmest friends not absorbed by the superior
+claims of their chilliest acquaintances.
+
+There was what is called a _conversazione_ at the house of one of those
+Whig noblemen who yet retain the graceful art of bringing agreeable
+people together, and collecting round them the true aristocracy, which
+combines letters and art and science with hereditary rank and political
+distinction,--that art which was the happy secret of the Lansdownes and
+Hollands of the last generation. Lord Beaumanoir was himself a genial,
+well-read man, a good judge of art, and a pleasant talker. He had a
+charming wife, devoted to him and to her children, but with enough love
+of general approbation to make herself as popular in the fashionable
+world as if she sought in its gayeties a refuge from the dulness of
+domestic life.
+
+Amongst the guests at the Beaumanoirs, this evening were two men, seated
+apart in a small room, and conversing familiarly. The one might be about
+fifty-four; he was tall, strongly built, but not corpulent, somewhat
+bald, with black eyebrows, dark eyes, bright and keen, mobile lips round
+which there played a shrewd and sometimes sarcastic smile.
+
+This gentleman, the Right Hon. Gerard Danvers, was a very influential
+member of Parliament. He had, when young for English public life,
+attained to high office; but--partly from a great distaste to the
+drudgery of administration; partly from a pride of temperament, which
+unfitted him for the subordination that a Cabinet owes to its chief;
+partly, also, from a not uncommon kind of epicurean philosophy, at once
+joyous and cynical, which sought the pleasures of life and held very
+cheap its honours--he had obstinately declined to re-enter office, and
+only spoke on rare occasions. On such occasions he carried great weight,
+and, by the brief expression of his opinions, commanded more votes than
+many an orator infinitely more eloquent. Despite his want of ambition,
+he was fond of power in his own way,--power over the people who _had_
+power; and, in the love of political intrigue, he found an amusement for
+an intellect very subtle and very active. At this moment he was bent on
+a new combination among the leaders of different sections in the same
+party, by which certain veterans were to retire, and certain younger men
+to be admitted into the Administration. It was an amiable feature in his
+character that he had a sympathy with the young, and had helped to
+bring into Parliament, as well as into office, some of the ablest of
+a generation later than his own. He gave them sensible counsel,
+was pleased when they succeeded, and encouraged them when they
+failed,--always provided that they had stuff enough in them to redeem
+the failure; if not, he gently dropped them from his intimacy, but
+maintained sufficiently familiar terms with them to be pretty sure that
+he could influence their votes whenever he so desired.
+
+The gentleman with whom he was now conversing was young, about
+five-and-twenty; not yet in Parliament, but with an intense desire to
+obtain a seat in it, and with one of those reputations which a youth
+carries away from school and college, justified, not by honours purely
+academical, but by an impression of ability and power created on the
+minds of his contemporaries and endorsed by his elders. He had done
+little at the University beyond taking a fair degree, except acquiring
+at the debating society the fame of an exceedingly ready and adroit
+speaker. On quitting college he had written one or two political
+articles in a quarterly review, which created a sensation; and though
+belonging to no profession, and having but a small yet independent
+income, society was very civil to him, as to a man who would some day or
+other attain a position in which he could damage his enemies and serve
+his friends. Something in this young man’s countenance and bearing
+tended to favour the credit given to his ability and his promise. In his
+countenance there was no beauty; in his bearing no elegance. But in that
+countenance there was vigour, there was energy, there was audacity. A
+forehead wide but low, protuberant in those organs over the brow which
+indicate the qualities fitted for perception and judgment,--qualities
+for every-day life; eyes of the clear English blue, small, somewhat
+sunken, vigilant, sagacious, penetrating; a long straight upper
+lip, significant of resolute purpose; a mouth in which a student
+of physiognomy would have detected a dangerous charm. The smile
+was captivating, but it was artificial, surrounded by dimples, and
+displaying teeth white, small, strong, but divided from each other. The
+expression of that smile would have been frank and candid to all who
+failed to notice that it was not in harmony with the brooding forehead
+and the steely eye; that it seemed to stand distinct from the rest
+of the face, like a feature that had learned its part. There was that
+physical power in the back of the head which belongs to men who make
+their way in life,--combative and destructive. All gladiators have it;
+so have great debaters and great reformers,--that is, reformers who can
+destroy, but not necessarily reconstruct. So, too, in the bearing of the
+man there was a hardy self-confidence, much too simple and unaffected
+for his worst enemy to call it self-conceit. It was the bearing of one
+who knew how to maintain personal dignity without seeming to care about
+it. Never servile to the great, never arrogant to the little; so little
+over-refined that it was never vulgar,--a popular bearing.
+
+The room in which these gentlemen were seated was separated from the
+general suite of apartments by a lobby off the landing-place, and served
+for Lady Beaumanoir’s boudoir. Very pretty it was, but simply furnished,
+with chintz draperies. The walls were adorned with drawings in
+water-colours, and precious specimens of china on fanciful Parian
+brackets. At one corner, by a window that looked southward and opened
+on a spacious balcony, glazed in and filled with flowers, stood one of
+those high trellised screens, first invented, I believe, in Vienna, and
+along which ivy is so trained as to form an arbour.
+
+The recess thus constructed, and which was completely out of sight from
+the rest of the room, was the hostess’s favourite writing-nook. The two
+men I have described were seated near the screen, and had certainly no
+suspicion that any one could be behind it.
+
+“Yes,” said Mr. Danvers, from an ottoman niched in another recess of the
+room, “I think there will be an opening at Saxboro’ soon: Milroy wants a
+Colonial Government; and if we can reconstruct the Cabinet as I propose,
+he would get one. Saxboro’ would thus be vacant. But, my dear fellow,
+Saxboro’ is a place to be wooed through love, and only won through
+money. It demands liberalism from a candidate,--two kinds of liberalism
+seldom united; the liberalism in opinion which is natural enough to a
+very poor man, and the liberalism in expenditure which is scarcely to
+be obtained except from a very rich one. You may compute the cost of
+Saxboro’ at L3000 to get in, and about L2000 more to defend your seat
+against a petition,--the defeated candidate nearly always petitions.
+L5000 is a large sum; and the worst of it is, that the extreme opinions
+to which the member for Saxboro’ must pledge himself are a drawback to
+an official career. Violent politicians are not the best raw material
+out of which to manufacture fortunate placemen.”
+
+“The opinions do not so much matter; the expense does. I cannot afford
+L5000, or even L3000.”
+
+“Would not Sir Peter assist? He has, you say, only one son; and if
+anything happen to that son, you are the next heir.”
+
+“My father quarrelled with Sir Peter, and harassed him by an imprudent
+and ungracious litigation. I scarcely think I could apply to him for
+money to obtain a seat in Parliament upon the democratic side of the
+question; for, though I know little of his politics, I take it for
+granted that a country gentleman of old family and L10,000 a year cannot
+well be a democrat.”
+
+“Then I presume you would not be a democrat if, by the death of your
+cousin, you became heir to the Chillinglys.”
+
+“I am not sure what I might be in that case. There are times when a
+democrat of ancient lineage and good estates could take a very high
+place amongst the aristocracy.”
+
+“Humph! my dear Gordon, _vous irez loin_.”
+
+“I hope to do so. Measuring myself against the men of my own day, I do
+not see many who should outstrip me.”
+
+“What sort of a fellow is your cousin Kenelm? I met him once or twice
+when he was very young, and reading with Welby in London. People then
+said that he was very clever; he struck me as very odd.”
+
+“I never saw him, but from all I hear, whether he be clever or whether
+he be odd, he is not likely to do anything in life,--a dreamer.”
+
+“Writes poetry perhaps?”
+
+“Capable of it, I dare say.”
+
+Just then some other guests came into the room, amongst them a lady
+of an appearance at once singularly distinguished and singularly
+prepossessing, rather above the common height, and with a certain
+indescribable nobility of air and presence. Lady Glenalvon was one of
+the queens of the London world, and no queen of that world was ever
+less worldly or more queen-like. Side by side with the lady was Mr.
+Chillingly Mivers. Gordon and Mivers interchanged friendly nods, and the
+former sauntered away and was soon lost amid a crowd of other young
+men, with whom, as he could converse well and lightly on things which
+interested them, he was rather a favourite, though he was not an
+intimate associate. Mr. Danvers retired into a corner of the adjoining
+lobby, where he favoured the French ambassador with his views on the
+state of Europe and the reconstruction of Cabinets in general.
+
+“But,” said Lady Glenalvon to Chillingly Mivers, “are you quite sure
+that my old young friend Kenelm is here? Since you told me so, I have
+looked everywhere for him in vain. I should so much like to see him
+again.”
+
+“I certainly caught a glimpse of him half an hour ago; but before I
+could escape from a geologist who was boring me about the Silurian
+system, Kenelm had vanished.”
+
+“Perhaps it was his ghost!”
+
+“Well, we certainly live in the most credulous and superstitious age
+upon record; and so many people tell me that they converse with the
+dead under the table that it seems impertinent in me to say that I don’t
+believe in ghosts.”
+
+“Tell me some of those incomprehensible stories about table-rapping,”
+ said Lady Glenalvon. “There is a charming, snug recess here behind the
+screen.”
+
+Scarcely had she entered the recess when she drew back with a start and
+an exclamation of amaze. Seated at the table within the recess, his chin
+resting on his hand, and his face cast down in abstracted revery, was a
+young man. So still was his attitude, so calmly mournful the expression
+of his face, so estranged did he seem from all the motley but brilliant
+assemblage which circled around the solitude he had made for himself,
+that he might well have been deemed one of those visitants from another
+world whose secrets the intruder had wished to learn. Of that intruder’s
+presence he was evidently unconscious. Recovering her surprise, she
+stole up to him, placed her hand on his shoulder, and uttered his name
+in a low gentle voice. At that sound Kenelm Chillingly looked up.
+
+“Do you not remember me?” asked Lady Glenalvon. Before he could answer,
+Mivers, who had followed the marchioness into the recess, interposed.
+
+“My dear Kenelm, how are you? When did you come to London? Why have you
+not called on me; and what on earth are you hiding yourself for?”
+
+Kenelm had now recovered the self-possession which he rarely lost long
+in the presence of others. He returned cordially his kinsman’s greeting,
+and kissed with his wonted chivalrous grace the fair hand which the lady
+withdrew from his shoulder and extended to his pressure. “Remember you!”
+ he said to Lady Glenalvon with the kindliest expression of his soft dark
+eyes; “I am not so far advanced towards the noon of life as to forget
+the sunshine that brightened its morning. My dear Mivers, your questions
+are easily answered. I arrived in England two weeks ago, stayed at
+Exmundham till this morning, to-day dined with Lord Thetford, whose
+acquaintance I made abroad, and was persuaded by him to come here and
+be introduced to his father and mother, the Beaumanoirs. After I had
+undergone that ceremony, the sight of so many strange faces frightened
+me into shyness. Entering this room at a moment when it was quite
+deserted, I resolved to turn hermit behind the screen.”
+
+“Why, you must have seen your cousin Gordon as you came into the room.”
+
+“But you forget I don’t know him by sight. However, there was no one in
+the room when I entered; a little later some others came in, for I heard
+a faint buzz, like that of persons talking in a whisper. However, I was
+no eavesdropper, as a person behind a screen is on the dramatic stage.”
+
+This was true. Even had Gordon and Danvers talked in a louder tone,
+Kenelm had been too absorbed in his own thoughts to have heard a word of
+their conversation.
+
+“You ought to know young Gordon; he is a very clever fellow, and has an
+ambition to enter Parliament. I hope no old family quarrel between his
+bear of a father and dear Sir Peter will make you object to meet him.”
+
+“Sir Peter is the most forgiving of men, but he would scarcely forgive
+me if I declined to meet a cousin who had never offended him.”
+
+“Well said. Come and meet Gordon at breakfast to-morrow,--ten o’clock. I
+am still in the old rooms.”
+
+While the kinsmen thus conversed, Lady Glenalvon had seated herself on
+the couch beside Kenelm, and was quietly observing his countenance.
+Now she spoke. “My dear Mr. Mivers, you will have many opportunities of
+talking with Kenelm; do not grudge me five minutes’ talk with him now.”
+
+“I leave your ladyship alone in your hermitage. How all the men in this
+assembly will envy the hermit!”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+“I AM glad to see you once more in the world,” said Lady Glenalvon; “and
+I trust that you are now prepared to take that part in it which ought to
+be no mean one if you do justice to your talents and your nature.”
+
+KENELM.--“When you go to the theatre, and see one of the pieces which
+appear now to be the fashion, which would you rather be,--an actor or a
+looker-on?”
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--“My dear young friend, your question saddens me.”
+ (After a pause.)--“But though I used a stage metaphor when I expressed
+my hope that you would take no mean part in the world, the world is not
+really a theatre. Life admits of no lookers-on. Speak to me frankly, as
+you used to do. Your face retains its old melancholy expression. Are you
+not happy?”
+
+KENELM.--“Happy, as mortals go, I ought to be. I do not think I am
+unhappy. If my temper be melancholic, melancholy has a happiness of its
+own. Milton shows that there are as many charms in life to be found on
+the _Penseroso_ side of it as there are on the _Allegro_.”
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--“Kenelm, you saved the life of my poor son, and when,
+later, he was taken from me, I felt as if he had commended you to my
+care. When at the age of sixteen, with a boy’s years and a man’s heart,
+you came to London, did I not try to be to you almost as a mother? and
+did you not often tell me that you could confide to me the secrets of
+your heart more readily than to any other?”
+
+“You were to me,” said Kenelm, with emotion, “that most precious and
+sustaining good genius which a youth can find at the threshold of
+life,--a woman gently wise, kindly sympathizing, shaming him by the
+spectacle of her own purity from all grosser errors, elevating him from
+mean tastes and objects by the exquisite, ineffable loftiness of soul
+which is only found in the noblest order of womanhood. Come, I will open
+my heart to you still. I fear it is more wayward than ever. It still
+feels estranged from the companionship and pursuits natural to my age
+and station. However, I have been seeking to brace and harden my nature,
+for the practical ends of life, by travel and adventure, chiefly among
+rougher varieties of mankind than we meet in drawing-rooms. Now, in
+compliance with the duty I owe to my dear father’s wishes, I come back
+to these circles, which under your auspices I entered in boyhood, and
+which even then seemed to me so inane and artificial. Take a part in the
+world of these circles; such is your wish. My answer is brief. I have
+been doing my best to acquire a motive power, and have not succeeded. I
+see nothing that I care to strive for, nothing that I care to gain. The
+very times in which we live are to me, as to Hamlet, out of joint; and
+I am not born like Hamlet to set them right. Ah! if I could look on
+society through the spectacles with which the poor hidalgo in ‘Gil Blas’
+looked on his meagre board,--spectacles by which cherries appear the
+size of peaches, and tomtits as large as turkeys! The imagination which
+is necessary to ambition is a great magnifier.”
+
+“I have known more than one man, now very eminent, very active, who
+at your age felt the same estrangement from the practical pursuits of
+others.”
+
+“And what reconciled those men to such pursuits?”
+
+“That diminished sense of individual personality, that unconscious
+fusion of one’s own being into other existences, which belong to home
+and marriage.”
+
+“I don’t object to home, but I do to marriage.”
+
+“Depend on it there is no home for man where there is no woman.”
+
+“Prettily said. In that case I resign the home.”
+
+“Do you mean seriously to tell me that you never see the woman you could
+love enough to make her your wife, and never enter any home that you do
+not quit with a touch of envy at the happiness of married life?”
+
+“Seriously, I never see such a woman; seriously, I never enter such a
+home.”
+
+“Patience, then; your time will come, and I hope it is at hand. Listen
+to me. It was only yesterday that I felt an indescribable longing to
+see you again,--to know your address that I might write to you; for
+yesterday, when a certain young lady left my house after a week’s visit,
+I said this girl would make a perfect wife, and, above all, the exact
+wife to suit Kenelm Chillingly.”
+
+“Kenelm Chillingly is very glad to hear that this young lady has left
+your house.”
+
+“But she has not left London: she is here to-night. She only stayed
+with me till her father came to town, and the house he had taken for the
+season was vacant; those events happened yesterday.”
+
+“Fortunate events for me: they permit me to call on you without danger.”
+
+“Have you no curiosity to know, at least, who and what is the young lady
+who appears to me so well suited to you?”
+
+“No curiosity, but a vague sensation of alarm.”
+
+“Well, I cannot talk pleasantly with you while you are in this
+irritating mood, and it is time to quit the hermitage. Come, there are
+many persons here, with some of whom you should renew old acquaintance,
+and to some of whom I should like to make you known.”
+
+“I am prepared to follow Lady Glenalvon wherever she deigns to lead
+me,--except to the altar with another.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE rooms were now full,--not overcrowded, but full,--and it was rarely
+even in that house that so many distinguished persons were collected
+together. A young man thus honoured by so _grande_ a dame as Lady
+Glenalvon could not but be cordially welcomed by all to whom she
+presented him, Ministers and Parliamentary leaders, ball-givers, and
+beauties in vogue,--even authors and artists; and there was something in
+Kenelm Chillingly, in his striking countenance and figure, in that calm
+ease of manner natural to his indifference to effect, which seemed to
+justify the favour shown to him by the brilliant princess of fashion and
+mark him out for general observation.
+
+That first evening of his reintroduction to the polite world was
+a success which few young men of his years achieve. He produced a
+sensation. Just as the rooms were thinning, Lady Glenalvon whispered to
+Kenelm,--
+
+“Come this way: there is one person I must reintroduce you to; thank me
+for it hereafter.”
+
+Kenelm followed the marchioness, and found himself face to face with
+Cecilia Travers. She was leaning on her father’s arm, looking very
+handsome, and her beauty was heightened by the blush which overspread
+her cheeks as Kenelm Chillingly approached.
+
+Travers greeted him with great cordiality; and Lady Glenalvon asking him
+to escort her to the refreshment-room, Kenelm had no option but to offer
+his arm to Cecilia.
+
+Kenelm felt somewhat embarrassed. “Have you been long in town, Miss
+Travers?”
+
+“A little more than a week, but we only settled into our house
+yesterday.”
+
+“Ah, indeed! were you then the young lady who--” He stopped short, and
+his face grew gentler and graver in its expression.
+
+“The young lady who--what?” asked Cecilia with a smile.
+
+“Who has been staying with Lady Glenalvon?”
+
+“Yes; did she tell you?”
+
+“She did not mention your name, but praised that young lady so justly
+that I ought to have guessed it.”
+
+Cecilia made some not very audible answer, and on entering the
+refreshment-room other young men gathered round her, and Lady Glenalvon
+and Kenelm remained silent in the midst of a general small-talk. When
+Travers, after giving his address to Kenelm, and, of course, pressing
+him to call, left the house with Cecilia, Kenelm said to Lady Glenalvon,
+musingly, “So that is the young lady in whom I was to see my fate: you
+knew that we had met before?”
+
+“Yes, she told me when and where. Besides, it is not two years since you
+wrote to me from her father’s house. Do you forget?”
+
+“Ah,” said Kenelm, so abstractedly that he seemed to be dreaming, “no
+man with his eyes open rushes on his fate: when he does so his sight is
+gone. Love is blind. They say the blind are very happy, yet I never met
+a blind man who would not recover his sight if he could.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Mr. CHILLINGLY MIVERS never gave a dinner at his own rooms. When he
+did give a dinner it was at Greenwich or Richmond. But he gave
+breakfast-parties pretty often, and they were considered pleasant.
+He had handsome bachelor apartments in Grosvenor Street, daintily
+furnished, with a prevalent air of exquisite neatness, a good library
+stored with books of reference, and adorned with presentation copies
+from authors of the day, very beautifully bound. Though the room served
+for the study of the professed man of letters, it had none of the untidy
+litter which generally characterizes the study of one whose vocation it
+is to deal with books and papers. Even the implements for writing
+were not apparent, except when required. They lay concealed in a vast
+cylinder bureau, French made, and French polished. Within that bureau
+were numerous pigeon-holes and secret drawers, and a profound well with
+a separate patent lock. In the well were deposited the articles intended
+for publication in “The Londoner,” proof-sheets, etc.; pigeon-holes
+were devoted to ordinary correspondence; secret drawers to confidential
+notes, and outlines of biographies of eminent men now living, but
+intended to be completed for publication the day after their death.
+
+No man wrote such funeral compositions with a livelier pen than that
+of Chillingly Mivers; and the large and miscellaneous circle of
+his visiting acquaintances allowed him to ascertain, whether by
+authoritative report or by personal observation, the signs of mortal
+disease in the illustrious friends whose dinners he accepted, and whose
+failing pulses he instinctively felt in returning the pressure of their
+hands; so that he was often able to put the finishing-stroke to their
+obituary memorials days, weeks, even months, before their fate took the
+public by surprise. That cylinder bureau was in harmony with the secrecy
+in which this remarkable man shrouded the productions of his brain. In
+his literary life Mivers had no “I,” there he was ever the inscrutable,
+mysterious “We.” He was only “I” when you met him in the world, and
+called him Mivers.
+
+Adjoining the library on one side was a small dining or rather breakfast
+room, hung with valuable pictures,--presents from living painters.
+Many of these painters had been severely handled by Mr. Mivers in his
+existence as “We,”--not always in “The Londoner.” His most pungent
+criticisms were often contributed to other intellectual journals
+conducted by members of the same intellectual clique. Painters knew not
+how contemptuously “We” had treated them when they met Mr. Mivers.
+His “I” was so complimentary that they sent him a tribute of their
+gratitude.
+
+On the other side was his drawing-room, also enriched by many gifts,
+chiefly from fair hands,--embroidered cushions and table-covers, bits
+of Sevres or old Chelsea, elegant knick-knacks of all kinds. Fashionable
+authoresses paid great court to Mr. Mivers; and in the course of his
+life as a single man, he had other female adorers besides fashionable
+authoresses.
+
+Mr. Mivers had already returned from his early constitutional walk
+in the Park, and was now seated by the cylinder _secretaire_ with a
+mild-looking man, who was one of the most merciless contributors to “The
+Londoner” and no unimportant councillor in the oligarchy of the clique
+that went by the name of the “Intellectuals.”
+
+“Well,” said Mivers, languidly, “I can’t even get through the book;
+it is as dull as the country in November. But, as you justly say,
+the writer is an ‘Intellectual,’ and a clique would be anything
+but intellectual if it did not support its members. Review the book
+yourself; mind and make the dulness of it the signal proof of its merit.
+Say: ‘To the ordinary class of readers this exquisite work may appear
+less brilliant than the flippant smartness of’--any other author you
+like to name; ‘but to the well educated and intelligent every line is
+pregnant with,’ etc. By the way, when we come by and by to review the
+exhibition at Burlington House, there is one painter whom we must try
+our best to crush. I have not seen his pictures myself, but he is a new
+man; and our friend, who has seen him, is terribly jealous of him, and
+says that if the good judges do not put him down at once, the villanous
+taste of the public will set him up as a prodigy. A low-lived fellow
+too, I hear. There is the name of the man and the subject of the
+pictures. See to it when the time comes. Meanwhile, prepare the way for
+onslaught on the pictures by occasional sneers at the painter.” Here
+Mr. Mivers took out of his cylinder a confidential note from the jealous
+rival and handed it to his mild-looking _confrere_; then rising, he
+said, “I fear we must suspend our business till to-morrow; I expect two
+young cousins to breakfast.”
+
+As soon as the mild-looking man was gone, Mr. Mivers sauntered to his
+drawing-room window, amiably offering a lump of sugar to a canary-bird
+sent to him as a present the day before, and who, in the gilded cage
+which made part of the present, scanned him suspiciously and refused the
+sugar.
+
+Time had remained very gentle in its dealings with Chillingly Mivers.
+He scarcely looked a day older than when he was first presented to the
+reader on the birth of his kinsman Kenelm. He was reaping the fruit of
+his own sage maxims. Free from whiskers and safe in wig, there was no
+sign of gray, no suspicion of dye. Superiority to passion, abnegation of
+sorrow, indulgence of amusement, avoidance of excess, had kept away the
+crow’s-feet, preserved the elasticity of his frame and the unflushed
+clearness of his gentlemanlike complexion. The door opened, and a
+well-dressed valet, who had lived long enough with Mivers to grow very
+much like him, announced Mr. Chillingly Gordon.
+
+“Good morning,” said Mivers; “I was much pleased to see you talking so
+long and so familiarly with Danvers: others, of course, observed it, and
+it added a step to your career. It does you great good to be seen in a
+drawing-room talking apart with a Somebody. But may I ask if the talk
+itself was satisfactory?”
+
+“Not at all: Danvers throws cold water on the notion of Saxboro’, and
+does not even hint that his party will help me to any other opening.
+Party has few openings at its disposal nowadays for any young man. The
+schoolmaster being abroad has swept away the school for statesmen as
+he has swept away the school for actors,--an evil, and an evil of a far
+greater consequence to the destinies of the nation than any good likely
+to be got from the system that succeeded it.”
+
+“But it is of no use railing against things that can’t be helped. If I
+were you, I would postpone all ambition of Parliament and read for the
+bar.”
+
+“The advice is sound, but too unpalatable to be taken. I am resolved to
+find a seat in the House, and where there is a will there is a way.”
+
+“I am not so sure of that.”
+
+“But I am.”
+
+“Judging by what your contemporaries at the University tell me of your
+speeches at the Debating Society, you were not then an ultra-Radical.
+But it is only an ultra-Radical who has a chance of success at
+Saxboro’.”
+
+“I am no fanatic in politics. There is much to be said on all sides:
+_coeteris paribus_, I prefer the winning side to the losing; nothing
+succeeds like success.”
+
+“Ay, but in politics there is always reaction. The winning side one day
+may be the losing side another. The losing side represents a minority,
+and a minority is sure to comprise more intellect than a majority: in
+the long run intellect will force its way, get a majority and then lose
+it, because with a majority it will become stupid.”
+
+“Cousin Mivers, does not the history of the world show you that a single
+individual can upset all theories as to the comparative wisdom of the
+few or the many? Take the wisest few you can find, and one man of genius
+not a tithe so wise crushes them into powder. But then that man of
+genius, though he despises the many, must make use of them. That
+done, he rules them. Don’t you see how in free countries political
+destinations resolve themselves into individual impersonations? At
+a general election it is one name around which electors rally. The
+candidate may enlarge as much as he pleases on political principles, but
+all his talk will not win him votes enough for success, unless he says,
+‘I go with Mr. A.,’ the minister, or with Mr. Z., the chief of the
+opposition. It was not the Tories who beat the Whigs when Mr. Pitt
+dissolved Parliament. It was Mr. Pitt who beat Mr. Fox, with whom in
+general political principle--slave-trade, Roman Catholic emancipation,
+Parliamentary reform--he certainly agreed much more than he did with any
+man in his own cabinet.”
+
+“Take care, my young cousin,” cried Mivers, in accents of alarm; “don’t
+set up for a man of genius. Genius is the worst quality a public man can
+have nowadays: nobody heeds it, and everybody is jealous of it.”
+
+“Pardon me, you mistake; my remark was purely objective, and intended
+as a reply to your argument. I prefer at present to go with the many
+because it is the winning side. If we then want a man of genius to keep
+it the winning side, by subjugating its partisans to his will, he will
+be sure to come. The few will drive him to us, for the few are always
+the enemies of the one man of genius. It is they who distrust,--it is
+they who are jealous,--not the many. You have allowed your judgment,
+usually so clear, to be somewhat dimmed by your experience as a critic.
+The critics are the few. They have infinitely more culture than the
+many. But when a man of real genius appears and asserts himself, the
+critics are seldom such fair judges of him as the many are. If he be not
+one of their oligarchical clique, they either abuse, or disparage, or
+affect to ignore him; though a time at last comes when, having gained
+the many, the critics acknowledge him. But the difference between the
+man of action and the author is this, that the author rarely finds this
+acknowledgment till he is dead, and it is necessary to the man of action
+to enforce it while he is alive. But enough of this speculation: you ask
+me to meet Kenelm; is he not coming?”
+
+“Yes, but I did not ask him till ten o’clock. I asked you at half-past
+nine, because I wished to hear about Danvers and Saxboro’, and also to
+prepare you somewhat for your introduction to your cousin. I must be
+brief as to the last, for it is only five minutes to the hour, and he
+is a man likely to be punctual. Kenelm is in all ways your opposite. I
+don’t know whether he is cleverer or less clever; there is no scale of
+measurement between you: but he is wholly void of ambition, and might
+possibly assist yours. He can do what he likes with Sir Peter;
+and considering how your poor father--a worthy man, but
+cantankerous--harassed and persecuted Sir Peter, because Kenelm came
+between the estate and you, it is probable that Sir Peter bears you a
+grudge, though Kenelm declares him incapable of it; and it would be
+well if you could annul that grudge in the father by conciliating the
+goodwill of the son.”
+
+“I should be glad so to annul it; but what is Kenelm’s weak side?--the
+turf? the hunting-field? women? poetry? One can only conciliate a man by
+getting on his weak side.”
+
+“Hist! I see him from the windows. Kenelm’s weak side was, when I knew
+him some years ago, and I rather fancy it still is--”
+
+“Well, make haste! I hear his ring at your door-bell.”
+
+“A passionate longing to find ideal truth in real life.”
+
+“Ah!” said Gordon, “as I thought,--a mere dreamer”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+KENELM entered the room. The young cousins were introduced, shook hands,
+receded a step, and gazed at each other. It is scarcely possible
+to conceive a greater contrast outwardly than that between the two
+Chillingly representatives of the rising generation. Each was silently
+impressed by the sense of that contrast. Each felt that the contrast
+implied antagonism, and that if they two met in the same arena it must
+be as rival combatants; still, by some mysterious intuition, each felt a
+certain respect for the other, each divined in the other a power that
+he could not fairly estimate, but against which his own power would
+be strongly tasked to contend. So might exchange looks a thorough-bred
+deer-hound and a half-bred mastiff: the bystander could scarcely doubt
+which was the nobler animal; but he might hesitate which to bet on, if
+the two came to deadly quarrel. Meanwhile the thorough-bred deer-hound
+and the half-bred mastiff sniffed at each other in polite salutation.
+Gordon was the first to give tongue.
+
+“I have long wished to know you personally,” said he, throwing into his
+voice and manner that delicate kind of deference which a well-born cadet
+owes to the destined head of his house. “I cannot conceive how I missed
+you last night at Lady Beaumanoir’s, where Mivers tells me he met you;
+but I left early.”
+
+Here Mivers led the way to the breakfast-room, and, there seated, the
+host became the principal talker, running with lively glibness over the
+principal topics of the day,--the last scandal, the last new book, the
+reform of the army, the reform of the turf, the critical state of Spain,
+and the debut of an Italian singer. He seemed an embodied Journal,
+including the Leading Article, the Law Reports, Foreign Intelligence,
+the Court Circular, down to the Births, Deaths, and Marriages. Gordon
+from time to time interrupted this flow of soul with brief, trenchant
+remarks, which evinced his own knowledge of the subjects treated, and
+a habit of looking on all subjects connected with the pursuits and
+business of mankind from a high ground appropriated to himself, and
+through the medium of that blue glass which conveys a wintry aspect to
+summer landscapes. Kenelm said little, but listened attentively.
+
+The conversation arrested its discursive nature, to settle upon a
+political chief, the highest in fame and station of that party to which
+Mivers professed--not to belong, he belonged to himself alone, but to
+appropinquate. Mivers spoke of this chief with the greatest distrust,
+and in a spirit of general depreciation. Gordon acquiesced in the
+distrust and the depreciation, adding, “But he is master of the
+position, and must, of course, be supported through thick and thin for
+the present.”
+
+“Yes, for the present,” said Mivers, “one has no option. But you will
+see some clever articles in ‘The Londoner’ towards the close of the
+session, which will damage him greatly, by praising him in the wrong
+place, and deepening the alarm of important followers,--an alarm now at
+work, though suppressed.”
+
+Here Kenelm asked, in humble tones, why Gordon thought that a minister
+he considered so untrustworthy and dangerous must for the present be
+supported through thick and thin.
+
+“Because at present a member elected so to support him would lose his
+seat if he did not: needs must when the devil drives.”
+
+KENELM.--“When the devil drives, I should have thought it better to
+resign one’s seat on the coach; perhaps one might be of some use, out of
+it, in helping to put on the drag.”
+
+MIVERS.--“Cleverly said, Kenelm. But, metaphor apart, Gordon is right.
+A young politician must go with his party; a veteran journalist like
+myself is more independent. So long as the journalist blames everybody,
+he will have plenty of readers.”
+
+Kenelm made no reply, and Gordon changed the conversation from men
+to measures. He spoke of some Bills before Parliament with remarkable
+ability, evincing much knowledge of the subject, much critical
+acuteness, illustrating their defects, and proving the danger of their
+ultimate consequences.
+
+Kenelm was greatly struck with the vigour of this cold, clear mind, and
+owned to himself that the House of Commons was a fitting place for its
+development.
+
+“But,” said Mivers, “would you not be obliged to defend these Bills if
+you were member for Saxboro’?”
+
+“Before I answer your question, answer me this: dangerous as the Bills
+are, is it not necessary that they shall pass? Have not the public so
+resolved?”
+
+“There can be no doubt of that.”
+
+“Then the member for Saxboro’ cannot be strong enough to go against the
+public.”
+
+“Progress of the age!” said Kenelm, musingly. “Do you think the class of
+gentlemen will long last in England?”
+
+“What do you call gentlemen? The aristocracy by birth?--the
+_gentilshommes_?”
+
+“Nay, I suppose no laws can take away a man’s ancestors, and a class of
+well-born men is not to be exterminated. But a mere class of well-born
+men--without duties, responsibilities, or sentiment of that which
+becomes good birth in devotion to country or individual honour--does no
+good to a nation. It is a misfortune which statesmen of democratic creed
+ought to recognize, that the class of the well-born cannot be destroyed:
+it must remain as it remained in Rome and remains in France, after all
+efforts to extirpate it, as the most dangerous class of citizens when
+you deprive it of the attributes which made it the most serviceable.
+I am not speaking of that class; I speak of that unclassified order
+peculiar to England, which, no doubt, forming itself originally from
+the ideal standard of honour and truth supposed to be maintained by the
+_gentilshommes_, or well-born, no longer requires pedigrees and acres to
+confer upon its members the designation of gentleman; and when I hear
+a ‘gentleman’ say that he has no option but to think one thing and say
+another, at whatever risk to his country, I feel as if in the progress
+of the age the class of gentleman was about to be superseded by some
+finer development of species.”
+
+Therewith Kenelm rose, and would have taken his departure, if Gordon had
+not seized his hand and detained him.
+
+“My dear cousin, if I may so call you,” he said, with the frank manner
+which was usual to him, and which suited well the bold expression of his
+face and the clear ring of his voice, “I am one of those who, from an
+over-dislike to sentimentality and cant, often make those not intimately
+acquainted with them think worse of their principles than they deserve.
+It may be quite true that a man who goes with his party dislikes the
+measures he feels bound to support, and says so openly when among
+friends and relations, yet that man is not therefore devoid of loyalty
+and honour; and I trust, when you know me better, you will not think it
+likely I should derogate from that class of gentlemen to which we both
+belong.”
+
+“Pardon me if I seemed rude,” answered Kenelm; “ascribe it to my
+ignorance of the necessities of public life. It struck me that where a
+politician thought a thing evil, he ought not to support it as good. But
+I dare say I am mistaken.”
+
+“Entirely mistaken,” said Mivers, “and for this reason: in politics
+formerly there was a direct choice between good and evil. That rarely
+exists now. Men of high education, having to choose whether to accept or
+reject a measure forced upon their option by constituent bodies of very
+low education, are called upon to weigh evil against evil,--the evil of
+accepting or the evil of rejecting; and if they resolve on the first, it
+is as the lesser evil of the two.”
+
+“Your definition is perfect,” said Gordon, “and I am contented to rest
+on it my excuse for what my cousin deems insincerity.”
+
+“I suppose that is real life,” said Kenelm, with his mournful smile.
+
+“Of course it is,” said Mivers.
+
+“Every day I live,” sighed Kenelm, “still more confirms my conviction
+that real life is a phantasmal sham. How absurd it is in philosophers to
+deny the existence of apparitions! what apparitions we, living men, must
+seem to the ghosts!
+
+
+ “‘The spirits of the wise
+ Sit in the clouds and mock us.’”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+CHILLINGLY GORDON did not fail to confirm his acquaintance with Kenelm.
+He very often looked in upon him of a morning, sometimes joined him
+in his afternoon rides, introduced him to men of his own set who were
+mostly busy members of Parliament, rising barristers, or political
+journalists, but not without a proportion of brilliant idlers,--club
+men, sporting men, men of fashion, rank, and fortune. He did so with a
+purpose, for these persons spoke well of him,--spoke well not only
+of his talents, but of his honourable character. His general nickname
+amongst them was “HONEST GORDON.” Kenelm at first thought this sobriquet
+must be ironical; not a bit of it. It was given to him on account of
+the candour and boldness with which he expressed opinions embodying that
+sort of cynicism which is vulgarly called “the absence of humbug.” The
+man was certainly no hypocrite; he affected no beliefs which he did not
+entertain. And he had very few beliefs in anything, except the first
+half of the adage, “Every man for himself,--and God for us all.”
+
+But whatever Chillingly Gordon’s theoretical disbeliefs in things which
+make the current creed of the virtuous, there was nothing in his conduct
+which evinced predilection for vices: he was strictly upright in all
+his dealings, and in delicate matters of honour was a favourite umpire
+amongst his coevals. Though so frankly ambitious, no one could accuse
+him of attempting to climb on the shoulders of patrons. There was
+nothing servile in his nature; and, though he was perfectly prepared to
+bribe electors if necessary, no money could have bought himself. His one
+master-passion was the desire of power. He sneered at patriotism as a
+worn-out prejudice, at philanthropy as a sentimental catch-word. He did
+not want to serve his country, but to rule it. He did not want to
+raise mankind, but to rise himself. He was therefore unscrupulous,
+unprincipled, as hungerers after power for itself too often are; yet
+still if he got power he would probably use it well, from the clearness
+and strength of his mental perceptions. The impression he made on Kenelm
+may be seen in the following letter:--
+
+
+TO SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, BART., ETC.
+
+MY DEAR FATHER,--You and my dear mother will be pleased to hear that
+London continues very polite to me: that “arida nutrix leonum” enrolls
+me among the pet class of lions which ladies of fashion admit into the
+society of their lapdogs. It is somewhere about six years since I was
+allowed to gaze on this peep-show through the loopholes of Mr. Welby’s
+retreat. It appears to me, perhaps erroneously, that even within that
+short space of time the tone of “society” is perceptibly changed. That
+the change is for the better is an assertion I leave to those who belong
+to the _progressista_ party.
+
+I don’t think nearly so many young ladies six years ago painted their
+eyelids and dyed their hair: a few of them there might be, imitators of
+the slang invented by schoolboys and circulated through the medium of
+small novelists; they might use such expressions as “stunning,” “cheek,”
+ “awfully jolly,” etc. But now I find a great many who have advanced to
+a slang beyond that of verbal expressions,--a slang of mind, a slang
+of sentiment, a slang in which very little seems left of the woman and
+nothing at all of the lady.
+
+Newspaper essayists assert that the young men of the day are to blame
+for this; that the young men like it; and the fair husband-anglers dress
+their flies in the colours most likely to attract a nibble. Whether this
+excuse be the true one I cannot pretend to judge; but it strikes me that
+the men about my own age who affect to be fast are a more languid race
+than the men from ten to twenty years older, whom they regard as _slow_.
+The habit of dram-drinking in the morning is a very new idea, an idea
+greatly in fashion at the moment. Adonis calls for a “pick-me-up” before
+he has strength enough to answer a _billet-doux_ from Venus. Adonis
+has not the strength to get nobly drunk, but his delicate constitution
+requires stimulants, and he is always tippling.
+
+The men of high birth or renown for social success belonging, my
+dear father, to your time, are still distinguished by an air of good
+breeding, by a style of conversation more or less polished and not
+without evidences of literary culture, from men of the same rank in
+my generation, who appear to pride themselves on respecting nobody and
+knowing nothing, not even grammar. Still we are assured that the world
+goes on steadily improving. _That_ new idea is in full vigour.
+
+Society in the concrete has become wonderfully conceited as to its
+own progressive excellences, and the individuals who form the concrete
+entertain the same complacent opinion of themselves. There are, of
+course, even in my brief and imperfect experience, many exceptions to
+what appear to me the prevalent characteristics of the rising generation
+in “society.” Of these exceptions I must content myself with naming the
+most remarkable. _Place aux dames_, the first I name is Cecilia Travers.
+She and her father are now in town, and I meet them frequently. I
+can conceive no civilized era in the world which a woman like Cecilia
+Travers would not grace and adorn, because she is essentially the type
+of woman as man likes to imagine woman; namely, on the fairest side of
+the womanly character. And I say “woman” rather than “girl,” because
+among “Girls of the Period” Cecilia Travers cannot be classed. You might
+call her damsel, virgin, maiden, but you could no more call her girl
+than you could call a well-born French demoiselle _fille_. She is
+handsome enough to please the eye of any man, however fastidious, but
+not that kind of beauty which dazzles all men too much to fascinate one
+man; for--speaking, thank Heaven, from mere theory--I apprehend that the
+love for woman has in it a strong sense of property; that one requires
+to individualize one’s possession as being wholly one’s own, and not
+a possession which all the public are invited to admire. I can readily
+understand how a rich man, who has what is called a show place, in which
+the splendid rooms and the stately gardens are open to all inspectors,
+so that he has no privacy in his own demesnes, runs away to a pretty
+cottage which he has all to himself, and of which he can say, “_This_ is
+home; _this_ is all mine.”
+
+But there are some kinds of beauty which are eminently show
+places,--which the public think they have as much a right to admire as
+the owner has; and the show place itself would be dull and perhaps fall
+out of repair, if the public could be excluded from the sight of it.
+
+The beauty of Cecilia Travers is not that of a show place. There is a
+feeling of safety in her. If Desdemona had been like her, Othello would
+not have been jealous. But then Cecilia would not have deceived her
+father; nor I think have told a blackamoor that she wished “Heaven
+had made her such a man.” Her mind harmonizes with her person: it is
+a companionable mind. Her talents are not showy, but, take them
+altogether, they form a pleasant whole: she has good sense enough in
+the practical affairs of life, and enough of that ineffable womanly gift
+called tact to counteract the effects of whimsical natures like mine,
+and yet enough sense of the humouristic views of life not to take too
+literally all that a whimsical man like myself may say. As to temper,
+one never knows what a woman’s temper is--till one puts her out of it.
+But I imagine hers, in its normal state, to be serene, and disposed to
+be cheerful. Now, my dear father, if you were not one of the cleverest
+of men you would infer from this eulogistic mention of Cecilia Travers
+that I was in love with her. But you no doubt will detect the truth that
+a man in love with a woman does not weigh her merits with so steady a
+hand as that which guides this steel pen. I am not in love with Cecilia
+Travers. I wish I were. When Lady Glenalvon, who remains wonderfully
+kind to me, says, day after day, “Cecilia Travers would make you a
+perfect wife,” I have no answer to give; but I don’t feel the least
+inclined to ask Cecilia Travers if she would waste her perfection on one
+who so coldly concedes it.
+
+I find that she persisted in rejecting the man whom her father wished
+her to marry, and that he has consoled himself by marrying somebody
+else. No doubt other suitors as worthy will soon present themselves.
+
+Oh, dearest of all my friends,--sole friend whom I regard as a
+confidant,--shall I ever be in love? and if not, why not? Sometimes
+I feel as if, with love as with ambition, it is because I have some
+impossible ideal in each, that I must always remain indifferent to the
+sort of love and the sort of ambition which are within my reach. I have
+an idea that if I did love, I should love as intensely as Romeo, and
+that thought inspires me with vague forebodings of terror; and if I
+did find an object to arouse my ambition, I could be as earnest in its
+pursuit as--whom shall I name?--Caesar or Cato? I like Cato’s
+ambition the better of the two. But people nowadays call ambition an
+impracticable crotchet, if it be invested on the losing side. Cato would
+have saved Rome from the mob and the dictator; but Rome could not be
+saved, and Cato falls on his own sword. Had we a Cato now, the verdict
+at a coroner’s inquest would be, “suicide while in a state of unsound
+mind;” and the verdict would have been proved by his senseless
+resistance to a mob and a dictator! Talking of ambition, I come to the
+other exception to the youth of the day; I have named a _demoiselle_, I
+now name a _damoiseau_. Imagine a man of about five-and-twenty, and who
+is morally about fifty years older than a healthy man of sixty,--imagine
+him with the brain of age and the flower of youth; with a heart absorbed
+into the brain, and giving warm blood to frigid ideas: a man who sneers
+at everything I call lofty, yet would do nothing that he thinks mean; to
+whom vice and virtue are as indifferent as they were to the Aesthetics
+of Goethe; who would never jeopardize his career as a practical reasoner
+by an imprudent virtue, and never sully his reputation by a degrading
+vice. Imagine this man with an intellect keen, strong, ready,
+unscrupulous, dauntless,--all cleverness and no genius. Imagine this
+man, and then do not be astonished when I tell you he is a Chillingly.
+
+The Chillingly race culminates in him, and becomes Chillinglyest. In
+fact, it seems to me that we live in a day precisely suited to the
+Chillingly idiosyncrasies. During the ten centuries or more that our
+race has held local habitation and a name, it has been as airy nothings.
+Its representatives lived in hot-blooded times, and were compelled to
+skulk in still water with their emblematic daces. But the times now, my
+dear father, are so cold-blooded that you can’t be too cold-blooded to
+prosper. What could Chillingly Mivers have been in an age when people
+cared twopence-halfpenny about their religious creeds, and their
+political parties deemed their cause was sacred and their leaders were
+heroes? Chillingly Mivers would not have found five subscribers to
+“The Londoner.” But now “The Londoner” is the favourite organ of the
+intellectual public; it sneers away all the foundations of the social
+system, without an attempt at reconstruction; and every new journal set
+up, if it keep its head above water, models itself on “The Londoner.”
+ Chillingly Mivers is a great man, and the most potent writer of the age,
+though nobody knows what he has written. Chillingly Gordon is a still
+more notable instance of the rise of the Chillingly worth in the modern
+market.
+
+There is a general impression in the most authoritative circles that
+Chillingly Gordon will have high rank in the van of the coming men. His
+confidence in himself is so thorough that it infects all with whom he
+comes into contact,--myself included.
+
+He said to me the other day, with a _sang-froid_ worthy of the iciest
+Chillingly, “I mean to be Prime Minister of England: it is only a
+question of time.” Now, if Chillingly Gordon is to be Prime Minister, it
+will be because the increasing cold of our moral and social atmosphere
+will exactly suit the development of his talents.
+
+He is the man above all others to argue down the declaimers of
+old-fashioned sentimentalities,--love of country, care for its position
+among nations, zeal for its honour, pride in its renown. (Oh, if
+you could hear him philosophically and logically sneer away the word
+“prestige”!) Such notions are fast being classified as “bosh.” And
+when that classification is complete,--when England has no colonies to
+defend, no navy to pay for, no interest in the affairs of other nations,
+and has attained to the happy condition of Holland,--then Chillingly
+Gordon will be her Prime Minister.
+
+Yet while, if ever I am stung into political action, it will be by
+abnegation of the Chillingly attributes, and in opposition, however
+hopeless, to Chillingly Gordon, I feel that this man cannot be
+suppressed, and ought to have fair play; his ambition will be infinitely
+more dangerous if it become soured by delay. I propose, my dear father,
+that you should have the honour of laying this clever kinsman under
+an obligation, and enabling him to enter Parliament. In our last
+conversation at Exmundham, you told me of the frank resentment of Gordon
+_pere_, when my coming into the world shut him out from the Exmundham
+inheritance; you confided to me your intention at that time to lay
+by yearly a sum that might ultimately serve as a provision for Gordon
+_fils_, and as some compensation for the loss of his expectations when
+you realized your hope of an heir; you told me also how this generous
+intention on your part had been frustrated by a natural indignation at
+the elder Gordon’s conduct in his harassing and costly litigation, and
+by the addition you had been tempted to make to the estate in a purchase
+which added to its acreage, but at a rate of interest which diminished
+your own income, and precluded the possibility of further savings. Now,
+chancing to meet your lawyer, Mr. Vining, the other day, I learned from
+him that it had been long a wish which your delicacy prevented your
+naming to me, that I, to whom the fee-simple descends, should join with
+you in cutting off the entail and resettling the estate. He showed me
+what an advantage this would be to the property, because it would leave
+your hands free for many improvements in which I heartily go with the
+progress of the age, for which, as merely tenant for life, you could not
+raise the money except upon ruinous terms; new cottages for labourers,
+new buildings for tenants, the consolidation of some old mortgages and
+charges on the rent-roll, etc. And allow me to add that I should like
+to make a large increase to the jointure of my dear mother. Vining says,
+too, that there is a part of the outlying land which, as being near a
+town, could be sold to considerable profit if the estate were resettled.
+
+Let us hasten to complete the necessary deeds, and so obtain the L20,000
+required for the realization of your noble and, let me add, your just
+desire to do something for Chillingly Gordon. In the new deeds of
+settlement we could insure the power of willing the estate as we
+pleased, and I am strongly against devising it to Chillingly Gordon.
+It may be a crotchet of mine, but one which I think you share, that the
+owner of English soil should have a son’s love for the native land, and
+Gordon will never have that. I think, too, that it will be best for his
+own career, and for the establishment of a frank understanding between
+us and himself, that he should be fairly told that he would not be
+benefited in the event of our death. Twenty thousand pounds given to him
+now would be a greater boon to him than ten times the sum twenty years
+later. With that at his command, he can enter Parliament, and have an
+income, added to what he now possesses, if modest, still sufficient to
+make him independent of a minister’s patronage.
+
+Pray humour me, my dearest father, in the proposition I venture to
+submit to you.
+
+ Your affectionate son, KENELM.
+
+
+FROM SIR PETER CHILLINGLY TO KENELM CHILLINGLY.
+
+MY DEAR BOY,--You are not worthy to be a Chillingly; you are decidedly
+warm-blooded: never was a load lifted off a man’s mind with a gentler
+hand. Yes, I have wished to cut off the entail and resettle the
+property; but, as it was eminently to my advantage to do so, I shrank
+from asking it, though eventually it would be almost as much to your own
+advantage. What with the purchase I made of the Faircleuch lands--which
+I could only effect by money borrowed at high interest on my personal
+security, and paid off by yearly instalments, eating largely into
+income--and the old mortgages, etc., I own I have been pinched of late
+years. But what rejoices me the most is the power to make homes for our
+honest labourers more comfortable, and nearer to their work, which last
+is the chief point, for the old cottages in themselves are not bad; the
+misfortune is, when you build an extra room for the children, the silly
+people let it out to a lodger.
+
+My dear boy, I am very much touched by your wish to increase your
+mother’s jointure,--a very proper wish, independently of filial feeling,
+for she brought to the estate a very pretty fortune, which, the trustees
+consented to my investing in land; and though the land completed our
+ring-fence, it does not bring in two per cent, and the conditions of
+the entail limited the right of jointure to an amount below that which a
+widowed Lady Chillingly may fairly expect.
+
+I care more about the provision on these points than I do for the
+interests of old Chillingly Gordon’s son. I had meant to behave very
+handsomely to the father; and when the return for behaving handsomely
+is being put into Chancery--A Worm Will Turn. Nevertheless, I agree with
+you that a son should not be punished for his father’s faults; and, if
+the sacrifice of L20,000 makes you and myself feel that we are better
+Christians and truer gentlemen, we shall buy that feeling very cheaply.
+
+
+Sir Peter then proceeded, half jestingly, half seriously, to combat
+Kenelm’s declaration that he was not in love with Cecilia Travers; and,
+urging the advantages of marriage with one whom Kenelm allowed would be
+a perfect wife, astutely remarked that unless Kenelm had a son of his
+own it did not seem to him quite just to the next of kin to will the
+property from him, upon no better plea than the want of love for his
+native country. “He would love his country fast enough if he had 10,000
+acres in it.”
+
+Kenelm shook his head when he came to this sentence.
+
+“Is even then love for one’s country but cupboard-love after all?” said
+he; and he postponed finishing the perusal of his father’s letter.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY did not exaggerate the social position he had acquired
+when he classed himself amongst the lions of the fashionable world. I
+dare not count the number of three-cornered notes showered upon him by
+the fine ladies who grow romantic upon any kind of celebrity; or the
+carefully sealed envelopes, containing letters from fair Anonymas, who
+asked if he had a heart, and would be in such a place in the Park at
+such an hour. What there was in Kenelm Chillingly that should make him
+thus favoured, especially by the fair sex, it would be difficult to say,
+unless it was the two-fold reputation of being unlike other people, and
+of being unaffectedly indifferent to the gain of any reputation at all.
+He might, had he so pleased, have easily established a proof that
+the prevalent though vague belief in his talents was not altogether
+unjustified. For the articles he had sent from abroad to “The Londoner”
+ and by which his travelling expenses were defrayed, had been stamped
+by that sort of originality in tone and treatment which rarely fails to
+excite curiosity as to the author, and meets with more general praise
+than perhaps it deserves.
+
+But Mivers was true to his contract to preserve inviolable the incognito
+of the author, and Kenelm regarded with profound contempt the articles
+themselves and the readers who praised them.
+
+Just as misanthropy with some persons grows out of benevolence
+disappointed, so there are certain natures--and Kenelm Chillingly’s was
+perhaps one of them--in which indifferentism grows out of earnestness
+baffled.
+
+He had promised himself pleasure in renewing acquaintance with his old
+tutor, Mr. Welby,--pleasure in refreshing his own taste for metaphysics
+and casuistry and criticism. But that accomplished professor of realism
+had retired from philosophy altogether, and was now enjoying a holiday
+for life in the business of a public office. A minister in favour of
+whom, when in opposition, Mr. Welby, in a moment of whim, wrote some
+very able articles in a leading journal, had, on acceding to power,
+presented the realist with one of those few good things still left to
+ministerial patronage,--a place worth about L1,200 a year. His mornings
+thus engaged in routine work, Mr. Welby enjoyed his evenings in a
+convivial way.
+
+“_Inveni portum_,” he said to Kenelm; “I plunge into no troubled waters
+now. But come and dine with me to-morrow, tete-a-tete. My wife is at
+St. Leonard’s with my youngest born for the benefit of sea-air.” Kenelm
+accepted the invitation.
+
+The dinner would have contented a Brillat-Savarin: it was faultless; and
+the claret was that rare nectar, the Lafitte of 1848.
+
+“I never share this,” said Welby, “with more than one friend at a time.”
+
+Kenelm sought to engage his host in discussion on certain new works in
+vogue, and which were composed according to purely realistic canons of
+criticism. “The more realistic; these books pretend to be, the less
+real they are,” said Kenelm. “I am half inclined to think that the whole
+school you so systematically sought to build up is a mistake, and that
+realism in art is a thing impossible.”
+
+“I dare say you are right. I took up that school in earnest because I
+was in a passion with pretenders to the Idealistic school; and whatever
+one takes up in earnest is generally a mistake, especially if one is in
+a passion. I was not in earnest and I was not in a passion when I wrote
+those articles to which I am indebted for my office.” Mr. Welby here
+luxuriously stretched his limbs, and lifting his glass to his lips,
+voluptuously inhaled its bouquet.
+
+“You sadden me,” returned Kenelm. “It is a melancholy thing to find that
+one’s mind was influenced in youth by a teacher who mocks at his own
+teachings.”
+
+Welby shrugged his shoulders. “Life consists in the alternate process of
+learning and unlearning; but it is often wiser to unlearn than to learn.
+For the rest, as I have ceased to be a critic, I care little whether I
+was wrong or right when I played that part. I think I am right now as a
+placeman. Let the world go its own way, provided the world lets you live
+upon it. I drain my wine to the lees, and cut down hope to the brief
+span of life. Reject realism in art if you please, and accept realism in
+conduct. For the first time in my life I am comfortable: my mind, having
+worn out its walking-shoes, is now enjoying the luxury of slippers. Who
+can deny the realism of comfort?”
+
+“Has a man a right,” Kenelm said to himself, as he entered his brougham,
+“to employ all the brilliancy of a rare wit, all the acquisitions of as
+rare a scholarship, to the scaring of the young generation out of the
+safe old roads which youth left to itself would take,--old roads skirted
+by romantic rivers and bowery trees,--directing them into new paths on
+long sandy flats, and then, when they are faint and footsore, to tell
+them that he cares not a pin whether they have worn out their shoes in
+right paths or wrong paths, for that he has attained the _summum bonum_
+of philosophy in the comfort of easy slippers?”
+
+Before he could answer the question he thus put to himself, his brougham
+stopped at the door of the minister whom Welby had contributed to bring
+into power.
+
+That night there was a crowded muster of the fashionable world at the
+great man’s house. It happened to be a very critical moment for the
+minister. The fate of his cabinet depended on the result of a motion
+about to be made the following week in the House of Commons. The great
+man stood at the entrance of the apartments to receive his guests, and
+among the guests were the framers of the hostile motion and the leaders
+of the opposition. His smile was not less gracious to them than to his
+dearest friends and stanchest supporters.
+
+“I suppose this is realism,” said Kenelm to himself; “but it is not
+truth, and it is not comfort.” Leaning against the wall near the
+doorway, he contemplated with grave interest the striking countenance
+of his distinguished host. He detected beneath that courteous smile
+and that urbane manner the signs of care. The eye was absent, the cheek
+pinched, the brow furrowed. Kenelm turned away his looks, and glanced
+over the animated countenances of the idle loungers along commoner
+thoroughfares in life. Their eyes were not absent; their brows were
+not furrowed; their minds seemed quite at home in exchanging nothings.
+Interest many of them had in the approaching struggle, but it was
+much such an interest as betters of small sums may have on the Derby
+day,--just enough to give piquancy to the race; nothing to make gain a
+great joy, or loss a keen anguish.
+
+“Our host is looking ill,” said Mivers, accosting Kenelm. “I detect
+symptoms of suppressed gout. You know my aphorism, ‘nothing so gouty as
+ambition,’ especially Parliamentary ambition.”
+
+“You are not one of those friends who press on my choice of life that
+source of disease; allow me to thank you.”
+
+“Your thanks are misplaced. I strongly advise you to devote yourself to
+a political career.”
+
+“Despite the gout?”
+
+“Despite the gout. If you could take the world as I do, my advice might
+be different. But your mind is overcrowded with doubts and fantasies and
+crotchets, and you have no choice but to give them vent in active life.”
+
+“You had something to do in making me what I am,--an idler; something
+to answer for as to my doubts, fantasies, and crotchets. It was by your
+recommendation that I was placed under the tuition of Mr. Welby, and at
+that critical age in which the bent of the twig forms the shape of the
+tree.”
+
+“And I pride myself on that counsel. I repeat the reasons for which I
+gave it: it is an incalculable advantage for a young man to start in
+life thoroughly initiated into the New Ideas which will more or less
+influence his generation. Welby was the ablest representative of these
+ideas. It is a wondrous good fortune when the propagandist of the
+New Ideas is something more than a bookish philosopher,--when he is
+a thorough ‘man of the world,’ and is what we emphatically call
+‘practical.’ Yes, you owe me much that I secured to you such tuition,
+and saved you from twaddle and sentiment, the poetry of Wordsworth and
+the muscular Christianity of Cousin John.”
+
+“What you say that you saved me from might have done me more good than
+all you conferred on me. I suspect that when education succeeds
+in placing an old head upon young shoulders the combination is not
+healthful: it clogs the blood and slackens the pulse. However, I must
+not be ungrateful; you meant kindly. Yes, I suppose Welby is practical:
+he has no belief, and he has got a place. But our host, I presume, is
+also practical; his place is a much higher one than Welby’s, and yet he
+is surely not without belief?”
+
+“He was born before the new ideas came into practical force; but
+in proportion as they have done so, his beliefs have necessarily
+disappeared. I don’t suppose that he believes in much now, except the
+two propositions: firstly, that if he accept the new ideas he will have
+power and keep it, and if he does not accept them power is out of the
+question; and, secondly, that if the new ideas are to prevail he is the
+best man to direct them safely,--beliefs quite enough for a minister. No
+wise minister should have more.”
+
+“Does he not believe that the motion he is to resist next week is a bad
+one?”
+
+“A bad one of course, in its consequences, for if it succeed it will
+upset him; a good one in itself I am sure he must think it, for he would
+bring it on himself if he were in opposition.”
+
+“I see that Pope’s definition is still true, ‘Party is the madness of
+the many for the gain of the few.’”
+
+“No, it is not true. Madness is a wrong word applied to the many: the
+many are sane enough; they know their own objects, and they make use of
+the intellect of the few in order to gain their objects. In each party
+it is the many that control the few who nominally lead them. A man
+becomes Prime Minister because he seems to the many of his party the
+fittest person to carry out their views. If he presume to differ from
+these views, they put him into a moral pillory, and pelt him with their
+dirtiest stones and their rottenest eggs.”
+
+“Then the maxim should be reversed, and party is rather the madness of
+the few for the gain of the many?
+
+“Of the two, that is the more correct definition.”
+
+“Let me keep my senses and decline to be one of the few.”
+
+Kenelm moved away from his cousin’s side, and entering one of the less
+crowded rooms, saw Cecilia Travers seated there in a recess with Lady
+Glenalvon. He joined them, and after a brief interchange of a few
+commonplaces, Lady Glenalvon quitted her post to accost a foreign
+ambassadress, and Kenelm sank into the chair she vacated.
+
+It was a relief to his eye to contemplate Cecilia’s candid brow; to
+his ear to hearken to the soft voice that had no artificial tones, and
+uttered no cynical witticisms.
+
+“Don’t you think it strange,” said Kenelm, “that we English should so
+mould all our habits as to make even what we call pleasure as little
+pleasurable as possible? We are now in the beginning of June, the fresh
+outburst of summer, when every day in the country is a delight to eye
+and ear, and we say, ‘The season for hot rooms is beginning.’ We alone
+of civilized races spend our summer in a capital, and cling to the
+country when the trees are leafless and the brooks frozen.”
+
+“Certainly that is a mistake; but I love the country in all seasons,
+even in winter.”
+
+“Provided the country house is full of London people?”
+
+“No; that is rather a drawback. I never want companions in the country.”
+
+“True; I should have remembered that you differ from young ladies in
+general, and make companions of books. They are always more conversable
+in the country than they are in town; or rather, we listen there to them
+with less distracted attention. Ha! do I not recognize yonder the fair
+whiskers of George Belvoir? Who is the lady leaning on his arm?”
+
+“Don’t you know?--Lady Emily Belvoir, his wife.”
+
+“Ah! I was told that he had married. The lady is handsome. She will
+become the family diamonds. Does she read Blue-books?”
+
+“I will ask her if you wish.”
+
+“Nay, it is scarcely worth while. During my rambles abroad I saw but
+few English newspapers. I did, however, learn that George had won his
+election. Has he yet spoken in Parliament?”
+
+“Yes; he moved the answer to the Address this session, and was much
+complimented on the excellent tone and taste of his speech. He spoke
+again a few weeks afterwards, I fear not so successfully.”
+
+“Coughed down?”
+
+“Something like it.”
+
+“Do him good; he will recover the cough, and fulfil my prophecy of his
+success.”
+
+“Have you done with poor George for the present? If so, allow me to ask
+whether you have quite forgotten Will Somers and Jessie Wiles?”
+
+“Forgotten them! no.”
+
+“But you have never asked after them?”
+
+“I took it for granted that they were as happy as could be expected.
+Pray assure me that they are.”
+
+“I trust so now; but they have had trouble, and have left Graveleigh.”
+
+“Trouble! left Graveleigh! You make me uneasy. Pray explain.”
+
+“They had not been three months married and installed in the home they
+owed to you, when poor Will was seized with a rheumatic fever. He was
+confined to his bed for many weeks; and, when at last he could move from
+it, was so weak as to be still unable to do any work. During his illness
+Jessie had no heart and little leisure to attend to the shop. Of course
+I--that is, my dear father--gave them all necessary assistance; but--”
+
+“I understand; they were reduced to objects of charity. Brute that I am,
+never to have thought of the duties I owed to the couple I had brought
+together. But pray go on.”
+
+“You are aware that just before you left us my father received a
+proposal to exchange his property at Graveleigh for some lands more
+desirable to him?”
+
+“I remember. He closed with that offer.”
+
+“Yes; Captain Stavers, the new landlord of Graveleigh, seems to be
+a very bad man; and though he could not turn the Somerses out of the
+cottage so long as they paid rent, which we took care they did pay,--yet
+out of a very wicked spite he set up a rival shop in one of his other
+cottages in the village, and it became impossible for these poor young
+people to get a livelihood at Graveleigh.”
+
+“What excuse for spite against so harmless a young couple could Captain
+Stavers find or invent?”
+
+Cecilia looked down and coloured. “It was a revengeful feeling against
+Jessie.”
+
+“Ah, I comprehend.”
+
+“But they have now left the village, and are happily settled elsewhere.
+Will has recovered his health, and they are prospering much more than
+they could ever have done at Graveleigh.”
+
+“In that change you were their benefactress, Miss Travers?” said Kenelm,
+in a more tender voice and with a softer eye than he had ever before
+evinced towards the heiress.
+
+“No, it is not I whom they have to thank and bless.”
+
+“Who, then, is it? Your father?”
+
+“No. Do not question me. I am bound not to say. They do not themselves
+know; they rather believe that their gratitude is due to you.”
+
+“To me! Am I to be forever a sham in spite of myself? My dear Miss
+Travers, it is essential to my honour that I should undeceive this
+credulous pair; where can I find them?”
+
+“I must not say; but I will ask permission of their concealed
+benefactor, and send you their address.”
+
+A touch was laid on Kenelm’s arm, and a voice whispered, “May I ask you
+to present me to Miss Travers?”
+
+“Miss Travers,” said Kenelm, “I entreat you to add to the list of your
+acquaintances a cousin of mine,--Mr. Chillingly Gordon.”
+
+While Gordon addressed to Cecilia the well-bred conventionalisms with
+which acquaintance in London drawing-rooms usually commences, Kenelm,
+obedient to a sign from Lady Glenalvon, who had just re-entered the
+room, quitted his seat, and joined the marchioness.
+
+“Is not that young man whom you left talking with Miss Travers your
+clever cousin Gordon?”
+
+“The same.”
+
+“She is listening to him with great attention. How his face brightens up
+as he talks! He is positively handsome, thus animated.”
+
+“Yes, I could fancy him a dangerous wooer. He has wit and liveliness and
+audacity; he could be very much in love with a great fortune, and talk
+to the owner of it with a fervour rarely exhibited by a Chillingly.
+Well, it is no affair of mine.”
+
+“It ought to be.”
+
+Alas and alas! that “ought to be;” what depths of sorrowful meaning lie
+within that simple phrase! How happy would be our lives, how grand our
+actions, how pure our souls, if all could be with us as it ought to be!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+WE often form cordial intimacies in the confined society of a country
+house, or a quiet watering-place, or a small Continental town, which
+fade away into remote acquaintanceship in the mighty vortex of London
+life, neither party being to blame for the estrangement. It was so with
+Leopold Travers and Kenelm Chillingly. Travers, as we have seen, had
+felt a powerful charm in the converse of the young stranger, so in
+contrast with the routine of the rural companionships to which his alert
+intellect had for many years circumscribed its range. But on reappearing
+in London the season before Kenelm again met him, he had renewed old
+friendships with men of his own standing,--officers in the regiment of
+which he had once been a popular ornament, some of them still unmarried,
+a few of them like himself widowed, others who had been his rivals
+in fashion, and were still pleasant idlers about town; and it rarely
+happens in a metropolis that we have intimate friendships with those of
+another generation, unless there be some common tie in the cultivation
+of art and letters, or the action of kindred sympathies in the party
+strife of politics. Therefore Travers and Kenelm had had little familiar
+communication with each other since they first met at the Beaumanoirs’.
+Now and then they found themselves at the same crowded assemblies, and
+interchanged nods and salutations. But their habits were different; the
+houses at which they were intimate were not the same, neither did they
+frequent the same clubs. Kenelm’s chief bodily exercise was still that
+of long and early rambles into rural suburbs; Leopold’s was that of
+a late ride in the Row. Of the two, Leopold was much more the man of
+pleasure. Once restored to metropolitan life, a temper constitutionally
+eager, ardent, and convivial took kindly, as in earlier youth, to its
+light range of enjoyments.
+
+Had the intercourse between the two men been as frankly familiar as it
+had been at Neesdale Park, Kenelm would probably have seen much more of
+Cecilia at her own home; and the admiration and esteem with which she
+already inspired him might have ripened into much warmer feeling, had
+he thus been brought into clearer comprehension of the soft and womanly
+heart, and its tender predisposition towards himself.
+
+He had said somewhat vaguely in his letter to Sir Peter, that “sometimes
+he felt as if his indifference to love, as to ambition, was because he
+had some impossible ideal in each.” Taking that conjecture to task,
+he could not honestly persuade himself that he had formed any ideal of
+woman and wife with which the reality of Cecilia Travers was at war. On
+the contrary, the more he thought over the characteristics of Cecilia,
+the more they seemed to correspond to any ideal that had floated before
+him in the twilight of dreamy revery; and yet he knew that he was not
+in love with her, that his heart did not respond to his reason; and
+mournfully he resigned himself to the conviction that nowhere in
+this planet, from the normal pursuits of whose inhabitants he felt so
+estranged, was there waiting for him the smiling playmate, the earnest
+helpmate. As this conviction strengthened, so an increased weariness
+of the artificial life of the metropolis, and of all its objects and
+amusements, turned his thoughts with an intense yearning towards the
+Bohemian freedom and fresh excitements of his foot ramblings. He often
+thought with envy of the wandering minstrel, and wondered whether, if he
+again traversed the same range of country, he might encounter again that
+vagrant singer.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+IT is nearly a week since Kenelm had met Cecilia, and he is sitting
+in his rooms with Lord Thetford at that hour of three in the afternoon
+which is found the most difficult to dispose of by idlers about town.
+Amongst young men of his own age and class with whom Kenelm assorted in
+the fashionable world, perhaps the one whom he liked the best, and of
+whom he saw the most, was this young heir of the Beaumanoirs; and though
+Lord Thetford has nothing to do with the direct stream of my story, it
+is worth pausing a few minutes to sketch an outline of one of the
+best whom the last generation has produced for a part that, owing to
+accidents of birth and fortune, young men like Lord Thetford must play
+on that stage from which the curtain is not yet drawn up. Destined to
+be the head of a family that unites with princely possessions and a
+historical name a keen though honourable ambition for political power,
+Lord Thetford has been care fully educated, especially in the new ideas
+of his time. His father, though a man of no ordinary talents, has never
+taken a prominent part in public life. He desires his eldest son to do
+so. The Beaumanoirs have been Whigs from the time of William III. They
+have shared the good and the ill fortunes of a party which, whether we
+side with it or not, no politician who dreads extremes in the government
+of a State so pre-eminently artificial that a prevalent extreme at
+either end of the balance would be fatal to equilibrium, can desire to
+become extinct or feeble so long as a constitutional monarchy exists
+in England. From the reign of George I. to the death of George IV., the
+Beaumanoirs were in the ascendant. Visit their family portrait gallery,
+and you must admire the eminence of a house which, during that interval
+of less than a century, contributed so many men to the service of the
+State or the adornment of the Court,--so many Ministers, Ambassadors,
+Generals, Lord Chamberlains, and Masters of the Horse. When the younger
+Pitt beat the great Whig Houses, the Beaumanoirs vanish into comparative
+obscurity; they reemerge with the accession of William IV., and once
+more produce bulwarks of the State and ornaments of the Crown. The
+present Lord of Beaumanoir, _poco curante_ in politics though he be, has
+at least held high offices at Court; and, as a matter of course, he is
+Lord Lieutenant of his county, as well as Knight of the Garter. He is
+a man whom the chiefs of his party have been accustomed to consult on
+critical questions. He gives his opinions confidentially and modestly,
+and when they are rejected never takes offence. He thinks that a time
+is coming when the head of the Beaumanoirs should descend into the lists
+and fight hand-to-hand with any Hodge or Hobson in the cause of his
+country for the benefit of the Whigs. Too lazy or too old to do this
+himself, he says to his son, “You must do it: without effort of mine the
+thing may last my life. It needs effort of yours that the thing may last
+through your own.”
+
+Lord Thetford cheerfully responds to the paternal admonition. He curbs
+his natural inclinations, which are neither inelegant nor unmanly; for,
+on the one side, he is very fond of music and painting, an accomplished
+amateur, and deemed a sound connoisseur in both; and, on the other side,
+he has a passion for all field sports, and especially for hunting. He
+allows no such attractions to interfere with diligent attention to the
+business of the House of Commons. He serves in Committees, he takes the
+chair at public meetings on sanitary questions or projects for social
+improvement, and acquits himself well therein. He has not yet spoken in
+debate, but he has only been two years in Parliament, and he takes his
+father’s wise advice not to speak till the third. But he is not without
+weight among the well-born youth of the party, and has in him the stuff
+out of which, when it becomes seasoned, the Corinthian capitals of a
+Cabinet may be very effectively carved. In his own heart he is convinced
+that his party are going too far and too fast; but with that party he
+goes on light-heartedly, and would continue to do so if they went to
+Erebus. But he would prefer their going the other way. For the rest, a
+pleasant, bright-eyed young fellow, with vivid animal spirits; and, in
+the holiday moments of reprieve from public duty he brings sunshine into
+draggling hunting-fields, and a fresh breeze into heated ballrooms.
+
+“My dear fellow,” said Lord Thetford, as he threw aside his cigar, “I
+quite understand that you bore yourself: you have nothing else to do.”
+
+“What can I do?”
+
+“Work.”
+
+“Work!”
+
+“Yes, you are clever enough to feel that you have a mind; and mind is a
+restless inmate of body: it craves occupation of some sort, and regular
+occupation too; it needs its daily constitutional exercise. Do you give
+your mind that?”
+
+“I am sure I don’t know, but my mind is always busying itself about
+something or other.”
+
+“In a desultory way,--with no fixed object.”
+
+“True.”
+
+“Write a book, and then it will have its constitutional.”
+
+“Nay, my mind is always writing a book (though it may not publish
+one), always jotting down impressions, or inventing incidents, or
+investigating characters; and between you and me, I do not think that I
+do bore myself so much as I did formerly. Other people bore me more than
+they did.”
+
+“Because you will not create an object in common with other people: come
+into Parliament, side with a party, and you have that object.”
+
+“Do you mean seriously to tell me that you are not bored in the House of
+Commons?”
+
+“With the speakers very often, yes; but with the strife between the
+speakers, no. The House of Commons life has a peculiar excitement
+scarcely understood out of it; but you may conceive its charm when you
+observe that a man who has once been in the thick of it feels forlorn
+and shelved if he lose his seat, and even repines when the accident
+of birth transfers him to the serener air of the Upper House. Try that
+life, Chillingly.”
+
+“I might if I were an ultra-Radical, a Republican, a Communist, a
+Socialist, and wished to upset everything existing, for then the strife
+would at least be a very earnest one.”
+
+“But could not you be equally in earnest against those revolutionary
+gentlemen?”
+
+“Are you and your leaders in earnest against them? They don’t appear to
+me so.”
+
+Thetford was silent for a minute. “Well, if you doubt the principles of
+my side, go with the other side. For my part, I and many of our party
+would be glad to see the Conservatives stronger.”
+
+“I have no doubt they would. No sensible man likes to be carried off his
+legs by the rush of the crowd behind him; and a crowd is less headlong
+when it sees a strong force arrayed against it in front. But it seems
+to me that, at present, Conservatism can but be what it now is,--a party
+that may combine for resistance, and will not combine for inventive
+construction. We are living in an age in which the process of
+unsettlement is going blindly at work, as if impelled by a Nemesis as
+blind as itself. New ideas come beating into surf and surge against
+those which former reasoners had considered as fixed banks and
+breakwaters; and the new ideas are so mutable, so fickle, that those
+which were considered novel ten years ago are deemed obsolete to-day,
+and the new ones of to-day will in their turn be obsolete to-morrow.
+And, in a sort of fatalism, you see statesmen yielding way to these
+successive mockeries of experiment,--for they are experiments against
+experience,--and saying to each other with a shrug of the shoulders,
+‘Bismillah! it must be so; the country will have it, even though it
+sends the country to the dogs.’ I don’t feel sure that the country will
+not go there the sooner, if you can only strengthen the Conservative
+element enough to set it up in office, with the certainty of knocking
+it down again. Alas! I am too dispassionate a looker-on to be fit for a
+partisan: would I were not! Address yourself to my cousin Gordon.”
+
+“Ay, Chillingly Gordon is a coming man, and has all the earnestness you
+find absent in party and in yourself.”
+
+“You call him earnest?”
+
+“Thoroughly, in the pursuit of one object,--the advancement of
+Chillingly Gordon. If he get into the House of Commons, and succeed
+there, I hope he will never become my leader; for if he thought
+Christianity in the way of his promotion, he would bring in a bill for
+its abolition.”
+
+“In that case would he still be your leader?”
+
+“My dear Kenelm, you don’t know what is the spirit of party, and how
+easily it makes excuses for any act of its leader. Of course, if Gordon
+brought in a bill for the abolition of Christianity, it would be on the
+plea that the abolition was good for the Christians, and his followers
+would cheer that enlightened sentiment.”
+
+“Ah,” said Kenelm, with a sigh, “I own myself the dullest of blockheads;
+for instead of tempting me into the field of party politics, your talk
+leaves me in stolid amaze that you do not take to your heels, where
+honour can only be saved by flight.”
+
+“Pooh! my dear Chillingly, we cannot run away from the age in which we
+live: we must accept its conditions and make the best of them; and if
+the House of Commons be nothing else, it is a famous debating society
+and a capital club. Think over it. I must leave you now. I am going
+to see a picture at the Exhibition which has been most truculently
+criticised in ‘The Londoner,’ but which I am assured, on good authority,
+is a work of remarkable merit. I can’t bear to see a man snarled and
+sneered down, no doubt by jealous rivals, who have their influence in
+journals, so I shall judge of the picture for myself. If it be really
+as good as I am told, I shall talk about it to everybody I meet; and in
+matters of art I fancy my word goes for something. Study art, my dear
+Kenelm. No gentleman’s education is complete if he does n’t know a good
+picture from a bad one. After the Exhibition I shall just have time for
+a canter round the Park before the debate of the session, which begins
+to-night.”
+
+With a light step the young man quitted the room, humming an air from
+the “Figaro” as he descended the stairs. From the window Kenelm watched
+him swinging himself with careless grace into his saddle and riding
+briskly down the street,--in form and face and bearing a very model of
+young, high-born, high-bred manhood. “The Venetians,” muttered Kenelm,
+“decapitated Marino Faliero for conspiring against his own order,--the
+nobles. The Venetians loved their institutions, and had faith in them.
+Is there such love and such faith among the English?”
+
+As he thus soliloquized he heard a shrilling sort of squeak; and a
+showman stationed before his window the stage on which Punch satirizes
+the laws and moralities of the world, “kills the beadle and defies the
+devil.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+KENELM turned from the sight of Punch and Punch’s friend the cur, as his
+servant, entering, said a person from the country, who would not give
+his name, asked to see him.
+
+Thinking it might be some message from his father, Kenelm ordered the
+stranger to be admitted, and in another minute there entered a young man
+of handsome countenance and powerful frame, in whom, after a surprised
+stare, Kenelm recognized Tom Bowles. Difficult indeed would have been
+that recognition to an unobservant beholder: no trace was left of the
+sullen bully or the village farrier; the expression of the face was mild
+and intelligent,--more bashful than hardy; the brute strength of the
+form had lost its former clumsiness, the simple dress was that of a
+gentleman,--to use an expressive idiom, the whole man was wonderfully
+“toned down.”
+
+“I am afraid, sir, I am taking a liberty,” said Tom, rather nervously,
+twiddling his hat between his fingers.
+
+“I should be a greater friend to liberty than I am if it were always
+taken in the same way,” said Kenelm, with a touch of his saturnine
+humour; but then yielding at once to the warmer impulse of his nature,
+he grasped his old antagonist’s hand and exclaimed, “My dear Tom, you
+are so welcome. I am so glad to see you. Sit down, man; sit down: make
+yourself at home.”
+
+“I did not know you were back in England, sir, till within the last few
+days; for you did say that when you came back I should see or hear from
+you,” and there was a tone of reproach in the last words.
+
+“I am to blame, forgive me,” said Kenelm, remorsefully. “But how did
+you find me out? you did not then, I think, even know my name. That,
+however, it was easy enough to discover; but who gave you my address in
+this lodging?”
+
+“Well, sir, it was Miss Travers; and she bade me come to you. Otherwise,
+as you did not send for me, it was scarcely my place to call uninvited.”
+
+“But, my dear Tom, I never dreamed that you were in London. One don’t
+ask a man whom one supposes to be more than a hundred miles off to pay
+one an afternoon call. You are still with your uncle, I presume? and I
+need not ask if all thrives well with you: you look a prosperous man,
+every inch of you, from crown to toe.”
+
+“Yes,” said Tom; “thank you kindly, sir, I am doing well in the way of
+business, and my uncle is to give me up the whole concern at Christmas.”
+
+While Tom thus spoke Kenelm had summoned his servant, and ordered up
+such refreshments as could be found in the larder of a bachelor in
+lodgings. “And what brings you to town, Tom?”
+
+“Miss Travers wrote to me about a little business which she was good
+enough to manage for me, and said you wished to know about it; and so,
+after turning it over in my mind for a few days, I resolved to come to
+town: indeed,” added Tom, heartily, “I did wish to see your face again.”
+
+“But you talk riddles. What business of yours could Miss Travers imagine
+I wished to know about?”
+
+Tom coloured high, and looked very embarrassed. Luckily, the servant
+here entering with the refreshment-tray allowed him time to recover
+himself. Kenelm helped him to a liberal slice of cold pigeon-pie,
+pressed wine on him, and did not renew the subject till he thought his
+guest’s tongue was likely to be more freely set loose; then he said,
+laying a friendly hand on Tom’s shoulders, “I have been thinking over
+what passed between me and Miss Travers. I wished to have the new
+address of Will Somers; she promised to write to his benefactor to ask
+permission to give it. You are that benefactor?”
+
+“Don’t say benefactor, sir. I will tell how it came about if you will
+let me. You see, I sold my little place at Graveleigh to the new Squire,
+and when Mother removed to Luscombe to be near me, she told me how
+poor Jessie had been annoyed by Captain Stavers, who seems to think
+his purchase included the young women on the property along with the
+standing timber; and I was half afraid that she had given some cause for
+his persecution, for you know she has a blink of those soft eyes of
+hers that might charm a wise man out of his skin and put a fool there
+instead.”
+
+“But I hope she has done with those blinks since her marriage.”
+
+“Well, and I honestly think she has. It is certain she did not encourage
+Captain Stavers, for I went over to Graveleigh myself on the sly, and
+lodged concealed with one of the cottagers who owed me a kindness; and
+one day, as I was at watch, I saw the Captain peering over the stile
+which divides Holmwood from the glebe,--you remember Holmwood?”
+
+“I can’t say I do.”
+
+“The footway from the village to Squire Travers’s goes through the
+wood, which is a few hundred yards at the back of Will Somers’s orchard.
+Presently the Captain drew himself suddenly back from the stile, and
+disappeared among the trees, and then I saw Jessie coming from the
+orchard with a basket over her arm, and walking quick towards the wood.
+Then, sir, my heart sank. I felt sure she was going to meet the Captain.
+However, I crept along the hedgerow, hiding myself, and got into the
+wood almost as soon as Jessie got there, by another way. Under the cover
+of the brushwood I stole on till I saw the Captain come out from the
+copse on the other side of the path, and plant himself just before
+Jessie. Then I saw at once I had wronged her. She had not expected to
+see him, for she hastily turned back, and began to run homeward; but he
+caught her up, and seized her by the arm. I could not hear what he said,
+but I heard her voice quite sharp with fright and anger. And then he
+suddenly seized her round the waist, and she screamed, and I sprang
+forward--”
+
+“And thrashed the Captain?”
+
+“No, I did not,” said Tom; “I had made a vow to myself that I never
+would be violent again if I could help it. So I took him with one hand
+by the cuff of the neck, and with the other by the waistband, and just
+pitched him on a bramble bush,--quite mildly. He soon picked himself up,
+for he is a dapper little chap, and became very blustering and abusive.
+But I kept my temper, and said civilly, ‘Little gentleman, hard words
+break no bones; but if ever you molest Mrs. Somers again, I will carry
+you into her orchard, souse you into the duck-pond there, and call all
+the villagers to see you scramble out of it again; and I will do it
+now if you are not off. I dare say you have heard of my name: I am Tom
+Bowles.’ Upon that his face, which was before very red, grew very white,
+and muttering something I did not hear, he walked away.
+
+“Jessie--I mean Mrs. Somers--seemed at first as much frightened at me
+as she had been at the Captain; and though I offered to walk with her to
+Miss Travers’s, where she was going with a basket which the young lady
+had ordered, she refused, and went back home. I felt hurt, and returned
+to my uncle’s the same evening; and it was not for months that I heard
+the Captain had been spiteful enough to set up an opposition shop, and
+that poor Will had been taken ill, and his wife was confined about the
+same time, and the talk was that they were in distress and might have to
+be sold up.
+
+“When I heard all this, I thought that after all it was my rough tongue
+that had so angered the Captain and been the cause of his spite, and so
+it was my duty to make it up to poor Will and his wife. I did not know
+how to set about mending matters, but I thought I’d go and talk to Miss
+Travers; and if ever there was a kind heart in a girl’s breast, hers is
+one.”
+
+“You are right there, I guess. What did Miss Travers say?”
+
+“Nay; I hardly know what she did say, but she set me thinking, and it
+struck me that Jessie--Mrs. Somers--had better move to a distance, and
+out of the Captain’s reach, and that Will would do better in a less
+out-of-the-way place. And then, by good luck, I read in the newspaper
+that a stationary and a fancywork business, with a circulating library,
+was to be sold on moderate terms at Moleswich, the other side of London.
+So I took the train and went to the place, and thought the shop would
+just suit these young folks, and not be too much work for either; then I
+went to Miss Travers, and I had a lot of money lying by me from the sale
+of the old forge and premises, which I did not know what to do with; and
+so, to cut short a long story, I bought the business, and Will and his
+wife are settled at Moleswich, thriving and happy, I hope, sir.”
+
+Tom’s voice quivered at the last words, and he turned aside quickly,
+passing his hand over his eyes.
+
+Kenelm was greatly moved.
+
+“And they don’t know what you did for them?”
+
+“To be sure not. I don’t think Will would have let him self be
+beholden to me. Ah! the lad has a spirit of his own, and Jessie--Mrs.
+Somers--would have felt pained and humbled that I should even think of
+such a thing. Miss Travers managed it all. They take the money as a loan
+which is to be paid by instalments. They have sent Miss Travers more
+than one instalment already, so I know they are doing well.”
+
+“A loan from Miss Travers?”
+
+“No; Miss Travers wanted to have a share in it, but I begged her not. It
+made me happy to do what I did all myself; and Miss Travers felt for me
+and did not press. They perhaps think it is Squire Travers (though he is
+not a man who would like to say it, for fear it should bring applicants
+on him), or some other gentleman who takes an interest in them.”
+
+“I always said you were a grand fellow, Tom. But you are grander still
+than I thought you.”
+
+“If there be any good in me, I owe it to you, sir. Think what a drunken,
+violent brute I was when I first met you. Those walks with you, and I
+may say that other gentleman’s talk, and then that long kind letter I
+had from you, not signed in your name, and written from abroad,--all
+these changed me, as the child is changed at nurse.”
+
+“You have evidently read a good deal since we parted.”
+
+“Yes; I belong to our young men’s library and institute; and when of an
+evening I get hold of a book, especially a pleasant story-book, I don’t
+care for other company.”
+
+“Have you never seen any other girl you could care for, and wish to
+marry?”
+
+“Ah, sir,” answered Tom, “a man does not go so mad for a girl as I
+did for Jessie Wiles, and when it is all over, and he has come to his
+senses, put his heart into joint again as easily as if it were only a
+broken leg. I don’t say that I may not live to love and to marry another
+woman: it is my wish to do so. But I know that I shall love Jessie to my
+dying day; but not sinfully, sir,--not sinfully. I would not wrong her
+by a thought.”
+
+There was a long pause.
+
+At last Kenelm said, “You promised to be kind to that little girl with
+the flower-ball; what has become of her?”
+
+“She is quite well, thank you, sir. My aunt has taken a great fancy to
+her, and so has my mother. She comes to them very often of an evening,
+and brings her work with her. A quick, intelligent little thing, and
+full of pretty thoughts. On Sundays, if the weather is fine, we stroll
+out together in the fields.”
+
+“She has been a comfort to you, Tom.”
+
+“Oh, yes.”
+
+“And loves you?”
+
+“I am sure she does; an affectionate, grateful child.”
+
+“She will be a woman soon, Tom, and may love you as a woman then.”
+
+Tom looked indignant and rather scornful at that suggestion, and
+hastened to revert to the subject more immediately at his heart.
+
+“Miss Travers said you would like to call on Will Somers and his wife;
+will you? Moleswich is not far from London, you know.”
+
+“Certainly, I will call.”
+
+“I do hope you will find them happy; and if so, perhaps you will kindly
+let me know; and--and--I wonder whether Jessie’s child is like her? It
+is a boy; somehow or other I would rather it had been a girl.”
+
+“I will write you full particulars. But why not come with me?”
+
+“No, I don’t think I could do that, just at present. It unsettled me
+sadly when I did again see her sweet face at Graveleigh, and she was
+still afraid of me too! that was a sharp pang.”
+
+“She ought to know what you have done for her, and will.”
+
+“On no account, sir; promise me that. I should feel mean if I humbled
+them,--that way.”
+
+“I understand, though I will not as yet make you any positive promise.
+Meanwhile, if you are staying in town, lodge with me; my landlady can
+find you a room.”
+
+“Thank you heartily, sir; but I go back by the evening train; and, bless
+me! how late it is now! I must wish you good-by. I have some commissions
+to do for my aunt, and I must buy a new doll for Susey.”
+
+“Susey is the name of the little girl with the flower-ball?”
+
+“Yes. I must run off now; I feel quite light at heart seeing you again
+and finding that you receive me still so kindly, as if we were equals.”
+
+“Ah, Tom, I wish I was your equal,--nay, half as noble as Heaven has
+made you!”
+
+Tom laughed incredulously, and went his way.
+
+“This mischievous passion of love,” said Kenelm to himself, “has its
+good side, it seems, after all. If it was nearly making a wild beast of
+that brave fellow,--nay, worse than wild beast, a homicide doomed to
+the gibbet,--so, on the other hand, what a refined, delicate, chivalrous
+nature of gentleman it has developed out of the stormy elements of its
+first madness! Yes, I will go and look at this new-married couple. I
+dare say they are already snarling and spitting at each other like cat
+and dog. Moleswich is within reach of a walk.”
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK V.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+TWO days after the interview recorded in the last chapter of the
+previous Book, Travers, chancing to call at Kenelm’s lodgings, was told
+by his servant that Mr. Chillingly had left London, alone, and had given
+no orders as to forwarding letters. The servant did not know where he
+had gone, or when he would return.
+
+Travers repeated this news incidentally to Cecilia, and she felt
+somewhat hurt that he had not written her a line respecting Tom’s visit.
+She, however, guessed that he had gone to see the Somerses, and would
+return to town in a day or so. But weeks passed, the season drew to its
+close, and of Kenelm Chillingly she saw or heard nothing: he had
+wholly vanished from the London world. He had but written a line to his
+servant, ordering him to repair to Exmundham and await him there, and
+enclosing him a check to pay outstanding bills.
+
+We must now follow the devious steps of the strange being who has grown
+into the hero of this story. He had left his apartment at daybreak long
+before his servant was up, with his knapsack, and a small portmanteau,
+into which he had thrust--besides such additional articles of dress as
+he thought he might possibly require, and which his knapsack could not
+contain--a few of his favourite books. Driving with these in a hack-cab
+to the Vauxhall station, he directed the portmanteau to be forwarded
+to Moleswich, and flinging the knapsack on his shoulders, walked slowly
+along the drowsy suburbs that stretched far into the landscape, before,
+breathing more freely, he found some evidences of rural culture on
+either side of the high road. It was not, however, till he had left the
+roofs and trees of pleasant Richmond far behind him that he began to
+feel he was out of reach of the metropolitan disquieting influences.
+Finding at a little inn, where he stopped to breakfast, that there was
+a path along fields, and in sight of the river, through which he could
+gain the place of his destination, he then quitted the high road,
+and traversing one of the loveliest districts in one of our loveliest
+counties, he reached Moleswich about noon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ON entering the main street of the pretty town, the name of Somers,
+in gilt capitals, was sufficiently conspicuous over the door of a very
+imposing shop. It boasted two plate-glass windows, at one of which were
+tastefully exhibited various articles of fine stationery, embroidery
+patterns, etc.; at the other, no less tastefully, sundry specimens of
+ornamental basket-work.
+
+Kenelm crossed the threshold and recognized behind the counter--fair
+as ever, but with an expression of face more staid, and a figure more
+rounded and matron-like--his old friend Jessie. There were two or three
+customers before her, between whom she was dividing her attention. While
+a handsome young lady, seated, was saying, in a somewhat loud but cheery
+and pleasant voice, “Do not mind me, Mrs. Somers: I can wait,” Jessie’s
+quick eye darted towards the stranger, but too rapidly to distinguish
+his features, which, indeed, he turned away, and began to examine the
+baskets.
+
+In a minute or so the other customers were served and had departed; and
+the voice of the lady was again heard, “Now, Mrs. Somers, I want to see
+your picture-books and toys. I am giving a little children’s party this
+afternoon, and I want to make them as happy as possible.”
+
+“Somewhere or other, on this planet, or before my Monad was whisked
+away to it, I have heard that voice,” muttered Kenelm. While Jessie was
+alertly bringing forth her toys and picture-books, she said, “I am sorry
+to keep you waiting, sir; but if it is the baskets you come about, I can
+call my husband.”
+
+“Do,” said Kenelm.
+
+“William, William,” cried Mrs. Somers; and after a delay long enough to
+allow him to slip on his jacket, William Somers emerged from the back
+parlour.
+
+His face had lost its old trace of suffering and ill health; it was
+still somewhat pale, and retained its expression of intellectual
+refinement.
+
+“How you have improved in your art!” said Kenelm, heartily.
+
+William started, and recognized Kenelm at once. He sprang forward and
+took Kenelm’s outstretched hand in both his own, and, in a voice between
+laughing and crying, exclaimed, “Jessie, Jessie, it is he!--he whom we
+pray for every night. God bless you! God bless and make you as happy as
+He permitted you to make me!”
+
+Before this little speech was faltered out, Jessie was by her husband’s
+side, and she added, in a lower voice, but tremulous with deep feeling,
+“And me too!”
+
+“By your leave, Will,” said Kenelm, and he saluted Jessie’s white
+forehead with a kiss that could not have been kindlier or colder if it
+had been her grandfather’s.
+
+Meanwhile the lady had risen noiselessly and unobserved, and stealing up
+to Kenelm, looked him full in the face.
+
+“You have another friend here, sir, who has also some cause to thank
+you--”
+
+“I thought I remembered your voice,” said Kenelm, looking puzzled. “But
+pardon me if I cannot recall your features. Where have we met before?”
+
+“Give me your arm when we go out, and I will bring myself to your
+recollection. But no: I must not hurry you away now. I will call
+again in half an hour. Mrs. Somers, meanwhile put up the things I
+have selected. I will take them away with me when I come back from the
+vicarage, where I have left the pony-carriage.” So, with a parting nod
+and smile to Kenelm, she turned away, and left him bewildered.
+
+“But who is that lady, Will?”
+
+“A Mrs. Braefield. She is a new comer.”
+
+“She may well be that, Will,” said Jessie, smiling, “for she has only
+been married six months.”
+
+“And what was her name before she married?”
+
+“I am sure I don’t know, sir. It is only three months since we came
+here, and she has been very kind to us and an excellent customer.
+Everybody likes her. Mr. Braefield is a city gentleman and very rich;
+and they live in the finest house in the place, and see a great deal of
+company.”
+
+“Well, I am no wiser than I was before,” said Kenelm. “People who ask
+questions very seldom are.”
+
+“And how did you find us out, sir?” said Jessie. “Oh! I guess,” she
+added, with an arch glance and smile. “Of course, you have seen Miss
+Travers, and she told you.”
+
+“You are right. I first learned your change of residence from her, and
+thought I would come and see you, and be introduced to the baby,--a boy,
+I understand? Like you, Will?”
+
+“No, sir, the picture of Jessie.”
+
+“Nonsense, Will; it is you all over, even to its little hands.”
+
+“And your good mother, Will, how did you leave her?”
+
+“Oh, sir!” cried Jessie, reproachfully; “do you think we could have the
+heart to leave Mother,--so lone and rheumatic too? She is tending baby
+now,--always does while I am in the shop.”
+
+Here Kenelm followed the young couple into the parlour, where, seated by
+the window, they found old Mrs. Somers reading the Bible and rocking the
+baby, who slept peacefully in its cradle.
+
+“Will,” said Kenelm, bending his dark face over the infant, “I will
+tell you a pretty thought of a foreign poet’s, which has been thus badly
+translated:
+
+
+ “‘Blest babe, a boundless world this bed so narrow seems to thee;
+ Grow man, and narrower than this bed the boundless world shall
+ be.’”[1]
+
+
+ [1] Schiller.
+
+
+“I don’t think that is true, sir,” said Will, simply; “for a happy home
+is a world wide enough for any man.”
+
+Tears started into Jessie’s eyes; she bent down and kissed--not the
+baby, but the cradle. “Will made it.” She added blushing, “I mean the
+cradle, sir.”
+
+Time flew past while Kenelm talked with Will and the old mother, for
+Jessie was soon summoned back to the shop; and Kenelm was startled when
+he found the half-hour’s grace allowed to him was over, and Jessie put
+her head in at the door and said, “Mrs. Braefield is waiting for you.”
+
+“Good-by, Will; I shall come to see you again soon; and my mother gives
+me a commission to buy I don’t know how many specimens of your craft.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+A SMART pony-phaeton, with a box for a driver in livery equally smart,
+stood at the shop-door.
+
+“Now, Mr. Chillingly,” said Mrs. Braefield, “it is my turn to run away
+with you; get in!”
+
+“Eh!” murmured Kenelm, gazing at her with large dreamy eyes. “Is it
+possible?”
+
+“Quite possible; get in. Coachman, home! Yes, Mr. Chillingly, you meet
+again that giddy creature whom you threatened to thrash; it would have
+served her right. I ought to feel so ashamed to recall myself to your
+recollection, and yet I am not a bit ashamed. I am proud to show you
+that I have turned out a steady, respectable woman, and, my husband
+tells me, a good wife.”
+
+“You have only been six months married, I hear,” said Kenelm, dryly. “I
+hope your husband will say the same six years hence.”
+
+“He will say the same sixty years hence, if we live as long.”
+
+“How old is he now?”
+
+“Thirty-eight.”
+
+“When a man wants only two years of his hundredth, he probably has
+learned to know his own mind; but then, in most cases, very little mind
+is left to him to know.”
+
+“Don’t be satirical, sir; and don’t talk as if you were railing at
+marriage, when you have just left as happy a young couple as the sun
+ever shone upon; and owing,--for Mrs. Somers has told me all about her
+marriage,--owing their happiness to you.”
+
+“Their happiness to me! not in the least. I helped them to marry, and in
+spite of marriage they helped each other to be happy.”
+
+“You are still unmarried yourself?”
+
+“Yes, thank Heaven!”
+
+“And are you happy?”
+
+“No; I can’t make myself happy: myself is a discontented brute.”
+
+“Then why do you say ‘thank Heaven’?”
+
+“Because it is a comfort to think I am not making somebody else
+unhappy.”
+
+“Do you believe that if you loved a wife who loved you, you should make
+her unhappy?”
+
+“I am sure I don’t know; but I have not seen a woman whom I could love
+as a wife. And we need not push our inquiries further. What has become
+of that ill-treated gray cob?”
+
+“He was quite well, thank you, when I last heard of him.”
+
+“And the uncle who would have inflicted me upon you, if you had not so
+gallantly defended yourself?”
+
+“He is living where he did live, and has married his housekeeper. He
+felt a delicate scruple against taking that step till I was married
+myself and out of the way.”
+
+Here Mrs. Braefield, beginning to speak very hurriedly, as women who
+seek to disguise emotion often do, informed Kenelm how unhappy she had
+felt for weeks after having found an asylum with her aunt,--how she had
+been stung by remorse and oppressed by a sense of humiliation at the
+thought of her folly and the odious recollection of Mr. Compton,--how
+she had declared to herself that she would never marry any one
+now--never! How Mr. Braefield happened to be on a visit in the
+neighbourhood, and saw her at church,--how he had sought an introduction
+to her,--and how at first she rather disliked him than not; but he was
+so good and so kind, and when at last he proposed--and she had frankly
+told him all about her girlish flight and infatuation--how generously he
+had thanked her for a candour which had placed her as high in his esteem
+as she had been before in his love. “And from that moment,” said Mrs.
+Braefield, passionately, “my whole heart leaped to him. And now you know
+all; and here we are at the Lodge.”
+
+The pony-phaeton went with great speed up a broad gravel-drive, bordered
+with rare evergreens, and stopped at a handsome house with a portico in
+front, and a long conservatory at the garden side,--one of those houses
+which belong to “city gentlemen,” and often contain more comfort and
+exhibit more luxury than many a stately manorial mansion.
+
+Mrs. Braefield evidently felt some pride as she led Kenelm through
+the handsome hall, paved with Malvern tiles and adorned with Scagliola
+columns, and into a drawing-room furnished with much taste and opening
+on a spacious flower-garden.
+
+“But where is Mr. Braefield?” asked Kenelm.
+
+“Oh, he has taken the rail to his office; but he will be back long
+before dinner, and of course you dine with us.”
+
+“You’re very hospitable, but--”
+
+“No buts: I will take no excuse. Don’t fear that you shall have only
+mutton-chops and a rice-pudding; and, besides, I have a children’s party
+coming at two o’clock, and there will be all sorts of fun. You are fond
+of children, I am sure?”
+
+“I rather think I am not. But I have never clearly ascertained my own
+inclinations upon that subject.”
+
+“Well, you shall have ample opportunity to do so to-day. And oh! I
+promise you the sight of the loveliest face that you can picture to
+yourself when you think of your future wife.”
+
+“My future wife, I hope, is not yet born,” said Kenelm, wearily, and
+with much effort suppressing a yawn. “But at all events, I will stay
+till after two o’clock; for two o’clock, I presume, means luncheon.”
+
+Mrs. Braefield laughed. “You retain your appetite?”
+
+“Most single men do, provided they don’t fall in love and become doubled
+up.”
+
+At this abominable attempt at a pun, Mrs. Braefield disdained to laugh;
+but turning away from its perpetrator she took off her hat and gloves
+and passed her hands lightly over her forehead, as if to smooth back
+some vagrant tress in locks already sufficiently sheen and trim. She was
+not quite so pretty in female attire as she had appeared in boy’s
+dress, nor did she look quite as young. In all other respects she was
+wonderfully improved. There was a serener, a more settled intelligence
+in her frank bright eyes, a milder expression in the play of her parted
+lips. Kenelm gazed at her with pleased admiration. And as now, turning
+from the glass, she encountered his look, a deeper colour came into the
+clear delicacy of her cheeks, and the frank eyes moistened. She came up
+to him as he sat, and took his hand in both hers, pressing it warmly.
+“Ah, Mr. Chillingly,” she said, with impulsive tremulous tones, “look
+round, look round this happy, peaceful home!--the life so free from a
+care, the husband whom I so love and honour; all the blessings that I
+might have so recklessly lost forever had I not met with you, had I been
+punished as I deserved. How often I thought of your words, that ‘you
+would be proud of my friendship when we met again’! What strength they
+gave me in my hours of humbled self-reproach!” Her voice here died away
+as if in the effort to suppress a sob.
+
+She released his hand, and, before he could answer, passed quickly
+through the open sash into the garden.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE children have come,--some thirty of them, pretty as English children
+generally are, happy in the joy of the summer sunshine, and the
+flower lawns, and the feast under cover of an awning suspended between
+chestnut-trees, and carpeted with sward.
+
+No doubt Kenelm held his own at the banquet, and did his best to
+increase the general gayety, for whenever he spoke the children listened
+eagerly, and when he had done they laughed mirthfully.
+
+“The fair face I promised you,” whispered Mrs. Braefield, “is not here
+yet. I have a little note from the young lady to say that Mrs. Cameron
+does not feel very well this morning, but hopes to recover sufficiently
+to come later in the afternoon.”
+
+“And pray who is Mrs. Cameron?”
+
+“Ah! I forgot that you are a stranger to the place. Mrs. Cameron is the
+aunt with whom Lily resides. Is it not a pretty name, Lily?”
+
+“Very! emblematic of a spinster that does not spin, with a white head
+and a thin stalk.”
+
+“Then the name belies my Lily, as you will see.”
+
+The children now finished their feast, and betook themselves to dancing
+in an alley smoothed for a croquet-ground, and to the sound of a violin
+played by the old grandfather of one of the party. While Mrs. Braefield
+was busying herself with forming the dance, Kenelm seized the occasion
+to escape from a young nymph of the age of twelve who had sat next him
+at the banquet, and taken so great a fancy to him that he began to fear
+she would vow never to forsake his side, and stole away undetected.
+
+There are times when the mirth of others only saddens us, especially
+the mirth of children with high spirits, that jar on our own quiet mood.
+Gliding through a dense shrubbery, in which, though the lilacs were
+faded, the laburnum still retained here and there the waning gold of its
+clusters, Kenelm came into a recess which bounded his steps and invited
+him to repose. It was a circle, so formed artificially by slight
+trellises, to which clung parasite roses heavy with leaves and flowers.
+In the midst played a tiny fountain with a silvery murmuring sound; at
+the background, dominating the place, rose the crests of stately trees,
+on which the sunlight shimmered, but which rampired out all horizon
+beyond. Even as in life do the great dominant passions--love, ambition,
+desire of power or gold or fame or knowledge--form the proud background
+to the brief-lived flowerets of our youth, lift our eyes beyond the
+smile of their bloom, catch the glint of a loftier sunbeam, and yet,
+and yet, exclude our sight from the lengths and the widths of the space
+which extends behind and beyond them.
+
+Kenelm threw himself on the turf beside the fountain. From afar came the
+whoop and the laugh of the children in their sports or their dance. At
+the distance their joy did not sadden him,--he marvelled why; and thus,
+in musing revery, thought to explain the why to himself.
+
+“The poet,” so ran his lazy thinking, “has told us that ‘distance lends
+enchantment to the view,’ and thus compares to the charm of distance
+the illusion of hope. But the poet narrows the scope of his own
+illustration. Distance lends enchantment to the ear as well as to the
+sight; nor to these bodily senses alone. Memory no less than hope owes
+its charm to ‘the far away.’
+
+“I cannot imagine myself again a child when I am in the midst of
+young noisy children. But as their noise reaches me here, subdued and
+mellowed, and knowing, thank Heaven, that the urchins are not within
+reach of me, I could readily dream myself back into childhood, and into
+sympathy with the lost playfields of school.
+
+“So surely it must be with grief: how different the terrible agony for
+a beloved one just gone from earth, to the soft regret for one who
+disappeared into Heaven years ago! So with the art of poetry: how
+imperatively, when it deals with the great emotions of tragedy, it must
+remove the actors from us, in proportion as the emotions are to elevate,
+and the tragedy is to please us by the tears it draws! Imagine our shock
+if a poet were to place on the stage some wise gentleman with whom we
+dined yesterday, and who was discovered to have killed his father and
+married his mother. But when Oedipus commits those unhappy mistakes
+nobody is shocked. Oxford in the nineteenth century is a long way off
+from Thebes three thousand or four thousand years ago.
+
+“And,” continued Kenelm, plunging deeper into the maze of metaphysical
+criticism, “even where the poet deals with persons and things close upon
+our daily sight,--if he would give them poetic charm he must resort to
+a sort of moral or psychological distance; the nearer they are to us
+in external circumstance, the farther they must be in some internal
+peculiarities. Werter and Clarissa Harlowe are described as
+contemporaries of their artistic creation, and with the minutest details
+of apparent realism; yet they are at once removed from our daily lives
+by their idiosyncrasies and their fates. We know that while Werter
+and Clarissa are so near to us in much that we sympathize with them as
+friends and kinsfolk, they are yet as much remote from us in the poetic
+and idealized side of their natures as if they belonged to the age of
+Homer; and this it is that invests with charm the very pain which their
+fate inflicts on us. Thus, I suppose, it must be in love. If the love
+we feel is to have the glamour of poetry, it must be love for some
+one morally at a distance from our ordinary habitual selves; in short,
+differing from us in attributes which, however near we draw to the
+possessor, we can never approach, never blend, in attributes of our
+own; so that there is something in the loved one that always remains an
+ideal,--a mystery,--‘a sun-bright summit mingling with the sky’!”
+
+Herewith the soliloquist’s musings glided vaguely into mere revery. He
+closed his eyes drowsily, not asleep, nor yet quite awake; as sometimes
+in bright summer days when we recline on the grass we do close our eyes,
+and yet dimly recognize a golden light bathing the drowsy lids; and
+athwart that light images come and go like dreams, though we know that
+we are not dreaming.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+FROM this state, half comatose, half unconscious, Kenelm was roused
+slowly, reluctantly. Something struck softly on his cheek,--again a
+little less softly; he opened his eyes, they fell first upon two tiny
+rosebuds, which, on striking his face, had fallen on his breast; and
+then looking up, he saw before him, in an opening of the trellised
+circle, a female child’s laughing face. Her hand was still uplifted
+charged with another rosebud, but behind the child’s figure, looking
+over her shoulder and holding back the menacing arm, was a face as
+innocent but lovelier far,--the face of a girl in her first youth,
+framed round with the blossoms that festooned the trellise. How the face
+became the flowers! It seemed the fairy spirit of them.
+
+Kenelm started and rose to his feet. The child, the one whom he had so
+ungallantly escaped from ran towards him through a wicket in the circle.
+Her companion disappeared.
+
+“Is it you?” said Kenelm to the child, “you who pelted me so cruelly?
+Ungrateful creature! Did I not give you the best strawberries in the
+dish and all my own cream?”
+
+“But why did you run away and hide yourself when you ought to be dancing
+with me?” replied the young lady, evading, with the instinct of her sex,
+all answer to the reproach she had deserved.
+
+“I did not run away, and it is clear that I did not mean to hide myself,
+since you so easily found me out. But who was the young lady with you?
+I suspect she pelted me too, for she seems to have run away to hide
+herself.”
+
+“No, she did not pelt you; she wanted to stop me, and you would have had
+another rosebud--oh, so much bigger!--if she had not held back my arm.
+Don’t you know her,--don’t you know Lily?”
+
+“No; so that is Lily? You shall introduce me to her.”
+
+By this time they had passed out of the circle through the little wicket
+opposite the path by which Kenelm had entered, and opening at once on
+the lawn. Here at some distance the children were grouped, some reclined
+on the grass, some walking to and fro, in the interval of the dance.
+
+In the space between the group and the trellise Lily was walking alone
+and quickly. The child left Kenelm’s side and ran after her friend, soon
+overtook, but did not succeed in arresting her steps. Lily did not pause
+till she had reached the grassy ball-room, and here all the children
+came round her and shut out her delicate form from Kenelm’s sight.
+
+Before he had reached the place, Mrs. Braefield met him.
+
+“Lily is come!”
+
+“I know it: I have seen her.”
+
+“Is not she beautiful?”
+
+“I must see more of her if I am to answer critically; but before you
+introduce me, may I be permitted to ask who and what is Lily?”
+
+Mrs. Braefield paused a moment before she answered, and yet the
+answer was brief enough not to need much consideration. “She is a Miss
+Mordaunt, an orphan; and, as I before told you, resides with her aunt,
+Mrs. Cameron, a widow. They have the prettiest cottage you ever saw on
+the banks of the river, or rather rivulet, about a mile from this place.
+Mrs. Cameron is a very good, simple-hearted woman. As to Lily, I can
+praise her beauty only with safe conscience, for as yet she is a mere
+child,--her mind quite unformed.”
+
+“Did you ever meet any man, much less any woman, whose mind was formed?”
+ muttered Kenelm. “I am sure mine is not, and never will be on this
+earth.”
+
+Mrs. Braefield did not hear this low-voiced observation. She was
+looking about for Lily; and perceiving her at last as the children who
+surrounded her were dispersing to renew the dance, she took Kenelm’s
+arm, led him to the young lady, and a formal introduction took place.
+
+Formal as it could be on those sunlit swards, amidst the joy of summer
+and the laugh of children. In such scene and such circumstance formality
+does not last long. I know not how it was, but in a very few minutes
+Kenelm and Lily had ceased to be strangers to each other. They found
+themselves seated apart from the rest of the merry-makers, on the bank
+shadowed by lime-trees; the man listening with downcast eyes, the girl
+with mobile shifting glances now on earth, now on heaven, and talking
+freely; gayly,--like the babble of a happy stream, with a silvery dulcet
+voice and a sparkle of rippling smiles.
+
+No doubt this is a reversal of the formalities of well-bred life, and
+conventional narrating thereof. According to them, no doubt, it is for
+the man to talk and the maid to listen; but I state the facts as they
+were, honestly. And Lily knew no more of the formalities of drawing-room
+life than a skylark fresh from its nest knows of the song-teacher and
+the cage. She was still so much of a child. Mrs. Braefield was right:
+her mind was still so unformed.
+
+What she did talk about in that first talk between them that could make
+the meditative Kenelm listen so mutely, so intently, I know not, at
+least I could not jot it down on paper. I fear it was very egotistical,
+as the talk of children generally is,--about herself and her aunt, and
+her home and her friends; all her friends seemed children like herself,
+though younger,--Clemmy the chief of them. Clemmy was the one who had
+taken a fancy to Kenelm. And amidst all this ingenuous prattle there
+came flashes of a quick intellect, a lively fancy,--nay, even a poetry
+of expression or of sentiment. It might be the talk of a child, but
+certainly not of a silly child. But as soon as the dance was over,
+the little ones again gathered round Lily. Evidently she was the prime
+favourite of them all; and as her companion had now become tired
+of dancing, new sports were proposed, and Lily was carried off to
+“Prisoner’s Base.”
+
+“I am very happy to make your acquaintance, Mr. Chillingly,” said a
+frank, pleasant voice; and a well-dressed, good-looking man held out his
+hand to Kenelm.
+
+“My husband,” said Mrs. Braefield, with a certain pride in her look.
+
+Kenelm responded cordially to the civilities of the master of the house,
+who had just returned from his city office, and left all its cares
+behind him. You had only to look at him to see that he was prosperous,
+and deserved to be so. There were in his countenance the signs of strong
+sense, of good-humour,--above all, of an active energetic temperament. A
+man of broad smooth forehead, keen hazel eyes, firm lips and jaw; with a
+happy contentment in himself, his house, the world in general, mantling
+over his genial smile, and outspoken in the metallic ring of his voice.
+
+“You will stay and dine with us, of course,” said Mr. Braefield; “and,
+unless you want very much to be in town to-night, I hope you will take a
+bed here.”
+
+Kenelm hesitated.
+
+“Do stay at least till to-morrow,” said Mrs. Braefield. Kenelm hesitated
+still; and while hesitating his eye rested on Lily, leaning on the arm
+of a middle-aged lady, and approaching the hostess,--evidently to take
+leave.
+
+“I cannot resist so tempting an invitation,” said Kenelm, and he fell
+back a little behind Lily and her companion.
+
+“Thank you much for so pleasant a day,” said Mrs. Cameron to the
+hostess. “Lily has enjoyed herself extremely. I only regret we could not
+come earlier.”
+
+“If you are walking home,” said Mr. Braefield, “let me accompany you. I
+want to speak to your gardener about his heart’s-ease: it is much finer
+than mine.”
+
+“If so,” said Kenelm to Lily, “may I come too? Of all flowers that grow,
+heart’s-ease is the one I most prize.”
+
+A few minutes afterwards Kenelm was walking by the side of Lily along
+the banks of a little stream, tributary to the Thames; Mrs. Cameron and
+Mr. Braefield in advance, for the path only held two abreast.
+
+Suddenly Lily left his side, allured by a rare butterfly--I think it is
+called the Emperor of Morocco--that was sunning its yellow wings upon
+a group of wild reeds. She succeeded in capturing this wanderer in her
+straw hat, over which she drew her sun-veil. After this notable capture
+she returned demurely to Kenelm’s side.
+
+“Do you collect insects?” said that philosopher, as much surprised as it
+was his nature to be at anything.
+
+“Only butterflies,” answered Lily; “they are not insects, you know; they
+are souls.”
+
+“Emblems of souls you mean,--at least, so the Greeks prettily
+represented them to be.”
+
+“No, real souls,--the souls of infants that die in their cradles
+unbaptized; and if they are taken care of, and not eaten by birds, and
+live a year then they pass into fairies.”
+
+“It is a very poetical idea, Miss Mordaunt, and founded on evidence
+quite as rational as other assertions of the metamorphosis of one
+creature into another. Perhaps you can do what the philosophers
+cannot,--tell me how you learned a new idea to be an incontestable
+fact?”
+
+“I don’t know,” replied Lily, looking very much puzzled; “perhaps I
+learned it in a book, or perhaps I dreamed it.”
+
+“You could not make a wiser answer if you were a philosopher. But you
+talk of taking care of butterflies; how do you do that? Do you impale
+them on pins stuck into a glass case?”
+
+“Impale them! How can you talk so cruelly? You deserve to be pinched by
+the fairies.”
+
+“I am afraid,” thought Kenelm, compassionately, “that my companion has
+no mind to be formed; what is euphoniously called ‘an innocent.’”
+
+He shook his head and remained silent. Lily resumed,--
+
+“I will show you my collection when we get home; they seem so happy. I
+am sure there are some of them who know me: they will feed from my hand.
+I have only had one die since I began to collect them last summer.”
+
+“Then you have kept them a year: they ought to have turned into
+fairies.”
+
+“I suppose many of them have. Of course I let out all those that had
+been with me twelve months: they don’t turn to fairies in the cage,
+you know. Now I have only those I caught this year, or last autumn; the
+prettiest don’t appear till the autumn.”
+
+The girl here bent her uncovered head over the straw hat, her tresses
+shadowing it, and uttered loving words to the prisoner. Then again she
+looked up and around her, and abruptly stopped, and exclaimed,--
+
+“How can people live in towns? How can people say they are ever dull in
+the country? Look,” she continued, gravely and earnestly, “look at that
+tall pine-tree, with its long branch sweeping over the water; see how,
+as the breeze catches it, it changes its shadow, and how the shadow
+changes the play of the sunlight on the brook:--
+
+
+ “‘Wave your tops, ye pines;
+ With every plant, in sign of worship wave.’
+
+
+“What an interchange of music there must be between Nature and a poet!”
+
+Kenelm was startled. This “an innocent”!--this a girl who had no mind to
+be formed! In that presence he could not be cynical; could not speak of
+Nature as a mechanism, a lying humbug, as he had done to the man poet.
+He replied gravely,--
+
+“The Creator has gifted the whole universe with language, but few are
+the hearts that can interpret it. Happy those to whom it is no foreign
+tongue, acquired imperfectly with care and pain, but rather a native
+language, learned unconsciously from the lips of the great mother. To
+them the butterfly’s wing may well buoy into heaven a fairy’s soul!”
+
+When he had thus said Lily turned, and for the first time attentively
+looked into his dark soft eyes; then instinctively she laid her light
+hand on his arm, and said in a low voice, “Talk on; talk thus: I like to
+hear you.”
+
+But Kenelm did not talk on. They had now arrived at the garden-gate of
+Mrs. Cameron’s cottage, and the elder persons in advance paused at the
+gate and walked with them to the house.
+
+It was a long, low, irregular cottage, without pretension to
+architectural beauty, yet exceedingly picturesque,--a flower-garden,
+large, but in proportion to the house, with parterres in which the
+colours were exquisitely assorted, sloping to the grassy margin of the
+rivulet, where the stream expanded into a lake-like basin, narrowed
+at either end by locks, from which with gentle sound flowed shallow
+waterfalls. By the banks was a rustic seat, half overshadowed by the
+drooping boughs of a vast willow.
+
+The inside of the house was in harmony with the exterior,--cottage-like,
+but with an unmistakable air of refinement about the rooms, even in the
+little entrance-hall, which was painted in Pompeian frescos.
+
+“Come and see my butterfly-cage,” said Lily, whisperingly.
+
+Kenelm followed her through the window that opened on the garden; and
+at one end of a small conservatory, or rather greenhouse, was the
+habitation of these singular favourites. It was as large as a small
+room; three sides of it formed by minute wirework, with occasional
+draperies of muslin or other slight material, and covered at intervals,
+sometimes within, sometimes without, by dainty creepers; a tiny cistern
+in the centre, from which upsprang a sparkling jet. Lily cautiously
+lifted a sash-door and glided in, closing it behind her. Her entrance
+set in movement a multitude of gossamer wings, some fluttering round
+her, some more boldly settling on her hair or dress. Kenelm thought
+she had not vainly boasted when she said that some of the creatures had
+learned to know her. She released the Emperor of Morocco from her hat;
+it circled round her fearlessly, and then vanished amidst the leaves of
+the creepers. Lily opened the door and came out.
+
+“I have heard of a philosopher who tamed a wasp,” said Kenelm, “but
+never before of a young lady who tamed butterflies.”
+
+“No,” said Lily, proudly; “I believe I am the first who attempted it.
+I don’t think I should have attempted it if I had been told that others
+had succeeded before me. Not that I have succeeded quite. No matter; if
+they don’t love me, I love them.”
+
+They re-entered the drawing-room, and Mrs. Cameron addressed Kenelm.
+
+“Do you know much of this part of the country, Mr. Chillingly?”
+
+“It is quite new to me, and more rural than many districts farther from
+London.”
+
+“That is the good fortune of most of our home counties,” said Mr.
+Braefield; “they escape the smoke and din of manufacturing towns, and
+agricultural science has not demolished their leafy hedgerows. The
+walks through our green lanes are as much bordered with convolvulus and
+honeysuckle as they were when Izaak Walton sauntered through them to
+angle in that stream!”
+
+“Does tradition say that he angled in that stream? I thought his haunts
+were rather on the other side of London.”
+
+“Possibly; I am not learned in Walton or in his art, but there is an old
+summer-house, on the other side of the lock yonder, on which is carved
+the name of Izaak Walton, but whether by his own hand or another’s who
+shall say? Has Mr. Melville been here lately, Mrs. Cameron?”
+
+“No, not for several months.”
+
+“He has had a glorious success this year. We may hope that at last his
+genius is acknowledged by the world. I meant to buy his picture, but I
+was not in time: a Manchester man was before me.”
+
+“Who is Mr. Melville? any relation to you?” whispered Kenelm to Lily.
+
+“Relation,--I scarcely know. Yes, I suppose so, because he is my
+guardian. But if he were the nearest relation on earth, I could not love
+him more,” said Lily, with impulsive eagerness, her cheeks flushing, her
+eyes filling with tears.
+
+“And he is an artist,--a painter?” asked Kenelm.
+
+“Oh, yes; no one paints such beautiful pictures,--no one so clever, no
+one so kind.”
+
+Kenelm strove to recollect if he had ever heard the name of Melville as
+a painter, but in vain. Kenelm, however, knew but little of painters:
+they were not in his way; and he owned to himself, very humbly, that
+there might be many a living painter of eminent renown whose name and
+works would be strange to him.
+
+He glanced round the wall; Lily interpreted his look. “There are no
+pictures of his here,” said she; “there is one in my own room. I will
+show it you when you come again.”
+
+“And now,” said Mr. Braefield, rising, “I must just have a word with
+your gardener, and then go home. We dine earlier here than in London,
+Mr. Chillingly.”
+
+As the two gentlemen, after taking leave, re-entered the hall, Lily
+followed them and said to Kenelm, “What time will you come to-morrow to
+see the picture?”
+
+Kenelm averted his head, and then replied, not with his wonted courtesy,
+but briefly and brusquely,--
+
+“I fear I cannot call to-morrow. I shall be far away by sunrise.”
+
+Lily made no answer, but turned back into the room.
+
+Mr. Braefield found the gardener watering a flower-border, conferred
+with him about the heart’s-ease, and then joined Kenelm, who had halted
+a few yards beyond the garden-gate.
+
+“A pretty little place that,” said Mr. Braefield, with a sort of lordly
+compassion, as became the owner of Braefieldville. “What I call quaint.”
+
+“Yes, quaint,” echoed Kenelm, abstractedly.
+
+“It is always the case with houses enlarged by degrees. I have heard my
+poor mother say that when Melville or Mrs. Cameron first bought it, it
+was little better than a mere labourer’s cottage, with a field attached
+to it. And two or three years afterwards a room or so more was built,
+and a bit of the field taken in for a garden; and then by degrees the
+whole part now inhabited by the family was built, leaving only the old
+cottage as a scullery and washhouse; and the whole field was turned
+into the garden, as you see. But whether it was Melville’s money or the
+aunt’s that did it, I don’t know. More likely the aunt’s. I don’t see
+what interest Melville has in the place: he does not go there often, I
+fancy; it is not his home.”
+
+“Mr. Melville, it seems, is a painter, and, from what I heard you say, a
+successful one.”
+
+“I fancy he had little success before this year. But surely you saw his
+pictures at the Exhibition?”
+
+“I am ashamed to say I have not been to the Exhibition.”
+
+“You surprise me. However, Melville had three pictures there,--all very
+good; but the one I wished to buy made much more sensation than the
+others, and has suddenly lifted him from obscurity into fame.”
+
+“He appears to be a relation of Miss Mordaunt’s, but so distant a
+one that she could not even tell me what grade of cousinship he could
+claim.”
+
+“Nor can I. He is her guardian, I know. The relationship, if any, must,
+as you say, be very distant; for Melville is of humble extraction, while
+any one can see that Mrs. Cameron is a thorough gentlewoman, and Lily
+Mordaunt is her sister’s child. I have heard my mother say that it was
+Melville, then a very young man, who bought the cottage, perhaps with
+Mrs. Cameron’s money; saying it was for a widowed lady, whose husband
+had left her with very small means. And when Mrs. Cameron arrived with
+Lily, then a mere infant, she was in deep mourning, and a very young
+woman herself,--pretty too. If Melville had been a frequent visitor
+then, of course there would have been scandal; but he very seldom came,
+and when he did, he lodged in a cottage, Cromwell Lodge, on the other
+side of the brook; now and then bringing with him a fellow-lodger,--some
+other young artist, I suppose, for the sake of angling. So there could
+be no cause for scandal, and nothing can be more blameless than poor
+Mrs. Cameron’s life. My mother, who then resided at Braefieldville, took
+a great fancy to both Lily and her aunt, and when by degrees the cottage
+grew into a genteel sort of place, the few gentry in the neighbourhood
+followed my mother’s example and were very kind to Mrs. Cameron, so that
+she has now her place in the society about here, and is much liked.”
+
+“And Mr. Melville?--does he still very seldom come here?”
+
+“To say truth, he has not been at all since I settled at Braefieldville.
+The place was left to my mother for her life, and I was not much there
+during her occupation. In fact, I was then a junior partner in our firm,
+and conducted the branch business in New York, coming over to England
+for my holiday once a year or so. When my mother died, there was much to
+arrange before I could settle personally in England, and I did not come
+to settle at Braefieldville till I married. I did see Melville on one of
+my visits to the place some years ago; but, between ourselves, he is not
+the sort of person whose intimate acquaintance one would wish to court.
+My mother told me he was an idle, dissipated man, and I have heard from
+others that he was very unsteady. Mr. -----, the great painter, told
+me that he was a loose fish; and I suppose his habits were against his
+getting on, till this year, when, perhaps, by a lucky accident, he has
+painted a picture that raises him to the top of the tree. But is not
+Miss Lily wondrously nice to look at? What a pity her education has been
+so much neglected!”
+
+“Has it?”
+
+“Have not you discovered that already? She has not had even a
+music-master, though my wife says she has a good ear, and can sing
+prettily enough. As for reading I don’t think she has read anything but
+fairy tales and poetry, and such silly stuff. However, she is very young
+yet; and now that her guardian can sell his pictures, it is to be hoped
+that he will do more justice to his ward. Painters and actors are not so
+regular in their private lives as we plain men are, and great allowance
+is to be made for them; still, every one is bound to do his duty. I am
+sure you agree with me?”
+
+“Certainly,” said Kenelm, with an emphasis which startled the merchant.
+“That is an admirable maxim of yours: it seems a commonplace, yet how
+often, when it is put into our heads, it strikes as a novelty! A duty
+may be a very difficult thing, a very disagreeable thing, and, what
+is strange, it is often a very invisible thing. It is present,--close
+before us, and yet we don’t see it; somebody shouts its name in our
+ears, ‘Duty,’ and straight it towers before us a grim giant. Pardon me
+if I leave you: I can’t stay to dine. Duty summons me elsewhere. Make my
+excuses to Mrs. Braefield.”
+
+Before Mr. Braefield could recover his self-possession, Kenelm had
+vaulted over a stile and was gone.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+KENELM walked into the shop kept by the Somerses, and found Jessie
+still at the counter. “Give me back my knap sack. Thank you,” he said,
+flinging the knapsack across his shoulders. “Now, do me a favour. A
+portmanteau of mine ought to be at the station. Send for it, and keep it
+till I give further directions. I think of going to Oxford for a day
+or two. Mrs. Somers, one more word with you. Think, answer frankly, are
+you, as you said this morning, thoroughly happy, and yet married to the
+man you loved?”
+
+“Oh, so happy!”
+
+“And wish for nothing beyond? Do not wish Will to be other than he is?”
+
+“God forbid! You frighten me, sir.”
+
+“Frighten you! Be it so. Everyone who is happy should be frightened
+lest happiness fly away. Do your best to chain it, and you will, for you
+attach Duty to Happiness; and,” muttered Kenelm, as he turned from the
+shop, “Duty is sometimes not a rose-coloured tie, but a heavy iron-hued
+clog.”
+
+He strode on through the street towards the sign-post with “To Oxford”
+ inscribed thereon. And whether he spoke literally of the knapsack, or
+metaphorically of duty, he murmured, as he strode,--
+
+
+ “A pedlar’s pack that bows the bearer down.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+
+KENELM might have reached Oxford that night, for he was a rapid and
+untirable pedestrian; but he halted a little after the moon rose, and
+laid himself down to rest beneath a new-mown haystack, not very far from
+the high road.
+
+He did not sleep. Meditatingly propped on his elbow, he said to
+himself,--
+
+“It is long since I have wondered at nothing. I wonder now: can this be
+love,--really love,--unmistakably love? Pooh! it is impossible; the
+very last person in the world to be in love with. Let us reason upon
+it,--you, myself, and I. To begin with,--face! What is face? In a few
+years the most beautiful face may be very plain. Take the Venus at
+Florence. Animate her; see her ten years after; a chignon, front teeth
+(blue or artificially white), mottled complexion, double chin,--all that
+sort of plump prettiness goes into double chin. Face, bah! What man of
+sense--what pupil of Welby, the realist--can fall in love with a face?
+and even if I were simpleton enough to do so, pretty faces are as common
+as daisies. Cecilia Travers has more regular features; Jessie Wiles a
+richer colouring. I was not in love with them,--not a bit of it. Myself,
+you have nothing to say there. Well, then, mind? Talk of mind, indeed!
+a creature whose favourite companionship is that of butterflies, and who
+tells me that butterflies are the souls of infants unbaptized. What an
+article for ‘The Londoner,’ on the culture of young women! What a girl
+for Miss Garrett and Miss Emily Faithfull! Put aside Mind as we have
+done Face. What rests?--the Frenchman’s ideal of happy marriage?
+congenial circumstance of birth, fortune, tastes, habits. Worse still.
+Myself, answer honestly, are you not floored?”
+
+Whereon “Myself” took up the parable and answered, “O thou fool! why
+wert thou so ineffably blessed in one presence? Why, in quitting that
+presence, did Duty become so grim? Why dost thou address to me those
+inept pedantic questionings, under the light of yon moon, which has
+suddenly ceased to be to thy thoughts an astronomical body and has
+become, forever and forever, identified in thy heart’s dreams with
+romance and poesy and first love? Why, instead of gazing on that
+uncomfortable orb, art thou not quickening thy steps towards a cozy inn
+and a good supper at Oxford? Kenelm, my friend, thou art in for it. No
+disguising the fact: thou art in love!”
+
+“I’ll be hanged if I am,” said the Second in the Dualism of Kenelm’s
+mind; and therewith he shifted his knapsack into a pillow, turned his
+eyes from the moon, and still could not sleep. The face of Lily still
+haunted his eyes; the voice of Lily still rang in his ears.
+
+Oh, my reader! dost thou here ask me to tell thee what Lily was
+like?--was she dark? was she fair? was she tall? was she short? Never
+shalt thou learn these secrets from me. Imagine to thyself the being to
+which thine whole of life, body and mind and soul, moved irresistibly as
+the needle to the pole. Let her be tall or short, dark or fair, she is
+that which out of all womankind has suddenly become the one woman for
+thee. Fortunate art thou, my reader, if thou chance to have heard the
+popular song of “My Queen” sung by the one lady who alone can sing it
+with expression worthy the verse of the poetess and the music of the
+composition, by the sister of the exquisite songstress. But if thou hast
+not heard the verse thus sung, to an accompaniment thus composed, still
+the words themselves are, or ought to be, familiar to thee, if thou art,
+as I take for granted, a lover of the true lyrical muse. Recall then
+the words supposed to be uttered by him who knows himself destined to do
+homage to one he has not yet beheld:--
+
+
+ “She is standing somewhere,--she I shall honour,
+ She that I wait for, my queen, my queen;
+ Whether her hair be golden or raven,
+ Whether her eyes be hazel or blue,
+ I know not now, it will be engraven
+ Some day hence as my loveliest hue.
+ She may be humble or proud, my lady,
+ Or that sweet calm which is just between;
+ But whenever she comes, she will find me ready
+ To do her homage, my queen, my queen.”
+
+
+Was it possible that the cruel boy-god “who sharpens his arrows on the
+whetstone of the human heart” had found the moment to avenge himself
+for the neglect of his altars and the scorn of his power? Must that
+redoubted knight-errant, the hero of this tale, despite the Three Fishes
+on his charmed shield, at last veil the crest and bow the knee, and
+murmur to himself, “She has come, my queen”?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE next morning Kenelm arrived at Oxford,--“Verum secretumque
+Mouseion.”
+
+If there be a place in this busy island which may distract the
+passion of youth from love to scholarship, to Ritualism, to mediaeval
+associations, to that sort of poetical sentiment or poetical fanaticism
+which a Mivers and a Welby and an advocate of the Realistic School would
+hold in contempt,--certainly that place is Oxford,--home; nevertheless,
+of great thinkers and great actors in the practical world.
+
+The vacation had not yet commenced, but the commencement was near at
+hand. Kenelm thought he could recognize the leading men by their slower
+walk and more abstracted expression of countenance. Among the Fellows
+was the eminent author of that book which had so powerfully fascinated
+the earlier adolescence of Kenelm Chillingly, and who had himself been
+subject to the fascination of a yet stronger spirit. The Rev. Decimus
+Roach had been ever an intense and reverent admirer of John Henry
+Newman,--an admirer, I mean, of the pure and lofty character of the
+man, quite apart from sympathy with his doctrines. But although Roach
+remained an unconverted Protestant of orthodox, if High Church, creed,
+yet there was one tenet he did hold in common with the author of the
+“Apologia.” He ranked celibacy among the virtues most dear to Heaven.
+In that eloquent treatise, “The Approach to the Angels,” he not only
+maintained that the state of single blessedness was strictly incumbent
+on every member of a Christian priesthood, but to be commended to the
+adoption of every conscientious layman.
+
+It was the desire to confer with this eminent theologian that had
+induced Kenelm to direct his steps to Oxford.
+
+Mr. Roach was a friend of Welby, at whose house, when a pupil,
+Kenelm had once or twice met him, and been even more charmed by his
+conversation than by his treatise.
+
+Kenelm called on Mr. Roach, who received him very graciously, and, not
+being a tutor or examiner, placed his time at Kenelm’s disposal; took
+him the round of the colleges and the Bodleian; invited him to dine in
+his college-hall; and after dinner led him into his own rooms, and gave
+him an excellent bottle of Chateau Margeaux.
+
+Mr. Roach was somewhere about fifty,--a good-looking man and evidently
+thought himself so; for he wore his hair long behind and parted in the
+middle, which is not done by men who form modest estimates of their
+personal appearance.
+
+Kenelm was not long in drawing out his host on the subject to which that
+profound thinker had devoted so much meditation.
+
+“I can scarcely convey to you,” said Kenelm, “the intense admiration
+with which I have studied your noble work, ‘Approach to the Angels.’ It
+produced a great effect on me in the age between boyhood and youth. But
+of late some doubts on the universal application of your doctrine have
+crept into my mind.”
+
+“Ay, indeed?” said Mr. Roach, with an expression of interest in his
+face.
+
+“And I come to you for their solution.”
+
+Mr. Roach turned away his head, and pushed the bottle to Kenelm.
+
+“I am quite willing to concede,” resumed the heir of the Chillinglys,
+“that a priesthood should stand apart from the distracting cares of a
+family, and pure from all carnal affections.”
+
+“Hem, hem,” grunted Mr. Roach, taking his knee on his lap and caressing
+it.
+
+“I go further,” continued Kenelm, “and supposing with you that the
+Confessional has all the importance, whether in its monitory or its
+cheering effects upon repentant sinners, which is attached to it by
+the Roman Catholics, and that it ought to be no less cultivated by the
+Reformed Church, it seems to me essential that the Confessor should have
+no better half to whom it can be even suspected he may, in an unguarded
+moment, hint at the frailties of one of her female acquaintances.”
+
+“I pushed that argument too far,” murmured Roach.
+
+“Not a bit of it. Celibacy in the Confessor stands or falls with the
+Confessional. Your argument there is as sound as a bell. But when it
+comes to the layman, I think I detect a difference.”
+
+Mr. Roach shook his head, and replied stoutly, “No; if celibacy be
+incumbent on the one, it is equally incumbent on the other. I say ‘if.’”
+
+“Permit me to deny that assertion. Do not fear that I shall insult your
+understanding by the popular platitude; namely, that if celibacy were
+universal, in a very few years the human race would be extinct. As you
+have justly observed, in answer to that fallacy, ‘It is the duty of each
+human soul to strive towards the highest perfection of the spiritual
+state for itself, and leave the fate of the human race to the care of
+the Creator.’ If celibacy be necessary to spiritual perfection, how do
+we know but that it may be the purpose and decree of the All Wise that
+the human race, having attained to that perfection, should disappear
+from earth? Universal celibacy would thus be the euthanasia of mankind.
+On the other hand, if the Creator decided that the human race, having
+culminated to this crowning but barren flower of perfection, should
+nevertheless continue to increase and multiply upon earth, have you not
+victoriously exclaimed, ‘Presumptuous mortal! how canst thou presume
+to limit the resources of the Almighty? Would it not be easy for Him to
+continue some other mode, unexposed to trouble and sin and passion, as
+in the nuptials of the vegetable world, by which the generations will
+be renewed? Can we suppose that the angels--the immortal companies
+of heaven--are not hourly increasing in number, and extending their
+population throughout infinity? and yet in heaven there is no marrying
+nor giving in marriage.’ All this, clothed by you in words which my
+memory only serves me to quote imperfectly,--all this I unhesitatingly
+concede.”
+
+Mr. Roach rose and brought another bottle of the Chateau Margeaux from
+his cellaret, filled Kenelm’s glass, reseated himself, and took the
+other knee into his lap to caress.
+
+“But,” resumed Kenelm, “my doubt is this.”
+
+“Ah!” cried Mr. Roach, “let us hear the doubt.”
+
+“In the first place, is celibacy essential to the highest state of
+spiritual perfection; and, in the second place, if it were, are mortals,
+as at present constituted, capable of that culmination?”
+
+“Very well put,” said Mr. Roach, and he tossed off his glass with more
+cheerful aspect than he had hitherto exhibited.
+
+“You see,” said Kenelm, “we are compelled in this, as in other questions
+of philosophy, to resort to the inductive process, and draw our theories
+from the facts within our cognizance. Now looking round the world, is it
+the fact that old maids and old bachelors are so much more spiritually
+advanced than married folks? Do they pass their time, like an Indian
+dervish, in serene contemplation of divine excellence and beatitude?
+Are they not quite as worldly in their own way as persons who have been
+married as often as the Wife of Bath, and, generally speaking, more
+selfish, more frivolous, and more spiteful? I am sure I don’t wish to
+speak uncharitably against old maids and old bachelors. I have three
+aunts who are old maids, and fine specimens of the genus; but I am sure
+they would all three have been more agreeable companions, and quite as
+spiritually gifted, if they had been happily married, and were caressing
+their children, instead of lapdogs. So, too, I have an old bachelor
+cousin, Chillingly Mivers, whom you know. As clever as a man can be.
+But, Lord bless you! as to being wrapped in spiritual meditation, he
+could not be more devoted to the things of earth if he had married as
+many wives as Solomon, and had as many children as Priam. Finally, have
+not half the mistakes in the world arisen from a separation between the
+spiritual and the moral nature of man? Is it not, after all, through his
+dealings with his fellow-men that man makes his safest ‘approach to the
+angels’? And is not the moral system a very muscular system? Does it not
+require for healthful vigour plenty of continued exercise, and does it
+not get that exercise naturally by the relationships of family, with
+all the wider collateral struggles with life which the care of family
+necessitates?
+
+“I put these questions to you with the humblest diffidence. I expect to
+hear such answers as will thoroughly convince my reason, and I shall be
+delighted if so. For at the root of the controversy lies the passion of
+love. And love must be a very disquieting, troublesome emotion, and has
+led many heroes and sages into wonderful weaknesses and follies.”
+
+“Gently, gently, Mr. Chillingly; don’t exaggerate. Love, no doubt,
+is--ahem--a disquieting passion. Still, every emotion that changes life
+from a stagnant pool into the freshness and play of a running stream is
+disquieting to the pool. Not only love and its fellow-passions, such as
+ambition, but the exercise of the reasoning faculty, which is always at
+work in changing our ideas, is very disquieting. Love, Mr. Chillingly,
+has its good side as well as its bad. Pass the bottle.”
+
+KENELM (passing the bottle).--“Yes, yes; you are quite right in
+putting the adversary’s case strongly, before you demolish it: all good
+rhetoricians do that. Pardon me if I am up to that trick in argument.
+Assume that I know all that can be said in favour of the abnegation of
+common-sense, euphoniously called ‘love,’ and proceed to the demolition
+of the case.”
+
+THE REV. DECIMUS ROACH (hesitatingly).--“The demolition of the case?
+humph! The passions are ingrafted in the human system as part and parcel
+of it, and are not to be demolished so easily as you seem to think.
+Love, taken rationally and morally by a man of good education and sound
+principles, is--is--”
+
+KENELM.--“Well, is what?”
+
+THE REV. DECIMUS ROACH.--“A--a--a--thing not to be despised. Like the
+sun, it is the great colourist of life, Mr. Chillingly. And you are so
+right: the moral system does require daily exercise. What can give that
+exercise to a solitary man, when he arrives at the practical age in
+which he cannot sit for six hours at a stretch musing on the divine
+essence; and rheumatism or other ailments forbid his adventure into
+the wilds of Africa as a missionary? At that age, Nature, which will
+be heard, Mr. Chillingly, demands her rights. A sympathizing female
+companion by one’s side; innocent little children climbing one’s
+knee,--lovely, bewitching picture! Who can be Goth enough to rub it out,
+who fanatic enough to paint over it the image of a Saint Simeon sitting
+alone on a pillar? Take another glass. You don’t drink enough, Mr.
+Chillingly.”
+
+“I have drunk enough,” replied Kenelm, in a sullen voice, “to think I
+see double. I imagined that before me sat the austere adversary of the
+insanity of love and the miseries of wedlock. Now, I fancy I listen to
+a puling sentimentalist uttering the platitudes which the other Decimus
+Roach had already refuted. Certainly either I see double, or you amuse
+yourself with mocking my appeal to your wisdom.”
+
+“Not so, Mr. Chillingly. But the fact is, that when I wrote that book
+of which you speak I was young, and youth is enthusiastic and one-sided.
+Now, with the same disdain of the excesses to which love may hurry weak
+intellects, I recognize its benignant effects when taken, as I before
+said, rationally,--taken rationally, my young friend. At that period
+of life when the judgment is matured, the soothing companionship of
+an amiable female cannot but cheer the mind, and prevent that morose
+hoar-frost into which solitude is chilled and made rigid by increasing
+years. In short, Mr. Chillingly, having convinced myself that I erred
+in the opinion once too rashly put forth, I owe it to Truth, I owe it to
+Mankind, to make my conversion known to the world. And I am about next
+month to enter into the matrimonial state with a young lady who--”
+
+“Say no more, say no more, Mr. Roach. It must be a painful subject to
+you. Let us drop it.”
+
+“It is not a painful subject at all!” exclaimed Mr. Roach, with warmth.
+“I look forward to the fulfilment of my duty with the pleasure which
+a well-trained mind always ought to feel in recanting a fallacious
+doctrine. But you do me the justice to understand that of course I do
+not take this step I propose--for my personal satisfaction. No, sir,
+it is the value of my example to others which purifies my motives and
+animates my soul.”
+
+After this concluding and noble sentence, the conversation drooped. Host
+and guest both felt they had had enough of each other. Kenelm soon rose
+to depart.
+
+Mr. Roach, on taking leave of, him at the door, said, with marked
+emphasis,--
+
+“Not for my personal satisfaction,--remember that. Whenever you hear my
+conversion discussed in the world, say that from my own lips you heard
+these words,--NOT FOR MY PERSONAL SATISFACTION. No! my kind regards to
+Welby,--a married man himself, and a father: he will understand me.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ON quitting Oxford, Kenelm wandered for several days about the country,
+advancing to no definite goal, meeting with no noticeable adventure.
+At last he found himself mechanically retracing his steps. A magnetic
+influence he could not resist drew him back towards the grassy meads and
+the sparkling rill of Moleswich.
+
+“There must be,” said he to himself, “a mental, like an optical,
+illusion. In the last, we fancy we have seen a spectre. If we dare not
+face the apparition,--dare not attempt to touch it,--run superstitiously
+away from it,--what happens? We shall believe to our dying day that it
+was not an illusion, that it was a spectre; and so we may be crazed for
+life. But if we manfully walk up to the phantom, stretch our hands
+to seize it, oh! it fades into thin air, the cheat of our eyesight is
+dispelled, and we shall never be ghost-ridden again. So it must be with
+this mental illusion of mine. I see an image strange to my experience:
+it seems to me, at first sight, clothed with a supernatural charm; like
+an unreasoning coward, I run away from it. It continues to haunt me; I
+cannot shut out its apparition. It pursues me by day alike in the haunts
+of men,--alike in the solitudes of nature; it visits me by night in my
+dreams. I begin to say this must be a real visitant from another world:
+it must be love; the love of which I read in the Poets, as in the Poets
+I read of witchcraft and ghosts. Surely I must approach that apparition
+as a philosopher like Sir David Brewster would approach the black
+cat seated on a hearth-rug, which he tells us that some lady of his
+acquaintance constantly saw till she went into a world into which black
+cats are not held to be admitted. The more I think of it the less
+it appears to me possible that I can be really in love with a wild,
+half-educated, anomalous creature, merely because the apparition of
+her face haunts me. With perfect safety, therefore, I can approach the
+creature; in proportion as I see more of her the illusion will vanish. I
+will go back to Moleswich manfully.”
+
+Thus said Kenelm to himself, and himself answered,--“Go; for thou canst
+not help it. Thinkest thou that Daces can escape the net that has meshed
+a Roach? No,--
+
+
+ ‘Come it will, the day decreed by fate,’
+
+
+when thou must succumb to the ‘Nature which will be heard.’ Better
+succumb now, and with a good grace, than resist till thou hast reached
+thy fiftieth year, and then make a rational choice not for thy personal
+satisfaction.”
+
+Whereupon Kenelm answered to himself, indignantly, “Pooh! thou flippant.
+My _alter ego_, thou knowest not what thou art talking about! It is
+not a question of Nature; it is a question of the supernatural,--an
+illusion,--a phantom!” Thus Kenelm and himself continued to quarrel with
+each other; and the more they quarrelled, the nearer they approached
+to the haunted spot in which had been seen, and fled from, the fatal
+apparition of first love.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VI.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+SIR PETER had not heard from Kenelm since a letter informing him that
+his son had left town on an excursion, which would probably be short,
+though it might last a few weeks; and the good Baronet now resolved to
+go to London himself, take his chance of Kenelm’s return, and if
+still absent, at least learn from Mivers and others how far that very
+eccentric planet had contrived to steer a regular course amidst the
+fixed stars of the metropolitan system. He had other reasons for his
+journey. He wished to make the acquaintance of Chillingly Gordon
+before handing him over the L20,000 which Kenelm had released in that
+resettlement of estates, the necessary deeds of which the young heir had
+signed before quitting London for Moleswich. Sir Peter wished still more
+to see Cecilia Travers, in whom Kenelm’s accounts of her had inspired a
+very strong interest.
+
+The day after his arrival in town Sir Peter breakfasted with Mivers.
+
+“Upon my word you are very comfortable here,” said Sir Peter, glancing
+at the well-appointed table, and round the well-furnished rooms.
+
+“Naturally so: there is no one to prevent my being comfortable. I am not
+married; taste that omelette.”
+
+“Some men declare they never knew comfort till they were married, Cousin
+Miners.”
+
+“Some men are reflecting bodies, and catch a pallid gleam from the
+comfort which a wife concentres on herself. With a fortune so modest and
+secure, what comforts, possessed by me now, would not a Mrs. Chillingly
+Mivers ravish from my hold and appropriate to herself! Instead of these
+pleasant rooms, where should I be lodged? In a dingy den looking on
+a backyard excluded from the sun by day and vocal with cats by night;
+while Mrs. Mivers luxuriated in two drawing-rooms with southern aspect
+and perhaps a boudoir. My brougham would be torn from my uses and
+monopolized by ‘the angel of my hearth,’ clouded in her crinoline and
+halved by her chignon. No! if ever I marry--and I never deprive myself
+of the civilities and needlework which single ladies waste upon me by
+saying I shall not marry--it will be when women have fully established
+their rights; for then men may have a chance of vindicating their own.
+Then if there are two drawing-rooms in the house I shall take one;
+if not, we will toss up who shall have the back parlour; if we keep a
+brougham, it will be exclusively mine three days in the week; if Mrs. M.
+wants L200 a year for her wardrobe she must be contented with one, the
+other half will belong to my personal decoration; if I am oppressed by
+proof-sheets and printers’ devils, half of the oppression falls to her
+lot, while I take my holiday on the croquet ground at Wimbledon. Yes,
+when the present wrongs of women are exchanged for equality with men, I
+will cheerfully marry; and to do the thing generous, I will not oppose
+Mrs. M.’s voting in the vestry or for Parliament. I will give her my own
+votes with pleasure.”
+
+“I fear, my dear cousin, that you have infected Kenelm with your selfish
+ideas on the nuptial state. He does not seem inclined to marry,--eh?”
+
+“Not that I know of.”
+
+“What sort of girl is Cecilia Travers?”
+
+“One of those superior girls who are not likely to tower into that
+terrible giantess called a ‘superior woman.’ A handsome, well-educated,
+sensible young lady, not spoiled by being an heiress; in fine, just the
+sort of girl whom you could desire to fix on for a daughter-in-law.”
+
+“And you don’t think Kenelm has a fancy for her?”
+
+“Honestly speaking, I do not.”
+
+“Any counter-attraction? There are some things in which sons do not
+confide in their fathers. You have never heard that Kenelm has been a
+little wild?”
+
+“Wild he is, as the noble savage who ran in the woods,” said Cousin
+Mivers.
+
+“You frighten me!”
+
+“Before the noble savage ran across the squaws, and was wise enough to
+run away from them. Kenelm has run away now somewhere.”
+
+“Yes, he does not tell me where, nor do they know at his lodgings.
+A heap of notes on his table and no directions where they are to
+be forwarded. On the whole, however, he has held his own in London
+society,--eh?”
+
+“Certainly! he has been more courted than most young men, and perhaps
+more talked of. Oddities generally are.”
+
+“You own he has talents above the average? Do you not think he will make
+a figure in the world some day, and discharge that debt to the literary
+stores or the political interests of his country, which alas, I and my
+predecessors, the other Sir Peters, failed to do; and for which I hailed
+his birth, and gave him the name of Kenelm?”
+
+“Upon my word,” answered Mivers,--who had now finished his breakfast,
+retreated to an easy-chair, and taken from the chimney-piece one of his
+famous trabucos,--“upon my word, I can’t guess; if some great reverse
+of fortune befell him, and he had to work for his livelihood, or if some
+other direful calamity gave a shock to his nervous system and jolted it
+into a fussy, fidgety direction, I dare say he might make a splash in
+that current of life which bears men on to the grave. But you see he
+wants, as he himself very truly says, the two stimulants to definite
+action,--poverty and vanity.”
+
+“Surely there have been great men who were neither poor nor vain?”
+
+“I doubt it. But vanity is a ruling motive that takes many forms
+and many aliases: call it ambition, call it love of fame, still its
+substance is the same,--the desire of applause carried into fussiness of
+action.”
+
+“There may be the desire for abstract truth without care for applause.”
+
+“Certainly. A philosopher on a desert island may amuse himself by
+meditating on the distinction between light and heat. But if, on
+returning to the world, he publish the result of his meditations, vanity
+steps in and desires to be applauded.”
+
+“Nonsense, Cousin Mivers, he may rather desire to be of use and benefit
+to mankind. You don’t deny that there is such a thing as philanthropy.”
+
+“I don’t deny that there is such a thing as humbug. And whenever I meet
+a man who has the face to tell me that he is taking a great deal
+of trouble, and putting himself very much out of his way, for a
+philanthropical object, without the slightest idea of reward either in
+praise or pence, I know that I have a humbug before me,--a dangerous
+humbug, a swindling humbug, a fellow with his pocket full of villanous
+prospectuses and appeals to subscribers.”
+
+“Pooh, pooh; leave off that affectation of cynicism: you are not a
+bad-hearted fellow; you must love mankind; you must have an interest in
+the welfare of posterity.”
+
+“Love mankind? Interest in posterity? Bless my soul, Cousin Peter, I
+hope you have no prospectuses in _your_ pockets; no schemes for draining
+the Pontine Marshes out of pure love to mankind; no propositions for
+doubling the income-tax, as a reserve fund for posterity, should our
+coal-fields fail three thousand years hence. Love of mankind! Rubbish!
+This comes of living in the country.”
+
+“But you do love the human race; you do care for the generations that
+are to come.”
+
+“I! Not a bit of it. On the contrary, I rather dislike the human race,
+taking it altogether, and including the Australian bushmen; and I don’t
+believe any man who tells me that he would grieve half as much if
+ten millions of human beings were swallowed up by an earthquake at a
+considerable distance from his own residence, say Abyssinia, as he would
+for a rise in his butcher’s bills. As to posterity, who would consent
+to have a month’s fit of the gout or tic-douloureux in order that in the
+fourth thousand year, A. D., posterity should enjoy a perfect system of
+sewage?”
+
+Sir Peter, who had recently been afflicted by a very sharp attack
+of neuralgia, shook his head, but was too conscientious not to keep
+silence.
+
+“To turn the subject,” said Mivers, relighting the cigar which he had
+laid aside while delivering himself of his amiable opinions, “I think
+you would do well, while in town, to call on your old friend Travers,
+and be introduced to Cecilia. If you think as favourably of her as I do,
+why not ask father and daughter to pay you a visit at Exmundham? Girls
+think more about a man when they see the place which he can offer
+to them as a home, and Exmundham is an attractive place to
+girls,--picturesque and romantic.”
+
+“A very good idea,” cried Sir Peter, heartily. “And I want also to make
+the acquaintance of Chillingly Gordon. Give me his address.”
+
+“Here is his card on the chimney-piece, take it; you will always find
+him at home till two o’clock. He is too sensible to waste the forenoon
+in riding out in Hyde Park with young ladies.”
+
+“Give me your frank opinion of that young kinsman. Kenelm tells me that
+he is clever and ambitious.”
+
+“Kenelm speaks truly. He is not a man who will talk stuff about love of
+mankind and posterity. He is of our day, with large, keen, wide-awake
+eyes, that look only on such portions of mankind as can be of use to
+him, and do not spoil their sight by poring through cracked telescopes
+to catch a glimpse of posterity. Gordon is a man to be a Chancellor of
+the Exchequer, perhaps a Prime Minister.”
+
+“And old Gordon’s son is cleverer than my boy,--than the namesake of
+Kenelm Digby!” and Sir Peter sighed.
+
+“I did not say that. I am cleverer than Chillingly Gordon, and the
+proof of it is that I am too clever to wish to be Prime Minister,--very
+disagreeable office, hard work, irregular hours for meals, much abuse
+and confirmed dyspepsia.”
+
+Sir Peter went away rather down-hearted. He found Chillingly Gordon at
+home in a lodging in Jermyn Street. Though prepossessed against him by
+all he had heard, Sir Peter was soon propitiated in his favour. Gordon
+had a frank man-of-the-world way with him, and much too fine a tact
+to utter any sentiments likely to displease an old-fashioned country
+gentleman, and a relation who might possibly be of service in his
+career. He touched briefly, and with apparent feeling, on the unhappy
+litigation commenced by his father; spoke with affectionate praise of
+Kenelm; and with a discriminating good-nature of Mivers, as a man who,
+to parody the epigram on Charles II.,
+
+
+ “Never says a kindly thing
+ And never does a harsh one.”
+
+
+Then he drew Sir Peter on to talk of the country and agricultural
+prospects. Learned that among his objects in visiting town was the wish
+to inspect a patented hydraulic ram that might be very useful for his
+farm-yard, which was ill supplied with water. Startled the Baronet by
+evincing some practical knowledge of mechanics; insisted on accompanying
+him to the city to inspect the ram; did so, and approved the purchase;
+took him next to see a new American reaping-machine, and did not part
+with him till he had obtained Sir Peter’s promise to dine with him at
+the Garrick; an invitation peculiarly agreeable to Sir Peter, who had
+a natural curiosity to see some of the more recently distinguished
+frequenters of that social club. As, on quitting Gordon, Sir Peter took
+his way to the house of Leopold Travers, his thoughts turned with much
+kindliness towards his young kinsman. “Mivers and Kenelm,” quoth he to
+himself, “gave me an unfavourable impression of this lad; they represent
+him as worldly, self-seeking, and so forth. But Mivers takes such
+cynical views of character, and Kenelm is too eccentric to judge fairly
+of a sensible man of the world. At all events, it is not like an egotist
+to put himself out of his way to be so civil to an old fellow like me. A
+young man about town must have pleasanter modes of passing his day than
+inspecting hydraulic rams and reaping-machines. Clever they allow him to
+be. Yes, decidedly clever, and not offensively clever,--practical.”
+
+Sir Peter found Travers in the dining-room with his daughter, Mrs.
+Campion, and Lady Glenalvon. Travers was one of those men rare in middle
+age, who are more often to be found in their drawing-room than in their
+private study; he was fond of female society; and perhaps it was this
+predilection which contributed to preserve in him the charm of good
+breeding and winning manners. The two men had not met for many years;
+not indeed since Travers was at the zenith of his career of fashion,
+and Sir Peter was one of those pleasant _dilettanti_ and half humoristic
+conversationalists who become popular and courted diners-out.
+
+Sir Peter had originally been a moderate Whig because his father
+had been one before him; but he left the Whig party with the Duke of
+Richmond, Mr. Stanley (afterwards Lord Derby), and others, when it
+seemed to him that that party had ceased to be moderate.
+
+Leopold Travers had, as a youth in the Guards, been a high Tory, but,
+siding with Sir Robert Peel on the repeal of the Corn Laws, remained
+with the Peelites after the bulk of the Tory party had renounced the
+guidance of their former chief, and now went with these Peelites in
+whatever direction the progress of the age might impel their strides in
+advance of Whigs and in defiance of Tories.
+
+However, it is not the politics of these two gentlemen that are in
+question now. As I have just said, they had not met for many years.
+Travers was very little changed. Sir Peter recognized him at a glance;
+Sir Peter was much changed, and Travers hesitated before, on hearing
+his name announced, he felt quite sure that it was the right Sir Peter
+towards whom he advanced, and to whom he extended his cordial hand.
+Travers preserved the colour of his hair and the neat proportions of his
+figure, and was as scrupulously well dressed as in his dandy days. Sir
+Peter, originally very thin and with fair locks and dreamy blue eyes,
+had now become rather portly,--at least towards the middle of him,--and
+very gray; had long ago taken to spectacles; his dress, too, was very
+old-fashioned, and made by a country tailor. He looked quite as much
+a gentleman as Travers did; quite perhaps as healthy, allowing for
+difference of years; quite as likely to last his time. But between them
+there was the difference of the nervous temperament and the lymphatic.
+Travers, with less brain than Sir Peter, had kept his brain constantly
+active; Sir Peter had allowed his brain to dawdle over old books and
+lazily delight in letting the hours slip by. Therefore Travers still
+looked young, alert,--up to his day, up to anything; while Sir Peter,
+entering that drawing-room, seemed a sort of Rip van Winkle who had
+slept through the past generation, and looked on the present with eyes
+yet drowsy. Still, in those rare moments when he was thoroughly roused
+up, there would have been found in Sir Peter a glow of heart, nay,
+even a vigour of thought, much more expressive than the constitutional
+alertness that characterized Leopold Travers, of the attributes we most
+love and admire in the young.
+
+“My dear Sir Peter, is it you? I am so glad to see you again,” said
+Travers. “What an age since we met, and how condescendingly kind you
+were then to me; silly fop that I was! But bygones are bygones; come
+to the present. Let me introduce to you, first, my valued friend, Mrs.
+Campion, whose distinguished husband you remember. Ah, what pleasant
+meetings we had at his house! And next, that young lady of whom she
+takes motherly charge, my daughter Cecilia. Lady Glenalvon, your wife’s
+friend, of course needs no introduction: time stands still with her.”
+
+Sir Peter lowered his spectacles, which in reality he only wanted for
+books in small print, and gazed attentively on the three ladies,--at
+each gaze a bow. But while his eyes were still lingeringly fixed on
+Cecilia, Lady Glenalvon advanced, naturally in right of rank and the
+claim of old acquaintance, the first of the three to greet him.
+
+“Alas, my dear Sir Peter! time does not stand still for any of us; but
+what matter, if it leaves pleasant footprints? When I see you again, my
+youth comes before me,--my early friend, Caroline Brotherton, now Lady
+Chillingly; our girlish walks with each other; wreaths and ball-dresses
+the practical topic; prospective husbands, the dream at a distance. Come
+and sit here: tell me all about Caroline.”
+
+Sir Peter, who had little to say about Caroline that could possibly
+interest anybody but himself, nevertheless took his seat beside Lady
+Glenalvon, and, as in duty bound, made the most flattering account
+of his She Baronet which experience or invention would allow. All the
+while, however, his thoughts were on Kenelm, and his eyes on Cecilia.
+
+Cecilia resumes some mysterious piece of lady’s work, no matter
+what,--perhaps embroidery for a music-stool, perhaps a pair of slippers
+for her father (which, being rather vain of his feet and knowing they
+looked best in plain morocco, he will certainly never wear). Cecilia
+appears absorbed in her occupation; but her eyes and her thoughts are
+on Sir Peter. Why, my lady reader may guess. And oh, so flatteringly,
+so lovingly fixed! She thinks he has a most charming, intelligent,
+benignant countenance. She admires even his old-fashioned frock-coat,
+high neckcloth, and strapped trousers. She venerates his gray hairs,
+pure of dye. She tries to find a close resemblance between that
+fair, blue-eyed, plumpish, elderly gentleman and the lean, dark-eyed,
+saturnine, lofty Kenelm; she detects the likeness which nobody else
+would. She begins to love Sir Peter, though he has not said a word to
+her.
+
+Ah! on this, a word for what it is worth to you, my young readers. You,
+sir, wishing to marry a girl who is to be deeply, lastingly in love with
+you, and a thoroughly good wife practically, consider well how she takes
+to your parents; how she attaches to them an inexpressible sentiment,
+a disinterested reverence; even should you but dimly recognize the
+sentiment, or feel the reverence, how if between you and your parents
+some little cause of coldness arise, she will charm you back to honour
+your father and your mother, even though they are not particularly
+genial to her: well, if you win that sort of girl as your wife think you
+have got a treasure. You have won a woman to whom Heaven has given the
+two best attributes,--intense feeling of love, intense sense of duty.
+What, my dear lady reader, I say of one sex, I say of another, though
+in a less degree; because a girl who marries becomes of her husband’s
+family, and the man does not become of his wife’s. Still I distrust the
+depth of any man’s love to a woman, if he does not feel a great degree
+of tenderness (and forbearance where differences arise) for her parents.
+But the wife must not so put them in the foreground as to make the
+husband think he is cast in the cold of the shadow. Pardon this
+intolerable length of digression, dear reader: it is not altogether a
+digression, for it belongs to my tale that you should clearly understand
+the sort of girl that is personified in Cecilia Travers.
+
+“What has become of Kenelm?” asked Lady Glenalvon.
+
+“I wish I could tell you,” answered Sir Peter. “He wrote me word that he
+was going forth on rambles into ‘fresh woods and pastures new,’ perhaps
+for some weeks. I have not had a word from him since.”
+
+“You make me uneasy,” said Lady Glenalvon. “I hope nothing can have
+happened to him: he cannot have fallen ill.”
+
+Cecilia stops her work, and looks up wistfully.
+
+“Make your mind easy,” said Travers with a laugh; “I am in this secret.
+He has challenged the champion of England, and gone into the country to
+train.”
+
+“Very likely,” said Sir Peter, quietly: “I should not be in the least
+surprised; should you, Miss Travers?”
+
+“I think it more probable that Mr. Chillingly is doing some kindness to
+others which he wishes to keep concealed.”
+
+Sir Peter was pleased with this reply, and drew his chair nearer to
+Cecilia’s. Lady Glenalvon, charmed to bring those two together, soon
+rose and took leave.
+
+Sir Peter remained nearly an hour talking chiefly with Cecilia, who won
+her way into his heart with extraordinary ease; and he did not quit the
+house till he had engaged her father, Mrs. Campion, and herself to pay
+him a week’s visit at Exmundham, towards the end of the London season,
+which was fast approaching.
+
+Having obtained this promise, Sir Peter went away, and ten minutes
+after Mr. Chillingly Gordon entered the drawing-room. He had already
+established a visiting acquaintance with the Traverses. Travers
+had taken a liking to him. Mrs. Campion found him an extremely
+well-informed, unaffected young man, very superior to young men in
+general. Cecilia was cordially polite to Kenelm’s cousin. Altogether
+that was a very happy day for Sir Peter. He enjoyed greatly his dinner
+at the Garrick, where he met some old acquaintance and was presented to
+some new “celebrities.” He observed that Gordon stood well with these
+eminent persons. Though as yet undistinguished himself, they treated him
+with a certain respect, as well as with evident liking. The most eminent
+of them, at least the one with the most solidly established reputation,
+said in Sir Peter’s ear, “You may be proud of your nephew Gordon!”
+
+“He is not my nephew, only the son of a very distant cousin.”
+
+“Sorry for that. But he will shed lustre on kinsfolk, however distant.
+Clever fellow, yet popular; rare combination,--sure to rise.”
+
+Sir Peter suppressed a gulp in the throat. “Ah, if some one as eminent
+had spoken thus of Kenelm!”
+
+But he was too generous to allow that half-envious sentiment to last
+more than a moment. Why should he not be proud of any member of the
+family who could irradiate the antique obscurity of the Chillingly race?
+And how agreeable this clever young man made himself to Sir Peter!
+
+The next day Gordon insisted on accompanying him to see the latest
+acquisitions in the British Museum, and various other exhibitions, and
+went at night to the Prince of Wales’s Theatre, where Sir Peter was
+infinitely delighted with an admirable little comedy by Mr. Robertson,
+admirably placed on the stage by Marie Wilton. The day after, when
+Gordon called on him at his hotel, he cleared his throat, and thus
+plunged at once into the communication he had hitherto delayed.
+
+“Gordon, my boy, I owe you a debt, and I am now, thanks to Kenelm, able
+to pay it.”
+
+Gordon gave a little start of surprise, but remained silent.
+
+“I told your father, shortly after Kenelm was born, that I meant to give
+up my London house, and lay by L1000 a year for you, in compensation
+for your chance of succeeding to Exmundham should I have died childless.
+Well, your father did not seem to think much of that promise, and went
+to law with me about certain unquestionable rights of mine. How so
+clever a man could have made such a mistake would puzzle me, if I did
+not remember that he had a quarrelsome temper. Temper is a thing that
+often dominates cleverness,--an uncontrollable thing; and allowances
+must be made for it. Not being of a quarrelsome temper myself (the
+Chillinglys are a placid race), I did not make the allowance for your
+father’s differing, and (for a Chillingly) abnormal, constitution. The
+language and the tone of his letter respecting it nettled me. I did
+not see why, thus treated, I should pinch myself to lay by a thousand a
+year. Facilities for buying a property most desirable for the possessor
+of Exmundham presented themselves. I bought it with borrowed money, and
+though I gave up the house in London, I did not lay by the thousand a
+year.”
+
+“My dear Sir Peter, I have always regretted that my poor father
+was misled--perhaps out of too paternal a care for my supposed
+interests--into that unhappy and fruitless litigation, after which
+no one could doubt that any generous intentions on your part would be
+finally abandoned. It has been a grateful surprise to me that I have
+been so kindly and cordially received into the family by Kenelm and
+yourself. Pray oblige me by dropping all reference to pecuniary matters:
+the idea of compensation to a very distant relative for the loss of
+expectations he had no right to form, is too absurd, for me at least,
+ever to entertain.”
+
+“But I am absurd enough to entertain it, though you express yourself in
+a very high-minded way. To come to the point, Kenelm is of age, and we
+have cut off the entail. The estate of course remains absolutely with
+Kenelm to dispose of, as it did before, and we must take it for granted
+that he will marry; at all events he cannot fall into your poor father’s
+error: but whatever Kenelm hereafter does with his property, it is
+nothing to you, and is not to be counted upon. Even the title dies with
+Kenelm if he has no son. On resettling the estate, however, sums
+of money have been realized which, as I stated before, enable me to
+discharge the debt which Kenelm heartily agrees with me is due to
+you. L20,000 are now lying at my bankers’ to be transferred to yours;
+meanwhile, if you will call on my solicitor, Mr. Vining, Lincoln’s-inn,
+you can see the new deed and give to him your receipt for the L20,000,
+for which he holds my cheque. Stop! stop! stop! I will not hear a. word:
+no thanks; they are not due.”
+
+Here Gordon, who had during this speech uttered various brief
+exclamations, which Sir Peter did not heed, caught hold of his kinsman’s
+hand, and, despite of all struggles, pressed his lips on it. “I must
+thank you; I must give some vent to my emotions,” cried Gordon. “This
+sum, great in itself, is far more to me than you can imagine: it opens
+my career; it assures my future.”
+
+“So Kenelm tells me; he said that sum would be more use to you now than
+ten times the amount twenty years hence.”
+
+“So it will,--it will. And Kenelm consents to this sacrifice?”
+
+“Consents! urges it.”
+
+Gordon turned away his face, and Sir Peter resumed: “You want to get
+into Parliament; very natural ambition for a clever young fellow. I
+don’t presume to dictate politics to you. I hear you are what is called
+a Liberal; a man may be a Liberal, I suppose, without being a Jacobin.”
+
+“I hope so, indeed. For my part I am anything but a violent man.”
+
+“Violent, no! Who ever heard of a violent Chillingly? But I was reading
+in the newspaper to-day a speech addressed to some popular audience,
+in which the orator was for dividing all the lands and all the capital
+belonging to other people among the working class, calmly and quietly,
+without any violence, and deprecating violence: but saying, perhaps very
+truly, that the people to be robbed might not like it, and might offer
+violence; in which case woe betide them; it was they who would be guilty
+of violence; and they must take the consequences if they resisted the
+reasonable, propositions of himself and his friends! That, I suppose, is
+among the new ideas with which Kenelm is more familiar than I am. Do you
+entertain those new ideas?”
+
+“Certainly not: I despise the fools who do.”
+
+“And you will not abet revolutionary measures if you get into
+Parliament?”
+
+“My dear Sir Peter, I fear you have heard very false reports of my
+opinions if you put such questions. Listen,” and therewith Gordon
+launched into dissertations very clever, very subtle, which committed
+him to nothing, beyond the wisdom of guiding popular opinions into right
+directions: what might be right directions he did not define; he left
+Sir Peter to guess them. Sir Peter did guess them, as Gordon meant he
+should, to be the directions which he, Sir Peter, thought right; and he
+was satisfied.
+
+That subject disposed of, Gordon said, with much apparent feeling, “May
+I ask you to complete the favours you have lavished on me? I have never
+seen Exmundham, and the home of the race from which I sprang has a deep
+interest for time. Will you allow me to spend a few days with you, and
+under the shade of your own trees take lessons in political science from
+one who has evidently reflected on it profoundly?”
+
+“Profoundly, no; a little,--a little, as a mere bystander,” said Sir
+Peter, modestly, but much flattered. “Come, my dear boy, by all means;
+you will have a hearty welcome. By the by, Travers and his handsome
+daughter promised to visit me in about a fortnight, why not come at the
+same time?”
+
+A sudden flash lit up the young man’s countenance.
+
+“I shall be so delighted,” he cried. “I am but slightly acquainted with
+Mr. Travers, but I like him much, and Mrs. Campion is so well informed.”
+
+“And what say you to the girl?”
+
+“The girl, Miss Travers. Oh, she is very well in her way. But I don’t
+talk with young ladies more than I can help.”
+
+“Then you are like your cousin Kenelm?”
+
+“I wish I were like him in other things.”
+
+“No, one such oddity in a family is quite enough. But though I would
+not have you change to a Kenelm, I would not change Kenelm for the most
+perfect model of a son that the world can exhibit.” Delivering himself
+of this burst of parental fondness, Sir Peter shook hands with Gordon,
+and walked off to Mivers, who was to give him luncheon and then
+accompany him to the station. Sir Peter was to return to Exmundham by
+the afternoon express.
+
+Left alone, Gordon indulged in one of those luxurious guesses into the
+future which form the happiest moments in youth when so ambitious as
+his. The sum Sir Peter placed at his disposal would insure his entrance
+in Parliament. He counted with confidence on early successes there. He
+extended the scope of his views. With such successes he might calculate
+with certainty on a brilliant marriage, augmenting his fortune, and
+confirming his position. He had previously fixed his thoughts on Cecilia
+Travers. I will do him the justice to say not from mercenary motives
+alone, but not certainly with the impetuous ardour of youthful love. He
+thought her exactly fitted to be the wife of an eminent public man, in
+person, acquirement, dignified yet popular manners. He esteemed her, he
+liked her, and then her fortune would add solidity to his position. In
+fact, he had that sort of rational attachment to Cecilia which wise men,
+like Lord Bacon and Montaigne, would commend to another wise man seeking
+a wife. What opportunities of awaking in herself a similar, perhaps a
+warmer, attachment the visit to Exmundham would afford! He had learned
+when he had called on the Traverses that they were going thither, and
+hence that burst of family sentiment which had procured the invitation
+to himself.
+
+But he must be cautious, he must not prematurely awaken Travers’s
+suspicions. He was not as yet a match that the squire could approve of
+for his heiress. And, though he was ignorant of Sir Peter’s designs
+on that, young lady, he was much too prudent to confide his own to a
+kinsman of whose discretion he had strong misgivings. It was enough for
+him at present that way was opened for his own resolute energies. And
+cheerfully, though musingly, he weighed its obstacles, and divined its
+goal, as he paced his floor with bended head and restless strides, now
+quick, now slow.
+
+Sir Peter, in the meanwhile, found a very good luncheon prepared for
+him at Mivers’s rooms, which he had all to himself, for his host never
+“spoilt his dinner and insulted his breakfast” by that intermediate
+meal. He remained at his desk writing brief notes of business, or
+of pleasure, while Sir Peter did justice to lamb cutlets and grilled
+chicken. But he looked up from his task, with raised eyebrows, when
+Sir Peter, after a somewhat discursive account of his visit to the
+Traverses, his admiration of Cecilia, and the adroitness with which,
+acting on his cousin’s hint, he had engaged the family to spend a few
+days at Exmundham, added, “And, by the by, I have asked young Gordon to
+meet them.”
+
+“To meet them! meet Mr. and Miss Travers! you have? I thought you wished
+Kenelm to marry Cecilia. I was mistaken, you meant Gordon!”
+
+“Gordon,” exclaimed Sir Peter, dropping his knife and fork. “Nonsense,
+you don’t suppose that Miss Travers prefers him to Kenelm, or that
+he has the presumption to fancy that her father would sanction his
+addresses?”
+
+“I indulge in no suppositions of the sort. I content myself with
+thinking that Gordon is clever, insinuating, young; and it is a very
+good chance of bettering himself that you have thrown in his way.
+However, it is no affair of mine; and though on the whole I like
+Kenelm better than Gordon, still I like Gordon very well, and I have
+an interest in following his career which I can’t say I have in
+conjecturing what may be Kenelm’s--more likely no career at all.”
+
+“Mivers, you delight in provoking me; you do say such uncomfortable
+things. But, in the first place, Gordon spoke rather slightingly of Miss
+Travers.”
+
+“Ah, indeed; that’s a bad sign,” muttered Mivers.
+
+Sir Peter did not hear him, and went on.
+
+“And, besides, I feel pretty sure that the dear girl has already a
+regard for Kenelm which allows no room for a rival. However, I shall not
+forget your hint, but keep a sharp lookout; and, if I see the young man
+wants to be too sweet on Cecilia, I shall cut short his visit.”
+
+“Give yourself no trouble in the matter; it will do no good. Marriages
+are made in heaven. Heaven’s will be done. If I can get away I will
+run down to you for a day or two. Perhaps in that case you can ask Lady
+Glenalvon. I like her, and she likes Kenelm. Have you finished? I see
+the brougham is at the door, and we have to call at your hotel to take
+up your carpet-bag.”
+
+Mivers was deliberately sealing his notes while he thus spoke. He now
+rang for his servant, gave orders for their delivery, and then followed
+Sir Peter down stairs and into the brougham. Not a word would he say
+more about Gordon, and Sir Peter shrank from telling him about the
+L20,000. Chillingly Mivers was perhaps the last person to whom Sir
+Peter would be tempted to parade an act of generosity. Mivers might not
+unfrequently do a generous act himself, provided it was not divulged;
+but he had always a sneer for the generosity of others.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+WANDERING back towards Moleswich, Kenelm found himself a little before
+sunset on the banks of the garrulous brook, almost opposite to the house
+inhabited by Lily Mordaunt. He stood long and silently by the grassy
+margin, his dark shadow falling over the stream, broken into fragments
+by the eddy and strife of waves, fresh from their leap down the
+neighbouring waterfall. His eyes rested on the house and the garden lawn
+in the front. The upper windows were open. “I wonder which is hers,” he
+said to himself. At last he caught a glimpse of the gardener, bending
+over a flower border with his watering-pot, and then moving slowly
+through the little shrubbery, no doubt to his own cottage. Now the lawn
+was solitary, save that a couple of thrushes dropped suddenly on the
+sward.
+
+“Good evening, sir,” said a voice. “A capital spot for trout this.”
+
+Kenelm turned his head, and beheld on the footpath, just behind him,
+a respectable elderly man, apparently of the class of a small retail
+tradesman, with a fishing-rod in his hand and a basket belted to his
+side.
+
+“For trout,” replied Kenelm; “I dare say. A strangely attractive spot
+indeed.”
+
+“Are you an angler, sir, if I may make bold to inquire?” asked the
+elderly man, somewhat perhaps puzzled as to the rank of the stranger;
+noticing, on the one hand, his dress and his mien, on the other, slung
+to his shoulders, the worn and shabby knapsack which Kenelm had carried,
+at home and abroad, the preceding year.
+
+“Ay, I am an angler.”
+
+“Then this is the best place in the whole stream. Look, sir, there
+is Izaak Walton’s summer-house; and further down you see that white,
+neat-looking house. Well, that is my house, sir, and I have an apartment
+which I let to gentleman anglers. It is generally occupied throughout
+the summer months. I expect every day to have a letter to engage it,
+but it is vacant now. A very nice apartment, sir,--sitting-room and
+bedroom.”
+
+“_Descende ceolo, et dic age tibia_,” said Kenelm.
+
+“Sir?” said the elderly man.
+
+“I beg you ten thousand pardons. I have had the misfortune to have been
+at the university, and to have learned a little Latin, which sometimes
+comes back very inopportunely. But, speaking in plain English, what
+I meant to say is this: I invoked the Muse to descend from heaven and
+bring with her--the original says a fife, but I meant--a fishing-rod. I
+should think your apartment would suit me exactly; pray show it to me.”
+
+“With the greatest pleasure,” said the elderly man. “The Muse need not
+bring a fishing-rod! we have all sorts of tackle at your service, and a
+boat too, if you care for that. The stream hereabouts is so shallow and
+narrow that a boat is of little use till you get farther down.”
+
+“I don’t want to get farther down; but should I want to get to the
+opposite bank, without wading across, would the boat take me or is there
+a bridge?”
+
+“The boat can take you. It is a flat-bottomed punt, and there is a
+bridge too for foot-passengers, just opposite my house; and between
+this and Moleswich, where the stream widens, there is a ferry. The stone
+bridge for traffic is at the farther end of the town.”
+
+“Good. Let us go at once to your house.”
+
+The two men walked on.
+
+“By the by,” said Kenelm, as they walked, “do you know much of the
+family that inhabit the pretty cottage on the opposite side, which we
+have just left behind?”
+
+“Mrs. Cameron’s. Yes, of course, a very good lady; and Mr. Melville, the
+painter. I am sure I ought to know, for he has often lodged with me
+when he came to visit Mrs. Cameron. He recommends my apartment to his
+friends, and they are my best lodgers. I like painters, sir, though I
+don’t know much about paintings. They are pleasant gentlemen, and easily
+contented with my humble roof and fare.”
+
+“You are quite right. I don’t know much about paintings myself; but I am
+inclined to believe that painters, judging not from what I have seen of
+them, for I have not a single acquaintance among them personally, but
+from what I have read of their lives, are, as a general rule, not only
+pleasant but noble gentlemen. They form within themselves desires to
+beautify or exalt commonplace things, and they can only accomplish their
+desires by a constant study of what is beautiful and what is exalted.
+A man constantly so engaged ought to be a very noble gentleman, even
+though he may be the son of a shoeblack. And living in a higher world
+than we do, I can conceive that he is, as you say, very well contented
+with humble roof and fare in the world we inhabit.”
+
+“Exactly, sir; I see--I see now, though you put it in a way that never
+struck me before.”
+
+“And yet,” said Kenelm, looking benignly at the speaker, “you seem to
+me a well-educated and intelligent man; reflective on things in general,
+without being unmindful of your interests in particular, especially when
+you have lodgings to let. Do not be offended. That sort of man is not
+perhaps born to be a painter, but I respect him highly. The world, sir,
+requires the vast majority of its inhabitants to live in it,--to live
+by it. ‘Each for himself, and God for us all.’ The greatest happiness
+of the greatest number is best secured by a prudent consideration for
+Number One.”
+
+Somewhat to Kenelm’s surprise (allowing that he had now learned enough
+of life to be occasionally surprised) the elderly man here made a dead
+halt, stretched out his hand cordially, and cried, “Hear, hear! I see
+that, like me, you are a decided democrat.”
+
+“Democrat! Pray, may I ask, not why you are one,--that would be a
+liberty, and democrats resent any liberty taken with themselves; but why
+you suppose I am?”
+
+“You spoke of the greatest happiness of the greatest number. That is
+a democratic sentiment surely! Besides, did not you say, sir, that
+painters,--painters, sir, painters, even if they were the sons of
+shoeblacks, were the true gentlemen,--the true noblemen?”
+
+“I did not say that exactly, to the disparagement of other gentlemen and
+nobles. But if I did, what then?”
+
+“Sir, I agree with you. I despise rank; I despise dukes and earls and
+aristocrats. ‘An honest man’s the noblest work of God.’ Some poet says
+that. I think Shakspeare. Wonderful man, Shakspeare. A tradesman’s
+son,--butcher, I believe. Eh! My uncle was a butcher, and might have
+been an alderman. I go along with you heartily, heartily. I am a
+democrat, every inch of me. Shake hands, sir, shake hands; we are all
+equals. ‘Each man for himself, and God for us all.’”
+
+“I have no objection to shake hands,” said Kenelm; “but don’t let me owe
+your condescension to false pretences. Though we are all equal before
+the law, except the rich man, who has little chance of justice as
+against a poor man when submitted to an English jury, yet I utterly deny
+that any two men you select can be equals. One must beat the other
+in something; and, when one man beats another, democracy ceases and
+aristocracy begins.”
+
+“Aristocracy! I don’t see that. What do you mean by aristocracy?”
+
+“The ascendency of the better man. In a rude State the better man is
+the stronger; in a corrupt State, perhaps the more roguish; in modern
+republics the jobbers get the money and the lawyers get the power. In
+well-ordered States alone aristocracy appears at its genuine worth:
+the better man in birth, because respect for ancestry secures a higher
+standard of honour; the better man in wealth, because of the immense
+uses to enterprise, energy, and the fine arts, which rich men must be if
+they follow their natural inclinations; the better man in character, the
+better man in ability, for reasons too obvious to define; and these two
+last will beat the others in the government of the State, if the State
+be flourishing and free. All these four classes of better men constitute
+true aristocracy; and when a better government than a true aristocracy
+shall be devised by the wit of man, we shall not be far off from
+the Millennium and the reign of saints. But here we are at the
+house,--yours, is it not? I like the look of it extremely.”
+
+The elderly man now entered the little porch, over which clambered
+honeysuckle and ivy intertwined, and ushered Kenelm into a pleasant
+parlour, with a bay window, and an equally pleasant bedroom behind it.
+
+“Will it do, sir?”
+
+“Perfectly. I take it from this moment. My knapsack contains all I shall
+need for the night. There is a portmanteau of mine at Mr. Somers’s shop,
+which can be sent here in the morning.”
+
+“But we have not settled about the terms,” said the elderly man,
+beginning to feel rather doubtful whether he ought thus to have
+installed in his home a stalwart pedestrian of whom he knew nothing,
+and who, though talking glibly enough on other things, had preserved an
+ominous silence on the subject of payment.
+
+“Terms? true, name them.”
+
+“Including board?”
+
+“Certainly. Chameleons live on air; democrats on wind bags. I have a
+more vulgar appetite, and require mutton.”
+
+“Meat is very dear now-a-days,” said the elderly man, “and I am afraid,
+for board and lodging I cannot charge you less than L3 3s.,--say L3 a
+week. My lodgers usually pay a week in advance.”
+
+“Agreed,” said Kenelm, extracting three sovereigns from his purse. “I
+have dined already: I want nothing more this evening; let me detain you
+no further. Be kind enough to shut the door after you.”
+
+When he was alone, Kenelm seated himself in the recess of the bay
+window, against the casement, and looked forth intently. Yes; he was
+right: he could see from thence the home of Lily. Not, indeed, more than
+a white gleam of the house through the interstices of trees and shrubs,
+but the gentle lawn sloping to the brook, with the great willow at the
+end dipping its boughs into the water, and shutting out all view beyond
+itself by its bower of tender leaves. The young man bent his face on his
+hands and mused dreamily: the evening deepened; the stars came forth;
+the rays of the moon now peered aslant through the arching dips of the
+willow, silvering their way as they stole to the waves below.
+
+“Shall I bring lights, sir? or do you prefer a lamp or candles?” asked
+a voice behind,--the voice of the elderly man’s wife. “Do you like the
+shutters closed?”
+
+The question startled the dreamer. They seemed mocking his own old
+mockings on the romance of love. Lamp or candles, practical lights for
+prosaic eyes, and shutters closed against moon and stars!
+
+“Thank you, ma’am, not yet,” he said; and rising quietly he placed his
+hand on the window-sill, swung himself through the open casement, and
+passed slowly along the margin of the rivulet, by a path checkered
+alternately with shade and starlight; the moon yet more slowly rising
+above the willows, and lengthening its track along the wavelets.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THOUGH Kenelm did not think it necessary at present to report to his
+parents or his London acquaintances his recent movements and his present
+resting-place, it never entered into his head to lurk _perdu_ in the
+immediate vicinity of Lily’s house, and seek opportunities of meeting
+her clandestinely. He walked to Mrs. Braefield’s the next morning, found
+her at home, and said in rather a more off-hand manner than was habitual
+to him, “I have hired a lodging in your neighbourhood, on the banks of
+the brook, for the sake of its trout-fishing. So you will allow me to
+call on you sometimes, and one of these days I hope you will give me the
+dinner I so unceremoniously rejected some days ago. I was then summoned
+away suddenly, much against my will.”
+
+“Yes; my husband said that you shot off from him with a wild exclamation
+about duty.”
+
+“Quite true; my reason, and I may say my conscience, were greatly
+perplexed upon a matter extremely important and altogether new to me. I
+went to Oxford,--the place above all others in which questions of
+reason and conscience are most deeply considered, and perhaps
+least satisfactorily solved. Relieved in my mind by my visit to a
+distinguished ornament of that university, I felt I might indulge in a
+summer holiday, and here I am.”
+
+“Ah! I understand. You had religious doubts,--thought perhaps of turning
+Roman Catholic. I hope you are not going to do so?”
+
+“My doubts were not necessarily of a religious nature. Pagans have
+entertained them.”
+
+“Whatever they were I am pleased to see they did not prevent your
+return,” said Mrs. Braefield, graciously. “But where have you found a
+lodging; why not have come to us? My husband would have been scarcely
+less glad than myself to receive you.”
+
+“You say that so sincerely, and so cordially, that to answer by a brief
+‘I thank you’ seems rigid and heartless. But there are times in life
+when one yearns to be alone,--to commune with one’s own heart, and, if
+possible, be still; I am in one of those moody times. Bear with me.”
+
+Mrs. Braefield looked at him with affectionate, kindly interest. She
+had gone before him through the solitary road of young romance. She
+remembered her dreamy, dangerous girlhood, when she, too, had yearned to
+be alone.
+
+“Bear with you; yes, indeed. I wish, Mr. Chillingly, that I were your
+sister, and that you would confide in me. Something troubles you.”
+
+“Troubles me,--no. My thoughts are happy ones, and they may sometimes
+perplex me, but they do not trouble.”
+
+Kenelm said this very softly; and in the warmer light of his musing
+eyes, the sweeter play of his tranquil smile, there was an expression
+which did not belie his words.
+
+“You have not told me where you have found a lodging,” said Mrs.
+Braefield, somewhat abruptly.
+
+“Did I not?” replied Kenelm, with an unconscious start, as from an
+abstracted reverie. “With no undistinguished host, I presume, for when
+I asked him this morning for the right address of this cottage, in order
+to direct such luggage as I have to be sent there, he gave me his card
+with a grand air, saying, ‘I am pretty well known at Moleswich, by
+and beyond it.’ I have not yet looked at his card. Oh, here it
+is,--‘Algernon Sidney Gale Jones, Cromwell Lodge;’ you laugh. What do
+you know of him?”
+
+“I wish my husband were here; he would tell you more about him. Mr.
+Jones is quite a character.”
+
+“So I perceive.”
+
+“A great radical,--very talkative and troublesome at the vestry; but our
+vicar, Mr. Emlyn, says there is no real harm in him, that his bark is
+worse than his bite, and that his republican or radical notions must be
+laid to the door of his godfathers! In addition to his name of Jones, he
+was unhappily christened Gale; Gale Jones being a noted radical orator
+at the time of his birth. And I suppose Algernon Sidney was prefixed
+to Gale in order to devote the new-born more emphatically to republican
+principles.”
+
+“Naturally, therefore, Algernon Sidney Gale Jones baptizes his house
+Cromwell Lodge, seeing that Algernon Sidney held the Protectorate in
+especial abhorrence, and that the original Gale Jones, if an honest
+radical, must have done the same, considering what rough usage the
+advocates of Parliamentary Reform met with at the hands of his Highness.
+But we must be indulgent to men who have been unfortunately christened
+before they had any choice of the names that were to rule their fate.
+I myself should have been less whimsical had I not been named after a
+Kenelm who believed in sympathetic powders. Apart from his political
+doctrines, I like my landlord: he keeps his wife in excellent order. She
+seems frightened at the sound of her own footsteps, and glides to and
+fro, a pallid image of submissive womanhood in list slippers.”
+
+“Great recommendations certainly, and Cromwell Lodge is very prettily
+situated. By the by, it is very near Mrs. Cameron’s.”
+
+“Now I think of it, so it is,” said Kenelm, innocently. Ah! my friend
+Kenelm, enemy of shams, and truth-teller, _par excellence_, what hast
+thou come to? How are the mighty fallen! “Since you say you will dine
+with us, suppose we fix the day after to-morrow, and I will ask Mrs.
+Cameron and Lily.”
+
+“The day after to-morrow: I shall be delighted.”
+
+“An early hour?”
+
+“The earlier the better.”
+
+“Is six o’clock too early?”
+
+“Too early! certainly not; on the contrary. Good-day: I must now go to
+Mrs. Somers; she has charge of my portmanteau.”
+
+Then Kenelm rose.
+
+“Poor dear Lily!” said Mrs. Braefield; “I wish she were less of a
+child.”
+
+Kenelm reseated himself.
+
+“Is she a child? I don’t think she is actually a child.”
+
+“Not in years; she is between seventeen and eighteen: but my husband
+says that she is too childish to talk to, and always tells me to take
+her off his hands; he would rather talk with Mrs. Cameron.”
+
+“Indeed!”
+
+“Still I find something in her.”
+
+“Indeed!”
+
+“Not exactly childish, nor quite womanish.”
+
+“What then?”
+
+“I can’t exactly define. But you know what Mr. Melville and Mrs. Cameron
+call her as a pet name?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Fairy! Fairies have no age; fairy is neither child nor woman.”
+
+“Fairy. She is called fairy by those who know her best? Fairy!”
+
+“And she believes in fairies.”
+
+“Does she?--so do I. Pardon me, I must be off. The day after
+to-morrow,--six o’clock.”
+
+“Wait one moment,” said Elsie, going to her writing-table. “Since you
+pass Grasmere on your way home, will you kindly leave this note?”
+
+“I thought Grasmere was a lake in the north?”
+
+“Yes; but Mr. Melville chose to call the cottage by the name of the
+lake. I think the first picture he ever sold was a view of Wordsworth’s
+house there. Here is my note to ask Mrs. Cameron to meet you; but if you
+object to be my messenger--”
+
+“Object! my dear Mrs. Braefield. As you say, I pass close by the
+cottage.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+KENELM went with somewhat rapid pace from Mrs. Braefield’s to the shop
+in the High Street kept by Will Somers. Jessie was behind the counter,
+which was thronged with customers. Kenelm gave her a brief direction
+about his portmanteau, and then passed into the back parlour, where
+her husband was employed on his baskets,--with the baby’s cradle in
+the corner, and its grandmother rocking it mechanically, as she read a
+wonderful missionary tract full of tales of miraculous conversions: into
+what sort of Christians we will not pause to inquire.
+
+“And so you are happy, Will?” said Kenelm, seating himself between the
+basket-maker and the infant; the dear old mother beside him, reading the
+tract which linked her dreams of life eternal with life just opening
+in the cradle that she rocked. He not happy! How he pitied the man who
+could ask such a question.
+
+“Happy, sir! I should think so, indeed. There is not a night on which
+Jessie and I, and mother too, do not pray that some day or other you may
+be as happy. By and by the baby will learn to pray ‘God bless papa, and
+mamma, grandmamma, and Mr. Chillingly.’”
+
+“There is some one else much more deserving of prayers than I, though
+needing them less. You will know some day: pass it by now. To return to
+the point: you are happy; if I asked why, would you not say, ‘Because I
+have married the girl I love, and have never repented’?”
+
+“Well, sir, that is about it; though, begging your pardon, I think it
+could be put more prettily somehow.”
+
+“You are right there. But perhaps love and happiness never yet found any
+words that could fitly express them. Good-bye, for the present.”
+
+Ah! if it were as mere materialists, or as many middle-aged or elderly
+folks, who, if materialists, are so without knowing it, unreflectingly
+say, “The main element of happiness is bodily or animal health and
+strength,” that question which Chillingly put would appear a very
+unmeaning or a very insulting one addressed to a pale cripple, who
+however improved of late in health, would still be sickly and ailing
+all his life,--put, too, by a man of the rarest conformation of physical
+powers that nature can adapt to physical enjoyment,--a man who, since
+the age in which memory commences, had never known what it was to
+be unwell, who could scarcely understand you if you talked of a
+finger-ache, and whom those refinements of mental culture which
+multiply the delights of the senses had endowed with the most exquisite
+conceptions of such happiness as mere nature and its instincts can give!
+But Will did not think the question unmeaning or insulting. He, the poor
+cripple, felt a vast superiority on the scale of joyous being over the
+young Hercules, well born, cultured, and wealthy, who could know so
+little of happiness as to ask the crippled basket-maker if he were
+happy.--he, blessed husband and father!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+LILY was seated on the grass under a chestnut-tree on the lawn. A white
+cat, not long emerged from kittenhood, curled itself by her side. On her
+lap was an open volume, which she was reading with the greatest delight.
+
+Mrs. Cameron came from the house, looked round, perceived the girl, and
+approached; and either she moved so gently, or Lily was so absorbed in
+the book, that the latter was not aware of her presence till she felt
+a light hand on her shoulder, and, looking up, recognized her aunt’s
+gentle face.
+
+“Ah! Fairy, Fairy, that silly book, when you ought to be at your French
+verbs. What will your guardian say when he comes and finds you have so
+wasted time?”
+
+“He will say that fairies never waste their time; and he will scold you
+for saying so.” Therewith Lily threw down the book, sprang to her feet,
+wound her arm round Mrs. Cameron’s neck, and kissed her fondly. “There!
+is that wasting time? I love you so, aunty. In a day like this I think I
+love everybody and everything!” As she said this, she drew up her lithe
+form, looked into the blue sky, and with parted lips seemed to drink in
+air and sunshine. Then she woke up the dozing cat, and began chasing it
+round the lawn.
+
+Mrs. Cameron stood still, regarding her with moistened eyes. Just at
+that moment Kenelm entered through the garden gate. He, too, stood
+still, his eyes fixed on the undulating movements of Fairy’s exquisite
+form. She had arrested her favourite, and was now at play with it,
+shaking off her straw hat, and drawing the ribbon attached to it
+tantalizingly along the smooth grass. Her rich hair, thus released and
+dishevelled by the exercise, fell partly over her face in wavy ringlets;
+and her musical laugh and words of sportive endearment sounded on
+Kenelm’s ear more joyously than the thrill of the skylark, more sweetly
+than the coo of the ring-dove.
+
+He approached towards Mrs. Cameron. Lily turned suddenly and saw him.
+Instinctively she smoothed back her loosened tresses, replaced the straw
+hat, and came up demurely to his side just as he had accosted her aunt.
+
+“Pardon my intrusion, Mrs. Cameron. I am the bearer of this note from
+Mrs. Braefield.” While the aunt read the note, he turned to the niece.
+
+“You promised to show me the picture, Miss Mordaunt.”
+
+“But that was a long time ago.”
+
+“Too long to expect a lady’s promise to be kept?”
+
+Lily seemed to ponder that question, and hesitated before she answered.
+
+“I will show you the picture. I don’t think I ever broke a promise yet,
+but I shall be more careful how I make one in future.”
+
+“Why so?”
+
+“Because you did not value mine when I made it, and that hurt me.” Lily
+lifted up her head with a bewitching stateliness, and added gravely, “I
+was offended.”
+
+“Mrs. Braefield is very kind,” said Mrs. Cameron; “she asks us to dine
+the day after to-morrow. You would like to go, Lily?”
+
+“All grown-up people, I suppose? No, thank you, dear aunt. You go alone,
+I would rather stay at home. May I have little Clemmy to play with? She
+will bring Juba, and Blanche is very partial to Juba, though she does
+scratch him.”
+
+“Very well, my dear, you shall have your playmate, and I will go by
+myself.”
+
+Kenelm stood aghast. “You will not go, Miss Mordaunt; Mrs. Braefield
+will be so disappointed. And if you don’t go, whom shall I have to talk
+to? I don’t like grown-up people better than you do.”
+
+“You are going?”
+
+“Certainly.”
+
+“And if I go you will talk to me? I am afraid of Mr. Braefield. He is so
+wise.”
+
+“I will save you from him, and will not utter a grain of wisdom.”
+
+“Aunty, I will go.”
+
+Here Lily made a bound and caught up Blanche, who, taking her kisses
+resignedly, stared with evident curiosity upon Kenelm.
+
+Here a bell within the house rang the announcement of luncheon. Mrs.
+Cameron invited Kenelm to partake of that meal. He felt as Romulus might
+have felt when first invited to taste the ambrosia of the gods. Yet
+certainly that luncheon was not such as might have pleased Kenelm
+Chillingly in the early days of the Temperance Hotel. But somehow or
+other of late he had lost appetite; and on this occasion a very modest
+share of a very slender dish of chicken fricasseed, and a few cherries
+daintily arranged on vine leaves, which Lily selected for him, contented
+him,--as probably a very little ambrosia contented Romulus while
+feasting his eyes on Hebe.
+
+Luncheon over, while Mrs. Cameron wrote her reply to Elsie, Kenelm
+was conducted by Lily into her own _own_ room, in vulgar parlance her
+_boudoir_, though it did not look as if any one ever _bouder’d_ there.
+It was exquisitely pretty,--pretty not as a woman’s, but as a child’s
+dream of the own _own_ room she would like to have,--wondrously neat and
+cool, and pure-looking; a trellis paper, the trellis gay with roses and
+woodbine, and birds and butterflies; draperies of muslin, festooned with
+dainty tassels and ribbons; a dwarf bookcase, that seemed well stored,
+at least as to bindings; a dainty little writing-table in French
+_marqueterie_, looking too fresh and spotless to have known hard
+service. The casement was open, and in keeping with the trellis paper;
+woodbine and roses from without encroached on the window-sides, gently
+stirred by the faint summer breeze, and wafted sweet odours into the
+little room. Kenelm went to the window, and glanced on the view beyond.
+“I was right,” he said to himself; “I divined it.” But though he
+spoke in a low inward whisper, Lily, who had watched his movements in
+surprise, overheard.
+
+“You divined it. Divined what?”
+
+“Nothing, nothing; I was but talking to myself.”
+
+“Tell me what you divined: I insist upon it!” and Fairy petulantly
+stamped her tiny foot on the floor.
+
+“Do you? Then I obey. I have taken a lodging for a short time on the
+other side of the brook,--Cromwell Lodge,--and seeing your house as I
+passed, I divined that your room was in this part of it. How soft here
+is the view of the water! Ah! yonder is Izaak Walton’s summer-house.”
+
+“Don’t talk about Izaak Walton, or I shall quarrel with you, as I did
+with Lion when he wanted me to like that cruel book.”
+
+“Who is Lion?”
+
+“Lion,--of course, my guardian. I called him Lion when I was a little
+child. It was on seeing in one of his books a print of a lion playing
+with a little child.”
+
+“Ah! I know the design well,” said Kenelm, with a slight sigh. “It is
+from an antique Greek gem. It is not the lion that plays with the child,
+it is the child that masters the lion, and the Greeks called the child
+‘Love.’”
+
+This idea seemed beyond Lily’s perfect comprehension. She paused before
+she answered, with the naivete of a child six years old,--
+
+“I see now why I mastered Blanche, who will not make friends with any
+one else: I love Blanche. Ah, that reminds me,--come and look at the
+picture.”
+
+She went to the wall over the writing-table, drew a silk curtain aside
+from a small painting in a dainty velvet framework, and pointing to it,
+cried with triumph, “Look there! is it not beautiful?”
+
+Kenelm had been prepared to see a landscape, or a group, or anything but
+what he did see: it was the portrait of Blanche when a kitten.
+
+Little elevated though the subject was, it was treated with graceful
+fancy. The kitten had evidently ceased from playing with the cotton
+reel that lay between her paws, and was fixing her gaze intently on a
+bulfinch that had lighted on a spray within her reach.
+
+“You understand,” said Lily, placing her hand on his arm, and drawing
+him towards what she thought the best light for the picture; “it is
+Blanche’s first sight of a bird. Look well at her face; don’t you see a
+sudden surprise,--half joy, half fear? She ceases to play with the reel.
+Her intellect--or, as Mr. Braefield would say, ‘her instinct’--is for
+the first time aroused. From that moment Blanche was no longer a mere
+kitten. And it required, oh, the most careful education, to teach her
+not to kill the poor little birds. She never does now, but I had such
+trouble with her.”
+
+“I cannot say honestly that I do see all that you do in the picture;
+but it seems to me very simply painted, and was, no doubt, a striking
+likeness of Blanche at that early age.”
+
+“So it was. Lion drew the first sketch from life with his pencil; and
+when he saw how pleased I was with it--he was so good--he put it on
+canvas, and let me sit by him while he painted it. Then he took it away,
+and brought it back finished and framed as you see, last May, a present
+for my birthday.”
+
+“You were born in May--with the flowers.”
+
+“The best of all the flowers are born in May,--violets.”
+
+“But they are born in the shade, and cling to it. Surely, as a child of
+May, you love the sun!”
+
+“I love the sun; it is never too bright nor too warm for me. But I don’t
+think that, though born in May, I was born in sunlight. I feel more like
+my own native self when I creep into the shade and sit down alone. I can
+weep then.”
+
+As she thus shyly ended, the character of her whole countenance was
+changed: its infantine mirthfulness was gone; a grave, thoughtful, even
+a sad expression settled on the tender eyes and the tremulous lips.
+
+Kenelm was so touched that words failed him, and there was silence for
+some moments between the two. At length Kenelm said, slowly,--
+
+“You say your own native self. Do you, then, feel, as I often do, that
+there is a second, possibly a _native_, self, deep hid beneath the
+self,--not merely what we show to the world in common (that may be
+merely a mask), but the self that we ordinarily accept even when in
+solitude as our own, an inner innermost self, oh so different and
+so rarely coming forth from its hiding-place, asserting its right of
+sovereignty, and putting out the other self as the sun puts out a star?”
+
+Had Kenelm thus spoken to a clever man of the world--to a Chillingly
+Mivers, to a Chillingly Gordon--they certainly would not have understood
+him. But to such men he never would have thus spoken. He had a vague
+hope that this childlike girl, despite so much of childlike talk, would
+understand him; and she did at once.
+
+Advancing close to him, again laying her hand on his arm, and looking up
+towards his bended face with startled wondering eyes, no longer sad, yet
+not mirthful,--
+
+“How true! You have felt that too? Where _is_ that innermost self,
+so deep down,--so deep; yet when it does come forth, so much
+higher,--higher,--immeasurably higher than one’s everyday self? It does
+not tame the butterflies; it longs to get to the stars. And then,--and
+then,--ah, how soon it fades back again! You have felt that. Does it not
+puzzle you?”
+
+“Very much.”
+
+“Are there no wise books about it that help to explain?”
+
+“No wise books in my very limited reading even hint at the puzzle. I
+fancy that it is one of those insoluble questions that rest between the
+infant and his Maker. Mind and soul are not the same things, and what
+you and I call ‘wise men’ are always confounding the two--”
+
+Fortunately for all parties--especially the reader; for Kenelm had here
+got on the back of one of his most cherished hobbies, the distinction
+between psychology and metaphysics, soul and mind scientifically or
+logically considered--Mrs. Cameron here entered the room, and asked him
+how he liked the picture.
+
+“Very much. I am no great judge of the art. But it pleased me at once,
+and now that Miss Mordaunt has interpreted the intention of the painter
+I admire it yet more.”
+
+“Lily chooses to interpret his intention in her own way, and insists
+that Blanche’s expression of countenance conveys an idea of her capacity
+to restrain her destructive instinct, and be taught to believe that it
+is wrong to kill birds for mere sport. For food she need not kill them,
+seeing that Lily takes care that she has plenty to eat. But I don’t
+think that Mr. Melville had the slightest suspicion that he had
+indicated that capacity in his picture.”
+
+“He must have done so, whether he suspected it or not,” said Lily,
+positively; “otherwise he would not be truthful.”
+
+“Why not truthful?” asked Kenelm.
+
+“Don’t you see? If you were called upon to describe truthfully the
+character of any little child, would you only speak of such naughty
+impulses as all children have in common, and not even hint at the
+capacity to be made better?”
+
+“Admirably put!” said Kenelm. “There is no doubt that a much fiercer
+animal than a cat--a tiger, for instance, or a conquering hero--may be
+taught to live on the kindest possible terms with the creatures on which
+it was its natural instinct to prey.”
+
+“Yes, yes; hear that, aunty! You remember the Happy Family that we
+saw eight years ago, at Moleswich fair, with a cat not half so nice as
+Blanche allowing a mouse to bite her ear? Well, then, would Lion not
+have been shamefully false to Blanche if he had not”--
+
+Lily paused and looked half shyly, half archly, at Kenelm, then added,
+in slow, deep-drawn tones--“given a glimpse of her innermost self?”
+
+“Innermost self!” repeated Mrs. Cameron, perplexed and laughing gently.
+
+Lily stole nearer to Kenelm and whispered,--
+
+“Is not one’s innermost self one’s best self?”
+
+Kenelm smiled approvingly. The fairy was rapidly deepening her spell
+upon him. If Lily had been his sister, his betrothed, his wife, how
+fondly he would have kissed her! She had expressed a thought over which
+he had often inaudibly brooded, and she had clothed it with all the
+charm of her own infantine fancy and womanlike tenderness. Goethe has
+said somewhere, or is reported to have said, “There is something in
+every man’s heart, that, if you knew it, would make you hate him.” What
+Goethe said, still more what Goethe is reported to have said, is never
+to be taken quite literally. No comprehensive genius--genius at once
+poet and thinker--ever can be so taken. The sun shines on a dunghill.
+But the sun has no predilection for a dunghill. It only comprehends a
+dunghill as it does a rose. Still Kenelm had always regarded that loose
+ray from Goethe’s prodigal orb with an abhorrence most unphilosophical
+for a philosopher so young as generally to take upon oath any words
+of so great a master. Kenelm thought that the root of all private
+benevolence, of all enlightened advance in social reform, lay in the
+adverse theorem,--that in every man’s nature there lies a something
+that, could we get at it, cleanse it, polish it, render it visibly clear
+to our eyes, would make us love him. And in this spontaneous, uncultured
+sympathy with the results of so many laborious struggles of his own
+scholastic intellect against the dogma of the German giant, he felt as
+if he had found a younger--true, but oh, how much more subduing, because
+so much younger--sister of his own man’s soul. Then came, so strongly,
+the sense of her sympathy with his own strange innermost self, which a
+man will never feel more than once in his life with a daughter of
+Eve, that he dared not trust himself to speak. He somewhat hurried his
+leave-taking.
+
+Passing in the rear of the garden towards the bridge which led to his
+lodging, he found on the opposite bank, at the other end of the bridge,
+Mr. Algernon Sidney Gale Jones peacefully angling for trout.
+
+“Will you not try the stream to-day, sir? Take my rod.” Kenelm
+remembered that Lily had called Izaak Walton’s book “a cruel one,” and
+shaking his head gently, went his way into the house. There he seated
+himself silently by the window, and looked towards the grassy lawn
+and the dipping willows, and the gleam of the white walls through the
+girdling trees, as he had looked the eve before.
+
+“Ah!” he murmured at last, “if, as I hold, a man but tolerably good
+does good unconsciously merely by the act of living,--if he can no more
+traverse his way from the cradle to the grave, without letting fall,
+as he passes, the germs of strength, fertility, and beauty, than can a
+reckless wind or a vagrant bird, which, where it passes, leaves behind
+it the oak, the corn-sheaf, or the flower,--ah, if that be so, how
+tenfold the good must be, if the man find the gentler and purer
+duplicate of his own being in that mysterious, undefinable union which
+Shakspeares and day-labourers equally agree to call love; which Newton
+never recognizes, and which Descartes (his only rival in the realms
+of thought at once severe and imaginative) reduces into links of early
+association, explaining that he loved women who squinted, because, when
+he was a boy, a girl with that infirmity squinted at him from the other
+side of his father’s garden-wall! Ah! be this union between man and
+woman what it may; if it be really love, really the bond which embraces
+the innermost and bettermost self of both,--how daily, hourly, momently,
+should we bless God for having made it so easy to be happy and to be
+good!”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE dinner-party at Mr. Braefield’s was not quite so small as Kenelm
+had anticipated. When the merchant heard from his wife that Kenelm
+was coming, he thought it would be but civil to the young gentleman to
+invite a few other persons to meet him.
+
+“You see, my dear,” he said to Elsie, “Mrs. Cameron is a very good,
+simple sort of woman, but not particularly amusing; and Lily, though a
+pretty girl, is so exceedingly childish. We owe much, my sweet Elsie,
+to this Mr. Chillingly,”--here there was a deep tone of feeling in his
+voice and look,--“and we must make it as pleasant for him as we can.
+I will bring down my friend Sir Thomas, and you ask Mr. Emlyn and his
+wife. Sir Thomas is a very sensible man, and Emlyn a very learned one.
+So Mr. Chillingly will find people worth talking to. By the by, when I
+go to town I will send down a haunch of venison from Groves’s.”
+
+So when Kenelm arrived, a little before six o’clock, he found in the
+drawing-room the Rev. Charles Emlyn, vicar of Moleswich proper, with
+his spouse, and a portly middle-aged man, to whom, as Sir Thomas Pratt,
+Kenelm was introduced. Sir Thomas was an eminent city banker. The
+ceremonies of introduction over, Kenelm stole to Elsie’s side.
+
+“I thought I was to meet Mrs. Cameron. I don’t see her.”
+
+“She will be here presently. It looks as if it might rain, and I have
+sent the carriage for her and Lily. Ah, here they are!”
+
+Mrs. Cameron entered, clothed in black silk. She always wore black; and
+behind her came Lily, in the spotless colour that became her name;
+no ornament, save a slender gold chain to which was appended a single
+locket, and a single blush rose in her hair. She looked wonderfully
+lovely; and with that loveliness there was a certain nameless air of
+distinction, possibly owing to delicacy of form and colouring; possibly
+to a certain grace of carriage, which was not without a something of
+pride.
+
+Mr. Braefield, who was a very punctual man, made a sign to his servant,
+and in another moment or so dinner was announced. Sir Thomas, of course,
+took in the hostess; Mr. Braefield, the vicar’s wife (she was a dean’s
+daughter); Kenelm, Mrs. Cameron; and the vicar, Lily.
+
+On seating themselves at the table Kenelm was on the left hand, next to
+the hostess, and separated from Lily by Mrs. Cameron and Mr. Emlyn;
+and when the vicar had said grace, Lily glanced behind his back and her
+aunt’s at Kenelm (who did the same thing), making at him what the French
+call a _moue_. The pledge to her had been broken. She was between two
+men very much grown up,--the vicar and the host. Kenelm returned the
+_moue_ with a mournful smile and an involuntary shrug.
+
+All was silent till, after his soup and his first glass of sherry, Sir
+Thomas began,--
+
+“I think, Mr. Chillingly, we have met before, though I had not the
+honour then of making your acquaintance.” Sir Thomas paused before he
+added, “Not long ago; the last State ball at Buckingham Palace.”
+
+Kenelm bent his head acquiescingly. He had been at that ball.
+
+“You were talking with a very charming woman,--a friend of mine,--Lady
+Glenalvon.”
+
+(Sir Thomas was Lady Glenalvon’s banker.)
+
+“I remember perfectly,” said Kenelm. “We were seated in the picture
+gallery. You came to speak to Lady Glenalvon, and I yielded to you my
+place on the settee.”
+
+“Quite true; and I think you joined a young lady, very handsome,--the
+great heiress, Miss Travers.”
+
+Kenelm again bowed, and, turning away as politely as he could, addressed
+himself to Mrs. Cameron. Sir Thomas, satisfied that he had impressed
+on his audience the facts of his friendship with Lady Glenalvon and his
+attendance at the court ball, now directed his conversational powers
+towards the vicar, who, utterly foiled in the attempt to draw out
+Lily, met the baronet’s advances with the ardour of a talker too long
+suppressed. Kenelm continued, unmolested, to ripen his acquaintance with
+Mrs. Cameron. She did not, however, seem to lend a very attentive ear to
+his preliminary commonplace remarks about scenery or weather, but at his
+first pause, said,--
+
+“Sir Thomas spoke about a Miss Travers: is she related to a gentleman
+who was once in the Guards, Leopold Travers?”
+
+“She is his daughter. Did you ever know Leopold Travers?”
+
+“I have heard him mentioned by friends of mine long ago,--long ago,”
+ replied Mrs. Cameron with a sort of weary languor, not unwonted, in her
+voice and manner; and then, as if dismissing the bygone reminiscence
+from her thoughts, changed the subject.
+
+“Lily tells me, Mr. Chillingly, that you said you were staying at Mr.
+Jones’s, Cromwell Lodge. I hope you are made comfortable there.”
+
+“Very. The situation is singularly pleasant.”
+
+“Yes, it is considered the prettiest spot on the brook-side, and used to
+be a favourite resort for anglers; but the trout, I believe, are growing
+scarce; at least, now that the fishing in the Thames is improved, poor
+Mr. Jones complains that his old lodgers desert him. Of course you took
+the rooms for the sake of the fishing. I hope the sport may be better
+than it is said to be.”
+
+“It is of little consequence to me: I do not care much about fishing;
+and since Miss Mordaunt calls the book which first enticed me to take
+to it ‘a cruel one,’ I feel as if the trout had become as sacred as
+crocodiles were to the ancient Egyptians.”
+
+“Lily is a foolish child on such matters. She cannot bear the thought of
+giving pain to any dumb creature; and just before our garden there are a
+few trout which she has tamed. They feed out of her hand; she is always
+afraid they will wander away and get caught.”
+
+“But Mr. Melville is an angler?”
+
+“Several years ago he would sometimes pretend to fish, but I believe
+it was rather an excuse for lying on the grass and reading ‘the cruel
+book,’ or perhaps, rather, for sketching. But now he is seldom here till
+autumn, when it grows too cold for such amusement.”
+
+Here Sir Thomas’s voice was so loudly raised that it stopped the
+conversation between Kenelm and Mrs. Cameron. He had got into some
+question of politics on which he and the vicar did not agree, and
+the discussion threatened to become warm, when Mrs. Braefield, with
+a woman’s true tact, broached a new topic, in which Sir Thomas was
+immediately interested, relating to the construction of a conservatory
+for orchids that he meditated adding to his country-house, and in
+which frequent appeal was made to Mrs. Cameron, who was considered an
+accomplished florist, and who seemed at some time or other in her life
+to have acquired a very intimate acquaintance with the costly family of
+orchids.
+
+When the ladies retired Kenelm found himself seated next to Mr. Emlyn,
+who astounded him by a complimentary quotation from one of his own
+Latin prize poems at the university, hoped he would make some stay at
+Moleswich, told him of the principal places in the neighbourhood worth
+visiting, and offered him the run of his library, which he flattered
+himself was rather rich, both in the best editions of Greek and Latin
+classics and in early English literature. Kenelm was much pleased with
+the scholarly vicar, especially when Mr. Emlyn began to speak about Mrs.
+Cameron and Lily. Of the first he said, “She is one of those women in
+whom quiet is so predominant that it is long before one can know what
+undercurrents of good feeling flow beneath the unruffled surface.
+I wish, however, she was a little more active in the management and
+education of her niece,--a girl in whom I feel a very anxious interest,
+and whom I doubt if Mrs. Cameron understands. Perhaps, however, only
+a poet, and a very peculiar sort of poet, can understand her: Lily
+Mordaunt is herself a poem.”
+
+“I like your definition of her,” said Kenelm. “There is certainly
+something about her which differs much from the prose of common life.”
+
+“You probably know Wordsworth’s lines:
+
+
+ “‘... and she shall lean her ear
+ In many a secret place
+ Where rivulets dance their wayward round,
+ And beauty, born of murmuring sound,
+ Shall pass into her face.’
+
+
+“They are lines that many critics have found unintelligible; but Lily
+seems like the living key to them.”
+
+Kenelm’s dark face lighted up, but he made no answer.
+
+“Only,” continued Mr. Emlyn, “how a girl of that sort, left wholly to
+herself, untrained, undisciplined, is to grow up into the practical uses
+of womanhood, is a question that perplexes and saddens me.”
+
+“Any more wine?” asked the host, closing a conversation on commercial
+matters with Sir Thomas. “No?--shall we join the ladies?”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE drawing-room was deserted; the ladies were in the garden. As Kenelm
+and Mr. Emlyn walked side by side towards the group (Sir Thomas and Mr.
+Braefield following at a little distance), the former asked, somewhat
+abruptly, “What sort of man is Miss Cameron’s guardian, Mr. Melville?”
+
+“I can scarcely answer that question. I see little of him when he comes
+here. Formerly, he used to run down pretty often with a harum-scarum
+set of young fellows, quartered at Cromwell Lodge,--Grasmere had no
+accommodation for them,--students in the Academy, I suppose. For some
+years he has not brought those persons, and when he does come himself it
+is but for a few days. He has the reputation of being very wild.”
+
+Further conversation was here stopped. The two men, while they thus
+talked, had been diverging from the straight way across the lawn towards
+the ladies, turning into sequestered paths through the shrubbery; now
+they emerged into the open sward, just before a table, on which coffee
+was served, and round which all the rest of the party were gathered.
+
+“I hope, Mr. Emlyn,” said Elsie’s cheery voice, “that you have dissuaded
+Mr. Chillingly from turning Papist. I am sure you have taken time enough
+to do so.”
+
+Mr. Emlyn, Protestant every inch of him, slightly recoiled from Kenelm’s
+side. “Do you meditate turning--” He could not conclude the sentence.
+
+“Be not alarmed, my dear sir. I did but own to Mrs. Braefield that I
+had paid a visit to Oxford in order to confer with a learned man on
+a question that puzzled me, and as abstract as that feminine pastime,
+theology, is now-a-days. I cannot convince Mrs. Braefield that Oxford
+admits other puzzles in life than those which amuse the ladies.” Here
+Kenelm dropped into a chair by the side of Lily.
+
+Lily half turned her back to him.
+
+“Have I offended again?”
+
+Lily shrugged her shoulders slightly and would not answer.
+
+“I suspect, Miss Mordaunt, that among your good qualities, nature has
+omitted one; the bettermost self within you should replace it.”
+
+Lily here abruptly turned to him her front face: the light of the skies
+was becoming dim, but the evening star shone upon it.
+
+“How! what do you mean?”
+
+“Am I to answer politely or truthfully?”
+
+“Truthfully! Oh, truthfully! What is life without truth?”
+
+“Even though one believes in fairies?”
+
+“Fairies are truthful, in a certain way. But you are not truthful. You
+were not thinking of fairies when you--”
+
+“When I what?”
+
+“Found fault with me.”
+
+“I am not sure of that. But I will translate to you my thoughts, so far
+as I can read them myself, and to do so I will resort to the fairies.
+Let us suppose that a fairy has placed her changeling into the cradle of
+a mortal: that into the cradle she drops all manner of fairy gifts which
+are not bestowed on mere mortals; but that one mortal attribute she
+forgets. The changeling grows up; she charms those around her: they
+humour, and pet, and spoil her. But there arises a moment in which the
+omission of the one mortal gift is felt by her admirers and friends.
+Guess what that is.”
+
+Lily pondered. “I see what you mean; the reverse of truthfulness,
+politeness.”
+
+“No, not exactly that, though politeness slides into it unawares: it is
+a very humble quality, a very unpoetic quality; a quality that many dull
+people possess; and yet without it no fairy can fascinate mortals, when
+on the face of the fairy settles the first wrinkle. Can you not guess it
+now?”
+
+“No: you vex me; you provoke me;” and Lily stamped her foot petulantly,
+as in Kenelm’s presence she had stamped it once before. “Speak plainly,
+I insist.”
+
+“Miss Mordaunt, excuse me: I dare not,” said Kenelm, rising with a sort
+of bow one makes to the Queen; and he crossed over to Mrs. Braefield.
+
+Lily remained, still pouting fiercely.
+
+Sir Thomas took the chair Kenelm had vacated.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE hour for parting came. Of all the guests, Sir Thomas alone stayed
+at the house a guest for the night. Mr. and Mrs. Emlyn had their own
+carriage. Mrs. Braefield’s carriage came to the door for Mrs. Cameron
+and Lily.
+
+Said Lily, impatiently and discourteously, “Who would not rather walk on
+such a night?” and she whispered to her aunt.
+
+Mrs. Cameron, listening to the whisper and obedient to every whim
+of Lily’s, said, “You are too considerate, dear Mrs. Braefield; Lily
+prefers walking home; there is no chance of rain now.”
+
+Kenelm followed the steps of the aunt and niece, and soon overtook them
+on the brook-side.
+
+“A charming night, Mr. Chillingly,” said Mrs. Cameron.
+
+“An English summer night; nothing like it in such parts of the world as
+I have visited. But, alas! of English summer nights there are but few.”
+
+“You have travelled much abroad?”
+
+“Much, no, a little; chiefly on foot.”
+
+Lily hitherto had not said a word, and had been walking with downcast
+head. Now she looked up and said, in the mildest and most conciliatory
+of human voices,--
+
+“You have been abroad;” then, with an acquiescence in the manners of
+the world which to him she had never yet manifested, she added his
+name, “Mr. Chillingly,” and went on, more familiarly. “What a breadth
+of meaning the word ‘abroad’ conveys! Away, afar from one’s self, from
+one’s everyday life. How I envy you! you have been abroad: so has Lion”
+ (here drawing herself up), “I mean my guardian, Mr. Melville.”
+
+“Certainly, I have been abroad, but afar from myself--never. It is an
+old saying,--all old sayings are true; most new sayings are false,--a
+man carries his native soil at the sole of his foot.”
+
+Here the path somewhat narrowed. Mrs. Cameron went on first, Kenelm and
+Lily behind; she, of course, on the dry path, he on the dewy grass.
+
+She stopped him. “You are walking in the wet, and with those thin
+shoes.” Lily moved instinctively away from the dry path.
+
+Homely though that speech of Lily’s be, and absurd as said by a fragile
+girl to a gladiator like Kenelm, it lit up a whole world of womanhood:
+it showed all that undiscoverable land which was hidden to the learned
+Mr. Emlyn, all that land which an uncomprehended girl seizes and reigns
+over when she becomes wife and mother.
+
+At that homely speech, and that impulsive movement, Kenelm halted, in
+a sort of dreaming maze. He turned timidly, “Can you forgive me for my
+rude words? I presumed to find fault with you.”
+
+“And so justly. I have been thinking over all you said, and I feel you
+were so right; only I still do not quite understand what you meant by
+the quality for mortals which the fairy did not give to her changeling.”
+
+“If I did not dare say it before, I should still less dare to say it
+now.”
+
+“Do.” There was no longer the stamp of the foot, no longer the flash
+from her eyes, no longer the wilfulness which said, “I insist;”--
+
+“Do;” soothingly, sweetly, imploringly.
+
+Thus pushed to it, Kenelm plucked up courage, and not trusting himself
+to look at Lily, answered brusquely,--
+
+“The quality desirable for men, but more essential to women in
+proportion as they are fairy-like, though the tritest thing possible, is
+good temper.”
+
+Lily made a sudden bound from his side, and joined her aunt, walking
+through the wet grass.
+
+When they reached the garden-gate, Kenelm advanced and opened it. Lily
+passed him by haughtily; they gained the cottage-door.
+
+“I don’t ask you in at this hour,” said Mrs. Cameron. “It would be but a
+false compliment.”
+
+Kenelm bowed and retreated. Lily left her aunt’s side, and came towards
+him, extending her hand.
+
+“I shall consider your words, Mr. Chillingly,” she said, with a
+strangely majestic air. “At present I think you are not right. I am not
+ill-tempered; but--” here she paused, and then added with a loftiness
+of mien which, had she not been so exquisitely pretty, would have been
+rudeness--“in any case I forgive you.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THERE were a good many pretty villas in the outskirts of Moleswich, and
+the owners of them were generally well off, and yet there was little of
+what is called visiting society; owing perhaps to the fact that there
+not being among these proprietors any persons belonging to what is
+commonly called “the aristocratic class,” there was a vast deal of
+aristocratic pretension. The family of Mr. A-----, who had enriched
+himself as a stock-jobber, turned up its nose at the family of Mr.
+B-----, who had enriched himself still more as a linen-draper, while the
+family of Mr. B----- showed a very cold shoulder to the family of Mr.
+C-----, who had become richer than either of them as a pawnbroker,
+and whose wife wore diamonds, but dropped her h’s. England would be a
+community so aristocratic that there would be no living in it, if one
+could exterminate what is now called “aristocracy.” The Braefields were
+the only persons who really drew together the antagonistic atoms of the
+Moleswich society, partly because they were acknowledged to be the first
+persons there, in right not only of old settlement (the Braefields had
+held Braefieldville for four generations), but of the wealth derived
+from those departments of commercial enterprise which are recognized as
+the highest, and of an establishment considered to be the most elegant
+in the neighbourhood; principally because Elsie, while exceedingly
+genial and cheerful in temper, had a certain power of will (as her
+runaway folly had manifested), and when she got people together
+compelled them to be civil to each other. She had commenced this
+gracious career by inaugurating children’s parties, and when the
+children became friends the parents necessarily grew closer together.
+Still her task had only recently begun, and its effects were not in
+full operation. Thus, though it became known at Moleswich that a young
+gentleman, the heir to a baronetcy and a high estate, was sojourning at
+Cromwell Lodge, no overtures were made to him on the part of the A’s,
+B’s, and C’s. The vicar, who called on Kenelm the day after the dinner
+at Braefieldville, explained to him the social conditions of the place.
+“You understand,” said he, “that it will be from no want of courtesy on
+the part of my neighbours if they do not offer you any relief from
+the pleasures of solitude. It will be simply because they are shy, not
+because they are uncivil. And, it is this consideration that makes
+me, at the risk of seeming too forward, entreat you to look into the
+vicarage any morning or evening on which you feel tired of your own
+company; suppose you drink tea with us this evening,--you will find a
+young lady whose heart you have already won.”
+
+“Whose heart I have won!” faltered Kenelm, and the warm blood rushed to
+his cheek.
+
+“But,” continued the vicar, smiling, “she has no matrimonial designs on
+you at present. She is only twelve years old,--my little girl Clemmy.”
+
+“Clemmy!--she is your daughter? I did not know that. I very gratefully
+accept your invitation.”
+
+“I must not keep you longer from your amusement. The sky is just clouded
+enough for sport. What fly do you use?”
+
+“To say truth, I doubt if the stream has much to tempt me in the way of
+trout, and I prefer rambling about the lanes and by-paths to
+
+
+ “‘The noiseless angler’s solitary stand.’
+
+“I am an indefatigable walker, and the home scenery round the place has
+many charms for me. Besides,” added Kenelm, feeling conscious that he
+ought to find some more plausible excuse than the charms of home scenery
+for locating himself long in Cromwell Lodge, “besides, I intend to
+devote myself a good deal to reading. I have been very idle of late, and
+the solitude of this place must be favourable to study.”
+
+“You are not intended, I presume, for any of the learned professions?”
+
+“The learned professions,” replied Kenelm, “is an invidious form of
+speech that we are doing our best to eradicate from the language.
+All professions now-a-days are to have much about the same amount of
+learning. The learning of the military profession is to be levelled
+upwards, the learning of the scholastic to be levelled downwards.
+Cabinet ministers sneer at the uses of Greek and Latin. And even
+such masculine studies as Law and Medicine are to be adapted to the
+measurements of taste and propriety in colleges for young ladies. No,
+I am not intended for any profession; but still an ignorant man like
+myself may not be the worse for a little book-reading now and then.”
+
+“You seem to be badly provided with books here,” said the vicar,
+glancing round the room, in which, on a table in the corner, lay
+half-a-dozen old-looking volumes, evidently belonging not to the lodger
+but to the landlord. “But, as I before said, my library is at your
+service. What branch of reading do you prefer?”
+
+Kenelm was, and looked, puzzled. But after a pause he answered:
+
+“The more remote it be from the present day, the better for me. You said
+your collection was rich in mediaeval literature. But the Middle
+Ages are so copied by the modern Goths, that I might as well read
+translations of Chaucer or take lodgings in Wardour Street. If you have
+any books about the manners and habits of those who, according to
+the newest idea in science, were our semi-human progenitors in the
+transition state between a marine animal and a gorilla, I should be very
+much edified by the loan.”
+
+“Alas,” said Mr. Emlyn, laughing, “no such books have been left to us.”
+
+“No such books? You must be mistaken. There must be plenty of them
+somewhere. I grant all the wonderful powers of invention bestowed on
+the creators of poetic romance; still not the sovereign masters in that
+realm of literature--not Scott, not Cervantes, not Goethe, not even
+Shakspeare--could have presumed to rebuild the past without such
+materials as they found in the books that record it. And though I, no
+less cheerfully, grant that we have now living among us a creator of
+poetic romance immeasurably more inventive than they,--appealing to our
+credulity in portents the most monstrous, with a charm of style the
+most conversationally familiar,--still I cannot conceive that even that
+unrivalled romance-writer can so bewitch our understandings as to make
+us believe that, if Miss Mordaunt’s cat dislikes to wet her feet, it is
+probably because in the prehistoric age her ancestors lived in the dry
+country of Egypt; or that when some lofty orator, a Pitt or a Gladstone,
+rebuts with a polished smile which reveals his canine teeth the rude
+assault of an opponent, he betrays his descent from a ‘semi-human
+progenitor’ who was accustomed to snap at his enemy. Surely, surely
+there must be some books still extant written by philosophers before the
+birth of Adam, in which there is authority, even though but in mythic
+fable, for such poetic inventions. Surely, surely some early chroniclers
+must depose that they saw, saw with their own eyes, the great gorillas
+who scratched off their hairy coverings to please the eyes of the young
+ladies of their species, and that they noted the gradual metamorphosis
+of one animal into another. For, if you tell me that this illustrious
+romance-writer is but a cautious man of science, and that we must accept
+his inventions according to the sober laws of evidence and fact, there
+is not the most incredible ghost story which does not better satisfy the
+common sense of a sceptic. However, if you have no such books, lend
+me the most unphilosophical you possess,--on magic, for instance,--the
+philosopher’s stone”--
+
+“I have some of them,” said the vicar, laughing; “you shall choose for
+yourself.”
+
+“If you are going homeward, let me accompany you part of the way: I
+don’t yet know where the church and the vicarage are, and I ought to
+know before I come in the evening.”
+
+Kenelm and the vicar walked side by side, very sociably, across the
+bridge and on the side of the rivulet on which stood Mrs. Cameron’s
+cottage. As they skirted the garden pale at the rear of the cottage,
+Kenelm suddenly stopped in the middle of some sentence which had
+interested Mr. Emlyn, and as suddenly arrested his steps on the turf
+that bordered the lane. A little before him stood an old peasant woman,
+with whom Lily, on the opposite side of the garden pale, was conversing.
+Mr. Emlyn did not at first see what Kenelm saw; turning round rather
+to gaze on his companion, surprised by his abrupt halt and silence. The
+girl put a small basket into the old woman’s hand, who then dropped a
+low curtsy, and uttered low a “God bless you.” Low though it was, Kenelm
+overheard it, and said abstractedly to Mr. Emlyn, “Is there a greater
+link between this life and the next than God’s blessing on the young,
+breathed from the lips of the old?”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+“AND how is your good man, Mrs. Haley?” said the vicar, who had now
+reached the spot on which the old woman stood,--with Lily’s fair face
+still bended down to her,--while Kenelm slowly followed him.
+
+“Thank you kindly, sir, he is better; out of his bed now. The young lady
+has done him a power of good--”
+
+“Hush!” said Lily, colouring. “Make haste home now; you must not keep
+him waiting for his dinner.”
+
+The old woman again curtsied, and went off at a brisk pace.
+
+“Do you know, Mr. Chillingly,” said Mr. Emlyn, “that Miss Mordaunt is
+the best doctor in the place? Though if she goes on making so many cures
+she will find the number of her patients rather burdensome.”
+
+“It was only the other day,” said Lily, “that you scolded me for the
+best cure I have yet made.”
+
+“I?--Oh! I remember; you led that silly child Madge to believe that
+there was a fairy charm in the arrowroot you sent her. Own you deserved
+a scolding there.”
+
+“No, I did not. I dressed the arrowroot, and am I not Fairy? I have just
+got such a pretty note from Clemmy, Mr. Emlyn, asking me to come up this
+evening and see her new magic lantern. Will you tell her to expect me?
+And, mind, no scolding.”
+
+“And all magic?” said Mr. Emlyn; “be it so.”
+
+Lily and Kenelm had not hitherto exchanged a word. She had replied with
+a grave inclination of her head to his silent bow. But now she turned to
+him shyly and said, “I suppose you have been fishing all the morning?”
+
+“No; the fishes hereabout are under the protection of a Fairy,--whom I
+dare not displease.”
+
+Lily’s face brightened, and she extended her hand to him over the
+palings. “Good-day; I hear aunty’s voice: those dreadful French verbs!”
+
+She disappeared among the shrubs, amid which they heard the thrill of
+her fresh young voice singing to herself.
+
+“That child has a heart of gold,” said Mr. Emlyn, as the two men walked
+on. “I did not exaggerate when I said she was the best doctor in the
+place. I believe the poor really do believe that she is a fairy. Of
+course we send from the vicarage to our ailing parishioners who require
+it, food and wine; but it never seems to do them the good that her
+little dishes made by her own tiny hands do; and I don’t know if you
+noticed the basket that old woman took away,--Miss Lily taught Will
+Somers to make the prettiest little baskets; and she puts her jellies or
+other savouries into dainty porcelain gallipots nicely fitted into the
+baskets, which she trims with ribbons. It is the look of the thing that
+tempts the appetite of the invalids, and certainly the child may well be
+called Fairy at present; but I wish Mrs. Cameron would attend a little
+more strictly to her education. She can’t be a fairy forever.”
+
+Kenelm sighed, but made no answer.
+
+Mr. Emlyn then turned the conversation to erudite subjects, and so they
+came in sight of the town, when the vicar stopped and pointed towards
+the church, of which the spire rose a little to the left, with two aged
+yew-trees half shadowing the burial-ground, and in the rear a glimpse of
+the vicarage seen amid the shrubs of its garden ground.
+
+“You will know your way now,” said the vicar; “excuse me if I quit you:
+I have a few visits to make; among others, to poor Haley, husband to the
+old woman you saw. I read to him a chapter in the Bible every day; yet
+still I fancy that he believes in fairy charms.”
+
+“Better believe too much, than too little,” said Kenelm; and he turned
+aside into the village and spent half-an-hour with Will, looking at the
+pretty baskets Lily had taught Will to make. Then, as he went slowly
+homeward, he turned aside into the churchyard.
+
+The church, built in the thirteenth century, was not large, but it
+probably sufficed for its congregation, since it betrayed no signs of
+modern addition; restoration or repair it needed not. The centuries had
+but mellowed the tints of its solid walls, as little injured by the huge
+ivy stems that shot forth their aspiring leaves to the very summit of
+the stately tower as by the slender roses which had been trained
+to climb up a foot or so of the massive buttresses. The site of the
+burial-ground was unusually picturesque: sheltered towards the north by
+a rising ground clothed with woods, sloping down at the south towards
+the glebe pasture-grounds through which ran the brooklet, sufficiently
+near for its brawling gurgle to be heard on a still day. Kenelm sat
+himself on an antique tomb, which was evidently appropriated to some one
+of higher than common rank in bygone days, but on which the sculpture
+was wholly obliterated.
+
+The stillness and solitude of the place had their charms for his
+meditative temperament; and he remained there long, forgetful of time,
+and scarcely hearing the boom of the clock that warned him of its lapse.
+
+When suddenly, a shadow--the shadow of a human form--fell on the grass
+on which his eyes dreamily rested. He looked up with a start, and beheld
+Lily standing before him mute and still. Her image was so present in his
+thoughts at the moment that he felt a thrill of awe, as if the thoughts
+had conjured up her apparition. She was the first to speak.
+
+“You here, too?” she said very softly, almost whisperingly. “Too!”
+ echoed Kenelm, rising; “too! ‘Tis no wonder that I, a stranger to
+the place, should find my steps attracted towards its most venerable
+building. Even the most careless traveller, halting at some remote
+abodes of the living, turns aside to gaze on the burial-ground of the
+dead. But my surprise is that you, Miss Mordaunt, should be attracted
+towards the same spot.”
+
+“It is my favourite spot,” said Lily, “and always has been. I have sat
+many an hour on that tombstone. It is strange to think that no one knows
+who sleeps beneath it. The ‘Guide Book to Moleswich,’ though it gives
+the history of the church from the reign in which it was first built,
+can only venture a guess that this tomb, the grandest and oldest in the
+burial-ground, is tenanted by some member of a family named Montfichet,
+that was once very powerful in the county, and has become extinct since
+the reign of Henry VI. But,” added Lily, “there is not a letter of the
+name Montfichet left. I found out more than any one else has done; I
+learned black-letter on purpose; look here,” and she pointed to a small
+spot in which the moss had been removed. “Do you see those figures?
+are they not XVIII? and look again, in what was once the line above
+the figures, ELE. It must have been an Eleanor, who died at the age of
+eighteen--”
+
+“I rather think it more probable that the figures refer to the date
+of the death, 1318 perhaps; and so far as I can decipher black-letter,
+which is more in my father’s line than mine, I think it is AL, not EL,
+and that it seems as if there had been a letter between L and the second
+E, which is now effaced. The tomb itself is not likely to belong to any
+powerful family then resident at the place. Their monuments, according
+to usage, would have been within the church,--probably in their own
+mortuary chapel.”
+
+“Don’t try to destroy my fancy,” said Lily, shaking her head; “you
+cannot succeed, I know her history too well. She was young, and some one
+loved her, and built over her the finest tomb he could afford; and see
+how long the epitaph must have been! how much it must have spoken in
+her praise and of his grief. And then he went his way, and the tomb was
+neglected, and her fate forgotten.”
+
+“My dear Miss Mordaunt, this is indeed a wild romance to spin out of so
+slender a thread. But even if true, there is no reason to think that a
+life is forgotten, though a tomb be neglected.”
+
+“Perhaps not,” said Lily, thoughtfully. “But when I am dead, if I can
+look down, I think it would please me to see my grave not neglected by
+those who had loved me once.”
+
+She moved from him as she said this, and went to a little mound that
+seemed not long since raised; there was a simple cross at the head and
+a narrow border of flowers round it. Lily knelt beside the flowers and
+pulled out a stray weed. Then she rose, and said to Kenelm, who had
+followed, and now stood beside her,--
+
+“She was the little grandchild of poor old Mrs. Hales. I could not cure
+her, though I tried hard: she was so fond of me, and died in my arms.
+No, let me not say ‘died,’--surely there is no such thing as dying. ‘Tis
+but a change of life,--
+
+
+ ‘Less than the void between two waves of air,
+ The space between existence and a soul.’”
+
+
+“Whose lines are those?” asked Kenelm.
+
+“I don’t know; I learnt them from Lion. Don’t you believe them to be
+true?”
+
+“Yes. But the truth does not render the thought of quitting this scene
+of life for another more pleasing to most of us. See how soft and gentle
+and bright is all that living summer land beyond; let us find subject
+for talk from that, not from the graveyard on which we stand.”
+
+“But is there not a summer land fairer than that we see now; and which
+we do see, as in a dream, best when we take subjects of talk from the
+graveyard?” Without waiting for a reply, Lily went on. “I planted these
+flowers: Mr. Emlyn was angry with me; he said it was ‘Popish.’ But he
+had not the heart to have them taken up; I come here very often to see
+to them. Do you think it wrong? Poor little Nell! she was so fond of
+flowers. And the Eleanor in the great tomb, she too perhaps knew some
+one who called her Nell; but there are no flowers round her tomb. Poor
+Eleanor!”
+
+She took the nosegay she wore on her bosom, and as she repassed the tomb
+laid it on the mouldering stone.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THEY quitted the burial-ground, taking their way to Grasmere. Kenelm
+walked by Lily’s side; not a word passed between them till they came in
+sight of the cottage.
+
+Then Lily stopped abruptly, and lifting towards him her charming face,
+said,--
+
+“I told you I would think over what you said to me last night. I have
+done so, and feel I can thank you honestly. You were very kind: I never
+before thought that I had a bad temper; no one ever told me so. But I
+see now what you mean; sometimes I feel very quickly, and then I show
+it. But how did I show it to you, Mr. Chillingly?”
+
+“Did you not turn your back to me when I seated myself next you in
+Mrs. Braefield’s garden, vouchsafing me no reply when I asked if I had
+offended?”
+
+Lily’s face became bathed in blushes, and her voice faltered, as she
+answered,--
+
+“I was not offended; I was not in a bad temper then: it was worse than
+that.”
+
+“Worse? what could it possibly be?”
+
+“I am afraid it was envy.”
+
+“Envy of what? of whom?”
+
+“I don’t know how to explain; after all, I fear aunty is right, and the
+fairy tales put very silly, very naughty thoughts into one’s head. When
+Cinderella’s sisters went to the king’s ball, and Cinderella was left
+alone, did not she long to go too? Did not she envy her sisters?”
+
+“Ah! I understand now: Sir Charles spoke of the Court Ball.”
+
+“And you were there talking with handsome ladies--and--oh! I was so
+foolish and felt sore.”
+
+“You, who when we first met wondered how people who could live in
+the country preferred to live in towns, do then sometimes contradict
+yourself, and sigh for the great world that lies beyond these quiet
+water banks. You feel that you have youth and beauty, and wish to be
+admired!”
+
+“It is not that exactly,” said Lily, with a perplexed look in her
+ingenuous countenance, “and in my better moments, when the ‘bettermost
+self’ comes forth, I know that I am not made for the great world you
+speak of. But you see--” Here she paused again, and as they had now
+entered the garden, dropped wearily on a bench beside the path. Kenelm
+seated himself there too, waiting for her to finish her broken sentence.
+
+“You see,” she continued, looking down embarrassed, and describing vague
+circles on the gravel with her fairy-like foot, “that at home, ever
+since I can remember, they have treated me as if--well, as if I
+were--what shall I say? the child of one of your great ladies. Even
+Lion, who is so noble, so grand, seemed to think when I was a mere
+infant that I was a little queen: once when I told a fib he did not
+scold me; but I never saw him look so sad and so angry as when he said,
+‘Never again forget that you are a lady.’ And, but I tire you--”
+
+“Tire me, indeed! go on.”
+
+“No, I have said enough to explain why I have at times proud thoughts,
+and vain thoughts; and why, for instance, I said to myself, ‘Perhaps my
+place of right is among those fine ladies whom he--’ but it is all over
+now.” She rose hastily with a pretty laugh, and bounded towards Mrs.
+Cameron, who was walking slowly along the lawn with a book in her hand.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+IT was a very merry party at the vicarage that evening. Lily had not
+been prepared to meet Kenelm there, and her face brightened wonderfully
+as at her entrance he turned from the book-shelves to which Mr. Emlyn
+was directing his attention. But instead of meeting his advance, she
+darted off to the lawn, where Clemmy and several other children greeted
+her with a joyous shout.
+
+“Not acquainted with Macleane’s Juvenal?” said the reverend scholar;
+“you will be greatly pleased with it; here it is,--a posthumous work,
+edited by George Long. I can lend you Munro’s Lucretius, ‘69. Aha! we
+have some scholars yet to pit against the Germans.”
+
+“I am heartily glad to hear it,” said Kenelm. “It will be a long time
+before they will ever wish to rival us in that game which Miss Clemmy
+is now forming on the lawn, and in which England has recently acquired a
+European reputation.”
+
+“I don’t take you. What game?”
+
+“Puss in the Corner. With your leave I will look out and see whether
+it be a winning game for puss--in the long-run.” Kenelm joined the
+children, amidst whom Lily seemed not the least childlike. Resisting all
+overtures from Clemmy to join their play, he seated himself on a sloping
+bank at a little distance,--an idle looker-on. His eye followed Lily’s
+nimble movements, his ear drank in the music of her joyous laugh. Could
+that be the same girl whom he had seen tending the flower-bed amid the
+gravestones? Mrs. Emlyn came across the lawn and joined him, seating
+herself also on the bank. Mrs. Emlyn was an exceedingly clever woman:
+nevertheless she was not formidable,--on the contrary, pleasing; and
+though the ladies in the neighbourhood said ‘she talked like a book,’
+the easy gentleness of her voice carried off that offence.
+
+“I suppose, Mr. Chillingly,” said she, “I ought to apologize for
+my husband’s invitation to what must seem to you so frivolous an
+entertainment as a child’s party. But when Mr. Emlyn asked you to come
+to us this evening, he was not aware that Clemmy had also invited her
+young friends. He had looked forward to rational conversation with you
+on his own favourite studies.”
+
+“It is not so long since I left school, but that I prefer a half holiday
+to lessons, even from a tutor so pleasant as Mr. Emlyn,--
+
+
+ “‘Ah, happy years,--once more who would not be a boy!’”
+
+
+“Nay,” said Mrs. Emlyn, with a grave smile. “Who that had started so
+fairly as Mr. Chillingly in the career of man would wish to go back and
+resume a place among boys?”
+
+“But, my dear Mrs. Emlyn, the line I quoted was wrung from the heart of
+a man who had already outstripped all rivals in the race-ground he had
+chosen, and who at that moment was in the very Maytime of youth and of
+fame. And if such a man at such an epoch in his career could sigh to ‘be
+once more a boy,’ it must have been when he was thinking of the boy’s
+half holiday, and recoiling from the task work he was condemned to learn
+as man.”
+
+“The line you quote is, I think, from ‘Childe Harold,’ and surely
+you would not apply to mankind in general the sentiment of a poet so
+peculiarly self-reflecting (if I may use that expression), and in whom
+sentiment is often so morbid.”
+
+“You are right, Mrs. Emlyn,” said Kenelm, ingenuously. “Still a boy’s
+half holiday is a very happy thing; and among mankind in general
+there must be many who would be glad to have it back again,--Mr. Emlyn
+himself, I should think.”
+
+“Mr. Emlyn has his half holiday now. Do you not see him standing just
+outside the window? Do you not hear him laughing? He is a child again
+in the mirth of his children. I hope you will stay some time in the
+neighbourhood; I am sure you and he will like each other. And it is such
+a rare delight to him to get a scholar like yourself to talk to.”
+
+“Pardon me, I am not a scholar; a very noble title that, and not to be
+given to a lazy trifler on the surface of book-lore like myself.”
+
+“You are too modest. My husband has a copy of your Cambridge prize
+verses, and says ‘the Latinity of them is quite beautiful.’ I quote his
+very words.”
+
+“Latin verse-making is a mere knack, little more than a proof that one
+had an elegant scholar for one’s tutor, as I certainly had. But it is by
+special grace that a real scholar can send forth another real scholar,
+and a Kennedy produce a Munro. But to return to the more interesting
+question of half holidays; I declare that Clemmy is leading off your
+husband in triumph. He is actually going to be Puss in the Corner.”
+
+“When you know more of Charles,--I mean my husband,--you will discover
+that his whole life is more or less of a holiday. Perhaps because he is
+not what you accuse yourself of being: he is not lazy; he never wishes
+to be a boy once more; and taskwork itself is holiday to him. He enjoys
+shutting himself up in his study and reading; he enjoys a walk with
+the children; he enjoys visiting the poor; he enjoys his duties as a
+clergyman. And though I am not always contented for him, though I think
+he should have had those honours in his profession which have been
+lavished on men with less ability and less learning, yet he is never
+discontented himself. Shall I tell you his secret?”
+
+“Do.”
+
+“He is a _Thanks-giving Man_. You, too, must have much to thank God
+for, Mr. Chillingly; and in thanksgiving to God does there not blend
+usefulness to man, and such sense of pastime in the usefulness as makes
+each day a holiday?”
+
+Kenelm looked up into the quiet face of this obscure pastor’s wife with
+a startled expression in his own.
+
+“I see, ma’am,” said he, “that you have devoted much thought to the
+study of the aesthetical philosophy as expounded by German thinkers,
+whom it is rather difficult to understand.”
+
+“I, Mr. Chillingly! good gracious! No! What do you mean by your
+aesthetical philosophy?”
+
+“According to aesthetics, I believe man arrives at his highest state
+of moral excellence when labour and duty lose all the harshness of
+effort,--when they become the impulse and habit of life; when as the
+essential attributes of the beautiful, they are, like beauty, enjoyed
+as pleasure; and thus, as you expressed, each day becomes a holiday: a
+lovely doctrine, not perhaps so lofty as that of the Stoics, but more
+bewitching. Only, very few of us can practically merge our cares and our
+worries into so serene an atmosphere.”
+
+“Some do so without knowing anything of aesthetics and with no pretence
+to be Stoics; but, then, they are Christians.”
+
+“There are some such Christians, no doubt; but they are rarely to be met
+with. Take Christendom altogether, and it appears to comprise the most
+agitated population in the world; the population in which there is the
+greatest grumbling as to the quantity of labour to be done, the
+loudest complaints that duty instead of a pleasure is a very hard and
+disagreeable struggle, and in which holidays are fewest and the moral
+atmosphere least serene. Perhaps,” added Kenelm, with a deeper shade of
+thought on his brow, “it is this perpetual consciousness of struggle;
+this difficulty in merging toil into ease, or stern duty into placid
+enjoyment; this refusal to ascend for one’s self into the calm of an air
+aloof from the cloud which darkens, and the hail-storm which beats
+upon, the fellow-men we leave below,--that makes the troubled life of
+Christendom dearer to Heaven, and more conducive to Heaven’s design in
+rendering earth the wrestling-ground and not the resting-place of man,
+than is that of the Brahmin, ever seeking to abstract himself from
+the Christian’s conflicts of action and desire, and to carry into its
+extremest practice the aesthetic theory, of basking undisturbed in the
+contemplation of the most absolute beauty human thought can reflect from
+its idea of divine good!”
+
+Whatever Mrs. Emlyn might have said in reply was interrupted by the rush
+of the children towards her; they were tired of play, and eager for tea
+and the magic lantern.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE room is duly obscured and the white sheet attached to the wall; the
+children are seated, hushed, and awe-stricken. And Kenelm is placed next
+to Lily.
+
+The tritest things in our mortal experience are among the most
+mysterious. There is more mystery in the growth of a blade of grass than
+there is in the wizard’s mirror or the feats of a spirit medium. Most of
+us have known the attraction that draws one human being to another, and
+makes it so exquisite a happiness to sit quiet and mute by another’s
+side; which stills for the moment the busiest thoughts in our brain, the
+most turbulent desires in our heart, and renders us but conscious of a
+present ineffable bliss. Most of us have known that. But who has ever
+been satisfied with any metaphysical account of its why or wherefore? We
+can but say it is love, and love at that earlier section of its history
+which has not yet escaped from romance; but by what process that other
+person has become singled out of the whole universe to attain such
+special power over one is a problem that, though many have attempted to
+solve it, has never attained to solution. In the dim light of the room
+Kenelm could only distinguish the outlines of Lily’s delicate face, but
+at each new surprise in the show, the face intuitively turned to his,
+and once, when the terrible image of a sheeted ghost, pursuing a guilty
+man, passed along the wall, she drew closer to him in her childish
+fright, and by an involuntary innocent movement laid her hand on his. He
+detained it tenderly, but, alas! it was withdrawn the next moment;
+the ghost was succeeded by a couple of dancing dogs. And Lily’s ready
+laugh--partly at the dogs, partly at her own previous alarm--vexed
+Kenelm’s ear. He wished there had been a succession of ghosts, each more
+appalling than the last.
+
+The entertainment was over, and after a slight refreshment of cakes
+and wine-and-water the party broke up; the children visitors went away
+attended by servant-maids who had come for them. Mrs. Cameron and Lily
+were to walk home on foot.
+
+“It is a lovely night, Mrs. Cameron,” said Mr. Emlyn, “and I will attend
+you to your gate.”
+
+“Permit me also,” said Kenelm.
+
+“Ay,” said the vicar, “it is your own way to Cromwell Lodge.”
+
+The path led them through the churchyard as the nearest approach to the
+brook-side. The moonbeams shimmered through the yew-trees and rested on
+the old tomb; playing, as it were, round the flowers which Lily’s hand
+had that day dropped upon its stone. She was walking beside Kenelm, the
+elder two a few paces in front.
+
+“How silly I was,” said she, “to be so frightened at the false ghost! I
+don’t think a real one would frighten me, at least if seen here, in this
+loving moonlight, and on God’s ground!”
+
+“Ghosts, were they permitted to appear except in a magic lantern, could
+not harm the innocent. And I wonder why the idea of their apparition
+should always have been associated with such phantasies of horror,
+especially by sinless children, who have the least reason to dread
+them.”
+
+“Oh, that is true,” cried Lily; “but even when we are grown up there
+must be times in which we should so long to see a ghost, and feel what a
+comfort, what a joy it would be.”
+
+“I understand you. If some one very dear to us had vanished from our
+life; if we felt the anguish of the separation so intensely as to efface
+the thought that life, as you said so well, ‘never dies;’ well, yes,
+then I can conceive that the mourner would yearn to have a glimpse of
+the vanished one, were it but to ask the sole and only question he could
+desire to put, ‘Art thou happy? May I hope that we shall meet again,
+never to part,--never?’”
+
+Kenelm’s voice trembled as he spoke, tears stood in his eyes. A
+melancholy--vague, unaccountable, overpowering--passed across his heart,
+as the shadow of some dark-winged bird passes over a quiet stream.
+
+“You have never yet felt this?” asked Lily doubtingly, in a soft voice,
+full of tender pity, stopping short and looking into his face.
+
+“I? No. I have never yet lost one whom I so loved and so yearned to see
+again. I was but thinking that such losses may befall us all ere we too
+vanish out of sight.”
+
+“Lily!” called forth Mrs. Cameron, halting at the gate of the
+burial-ground.
+
+“Yes, auntie?”
+
+“Mr. Emlyn wants to know how far you have got in ‘Numa Pompilius.’ Come
+and answer for yourself.”
+
+“Oh, those tiresome grown-up people!” whispered Lily, petulantly, to
+Kenelm. “I do like Mr. Emlyn; he is one of the very best of men. But
+still he is grown up, and his ‘Numa Pompilius’ is so stupid.”
+
+“My first French lesson-book. No, it is not stupid. Read on. It has
+hints of the prettiest fairy tale I know, and of the fairy in especial
+who bewitched my fancies as a boy.”
+
+By this time they had gained the gate of the burial-ground.
+
+“What fairy tale? what fairy?” asked Lily, speaking quickly.
+
+“She was a fairy, though in heathen language she is called a
+nymph,--Egeria. She was the link between men and gods to him she loved;
+she belongs to the race of gods. True, she, too, may vanish, but she can
+never die.”
+
+“Well, Miss Lily,” said the vicar, “and how far in the book I lent
+you,--‘Numa Pompilius.’”
+
+“Ask me this day next week.”
+
+“I will; but mind you are to translate as you go on. I must see the
+translation.”
+
+“Very well. I will do my best,” answered Lily meekly. Lily now walked
+by the vicar’s side, and Kenelm by Mrs. Cameron’s, till they reached
+Grasmere.
+
+“I will go on with you to the bridge, Mr. Chillingly,” said the vicar,
+when the ladies had disappeared within their garden. “We had little
+time to look over my books, and, by the by, I hope you at least took the
+Juvenal.”
+
+“No, Mr. Emlyn; who can quit your house with an inclination for satire?
+I must come some morning and select a volume from those works which give
+pleasant views of life and bequeath favourable impressions of mankind.
+Your wife, with whom I have had an interesting conversation, upon the
+principles of aesthetical philosophy--”
+
+“My wife! Charlotte! She knows nothing about aesthetical philosophy.”
+
+“She calls it by another name, but she understands it well enough to
+illustrate the principles by example. She tells me that labour and duty
+are so taken up by you--
+
+
+ ‘In den heitern Regionen
+ Wo die reinen Formen wohnen,’
+
+
+that they become joy and beauty,--is it so?”
+
+“I am sure that Charlotte never said anything half so poetical. But, in
+plain words, the days pass with me very happily. I should be ungrateful
+if I were not happy. Heaven has bestowed on me so many sources of
+love,--wife, children, books, and the calling which, when one quits
+one’s own threshold, carries love along with it into the world beyond;
+a small world in itself,--only a parish,--but then my calling links it
+with infinity.”
+
+“I see; it is from the sources of love that you draw the supplies for
+happiness.”
+
+“Surely; without love one may be good, but one could scarcely be happy.
+No one can dream of a heaven except as the abode of love. What writer is
+it who says, ‘How well the human heart was understood by him who first
+called God by the name of Father’?”
+
+“I do not remember, but it is beautifully said. You evidently do not
+subscribe to the arguments in Decimus Roach’s ‘Approach to the Angels.’”
+
+“Ah, Mr. Chillingly! your words teach me how lacerated a man’s happiness
+may be if he does not keep the claws of vanity closely pared. I actually
+feel a keen pang when you speak to me of that eloquent panegyric on
+celibacy, ignorant that the only thing I ever published which I fancied
+was not without esteem by intellectual readers is a Reply to ‘The
+Approach to the Angels,’--a youthful book, written in the first year
+of my marriage. But it obtained success: I have just revised the tenth
+edition of it.”
+
+“That is the book I will select from your library. You will be pleased
+to hear that Mr. Roach, whom I saw at Oxford a few days ago, recants his
+opinions, and, at the age of fifty, is about to be married; he begs me
+to add, ‘not for his own personal satisfaction.’”
+
+“Going to be married!--Decimus Roach! I thought my Reply would convince
+him at last.”
+
+“I shall look to your Reply to remove some lingering doubts in my own
+mind.”
+
+“Doubts in favour of celibacy?”
+
+“Well, if not for laymen, perhaps for a priesthood.”
+
+“The most forcible part of my Reply is on that head: read it
+attentively. I think that, of all sections of mankind, the clergy are
+those to whom, not only for their own sakes, but for the sake of the
+community, marriage should be most commended. Why, sir,” continued the
+vicar, warming up into oratorical enthusiasm, “are you not aware that
+there are no homes in England from which men who have served and adorned
+their country have issued forth in such prodigal numbers as those of
+the clergy of our Church? What other class can produce a list so crowded
+with eminent names as we can boast in the sons we have reared and sent
+forth into the world? How many statesmen, soldiers, sailors, lawyers,
+physicians, authors, men of science, have been the sons of us village
+pastors? Naturally: for with us they receive careful education; they
+acquire of necessity the simple tastes and disciplined habits which lead
+to industry and perseverance; and, for the most part, they carry with
+them throughout life a purer moral code, a more systematic reverence for
+things and thoughts religious, associated with their earliest images
+of affection and respect, than can be expected from the sons of laymen
+whose parents are wholly temporal and worldly. Sir, I maintain that this
+is a cogent argument, to be considered well by the nation, not only in
+favour of a married clergy,--for, on that score, a million of Roaches
+could not convert public opinion in this country,--but in favour of the
+Church, the Established Church, which has been so fertile a nursery
+of illustrious laymen; and I have often thought that one main and
+undetected cause of the lower tone of morality, public and private,
+of the greater corruption of manners, of the more prevalent scorn
+of religion which we see, for instance, in a country so civilized as
+France, is, that its clergy can train no sons to carry into the contests
+of earth the steadfast belief in accountability to Heaven.”
+
+“I thank you with a full heart,” said Kenelm. “I shall ponder well over
+all that you have so earnestly said. I am already disposed to give up
+all lingering crotchets as to a bachelor clergy; but, as a layman,
+I fear that I shall never attain to the purified philanthropy of Mr.
+Decimus Roach, and, if ever I do marry, it will be very much for my
+personal satisfaction.”
+
+Mr. Emlyn laughed good-humouredly, and, as they had now reached the
+bridge, shook hands with Kenelm, and walked homewards, along the
+brook-side and through the burial-ground, with the alert step and the
+uplifted head of a man who has joy in life and admits of no fear in
+death.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+FOR the next two weeks or so Kenelm and Lily met not indeed so often
+as the reader might suppose, but still frequently; five times at Mrs.
+Braefield’s, once again at the vicarage, and twice when Kenelm had
+called at Grasmere; and, being invited to stay to tea at one of those
+visits, he stayed the whole evening. Kenelm was more and more fascinated
+in proportion as he saw more and more of a creature so exquisitely
+strange to his experience. She was to him not only a poem, but a poem in
+the Sibylline Books; enigmatical, perplexing conjecture, and somehow or
+other mysteriously blending its interest with visions of the future.
+
+Lily was indeed an enchanting combination of opposites rarely blended
+into harmony. Her ignorance of much that girls know before they number
+half her years was so relieved by candid, innocent simplicity, so
+adorned by pretty fancies and sweet beliefs, and so contrasted and lit
+up by gleams of a knowledge that the young ladies we call well educated
+seldom exhibit,--knowledge derived from quick observation of external
+Nature, and impressionable susceptibility to its varying and subtle
+beauties. This knowledge had been perhaps first instilled, and
+subsequently nourished, by such poetry as she had not only learned by
+heart, but taken up as inseparable from the healthful circulation of her
+thoughts; not the poetry of our own day,--most young ladies know enough
+of that,--but selected fragments from the verse of old, most of them
+from poets now little read by the young of either sex, poets dear to
+spirits like Coleridge or Charles Lamb,--none of them, however, so dear
+to her as the solemn melodies of Milton. Much of such poetry she had
+never read in books: it had been taught her in childhood by her guardian
+the painter. And with all this imperfect, desultory culture, there was
+such dainty refinement in her every look and gesture, and such deep
+woman-tenderness of heart. Since Kenelm had commended “Numa Pompilius”
+ to her study, she had taken very lovingly to that old-fashioned romance,
+and was fond of talking to him about Egeria as of a creature who had
+really existed.
+
+But what was the effect that he,--the first man of years correspondent
+to her own with whom she had ever familiarly conversed,--what was the
+effect that Kenelm Chillingly produced on the mind and the heart of
+Lily?
+
+This was, after all, the question that puzzled him the most,--not
+without reason: it might have puzzled the shrewdest bystander. The
+artless candour with which she manifested her liking to him was at
+variance with the ordinary character of maiden love; it seemed more the
+fondness of a child for a favourite brother. And it was this uncertainty
+that, in his own thoughts, justified Kenelm for lingering on, and
+believing that it was necessary to win, or at least to learn more of,
+her secret heart before he could venture to disclose his own. He did not
+flatter himself with the pleasing fear that he might be endangering
+her happiness; it was only his own that was risked. Then, in all those
+meetings, all those conversations to themselves, there had passed none
+of the words which commit our destiny to the will of another. If in the
+man’s eyes love would force its way, Lily’s frank, innocent gaze chilled
+it back again to its inward cell. Joyously as she would spring
+forward to meet him, there was no tell-tale blush on her cheek, no
+self-betraying tremor in her clear, sweet-toned voice. No; there had not
+yet been a moment when he could say to himself, “She loves me.” Often he
+said to himself, “She knows not yet what love is.”
+
+In the intervals of time not passed in Lily’s society, Kenelm would
+take long rambles with Mr. Emlyn, or saunter into Mrs. Braefield’s
+drawing-room. For the former he conceived a more cordial sentiment of
+friendship than he entertained for any man of his own age,--a friendship
+that admitted the noble elements of admiration and respect.
+
+Charles Emlyn was one of those characters in which the colours appear
+pale unless the light be brought very close to them, and then each
+tint seems to change into a warmer and richer one. The manner which, at
+first, you would call merely gentle, becomes unaffectedly genial;
+the mind you at first might term inert, though well-informed, you now
+acknowledge to be full of disciplined vigour. Emlyn was not, however,
+without his little amiable foibles; and it was, perhaps, these that made
+him lovable. He was a great believer in human goodness, and very easily
+imposed upon by cunning appeals to “his well-known benevolence.” He
+was disposed to overrate the excellence of all that he once took to his
+heart. He thought he had the best wife in the world, the best children,
+the best servants, the best beehive, the best pony, and the best
+house-dog. His parish was the most virtuous, his church the most
+picturesque, his vicarage the prettiest, certainly, in the whole
+shire,--perhaps, in the whole kingdom. Probably it was this philosophy
+of optimism which contributed to lift him into the serene realm of
+aesthetic joy.
+
+He was not without his dislikes as well as likings. Though a liberal
+Churchman towards Protestant dissenters, he cherished the _odium
+theologicum_ for all that savoured of Popery. Perhaps there was another
+cause for this besides the purely theological one. Early in life a young
+sister of his had been, to use his phrase, “secretly entrapped” into
+conversion to the Roman Catholic faith, and had since entered a convent.
+His affections had been deeply wounded by this loss to the range of
+them. Mr. Emlyn had also his little infirmities of self-esteem rather
+than of vanity. Though he had seen very little of any world beyond that
+of his parish, he piqued himself on his knowledge of human nature and of
+practical affairs in general. Certainly no man had read more about them,
+especially in the books of the ancient classics. Perhaps it was owing
+to this that he so little understood Lily,--a character to which the
+ancient classics afforded no counterpart nor clue; and perhaps it was
+this also that made Lily think him “so terribly grown up.” Thus, despite
+his mild good-nature, she did not get on very well with him.
+
+The society of this amiable scholar pleased Kenelm the more, because
+the scholar evidently had not the remotest idea that Kenelm’s sojourn at
+Cromwell Lodge was influenced by the vicinity to Grasmere. Mr. Emlyn was
+sure that he knew human nature, and practical affairs in general, too
+well to suppose that the heir to a rich baronet could dream of taking
+for wife a girl without fortune or rank, the orphan ward of a low-born
+artist only just struggling into reputation; or, indeed, that a
+Cambridge prizeman, who had evidently read much on grave and dry
+subjects, and who had no less evidently seen a great deal of polished
+society, could find any other attraction in a very imperfectly-educated
+girl, who tamed butterflies and knew no more than they did of
+fashionable life, than Mr. Emlyn himself felt in the presence of a
+pretty wayward innocent child, the companion and friend of his Clemmy.
+
+Mrs. Braefield was more discerning; but she had a good deal of tact, and
+did not as yet scare Kenelm away from her house by letting him see how
+much she had discerned. She would not even tell her husband, who, absent
+from the place on most mornings, was too absorbed in the cares of his
+own business to interest himself much in the affairs of others.
+
+Now Elsie, being still of a romantic turn of mind, had taken it into
+her head that Lily Mordaunt, if not actually the princess to be found in
+poetic dramas whose rank was for a while kept concealed, was yet one of
+the higher-born daughters of the ancient race whose name she bore,
+and in that respect no derogatory alliance for Kenelm Chillingly. A
+conclusion she had arrived at from no better evidence than the well-bred
+appearance and manners of the aunt, and the exquisite delicacy of the
+niece’s form and features, with the undefinable air of distinction
+which accompanied even her most careless and sportive moments. But Mrs.
+Braefield also had the wit to discover that, under the infantine ways
+and phantasies of this almost self-taught girl, there lay, as yet
+undeveloped, the elements of a beautiful womanhood. So that altogether,
+from the very day she first re-encountered Kenelm, Elsie’s thought had
+been that Lily was the wife to suit him. Once conceiving that idea, her
+natural strength of will made her resolve on giving all facilities to
+carry it out silently and unobtrusively, and therefore skilfully.
+
+“I am so glad to think,” she said one day, when Kenelm had joined her
+walk through the pleasant shrubberies in her garden ground, “that you
+have made such friends with Mr. Emlyn. Though all hereabouts like him so
+much for his goodness, there are few who can appreciate his learning.
+To you it must be a surprise as well as pleasure to find, in this quiet
+humdrum place, a companion so clever and well-informed: it compensates
+for your disappointment in discovering that our brook yields such bad
+sport.”
+
+“Don’t disparage the brook; it yields the pleasantest banks on which
+to lie down under old pollard oaks at noon, or over which to saunter
+at morn and eve. Where those charms are absent even a salmon could
+not please. Yes; I rejoice to have made friends with Mr. Emlyn. I have
+learned a great deal from him, and am often asking myself whether I
+shall ever make peace with my conscience by putting what I have learned
+into practice.”
+
+“May I ask what special branch of learning is that?”
+
+“I scarcely know how to define it. Suppose we call it ‘Worth-whileism.’
+Among the New Ideas which I was recommended to study as those that must
+govern my generation, the Not-worth-while Idea holds a very high rank;
+and being myself naturally of calm and equable constitution, that new
+idea made the basis of my philosophical system. But since I have become
+intimate with Charles Emlyn I think there is a great deal to be said in
+favour of Worth-whileism, old idea though it be. I see a man who, with
+very commonplace materials for interest or amusement at his command,
+continues to be always interested or generally amused; I ask myself why
+and how? And it seems to me as if the cause started from fixed beliefs
+which settle his relations with God and man, and that settlement he will
+not allow any speculations to disturb. Be those beliefs questionable or
+not by others, at least they are such as cannot displease a Deity, and
+cannot fail to be kindly and useful to fellow-mortals. Then he plants
+these beliefs on the soil of a happy and genial home, which tends to
+confirm and strengthen and call them into daily practice; and when he
+goes forth from home, even to the farthest verge of the circle that
+surrounds it, he carries with him the home influences of kindliness
+and use. Possibly my line of life may be drawn to the verge of a wider
+circle than his; but so much the better for interest and amusement, if
+it can be drawn from the same centre; namely, fixed beliefs daily warmed
+into vital action in the sunshine of a congenial home.”
+
+Mrs. Braefield listened to this speech with pleased attention, and as
+it came to its close, the name of Lily trembled on her tongue, for she
+divined that when he spoke of home Lily was in his thoughts; but she
+checked the impulse, and replied by a generalized platitude.
+
+“Certainly the first thing in life is to secure a happy and congenial
+home. It must be a terrible trial for the best of us if we marry without
+love.”
+
+“Terrible, indeed, if the one loves and the other does not.”
+
+“That can scarcely be your case, Mr. Chillingly, for I am sure you could
+not marry where you did not love; and do not think I flatter you when I
+say that a man far less gifted than you can scarcely fail to be loved by
+the woman he wooes and wins.”
+
+Kenelm, in this respect one of the modestest of human beings, shook his
+head doubtingly, and was about to reply in self-disparagement, when,
+lifting his eyes and looking round, he halted mute and still as if
+rooted to the spot. They had entered the trellised circle through the
+roses of which he had first caught sight of the young face that had
+haunted him ever since.
+
+“Ah!” he said abruptly; “I cannot stay longer here, dreaming away the
+work-day hours in a fairy ring. I am going to town to-day by the next
+train.”
+
+“Yoa are coming back?”
+
+“Of course,--this evening. I left no address at my lodgings in London.
+There must be a large accumulation of letters; some, no doubt, from my
+father and mother. I am only going for them. Good-by. How kindly you
+have listened to me!”
+
+“Shall we fix a day next week for seeing the remains of the old Roman
+villa? I will ask Mrs. Cameron and her niece to be of the party.”
+
+“Any day you please,” said Kenelm joyfully.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+KENELM did indeed find a huge pile of letters and notes on reaching his
+forsaken apartment in Mayfair; many of them merely invitations for days
+long past, none of them of interest except two from Sir Peter, three
+from his mother, and one from Tom Bowles.
+
+Sir Peter’s were short. In the first he gently scolded Kenelm for going
+away without communicating any address; and stated the acquaintance he
+had formed with Gordon, the favourable impression that young gentleman
+had made on him, the transfer of the L20,000 and the invitation given to
+Gordon, the Traverses, and Lady Glenalvon. The second, dated much later,
+noted the arrival of his invited guests, dwelt with warmth unusual to
+Sir Peter on the attractions of Cecilia, and took occasion to refer,
+not the less emphatically because as it were incidentally, to the sacred
+promise which Kenelm had given him never to propose to a young lady
+until the case had been submitted to the examination and received
+the consent of Sir Peter. “Come to Exmundham, and if I do not give my
+consent to propose to Cecilia Travers hold me a tyrant and rebel.”
+
+Lady Chillingly’s letters were much longer. They dwelt more
+complainingly on his persistence in eccentric habits; so exceedingly
+unlike other people, quitting London at the very height of the season,
+going without even a servant nobody knew where: she did not wish to
+wound his feelings; but still those were not the ways natural to a young
+gentleman of station. If he had no respect for himself, he ought to have
+some consideration for his parents, especially his poor mother. She then
+proceeded to comment on the elegant manners of Leopold Travers, and the
+good sense and pleasant conversation of Chillingly Gordon, a young man
+of whom any mother might be proud. From that subject she diverged to
+mildly querulous references to family matters. Parson John had expressed
+himself very rudely to Mr. Chillingly Gordon upon some book by a
+foreigner,--Comte or Count, or some such name,--on which, so far as
+she could pretend to judge, Mr. Gordon had uttered some very benevolent
+sentiments about humanity, which, in the most insolent manner, Parson
+John had denounced as an attack on religion. But really Parson John
+was too High Church for her. Having thus disposed of Parson John, she
+indulged some ladylike wailings on the singular costume of the three
+Miss Chillinglys. They had been asked by Sir Peter, unknown to her--so
+like him--to meet their guests; to meet Lady Glenalvon and Miss Travers,
+whose dress was so perfect (here she described their dress); and they
+came in pea-green with pelerines of mock blonde, and Miss Sally with
+corkscrew ringlets and a wreath of jessamine, “which no girl after
+eighteen would venture to wear.”
+
+“But, my dear,” added her ladyship, “your poor father’s family are
+certainly great oddities. I have more to put up with than any one knows.
+I do my best to carry it off. I know my duties, and will do them.”
+
+Family grievances thus duly recorded and lamented, Lady Chillingly
+returned to her guests.
+
+Evidently unconscious of her husband’s designs on Cecilia, she dismissed
+her briefly: “A very handsome young lady, though rather too blonde for
+her taste, and certainly with an air _distingue_.” Lastly, she enlarged
+on the extreme pleasure she felt on meeting again the friend of her
+youth, Lady Glenalvon.
+
+“Not at all spoilt by the education of the great world, which, alas!
+obedient to the duties of wife and mother, however little my sacrifices
+are appreciated, I have long since relinquished. Lady Glenalvon suggests
+turning that hideous old moat into a fernery,--a great improvement. Of
+course your poor father makes objections.”
+
+Tom’s letter was written on black-edged paper, and ran thus:--
+
+
+DEAR SIR,--Since I had the honour to see you in London I have had a sad
+loss: my poor uncle is no more. He died very suddenly after a hearty
+supper. One doctor says it was apoplexy, another valvular disease of the
+heart. He has left me his heir, after providing for his sister: no one
+had an idea that he had saved so much money. I am quite a rich man now.
+And I shall leave the veterinary business, which of late--since I
+took to reading, as you kindly advised--is not much to my liking The
+principal corn-merchant here has offered to take me into partnership;
+and, from what I can see, it will be a very good thing and a great rise
+in life. But, sir, I can’t settle to it at present; I can’t settle, as
+I would wish to anything. I know you will not laugh at me when I say I
+have a strange longing to travel for a while. I have been reading books
+of travels, and they get into my head more than any other books. But I
+don’t think I could leave the country with a contented heart till I have
+had just another look at you know whom,--just to see her, and know she
+is happy. I am sure I could shake hands with Will and kiss her little
+one without a wrong thought. What do you say to that, dear sir? You
+promised to write to me about her. But I have not heard from you. Susey,
+the little girl with the flower-ball, has had a loss too: the poor old
+man she lived with died within a few days of my dear uncle’s decease.
+Mother moved here, as I think you know, when the forge at Graveleigh was
+sold; and she is going to take Susey to live with her. She is quite fond
+of Susey. Pray let me hear from you soon; and do, dear sir, give me your
+advice about travelling--and about Her. You see I should like Her to
+think of me more kindly when I am in distant parts.
+
+ I remain, dear sir,
+
+ Your grateful servant,
+
+ T. BOWLES.
+
+P.S.--Miss Travers has sent me Will’s last remittance. There is
+very little owed me now; so they must be thriving. I hope she is not
+overworked.
+
+
+On returning by the train that evening, Kenelm went to the house of Will
+Somers. The shop was already closed, but he was admitted by a trusty
+servant-maid to the parlour, where he found them all at supper, except
+indeed the baby, who had long since retired to the cradle, and the
+cradle had been removed upstairs. Will and Jessie were very proud when
+Kenelm invited himself to share their repast, which, though simple,
+was by no means a bad one. When the meal was over and the supper things
+removed, Kenelm drew his chair near to the glass door which led into a
+little garden very neatly kept--for it was Will’s pride to attend to it
+before he sat down to his more professional work. The door was open,
+and admitted the coolness of the starlit air and the fragrance of the
+sleeping flowers.
+
+“You have a pleasant home here, Mrs. Somers.”
+
+“We have, indeed, and know how to bless him we owe it to.”
+
+“I am rejoiced to think that. How often when God designs a
+special kindness to us He puts the kindness into the heart of a
+fellow-man,--perhaps the last fellow-man we should have thought of; but
+in blessing him we thank God who inspired him. Now, my dear friends, I
+know that you all three suspect me of being the agent whom God chose for
+His benefits. You fancy that it was from me came the loan which enabled
+you to leave Graveleigh and settle here. You are mistaken,--you look
+incredulous.”
+
+“It could not be the Squire,” exclaimed Jessie. “Miss Travers assured
+me that it was neither he nor herself. Oh, it must be you, sir. I beg
+pardon, but who else could it be?”
+
+“Your husband shall guess. Suppose, Will, that you had behaved ill
+to some one who was nevertheless dear to you, and on thinking over it
+afterwards felt very sorry and much ashamed of yourself, and suppose
+that later you had the opportunity and the power to render a service to
+that person, do you think you would do it?”
+
+“I should be a bad man if I did not.”
+
+“Bravo! And supposing that when the person you thus served came to know
+it was you who rendered the service, he did not feel thankful, he did
+not think it handsome of you, thus to repair any little harm he might
+have done you before, but became churlish and sore and cross-grained,
+and with a wretched false pride said that because he had offended you
+once he resented your taking the liberty of befriending him now, would
+you not think that person an ungrateful fellow; ungrateful not only to
+you his fellow-man,--that is of less moment,--but ungrateful to the
+God who put it into your heart to be His human agent in the benefit
+received?”
+
+“Well, sir, yes, certainly,” said Will, with all the superior refinement
+of his intellect to that of Jessie, unaware of what Kenelm was driving
+at; while Jessie, pressing her hands tightly together, turned pale,
+and with a frightened hurried glance towards Will’s face, answered,
+impulsively,--
+
+“Oh, Mr. Chillingly, I hope you are not thinking, not speaking, of Mr.
+Bowles?”
+
+“Whom else should I think or speak of?”
+
+Will rose nervously from his chair, all his features writhing.
+
+“Sir, sir, this is a bitter blow,--very bitter, very.”
+
+Jessie rushed to Will, flung her arms round him and sobbed. Kenelm
+turned quietly to old Mrs. Somers, who had suspended the work on which
+since supper she had been employed, knitting socks for the baby,--
+
+“My dear Mrs. Somers, what is the good of being a grandmother and
+knitting socks for baby grandchildren, if you cannot assure those silly
+children of yours that they are too happy in each other to harbour any
+resentment against a man who would have parted them, and now repents?”
+
+Somewhat to Kenelm’s admiration, I dare not say surprise, old Mrs.
+Somers, thus appealed to, rose from her seat, and, with a dignity of
+thought or of feeling no one could have anticipated from the quiet
+peasant woman, approached the wedded pair, lifted Jessie’s face with one
+hand, laid the other on Will’s head, and said, “If you don’t long to see
+Mr. Bowles again and say ‘The Lord bless you, sir!’ you don’t deserve
+the Lord’s blessing upon you.” Therewith she went back to her seat, and
+resumed her knitting.
+
+“Thank Heaven, we have paid back the best part of the loan,” said Will,
+in very agitated tones, “and I think, with a little pinching, Jessie,
+and with selling off some of the stock, we might pay the rest; and
+then,”--and then he turned to Kenelm,--“and then, sir, we will” (here a
+gulp) “thank Mr. Bowles.”
+
+“This don’t satisfy me at all, Will,” answered Kenelm; “and since I
+helped to bring you two together, I claim the right to say I would never
+have done so could I have guessed you could have trusted your wife so
+little as to allow a remembrance of Mr. Bowles to be a thought of pain.
+You did not feel humiliated when you imagined that it was to me you owed
+some moneys which you have been honestly paying off. Well, then, I will
+lend you whatever trifle remains to discharge your whole debts to Mr.
+Bowles, so that you may sooner be able to say to him, ‘Thank you.’
+But between you and me, Will, I think you will be a finer fellow and a
+manlier fellow if you decline to borrow that trifle of me; if you feel
+you would rather say ‘Thank you’ to Mr. Bowles, without the silly
+notion that when you have paid him his money you owe him nothing for his
+kindness.”
+
+Will looked away irresolutely. Kenelm went on: “I have received a letter
+from Mr. Bowles to-day. He has come into a fortune, and thinks of going
+abroad for a time; but before he goes, he says he should like to shake
+hands with Will, and be assured by Jessie that all his old rudeness is
+forgiven. He had no notion that I should blab about the loan: he wished
+that to remain always a secret. But between friends there need be no
+secrets. What say you, Will? As head of this household, shall Mr. Bowles
+be welcomed here as a friend or not?”
+
+“Kindly welcome,” said old Mrs. Somers, looking up from the socks.
+
+“Sir,” said Will, with sudden energy, “look here; you have never been in
+love, I dare say. If you had, you would not be so hard on me. Mr. Bowles
+was in love with my wife there. Mr. Bowles is a very fine man, and I am
+a cripple.”
+
+“Oh, Will! Will!” cried Jessie.
+
+“But I trust my wife with my whole heart and soul; and, now that
+the first pang is over, Mr. Bowles shall be, as mother says, kindly
+welcome,--heartily welcome.”
+
+“Shake hands. Now you speak like a man, Will. I hope to bring Bowles
+here to supper before many days are over.”
+
+And that night Kenelm wrote to Mr. Bowles:
+
+
+MY DEAR TOM,--Come and spend a few days with me at Cromwell Lodge,
+Moleswich. Mr. and Mrs. Somers wish much to see and to thank you. I
+could not remain forever degraded in order to gratify your whim. They
+would have it that I bought their shop, etc., and I was forced in
+self-defence to say who it was. More on this and on travels when you
+come.
+
+ Your true friend,
+
+ K. C.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+MRS. CAMERON was seated alone in her pretty drawing-room, with a book
+lying open, but unheeded, on her lap. She was looking away from its
+pages, seemingly into the garden without, but rather into empty space.
+
+To a very acute and practised observer, there was in her countenance an
+expression which baffled the common eye.
+
+To the common eye it was simply vacant; the expression of a quiet,
+humdrum woman, who might have been thinking of some quiet humdrum
+household detail,--found that too much for her, and was now not thinking
+at all.
+
+But to the true observer, there were in that face indications of
+a troubled past, still haunted with ghosts never to be laid at
+rest,--indications, too, of a character in herself that had undergone
+some revolutionary change; it had not always been the character of a
+woman quiet and humdrum. The delicate outlines of the lip and nostril
+evinced sensibility, and the deep and downward curve of it bespoke
+habitual sadness. The softness of the look into space did not tell of
+a vacant mind, but rather of a mind subdued and over-burdened by the
+weight of a secret sorrow. There was also about her whole presence, in
+the very quiet which made her prevalent external characteristic, the
+evidence of manners formed in a high-bred society,--the society in which
+quiet is connected with dignity and grace. The poor understood this
+better than her rich acquaintances at Moleswich, when they said, “Mrs.
+Cameron was every inch a lady.” To judge by her features she must once
+have been pretty, not a showy prettiness, but decidedly pretty. Now,
+as the features were small, all prettiness had faded away in cold gray
+colourings, and a sort of tamed and slumbering timidity of aspect. She
+was not only not demonstrative, but must have imposed on herself as a
+duty the suppression of demonstration. Who could look at the formation
+of those lips, and not see that they belonged to the nervous, quick,
+demonstrative temperament? And yet, observing her again more closely,
+that suppression of the constitutional tendency to candid betrayal of
+emotion would the more enlist our curiosity or interest; because, if
+physiognomy and phrenology have any truth in them, there was little
+strength in her character. In the womanly yieldingness of the
+short curved upper lip, the pleading timidity of the regard, the
+disproportionate but elegant slenderness of the head between the ear
+and the neck, there were the tokens of one who cannot resist the will,
+perhaps the whim, of another whom she either loves or trusts.
+
+The book open on her lap is a serious book on the doctrine of grace,
+written by a popular clergyman of what is termed “the Low Church.” She
+seldom read any but serious books, except where such care as she gave
+to Lily’s education compelled her to read “Outlines of History and
+Geography,” or the elementary French books used in seminaries for
+young ladies. Yet if any one had decoyed Mrs. Cameron into familiar
+conversation, he would have discovered that she must early have received
+the education given to young ladies of station. She could speak
+and write French and Italian as a native. She had read, and still
+remembered, such classic authors in either language as are conceded to
+the use of pupils by the well-regulated taste of orthodox governesses.
+She had a knowledge of botany, such as botany was taught twenty years
+ago. I am not sure that, if her memory had been fairly aroused, she
+might not have come out strong in divinity and political economy, as
+expounded by the popular manuals of Mrs. Marcet. In short, you could see
+in her a thoroughbred English lady, who had been taught in a generation
+before Lily’s, and immeasurably superior in culture to the ordinary run
+of English young ladies taught nowadays. So, in what after all are very
+minor accomplishments,--now made major accomplishments,--such as music,
+it was impossible that a connoisseur should hear her play on the piano
+without remarking, “That woman has had the best masters of her time.”
+ She could only play pieces that belonged to her generation. She had
+learned nothing since. In short, the whole intellectual culture had come
+to a dead stop long years ago, perhaps before Lily was born.
+
+Now, while she is gazing into space Mrs. Braefield is announced. Mrs.
+Cameron does not start from revery. She never starts. But she makes a
+weary movement of annoyance, resettles herself, and lays the serious
+book on the sofa table. Elsie enters, young, radiant, dressed in all the
+perfection of the fashion, that is, as ungracefully as in the eyes of an
+artist any gentlewoman can be; but rich merchants who are proud of their
+wives so insist, and their wives, in that respect, submissively obey
+them.
+
+The ladies interchange customary salutations, enter into the customary
+preliminaries of talk, and after a pause Elsie begins in earnest.
+
+“But sha’n’t I see Lily? Where is she?”
+
+“I fear she has gone into the town. A poor little boy, who did our
+errands, has met with an accident,--fallen from a cherry-tree.”
+
+“Which he was robbing?”
+
+“Probably.”
+
+“And Lily has gone to lecture him?”
+
+“I don’t know as to that; but he is much hurt, and Lily has gone to see
+what is the matter with him.”
+
+Mrs. Braefield, in her frank outspoken way,--“I don’t take much to girls
+of Lily’s age in general, though I am passionately fond of children. You
+know how I do take to Lily; perhaps because she is so like a child. But
+she must be an anxious charge to you.”
+
+Mrs. Cameron replied by an anxious “No; she is still a child, a very
+good one; why should I be anxious?”
+
+Mrs. Braefield, impulsively,--“Why, your child must now be eighteen.”
+
+Mrs. Cameron,--“Eighteen--is it possible! How time flies! though in a
+life so monotonous as mine, time does not seem to fly, it slips on
+like the lapse of water. Let me think,--eighteen? No, she is but
+seventeen,--seventeen last May.”
+
+Mrs. Braefield,--“Seventeen! A very anxious age for a girl; an age in
+which dolls cease and lovers begin.”
+
+Mrs. Cameron, not so languidly, but still quietly,--“Lily never cared
+much for dolls,--never much for lifeless pets; and as to lovers, she
+does not dream of them.”
+
+Mrs. Braefield, briskly,--“There is no age after six in which girls do
+not dream of lovers. And here another question arises. When a girl so
+lovely as Lily is eighteen next birthday, may not a lover dream of her?”
+
+Mrs. Cameron, with that wintry cold tranquillity of manner, which
+implies that in putting such questions an interrogator is taking a
+liberty,--“As no lover has appeared, I cannot trouble myself about his
+dreams.”
+
+Said Elsie inly to herself, “This is the stupidest woman I ever met!”
+ and aloud to Mrs. Cameron,--“Do you not think that your neighbour, Mr.
+Chillingly, is a very fine young man?”
+
+“I suppose he would be generally considered so. He is very tall.”
+
+“A handsome face?”
+
+“Handsome, is it? I dare say.”
+
+“What does Lily say?”
+
+“About what?”
+
+“About Mr. Chillingly. Does she not think him handsome?”
+
+“I never asked her.”
+
+“My dear Mrs. Cameron, would it not be a very pretty match for Lily? The
+Chillinglys are among the oldest families in Burke’s ‘Landed Gentry,’
+and I believe his father, Sir Peter, has a considerable property.”
+
+For the first time in this conversation Mrs. Cameron betrayed emotion.
+A sudden flush overspread her countenance, and then left it paler
+than before. After a pause she recovered her accustomed composure, and
+replied, rudely,--
+
+“It would be no friend to Lily who could put such notions into her
+head; and there is no reason to suppose that they have entered into Mr.
+Chillingly’s.”
+
+“Would you be sorry if they did? Surely you would like your niece to
+marry well, and there are few chances of her doing so at Moleswich.”
+
+“Pardon me, Mrs. Braefield, but the question of Lily’s marriage I have
+never discussed, even with her guardian. Nor, considering the childlike
+nature of her tastes and habits, rather than the years she has numbered,
+can I think the time has yet come for discussing it at all.”
+
+Elsie, thus rebuked, changed the subject to some newspaper topic which
+interested the public mind at the moment and very soon rose to depart.
+Mrs. Cameron detained the hand that her visitor held out, and said in
+low tones, which, though embarrassed, were evidently earnest, “My dear
+Mrs. Braefield, let me trust to your good sense and the affection with
+which you have honoured my niece not to incur the risk of unsettling
+her mind by a hint of the ambitious projects for her future on which you
+have spoken to me. It is extremely improbable that a young man of
+Mr. Chillingly’s expectations would entertain any serious thoughts of
+marrying out of his own sphere of life, and--”
+
+“Stop, Mrs. Cameron, I must interrupt you. Lily’s personal attractions
+and grace of manner would adorn any station; and have I not rightly
+understood you to say that though her guardian, Mr. Melville, is, as we
+all know, a man who has risen above the rank of his parents, your niece,
+Miss Mordaunt, is like yourself, by birth a gentlewoman?”
+
+“Yes, by birth a gentlewoman,” said Mrs. Cameron, raising her head with
+a sudden pride. But she added, with as sudden a change to a sort of
+freezing humility, “What does that matter? A girl without fortune,
+without connection, brought up in this little cottage, the ward of a
+professional artist, who was the son of a city clerk, to whom she owes
+even the home she has found, is not in the same sphere of life as Mr.
+Chillingly, and his parents could not approve of such an alliance for
+him. It would be most cruel to her, if you were to change the innocent
+pleasure she may take in the conversation of a clever and well-informed
+stranger into the troubled interest which, since you remind me of her
+age, a girl even so childlike and beautiful as Lily might conceive in
+one represented to her as the possible partner of her life. Don’t commit
+that cruelty; don’t--don’t, I implore you!”
+
+“Trust me,” cried the warm-hearted Elsie, with tears rushing to her
+eyes. “What you say so sensibly, so nobly, never struck me before. I
+do not know much of the world,--knew nothing of it till I married,--and
+being very fond of Lily, and having a strong regard for Mr. Chillingly,
+I fancied I could not serve both better than--than--but I see now; he
+is very young, very peculiar; his parents might object, not to Lily
+herself, but to the circumstances you name. And you would not wish
+her to enter any family where she was not as cordially welcomed as she
+deserves to be. I am glad to have had this talk with you. Happily, I
+have done no mischief as yet. I will do none. I had come to propose
+an excursion to the remains of the Roman Villa, some miles off, and to
+invite you and Mr. Chillingly. I will no longer try to bring him and
+Lily together.”
+
+“Thank you. But you still misconstrue me. I do not think that Lily cares
+half so much for Mr. Chillingly as she does for a new butterfly. I do
+not fear their coming together, as you call it, in the light in which
+she now regards him, and in which, from all I observe, he regards her.
+My only fear is that a hint might lead her to regard him in another way,
+and that way impossible.”
+
+Elsie left the house extremely bewildered, and with a profound contempt
+for Mrs. Cameron’s knowledge of what may happen to two young persons
+“brought together.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+NOW, on that very day, and about the same hour in which the conversation
+just recorded between Elsie and Mrs. Cameron took place, Kenelm, in his
+solitary noonday wanderings, entered the burial-ground in which Lily had
+some short time before surprised him. And there he found her, standing
+beside the flower border which she had placed round the grave of the
+child whom she had tended and nursed in vain.
+
+The day was cloudless and sunless; one of those days that so often
+instil a sentiment of melancholy into the heart of an English summer.
+
+“You come here too often, Miss Mordaunt,” said Kenelm, very softly, as
+he approached.
+
+Lily turned her face to him, without any start of surprise, with no
+brightening change in its pensive expression,--an expression rare to the
+mobile play of her features.
+
+“Not too often. I promised to come as often as I could; and, as I told
+you before, I have never broken a promise yet.”
+
+Kenelm made no answer. Presently the girl turned from the spot, and
+Kenelm followed her silently till she halted before the old tombstone
+with its effaced inscription.
+
+“See,” she said, with a faint smile, “I have put fresh flowers there.
+Since the day we met in this churchyard, I have thought so much of that
+tomb, so neglected, so forgotten, and--” she paused a moment, and went
+on abruptly, “do you not often find that you are much too--what is
+the word? ah! too egotistical, considering and pondering and dreaming
+greatly too much about yourself?”
+
+“Yes, you are right there; though, till you so accused me, my conscience
+did not detect it.”
+
+“And don’t you find that you escape from being so haunted by the thought
+of yourself, when you think of the dead? they can never have any
+share in your existence _here_. When you say, ‘I shall do this or that
+to-day;’ when you dream, ‘I may be this or that to-morrow,’ you are
+thinking and dreaming, all by yourself, for yourself. But you are out of
+yourself, beyond yourself, when you think and dream of the dead, who can
+have nothing to do with your to-day or your to-morrow.”
+
+As we all know, Kenelm Chillingly made it one of the rules of his life
+never to be taken by surprise. But when the speech I have written down
+came from the lips of that tamer of butterflies, he was so startled that
+all it occurred to him to say, after a long pause, was,--
+
+“The dead are the past; and with the past rests all in the present or
+the future that can take us out of our natural selves. The past decides
+our present. By the past we divine our future. History, poetry, science,
+the welfare of states, the advancement of individuals, are all connected
+with tombstones of which inscriptions are effaced. You are right to
+honour the mouldered tombstones with fresh flowers. It is only in the
+companionship of the dead that one ceases to be an egotist.”
+
+If the imperfectly educated Lily had been above the quick comprehension
+of the academical Kenelm in her speech, so Kenelm was now above the
+comprehension of Lily. She, too, paused before she replied,--
+
+“If I knew you better, I think I could understand you better. I wish you
+knew Lion. I should like to hear you talk with him.”
+
+While thus conversing, they had left the burial-ground, and were in the
+pathway trodden by the common wayfarer.
+
+Lily resumed,--“Yes, I should like to hear you talk with Lion.”
+
+“You mean your guardian, Mr. Melville?”
+
+“Yes, you know that.”
+
+“And why should you like to hear me talk to him?”
+
+“Because there are some things in which I doubt if he was altogether
+right, and I would ask you to express my doubts to him; you would, would
+you not?”
+
+“But why can you not express them yourself to your guardian; are you
+afraid of him?”
+
+“Afraid, no indeed! But--ah, how many people there are coming this way!
+There is some tiresome public meeting in the town to-day. Let us take
+the ferry: the other side of the stream is much pleasanter; we shall
+have it more to ourselves.”
+
+Turning aside to the right while she thus spoke, Lily descended a
+gradual slope to the margin of the stream, on which they found an old
+man dozily reclined in his ferry-boat.
+
+As, seated side by side, they were slowly borne over the still waters
+under a sunless sky, Kenelm would have renewed the subject which his
+companion had begun, but she shook her head, with a significant glance
+at the ferryman. Evidently what she had to say was too confidential to
+admit of a listener, not that the old ferryman seemed likely to take
+the trouble of listening to any talk that was not addressed to him.
+Lily soon did address her talk to him, “So, Brown, the cow has quite
+recovered.”
+
+“Yes, Miss, thanks to you, and God bless you. To think of your beating
+the old witch like that!”
+
+“‘Tis not I who beat the witch, Brown; ‘tis the fairy. Fairies, you
+know, are much more powerful than witches.”
+
+“So I find, Miss.”
+
+Lily here turned to Kenelm; “Mr. Brown has a very nice milch-cow that
+was suddenly taken very ill, and both he and his wife were convinced
+that the cow was bewitched.”
+
+“Of course it were, that stands to reason. Did not Mother Wright tell my
+old woman that she would repent of selling milk, and abuse her dreadful;
+and was not the cow taken with shivers that very night?”
+
+“Gently, Brown. Mother Wright did not say that your wife would repent of
+selling milk, but of putting water into it.”
+
+“And how did she know that, if she was not a witch? We have the best of
+customers among the gentlefolks, and never any one that complained.”
+
+“And,” answered Lily to Kenelm, unheeding this last observation, which
+was made in a sullen manner, “Brown had a horrid notion of enticing
+Mother Wright into his ferry-boat and throwing her into the water, in
+order to break the spell upon the cow. But I consulted the fairies, and
+gave him a fairy charm to tie round the cow’s neck. And the cow is quite
+well now, you see. So, Brown, there was no necessity to throw Mother
+Wright into the water, because she said you put some of it into the
+milk. But,” she added, as the boat now touched the opposite bank, “shall
+I tell you, Brown, what the fairies said to me this morning?”
+
+“Do, Miss.”
+
+“It was this: If Brown’s cow yields milk without any water in it, and
+if water gets into it when the milk is sold, we, the fairies, will pinch
+Mr. Brown black and blue; and when Brown has his next fit of rheumatics
+he must not look to the fairies to charm it away.”
+
+Herewith Lily dropped a silver groat into Brown’s hand, and sprang
+lightly ashore, followed by Kenelm.
+
+“You have quite converted him, not only as to the existence, but as to
+the beneficial power of fairies,” said Kenelm.
+
+“Ah,” answered Lily very gravely, “ah, but would it not be nice if there
+were fairies still? good fairies, and one could get at them? tell them
+all that troubles and puzzles us, and win from them charms against the
+witchcraft we practise on ourselves?”
+
+“I doubt if it would be good for us to rely on such supernatural
+counsellors. Our own souls are so boundless that the more we explore
+them the more we shall find worlds spreading upon worlds into
+infinities; and among the worlds is Fairyland.” He added, inly to
+himself, “Am I not in Fairyland now?”
+
+“Hush!” whispered Lily. “Don’t speak more yet awhile. I am thinking over
+what you have just said, and trying to understand it.”
+
+Thus walking silently they gained the little summer-house which
+tradition dedicated to the memory of Izaak Walton. Lily entered it and
+seated herself; Kenelm took his place beside her. It was a small octagon
+building which, judging by its architecture, might have been built
+in the troubled reign of Charles I.; the walls plastered within were
+thickly covered with names and dates, and inscriptions in praise of
+angling, in tribute to Izaak, or with quotations from his books. On
+the opposite side they could see the lawn of Grasmere, with its great
+willows dipping into the water. The stillness of the place, with its
+associations of the angler’s still life, were in harmony with the quiet
+day, its breezeless air, and cloud-vested sky.
+
+“You were to tell me your doubts in connection with your guardian,
+doubts if he were right in something which you left unexplained, which
+you could not yourself explain to him.”
+
+Lily started as from thoughts alien to the subject thus reintroduced.
+“Yes, I cannot mention my doubts to him because they relate to me, and
+he is so good. I owe him so much that I could not bear to vex him by a
+word that might seem like reproach or complaint. You remember,” here she
+drew nearer to him; and with that ingenuous confiding look and movement
+which had, not unfrequently, enraptured him at the moment, and saddened
+him on reflection,--too ingenuous, too confiding, for the sentiment
+with which he yearned to inspire her,--she turned towards him her frank
+untimorous eyes, and laid her hand on his arm: “you remember that I said
+in the burial-ground how much I felt that one is constantly thinking
+too much of one’s self. That must be wrong. In talking to you only about
+myself I know I am wrong, but I cannot help it: I must do so. Do not
+think ill of me for it. You see I have not been brought up like other
+girls. Was my guardian right in that? Perhaps if he had insisted upon
+not letting me have my own wilful way, if he had made me read the books
+which Mr. and Mrs. Emlyn wanted to force on me, instead of the poems and
+fairy tales which he gave me, I should have had so much more to think of
+that I should have thought less of myself. You said that the dead were
+the past; one forgets one’s self when one thinks of the dead. If I had
+read more of the past, had more subjects of interest in the dead whose
+history it tells, surely I should be less shut up, as it were, in my
+own small, selfish heart? It is only very lately I have thought of this,
+only very lately that I have felt sorrow and shame in the thought that I
+am so ignorant of what other girls know, even little Clemmy. And I dare
+not say this to Lion when I see him next, lest he should blame himself,
+when he only meant to be kind, and used to say, ‘I don’t want Fairy to
+be learned, it is enough for me to think she is happy.’ And oh, I was so
+happy, till--till of late!”
+
+“Because till of late you only knew yourself as a child. But, now that
+you feel the desire of knowledge, childhood is vanishing. Do not vex
+yourself. With the mind which nature has bestowed on you, such learning
+as may fit you to converse with those dreaded ‘grown-up folks’ will come
+to you very easily and quickly. You will acquire more in a month now
+than you would have acquired in a year when you were a child, and
+task-work was loathed, not courted. Your aunt is evidently well
+instructed, and if I might venture to talk to her about the choice of
+books--”
+
+“No, don’t do that. Lion would not like it.”
+
+“Your guardian would not like you to have the education common to other
+young ladies?”
+
+“Lion forbade my aunt to teach me much that I rather wished to learn.
+She wanted to do so, but she has given it up at his wish. She only now
+teases me with those horrid French verbs, and that I know is a mere
+make-belief. Of course on Sunday it is different; then I must not read
+anything but the Bible and sermons. I don’t care so much for the sermons
+as I ought, but I could read the Bible all day, every week-day as well
+as Sunday; and it is from the Bible that I learn that I ought to think
+less about myself.”
+
+Kenelm involuntarily pressed the little hand that lay so innocently on
+his arm.
+
+“Do you know the difference between one kind of poetry and another?”
+ asked Lily, abruptly.
+
+“I am not sure. I ought to know when one kind is good and another kind
+is bad. But in that respect I find many people, especially professed
+critics, who prefer the poetry which I call bad to the poetry I think
+good.”
+
+“The difference between one kind of poetry and another, supposing them
+both to be good,” said Lily, positively, and with an air of triumph, “is
+this,--I know, for Lion explained it to me,--in one kind of poetry the
+writer throws himself entirely out of his existence, he puts himself
+into other existences quite strange to his own. He may be a very good
+man, and he writes his best poetry about very wicked men: he would not
+hurt a fly, but he delights in describing murderers. But in the other
+kind of poetry the writer does not put himself into other existences, he
+expresses his own joys and sorrows, his own individual heart and mind.
+If he could not hurt a fly, he certainly could not make himself at home
+in the cruel heart of a murderer. There, Mr. Chillingly, that is the
+difference between one kind of poetry and another.”
+
+“Very true,” said Kenelm, amused by the girl’s critical definitions.
+“The difference between dramatic poetry and lyrical. But may I ask what
+that definition has to do with the subject into which you so suddenly
+introduced it?”
+
+“Much; for when Lion was explaining this to my aunt, he said, ‘A perfect
+woman is a poem; but she can never be a poem of the one kind, never can
+make herself at home in the hearts with which she has no connection,
+never feel any sympathy with crime and evil; she must be a poem of the
+other kind, weaving out poetry from her own thoughts and fancies.’ And,
+turning to me, he said, smiling, ‘That is the poem I wish Lily to be.
+Too many dry books would only spoil the poem.’ And you now see why I am
+so ignorant, and so unlike other girls, and why Mr. and Mrs. Emlyn look
+down upon me.”
+
+“You wrong at least Mr. Emlyn, for it was he who first said to me, ‘Lily
+Mordaunt is a poem.’”
+
+“Did he? I shall love him for that. How pleased Lion will be!”
+
+“Mr. Melville seems to have an extraordinary influence over your mind,”
+ said Kenelm, with a jealous pang.
+
+“Of course. I have neither father nor mother: Lion has been both to
+me. Aunty has often said, ‘You cannot be too grateful to your guardian;
+without him I should have no home to shelter you, no bread to give you.’
+He never said that: he would be very angry with aunty if he knew she had
+said it. When he does not call me Fairy he calls me Princess. I would
+not displease him for the world.”
+
+“He is very much older than you; old enough to be your father, I hear.”
+
+“I dare say. But if he were twice as old I could not love him better.”
+
+Kenelm smiled: the jealousy was gone. Certainly not thus could any girl,
+even Lily, speak of one with whom, however she might love him, she was
+likely to fall in love.
+
+Lily now rose up, rather slowly and wearily. “It is time to go home:
+aunty will be wondering what keeps me away,--come.”
+
+They took their way towards the bridge opposite to Cromwell Lodge.
+
+It was not for some minutes that either broke silence. Lily was the
+first to do so, and with one of those abrupt changes of topic which were
+common to the restless play of her secret thoughts.
+
+“You have father and mother still living, Mr. Chillingly?”
+
+“Thank Heaven, yes.”
+
+“Which do you love the best?”
+
+“That is scarcely a fair question. I love my mother very much; but my
+father and I understand each other better than--”
+
+“I see: it is so difficult to be understood. No one understands me.”
+
+“I think I do.”
+
+Lily shook her head with an energetic movement of dissent.
+
+“At least as well as a man can understand a young lady.”
+
+“What sort of young lady is Miss Cecilia Travers?”
+
+“Cecilia Travers! When and how did you ever hear that such a person
+existed?”
+
+“That big London man whom they call Sir Thomas mentioned her name the
+day we dined at Braefieldville.”
+
+“I remember,--as having been at the Court ball.”
+
+“He said she was very handsome.”
+
+“So she is.”
+
+“Is she a poem too?”
+
+“No; that never struck me.”
+
+“Mr. Emlyn, I suppose, would call her perfectly brought up,--well
+educated. He would not raise his eyebrows at her as he does at me,--poor
+me, Cinderella!”
+
+“Ah, Miss Mordaunt, you need not envy her. Again let me say that you
+could very soon educate yourself to the level of any young ladies who
+adorn the Court balls.”
+
+“Ay; but then I should not be a poem,” said Lily, with a shy, arch
+side-glance at his face.
+
+They were now on the bridge, and before Kenelm could answer Lily resumed
+quickly, “You need not come any farther; it is out of your way.”
+
+“I cannot be so disdainfully dismissed, Miss Mordaunt; I insist on
+seeing you to at least your garden gate.”
+
+Lily made no objection and again spoke,--
+
+“What sort of country do you live in when at home; is it like this?”
+
+“Not so pretty; the features are larger, more hill and dale and
+woodland: yet there is one feature in our grounds which reminds me a
+little of this landscape,--a light stream, somewhat wider, indeed,
+than your brooklet; but here and there the banks are so like those by
+Cromwell Lodge that I sometimes start and fancy myself at home. I have
+a strange love for rivulets and all running waters, and in my foot
+wanderings I find myself magnetically attracted towards them.”
+
+Lily listened with interest, and after a short pause said, with a
+half-suppressed sigh, “Your home is much finer than any place here, even
+than Braefieldville, is it not? Mrs. Braefield says your father is very
+rich.”
+
+“I doubt if he is richer than Mr. Braefield; and, though his house may
+be larger than Braefieldville, it is not so smartly furnished, and has
+no such luxurious hothouses and conservatories. My father’s tastes are
+like mine, very simple. Give him his library, and he would scarcely miss
+his fortune if he lost it. He has in this one immense advantage over
+me.”
+
+“You would miss fortune?” said Lily, quickly.
+
+“Not that; but my father is never tired of books. And shall I own it?
+there are days when books tire me almost as much as they do you.”
+
+They were now at the garden gate. Lily, with one hand on the latch, held
+out the other to Kenelm, and her smile lit up the dull sky like a burst
+of sunshine, as she looked in his face and vanished.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VII.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+KENELM did not return home till dusk, and just as he was sitting down to
+his solitary meal there was a ring at the bell, and Mrs. Jones ushered
+in Mr. Thomas Bowles.
+
+Though that gentleman had never written to announce the day of his
+arrival, he was not the less welcome.
+
+“Only,” said Kenelm, “if you preserve the appetite I have lost, I fear
+you will find meagre fare to-day. Sit down, man.”
+
+“Thank you, kindly, but I dined two hours ago in London, and I really
+can eat nothing more.”
+
+Kenelm was too well-bred to press unwelcome hospitalities. In a very few
+minutes his frugal repast was ended; the cloth removed, the two men were
+left alone.
+
+“Your room is here, of course, Tom; that was engaged from the day I
+asked you, but you ought to have given me a line to say when to expect
+you, so that I could have put our hostess on her mettle as to dinner or
+supper. You smoke still, of course: light your pipe.”
+
+“Thank you, Mr. Chillingly, I seldom smoke now; but if you will excuse a
+cigar,” and Tom produced a very smart cigar-case.
+
+“Do as you would at home. I shall send word to Will Somers that you and
+I sup there to-morrow. You forgive me for letting out your secret.
+All straightforward now and henceforth. You come to their hearth as a
+friend, who will grow dearer to them both every year. Ah, Tom, this love
+for woman seems to me a very wonderful thing. It may sink a man into
+such deeps of evil, and lift a man into such heights of good.”
+
+“I don’t know as to the good,” said Tom, mournfully, and laying aside
+his cigar.
+
+“Go on smoking: I should like to keep you company; can you spare me one
+of your cigars?”
+
+Tom offered his case. Kenelm extracted a cigar, lighted it, drew a few
+whiffs, and, when he saw that Tom had resumed his own cigar, recommenced
+conversation.
+
+“You don’t know as to the good; but tell me honestly, do you think if
+you had not loved Jessie Wiles, you would be as good a man as you are
+now?”
+
+“If I am better than I was, it is not because of my love for the girl.”
+
+“What then?”
+
+“The loss of her.”
+
+Kenelm started, turned very pale, threw aside the cigar, rose, and
+walked the room to and fro with very quick but very irregular strides.
+
+Tom continued quietly. “Suppose I had won Jessie and married her, I
+don’t think any idea of improving myself would have entered my head. My
+uncle would have been very much offended at my marrying a day-labourer’s
+daughter, and would not have invited me to Luscombe. I should have
+remained at Graveleigh, with no ambition of being more than a common
+farrier, an ignorant, noisy, quarrelsome man; and if I could not have
+made Jessie as fond of me as I wished, I should not have broken myself
+of drinking, and I shudder to think what a brute I might have been, when
+I see in the newspapers an account of some drunken wife-beater. How do
+we know but what that wife-beater loved his wife dearly before marriage,
+and she did not care for him? His home was unhappy, and so he took to
+drink and to wife-beating.”
+
+“I was right, then,” said Kenelm, halting his strides, “when I told you
+it would be a miserable fate to be married to a girl whom you loved to
+distraction, and whose heart you could never warm to you, whose life you
+could never render happy.”
+
+“So right!”
+
+“Let us drop that part of the subject at present,” said Kenelm,
+reseating himself, “and talk about your wish to travel. Though contented
+that you did not marry Jessie, though you can now, without anguish,
+greet her as the wife of another, still there are some lingering
+thoughts of her that make you restless; and you feel that you could more
+easily wrench yourself from these thoughts in a marked change of scene
+and adventure, that you might bury them altogether in the soil of a
+strange land. Is it so?”
+
+“Ay, something of that, sir.”
+
+Then Kenelm roused himself to talk of foreign lands, and to map out a
+plan of travel that might occupy some months. He was pleased to find
+that Tom had already learned enough of French to make himself understood
+at least upon commonplace matters, and still more pleased to discover
+that he had been not only reading the proper guide-books or manuals
+descriptive of the principal places in Europe worth visiting, but that
+he had acquired an interest in the places; interest in the fame attached
+to them by their history in the past, or by the treasures of art they
+contained.
+
+So they talked far into the night; and when Tom retired to his room,
+Kenelm let himself out of the house noiselessly, and walked with slow
+steps towards the old summer-house in which he had sat with Lily. The
+wind had risen, scattering the clouds that had veiled the preceding day,
+so that the stars were seen in far chasms of the sky beyond,--seen for
+a while in one place, and, when the swift clouds rolled over them there,
+shining out elsewhere. Amid the varying sounds of the trees, through
+which swept the night gusts, Kenelm fancied he could distinguish the
+sigh of the willow on the opposite lawn of Grasmere.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+KENELM despatched a note to Will Somers early the next morning, inviting
+himself and Mr. Bowles to supper that evening. His tact was sufficient
+to make him aware that in such social meal there would be far less
+restraint for each and all concerned than in a more formal visit
+from Tom during the day-time; and when Jessie, too, was engaged with
+customers to the shop.
+
+But he led Tom through the town and showed him the shop itself, with
+its pretty goods at the plate-glass windows, and its general air of
+prosperous trade; then he carried him off into the lanes and fields of
+the country, drawing out the mind of his companion, and impressed with
+great admiration of its marked improvement in culture, and in the trains
+of thought which culture opens out and enriches.
+
+But throughout all their multiform range of subject Kenelm could
+perceive that Tom was still preoccupied and abstracted: the idea of the
+coming interview with Jessie weighed upon him.
+
+When they left Cromwell Lodge at nightfall, to repair to the supper at
+Will’s; Kenelm noticed that Bowles had availed himself of the contents
+of his carpet-bag to make some refined alterations in his dress. The
+alterations became him.
+
+When they entered the parlour, Will rose from his chair with the
+evidence of deep emotion on his face, advanced to Tom, took his hand and
+grasped and dropped it without a word. Jessie saluted both guests alike,
+with drooping eyelids and an elaborate curtsy. The old mother alone was
+perfectly self-possessed and up to the occasion.
+
+“I am heartily glad to see you, Mr. Bowles,” said she, “and so all three
+of us are, and ought to be; and if baby was older, there would be four.”
+
+“And where on earth have you hidden baby?” cried Kenelm. “Surely he
+might have been kept up for me to-night, when I was expected; the last
+time I supped here I took you by surprise, and therefore had no right to
+complain of baby’s want of respect to her parents’ friends.”
+
+Jessie raised the window-curtain, and pointed to the cradle behind it.
+Kenelm linked his arm in Tom’s, led him to the cradle, and, leaving
+him alone to gaze on the sleeping inmate, seated himself at the table,
+between old Mrs. Somers and Will. Will’s eyes were turned away towards
+the curtain, Jessie holding its folds aside, and the formidable Tom,
+who had been the terror of his neighbourhood, bending smiling over
+the cradle: till at last he laid his large hand on the pillow, gently,
+timidly, careful not to awake the helpless sleeper, and his lips moved,
+doubtless with a blessing; then he, too, came to the table, seating
+himself, and Jessie carried the cradle upstairs.
+
+Will fixed his keen, intelligent eyes on his bygone rival; and noticing
+the changed expression of the once aggressive countenance, the changed
+costume in which, without tinge of rustic foppery, there was the token
+of a certain gravity of station scarcely compatible with a return to old
+loves and old habits in the village world, the last shadow of jealousy
+vanished from the clear surface of Will’s affectionate nature.
+
+“Mr. Bowles,” he exclaimed, impulsively, “you have a kind heart, and a
+good heart, and a generous heart. And your corning here to-night on this
+friendly visit is an honour which--which”--“Which,” interrupted Kenelm,
+compassionating Will’s embarrassment, “is on the side of us single men.
+In this free country a married man who has a male baby may be father
+to the Lord Chancellor or the Archbishop of Canterbury. But--well, my
+friends, such a meeting as we have to-night does not come often; and
+after supper let us celebrate it with a bowl of punch. If we have
+headaches the next morning none of us will grumble.”
+
+Old Mrs. Somers laughed out jovially. “Bless you, sir, I did not think
+of the punch; I will go and see about it,” and, baby’s socks still in
+her hands, she hastened from the room.
+
+What with the supper, what with the punch, and what with Kenelm’s art
+of cheery talk on general subjects, all reserve, all awkwardness, all
+shyness between the convivialists, rapidly disappeared. Jessie mingled
+in the talk; perhaps (excepting only Kenelm) she talked more than the
+others, artlessly, gayly, no vestige of the old coquetry; but, now and
+then, with a touch of genteel finery, indicative of her rise in life,
+and of the contact of the fancy shopkeeper with noble customers. It was
+a pleasant evening; Kenelm had resolved that it should be so. Not a
+hint of the obligations to Mr. Bowles escaped until Will, following his
+visitor to the door, whispered to Tom, “You don’t want thanks, and I
+can’t express them. But when we say our prayers at night, we have always
+asked God to bless him who brought us together, and has since made us
+so prosperous,--I mean Mr. Chillingly. To-night there will be another
+besides him, for whom we shall pray, and for whom baby, when he is
+older, will pray too.”
+
+Therewith Will’s voice thickened; and he prudently receded, with no
+unreasonable fear lest the punch might make him too demonstrative of
+emotion if he said more.
+
+Tom was very silent on the return to Cromwell Lodge; it did not seem the
+silence of depressed spirits, but rather of quiet meditation, from which
+Kenelm did not attempt to rouse him.
+
+It was not till they reached the garden pales of Grasmere that Tom,
+stopping short, and turning his face to Kenelm, said, “I am very
+grateful to you for this evening,--very.”
+
+“It has revived no painful thoughts then?”
+
+“No; I feel so much calmer in mind than I ever believed I could have
+been, after seeing her again.”
+
+“Is it possible!” said Kenelm, to himself. “How should I feel if I ever
+saw in Lily the wife of another man, the mother of his child?” At that
+question he shuddered, and an involuntary groan escaped from his lips.
+Just then having, willingly in those precincts, arrested his steps when
+Tom paused to address him, something softly touched the arm which he had
+rested on the garden pale. He looked, and saw that it was Blanche.
+The creature, impelled by its instincts towards night-wanderings, had,
+somehow or other, escaped from its own bed within the house, and hearing
+a voice that had grown somewhat familiar to its ear, crept from among
+the shrubs behind upon the edge of the pale. There it stood, with arched
+back, purring low as in pleased salutation.
+
+Kenelm bent down and covered with kisses the blue ribbon which Lily’s
+hand had bound round the favourite’s neck. Blanche submitted to the
+caress for a moment, and then catching a slight rustle among the shrubs
+made by some awaking bird, sprang into the thick of the quivering leaves
+and vanished.
+
+Kenelm moved on with a quick impatient stride, and no further words were
+exchanged between him and his companion till they reached their lodging
+and parted for the night.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE next day, towards noon, Kenelm and his visitor, walking together
+along the brook-side, stopped before Izaak Walton’s summer-house, and,
+at Kenelm’s suggestion, entered therein to rest, and more at their ease
+to continue the conversation they had begun.
+
+“You have just told me,” said Kenelm, “that you feel as if a load were
+taken off your heart, now that you have again met Jessie Somers, and
+that you find her so changed that she is no longer the woman you loved.
+As to the change, whatever it be, I own, it seems to me for the better,
+in person, in manners, in character; of course I should not say this, if
+I were not convinced of your perfect sincerity when you assured me that
+you are cured of the old wound. But I feel so deeply interested in the
+question how a fervent love, once entertained and enthroned in the heart
+of a man so earnestly affectionate and so warm-blooded as yourself, can
+be, all of a sudden, at a single interview, expelled or transferred into
+the calm sentiment of friendship, that I pray you to explain.”
+
+“That is what puzzles me, sir,” answered Tom, passing his hand over his
+forehead. “And I don’t know if I can explain it.
+
+“Think over it, and try.”
+
+Tom mused for some moments and then began. “You see, sir, that I was
+a very different man myself when I fell in love with Jessie Wiles, and
+said, ‘Come what may, that girl shall be my wife. Nobody else shall have
+her.’”
+
+“Agreed; go on.”
+
+“But while I was becoming a different man, when I thought of her--and I
+was always thinking of her--I still pictured her to myself as the same
+Jessie Wiles; and though, when I did see her again at Graveleigh, after
+she had married--the day--”
+
+“You saved her from the insolence of the Squire.”
+
+“She was but very recently married. I did not realize her as married. I
+did not see her husband, and the difference within myself was only
+then beginning. Well, so all the time I was reading and thinking, and
+striving to improve my old self at Luscombe, still Jessie Wiles haunted
+me as the only girl I had ever loved, ever could love; I could not
+believe it possible that I could ever marry any one else. And lately I
+have been much pressed to marry some one else; all my family wish it:
+but the face of Jessie rose up before me, and I said to myself, ‘I
+should be a base man if I married one woman, while I could not get
+another woman out of my head.’ I must see Jessie once more, must learn
+whether her face is now really the face that haunts me when I sit alone;
+and I have seen her, and it is not that face: it may be handsomer, but
+it is not a girl’s face, it is the face of a wife and a mother. And,
+last evening, while she was talking with an open-heartedness which I
+had never found in her before, I became strangely conscious of the
+difference in myself that had been silently at work within the last two
+years or so. Then, sir, when I was but an ill-conditioned, uneducated,
+petty village farrier, there was no inequality between me and a peasant
+girl; or, rather, in all things except fortune, the peasant girl
+was much above me. But last evening I asked myself, watching her and
+listening to her talk, ‘If Jessie were now free, should I press her to
+be my wife?’ and I answered myself, ‘No.’”
+
+Kenelm listened with rapt attention, and exclaimed briefly, but
+passionately, “Why?”
+
+“It seems as if I were giving myself airs to say why. But, sir, lately I
+have been thrown among persons, women as well as men, of a higher class
+than I was born in; and in a wife I should want a companion up to their
+mark, and who would keep me up to mine; and ah, sir, I don’t feel as if
+I could find that companion in Mrs. Somers.”
+
+“I understand you now, Tom. But you are spoiling a silly romance of
+mine. I had fancied the little girl with the flower face would grow up
+to supply the loss of Jessie; and, I am so ignorant of the human heart,
+I did think it would take all the years required for the little girl to
+open into a woman, before the loss of the old love could be supplied. I
+see now that the poor little child with the flower face has no chance.”
+
+“Chance? Why, Mr. Chillingly,” cried Tom, evidently much nettled, “Susey
+is a dear little thing, but she is scarcely more than a mere charity
+girl. Sir, when I last saw you in London you touched on that matter as
+if I were still the village farrier’s son, who might marry a village
+labourer’s daughter. But,” added Tom, softening down his irritated tone
+of voice, “even if Susey were a lady born I think a man would make a
+very great mistake, if he thought he could bring up a little girl to
+regard him as a father; and then, when she grew up, expect her to accept
+him as a lover.”
+
+“Ah, you think that!” exclaimed Kenelm, eagerly, and turning eyes that
+sparkled with joy towards the lawn of Grasmere. “You think that; it is
+very sensibly said,--well, and you have been pressed to marry, and have
+hung back till you had seen again Mrs. Somers. Now you will be better
+disposed to such a step; tell me about it?”
+
+“I said, last evening, that one of the principal capitalists at
+Luscombe, the leading corn-merchant, had offered to take me into
+partnership. And, sir, he has an only daughter, she is a very amiable
+girl, has had a first-rate education, and has such pleasant manners and
+way of talk, quite a lady. If I married her I should soon be the first
+man in Luscombe, and Luscombe, as you are no doubt aware, returns two
+members to Parliament; who knows, but that some day the farrier’s son
+might be--” Tom stopped abruptly, abashed at the aspiring thought which,
+while speaking, had deepened his hardy colour and flashed from his
+honest eyes.
+
+“Ah!” said Kenelm, almost mournfully, “is it so? must each man in his
+life play many parts? Ambition succeeds to love, the reasoning brain to
+the passionate heart. True, you are changed; my Tom Bowles is gone.”
+
+“Not gone in his undying gratitude to you, sir,” said Tom, with great
+emotion. “Your Tom Bowles would give up all his dreams of wealth or of
+rising in life, and go through fire and water to serve the friend who
+first bid him be a new Tom Bowles! Don’t despise me as your own work:
+you said to me that terrible day, when madness was on my brow and crime
+within my heart, ‘I will be to you the truest friend man ever found in
+man.’ So you have been. You commanded me to read; you commanded me to
+think; you taught me that body should be the servant of mind.”
+
+“Hush, hush, times are altered; it is you who can teach me now. Teach
+me, teach me; how does ambition replace love? How does the desire to
+rise in life become the all-mastering passion, and, should it prosper,
+the all-atoning consolation of our life? We can never be as happy,
+though we rose to the throne of the Caesars, as we dream that we
+could have been, had Heaven but permitted us to dwell in the obscurest
+village, side by side with the woman we love.”
+
+Tom was exceedingly startled by such a burst of irrepressible passion
+from the man who had told him that, though friends were found only once
+in a life, sweethearts were as plentiful as blackberries.
+
+Again he swept his hand over his forehead, and replied hesitatingly: “I
+can’t pretend to say what maybe the case with others. But to judge by my
+own case, it seems to me this: a young man who, out of his own business,
+has nothing to interest or excite him, finds content, interest, and
+excitement when he falls in love; and then, whether for good or ill, he
+thinks there is nothing like love in the world, he don’t care a fig for
+ambition then. Over and over again did my poor uncle ask me to come to
+him at Luscombe, and represent all the worldly advantage it would be
+to me; but I could not leave the village in which Jessie lived, and,
+besides, I felt myself unfit to be anything higher than I was. But
+when I had been some time at Luscombe, and gradually got accustomed to
+another sort of people, and another sort of talk, then I began to feel
+interest in the same objects that interested those about me; and when,
+partly by mixing with better educated men, and partly by the pains I
+took to educate myself, I felt that I might now more easily rise above
+my uncle’s rank of life than two years ago I could have risen above
+a farrier’s forge, then the ambition to rise did stir in me, and grew
+stronger every day. Sir, I don’t think you can wake up a man’s intellect
+but what you wake with it emulation. And, after all, emulation is
+ambition.”
+
+“Then, I suppose, I have no emulation in me, for certainly I have no
+ambition.”
+
+“That I can’t believe, sir; other thoughts may cover it over and keep it
+down for a time. But sooner or later, it will force its way to the top,
+as it has done with me. To get on in life, to be respected by those who
+know you, more and more as you grow older, I call that a manly desire. I
+am sure it comes as naturally to an Englishman as--as--”
+
+“As the wish to knock down some other Englishman who stands in his way
+does. I perceive now that you were always a very ambitious man, Tom; the
+ambition has only taken another direction. Caesar might have been
+
+
+ “‘But the first wrestler on the green.’
+
+
+“And now, I suppose, you abandon the idea of travel: you will return to
+Luscombe, cured of all regret for the loss of Jessie; you will marry the
+young lady you mention, and rise, through progressive steps of alderman
+and mayor, into the rank of member for Luscombe.”
+
+“All that may come in good time,” answered Tom, not resenting the tone
+of irony in which he was addressed, “but I still intend to travel: a
+year so spent must render me all the more fit for any station I aim at.
+I shall go back to Luscombe to arrange my affairs, come to terms with
+Mr. Leland the corn-merchant, against my return, and--”
+
+“The young lady is to wait till then.”
+
+“Emily--”
+
+“Oh, that is the name? Emily! a much more elegant name than Jessie.”
+
+“Emily,” continued Tom, with an unruffled placidity,--which, considering
+the aggravating bitterness for which Kenelm had exchanged his wonted
+dulcitudes of indifferentism, was absolutely saintlike, “Emily knows
+that if she were my wife I should be proud of her, and will esteem me
+the more if she feels how resolved I am that she shall never be ashamed
+of me.”
+
+“Pardon me, Tom,” said Kenelm softened, and laying his hand on his
+friend’s shoulder with brotherlike tenderness. “Nature has made you a
+thorough gentleman; and you could not think and speak more nobly if you
+had come into the world as the head of all the Howards.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+TOM went away the next morning. He declined to see Jessie again, saying
+curtly, “I don’t wish the impression made on me the other evening to
+incur a chance of being weakened.”
+
+Kenelm was in no mood to regret his friend’s departure. Despite all
+the improvement in Tom’s manners and culture, which raised him so
+much nearer to equality with the polite and instructed heir of the
+Chillinglys, Kenelm would have felt more in sympathy and rapport with
+the old disconsolate fellow-wanderer who had reclined with him on the
+grass, listening to the minstrel’s talk or verse, than he did with
+the practical, rising citizen of Luscombe. To the young lover of Lily
+Mordaunt there was a discord, a jar, in the knowledge that the human
+heart admits of such well-reasoned, well-justified transfers of
+allegiance; a Jessie to-day, or an Emily to-morrow; “La reine est morte:
+vive la reine”
+
+An hour or two after Tom had gone, Kenelm found himself almost
+mechanically led towards Braefieldville. He had instinctively divined
+Elsie’s secret wish with regard to himself and Lily, however skilfully
+she thought she had concealed it.
+
+At Braefieldville he should hear talk of Lily, and in the scenes where
+Lily had been first beheld.
+
+He found Mrs. Braefield alone in the drawing-room, seated by a table
+covered with flowers, which she was assorting and intermixing for the
+vases to which they were destined.
+
+It struck him that her manner was more reserved than usual and somewhat
+embarrassed; and when, after a few preliminary matters of small talk,
+he rushed boldly _in medias res_ and asked if she had seen Mrs. Cameron
+lately, she replied briefly, “Yes, I called there the other day,”
+ and immediately changed the conversation to the troubled state of the
+Continent.
+
+Kenelm was resolved not to be so put off, and presently returned to the
+charge.
+
+“The other day you proposed an excursion to the site of the Roman villa,
+and said you would ask Mrs. Cameron to be of the party. Perhaps you have
+forgotten it?”
+
+“No; but Mrs. Cameron declines. We can ask the Emlyns instead. He will
+be an excellent _cicerone_.”
+
+“Excellent! Why did Mrs. Cameron decline?”
+
+Elsie hesitated, and then lifted her clear brown eyes to his face, with
+a sudden determination to bring matters to a crisis.
+
+“I cannot say why Mrs. Cameron declined, but in declining she acted very
+wisely and very honourably. Listen to me, Mr. Chillingly. You know how
+highly I esteem, and how cordially I like you, and judging by what I
+felt for some weeks, perhaps longer, after we parted at Tor Hadham--”
+ Here again she hesitated, and, with a half laugh and a slight blush,
+again went resolutely on. “If I were Lily’s aunt or elder sister, I
+should do as Mrs. Cameron does; decline to let Lily see much more of a
+young gentleman too much above her in wealth and station for--”
+
+“Stop,” cried Kenelm, haughtily, “I cannot allow that any man’s wealth
+or station would warrant his presumption in thinking himself above Miss
+Mordaunt.”
+
+“Above her in natural grace and refinement, certainly not. But in the
+world there are other considerations which, perhaps, Sir Peter and Lady
+Chillingly might take into account.”
+
+“You did not think of that before you last saw Mrs. Cameron.”
+
+“Honestly speaking, I did not. Assured that Miss Mordaunt was a
+gentlewoman by birth, I did not sufficiently reflect upon other
+disparities.”
+
+“You know, then, that she is by birth a gentlewoman?”
+
+“I only know it as all here do, by the assurance of Mrs. Cameron, whom
+no one could suppose not to be a lady. But there are different degrees
+of lady and of gentleman, which are little heeded in the ordinary
+intercourse of society, but become very perceptible in questions of
+matrimonial alliance; and Mrs. Cameron herself says very plainly that
+she does not consider her niece to belong to that station in life from
+which Sir Peter and Lady Chillingly would naturally wish their son
+should select his bride. Then (holding out her hand) pardon me if I have
+wounded or offended you. I speak as a true friend to you and to Lily
+both. Earnestly I advise you, if Miss Mordaunt be the cause of your
+lingering here, earnestly I advise you to leave while yet in time for
+her peace of mind and your own.”
+
+“Her peace of mind,” said Kenelm, in low faltering tones, scarcely
+hearing the rest of Mrs. Braefield’s speech. “Her peace of mind? Do
+you sincerely think that she cares for me,--could care for me,--if I
+stayed?”
+
+“I wish I could answer you decidedly. I am not in the secrets of her
+heart. I can but conjecture that it might be dangerous for the peace of
+any young girl to see too much of a man like yourself, to divine that he
+loved her, and not to be aware that he could not, with the approval of
+his family, ask her to become his wife.”
+
+Kenelm bent his face down, and covered it with his right hand. He did
+not speak for some moments. Then he rose, the fresh cheek very pale, and
+said,--
+
+“You are right. Miss Mordaunt’s peace of mind must be the first
+consideration. Excuse me if I quit you thus abruptly. You have given me
+much to think of, and I can only think of it adequately when alone.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+FROM KENELM CHILLINGLY TO SIR PETER CHILLINGLY.
+
+
+MY FATHER, MY DEAR FATHER,--This is no reply to your letters. I know
+not if itself can be called a letter. I cannot yet decide whether it be
+meant to reach your hands. Tired with talking to myself, I sit down to
+talk to you. Often have I reproached myself for not seeing every fitting
+occasion to let you distinctly know how warmly I love, how deeply I
+reverence you; you, O friend, O father. But we Chillinglys are not a
+demonstrative race. I don’t remember that you, by words, ever expressed
+to me the truth that you loved your son infinitely more than he
+deserves. Yet, do I not know that you would send all your beloved old
+books to the hammer rather than I should pine in vain for some untried,
+if sinless, delight on which I had set my heart? And do you not
+know equally well, that I would part with all my heritage, and turn
+day-labourer, rather than you should miss the beloved old books?
+
+That mutual knowledge is taken for granted in all that my heart yearns
+to pour forth to your own. But, if I divine aright, a day is coming
+when, as between you and me, there must be a sacrifice on the part of
+one to the other. If so, I implore that the sacrifice may come from
+you. How is this? How am I so ungenerous, so egotistical, so selfish, so
+ungratefully unmindful of all I already owe to you, and may never repay?
+I can only answer, “It is fate, it is nature, it is love”--
+
+ *****
+
+Here I must break off. It is midnight, the moon halts opposite to the
+window at which I sit, and on the stream that runs below there is a long
+narrow track on which every wave trembles in her light; on either side
+of the moonlit track all the other waves, running equally to their grave
+in the invisible deep, seem motionless and dark. I can write no more.
+
+.........
+
+ (Dated two days later.)
+
+They say she is beneath us in wealth and station. Are we, my father--we,
+two well-born gentlemen--coveters of gold or lackeys of the great? When
+I was at college, if there were any there more heartily despised than
+another it was the parasite and the tuft-hunter; the man who chose his
+friends according as their money or their rank might be of use to him.
+If so mean where the choice is so little important to the happiness and
+career of a man who has something of manhood in him, how much more mean
+to be the parasite and tuft-hunter in deciding what woman to love, what
+woman to select as the sweetener and ennobler of one’s everyday life!
+Could she be to my life that sweetener, that ennobler? I firmly believe
+it. Already life itself has gained a charm that I never even guessed in
+it before; already I begin, though as yet but faintly and vaguely, to
+recognize that interest in the objects and aspirations of my fellow-men
+which is strongest in those whom posterity ranks among its ennoblers. In
+this quiet village it is true that I might find examples enough to prove
+that man is not meant to meditate upon life, but to take active part in
+it, and in that action to find his uses. But I doubt if I should have
+profited by such examples; if I should not have looked on this
+small stage of the world as I have looked on the large one, with the
+indifferent eyes of a spectator on a trite familiar play carried on
+by ordinary actors, had not my whole being suddenly leaped out of
+philosophy into passion, and, at once made warmly human, sympathized
+with humanity wherever it burned and glowed. Ah, is there to be
+any doubt of what station, as mortal bride, is due to her,--her, my
+princess, my fairy? If so, how contented you shall be, my father, with
+the worldly career of your son! how perseveringly he will strive
+(and when did perseverance fail?) to supply all his deficiencies of
+intellect, genius, knowledge, by the energy concentrated on a single
+object which--more than intellect, genius, knowledge, unless they attain
+to equal energy equally concentrated--commands what the world calls
+honours.
+
+Yes, with her, with her as the bearer of my name, with her to whom I,
+whatever I might do of good or of great, could say, “It is thy work,”
+ I promise that you shall bless the day when you took to your arms a
+daughter.
+
+.........
+
+“Thou art in contact with the beloved in all that thou feelest elevated
+above thee.” So it is written by one of those weird Germans who search
+in our bosoms for the seeds of buried truths, and conjure them into
+flowers before we ourselves were even aware of the seeds.
+
+Every thought that associates itself with my beloved seems to me born
+with wings.
+
+.........
+
+I have just seen her, just parted from her. Since I had been
+told--kindly, wisely told--that I had no right to hazard her peace of
+mind unless I were privileged to woo and to win her, I promised myself
+that I would shun her presence until I had bared my heart to you, as I
+am doing now, and received that privilege from yourself; for even had I
+never made the promise that binds my honour, your consent and blessing
+must hallow my choice. I do not feel as if I could dare to ask one
+so innocent and fair to wed an ungrateful, disobedient son. But this
+evening I met her, unexpectedly, at the vicar’s, an excellent man, from
+whom I have learned much; whose precepts, whose example, whose delight
+in his home, and his life at once active and serene, are in harmony with
+my own dreams when I dream of her.
+
+I will tell you the name of the beloved; hold it as yet a profound
+secret between you and me. But oh for the day when I may hear you call
+her by that name, and print on her forehead the only kiss by man of
+which I should not be jealous.
+
+It is Sunday, and after the evening service it is my friend’s custom
+to gather his children round him, and, without any formal sermon or
+discourse, engage their interests in subjects harmonious to associations
+with the sanctity of the day; often not directly bearing upon religion;
+more often, indeed, playfully starting from some little incident or some
+slight story-book which had amused the children in the course of the
+past week, and then gradually winding into reference to some sweet moral
+precept or illustration from some divine example. It is a maxim with
+him that, while much that children must learn they can only learn well
+through conscious labour, and as positive task-work, yet Religion should
+be connected in their minds not with labour and task-work, but should
+become insensibly infused into their habits of thought, blending
+itself with memories and images of peace and love; with the indulgent
+tenderness of the earliest teachers, the sinless mirthfulness of the
+earliest home; with consolation in after sorrows, support through after
+trials, and never parting company with its twin sister, Hope.
+
+I entered the vicar’s room this evening just as the group had collected
+round him. By the side of his wife sat a lady in whom I feel a keen
+interest. Her face wears that kind of calm which speaks of the lassitude
+bequeathed by sorrow. She is the aunt of my beloved one. Lily had
+nestled herself on a low ottoman, at the good pastor’s feet, with one
+of his little girls, round whose shoulder she had wound her arm. She is
+much more fond of the companionship of children than that of girls of
+her own age. The vicar’s wife, a very clever woman, once, in my hearing,
+took her to task for this preference, asking her why she persisted in
+grouping herself with mere infants who could teach her nothing? Ah!
+could you have seen the innocent, angel-like expression of her face when
+she answered simply, “I suppose because with them I feel safer, I mean
+nearer to God.”
+
+Mr. Emlyn--that is the name of the vicar--deduced his homily this
+evening from a pretty fairy tale which Lily had been telling to his
+children the day before, and which he drew her on to repeat.
+
+Take, in brief, the substance of the story:--
+
+“Once on a time, a king and queen made themselves very unhappy because
+they had no heir to their throne; and they prayed for one; and lo, on
+some bright summer morning, the queen, waking from sleep, saw a cradle
+beside her bed, and in the cradle a beautiful sleeping babe. Great
+day throughout the kingdom! But as the infant grew up, it became very
+wayward and fretful: it lost its beauty; it would not learn its lessons;
+it was as naughty as a child could be. The parents were very sorrowful;
+the heir, so longed for, promised to be a great plague to themselves
+and their subjects. At last one day, to add to their trouble, two little
+bumps appeared on the prince’s shoulders. All the doctors were consulted
+as to the cause and the cure of this deformity. Of course they tried
+the effect of back-bands and steel machines, which gave the poor little
+prince great pain, and made him more unamiable than ever. The bumps,
+nevertheless, grew larger, and as they increased, so the prince sickened
+and pined away. At last a skilful surgeon proposed, as the only chance
+of saving the prince’s life, that the bumps should be cut out; and the
+next morning was fixed for that operation. But at night the queen saw,
+or dreamed she saw, a beautiful shape standing by her bedside. And it
+said to her reproachfully, ‘Ungrateful woman! How wouldst thou repay me
+for the precious boon that my favour bestowed on thee! In me behold the
+Queen of the Fairies. For the heir to thy kingdom, I consigned to thy
+charge an infant from Fairyland, to become a blessing to thee and to
+thy people; and thou wouldst inflict upon it a death of torture by the
+surgeon’s knife.’ And the queen answered, ‘Precious indeed thou mayest
+call the boon,--a miserable, sickly, feverish changeling.’
+
+“‘Art thou so dull,’ said the beautiful visitant, ‘as not to comprehend
+that the earliest instincts of the fairy child would be those of
+discontent, at the exile from its native home? and in that discontent it
+would have pined itself to death, or grown up, soured and malignant,
+a fairy still in its power but a fairy of wrath and evil, had not the
+strength of its inborn nature sufficed to develop the growth of its
+wings. That which thy blindness condemns as the deformity of the
+human-born, is to the fairy-born the crowning perfection of its beauty.
+Woe to thee, if thou suffer not the wings of the fairy child to grow.’
+
+“And the next morning the queen sent away the surgeon when he came with
+his horrible knife, and removed the back-board and the steel machines
+from the prince’s shoulders, though all the doctors predicted that the
+child would die. And from that moment the royal heir began to recover
+bloom and health. And when at last, out of those deforming bumps,
+budded delicately forth the plumage of snow-white wings, the wayward
+peevishness of the prince gave place to sweet temper. Instead of
+scratching his teachers, he became the quickest and most docile of
+pupils, grew up to be the joy of his parents and the pride of their
+people; and people said, ‘In him we shall have hereafter such a king as
+we have never yet known.’”
+
+Here ended Lily’s tale. I cannot convey to you a notion of the pretty,
+playful manner in which it was told. Then she said, with a grave shake
+of the head, “But you do not seem to know what happened afterwards. Do
+you suppose that the prince never made use of his wings? Listen to me.
+It was discovered by the courtiers who attended on His Royal Highness
+that on certain nights, every week, he disappeared. In fact, on these
+nights, obedient to the instinct of the wings, he flew from palace
+halls into Fairyland; coming back thence all the more lovingly disposed
+towards the human home from which he had escaped for a while.”
+
+“Oh, my children,” interposed the preacher earnestly, “the wings would
+be given to us in vain if we did not obey the instinct which allures us
+to soar; vain, no less, would be the soaring, were it not towards
+the home whence we came, bearing back from its native airs a stronger
+health, and a serener joy; more reconciled to the duties of earth by
+every new flight into heaven.”
+
+As he thus completed the moral of Lily’s fairy tale, the girl rose
+from her low seat, took his hand, kissed it reverently, and walked away
+towards the window. I could see that she was affected even to tears,
+which she sought to conceal. Later in the evening, when we were
+dispersed on the lawn, for a few minutes before the party broke up, Lily
+came to my side timidly and said, in a low whisper,--
+
+“Are you angry with me? what have I done to displease you?”
+
+“Angry with you; displeased? How can you think of me so unjustly?”
+
+“It is so many days since you have called, since I have seen you,”
+ she said so artlessly, looking up at me with eyes in which tears still
+seemed to tremble.
+
+Before I could trust myself to reply, her aunt approached, and noticing
+me with a cold and distant “Good-night,” led away her niece.
+
+I had calculated on walking back to their home with them, as I generally
+have done when we met at another house. But the aunt had probably
+conjectured I might be at the vicarage that evening, and in order to
+frustrate my intention had engaged a carriage for their return. No doubt
+she has been warned against permitting further intimacy with her niece.
+
+My father, I must come to you at once, discharge my promise, and receive
+from your own lips your consent to my choice; for you will consent, will
+you not? But I wish you to be prepared beforehand, and I shall therefore
+put up these disjointed fragments of my commune with my own heart and
+with yours, and post them to-morrow. Expect me to follow them after
+leaving you a day free to consider them alone,--alone, my dear father:
+they are meant for no eye but yours.
+
+K. C.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE next day Kenelm walked into the town, posted his voluminous letter
+to Sir Peter, and then looked in at the shop of Will Somers, meaning to
+make some purchases of basket-work or trifling fancy goods in Jessie’s
+pretty store of such articles, that might please the taste of his
+mother.
+
+On entering the shop his heart beat quicker. He saw two young forms
+bending over the counter, examining the contents of a glass case. One
+of these customers was Clemmy; in the other there was no mistaking the
+slight graceful shape of Lily Mordaunt. Clemmy was exclaiming, “Oh, it
+is so pretty, Mrs. Somers! but,” turning her eyes from the counter to a
+silk purse in her hand, she added sorrowfully, “I can’t buy it. I have
+not got enough, not by a great deal.”
+
+“And what is it, Miss Clemmy?” asked Kenelm.
+
+The two girls turned round at his voice, and Clemmy’s face brightened.
+
+“Look here,” she said, “is it not too lovely?”
+
+The object thus admired and coveted was a little gold locket, enriched
+by a cross composed of small pearls.
+
+“I assure you, miss,” said Jessie, who had acquired all the coaxing arts
+of her trade, “it is really a great bargain. Miss Mary Burrows, who was
+here just before you came, bought one not nearly so pretty and gave ten
+shillings more for it.”
+
+Miss Mary Burrows was the same age as Miss Clementina Emlyn, and there
+was a rivalry as to smartness between those youthful beauties. “Miss
+Burrows!” sighed Clemmy, very scornfully.
+
+But Kenelm’s attention was distracted from Clemmy’s locket to a little
+ring which Lily had been persuaded by Mrs. Somers to try on, and which
+she now drew off and returned with a shake of the head. Mrs. Somers, who
+saw that she had small chance of selling the locket to Clemmy, was now
+addressing herself to the elder girl more likely to have sufficient
+pocket-money, and whom, at all events, it was quite safe to trust.
+
+“The ring fits you so nicely, Miss Mordaunt, and every young lady of
+your age wears at least one ring; allow me to put it up.” She added in
+a lower voice, “Though we only sell the articles in this case on
+commission, it is all the same to us whether we are paid now or at
+Christmas.”
+
+“‘Tis no use tempting me, Mrs. Somers,” said Lily, laughing, and then
+with a grave air, “I promised Lion, I mean my guardian, never to run
+into debt, and I never will.”
+
+Lily turned resolutely from the perilous counter, taking up a paper
+that contained a new ribbon she had bought for Blanche, and Clemmy
+reluctantly followed her out of the shop.
+
+Kenelm lingered behind and selected very hastily a few trifles, to be
+sent to him that evening with some specimens of basket-work left to
+Will’s tasteful discretion; then purchased the locket on which Clemmy
+had set her heart; but all the while his thoughts were fixed on the ring
+which Lily had tried on. It was no sin against etiquette to give the
+locket to a child like Clemmy, but would it not be a cruel impertinence
+to offer a gift to Lily?
+
+Jessie spoke: “Miss Mordaunt took a great fancy to this ring, Mr.
+Chillingly. I am sure her aunt would like her to have it. I have a great
+mind to put it by on the chance of Mrs. Cameron’s calling here. It would
+be a pity if it were bought by some one else.”
+
+“I think,” said Kenelm, “that I will take the liberty of showing it to
+Mrs. Cameron. No doubt she will buy it for her niece. Add the price
+of it to my bill.” He seized the ring and carried it off; a very poor
+little simple ring, with a single stone shaped as a heart, not half the
+price of the locket.
+
+Kenelm rejoined the young ladies just where the path split into two, the
+one leading direct to Grasmere, the other through the churchyard to
+the vicarage. He presented the locket to Clemmy with brief kindly words
+which easily removed any scruple she might have had in accepting it;
+and, delighted with her acquisition, she bounded off to the vicarage,
+impatient to show the prize to her mamma and sisters, and more
+especially to Miss Mary Burrows, who was coming to lunch with them.
+
+Kenelm walked on slowly by Lily’s side.
+
+“You have a good heart, Mr. Chillingly,” said she, somewhat abruptly.
+“How it must please you to give such pleasure! Dear little Clemmy!”
+
+This artless praise, and the perfect absence of envy or thought of self
+evinced by her joy that her friend’s wish was gratified, though her own
+was not, enchanted Kenelm.
+
+“If it pleases to give pleasure,” said he, “it is your turn to be
+pleased now; you can confer such pleasure upon me.”
+
+“How?” she asked, falteringly, and with quick change of colour.
+
+“By conceding to me the same right your little friend has allowed.”
+
+And he drew forth the ring.
+
+Lily reared her head with a first impulse of haughtiness. But when
+her eyes met his the head drooped down again, and a slight shiver ran
+through her frame.
+
+“Miss Mordaunt,” resumed Kenelm, mastering his passionate longing to
+fall at her feet and say, “But, oh! in this ring it is my love that
+I offer,--it is my troth that I pledge!” “Miss Mordaunt, spare me the
+misery of thinking that I have offended you; least of all would I do so
+on this day, for it may be some little while before I see you again.
+I am going home for a few days upon a matter which may affect the
+happiness of my life, and on which I should be a bad son and an
+unworthy gentleman if I did not consult him who, in all that concerns
+my affections, has trained me to turn to him, the father; in all that
+concerns my honour to him, the gentleman.”
+
+A speech more unlike that which any delineator of manners and morals in
+the present day would put into the mouth of a lover, no critic in “The
+Londoner” could ridicule. But, somehow or other, this poor little tamer
+of butterflies and teller of fairy tales comprehended on the instant all
+that this most eccentric of human beings thus frigidly left untold.
+Into her innermost heart it sank more deeply than would the most ardent
+declaration put into the lips of the boobies or the scamps in whom
+delineators of manners in the present day too often debase the
+magnificent chivalry embodied in the name of “lover.”
+
+Where these two had, while speaking, halted on the path along the
+brook-side, there was a bench, on which it so happened that they had
+seated themselves weeks before. A few moments later on that bench they
+were seated again.
+
+And the trumpery little ring with its turquoise heart was on Lily’s
+finger, and there they continued to sit for nearly half an hour;
+not talking much, but wondrously happy; not a single vow of troth
+interchanged. No, not even a word that could be construed into “I love.”
+ And yet when they rose from the bench, and went silently along the
+brook-side, each knew that the other was beloved.
+
+When they reached the gate that admitted into the garden of Grasmere,
+Kenelm made a slight start. Mrs. Cameron was leaning over the gate.
+Whatever alarm at the appearance Kenelm might have felt was certainly
+not shared by Lily; she advanced lightly before him, kissed her aunt on
+the cheek, and passed on across the lawn with a bound in her step and
+the carol of a song upon her lips.
+
+Kenelm remained by the gate, face to face with Mrs. Cameron. She opened
+the gate, put her arm in his, and led him back along the brook-side.
+
+“I am sure, Mr. Chillingly,” she said, “that you will not impute to my
+words any meaning more grave than that which I wish them to convey,
+when I remind you that there is no place too obscure to escape from the
+ill-nature of gossip, and you must own that my niece incurs the chance
+of its notice if she be seen walking alone in these by-paths with a
+man of your age and position, and whose sojourn in the neighbourhood,
+without any ostensible object or motive, has already begun to excite
+conjecture. I do not for a moment assume that you regard my niece in any
+other light than that of an artless child, whose originality of tastes
+or fancy may serve to amuse you; and still less do I suppose that she
+is in danger of misrepresenting any attentions on your part. But for her
+sake I am bound to consider what others may say. Excuse me, then, if I
+add that I think you are also bound in honour and in good feeling to do
+the same. Mr. Chillingly, it would give me a great sense of relief if it
+suited your plans to move from the neighbourhood.”
+
+“My dear Mrs. Cameron,” answered Kenelm, who had listened to this speech
+with imperturbable calm of visage, “I thank you much for your candour,
+and I am glad to have this opportunity of informing you that I am about
+to move from this neighbourhood, with the hope of returning to it in
+a very few days and rectifying your mistake as to the point of view
+in which I regard your niece. In a word,” here the expression of his
+countenance and the tone of his voice underwent a sudden change, “it is
+the dearest wish of my heart to be empowered by my parents to assure you
+of the warmth with which they will welcome your niece as their daughter,
+should she deign to listen to my suit and intrust me with the charge of
+her happiness.”
+
+Mrs. Cameron stopped short, gazing into his face with a look of
+inexpressible dismay.
+
+“No! Mr. Chillingly,” she exclaimed, “this must not be,--cannot be. Put
+out of your mind an idea so wild. A young man’s senseless romance.
+Your parents cannot consent to your union with my niece; I tell you
+beforehand they cannot.”
+
+“But why?” asked Kenelm, with a slight smile, and not much impressed by
+the vehemence of Mrs. Cameron’s adjuration.
+
+“Why?” she repeated passionately; and then recovering something of her
+habitual weariness of quiet. “The why is easily explained. Mr. Kenelm
+Chillingly is the heir of a very ancient house and, I am told, of
+considerable estates. Lily Mordaunt is a nobody, an orphan, without
+fortune, without connection, the ward of a humbly born artist, to
+whom she owes the roof that shelters her; she is without the ordinary
+education of a gentlewoman; she has seen nothing of the world in which
+you move. Your parents have not the right to allow a son so young
+as yourself to throw himself out of his proper sphere by a rash and
+imprudent alliance. And, never would I consent, never would Walter
+Melville consent, to her entering into any family reluctant to receive
+her. There,--that is enough. Dismiss the notion so lightly entertained.
+And farewell.”
+
+“Madam,” answered Kenelm very earnestly, “believe me, that had I not
+entertained the hope approaching to conviction that the reasons you urge
+against my presumption will not have the weight with my parents which
+you ascribe to them, I should not have spoken to you thus frankly. Young
+though I be, still I might fairly claim the right to choose for myself
+in marriage. But I gave to my father a very binding promise that I would
+not formally propose to any one till I had acquainted him with my desire
+to do so, and obtained his approval of my choice; and he is the last man
+in the world who would withhold that approval where my heart is set on
+it as it is now. I want no fortune with a wife, and should I ever care
+to advance my position in the world, no connection would help me like
+the approving smile of the woman I love. There is but one qualification
+which my parents would deem they had the right to exact from my
+choice of one who is to bear our name. I mean that she should have the
+appearance, the manners, the principles, and--my mother at least might
+add--the birth of a gentlewoman. Well, as to appearance and manners, I
+have seen much of fine society from my boyhood, and found no one among
+the highest born who can excel the exquisite refinement of every look,
+and the inborn delicacy of every thought, in her of whom, if mine, I
+shall be as proud as I shall be fond. As to defects in the frippery
+and tinsel of a boarding-school education, they are very soon remedied.
+Remains only the last consideration,--birth. Mrs. Braefield informs me
+that you have assured her that, though circumstances into which as yet
+I have no right to inquire, have made her the ward of a man of humble
+origin, Miss Mordaunt is of gentle birth. Do you deny that?”
+
+“No,” said Mrs. Cameron, hesitating, but with a flash of pride in her
+eyes as she went on. “No. I cannot deny that my niece is descended from
+those who, in point of birth, were not unequal to your own ancestors.
+But what of that?” she added, with a bitter despondency of tone.
+“Equality of birth ceases when one falls into poverty, obscurity,
+neglect, nothingness!”
+
+“Really this is a morbid habit on your part. But, since we have thus
+spoken so confidentially, will you not empower me to answer the question
+which will probably be put to me, and the answer to which will, I doubt
+not, remove every obstacle in the way of my happiness? Whatever the
+reasons which might very sufficiently induce you to preserve, whilst
+living so quietly in this place, a discreet silence as to the parentage
+of Miss Mordaunt and your own,--and I am well aware that those whom
+altered circumstances of fortune have compelled to altered modes of life
+may disdain to parade to strangers the pretensions to a higher station
+than that to which they reconcile their habits,--whatever, I say,
+such reasons for silence to strangers, should they preclude you from
+confiding to me, an aspirant to your niece’s hand, a secret which, after
+all, cannot be concealed from her future husband?”
+
+“From her future husband? of course not,” answered Mrs. Cameron. “But I
+decline to be questioned by one whom I may never see again, and of whom
+I know so little. I decline, indeed, to assist in removing any obstacle
+to a union with my niece, which I hold to be in every way unsuited to
+either party. I have no cause even to believe that my niece would accept
+you if you were free to propose to her. You have not, I presume, spoken
+to her as an aspirant to her hand. You have not addressed to her
+any declaration of your attachment, or sought to extract from her
+inexperience any words that warrant you in thinking that her heart will
+break if she never sees you again.”
+
+“I do not merit such cruel and taunting questions,” said Kenelm,
+indignantly. “But I will say no more now. When we again meet let me hope
+you will treat me less unkindly. Adieu!”
+
+“Stay, sir. A word or two more. You persist in asking your father and
+Lady Chillingly to consent to your proposal to Miss Mordaunt?”
+
+“Certainly I do.”
+
+“And you will promise me, on your word as a gentleman, to state fairly
+all the causes which might fairly operate against their consent,--the
+poverty, the humble rearing, the imperfect education of my niece,--so
+that they might not hereafter say you had entrapped their consent, and
+avenge themselves for your deceit by contempt for her?”
+
+“Ah, madam, madam, you really try my patience too far. But take my
+promise, if you can hold that of value from one whom you can suspect of
+deliberate deceit.”
+
+“I beg your pardon, Mr. Chillingly. Bear with my rudeness. I have been
+so taken by surprise, I scarcely know what I am saying. But let us
+understand each other completely before we part. If your parents
+withhold their consent you will communicate it to me; me only, not to
+Lily. I repeat I know nothing of the state of her affections. But it
+might embitter any girl’s life to be led on to love one whom she could
+not marry.”
+
+“It shall be as you say. But if they do consent?”
+
+“Then you will speak to me before you seek an interview with Lily, for
+then comes another question: Will her guardian consent?--and--and--”
+
+“And what?”
+
+“No matter. I rely on your honour in this request, as in all else.
+Good-day.”
+
+She turned back with hurried footsteps, muttering to herself, “But they
+will not consent. Heaven grant that they will not consent, or if they
+do, what--what is to be said or done? Oh, that Walter Melville were
+here, or that I knew where to write to him!”
+
+On his way back to Cromwell Lodge, Kenelm was overtaken by the vicar.
+
+“I was coming to you, my dear Mr. Chillingly, first to thank you for the
+very pretty present with which you have gladdened the heart of my little
+Clemmy, and next to ask you to come with me quietly to-day to meet Mr.
+-----, the celebrated antiquarian, who came to Moleswich this morning
+at my request to examine that old Gothic tomb in our churchyard. Only
+think, though he cannot read the inscription any better than we can, he
+knows all about its history. It seems that a young knight renowned for
+feats of valour in the reign of Henry IV. married a daughter of one of
+those great Earls of Montfichet who were then the most powerful family
+in these parts. He was slain in defending the church from an assault by
+some disorderly rioters of the Lollard faction; he fell on the very spot
+where the tomb is now placed. That accounts for its situation in the
+churchyard, not within the fabric. Mr. ----- discovered this fact in
+an old memoir of the ancient and once famous family to which the young
+knight Albert belonged, and which came, alas! to so shameful an end,
+the Fletwodes, Barons of Fletwode and Malpas. What a triumph over pretty
+Lily Mordaunt, who always chose to imagine that the tomb must be that of
+some heroine of her own romantic invention! Do come to dinner; Mr. -----
+is a most agreeable man, and full of interesting anecdotes.”
+
+“I am so sorry I cannot. I am obliged to return home at once for a few
+days. That old family of Fletwode! I think I see before me, while we
+speak, the gray tower in which they once held sway; and the last of the
+race following Mammon along the Progress of the Age,--a convicted felon!
+What a terrible satire on the pride of birth!”
+
+Kenelm left Cromwell Lodge that evening, but he still kept on his
+apartments there, saying he might be back unexpectedly any day in the
+course of the next week.
+
+He remained two days in London, wishing all that he had communicated to
+Sir Peter in writing to sink into his father’s heart before a personal
+appeal to it.
+
+The more he revolved the ungracious manner in which Mrs. Cameron had
+received his confidence, the less importance he attached to it. An
+exaggerated sense of disparities of fortune in a person who appeared
+to him to have the pride so common to those who have known better days,
+coupled with a nervous apprehension lest his family should ascribe to
+her any attempt to ensnare a very young man of considerable worldly
+pretensions into a marriage with a penniless niece, seemed to account
+for much that had at first perplexed and angered him. And if, as he
+conjectured, Mrs. Cameron had once held a much higher position in the
+world than she did now,--a conjecture warranted by a certain peculiar
+conventional undeniable elegance which characterized her habitual
+manner,--and was now, as she implied, actually a dependant on the bounty
+of a painter who had only just acquired some professional distinction,
+she might well shrink from the mortification of becoming an object of
+compassion to her richer neighbours; nor, when he came to think of it,
+had he any more right than those neighbours to any confidence as to
+her own or Lily’s parentage, so long as he was not formally entitled to
+claim admission into her privity.
+
+London seemed to him intolerably dull and wearisome. He called nowhere
+except at Lady Glenalvon’s; he was glad to hear from the servants that
+she was still at Exmundham. He relied much on the influence of the queen
+of the fashion with his mother, whom he knew would be more difficult to
+persuade than Sir Peter, nor did he doubt that he should win to his side
+that sympathizing and warm-hearted queen.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+IT is somewhere about three weeks since the party invited by Sir Peter
+and Lady Chillingly assembled at Exmundham, and they are still there,
+though people invited to a country house have seldom compassion
+enough for the dulness of its owner to stay more than three days. Mr.
+Chillingly Mivers, indeed, had not exceeded that orthodox limit. Quietly
+observant, during his stay, of young Gordon’s manner towards Cecilia,
+and hers towards him, he had satisfied himself that there was no
+cause to alarm Sir Peter, or induce the worthy baronet to regret the
+invitation he had given to that clever kinsman. For all the visitors
+remaining Exmundham had a charm.
+
+To Lady Glenalvon, because in the hostess she met her most familiar
+friend when both were young girls, and because it pleased her to note
+the interest which Cecilia Travers took in the place so associated with
+memories of the man to whom it was Lady Glenalvon’s hope to see her
+united. To Chillingly Gordon, because no opportunity could be so
+favourable for his own well-concealed designs on the hand and heart of
+the heiress. To the heiress herself the charm needs no explanation.
+
+To Leopold Travers the attractions of Exmundham were unquestionably less
+fascinating. Still even he was well pleased to prolong his stay. His
+active mind found amusement in wandering over an estate the acreage of
+which would have warranted a much larger rental, and lecturing Sir Peter
+on the old-fashioned system of husbandry which that good-natured easy
+proprietor permitted his tenants to adopt, as well as on the number of
+superfluous hands that were employed on the pleasure-grounds and in the
+general management of the estate, such as carpenters, sawyers, woodmen,
+bricklayers, and smiths.
+
+When the Squire said, “You could do just as well with a third of those
+costly dependants,” Sir Peter, unconsciously plagiarizing the answer of
+the old French grand seigneur, replied, “Very likely. But the question
+is, could the rest do just as well without me?”
+
+Exmundham, indeed, was a very expensive place to keep up. The house,
+built by some ambitious Chillingly three centuries ago, would have been
+large for an owner of thrice the revenues; and though the flower-garden
+was smaller than that at Braefieldville, there were paths and drives
+through miles of young plantations and old woodlands that furnished lazy
+occupation to an army of labourers. No wonder that, despite his nominal
+ten thousand a year, Sir Peter was far from being a rich man. Exmundham
+devoured at least half the rental. The active mind of Leopold Travers
+also found ample occupation in the stores of his host’s extensive
+library.
+
+Travers, never much of a reader, was by no means a despiser of learning,
+and he soon took to historical and archaeological researches with the
+ardour of a man who must always throw energy into any pursuit that
+occasion presents as an escape from indolence. Indolent Leopold Travers
+never could be. But, more than either of these resources of occupation,
+the companionship of Chillingly Gordon excited his interest and
+quickened the current of his thoughts. Always fond of renewing his own
+youth in the society of the young, and of the sympathizing temperament
+which belongs to cordial natures, he had, as we have seen, entered very
+heartily into the ambition of George Belvoir, and reconciled himself
+very pliably to the humours of Kenelm Chillingly. But the first of these
+two was a little too commonplace, the second a little too eccentric, to
+enlist the complete good-fellowship which, being alike very clever and
+very practical, Leopold Travers established with that very clever and
+very practical representative of the rising generation, Chillingly
+Gordon. Between them there was this meeting-ground, political and
+worldly, a great contempt for innocuous old-fashioned notions; added to
+which, in the mind of Leopold Travers, was a contempt--which would
+have been complete, but that the contempt admitted dread--of harmful
+new-fashioned notions which, interpreted by his thoughts, threatened
+ruin to his country and downfall to the follies of existent society,
+and which, interpreted by his language, tamed itself into the man of the
+world’s phrase, “Going too far for me.” Notions which, by the much
+more cultivated intellect and the immeasurably more soaring ambition of
+Chillingly Gordon, might be viewed and criticised thus: “Could I accept
+these doctrines? I don’t see my way to being Prime Minister of a country
+in which religion and capital are still powers to be consulted. And,
+putting aside religion and capital, I don’t see how, if these doctrines
+passed into law, with a good coat on my back I should not be a sufferer.
+Either I, as having a good coat, should have it torn off my back as a
+capitalist, or, if I remonstrated in the name of moral honesty, be put
+to death as a religionist.”
+
+Therefore when Leopold Travers said, “Of course we must go on,”
+ Chillingly Gordon smiled and answered, “Certainly, go on.” And when
+Leopold Travers added, “But we may go too far,” Chillingly Gordon shook
+his dead, and replied, “How true that is! Certainly too far.”
+
+Apart from the congeniality of political sentiment, there were other
+points of friendly contact between the older and younger man. Each was
+an exceedingly pleasant man of the world; and, though Leopold Travers
+could not have plumbed certain deeps in Chillingly Gordon’s nature,--and
+in every man’s nature there are deeps which his ablest observer cannot
+fathom,--yet he was not wrong when he said to himself, “Gordon is a
+gentleman.”
+
+Utterly would my readers misconceive that very clever young man, if they
+held him to be a hypocrite like Blifil or Joseph Surface. Chillingly
+Gordon, in every private sense of the word, was a gentleman. If he had
+staked his whole fortune on a rubber at whist, and an undetected glance
+at his adversary’s hand would have made the difference between loss and
+gain, he would have turned away his head and said, “Hold up your cards.”
+ Neither, as I have had occasion to explain before, was he actuated
+by any motive in common with the vulgar fortune-hunter in his secret
+resolve to win the hand of the heiress. He recognized no inequality of
+worldly gifts between them. He said to himself, “Whatever she may give
+me in money, I shall amply repay in worldly position if I succeed, and
+succeed I certainly shall. If I were as rich as Lord Westminster, and
+still cared about being Prime Minister, I should select her as the most
+fitting woman I have seen for a Prime Minister’s wife.”
+
+It must be acknowledged that this sort of self-commune, if not that of
+a very ardent lover, is very much that of a sensible man setting high
+value on himself, bent on achieving the prizes of a public career, and
+desirous of securing in his wife a woman who would adorn the station
+to which he confidently aspired. In fact, no one so able as Chillingly
+Gordon would ever have conceived the ambition of being Minister of
+England if in all that in private life constitutes the English gentleman
+he could be fairly subject to reproach.
+
+He was but in public life what many a gentleman honest in private life
+has been before him, an ambitious, resolute egotist, by no means without
+personal affections, but holding them all subordinate to the objects
+of personal ambition, and with no more of other principle than that
+of expediency in reference to his own career than would cover a silver
+penny. But expediency in itself he deemed the statesman’s only rational
+principle. And to the consideration of expediency he brought a very
+unprejudiced intellect, quite fitted to decide whether the public
+opinion of a free and enlightened people was for turning St. Paul’s
+Cathedral into an Agapemone or not.
+
+During the summer weeks he had thus vouchsafed to the turfs and groves
+of Exmundham, Leopold Travers was not the only person whose good opinion
+Chillingly Gordon had ingratiated. He had won the warmest approbation
+from Mrs. Campion. His conversation reminded her of that which she had
+enjoyed in the house of her departed spouse. In talking with Cecilia she
+was fond of contrasting him to Kenelm, not to the favour of the
+latter, whose humours she utterly failed to understand, and whom she
+pertinaciously described as “so affected.” “A most superior young man
+Mr. Gordon, so well informed, so sensible,--above all, so natural.” Such
+was her judgment upon the unavowed candidate to Cecilia’s hand; and
+Mrs. Campion required no avowal to divine the candidature. Even Lady
+Glenalvon had begun to take friendly interest in the fortunes of this
+promising young man. Most women can sympathize with youthful ambition.
+He impressed her with a deep conviction of his abilities, and still more
+with respect for their concentration upon practical objects of power
+and renown. She too, like Mrs. Campion, began to draw comparisons
+unfavourable to Kenelm between the two cousins: the one seemed so
+slothfully determined to hide his candle under a bushel, the other so
+honestly disposed to set his light before men. She felt also annoyed and
+angry that Kenelm was thus absenting himself from the paternal home at
+the very time of her first visit to it, and when he had so felicitous
+an opportunity of seeing more of the girl in whom he knew that Lady
+Glenalvon deemed he might win, if he would properly woo, the wife that
+would best suit him. So that when one day Mrs. Campion, walking through
+the gardens alone with Lady Glenalvon while from the gardens into the
+park went Chillingly Gordon, arm-in-arm with Leopold Travers, abruptly
+asked, “Don’t you think that Mr. Gordon is smitten with Cecilia, though
+he, with his moderate fortune, does not dare to say so? And don’t you
+think that any girl, if she were as rich as Cecilia will be, would be
+more proud of such a husband as Chillingly Gordon than of some silly
+earl?”
+
+Lady Glenalvon answered curtly, but somewhat sorrowfully, “Yes.”
+
+After a pause she added, “There is a man with whom I did once think she
+would have been happier than with any other. One man who ought to be
+dearer to me than Mr. Gordon, for he saved the life of my son, and who,
+though perhaps less clever than Mr. Gordon, still has a great deal of
+talent within him, which might come forth and make him--what shall I
+say?--a useful and distinguished member of society, if married to a girl
+so sure of raising any man she marries as Cecilia Travers. But if I am
+to renounce that hope, and look through the range of young men brought
+under my notice, I don’t know one, putting aside consideration of rank
+and fortune, I should prefer for a clever daughter who went heart and
+soul with the ambition of a clever man. But, Mrs. Campion, I have not
+yet quite renounced my hope; and, unless I do, I yet think there is one
+man to whom I would rather give Cecilia, if she were my daughter.”
+
+Therewith Lady Glenalvon so decidedly broke off the subject of
+conversation that Mrs. Campion could not have renewed it without such a
+breach of the female etiquette of good breeding as Mrs. Campion was the
+last person to adventure.
+
+Lady Chillingly could not help being pleased with Gordon. He was light
+in hand, served to amuse her guests, and made up a rubber of whist in
+case of need.
+
+There were two persons, however, with whom Gordon made no ground;
+namely, Parson John and Sir Peter. When Travers praised him one day for
+the solidity of his parts and the soundness of his judgment, the Parson
+replied snappishly, “Yes, solid and sound as one of those tables you
+buy at a broker’s; the thickness of the varnish hides the defects in
+the joints: the whole framework is rickety.” But when the Parson was
+indignantly urged to state the reason by which he arrived at so harsh
+a conclusion, he could only reply by an assertion which seemed to his
+questioner a declamatory burst of parsonic intolerance.
+
+“Because,” said Parson John, “he has no love for man, and no reverence
+for God. And no character is sound and solid which enlarges its surface
+at the expense of its supports.”
+
+On the other hand, the favour with which Sir Peter had at first regarded
+Gordon gradually vanished, in proportion as, acting on the hint Mivers
+had originally thrown out but did not deem it necessary to repeat, he
+watched the pains which the young man took to insinuate himself into
+the good graces of Mr. Travers and Mrs. Campion, and the artful and
+half-suppressed gallantry of his manner to the heiress.
+
+Perhaps Gordon had not ventured thus “to feel his way” till after Mivers
+had departed; or perhaps Sir Peter’s parental anxiety rendered him, in
+this instance, a shrewder observer than was the man of the world,
+whose natural acuteness was, in matters of affection, not unfrequently
+rendered languid by his acquired philosophy of indifferentism.
+
+More and more every day, every hour, of her sojourn beneath his roof,
+did Cecilia become dearer to Sir Peter, and stronger and stronger became
+his wish to secure her for his daughter-in-law. He was inexpressibly
+flattered by her preference for his company: ever at hand to share his
+customary walks, his kindly visits to the cottages of peasants or the
+homesteads of petty tenants; wherein both were sure to hear many a
+simple anecdote of Master Kenelm in his childhood, anecdotes of whim or
+good-nature, of considerate pity or reckless courage.
+
+Throughout all these varieties of thought or feeling in the social
+circle around her, Lady Chillingly preserved the unmoved calm of her
+dignified position. A very good woman certainly, and very ladylike. No
+one could detect a flaw in her character, or a fold awry in her flounce.
+She was only, like the gods of Epicurus, too good to trouble her serene
+existence with the cares of us simple mortals. Not that she was without
+a placid satisfaction in the tribute which the world laid upon her
+altars; nor was she so supremely goddess-like as to soar above the
+household affections which humanity entails on the dwellers and denizens
+of earth. She liked her husband as much as most elderly wives like their
+elderly husbands. She bestowed upon Kenelm a liking somewhat more warm,
+and mingled with compassion. His eccentricities would have puzzled her,
+if she had allowed herself to be puzzled: it troubled her less to pity
+them. She did not share her husband’s desire for his union with Cecilia.
+She thought that her son would have a higher place in the county if he
+married Lady Jane, the Duke of Clanville’s daughter; and “that is what
+he ought to do,” said Lady Chillingly to herself. She entertained
+none of the fear that had induced Sir Peter to extract from Kenelm
+the promise not to pledge his hand before he had received his father’s
+consent. That the son of Lady Chillingly should make a _mesalliance_,
+however crotchety he might be in other respects, was a thought that it
+would have so disturbed her to admit that she did not admit it.
+
+Such was the condition of things at Exmundham when the lengthy
+communication of Kenelm reached Sir Peter’s hands.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VIII.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+NEVER in his whole life had the mind of Sir Peter been so agitated as it
+was during and after the perusal of Kenelm’s flighty composition. He had
+received it at the breakfast-table, and, opening it eagerly, ran his eye
+hastily over the contents, till he very soon arrived at sentences
+which appalled him. Lady Chillingly, who was fortunately busied at the
+tea-urn, did not observe the dismay on his countenance. It was visible
+only to Cecilia and to Gordon. Neither guessed who that letter was from.
+
+“No bad news, I hope,” said Cecilia, softly.
+
+“Bad news,” echoed Sir Peter. “No, my dear, no; a letter on business.
+It seems terribly long,” and he thrust the packet into his pocket,
+muttering, “see to it by and by.”
+
+“That slovenly farmer of yours, Mr. Nostock, has failed, I suppose,”
+ said Mr. Travers, looking up and observing a quiver on his host’s
+lip. “I told you he would,--a fine farm too. Let me choose you another
+tenant.”
+
+Sir Peter shook his head with a wan smile.
+
+“Nostock will not fail. There have been six generations of Nostocks on
+the farm.”
+
+“So I should guess,” said Travers, dryly.
+
+“And--and,” faltered Sir Peter, “if the last of the race fails, he must
+lean upon me, and--if one of the two break down--it shall not be--”
+
+“Shall not be that cross-cropping blockhead, my dear Sir Peter. This is
+carrying benevolence too far.”
+
+Here the tact and _savoir vivre_ of Chillingly Gordon came to the rescue
+of the host. Possessing himself of the “Times” newspaper, he uttered an
+exclamation of surprise, genuine or simulated, and read aloud an extract
+from the leading article, announcing an impending change in the Cabinet.
+
+As soon as he could quit the breakfast-table, Sir Peter hurried into
+his library and there gave himself up to the study of Kenelm’s unwelcome
+communication. The task took him long, for he stopped at intervals,
+overcome by the struggle of his heart, now melted into sympathy with the
+passionate eloquence of a son hitherto so free from amorous romance, and
+now sorrowing for the ruin of his own cherished hopes. This uneducated
+country girl would never be such a helpmate to a man like Kenelm as
+would have been Cecilia Travers. At length, having finished the letter,
+he buried his head between his clasped hands, and tried hard to
+realize the situation that placed the father and son into such direct
+antagonism.
+
+“But,” he murmured, “after all it is the boy’s happiness that must be
+consulted. If he will not be happy in my way, what right have I to say
+that he shall not be happy in his?”
+
+Just then Cecilia came softly into the room. She had acquired the
+privilege of entering his library at will; sometimes to choose a book of
+his recommendation, sometimes to direct and seal his letters,--Sir Peter
+was grateful to any one who saved him an extra trouble,--and
+sometimes, especially at this hour, to decoy him forth into his wonted
+constitutional walk.
+
+He lifted his face at the sound of her approaching tread and her winning
+voice, and the face was so sad that the tears rushed to her eyes on
+seeing it. She laid her hand on his shoulder, and said pleadingly, “Dear
+Sir Peter, what is it,--what is it?”
+
+“Ah--ah, my dear,” said Sir Peter, gathering up the scattered sheets of
+Kenelm’s effusion with hurried, trembling hands. “Don’t ask,--don’t talk
+of it; ‘tis but one of the disappointments that all of us must undergo,
+when we invest our hopes in the uncertain will of others.”
+
+Then, observing that the tears were trickling down the girl’s fair, pale
+cheeks, he took her hand in both his, kissed her forehead, and said,
+whisperingly, “Pretty one, how good you have been to me! Heaven bless
+you. What a wife you will be to some man!”
+
+Thus saying, he shambled out of the room through the open casement. She
+followed him impulsively, wonderingly; but before she reached his side
+he turned round, waved his hand with a gently repelling gesture, and
+went his way alone through dense fir-groves which had been planted in
+honour of Kenelm’s birth.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+KENELM arrived at Exmundham just in time to dress for dinner. His
+arrival was not unexpected, for the morning after his father had
+received his communication, Sir Peter had said to Lady Chillingly--“that
+he had heard from Kenelm to the effect that he might be down any day.”
+
+“Quite time he should come,” said Lady Chillingly. “Have you his letter
+about you?”
+
+“No, my dear Caroline. Of course he sends you his kindest love, poor
+fellow.”
+
+“Why poor fellow? Has he been ill?”
+
+“No; but there seems to be something on his mind. If so we must do what
+we can to relieve it. He is the best of sons, Caroline.”
+
+“I am sure I have nothing to say against him, except,” added her
+Ladyship, reflectively, “that I do wish he were a little more like other
+young men.”
+
+“Hum--like Chillingly Gordon, for instance?”
+
+“Well, yes; Mr. Gordon is a remarkably well-bred, sensible young man.
+How different from that disagreeable, bearish father of his, who went to
+law with you!”
+
+“Very different indeed, but with just as much of the Chillingly blood in
+him. How the Chillinglys ever gave birth to a Kenelm is a question much
+more puzzling.”
+
+“Oh, my dear Sir Peter, don’t be metaphysical. You know how I hate
+puzzles.”
+
+“And yet, Caroline, I have to thank you for a puzzle which I can never
+interpret by my brain. There are a great many puzzles in human nature
+which can only be interpreted by the heart.”
+
+“Very true,” said Lady Chillingly. “I suppose Kenelm is to have his old
+room, just opposite to Mr. Gordon’s.”
+
+“Ay--ay, just opposite. Opposite they will be all their lives. Only
+think, Caroline, I have made a discovery!”
+
+“Dear me! I hope not. Your discoveries are generally very expensive, and
+bring us in contact with such very odd people.”
+
+“This discovery shall not cost us a penny, and I don’t know any people
+so odd as not to comprehend it. Briefly it is this: To genius the
+first requisite is heart; it is no requisite at all to talent. My dear
+Caroline, Gordon has as much talent as any young man I know, but he
+wants the first requisite of genius. I am not by any means sure that
+Kenelm has genius, but there is no doubt that he has the first requisite
+of genius,--heart. Heart is a very perplexing, wayward, irrational
+thing; and that perhaps accounts for the general incapacity to
+comprehend genius, while any fool can comprehend talent. My dear
+Caroline, you know that it is very seldom, not more than once in three
+years, that I presume to have a will of my own against a will of yours;
+but should there come a question in which our son’s heart is concerned,
+then (speaking between ourselves) my will must govern yours.”
+
+“Sir Peter is growing more odd every day,” said Lady Chillingly to
+herself when left alone. “But he does not mean ill, and there are worse
+husbands in the world.”
+
+Therewith she rang for her maid, gave requisite orders for the preparing
+of Kenelm’s room, which had not been slept in for many months, and then
+consulted that functionary as to the adaptation of some dress of hers,
+too costly to be laid aside, to the style of some dress less costly
+which Lady Glenalvon had imported from Paris as _la derniere mode_.
+
+On the very day on which Kenelm arrived at Exmundham, Chillingly Gordon
+had received this letter from Mr. Gerald Danvers.
+
+
+DEAR GORDON,--In the ministerial changes announced as rumour in the
+public papers, and which you may accept as certain, that sweet little
+cherub--is to be sent to sit up aloft and pray there for the life of
+poor Jack; namely, of the government he leaves below. In accepting the
+peerage, which I persuaded him to do,--creates a vacancy for the
+borough of -----, just the place for you, far better in every way than
+Saxborough. ----- promises to recommend you to his committee. Come to
+town at once. Yours, etc.
+
+ G. DANVERS.
+
+
+Gordon showed this letter to Mr. Travers, and, on receiving the hearty
+good-wishes of that gentleman, said, with emotion partly genuine, partly
+assumed, “You cannot guess all that the realization of your good-wishes
+would be. Once in the House of Commons, and my motives for action are
+so strong that--do not think me very conceited if I count upon
+Parliamentary success.”
+
+“My clear Gordon, I am as certain of your success as I am of my own
+existence.”
+
+“Should I succeed,--should the great prizes of public life be within
+my reach,--should I lift myself into a position that would warrant my
+presumption, do you think I could come to you and say, ‘There is an
+object of ambition dearer to me than power and office,--the hope of
+attaining which was the strongest of all my motives of action? And in
+that hope shall I also have the good-wishes of the father of Cecilia
+Travers?”
+
+“My dear fellow, give me your hand; you speak manfully and candidly as a
+gentleman should speak. I answer in the same spirit. I don’t pretend
+to say that I have not entertained views for Cecilia which included
+hereditary rank and established fortune in a suitor to her hand, though
+I never should have made them imperative conditions. I am neither
+potentate nor _parvenu_ enough for that; and I can never forget” (here
+every muscle in the man’s face twitched) “that I myself married for
+love, and was so happy. How happy Heaven only knows! Still, if you had
+thus spoken a few weeks ago, I should not have replied very favourably
+to your question. But now that I have seen so much of you, my answer is
+this: If you lose your election,--if you don’t come into Parliament
+at all, you have my good-wishes all the same. If you win my daughter’s
+heart, there is no man on whom I would more willingly bestow her hand.
+There she is, by herself too, in the garden. Go and talk to her.”
+
+Gordon hesitated. He knew too well that he had not won her heart, though
+he had no suspicion that it was given to another. And he was much
+too clever not to know also how much he hazards who, in affairs of
+courtship, is premature.
+
+“Ah!” he said, “I cannot express my gratitude for words so generous,
+encouragement so cheering. But I have never yet dared to utter to Miss
+Travers a word that would prepare her even to harbour a thought of me as
+a suitor. And I scarcely think I should have the courage to go through
+this election with the grief of her rejection on my heart.”
+
+“Well, go in and win the election first; meanwhile, at all events, take
+leave of Cecilia.”
+
+Gordon left his friend, and joined Miss Travers, resolved not indeed
+to risk a formal declaration, but to sound his way to his chances of
+acceptance.
+
+The interview was very brief. He did sound his way skilfully, and felt
+it very unsafe for his footsteps. The advantage of having gained the
+approval of the father was too great to be lost altogether, by one of
+those decided answers on the part of the daughter which allow of no
+appeal, especially to a poor gentleman who wooes an heiress.
+
+He returned to Travers, and said simply, “I bear with me her good-wishes
+as well as yours. That is all. I leave myself in your kind hands.”
+
+Then he hurried away to take leave of his host and hostess, say a few
+significant words to the ally he had already gained in Mrs. Campion, and
+within an hour was on his road to London, passing on his way the train
+that bore Kenelm to Exmundham. Gordon was in high spirits. At least he
+felt as certain of winning Cecilia as he did of winning his election.
+
+“I have never yet failed in what I desired,” said he to himself,
+“because I have ever taken pains not to fail.”
+
+The cause of Gordon’s sudden departure created a great excitement in
+that quiet circle, shared by all except Cecilia and Sir Peter.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+KENELM did not see either father or mother till he appeared at dinner.
+Then he was seated next to Cecilia. There was but little conversation
+between the two; in fact, the prevalent subject of talk was general and
+engrossing, the interest in Chillingly Gordon’s election; predictions
+of his success, of what he would do in Parliament. “Where,” said Lady
+Glenalvon, “there is such a dearth of rising young men, that if he were
+only half as clever as he is he would be a gain.”
+
+“A gain to what?” asked Sir Peter, testily. “To his country? about which
+I don’t believe he cares a brass button.”
+
+To this assertion Leopold Travers replied warmly, and was not less
+warmly backed by Mrs. Campion.
+
+“For my part,” said Lady Glenalvon, in conciliatory accents, “I think
+every able man in Parliament is a gain to the country; and he may not
+serve his country less effectively because he does not boast of his
+love for it. The politicians I dread most are those so rampant in France
+nowadays, the bawling patriots. When Sir Robert Walpole said, ‘All
+those men have their price,’ he pointed to the men who called themselves
+‘patriots.’”
+
+“Bravo!” cried Travers.
+
+“Sir Robert Walpole showed his love for his country by corrupting it.
+There are many ways besides bribing for corrupting a country,” said
+Kenelm, mildly, and that was Kenelm’s sole contribution to the general
+conversation.
+
+It was not till the rest of the party had retired to rest that the
+conference, longed for by Kenelm, dreaded by Sir Peter, took place in
+the library. It lasted deep into the night; both parted with lightened
+hearts and a fonder affection for each other. Kenelm had drawn so
+charming a picture of the Fairy, and so thoroughly convinced Sir Peter
+that his own feelings towards her were those of no passing youthful
+fancy, but of that love which has its roots in the innermost heart,
+that though it was still with a sigh, a deep sigh, that he dismissed
+the thought of Cecilia, Sir Peter did dismiss it; and, taking comfort at
+last from the positive assurance that Lily was of gentle birth, and
+the fact that her name of Mordaunt was that of ancient and illustrious
+houses, said, with half a smile, “It might have been worse, my dear
+boy. I began to be afraid that, in spite of the teachings of Mivers and
+Welby, it was ‘The Miller’s Daughter,’ after all. But we still have
+a difficult task to persuade your poor mother. In covering your first
+flight from our roof I unluckily put into her head the notion of Lady
+Jane, a duke’s daughter, and the notion has never got out of it. That
+comes of fibbing.”
+
+“I count on Lady Glenalvon’s influence on my mother in support of
+your own,” said Kenelm. “If so accepted an oracle in the great world
+pronounce in my favour, and promise to present my wife at Court and
+bring her into fashion, I think that my mother will consent to allow us
+to reset the old family diamonds for her next reappearance in London.
+And then, too, you can tell her that I will stand for the county. I will
+go into Parliament, and if I meet there our clever cousin, and find that
+he does not care a brass button for the country, take my word for it, I
+will lick him more easily than I licked Tom Bowles.”
+
+“Tom Bowles! who is he?--ah! I remember some letter of yours in which
+you spoke of a Bowles, whose favourite study was mankind, a moral
+philosopher.”
+
+“Moral philosophers,” answered Kenelm, “have so muddled their brains
+with the alcohol of new ideas that their moral legs have become shaky,
+and the humane would rather help them to bed than give them a licking.
+My Tom Bowles is a muscular Christian, who became no less muscular, but
+much more Christian, after he was licked.”
+
+And in this pleasant manner these two oddities settled their conference,
+and went up to bed with arms wrapped round each other’s shoulder.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+KENELM found it a much harder matter to win Lady Glenalvon to his side
+than he had anticipated. With the strong interest she had taken in
+Kenelm’s future, she could not but revolt from the idea of his union
+with an obscure portionless girl whom he had only known a few weeks,
+and of whose very parentage he seemed to know nothing, save an assurance
+that she was his equal in birth. And, with the desire, which she had
+cherished almost as fondly as Sir Peter, that Kenelm might win a bride
+in every way so worthy of his choice as Cecilia Travers, she felt not
+less indignant than regretful at the overthrow of her plans.
+
+At first, indeed, she was so provoked that she would not listen to
+his pleadings. She broke away from him with a rudeness she had never
+exhibited to any one before, refused to grant him another interview in
+order to re-discuss the matter, and said that, so far from using her
+influence in favour of his romantic folly, she would remonstrate well
+with Lady Chillingly and Sir Peter against yielding their assent to his
+“thus throwing himself away.”
+
+It was not till the third day after his arrival that, touched by the
+grave but haughty mournfulness of his countenance, she yielded to the
+arguments of Sir Peter in the course of a private conversation with that
+worthy baronet. Still it was reluctantly (she did not fulfil her threat
+of remonstrance with Lady Chillingly) that she conceded the point,
+that a son who, succeeding to the absolute fee-simple of an estate, had
+volunteered the resettlement of it on terms singularly generous to both
+his parents, was entitled to some sacrifice of their inclinations on a
+question in which he deemed his happiness vitally concerned; and that he
+was of age to choose for himself independently of their consent, but for
+a previous promise extracted from him by his father, a promise which,
+rigidly construed, was not extended to Lady Chillingly, but confined
+to Sir Peter as the head of the family and master of the household. The
+father’s consent was already given, and, if in his reverence for both
+parents Kenelm could not dispense with his mother’s approval, surely
+it was the part of a true friend to remove every scruple from his
+conscience, and smooth away every obstacle to a love not to be condemned
+because it was disinterested.
+
+After this conversation, Lady Glenalvon sought Kenelm, found him
+gloomily musing on the banks of the trout-stream, took his arm, led him
+into the sombre glades of the fir-grove, and listened patiently to
+all he had to say. Even then her woman’s heart was not won to his
+reasonings, until he said pathetically, “You thanked me once for saving
+your son’s life: you said then that you could never repay me; you can
+repay me tenfold. Could your son, who is now, we trust, in heaven, look
+down and judge between us, do you think he would approve you if you
+refuse?”
+
+Then Lady Glenalvon wept, and took his hand, kissed his forehead as
+a mother might kiss it, and said, “You triumph; I will go to Lady
+Chillingly at once. Marry her whom you so love, on one condition: marry
+her from my house.”
+
+Lady Glenalvon was not one of those women who serve a friend by
+halves. She knew well how to propitiate and reason down the apathetic
+temperament of Lady Chillingly; she did not cease till that lady herself
+came into Kenelm’s room, and said very quietly,--
+
+“So you are going to propose to Miss Mordaunt, the Warwickshire
+Mordaunts I suppose? Lady Glenalvon says she is a very lovely girl,
+and will stay with her before the wedding. And as the young lady is an
+orphan Lady Glenalvon’s uncle the Duke, who is connected with the eldest
+branch of the Mordaunts, will give her away. It will be a very brilliant
+affair. I am sure I wish you happy; it is time you should have sown your
+wild oats.”
+
+Two days after the consent thus formally given, Kenelm quitted
+Exmundham. Sir Peter would have accompanied him to pay his respects to
+the intended, but the agitation he had gone through brought on a sharp
+twinge of the gout, which consigned his feet to flannels.
+
+After Kenelm had gone, Lady Glenalvon went into Cecilia’s room. Cecilia
+was seated very desolately by the open window. She had detected that
+something of an anxious and painful nature had been weighing upon the
+minds of father and son, and had connected it with the letter which had
+so disturbed the even mind of Sir Peter; but she did not divine what the
+something was, and if mortified by a certain reserve, more distant than
+heretofore, which had characterized Kenelm’s manner towards herself,
+the mortification was less sensibly felt than a tender sympathy for the
+sadness she had observed on his face and yearned to soothe. His reserve
+had, however, made her own manner more reserved than of old, for which
+she was now rather chiding herself than reproaching him.
+
+Lady Glenalvon put her arms round Cecilia’s neck and kissed her,
+whispering, “That man has so disappointed me: he is so unworthy of the
+happiness I had once hoped for him!”
+
+“Whom do you speak of?” murmured Cecilia, turning very pale.
+
+“Kenelm Chillingly. It seems that he has conceived a fancy for some
+penniless girl whom he has met in his wanderings, has come here to
+get the consent of his parents to propose to her, has obtained their
+consent, and is gone to propose.”
+
+Cecilia remained silent for a moment with her eyes closed, then she
+said, “He is worthy of all happiness, and he would never make an
+unworthy choice. Heaven bless him--and--and--” She would have added,
+“his bride,” but her lips refused to utter the word bride.
+
+“Cousin Gordon is worth ten of him,” cried Lady Glenalvon, indignantly.
+
+She had served Kenelm, but she had not forgiven him.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+KENELM slept in London that night, and, the next day, being singularly
+fine for an English summer, he resolved to go to Moleswich on foot. He
+had no need this time to encumber himself with a knapsack; he had left
+sufficient change of dress in his lodgings at Cromwell Lodge.
+
+It was towards the evening when he found himself in one of the prettiest
+rural villages by which
+
+
+ “Wanders the hoary Thames along
+ His silver-winding way.”
+
+
+It was not in the direct road from London to Moleswich, but it was a
+pleasanter way for a pedestrian. And when, quitting the long street of
+the sultry village, he came to the shelving margin of the river, he was
+glad to rest a while, enjoy the cool of the rippling waters, and listen
+to their placid murmurs amid the rushes in the bordering shallows. He
+had ample time before him. His rambles while at Cromwell Lodge had made
+him familiar with the district for miles round Moleswich, and he knew
+that a footpath through the fields at the right would lead him, in less
+than an hour, to the side of the tributary brook on which Cromwell Lodge
+was placed, opposite the wooden bridge which conducted to Grasmere and
+Moleswich.
+
+To one who loves the romance of history, English history, the whole
+course of the Thames is full of charm. Ah! could I go back to the days
+in which younger generations than that of Kenelm Chillingly were unborn,
+when every wave of the Rhine spoke of history and romance to me, what
+fairies should meet on thy banks, O thou our own Father Thames! Perhaps
+some day a German pilgrim may repay tenfold to thee the tribute rendered
+by the English kinsman to the Father Rhine.
+
+Listening to the whispers of the reeds, Kenelm Chillingly felt the
+haunting influence of the legendary stream. Many a poetic incident or
+tradition in antique chronicle, many a votive rhyme in song, dear to
+forefathers whose very names have become a poetry to us, thronged dimly
+and confusedly back to his memory, which had little cared to retain such
+graceful trinkets in the treasure-house of love. But everything that,
+from childhood upward, connects itself with romance, revives with yet
+fresher bloom in the memories of him who loves.
+
+And to this man, through the first perilous season of youth, so
+abnormally safe from youth’s most wonted peril,--to this would-be
+pupil of realism, this learned adept in the schools of a Welby or a
+Mivers,--to this man, love came at last as with the fatal powers of
+the fabled Cytherea; and with that love all the realisms of life became
+ideals, all the stern lines of our commonplace destinies undulated into
+curves of beauty, all the trite sounds of our every-day life attuned
+into delicacies of song. How full of sanguine yet dreamy bliss was his
+heart--and seemed his future--in the gentle breeze and the softened glow
+of that summer eve! He should see Lily the next morn, and his lips were
+now free to say all that they had as yet suppressed.
+
+Suddenly he was roused from the half-awake, half-asleep happiness that
+belongs to the moments in which we transport ourselves into Elysium, by
+the carol of a voice more loudly joyous than that of his own heart--
+
+
+ “Singing, singing,
+ Lustily singing,
+ Down the road, with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Nierestein.”
+
+
+Kenelm turned his head so quickly that he frightened Max, who had for
+the last minute been standing behind him inquisitively with one paw
+raised, and sniffing, in some doubt whether he recognized an old
+acquaintance; but at Kenelm’s quick movement the animal broke into a
+nervous bark, and ran back to his master.
+
+The minstrel, little heeding the figure reclined on the bank, would have
+passed on with his light tread and his cheery carol, but Kenelm rose to
+his feet, and holding out his hand, said, “I hope you don’t share Max’s
+alarm at meeting me again?”
+
+“Ah, my young philosopher, is it indeed you?”
+
+“If I am to be designated a philosopher it is certainly not I. And,
+honestly speaking, I am not the same. I, who spent that pleasant day
+with you among the fields round Luscombe two years ago--”
+
+“Or who advised me at Tor Hadham to string my lyre to the praise of a
+beefsteak. I, too, am not quite the same,--I, whose dog presented you
+with the begging-tray.”
+
+“Yet you still go through the world singing.”
+
+“Even that vagrant singing time is pretty well over. But I disturbed you
+from your repose; I would rather share it. You are probably not going my
+way, and as I am in no hurry, I should not like to lose the opportunity
+chance has so happily given me of renewing acquaintance with one who has
+often been present to my thoughts since we last met.” Thus saying, the
+minstrel stretched himself at ease on the bank, and Kenelm followed his
+example.
+
+There certainly was a change in the owner of the dog with the
+begging-tray, a change in costume, in countenance, in that indescribable
+self-evidence which we call “manner.” The costume was not that Bohemian
+attire in which Kenelm had first encountered the wandering minstrel, nor
+the studied, more graceful garb, which so well became his shapely form
+during his visit to Luscombe. It was now neatly simple, the cool and
+quiet summer dress any English gentleman might adopt in a long rural
+walk. And as he uncovered his head to court the cooling breeze, there
+was a graver dignity in the man’s handsome Rubens-like face, a line of
+more concentrated thought in the spacious forehead, a thread or two of
+gray shimmering here and there through the thick auburn curls of hair
+and beard. And in his manner, though still very frank, there was just
+perceptible a sort of self-assertion, not offensive, but manly; such
+as does not misbecome one of maturer years, and of some established
+position, addressing another man much younger than himself, who in
+all probability has achieved no position at all beyond that which the
+accident of birth might assign to him.
+
+“Yes,” said the minstrel, with a half-suppressed sigh, “the last year
+of my vagrant holidays has come to its close. I recollect that the first
+day we met by the road-side fountain, I advised you to do like me, seek
+amusement and adventure as a foot-traveller. Now, seeing you, evidently
+a gentleman by education and birth, still a foot-traveller, I feel as if
+I ought to say, ‘You have had enough of such experience: vagabond life
+has its perils as well as charms; cease it, and settle down.’”
+
+“I think of doing so,” replied Kenelm, laconically.
+
+“In a profession?--army, law, medicine?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Ah, in marriage then. Right; give me your hand on that. So a petticoat
+indeed has at last found its charm for you in the actual world as well
+as on the canvas of a picture?”
+
+“I conclude,” said Kenelm, evading any direct notice of that playful
+taunt, “I conclude from your remark that it is in marriage _you_ are
+about to settle down.”
+
+“Ay, could I have done so before I should have been saved from many
+errors, and been many years nearer to the goal which dazzled my sight
+through the haze of my boyish dreams.”
+
+“What is that goal,--the grave?”
+
+“The grave! That which allows of no grave,--fame.”
+
+“I see--despite of what you just now said--you still mean to go through
+the world seeking a poet’s fame.”
+
+“Alas! I resign that fancy,” said the minstrel, with another half-sigh.
+“It was not indeed wholly, but in great part the hope of the poet’s fame
+that made me a truant in the way to that which destiny, and such few
+gifts as Nature conceded to me, marked out for my proper and only goal.
+But what a strange, delusive Will-o’-the-Wisp the love of verse-making
+is! How rarely a man of good sense deceives himself as to other things
+for which he is fitted, in which he can succeed; but let him once drink
+into his being the charm of verse-making, how the glamour of the charm
+bewitches his understanding! how long it is before he can believe that
+the world will not take his word for it, when he cries out to sun, moon,
+and stars, ‘I, too, am a poet.’ And with what agonies, as if at the
+wrench of soul from life, he resigns himself at last to the conviction
+that whether he or the world be right, it comes to the same thing. Who
+can plead his cause before a court that will not give him a hearing?”
+
+It was with an emotion so passionately strong, and so intensely painful,
+that the owner of the dog with the begging-tray thus spoke, that Kenelm
+felt, through sympathy, as if he himself were torn asunder by the wrench
+of life from soul. But then Kenelm was a mortal so eccentric that, if
+a single acute suffering endured by a fellow mortal could be brought
+before the evidence of his senses, I doubt whether he would not have
+suffered as much as that fellow-mortal. So that, though if there were a
+thing in the world which Kenelm Chillingly would care not to do, it was
+verse-making, his mind involuntarily hastened to the arguments by which
+he could best mitigate the pang of the verse-maker.
+
+Quoth he: “According to my very scanty reading, you share the love
+of verse-making with men the most illustrious in careers which have
+achieved the goal of fame. It must, then, be a very noble love:
+Augustus, Pollio, Varius, Maecenas,--the greatest statesmen of their
+day,--they were verse-makers. Cardinal Richelieu was a verse-maker;
+Walter Raleigh and Philip Sidney, Fox, Burke, Sheridan, Warren
+Hastings, Canning, even the grave William Pitt,--all were verse-makers.
+Verse-making did not retard--no doubt the qualities essential to
+verse-making accelerated--their race to the goal of fame. What great
+painters have been verse-makers! Michael Angelo, Leonardo da Vinci,
+Salvator Rosa”--and Heaven knows how may other great names Kenelm
+Chillingly might have proceeded to add to his list, if the minstrel had
+not here interposed.
+
+“What! all those mighty painters were verse-makers?”
+
+“Verse-makers so good, especially Michael Angelo,--the greatest painter
+of all,--that they would have had the fame of poets, if, unfortunately
+for that goal of fame, their glory in the sister art of painting did not
+outshine it. But when you give to your gift of song the modest title of
+verse-making, permit me to observe that your gift is perfectly distinct
+from that of the verse-maker. Your gift, whatever it may be, could not
+exist without some sympathy with the non verse-making human heart.
+No doubt in your foot travels, you have acquired not only observant
+intimacy with external Nature in the shifting hues at each hour of a
+distant mountain, in the lengthening shadows which yon sunset casts on
+the waters at our feet, in the habits of the thrush dropped fearlessly
+close beside me, in that turf moistened by its neighbourhood to those
+dripping rushes, all of which I could describe no less accurately than
+you,--as a Peter Bell might describe them no less accurately than a
+William Wordsworth. But in such songs of yours as you have permitted me
+to hear, you seem to have escaped out of that elementary accidence
+of the poet’s art, and to touch, no matter how slightly, on the only
+lasting interest which the universal heart of man can have in the song
+of the poet; namely, in the sound which the poet’s individual sympathy
+draws forth from the latent chords in that universal heart. As for what
+you call ‘the world,’ what is it more than the fashion of the present
+day? How far the judgment of that is worth a poet’s pain I can’t pretend
+to say. But of one thing I am sure, that while I could as easily square
+the circle as compose a simple couplet addressed to the heart of a
+simple audience with sufficient felicity to decoy their praises
+into Max’s begging-tray, I could spin out by the yard the sort of
+verse-making which characterizes the fashion of the present day.”
+
+Much flattered, and not a little amused, the wandering minstrel turned
+his bright countenance, no longer dimmed by a cloud, towards that of his
+lazily reclined consoler, and answered gayly,--
+
+“You say that you could spin out by the yard verses in the fashion of
+the present day. I wish you would give me a specimen of your skill in
+that handiwork.”
+
+“Very well; on one condition, that you will repay my trouble by
+a specimen of your own verses, not in the fashion of the present
+day,--something which I can construe. I defy you to construe mine.”
+
+“Agreed.”
+
+“Well, then, let us take it for granted that this is the Augustan age of
+English poetry, and that the English language is dead, like the Latin.
+Suppose I am writing for a prize-medal in English, as I wrote at
+college for a prize-medal in Latin: of course, I shall be successful in
+proportion as I introduce the verbal elegances peculiar to our Augustan
+age, and also catch the prevailing poetic characteristic of that
+classical epoch.
+
+“Now I think that every observant critic will admit that the striking
+distinctions of the poetry most in the fashion of the present day,
+namely, of the Augustan age, are,--first, a selection of such verbal
+elegances as would have been most repulsive to the barbaric taste of the
+preceding century; and, secondly, a very lofty disdain of all prosaic
+condescensions to common-sense, and an elaborate cultivation of that
+element of the sublime which Mr. Burke defines under the head of
+obscurity.
+
+“These premises conceded, I will only ask you to choose the metre. Blank
+verse is very much in fashion just now.”
+
+“Pooh! blank verse indeed! I am not going so to free your experiment
+from the difficulties of rhyme.”
+
+“It is all one to me,” said Kenelm, yawning; “rhyme be it: heroic or
+lyrical?”
+
+“Heroics are old-fashioned; but the Chaucer couplet, as brought to
+perfection by our modern poets, I think the best adapted to dainty
+leaves and uncrackable nuts. I accept the modern Chaucerian. The
+subject?”
+
+“Oh, never trouble yourself about that. By whatever title your Augustan
+verse-maker labels his poem, his genius, like Pindar’s, disdains to be
+cramped by the subject. Listen, and don’t suffer Max to howl, if he can
+help it. Here goes.”
+
+And in an affected but emphatic sing-song Kenelm began:--
+
+
+ “In Attica the gentle Pythias dwelt.
+ Youthful he was, and passing rich: he felt
+ As if nor youth nor riches could suffice
+ For bliss. Dark-eyed Sophronia was a nice
+ Girl: and one summer day, when Neptune drove
+ His sea-car slowly, and the olive grove
+ That skirts Ilissus, to thy shell, Harmonia,
+ Rippled, he said ‘I love thee’ to Sophronia.
+ Crocus and iris, when they heard him, wagged
+ Their pretty heads in glee: the honey-bagged
+ Bees became altars: and the forest dove
+ Her plumage smoothed. Such is the charm of love.
+ Of this sweet story do ye long for more?
+ Wait till I publish it in volumes four;
+ Which certain critics, my good friends, will cry
+ Up beyond Chaucer. Take their word for ‘t. I
+ Say ‘Trust them, but not read,--or you’ll not buy.’”
+
+
+“You have certainly kept your word,” said the minstrel, laughing; “and
+if this be the Augustan age, and the English were a dead language, you
+deserve to win the prize-medal.”
+
+“You flatter me,” said Kenelm, modestly. “But if I, who never before
+strung two rhymes together, can improvise so readily in the style of the
+present day, why should not a practical rhymester like yourself dash off
+at a sitting a volume or so in the same style; disguising completely the
+verbal elegances borrowed, adding to the delicacies of the rhyme by the
+frequent introduction of a line that will not scan, and towering yet
+more into the sublime by becoming yet more unintelligible? Do that, and
+I promise you the most glowing panegyric in ‘The Londoner,’ for I will
+write it myself.”
+
+“‘The Londoner’!” exclaimed the minstrel, with an angry flush on his
+cheek and brow, “my bitter, relentless enemy.”
+
+“I fear, then, you have as little studied the critical press of the
+Augustan age as you have imbued your muse with the classical spirit of
+its verse. For the art of writing a man must cultivate himself. The art
+of being reviewed consists in cultivating the acquaintance of reviewers.
+In the Augustan age criticism is cliquism. Belong to a clique and you
+are Horace or Tibullus. Belong to no clique and, of course, you are
+Bavius or Maevius. ‘The Londoner’ is the enemy of no man: it holds all
+men in equal contempt. But as, in order to amuse, it must abuse, it
+compensates the praise it is compelled to bestow upon the members of its
+clique by heaping additional scorn upon all who are cliqueless. Hit him
+hard: he has no friends.”
+
+“Ah,” said the minstrel, “I believe that there is much truth in what you
+say. I never had a friend among the cliques. And Heaven knows with what
+pertinacity those from whom I, in utter ignorance of the rules which
+govern so-called organs of opinion, had hoped, in my time of struggle,
+for a little sympathy, a kindly encouragement, have combined to crush
+me down. They succeeded long. But at last I venture to hope that I
+am beating them. Happily, Nature endowed me with a sanguine, joyous,
+elastic temperament. He who never despairs seldom completely fails.”
+
+This speech rather perplexed Kenelm, for had not the minstrel declared
+that his singing days were over, that he had decided on the renunciation
+of verse-making? What other path to fame, from which the critics had
+not been able to exclude his steps, was he, then, now pursuing,--he whom
+Kenelm had assumed to belong to some commercial moneymaking firm? No
+doubt some less difficult prose-track, probably a novel. Everybody
+writes novels nowadays, and as the public will read novels without being
+told to do so, and will not read poetry unless they are told that they
+ought, possibly novels are not quite so much at the mercy of cliques as
+are the poems of our Augustan age.
+
+However, Kenelm did not think of seeking for further confidence on that
+score. His mind at that moment, not unnaturally, wandered from books and
+critics to love and wedlock.
+
+“Our talk,” said he, “has digressed into fretful courses; permit me
+to return to the starting-point. You are going to settle down into the
+peace of home. A peaceful home is like a good conscience. The rains
+without do not pierce its roof, the winds without do not shake its
+walls. If not an impertinent question, is it long since you have known
+your intended bride?”
+
+“Yes, very long.”
+
+“And always loved her?”
+
+“Always, from her infancy. Out of all womankind, she was designed to be
+my life’s playmate and my soul’s purifier. I know not what might have
+become of me, if the thought of her had not walked beside me as my
+guardian angel. For, like many vagrants from the beaten high roads of
+the world, there is in my nature something of that lawlessness which
+belongs to high animal spirits, to the zest of adventure, and the warm
+blood that runs into song, chiefly because song is the voice of a joy.
+And no doubt, when I look back on the past years I must own that I have
+too often been led astray from the objects set before my reason, and
+cherished at my heart, by erring impulse or wanton fancy.”
+
+“Petticoat interest, I presume,” interposed Kenelm, dryly.
+
+“I wish I could honestly answer ‘No,’” said the minstrel, colouring
+high. “But from the worst, from all that would have permanently blasted
+the career to which I intrust my fortunes, all that would have rendered
+me unworthy of the pure love that now, I trust, awaits and crowns
+my dreams of happiness, I have been saved by the haunting smile in a
+sinless infantine face. Only once was I in great peril,--that hour of
+peril I recall with a shudder. It was at Luscombe.”
+
+“At Luscombe!”
+
+“In the temptation of a terrible crime I thought I heard a voice say,
+‘Mischief! Remember the little child.’ In that supervention which is so
+readily accepted as a divine warning, when the imagination is morbidly
+excited, and when the conscience, though lulled asleep for a moment, is
+still asleep so lightly that the sigh of a breeze, the fall of a leaf,
+can awake it with a start of terror, I took the voice for that of my
+guardian angel. Thinking it over later, and coupling the voice with the
+moral of those weird lines you repeated to me so appositely the next
+day, I conclude that I am not mistaken when I say it was from your lips
+that the voice which preserved me came.”
+
+“I confess the impertinence: you pardon it?”
+
+The minstrel seized Kenelm’s hand and pressed it earnestly.
+
+“Pardon it! Oh, could you but guess what cause I have to be grateful,
+everlastingly grateful! That sudden cry, the remorse and horror of my
+own self that it struck into me,--deepened by those rugged lines which
+the next day made me shrink in dismay from ‘the face of my darling
+sin’! Then came the turning-point of my life. From that day, the lawless
+vagabond within me was killed. I mean not, indeed, the love of Nature
+and of song which had first allured the vagabond, but the hatred of
+steadfast habits and of serious work,--_that_ was killed. I no longer
+trifled with my calling: I took to it as a serious duty. And when I saw
+her, whom fate has reserved and reared for my bride, her face was no
+longer in my eyes that of the playful child; the soul of the woman was
+dawning into it. It is but two years since that day, to me so eventful.
+Yet my fortunes are now secured. And if fame be not established, I am at
+last in a position which warrants my saying to her I love, ‘The time has
+come when, without fear for thy future, I can ask thee to be mine.’”
+
+The man spoke with so fervent a passion that Kenelm silently left him
+to recover his wonted self-possession,--not unwilling to be silent,--not
+unwilling, in the softness of the hour, passing from roseate sunset into
+starry twilight, to murmur to himself, “And the time, too, has come for
+me!”
+
+After a few moments the minstrel resumed lightly and cheerily,--
+
+“Sir, your turn: pray have you long known--judging by our former
+conversation you cannot have long loved--the lady whom you have wooed
+and won?”
+
+As Kenelm had neither as yet wooed nor won the lady in question, and did
+not deem it necessary to enter into any details on the subject of love
+particular to himself, he replied by a general observation,--
+
+“It seems to me that the coming of love is like the coming of spring:
+the date is not to be reckoned by the calendar. It may be slow and
+gradual; it may be quick and sudden. But in the morning, when we wake
+and recognize a change in the world without, verdure on the trees,
+blossoms on the sward, warmth in the sunshine, music in the air, then we
+say Spring has come!”
+
+“I like your illustration. And if it be an idle question to ask a lover
+how long he has known the beloved one, so it is almost as idle to ask if
+she be not beautiful. He cannot but see in her face the beauty she has
+given to the world without.”
+
+“True; and that thought is poetic enough to make me remind you that I
+favoured you with the maiden specimen of my verse-making on condition
+that you repaid me by a specimen of your own practical skill in the art.
+And I claim the right to suggest the theme. Let it be--”
+
+“Of a beefsteak?”
+
+“Tush, you have worn out that tasteless joke at my expense. The theme
+must be of love, and if you could improvise a stanza or two expressive
+of the idea you just uttered I shall listen with yet more pleased
+attention.”
+
+“Alas! I am no _improvisatore_. Yet I will avenge myself on your former
+neglect of my craft by chanting to you a trifle somewhat in unison with
+the thought you ask me to versify, but which you would not stay to hear
+at Tor Hadham (though you did drop a shilling into Max’s tray); it was
+one of the songs I sang that evening, and it was not ill-received by my
+humble audience.
+
+
+ “THE BEAUTY OF THE MISTRESS IS IN THE LOVER’S EYE.
+
+ “Is she not pretty, my Mabel May?
+ Nobody ever yet called her so.
+ Are not her lineaments faultless, say?
+ If I must answer you plainly, No.
+
+ “Joy to believe that the maid I love
+ None but myself as she is can see;
+ Joy that she steals from her heaven above,
+ And is only revealed on this earth to me!”
+
+
+As soon as he had finished this very artless ditty, the minstrel rose
+and said,--
+
+“Now I must bid you good-by. My way lies through those meadows, and
+yours no doubt along the high road.”
+
+“Not so. Permit me to accompany you. I have a lodging not far from
+hence, to which the path through the fields is the shortest way.”
+
+The minstrel turned a somewhat surprised and somewhat inquisitive look
+towards Kenelm. But feeling, perhaps, that having withheld from his
+fellow-traveller all confidence as to his own name and attributes, he
+had no right to ask any confidence from that gentleman not voluntarily
+made to him, he courteously said “that he wished the way were longer,
+since it would be so pleasantly halved,” and strode forth at a brisk
+pace.
+
+The twilight was now closing into the brightness of a starry summer
+night, and the solitude of the fields was unbroken. Both these men,
+walking side by side, felt supremely happy. But happiness is like wine;
+its effect differing with the differing temperaments on which it
+acts. In this case garrulous and somewhat vaunting with the one man,
+warm-coloured, sensuous, impressionable to the influences of external
+Nature, as an Aeolian harp to the rise or fall of a passing wind; and,
+with the other man, taciturn and somewhat modestly expressed, saturnine,
+meditative, not indeed dull to the influences of external Nature, but
+deeming them of no value, save where they passed out of the domain of
+the sensuous into that of the intellectual, and the soul of man dictated
+to the soulless Nature its own questions and its own replies.
+
+The minstrel took the talk on himself, and the talk charmed his
+listener. It became so really eloquent in the tones of its utterance, in
+the frank play of its delivery, that I could no more adequately describe
+it than a reporter, however faithful to every word a true orator may
+say, can describe that which, apart from all words, belongs to the
+presence of the orator himself.
+
+Not, then, venturing to report the language of this singular itinerant,
+I content myself with saying that the substance of it was of the
+nature on which it is said most men can be eloquent: it was personal
+to himself. He spoke of aspirations towards the achievement of a name,
+dating back to the dawn of memory; of early obstacles in lowly birth,
+stinted fortunes; of a sudden opening to his ambition while yet in
+boyhood, through the generous favour of a rich man, who said, “The child
+has genius: I will give it the discipline of culture; one day it shall
+repay to the world what it owes to me;” of studies passionately begun,
+earnestly pursued, and mournfully suspended in early youth. He did not
+say how or wherefore: he rushed on to dwell upon the struggles for a
+livelihood for himself and those dependent on him; how in such struggles
+he was compelled to divert toil and energy from the systematic pursuit
+of the object he had once set before him; the necessities for money
+were too urgent to be postponed to the visions of fame. “But even,” he
+exclaimed, passionately, “even in such hasty and crude manifestations
+of what is within me, as circumstances limited my powers, I know that
+I ought to have found from those who profess to be authoritative judges
+the encouragement of praise. How much better, then, I should have done
+if I had found it! How a little praise warms out of a man the good
+that is in him, and the sneer of a contempt which he feels to be unjust
+chills the ardour to excel! However, I forced my way, so far as was then
+most essential to me, the sufficing breadmaker for those I loved; and in
+my holidays of song and ramble I found a delight that atoned for all the
+rest. But still the desire of fame, once conceived in childhood, once
+nourished through youth, never dies but in our grave. Foot and hoof may
+tread it down, bud, leaf, stalk; its root is too deep below the surface
+for them to reach, and year after year stalk and leaf and bud re-emerge.
+Love may depart from our mortal life: we console ourselves; the beloved
+will be reunited to us in the life to come. But if he who sets his heart
+on fame loses it in this life, what can console him?”
+
+“Did you not say a little while ago that fame allowed of no grave?”
+
+“True; but if we do not achieve it before we ourselves are in the grave,
+what comfort can it give to us? Love ascends to heaven, to which we hope
+ourselves to ascend; but fame remains on the earth, which we shall never
+again revisit. And it is because fame is earth-born that the desire for
+it is the most lasting, the regret for the want of it the most bitter,
+to the child of earth. But I shall achieve it now; it is already in my
+grasp.”
+
+By this time the travellers had arrived at the brook, facing the wooden
+bridge beside Cromwell Lodge.
+
+Here the minstrel halted; and Kenelm with a certain tremble in his
+voice, said, “Is it not time that we should make ourselves known to
+each other by name? I have no longer any cause to conceal mine, indeed I
+never had any cause stronger than whim,--Kenelm Chillingly, the only son
+of Sir Peter, of Exmundham, -----shire.”
+
+“I wish your father joy of so clever a son,” said the minstrel with his
+wonted urbanity. “You already know enough of me to be aware that I am
+of much humbler birth and station than you; but if you chance to have
+visited the exhibition of the Royal Academy this year--ah! I understand
+that start--you might have recognized a picture of which you have seen
+the rudimentary sketch, ‘The Girl with the Flower-ball,’ one of three
+pictures very severely handled by ‘The Londoner,’ but, in spite of
+that potent enemy, insuring fortune and promising fame to the wandering
+minstrel, whose name, if the sight of the pictures had induced you to
+inquire into that, you would have found to be Walter Melville. Next
+January I hope, thanks to that picture, to add, ‘Associate of the Royal
+Academy.’ The public will not let them keep me out of it, in spite of
+‘The Londoner.’ You are probably an expected guest at one of the more
+imposing villas from which we see the distant lights. I am going to a
+very humble cottage, in which henceforth I hope to find my established
+home. I am there now only for a few days, but pray let me welcome you
+there before I leave. The cottage is called Grasmere.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE minstrel gave a cordial parting shake of the hand to the
+fellow-traveller whom he had advised to settle down, not noticing how
+very cold had become the hand in his own genial grasp. Lightly he passed
+over the wooden bridge, preceded by Max, and merrily, when he had gained
+the other side of the bridge, came upon Kenelm’s ear, through the hush
+of the luminous night, the verse of the uncompleted love-song,--
+
+
+ “Singing, singing,
+ Lustily singing,
+ Down the road, with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Nierestein.”
+
+
+Love-song, uncompleted; why uncompleted? It was not given to Kenelm to
+divine the why. It was a love-song versifying one of the prettiest fairy
+tales in the world, which was a great favourite with Lily, and which
+Lion had promised Lily to versify, but only to complete it in her
+presence and to her perfect satisfaction.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+IF I could not venture to place upon paper the exact words of an
+eloquent coveter of fame, the earth-born, still less can I dare to place
+upon paper all that passed through the voiceless heart of a coveter of
+love, the heaven-born.
+
+From the hour in which Kenelm Chillingly had parted from Walter Melville
+until somewhere between sunrise and noon the next day, the summer
+joyousness of that external Nature which does now and then, though, for
+the most part, deceitfully, address to the soul of man questions and
+answers all her soulless own, laughed away the gloom of his misgivings.
+
+No doubt this Walter Melville was the beloved guardian of Lily; no doubt
+it was Lily whom he designated as reserved and reared to become his
+bride. But on that question Lily herself had the sovereign voice. It
+remained yet to be seen whether Kenelm had deceived himself in the
+belief that had made the world so beautiful to him since the hour of
+their last parting. At all events it was due to her, due even to his
+rival, to assert his own claim to her choice. And the more he recalled
+all that Lily had ever said to him of her guardian, so openly, so
+frankly, proclaiming affection, admiration, gratitude, the more
+convincingly his reasonings allayed his fears, whispering, “So might
+a child speak of a parent: not so does the maiden speak of the man she
+loves; she can scarcely trust herself to praise.”
+
+In fine, it was not in despondent mood, nor with dejected looks, that,
+a little before noon, Kenelm crossed the bridge and re-entered the
+enchanted land of Grasmere. In answer to his inquiries, the servant who
+opened the door said that neither Mr. Melville nor Miss Mordaunt were
+at home; they had but just gone out together for a walk. He was about to
+turn back, when Mrs. Cameron came into the hall, and, rather by
+gesture than words, invited him to enter. Kenelm followed her into the
+drawing-room, taking his seat beside her. He was about to speak, when
+she interrupted him in a tone of voice so unlike its usual languor, so
+keen, so sharp, that it sounded like a cry of distress.
+
+“I was just about to come to you. Happily, however, you find me alone,
+and what may pass between us will be soon over. But first tell me: you
+have seen your parents; you have asked their consent to wed a girl such
+as I described; tell me, oh tell me that that consent is refused!”
+
+“On the contrary, I am here with their full permission to ask the hand
+of your niece.”
+
+Mrs. Cameron sank back in her chair, rocking herself to and fro in the
+posture of a person in great pain.
+
+“I feared that. Walter said he had met you last evening; that you, like
+himself, entertained the thought of marriage. You, of course when you
+learned his name, must have known with whom his thought was connected.
+Happily, he could not divine what was the choice to which your youthful
+fancy had been so blindly led.”
+
+“My dear Mrs. Cameron,” said Kenelm, very mildly, but very firmly, “you
+were aware of the purpose for which I left Moleswich a few days ago,
+and it seems to me that you might have forestalled my intention, the
+intention which brings me; thus early to your house. I come to say to
+Miss Mordaunt’s guardian, ‘I ask the hand of your ward. If you also woo
+her, I have a very noble rival. With both of us no consideration for our
+own happiness can be comparable to the duty of consulting hers. Let her
+choose between the two.’”
+
+“Impossible!” exclaimed Mrs. Cameron; “impossible. You know not what you
+say; know not, guess not, how sacred are the claims of Walter Melville
+to all that the orphan whom he has protected from her very birth can
+give him in return. She has no right to a preference for another: her
+heart is too grateful to admit of one. If the choice were given to her
+between him and you, it is he whom she would choose. Solemnly I assure
+you of this. Do not, then, subject her to the pain of such a choice.
+Suppose, if you will, that you had attracted her fancy, and that now you
+proclaimed your love and urged your suit, she would not, must not, the
+less reject your hand, but you might cloud her happiness in accepting
+Melville’s. Be generous. Conquer your own fancy; it can be but a passing
+one. Speak not to her, nor to Mr. Melville, of a wish which can never be
+realized. Go hence, silently, and at once.”
+
+The words and the manner of the pale imploring woman struck a vague
+awe into the heart of her listener. But he did not the less resolutely
+answer, “I cannot obey you. It seems to me that my honour commands me
+to prove to your niece that, if I mistook the nature of her feelings
+towards me, I did not, by word or look, lead her to believe mine towards
+herself were less in earnest than they are; and it seems scarcely less
+honourable towards my worthy rival to endanger his own future happiness,
+should he discover later that his bride would have been happier with
+another. Why be so mysteriously apprehensive? If, as you say, with such
+apparent conviction, there is no doubt of your niece’s preference for
+another, at a word from her own lips I depart, and you will see me no
+more. But that word must be said by her; and if you will not permit me
+to ask for it in your own house, I will take my chance of finding her
+now, on her walk with Mr. Melville; and, could he deny me the right to
+speak to her alone, that which I would say can be said in his presence.
+Ah! madam, have you no mercy for the heart that you so needlessly
+torture? If I must bear the worst, let me learn it, and at once.”
+
+“Learn it, then, from my lips,” said Mrs. Cameron, speaking with voice
+unnaturally calm, and features rigidly set into stern composure. “And I
+place the secret you wring from me under the seal of that honour which
+you so vauntingly make your excuse for imperilling the peace of the home
+I ought never to have suffered you to enter. An honest couple, of
+humble station and narrow means, had an only son, who evinced in early
+childhood talents so remarkable that they attracted the notice of
+the father’s employer, a rich man of very benevolent heart and very
+cultivated taste. He sent the child, at his expense, to a first-rate
+commercial school, meaning to provide for him later in his own firm.
+The rich man was the head partner of an eminent bank; but very infirm
+health, and tastes much estranged from business, had induced him to
+retire from all active share in the firm, the management of which was
+confined to a son whom he idolized. But the talents of the protege he
+had sent to school took there so passionate a direction towards art
+and estranged from trade, and his designs in drawing when shown to
+connoisseurs were deemed so promising of future excellence, that the
+patron changed his original intention, entered him as a pupil in the
+studio of a distinguished French painter, and afterwards bade him
+perfect his taste by the study of Italian and Flemish masterpieces.
+
+“He was still abroad, when--” here Mrs. Cameron stopped, with visible
+effort, suppressed a sob, and went on, whisperingly, through teeth
+clenched together--“when a thunderbolt fell on the house of the patron,
+shattering his fortunes, blasting his name. The son, unknown to the
+father, had been decoyed into speculations which proved unfortunate: the
+loss might have been easily retrieved in the first instance; unhappily
+he took the wrong course to retrieve it, and launched into new hazards.
+I must be brief. One day the world was startled by the news that a firm,
+famed for its supposed wealth and solidity, was bankrupt. Dishonesty
+was alleged, was proved, not against the father,--he went forth from
+the trial, censured indeed for neglect, not condemned for fraud, but a
+penniless pauper. The--son, the son, the idolized son, was removed from
+the prisoner’s dock, a convicted felon, sentenced to penal servitude;
+escaped that sentence by--by--you guess--you guess. How could he escape
+except through death?--death by his own guilty deed?”
+
+Almost as much overpowered by emotion as Mrs. Cameron herself, Kenelm
+covered his bended face with one hand, stretching out the other blindly
+to clasp her own, but she would not take it.
+
+A dreary foreboding. Again before his eyes rose the old gray
+tower,--again in his ears thrilled the tragic tale of the Fletwodes.
+What was yet left untold held the young man in spell-bound silence. Mrs.
+Cameron resumed,--
+
+“I said the father was a penniless pauper; he died lingeringly
+bedridden. But one faithful friend did not desert that bed,--the youth
+to whose genius his wealth had ministered. He had come from abroad
+with some modest savings from the sale of copies or sketches made in
+Florence. These savings kept a roof over the heads of the old man and
+the two helpless, broken-hearted women,--paupers like himself,--his own
+daughter and his son’s widow. When the savings were gone, the young man
+stooped from his destined calling, found employment somehow, no matter
+how alien to his tastes, and these three whom his toil supported never
+wanted a home or food. Well, a few weeks after her husband’s terrible
+death, his young widow (they had not been a year married) gave birth to
+a child,--a girl. She did not survive the exhaustion of her confinement
+many days. The shock of her death snapped the feeble thread of the poor
+father’s life. Both were borne to the grave on the same day. Before they
+died, both made the same prayer to their sole two mourners, the felon’s
+sister, the old man’s young benefactor. The prayer was this, that the
+new-born infant should be reared, however humbly, in ignorance of her
+birth, of a father’s guilt and shame. She was not to pass a suppliant
+for charity to rich and high-born kinsfolk, who had vouchsafed no word
+even of pity to the felon’s guiltless father and as guiltless wife. That
+promise has been kept till now. I am that daughter. The name I bear,
+and the name which I gave to my niece, are not ours, save as we may
+indirectly claim them through alliances centuries ago. I have never
+married. I was to have been a bride, bringing to the representative of
+no ignoble house what was to have been a princely dower; the wedding day
+was fixed, when the bolt fell. I have never again seen my betrothed. He
+went abroad and died there. I think he loved me; he knew I loved him.
+Who can blame him for deserting me? Who could marry the felon’s sister?
+Who would marry the felon’s child? Who but one? The man who knows
+her secret, and will guard it; the man who, caring little for other
+education, has helped to instil into her spotless childhood so steadfast
+a love of truth, so exquisite a pride of honour, that did she know such
+ignominy rested on her birth she would pine herself away.”
+
+“Is there only one man on earth,” cried Kenelm, suddenly, rearing his
+face,--till then concealed and downcast,--and with a loftiness of pride
+on its aspect, new to its wonted mildness, “is there only one man who
+would deem the virgin at whose feet he desires to kneel and say, ‘Deign
+to be the queen of my life,’ not far too noble in herself to be debased
+by the sins of others before she was even born; is there only one man
+who does not think that the love of truth and the pride of honour are
+most royal attributes of woman or of man, no matter whether the fathers
+of the woman or the man were pirates as lawless as the fathers of
+Norman kings, or liars as unscrupulous, where their own interests
+were concerned, as have been the crowned representatives of lines as
+deservedly famous as Caesars and Bourbons, Tudors and Stuarts? Nobility,
+like genius, is inborn. One man alone guard _her_ secret!--guard a
+secret that if made known could trouble a heart that recoils from shame!
+Ah, madam, we Chillinglys are a very obscure, undistinguished race, but
+for more than a thousand years we have been English gentlemen. Guard her
+secret rather than risk the chance of discovery that could give her a
+pang! I would pass my whole life by her side in Kamtchatka, and even
+there I would not snatch a glimpse of the secret itself with mine own
+eyes: it should be so closely muffled and wrapped round by the folds of
+reverence and worship.”
+
+This burst of passion seemed to Mrs. Cameron the senseless declamation
+of an inexperienced, hot-headed young man; and putting it aside, much
+as a great lawyer dismisses as balderdash the florid rhetoric of some
+junior counsel, rhetoric in which the great lawyer had once indulged,
+or as a woman for whom romance is over dismisses as idle verbiage some
+romantic sentiment that befools her young daughter, Mrs. Cameron simply
+replied, “All this is hollow talk, Mr. Chillingly; let us come to the
+point. After all I have said, do you mean to persist in your suit to my
+niece?”
+
+“I persist.”
+
+“What!” she cried, this time indignantly, and with generous indignation;
+“what, even were it possible that you could win your parents’ consent to
+marry the child of a man condemned to penal servitude, or, consistently
+with the duties a son owes to parents, conceal that fact from them,
+could you, born to a station on which every gossip will ask, ‘Who and
+what is the name of the future Lady Chillingly?’ believe that the
+who and the what will never be discovered! Have you, a mere stranger,
+unknown to us a few weeks ago, a right to say to Walter Melville,
+‘Resign to me that which is your sole reward for the sublime sacrifices,
+for the loyal devotion, for the watchful tenderness of patient years’?”
+
+“Surely, madam,” cried Kenelm, more startled, more shaken in soul by
+this appeal, than by the previous revelations, “surely, when we
+last parted, when I confided to you my love for your niece, when you
+consented to my proposal to return home and obtain my father’s approval
+of my suit,--surely then was the time to say, ‘No; a suitor with claims
+paramount and irresistible has come before you.’”
+
+“I did not then know, Heaven is my witness, I did not then even suspect,
+that Walter Melville ever dreamed of seeking a wife in the child who had
+grown up under his eyes. You must own, indeed, how much I discouraged
+your suit; I could not discourage it more without revealing the secret
+of her birth, only to be revealed as an extreme necessity. But my
+persuasion was that your father would not consent to your alliance with
+one so far beneath the expectations he was entitled to form, and the
+refusal of that consent would terminate all further acquaintance between
+you and Lily, leaving her secret undisclosed. It was not till you had
+left, only indeed two days ago, that I received a letter from Walter
+Melville,--a letter which told me what I had never before conjectured.
+Here is the letter, read it, and then say if you have the heart to
+force yourself into rivalry, with--with--” She broke off, choked by her
+exertion, thrust the letter into his hands, and with keen, eager, hungry
+stare watched his countenance while he read.
+
+
+
+ ----- STREET, BLOOMSBURY.
+
+MY DEAR FRIEND,--Joy and triumph! My picture is completed, the picture
+on which for so many months I have worked night and day in this den of
+a studio, without a glimpse of the green fields, concealing my address
+from every one, even from you, lest I might be tempted to suspend my
+labours. The picture is completed: it is sold; guess the price! Fifteen
+hundred guineas, and to a dealer,--a dealer! Think of that! It is to be
+carried about the country exhibited by itself. You remember those three
+little landscapes of mine which two years ago I would gladly have sold
+for ten pounds, only neither Lily nor you would let me. My good friend
+and earliest patron, the German merchant at Luscombe, who called on
+me yesterday, offered to cover them with guineas thrice piled over the
+canvas. Imagine how happy I felt when I forced him to accept them as a
+present. What a leap in a man’s life it is when he can afford to say, “I
+give!” Now then, at last, at last I am in a position which justifies the
+utterance of the hope which has for eighteen years been my solace, my
+support; been the sunbeam that ever shone through the gloom when my fate
+was at the darkest; been the melody that buoyed me aloft as in the
+song of the skylark, when in the voices of men I heard but the laugh of
+scorn. Do you remember the night on which Lily’s mother besought us
+to bring up her child in ignorance of her parentage, not even to
+communicate to unkind and disdainful relatives that such a child was
+born? Do you remember how plaintively, and yet how proudly, she, so
+nobly born, so luxuriously nurtured, clasping my hand when I ventured
+to remonstrate, and say that her own family could not condemn her child
+because of the father’s guilt,--she, the proudest woman I ever knew, she
+whose smile I can at rare moments detect in Lily, raised her head from
+her pillow, and gasped forth,--
+
+“I am dying: the last words of the dying are commands. I command you to
+see that my child’s lot is not that of a felon’s daughter transported to
+the hearth of nobles. To be happy, her lot must be humble: no roof too
+humble to shelter, no husband too humble to wed, the felon’s daughter.”
+
+From that hour I formed a resolve that I would keep hand and heart
+free, that when the grandchild of my princely benefactor grew up into
+womanhood I might say to her, “I am humbly born, but thy mother would
+have given thee to me.” The newborn, consigned to our charge, has now
+ripened into woman, and I have now so assured my fortune that it is
+no longer poverty and struggle that I should ask her to share. I am
+conscious that, were her fate not so exceptional, this hope of mine
+would be a vain presumption,--conscious that I am but the creature
+of her grandsire’s bounty, and that from it springs all I ever can
+be,--conscious of the disparity in years,-conscious of many a past error
+and present fault. But, as fate so ordains, such considerations are
+trivial; I am her rightful choice. What other choice, compatible with
+these necessities which weigh, dear and honoured friend, immeasurably
+more on your sense of honour than they do upon mine? and yet mine is
+not dull. Granting, then, that you, her nearest and most responsible
+relative, do not contemn me for presumption, all else seems to me clear.
+Lily’s childlike affection for me is too deep and too fond not to
+warm into a wife’s love. Happily, too, she has not been reared in the
+stereotyped boarding-school shallowness of knowledge and vulgarities of
+gentility; but educated, like myself, by the free influences of Nature,
+longing for no halls and palaces save those that we build as we list, in
+fairyland; educated to comprehend and share the fancies which are
+more than booklore to the worshipper of art and song. In a day or two,
+perhaps the day after you receive this, I shall be able to escape from
+London, and most likely shall come on foot as usual. How I long to
+see once more the woodbine on the hedgerows, the green blades of the
+cornfields, the sunny lapse of the river, and dearer still the tiny
+falls of our own little noisy rill! Meanwhile I entreat you, dearest,
+gentlest, most honored of such few friends as my life has hitherto won
+to itself, to consider well the direct purport of this letter. If you,
+born in a grade so much higher than mine, feel that it is unwarrantable
+insolence in me to aspire to the hand of my patron’s grandchild, say so
+plainly; and I remain not less grateful for your friendship than I was
+to your goodness when dining for the first time at your father’s palace.
+Shy and sensitive and young, I felt that his grand guests wondered why I
+was invited to the same board as themselves. You, then courted, admired,
+you had sympathetic compassion on the raw, sullen boy; left those, who
+then seemed to me like the gods and goddesses of a heathen Pantheon, to
+come and sit beside your father’s protege and cheeringly whisper to
+him such words as make a low-born ambitious lad go home light-hearted,
+saying to himself, “Some day or other.” And what it is to an ambitious
+lad, fancying himself lifted by the gods and goddesses of a Pantheon, to
+go home light-hearted muttering to himself, “Some day or other,” I doubt
+if even you can divine.
+
+But should you be as kind to the presumptuous man as you were to the
+bashful boy, and say, “Realized be the dream, fulfilled be the object of
+your life! take from me as her next of kin, the last descendant of your
+benefactor,” then I venture to address to you this request. You are in
+the place of mother to your sister’s child, act for her as a keeper now,
+to prepare her mind and heart for the coming change in the relations
+between her and me. When I last saw her, six months ago, she was still
+so playfully infantine that it half seems to me I should be sinning
+against the reverence due to a child, if I said too abruptly, “You are
+woman, and I love you not as child but as woman.” And yet, time is
+not allowed to me for long, cautious, and gradual slide from the
+relationship of friend into that of lover. I now understand what the
+great master of my art once said to me, “A career is a destiny.” By one
+of those merchant princes who now at Manchester, as they did once at
+Genoa or Venice, reign alike over those two civilizers of the world
+which to dull eyes seem antagonistic, Art and Commerce, an offer is made
+to me for a picture on a subject which strikes his fancy: an offer so
+magnificently liberal that his commerce must command my art; and the
+nature of the subject compels me to seek the banks of the Rhine as
+soon as may be. I must have all the hues of the foliage in the meridian
+glories of summer. I can but stay at Grasmere a very few days; but
+before I leave I must know this, am I going to work for Lily or am I
+not? On the answer to that question depends all. If not to work for her,
+there would be no glory in the summer, no triumph in art to me: I refuse
+the offer. If she says, “Yes; it is for me you work,” then she becomes
+my destiny. She assures my career. Here I speak as an artist: nobody who
+is not an artist can guess how sovereign over even his moral being, at
+a certain critical epoch in his career of artist or his life of man,
+is the success or the failure of a single work. But I go on to speak as
+man. My love for Lily is such for the last six months that, though if
+she rejected me I should still serve art, still yearn for fame, it would
+be as an old man might do either. The youth of my life would be gone.
+
+As man I say, all my thoughts, all my dreams of happiness, distinct from
+Art and fame, are summed up in the one question, “Is Lily to be my wife
+or not?”
+
+ Yours affectionately,
+
+ W. M.
+
+
+Kenelm returned the letter without a word.
+
+Enraged by his silence, Mrs. Cameron exclaimed, “Now, sir, what say you?
+You have scarcely known Lily five weeks. What is the feverish fancy of
+five weeks’ growth to the lifelong devotion of a man like this? Do you
+now dare to say, ‘I persist’?”
+
+Kenelm waved his hand very quietly, as if to dismiss all conception of
+taunt and insult and said with his soft melancholy eyes fixed upon the
+working features of Lily’s aunt, “This man is more worthy of her than
+I. He prays you, in his letter, to prepare your niece for that change of
+relationship which he dreads too abruptly to break to her himself. Have
+you done so?”
+
+“I have; the night I got the letter.”
+
+“And--you hesitate; speak truthfully, I implore. And she--”
+
+“She,” answered Mrs. Cameron, feeling herself involuntarily compelled to
+obey the voice of that prayer--“she seemed stunned at first, muttering,
+‘This is a dream: it cannot be true,--cannot! I Lion’s wife--I--I!
+I, his destiny! In me his happiness!’ And then she laughed her pretty
+child’s laugh, and put her arms round my neck, and said, ‘You are
+jesting, aunty. He could not write thus!’ So I put that part of his
+letter under her eyes; and when she had convinced herself, her face
+became very grave, more like a woman’s face than I ever saw it; and
+after a pause she cried out passionately, ‘Can you think me--can I think
+myself--so bad, so ungrateful, as to doubt what I should answer, if
+Lion asked me whether I would willingly say or do anything that made him
+unhappy? If there be such a doubt in my heart, I would tear it out
+by the roots, heart and all!’ Oh, Mr. Chillingly! There would be no
+happiness for her with another, knowing that she had blighted the life
+of him to whom she owes so much, though she never will learn how
+much more she owes.” Kenelm not replying to this remark, Mrs. Cameron
+resumed, “I will be perfectly frank with you, Mr. Chillingly. I was not
+quite satisfied with Lily’s manner and looks the next morning, that is,
+yesterday. I did fear there might be some struggle in her mind in which
+there entered a thought of yourself. And when Walter, on his arrival
+here in the evening, spoke of you as one he had met before in his rural
+excursions, but whose name he only learned on parting at the bridge by
+Cromwell Lodge, I saw that Lily turned pale, and shortly afterwards
+went to her own room for the night. Fearing that any interview with you,
+though it would not alter her resolve, might lessen her happiness on
+the only choice she can and ought to adopt, I resolved to visit you this
+morning, and make that appeal to your reason and your heart which I have
+done now,--not, I am sure, in vain. Hush! I hear his voice!”
+
+Melville entered the room, Lily leaning on his arm. The artist’s comely
+face was radiant with ineffable joyousness. Leaving Lily, he reached
+Kenelm’s side as with a single bound, shook him heartily by the hand,
+saying, “I find that you have already been a welcomed visitor in this
+house. Long may you be so, so say I, so (I answer for her) says my fair
+betrothed, to whom I need not present you.”
+
+Lily advanced, and held out her hand very timidly. Kenelm touched rather
+than clasped it. His own strong hand trembled like a leaf. He ventured
+but one glance at her face. All the bloom had died out of it, but the
+expression seemed to him wondrously, cruelly tranquil.
+
+“Your betrothed! your future bride!” he said to the artist, with a
+mastery over his emotion rendered less difficult by the single glance
+at that tranquil face. “I wish you joy. All happiness to you, Miss
+Mordaunt. You have made a noble choice.”
+
+He looked round for his hat; it lay at his feet, but he did not see
+it; his eyes wandering away with uncertain vision, like those of a
+sleep-walker.
+
+Mrs. Cameron picked up the hat and gave it to him.
+
+“Thank you,” he said meekly; then with a smile half sweet, half bitter,
+“I have so much to thank you for, Mrs. Cameron.”
+
+“But you are not going already,--just as I enter too. Hold! Mrs. Cameron
+tells me you are lodging with my old friend Jones. Come and stop a
+couple of days with us: we can find you a room; the room over your
+butterfly cage, eh, Fairy?”
+
+“Thank you too. Thank you all. No; I must be in London by the first
+train.”
+
+Speaking thus, he had found his way to the door, bowed with the quiet
+grace that characterized all his movements, and was gone.
+
+“Pardon his abruptness, Lily; he too loves; he too is impatient to
+find a betrothed,” said the artist gayly: “but now he knows my dearest
+secret, I think I have a right to know his; and I will try.”
+
+He had scarcely uttered the words before he too had quitted the room and
+overtaken Kenelm just at the threshold.
+
+“If you are going back to Cromwell Lodge,--to pack up, I suppose,--let
+me walk with you as far as the bridge.”
+
+Kenelm inclined his head assentingly and tacitly as they passed through
+the garden-gate, winding backwards through the lane which skirted the
+garden pales; when, at the very spot in which the day after their first
+and only quarrel Lily’s face had been seen brightening through the
+evergreen, that day on which the old woman, quitting her, said, “God
+bless you!” and on which the vicar, walking with Kenelm, spoke of her
+fairy charms; well, just in that spot Lily’s face appeared again, not
+this time brightening through the evergreens, unless the palest gleam
+of the palest moon can be said to brighten. Kenelm saw, started, halted.
+His companion, then in the rush of a gladsome talk, of which Kenelm had
+not heard a word, neither saw nor halted; he walked on mechanically,
+gladsome, and talking.
+
+Lily stretched forth her hand through the evergreens. Kenelm took it
+reverentially. This time it was not his hand that trembled.
+
+“Good-by,” she said in a whisper, “good-by forever in this world. You
+understand,--you do understand me. Say that you do.”
+
+“I understand. Noble child! noble choice! God bless you! God comfort
+me!” murmured Kenelm. Their eyes met. Oh, the sadness; and, alas! oh the
+love in the eyes of both!
+
+Kenelm passed on.
+
+All said in an instant. How many Alls are said in an instant! Melville
+was in the midst of some glowing sentence, begun when Kenelm dropped
+from his side, and the end of the sentence was this:
+
+“Words cannot say how fair seems life; how easy seems conquest of fame,
+dating from this day--this day”--and in his turn he halted, looked round
+on the sunlit landscape, and breathed deep, as if to drink into his soul
+all of the earth’s joy and beauty which his gaze could compass and the
+arch of the horizon bound.
+
+“They who knew her even the best,” resumed the artist, striding on,
+“even her aunt, never could guess how serious and earnest, under all
+her infantine prettiness of fancy, is that girl’s real nature. We were
+walking along the brook-side, when I began to tell how solitary the
+world would be to me if I could not win her to my side; while I spoke
+she had turned aside from the path we had taken, and it was not till we
+were under the shadow of the church in which we shall be married that
+she uttered the word that gives to every cloud in my fate the silver
+lining; implying thus how solemnly connected in her mind was the thought
+of love with the sanctity of religion.”
+
+Kenelm shuddered,--the church, the burial-ground, the old Gothic tomb,
+the flowers round the infant’s grave!
+
+“But I am talking a great deal too much about myself,” resumed the
+artist. “Lovers are the most consummate of all egotists, and the
+most garrulous of all gossips. You have wished me joy on my destined
+nuptials, when shall I wish you joy on yours? Since we have begun to
+confide in each other, you are in my debt as to a confidence.”
+
+They had now gained the bridge. Kenelm turned round abruptly, “Good-day;
+let us part here. I have nothing to confide to you that might not seem
+to your ears a mockery when I wish you joy.” So saying, so obeying in
+spite of himself the anguish of his heart, Kenelm wrung his companion’s
+hand with the force of an uncontrollable agony, and speeded over the
+bridge before Melville recovered his surprise.
+
+The artist would have small claim to the essential attribute of
+genius--namely, the intuitive sympathy of passion with passion--if that
+secret of Kenelm’s which he had so lightly said “he had acquired the
+right to learn,” was not revealed to him as by an electric flash. “Poor
+fellow!” he said to himself pityingly; “how natural that he should fall
+in love with Fairy! but happily he is so young, and such a philosopher,
+that it is but one of those trials through which, at least ten times a
+year, I have gone with wounds that leave not a scar.”
+
+Thus soliloquizing, the warm-blooded worshipper of Nature returned
+homeward, too blest in the triumph of his own love to feel more than a
+kindly compassion for the wounded heart, consigned with no doubt of
+the healing result to the fickleness of youth and the consolations of
+philosophy. Not for a moment did the happier rival suspect that Kenelm’s
+love was returned; that an atom in the heart of the girl who had
+promised to be his bride could take its light or shadow from any love
+but his own. Yet, more from delicacy of respect to the rival so suddenly
+self-betrayed than from any more prudential motive, he did not speak
+even to Mrs. Cameron of Kenelm’s secret and sorrow; and certainly
+neither she nor Lily was disposed to ask any question that concerned the
+departed visitor.
+
+In fact the name of Kenelm Chillingly was scarcely, if at all, mentioned
+in that household during the few days which elapsed before Walter
+Melville quitted Grasmere for the banks of the Rhine, not to return till
+the autumn, when his marriage with Lily was to take place. During
+those days Lily was calm and seemingly cheerful; her manner towards
+her betrothed, if more subdued, not less affectionate than of old.
+Mrs. Cameron congratulated herself on having so successfully got rid of
+Kenelm Chillingly.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+SO, then, but for that officious warning, uttered under the balcony
+at Luscombe, Kenelm Chillingly might never have had a rival in Walter
+Melville. But ill would any reader construe the character of Kenelm, did
+he think that such a thought increased the bitterness of his sorrow.
+No sorrow in the thought that a noble nature had been saved from the
+temptation to a great sin.
+
+The good man does good merely by living. And the good he does may often
+mar the plans he formed for his own happiness. But he cannot regret that
+Heaven has permitted him to do good.
+
+What Kenelm did feel is perhaps best explained in the letter to Sir
+Peter, which is here subjoined:--
+
+
+“MY DEAREST FATHER,--Never till my dying day shall I forget that
+tender desire for my happiness with which, overcoming all worldly
+considerations, no matter at what disappointment to your own cherished
+plans or ambition for the heir to your name and race, you sent me
+away from your roof, these words ringing in my ear like the sound of
+joy-bells, ‘Choose as you will, with my blessing on your choice. I open
+my heart to admit another child: your wife shall be my daughter.’ It
+is such an unspeakable comfort to me to recall those words now. Of all
+human affections gratitude is surely the holiest; and it blends itself
+with the sweetness of religion when it is gratitude to a father. And,
+therefore, do not grieve too much for me, when I tell you that the hopes
+which enchanted me when we parted are not to be fulfilled. Her hand is
+pledged to another,--another with claims upon her preference to which
+mine cannot be compared; and he is himself, putting aside the accidents
+of birth and fortune, immeasurably my superior. In that thought--I mean
+the thought that the man she selects deserves her more than I do, and
+that in his happiness she will blend her own--I shall find comfort, so
+soon as I can fairly reason down the first all-engrossing selfishness
+that follows the sense of unexpected and irremediable loss. Meanwhile
+you will think it not unnatural that I resort to such aids for change
+of heart as are afforded by change of scene. I start for the Continent
+to-night, and shall not rest till I reach Venice, which I have not yet
+seen. I feel irresistibly attracted towards still canals and gliding
+gondolas. I will write to you and to my dear mother the day I arrive.
+And I trust to write cheerfully, with full accounts of all I see and
+encounter. Do not, dearest father, in your letters to me, revert or
+allude to that grief which even the tenderest word from your own tender
+self might but chafe into pain more sensitive. After all, a disappointed
+love is a very common lot. And we meet every day, men--ay, and women
+too--who have known it, and are thoroughly cured. The manliest of our
+modern lyrical poets has said very nobly, and, no doubt, very justly,
+
+
+ “To bear is to conquer our fate.
+
+
+ “Ever your loving son,
+
+ “K. C.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+NEARLY a year and a half has elapsed since the date of my last chapter.
+Two Englishmen were--the one seated, the other reclined at length--on
+one of the mounds that furrow the ascent of Posilippo. Before them
+spread the noiseless sea, basking in the sunshine, without visible
+ripple; to the left there was a distant glimpse through gaps of
+brushwood of the public gardens and white water of the Chiaja. They were
+friends who had chanced to meet abroad unexpectedly, joined company, and
+travelled together for many months, chiefly in the East. They had been
+but a few days in Naples. The elder of the two had important affairs in
+England which ought to have summoned him back long since. But he did not
+let his friend know this; his affairs seemed to him less important than
+the duties he owed to one for whom he entertained that deep and noble
+love which is something stronger than brotherly, for with brotherly
+affection it combines gratitude and reverence. He knew, too, that
+his friend was oppressed by a haunting sorrow, of which the cause was
+divined by one, not revealed by the other.
+
+To leave him, so beloved, alone with that sorrow in strange lands, was a
+thought not to be cherished by a friend so tender; for in the friendship
+of this man there was that sort of tenderness which completes a nature,
+thoroughly manlike, by giving it a touch of the woman’s.
+
+It was a day which in our northern climates is that of winter: in the
+southern clime of Naples it was mild as an English summer day, lingering
+on the brink of autumn; the sun sloping towards the west, and already
+gathering around it roseate and purple fleeces; elsewhere the deep blue
+sky was without a cloudlet.
+
+Both had been for some minutes silent; at length the man reclining on
+the grass--it was the younger man--said suddenly, and with no previous
+hint of the subject introduced, “Lay your hand on your heart, Tom, and
+answer me truly. Are your thoughts as clear from regrets as the heavens
+above us are from a cloud? Man takes regret from tears that have ceased
+to flow, as the heavens take clouds from the rains that have ceased to
+fall.”
+
+“Regrets? Ah, I understand, for the loss of the girl I once loved to
+distraction! No; surely I made that clear to you many, many, many months
+ago, when I was your guest at Moleswich.”
+
+“Ay, but I have never, since then, spoken to you on that subject. I did
+not dare. It seems to me so natural that a man, in the earlier struggle
+between love and reason, should say, ‘Reason shall conquer, and
+has conquered;’ and yet--and yet--as time glides on, feel that the
+conquerors who cannot put down rebellion have a very uneasy reign.
+Answer me not as at Moleswich, during the first struggle, but now, in
+the after-day, when reaction from struggle comes.”
+
+“Upon my honour,” answered the friend, “I have had no reaction at all.
+I was cured entirely, when I had once seen Jessie again, another man’s
+wife, mother to his child, happy in her marriage; and, whether she was
+changed or not,--very different from the sort of wife I should like to
+marry, now that I am no longer a village farrier.”
+
+“And, I remember, you spoke of some other girl whom it would suit you
+to marry. You have been long abroad from her. Do you ever think of
+her,--think of her still as your future wife? Can you love her? Can you,
+who have once loved so faithfully, love again?”
+
+“I am sure of that. I love Emily better than I did when I left England.
+We correspond. She writes such nice letters.” Tom hesitated, blushed,
+and continued timidly, “I should like to show you one of her letters.”
+
+“Do.”
+
+Tom drew forth the last of such letters from his breast-pocket.
+
+Kenelm raised himself from the grass, took the letter, and read slowly,
+carefully, while Tom watched in vain for some approving smile to
+brighten up the dark beauty of that melancholy face.
+
+Certainly it was the letter a man in love might show with pride to a
+friend: the letter of a lady, well educated, well brought up, evincing
+affection modestly, intelligence modestly too; the sort of letter in
+which a mother who loved her daughter, and approved the daughter’s
+choice, could not have suggested a correction.
+
+As Kenelm gave back the letter, his eyes met his friend’s. Those were
+eager eyes,--eyes hungering for praise. Kenelm’s heart smote him for
+that worst of sins in friendship,--want of sympathy; and that uneasy
+heart forced to his lips congratulations, not perhaps quite sincere, but
+which amply satisfied the lover. In uttering them, Kenelm rose to his
+feet, threw his arm round his friend’s shoulder, and said, “Are you not
+tired of this place, Tom? I am. Let us go back to England to-morrow.”
+ Tom’s honest face brightened vividly. “How selfish and egotistical I
+have been!” continued Kenelm; “I ought to have thought more of you, your
+career, your marriage,--pardon me--”
+
+“Pardon you,--pardon! Don’t I owe to you all,--owe to you Emily herself?
+If you had never come to Graveleigh, never said, ‘Be my friend,’ what
+should I have been now? what--what?”
+
+The next day the two friends quitted Naples _en route_ for England, not
+exchanging many words by the way. The old loquacious crotchety humour
+of Kenelm had deserted him. A duller companion than he was you could not
+have conceived. He might have been the hero of a young lady’s novel.
+It was only when they parted in London, that Kenelm evinced more secret
+purpose, more external emotion than one of his heraldic Daces shifting
+from the bed to the surface of a waveless pond.
+
+“If I have rightly understood you, Tom, all this change in you, all this
+cure of torturing regret, was wrought, wrought lastingly,--wrought so as
+to leave you heart-free for the world’s actions and a home’s peace, on
+that eve when you saw her whose face till then had haunted you, another
+man’s happy wife, and in so seeing her, either her face was changed or
+your heart became so.”
+
+“Quite true. I might express it otherwise, but the fact remains the
+same.”
+
+“God bless you, Tom; bless you in your career without, in your home
+within,” said Kenelm, wringing his friend’s hand at the door of the
+carriage that was to whirl to love and wealth and station the whilom
+bully of a village, along the iron groove of that contrivance which,
+though now the tritest of prosaic realities, seemed once too poetical
+for a poet’s wildest visions.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+A WINTER’S evening at Moleswich. Very different from a winter sunset
+at Naples. It is intensely cold. There has been a slight fall of snow,
+accompanied with severe, bright, clean frost, a thin sprinkling of white
+on the pavements. Kenelm Chillingly entered the town on foot, no longer
+a knapsack on his back. Passing through the main street, he paused a
+moment at the door of Will Somers. The shop was closed. No, he would
+not stay there to ask in a roundabout way for news. He would go in
+straightforwardly and manfully to Grasmere. He would take the inmates
+there by surprise. The sooner he could bring Tom’s experience home
+to himself, the better. He had schooled his heart to rely on that
+experience, and it brought him back the old elasticity of his stride.
+In his lofty carriage and buoyant face were again visible the old
+haughtiness of the indifferentism that keeps itself aloof from the
+turbulent emotions and conventional frivolities of those whom its
+philosophy pities and scorns.
+
+“Ha! ha!” laughed he who like Swift never laughed aloud, and often
+laughed inaudibly. “Ha! ha! I shall exorcise the ghost of my grief. I
+shall never be haunted again. If that stormy creature whom love might
+have maddened into crime, if he were cured of love at once by a single
+visit to the home of her whose face was changed to him,--for the smiles
+and the tears of it had become the property of another man,--how much
+more should I be left without a scar! I, the heir of the Chillinglys!
+I, the kinsman of a Mivers! I, the pupil of a Welby! I--I, Kenelm
+Chillingly, to be thus--thus--” Here, in the midst of his boastful
+soliloquy, the well-remembered brook rushed suddenly upon eye and ear,
+gleaming and moaning under the wintry moon. Kenelm Chillingly stopped,
+covered his face with his hands, and burst into a passion of tears.
+
+Recovering himself slowly, he went on along the path, every step of
+which was haunted by the form of Lily. He reached the garden gate of
+Grasmere, lifted the latch, and entered. As he did so, a man, touching
+his hat, rushed beside, and advanced before him,--the village postman.
+Kenelm drew back, allowing the man to pass to the door, and as he thus
+drew back, he caught a side view of lighted windows looking on the
+lawn,--the windows of the pleasant drawing-room in which he had first
+heard Lily speak of her guardian.
+
+The postman left his letters, and regained the garden gate, while
+Kenelm still stood wistfully gazing on those lighted windows. He had,
+meanwhile, advanced along the whitened sward to the light, saying to
+himself, “Let me just see her and her happiness, and then I will knock
+boldly at the door, and say, ‘Good-evening, Mrs. Melville.’”
+
+So Kenelm stole across the lawn, and, stationing himself at the angle of
+the wall, looked into the window.
+
+Melville, in dressing-robe and slippers, was seated alone by the
+fireside. His dog was lazily stretched on the hearth rug. One by one the
+features of the room, as the scene of his vanished happiness, grew out
+from its stillness; the delicately tinted walls, the dwarf bookcase,
+with its feminine ornaments on the upper shelf; the piano standing in
+the same place. Lily’s own small low chair; that was not in its old
+place, but thrust into a remote angle, as if it had passed into disuse.
+Melville was reading a letter, no doubt one of those which the postman
+had left. Surely the contents were pleasant, for his fair face, always
+frankly expressive of emotion, brightened wonderfully as he read on.
+Then he rose with a quick, brisk movement, and pulled the bell hastily.
+
+A neat maid-servant entered,--a strange face to Kenelm. Melville gave
+her some brief message. “He has had joyous news,” thought Kenelm. “He
+has sent for his wife that she may share his joy.” Presently the door
+opened, and entered not Lily, but Mrs. Cameron.
+
+She looked changed. Her natural quietude of mien and movement the same,
+indeed, but with more languor in it. Her hair had become gray. Melville
+was standing by the table as she approached him. He put the letter into
+her hands with a gay, proud smile, and looked over her shoulder while
+she read it, pointing with his finger as to some lines that should more
+emphatically claim her attention.
+
+When she had finished her face reflected his smile. They exchanged a
+hearty shake of the hand, as if in congratulation.
+
+“Ah,” thought Kenelm, “the letter is from Lily. She is abroad. Perhaps
+the birth of a first-born.”
+
+Just then Blanche, who had not been visible before, emerged from under
+the table, and as Melville reseated himself by the fireside, sprang into
+his lap, rubbing herself against his breast. The expression of his face
+changed; he uttered some low exclamation. Mrs. Cameron took the creature
+from his lap, stroking it quietly, carried it across the room, and put
+it outside the door. Then she seated herself beside the artist, placing
+her hand in his, and they conversed in low tones, till Melville’s face
+again grew bright, and again he took up the letter.
+
+A few minutes later the maid-servant entered with the tea-things,
+and after arranging them on the table approached the window. Kenelm
+retreated into the shade, the servant closed the shutters and drew the
+curtains; that scene of quiet home comfort vanished from the eyes of the
+looker-on.
+
+Kenelm felt strangely perplexed. What had become of Lily? was she indeed
+absent from her home? Had he conjectured rightly that the letter
+which had evidently so gladdened Melville was from her, or was
+it possible--here a thought of joy seized his heart and held him
+breathless--was it possible that, after all, she had not married her
+guardian; had found a home elsewhere,--was free? He moved on farther
+down the lawn, towards the water, that he might better bring before his
+sight that part of the irregular building in which Lily formerly had her
+sleeping-chamber, and her “own-own room.”
+
+All was dark there; the shutters inexorably closed. The place with which
+the childlike girl had associated her most childlike fancies, taming and
+tending the honey-drinkers destined to pass into fairies, that fragile
+tenement was not closed against the winds and snows; its doors were
+drearily open; gaps in the delicate wire-work; of its dainty draperies a
+few tattered shreds hanging here and there; and on the depopulated floor
+the moonbeams resting cold and ghostly. No spray from the tiny fountain;
+its basin chipped and mouldering; the scanty waters therein frozen. Of
+all the pretty wild ones that Lily fancied she could tame, not one. Ah!
+yes, there was one, probably not of the old familiar number; a stranger
+that might have crept in for shelter from the first blasts of
+winter, and now clung to an angle in the farther wall, its wings
+folded,--asleep, not dead. But Kenelm saw it not; he noticed only the
+general desolation of the spot.
+
+“Natural enough,” thought he. “She has outgrown all such pretty
+silliness. A wife cannot remain a child. Still, if she had belonged to
+me--” The thought choked even his inward, unspoken utterance. He turned
+away, paused a moment under the leafless boughs of the great willow
+still dipping into the brook, and then with impatient steps strode back
+towards the garden gate.
+
+“No,--no,--no. I cannot now enter that house and ask for Mrs. Melville.
+Trial enough for one night to stand on the old ground. I will return to
+the town. I will call at Jessie’s, and there I can learn if she indeed
+be happy.”
+
+So he went on by the path along the brook-side, the night momently
+colder and colder, and momently clearer and clearer, while the moon
+noiselessly glided into loftier heights. Wrapped in his abstracted
+thoughts, when he came to the spot in which the path split in twain,
+he did not take that which led more directly to the town. His steps,
+naturally enough following the train of his thoughts, led him along
+the path with which the object of his thoughts was associated. He found
+himself on the burial-ground, and in front of the old ruined tomb with
+the effaced inscription.
+
+“Ah! child! child!” he murmured almost audibly, “what depths of woman
+tenderness lay concealed in thee! In what loving sympathy with the
+past--sympathy only vouchsafed to the tenderest women and the highest
+poets--didst thou lay thy flowers on the tomb, to which thou didst give
+a poet’s history interpreted by a woman’s heart, little dreaming that
+beneath the stone slept a hero of thine own fallen race.”
+
+He passed beneath the shadow of the yews, whose leaves no winter wind
+can strew, and paused at the ruined tomb,--no flower now on its stone,
+only a sprinkling of snow at the foot of it,--sprinklings of snow at the
+foot of each humbler grave-mound. Motionless in the frosty air rested
+the pointed church-spire, and through the frosty air, higher and higher
+up the arch of heaven, soared the unpausing moon. Around and below and
+above her, the stars which no science can number; yet not less difficult
+to number are the thoughts, desires, aspirations which, in a space of
+time briefer than a winter’s night, can pass through the infinite deeps
+of a human soul.
+
+From his stand by the Gothic tomb, Kenelm looked along the churchyard
+for the infant’s grave which Lily’s pious care had bordered with votive
+flowers. Yes, in that direction there was still a gleam of colour; could
+it be of flowers in that biting winter time?--the moon is so deceptive,
+it silvers into the hue of the jessamines the green of the everlastings.
+
+He passed towards the white grave-mound. His sight had duped him; no
+pale flower, no green “everlasting” on its neglected border,--only brown
+mould, withered stalks, streaks of snow.
+
+“And yet,” he said sadly, “she told me she had never broken a promise;
+and she had given a promise to the dying child. Ah! she is too happy now
+to think of the dead.”
+
+So murmuring, he was about to turn towards the town, when close by
+that child’s grave he saw another. Round that other there were pale
+“everlastings,” dwarfed blossoms of the laurestinus; at the four angles
+the drooping bud of a Christmas rose; at the head of the grave was a
+white stone, its sharp edges cutting into the starlit air; and on the
+head, in fresh letters, were inscribed these words:--
+
+
+ To the Memory of
+ L. M.
+ Aged 17,
+ Died October 29, A. D. 18--,
+ This stone, above the grave to which her mortal
+ remains are consigned, beside that of an infant not
+ more sinless, is consecrated by those who
+ most mourn and miss her,
+ ISABEL CAMERON,
+ WALTER MELVILLE.
+ “Suffer the little children to come unto me.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE next morning Mr. Emlyn, passing from his garden to the town of
+Moleswich, descried a human form stretched on the burial-ground,
+stirring restlessly but very slightly, as if with an involuntary shiver,
+and uttering broken sounds, very faintly heard, like the moans that a
+man in pain strives to suppress and cannot.
+
+The rector hastened to the spot. The man was lying, his face downward,
+on a grave-mound, not dead, not asleep.
+
+“Poor fellow overtaken by drink, I fear,” thought the gentle pastor; and
+as it was the habit of his mind to compassionate error even more than
+grief, he accosted the supposed sinner in very soothing tones--trying to
+raise him from the ground--and with very kindly words.
+
+Then the man lifted his face from its pillow on the grave-mound, looked
+round him dreamily into the gray, blank air of the cheerless morn,
+and rose to his feet quietly and slowly. The vicar was startled; he
+recognized the face of him he had last seen in the magnificent affluence
+of health and strength. But the character of the face was changed,--so
+changed! its old serenity of expression, at once grave and sweet,
+succeeded by a wild trouble in the heavy eyelids and trembling lips.
+
+“Mr. Chillingly,--you! Is it possible?”
+
+“Varus, Varus,” exclaimed Kenelm, passionately, “what hast thou done
+with my legions?”
+
+At that quotation of the well-known greeting of Augustus to his
+unfortunate general, the scholar recoiled. Had his young friend’s mind
+deserted him,--dazed, perhaps, by over-study?
+
+He was soon reassured; Kenelm’s face settled back into calm, though a
+dreary calm, like that of the wintry day.
+
+“I beg pardon, Mr. Emlyn; I had not quite shaken off the hold of a
+strange dream. I dreamed that I was worse off than Augustus: he did not
+lose the world when the legions he had trusted to another vanished into
+a grave.”
+
+Here Kenelm linked his arm in that of the rector,--on which he leaned
+rather heavily,--and drew him on from the burial-ground into the open
+space where the two paths met.
+
+“But how long have you returned to Moleswich?” asked Emlyn; “and how
+came you to choose so damp a bed for your morning slumbers?”
+
+“The wintry cold crept into my veins when I stood in the burial-ground,
+and I was very weary; I had no sleep at night. Do not let me take you
+out of your way; I am going on to Grasmere. So I see, by the record on a
+gravestone, that it is more than a year ago since Mr. Melville lost his
+wife.”
+
+“Wife? He never married.”
+
+“What!” cried Kenelm. “Whose, then, is that gravestone,--‘L. M.’?”
+
+“Alas! it is our poor Lily’s.”
+
+“And she died unmarried?”
+
+As Kenelm said this he looked up, and the sun broke out from the
+gloomy haze of the morning. “I may claim thee, then,” he thought within
+himself, “claim thee as mine when we meet again.”
+
+“Unmarried,--yes,” resumed the vicar. “She was indeed betrothed to her
+guardian; they were to have been married in the autumn, on his return
+from the Rhine. He went there to paint on the spot itself his great
+picture, which is now so famous,--‘Roland, the Hermit Knight, looking
+towards the convent lattice for a sight of the Holy Nun.’ Melville had
+scarcely gone before the symptoms of the disease which proved fatal to
+poor Lily betrayed themselves; they baffled all medical skill,--rapid
+decline. She was always very delicate, but no one detected in her the
+seeds of consumption. Melville only returned a day or two before her
+death. Dear childlike Lily! how we all mourned for her!--not least the
+poor, who believed in her fairy charms.”
+
+“And least of all, it appears, the man she was to have married.”
+
+“He?--Melville? How can you wrong him so? His grief was
+intense--overpowering--for the time.”
+
+“For the time! what time?” muttered Kenelm, in tones too low for the
+pastor’s ear.
+
+They moved on silently. Mr. Emlyn resumed,--
+
+“You noticed the text on Lily’s gravestone--‘Suffer the little children
+to come unto me’? She dictated it herself the day before she died. I was
+with her then, so I was at the last.”
+
+“Were you--were you--at the last--the last? Good-day, Mr. Emlyn; we
+are just in sight of the garden gate. And--excuse me--I wish to see Mr.
+Melville alone.”
+
+“Well, then, good-day; but if you are making any stay in the
+neighbourhood, will you not be our guest? We have a room at your
+service.”
+
+“I thank you gratefully; but I return to London in an hour or so. Hold,
+a moment. You were with her at the last? She was resigned to die?”
+
+“Resigned! that is scarcely the word. The smile left upon her lips was
+not that of human resignation: it was the smile of a divine joy.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+“YES, sir, Mr. Melville is at home in his studio.”
+
+Kenelm followed the maid across the hall into a room not built at the
+date of Kenelm’s former visits to the house: the artist, making Grasmere
+his chief residence after Lily’s death, had added it at the back of
+the neglected place wherein Lily had encaged “the souls of infants
+unbaptized.”
+
+A lofty room, with a casement partially darkened, to the bleak north;
+various sketches on the walls; gaunt specimens of antique furniture,
+and of gorgeous Italian silks, scattered about in confused disorder;
+one large picture on its easel curtained; another as large, and half
+finished, before which stood the painter. He turned quickly, as Kenelm
+entered the room unannounced, let fall brush and palette, came up to him
+eagerly, grasped his hand, drooped his head on Kenelm’s shoulder, and
+said, in a voice struggling with evident and strong emotion,--
+
+“Since we parted, such grief! such a loss!”
+
+“I know it; I have seen her grave. Let us not speak of it. Why
+so needlessly revive your sorrow? So--so--your sanguine hopes are
+fulfilled: the world at last has done you justice? Emlyn tells me that
+you have painted a very famous picture.”
+
+Kenelm had seated himself as he thus spoke. The painter still stood with
+dejected attitude on the middle of the floor, and brushed his hand
+over his moistened eyes once or twice before he answered, “Yes, wait a
+moment, don’t talk of fame yet. Bear with me. The sudden sight of you
+unnerved me.”
+
+The artist here seated himself also on an old worm-eaten Gothic chest,
+rumpling and chafing the golden or tinselled threads of the embroidered
+silk, so rare and so time-worn, flung over the Gothic chest, so rare
+also, and so worm-eaten.
+
+Kenelm looked through half-closed lids at the artist, and his lips,
+before slightly curved with a secret scorn, became gravely compressed.
+In Melville’s struggle to conceal emotion the strong man recognized a
+strong man,--recognized, and yet only wondered; wondered how such a man,
+to whom Lily had pledged her hand, could so soon after the loss of Lily
+go on painting pictures, and care for any praise bestowed on a yard of
+canvas.
+
+In a very few minutes Melville recommenced conversation,--no more
+reference to Lily than if she had never existed. “Yes, my last picture
+has been indeed a success,--a reward complete, if tardy, for all the
+bitterness of former struggles made in vain, for the galling sense of
+injustice, the anguish of which only an artist knows, when unworthy
+rivals are ranked before him.
+
+
+ “‘Foes quick to blame, and friends afraid to praise.’
+
+
+“True that I have still much to encounter; the cliques still seek to
+disparage me, but between me and the cliques there stands at last the
+giant form of the public, and at last critics of graver weight than the
+cliques have deigned to accord to me a higher rank than even the public
+yet acknowledge. Ah, Mr. Chillingly, you do not profess to be a judge of
+paintings, but, excuse me, just look at this letter. I received it
+only last night from the greatest connoisseur of my art, certainly in
+England, perhaps in Europe.” Here Melville drew, from the side-pocket
+of his picturesque _moyen age_ surtout, a letter signed by a name
+authoritative to all who, being painters themselves, acknowledge
+authority in one who could no more paint a picture himself than Addison,
+the ablest critic of the greatest poem modern Europe has produced, could
+have written ten lines of the “Paradise Lost,” and thrust the letter
+into Kenelm’s hand. Kenelm read it listlessly, with an increased
+contempt for an artist who could so find in gratified vanity consolation
+for the life gone from earth. But, listlessly as he read the letter, the
+sincere and fervent enthusiasm of the laudatory contents impressed him,
+and the preeminent authority of the signature could not be denied.
+
+The letter was written on the occasion of Melville’s recent election to
+the dignity of R. A., successor to a very great artist whose death had
+created a vacancy in the Academy. He returned the letter to Melville,
+saying, “This is the letter I saw you reading last night as I looked
+in at your window. Indeed, for a man who cares for the opinion of other
+men, this letter is very flattering; and for the painter who cares for
+money, it must be very pleasant to know by how many guineas every inch
+of his canvas may be covered.” Unable longer to control his passions of
+rage, of scorn, of agonizing grief, Kenelm then burst forth: “Man, man,
+whom I once accepted as a teacher on human life,--a teacher to warm, to
+brighten, to exalt mine own indifferent, dreamy, slow-pulsed self! has
+not the one woman whom thou didst select out of this overcrowded world
+to be bone of thy bone, flesh of thy flesh, vanished evermore from the
+earth,--little more than a year since her voice was silenced, her heart
+ceased to beat? But how slight is such loss to thy life compared to the
+worth of a compliment that flatters thy vanity!”
+
+The artist rose to his feet with an indignant impulse. But the angry
+flush faded from his cheek as he looked on the countenance of his
+rebuker. He walked up to him, and attempted to take his hand, but Kenelm
+snatched it scornfully from his grasp.
+
+“Poor friend,” said Melville, sadly and soothingly, “I did not think you
+loved her thus deeply. Pardon me.” He drew a chair close to Kenelm’s,
+and after a brief pause went on thus, in very earnest tones, “I am not
+so heartless, not so forgetful of my loss as you suppose. But reflect,
+you have but just learned of her death, you are under the first shock of
+grief. More than a year has been given to me for gradual submission to
+the decree of Heaven. Now listen to me, and try to listen calmly. I
+am many years older than you: I ought to know better the conditions
+on which man holds the tenure of life. Life is composite, many-sided:
+nature does not permit it to be lastingly monopolized by a single
+passion, or while yet in the prime of its strength to be lastingly
+blighted by a single sorrow. Survey the great mass of our common race,
+engaged in the various callings, some the humblest, some the loftiest,
+by which the business of the world is carried on,--can you justly
+despise as heartless the poor trader, or the great statesman, when it
+may be but a few days after the loss of some one nearest and dearest to
+his heart, the trader reopens his shop, the statesman reappears in his
+office? But in me, the votary of art, in me you behold but the weakness
+of gratified vanity; if I feel joy in the hope that my art may triumph,
+and my country may add my name to the list of those who contribute to
+her renown, where and when ever lived an artist not sustained by that
+hope, in privation, in sickness, in the sorrows he must share with his
+kind? Nor is this hope that of a feminine vanity, a sicklier craving for
+applause; it identifies itself with glorious services to our land, to
+our race, to the children of all after time. Our art cannot triumph, our
+name cannot live, unless we achieve a something that tends to beautify
+or ennoble the world in which we accept the common heritage of toil and
+of sorrow, in order therefrom to work out for successive multitudes a
+recreation and a joy.”
+
+While the artist thus spoke Kenelm lifted towards his face eyes charged
+with suppressed tears. And the face, kindling as the artist vindicated
+himself from the young man’s bitter charge, became touchingly sweet in
+its grave expression at the close of the not ignoble defence.
+
+“Enough,” said Kenelm, rising. “There is a ring of truth in what you
+say. I can conceive the artist’s, the poet’s escape from this world,
+when all therein is death and winter, into the world he creates and
+colours at his will with the hues of summer. So, too, I can conceive
+how the man whose life is sternly fitted into the grooves of a trader’s
+calling, or a statesman’s duties, is borne on by the force of custom,
+afar from such brief halting-spot as a grave. But I am no poet, no
+artist, no trader, no statesman; I have no calling, my life is fixed
+into no grooves. Adieu.”
+
+“Hold a moment. Not now, but somewhat later, ask yourself whether any
+life can be permitted to wander in space, a monad detached from the
+lives of others. Into some groove or other, sooner or later, it
+must settle, and be borne on obedient to the laws of Nature and the
+responsibility to God.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+KENELM went back alone, and with downcast looks, through the desolate,
+flowerless garden, when at the other side of the gate a light touch was
+laid on his arm. He looked up, and recognized Mrs. Cameron.
+
+“I saw you,” she said, “from my window coming to the house, and I have
+been waiting for you here. I wished to speak to you alone. Allow me to
+walk beside you.”’
+
+Kenelm inclined his head assentingly, but made no answer. They were
+nearly midway between the cottage and the burial-ground when Mrs.
+Cameron resumed, her tones quick and agitated, contrasting her habitual
+languid quietude,--
+
+“I have a great weight on my mind; it ought not to be remorse. I acted
+as I thought in my conscience for the best. But oh, Mr. Chillingly, if I
+erred,--if I judged wrongly, do say you at least forgive me.” She seized
+his hand, pressing it convulsively. Kenelm muttered inaudibly: a sort
+of dreary stupor had succeeded to the intense excitement of grief. Mrs.
+Cameron went on,--
+
+“You could not have married Lily; you know you could not. The secret of
+her birth could not, in honour, have been concealed from your parents.
+They could not have consented to your marriage; and even if you had
+persisted, without that consent and in spite of that secret, to press
+for it,--even had she been yours--”
+
+“Might she not be living now?” cried Kenelm, fiercely.
+
+“No,--no; the secret must have come out. The cruel world would have
+discovered it; it would have reached her ears. The shame of it would
+have killed her. How bitter then would have been her short interval of
+life! As it is, she passed away,--resigned and happy. But I own that I
+did not, could not, understand her, could not believe her feeling for
+you to be so deep. I did think that when she knew her own heart she
+would find that love for her guardian was its strongest affection. She
+assented, apparently without a pang, to become his wife; and she seemed
+always so fond of him, and what girl would not be? But I was mistaken,
+deceived. From the day you saw her last, she began to fade away; but
+then Walter left a few days after, and I thought that it was his absence
+she mourned. She never owned to me that it was yours,--never till too
+late,--too late,--just when my sad letter had summoned him back, only
+three days before she died. Had I known earlier, while yet there was
+hope of recovery, I must have written to you, even though the obstacles
+to your union with her remained the same. Oh, again I implore you, say
+that if I erred you forgive me. She did, kissing me so tenderly. She did
+forgive me. Will not you? It would have been her wish.”
+
+“Her wish? Do you think I could disobey it? I know not if I have
+anything to forgive. If I have, now could I not forgive one who loved
+her? God comfort us both.”
+
+He bent down and kissed Mrs. Cameron’s forehead. The poor woman threw
+her arm gratefully, lovingly round him, and burst into tears.
+
+When she had recovered her emotion, she said,--
+
+“And now, it is with so much lighter a heart that I can fulfil her
+commission to you. But, before I place this in your hands, can you
+make me one promise? Never tell Melville how she loved you. She was so
+careful he should never guess that. And if he knew it was the thought of
+union with him which had killed her, he would never smile again.”
+
+“You would not ask such a promise if you could guess how sacred from all
+the world I hold the secret that you confide to me. By that secret
+the grave is changed into an altar. Our bridals now are only a while
+deferred.”
+
+Mrs. Cameron placed a letter in Kenelm’s hand, and murmuring in accents
+broken by a sob, “She gave it to me the day before her last,” left him,
+and with quick vacillating steps hurried back towards the cottage. She
+now understood him, at last, too well not to feel that on opening that
+letter he must be alone with the dead.
+
+It is strange that we need have so little practical household knowledge
+of each other to be in love. Never till then had Kenelm’s eyes rested
+upon Lily’s handwriting. And he now gazed at the formal address on the
+envelope with a sort of awe. Unknown handwriting coming to him from an
+unknown world,--delicate, tremulous handwriting,--handwriting not of one
+grown up, yet not of a child who had long to live.
+
+He turned the envelope over and over,--not impatiently, as does the
+lover whose heart beats at the sound of the approaching footstep, but
+lingeringly, timidly. He would not break the seal.
+
+He was now so near the burial-ground. Where should the first letter
+ever received from her--the sole letter he ever could receive--be so
+reverentially, lovingly read, as at her grave?
+
+He walked on to the burial-ground, sat down by the grave, broke the
+envelope; a poor little ring, with a poor little single turquoise,
+rolled out and rested at his feet. The letter contained only these
+words,--
+
+
+The ring comes back to you. I could not live to marry another. I never
+knew how I loved you--till, till I began to pray that you might not love
+me too much. Darling! darling! good-by, darling!
+
+ LILY.
+
+Don’t let Lion ever see this, or ever know what it says to you. He is so
+good, and deserves to be so happy. Do you remember the day of the ring?
+Darling! darling!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+SOMEWHAT more than another year has rolled away. It is early spring
+in London. The trees in the park and squares are budding into leaf and
+blossom. Leopold Travers has had a brief but serious conversation with
+his daughter, and now gone forth on horseback. Handsome and graceful
+still, Leopold Travers when in London is pleased to find himself
+scarcely less the fashion with the young than he was when himself in
+youth. He is now riding along the banks of the Serpentine, no one better
+mounted, better dressed, better looking, or talking with greater fluency
+on the topics which interest his companions.
+
+Cecilia is in the smaller drawing-room, which is exclusively
+appropriated to her use, alone with Lady Glenalvon.
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--“I own, my dear, dear Cecilia, that I arrange myself at
+last on the side of your father. How earnestly at one time I had hoped
+that Kenelm Chillingly might woo and win the bride that seemed to me
+most fitted to adorn and to cheer his life, I need not say. But when at
+Exmundham he asked me to befriend his choice of another, to reconcile
+his mother to that choice,--evidently not a suitable one,--I gave him
+up. And though that affair is at an end, he seems little likely ever to
+settle down to practical duties and domestic habits, an idle wanderer
+over the face of the earth, only heard of in remote places and with
+strange companions. Perhaps he may never return to England.”
+
+CECILIA.--“He is in England now, and in London.”
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--“You amaze me! Who told you so?”
+
+CECILIA.--“His father, who is with him. Sir Peter called yesterday, and
+spoke to me so kindly.” Cecilia here turned aside her face to conceal
+the tears that had started to her eyes.
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--“Did Mr. Travers see Sir Peter?”
+
+CECILIA.--“Yes; and I think it was something that passed between them
+which made my father speak to me--for the first time--almost sternly.”
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--“In urging Chillingly Gordon’s suit?”
+
+CECILIA.--“Commanding me to reconsider my rejection of it. He has
+contrived to fascinate my father.”
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--“So he has me. Of course you might choose among other
+candidates for your hand one of much higher worldly rank, of much larger
+fortune; yet, as you have already rejected them, Gordon’s merits become
+still more entitled to a fair hearing. He has already leaped into
+a position that mere rank and mere wealth cannot attain. Men of all
+parties speak highly of his parliamentary abilities. He is already
+marked in public opinion as a coming man,--a future minister of the
+highest grade. He has youth and good looks; his moral character is
+without a blemish: yet his manners are so free from affected austerity,
+so frank, so genial. Any woman might be pleased with his companionship;
+and you, with your intellect, your culture,--you, so born for high
+station,--you of all women might be proud to partake the anxieties of
+his career and the rewards of his ambition.”
+
+CECILIA (clasping her hands tightly together).--“I cannot, I cannot. He
+may be all you say,--I know nothing against Mr. Chillingly Gordon,--but
+my whole nature is antagonistic to his, and even were it not so--”
+
+She stopped abruptly, a deep blush warming up her fair face, and
+retreating to leave it coldly pale.
+
+LADY GLENALVON (tenderly kissing her).--“You have not, then, even
+yet conquered the first maiden fancy; the ungrateful one is still
+remembered?”
+
+Cecilia bowed her head on her friend’s breast, and murmured imploringly,
+“Don’t speak against him; he has been so unhappy. How much he must have
+loved!”
+
+“But it is not you whom he loved.”
+
+“Something here, something at my heart, tells me that he will love me
+yet; and, if not, I am contented to be his friend.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+WHILE the conversation just related took place between Cecilia and
+Lady Glenalvon, Chillingly Gordon was seated alone with Mivers in
+the comfortable apartment of the cynical old bachelor. Gordon had
+breakfasted with his kinsman, but that meal was long over; the two
+men having found much to talk about on matters very interesting to the
+younger, nor without interest to the elder one.
+
+It is true that Chillingly Gordon had, within the very short space of
+time that had elapsed since his entrance into the House of Commons,
+achieved one of those reputations which mark out a man for early
+admission into the progressive career of office,--not a very showy
+reputation, but a very solid one. He had none of the gifts of the
+genuine orator, no enthusiasm, no imagination, no imprudent bursts of
+fiery words from a passionate heart. But he had all the gifts of
+an exceedingly telling speaker,--a clear metallic voice; well-bred,
+appropriate action, not less dignified for being somewhat too quiet;
+readiness for extempore replies; industry and method for prepared
+expositions of principle or fact. But his principal merit with the
+chiefs of the assembly was in the strong good sense and worldly tact
+which made him a safe speaker. For this merit he was largely indebted to
+his frequent conferences with Chillingly Mivers. That gentleman, whether
+owing to his social qualities or to the influence of “The Londoner” on
+public opinion, enjoyed an intimate acquaintance with the chiefs of all
+parties, and was up to his ears in the wisdom of the world. “Nothing,”
+ he would say, “hurts a young Parliamentary speaker like violence in
+opinion, one way or the other. Shun it. Always allow that much may be
+said on both sides. When the chiefs of your own side suddenly adopt a
+violence, you can go with them or against them, according as best suits
+your own book.”
+
+“So,” said Mivers, reclined on his sofa, and approaching the end of his
+second Trabuco (he never allowed himself more than two), “so I think we
+have pretty well settled the tone you must take in your speech to-night.
+It is a great occasion.”
+
+“True. It is the first time in which the debate has been arranged so
+that I may speak at ten o’clock or later. That in itself is a great
+leap; and it is a Cabinet minister whom I am to answer,--luckily, he
+is a very dull fellow. Do you think I might hazard a joke,--at least a
+witticism?”
+
+“At his expense? Decidedly not. Though his office compels him to
+introduce this measure, he was by no means in its favour when it was
+discussed in the Cabinet; and though, as you say, he is dull, it is
+precisely that sort of dulness which is essential to the formation
+of every respectable Cabinet. Joke at him, indeed! Learn that gentle
+dulness never loves a joke--at its own expense. Vain man! seize the
+occasion which your blame of his measure affords you to secure his
+praise of yourself; compliment him. Enough of politics. It never does to
+think too much over what one has already decided to say. Brooding over
+it, one may become too much in earnest, and commit an indiscretion. So
+Kenelm has come back?”
+
+“Yes. I heard that news last night, at White’s, from Travers. Sir Peter
+had called on Travers.”
+
+“Travers still favours your suit to the heiress?”
+
+“More, I think, than ever. Success in Parliament has great effect on a
+man who has success in fashion and respects the opinion of clubs. But
+last night he was unusually cordial. Between you and me, I think he is
+a little afraid that Kenelm may yet be my rival. I gathered that from a
+hint he let fall of the unwelcome nature of Sir Peter’s talk to him.”
+
+“Why has Travers conceived a dislike to poor Kenelm? He seemed partial
+enough to him once.”
+
+“Ay, but not as a son-in-law, even before I had a chance of becoming so.
+And when, after Kenelm appeared at Exmundham, while Travers was staying
+there, Travers learned, I suppose from Lady Chillingly, that Kenelm had
+fallen in love with and wanted to marry some other girl, who it
+seems rejected him; and still more when he heard that Kenelm had been
+subsequently travelling on the Continent in company with a low-lived
+fellow, the drunken, riotous son of a farrier, you may well conceive how
+so polished and sensible a man as Leopold Travers would dislike the
+idea of giving his daughter to one so little likely to make an agreeable
+son-in-law. Bah! I have no fear of Kenelm. By the way, did Sir Peter say
+if Kenelm had quite recovered his health? He was at death’s door some
+eighteen months ago, when Sir Peter and Lady Chillingly were summoned to
+town by the doctors.”
+
+“My dear Gordon, I fear there is no chance of your succession to
+Exmundham. Sir Peter says that his wandering Hercules is as stalwart
+as ever, and more equable in temperament, more taciturn and grave,--in
+short, less odd. But when you say you have no fear of Kenelm’s rivalry,
+do you mean only as to Cecilia Travers?”
+
+“Neither as to that nor as to anything in life; and as to the succession
+to Exmundham, it is his to leave as he pleases, and I have cause to
+think he would never leave it to me. More likely to Parson John or the
+parson’s son,--or why not to yourself? I often think that for the prizes
+immediately set before my ambition I am better off without land: land is
+a great obfuscator.”
+
+“Humph, there is some truth in that. Yet the fear of land and
+obfuscation does not seem to operate against your suit to Cecilia
+Travers?”
+
+“Her father is likely enough to live till I maybe contented to ‘rest and
+be thankful’ in the Upper House; and I should not like to be a landless
+peer.”
+
+“You are right there; but I should tell you that, now Kenelm has come
+back, Sir Peter has set his heart on his son’s being your rival.”
+
+“For Cecilia?”
+
+“Perhaps; but certainly for Parliamentary reputation. The senior member
+for the county means to retire, and Sir Peter has been urged to allow
+his son to be brought forward,--from what I hear, with the certainty of
+success.”
+
+“What! in spite of that wonderful speech of his on coming of age?”
+
+“Pooh! that is now understood to have been but a bad joke on the new
+ideas, and their organs, including ‘The Londoner.’ But if Kenelm does
+come into the House, it will not be on your side of the question; and
+unless I greatly overrate his abilities--which very likely I do--he will
+not be a rival to despise. Except, indeed, that he may have one fault
+which in the present day would be enough to unfit him for public life.”
+
+“And what is that fault?”
+
+“Treason to the blood of the Chillinglys. This is the age, in England,
+when one cannot be too much of a Chillingly. I fear that if Kenelm does
+become bewildered by a political abstraction,--call it, no matter what,
+say, ‘love of his country,’ or some such old-fashioned crotchet,--I
+fear, I greatly fear, that he may be--in earnest.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE LAST.
+
+IT was a field night in the House of Commons,--an adjourned debate,
+opened by George Belvoir, who had been, the last two years, very slowly
+creeping on in the favour, or rather the indulgence of the House, and
+more than justifying Kenelm’s prediction of his career. Heir to a noble
+name and vast estates, extremely hard-working, very well informed, it
+was impossible that he should not creep on. That night he spoke sensibly
+enough, assisting his memory by frequent references to his notes;
+listened to courteously, and greeted with a faint “Hear, hear!” of
+relief when he had done.
+
+Then the House gradually thinned till nine o’clock, at which hour it
+became very rapidly crowded. A Cabinet minister had solemnly risen,
+deposited on the table before him a formidable array of printed papers,
+including a corpulent blue-book. Leaning his arm on the red box, he
+commenced with this awe-compelling sentence,--
+
+“Sir, I join issue with the right honourable gentleman opposite. He
+says this is not raised as a party question. I deny it. Her Majesty’s
+Government are put upon their trial.”
+
+Here there were cheers, so loudly, and so rarely greeting a speech from
+that Cabinet minister, that he was put out, and had much to “hum” and to
+“ha,” before he could recover the thread of his speech. Then he went on,
+with unbroken but lethargic fluency; read long extracts from the public
+papers, inflicted a whole page from the blue-book, wound up with a
+peroration of respectable platitudes, glanced at the clock, saw that he
+had completed the hour which a Cabinet minister who does not profess to
+be oratorical is expected to speak, but not to exceed; and sat down.
+
+Up rose a crowd of eager faces, from which the Speaker, as previously
+arranged with the party whips, selected one,--a young face, hardy,
+intelligent, emotionless.
+
+I need not say that it was the face of Chillingly Gordon. His position
+that night was one that required dexterous management and delicate tact.
+He habitually supported the Government; his speeches had been hitherto
+in their favour. On this occasion he differed from the Government. The
+difference was known to the chiefs of the Opposition, and hence the
+arrangement of the whips, that he should speak for the first time after
+ten o’clock, and for the first time in reply to a Cabinet minister.
+It is a position in which a young party man makes or mars his future.
+Chillingly Gordon spoke from the third row behind the Government; he had
+been duly cautioned by Mivers not to affect a conceited independence, or
+an adhesion to “violence” in ultra-liberal opinions, by seating
+himself below the gangway. Speaking thus, amid the rank and file of the
+Ministerial supporters, any opinion at variance with the mouthpieces of
+the Treasury Bench would be sure to produce a more effective sensation
+than if delivered from the ranks of the mutinous Bashi Bazouks divided
+by the gangway from better disciplined forces. His first brief sentences
+enthralled the House, conciliated the Ministerial side, kept the
+Opposition side in suspense. The whole speech was, indeed, felicitously
+adroit, and especially in this, that, while in opposition to the
+Government as a whole, it expressed the opinions of a powerful section
+of the Cabinet, which, though at present a minority, yet being the most
+enamoured of a New Idea, the progress of the age would probably render
+a safe investment for the confidence which honest Gordon reposed in its
+chance of beating its colleagues.
+
+It was not, however, till Gordon had concluded that the cheers of his
+audience--impulsive and hearty as are the cheers of that assembly when
+the evidence of intellect is unmistakable--made manifest to the gallery
+and the reporters the full effect of the speech he had delivered. The
+chief of the Opposition whispered to his next neighbour, “I wish we
+could get that man.” The Cabinet minister whom Gordon had answered--more
+pleased with a personal compliment to himself than displeased with an
+attack on the measure his office compelled him to advocate--whispered to
+his chief, “That is a man we must not lose.”
+
+Two gentlemen in the Speaker’s gallery, who had sat there from the
+opening of the debate, now quitted their places. Coming into the lobby,
+they found themselves commingled with a crowd of members who had also
+quitted their seats, after Gordon’s speech, in order to discuss its
+merits, as they gathered round the refreshment table for oranges or
+soda-water. Among them was George Belvoir, who, on sight of the younger
+of the two gentlemen issuing from the Speaker’s gallery, accosted him
+with friendly greeting,--
+
+“Ha! Chillingly, how are you? Did not know you were in town. Been
+here all the evening? Yes; very good debate. How did you like Gordon’s
+speech?”
+
+“I liked yours much better.”
+
+“Mine!” cried George, very much flattered and very much surprised. “Oh,
+mine was a mere humdrum affair, a plain statement of the reasons for the
+vote I should give. And Gordon’s was anything but that. You did not like
+his opinions?”
+
+“I don’t know what his opinions are. But I did not like his ideas.”
+
+“I don’t quite understand you. What ideas?”
+
+“The new ones; by which it is shown how rapidly a great state can be
+made small.”
+
+Here Mr. Belvoir was taken aside by a brother member, on an important
+matter to be brought before the committee on salmon fisheries, on which
+they both served; and Kenelm, with his companion, Sir Peter, threaded
+his way through the crowded lobby and disappeared. Emerging into the
+broad space, with its lofty clock-tower, Sir Peter halted, and pointing
+towards the old Abbey, half in shadow, half in light, under the tranquil
+moonbeams, said,--
+
+“It tells much for the duration of a people when it accords with the
+instinct of immortality in a man; when an honoured tomb is deemed
+recompense for the toils and dangers of a noble life. How much of the
+history of England Nelson summed up in the simple words,--‘Victory or
+Westminster Abbey.’”
+
+“Admirably expressed, my dear father,” said Kenelm, briefly.
+
+“I agree with your remark, which I overheard, on Gordon’s speech,”
+ resumed Sir Peter. “It was wonderfully clever; yet I should have been
+sorry to hear you speak it. It is not by such sentiments that Nelsons
+become great. If such sentiments should ever be national, the cry will
+not be ‘Victory or Westminster Abbey!’ but ‘Defeat and the Three per
+Cents!’”
+
+Pleased with his own unwonted animation, and with the sympathizing
+half-smile on his son’s taciturn lips, Sir Peter then proceeded more
+immediately to the subjects which pressed upon his heart. Gordon’s
+success in Parliament, Gordon’s suit to Cecilia Travers, favoured, as
+Sir Peter had learned, by her father, rejected as yet by herself, were
+somehow inseparably mixed up in Sir Peter’s mind and his words, as he
+sought to kindle his son’s emulation. He dwelt on the obligations which
+a country imposed on its citizens, especially on the young and vigorous
+generation to which the destinies of those to follow were intrusted;
+and with these stern obligations he combined all the cheering and tender
+associations which an English public man connects with an English home:
+the wife with a smile to soothe the cares, and a mind to share the
+aspirations, of a life that must go through labour to achieve renown;
+thus, in all he said, binding together, as if they could not be
+disparted, Ambition and Cecilia.
+
+His son did not interrupt him by a word, Sir Peter in his eagerness not
+noticing that Kenelm had drawn him aside from the direct thoroughfare,
+and had now made halt in the middle of Westminster bridge, bending
+over the massive parapet and gazing abstractedly upon the waves of
+the starlit river. On the right the stately length of the people’s
+legislative palace, so new in its date, so elaborately in each detail
+ancient in its form, stretching on towards the lowly and jagged roofs of
+penury and crime. Well might these be so near to the halls of a people’s
+legislative palace: near to the heart of every legislator for a people
+must be the mighty problem how to increase a people’s splendour and its
+virtue, and how to diminish its penury and its crime.
+
+“How strange it is,” said Kenelm, still bending over the parapet,
+“that throughout all my desultory wanderings I have ever been attracted
+towards the sight and the sound of running waters, even those of the
+humblest rill! Of what thoughts, of what dreams, of what memories,
+colouring the history of my past, the waves of the humblest rill could
+speak, were the waves themselves not such supreme philosophers,--roused
+indeed on their surface, vexed by a check to their own course, but so
+indifferent to all that makes gloom or death to the mortals who think
+and dream and feel beside their banks.”
+
+“Bless me,” said Peter to himself, “the boy has got back to his old vein
+of humours and melancholies. He has not heard a word I have been saying.
+Travers is right. He will never do anything in life. Why did I christen
+him Kenelm? he might as well have been christened Peter.” Still, loth
+to own that his eloquence had been expended in vain and that the wish of
+his heart was doomed to expire disappointed, Sir Peter said aloud, “You
+have not listened to what I said; Kenelm, you grieve me.”
+
+“Grieve you! you! do not say that, Father, dear Father. Listen to you!
+Every word you have said has sunk into the deepest deep of my heart.
+Pardon my foolish, purposeless snatch of talk to myself: it is but my
+way, only my way, dear Father!”
+
+“Boy, boy,” cried Sir Peter, with tears in his voice, “if you could
+get out of those odd ways of yours I should be so thankful. But if
+you cannot, nothing you can do shall grieve me. Only, let me say this;
+running waters have had a great charm for you. With a humble rill you
+associate thoughts, dreams, memories in your past. But now you halt by
+the stream of the mighty river: before you the senate of an empire wider
+than Alexander’s; behind you the market of a commerce to which that of
+Tyre was a pitiful trade. Look farther down, those squalid hovels,
+how much there to redeem or to remedy; and out of sight, but not very
+distant, the nation’s Walhalla, ‘Victory or Westminster Abbey!’ The
+humble rill has witnessed your past. Has the mighty river no effect on
+your future? The rill keeps no record of your past: shall the river
+keep no record of your future? Ah, boy, boy, I see you are dreaming
+still,--no use talking. Let us go home.”
+
+“I was not dreaming, I was telling myself that the time had come to
+replace the old Kenelm with the new ideas, by a new Kenelm with the
+Ideas of Old. Ah! perhaps we must,--at whatever cost to ourselves,--we
+must go through the romance of life before we clearly detect what is
+grand in its realities. I can no longer lament that I stand estranged
+from the objects and pursuits of my race. I have learned how much I have
+with them in common. I have known love; I have known sorrow.”
+
+Kenelm paused a moment, only a moment, then lifted the head which,
+during that pause, had drooped, and stood erect at the full height of
+his stature, startling his father by the change that had passed over his
+face; lip, eye, his whole aspect, eloquent with a resolute enthusiasm,
+too grave to be the flash of a passing moment.
+
+“Ay, ay,” he said, “Victory or Westminster Abbey! The world is a
+battle-field in which the worst wounded are the deserters, stricken as
+they seek to fly, and hushing the groans that would betray the secret of
+their inglorious hiding-place. The pain of wounds received in the thick
+of the fight is scarcely felt in the joy of service to some honoured
+cause, and is amply atoned by the reverence for noble scars. My choice
+is made. Not that of deserter, that of soldier in the ranks.”
+
+“It will not be long before you rise from the ranks, my boy, if you hold
+fast to the Idea of Old, symbolized in the English battle-cry, ‘Victory
+or Westminster Abbey.’”
+
+So saying, Sir Peter took his son’s arm, leaning on it proudly; and so,
+into the crowded thoroughfares, from the halting-place on the modern
+bridge that spans the legendary river, passes the Man of the Young
+Generation to fates beyond the verge of the horizon to which the eyes of
+my generation must limit their wistful gaze.
+
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Kenelm Chillingly, Complete, by
+Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KENELM CHILLINGLY, COMPLETE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 7658-0.txt or 7658-0.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/7/6/5/7658/
+
+Produced by David Widger and Dagny
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase “Project
+Gutenberg”), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. “Project Gutenberg” is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (“the Foundation”
+ or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase “Project Gutenberg” appears, or with which the phrase “Project
+Gutenberg” is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase “Project Gutenberg” associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+“Plain Vanilla ASCII” or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original “Plain Vanilla ASCII” or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, “Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.”
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+“Defects,” such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the “Right
+of Replacement or Refund” described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you ‘AS-IS’ WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm’s
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation’s EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state’s laws.
+
+The Foundation’s principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation’s web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/7658-0.zip b/7658-0.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dcade92
--- /dev/null
+++ b/7658-0.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/7658-h.zip b/7658-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4979fda
--- /dev/null
+++ b/7658-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/7658-h/7658-h.htm b/7658-h/7658-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..38b6d8b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/7658-h/7658-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,25493 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Kenelm Chillingly, by Edward Bulwer Lytton
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+Project Gutenberg's Kenelm Chillingly, Complete, by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Kenelm Chillingly, Complete
+
+Author: Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+Release Date: March 16, 2009 [EBook #7658]
+Last Updated: August 28, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KENELM CHILLINGLY, COMPLETE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger and Dagny
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ KENELM CHILLINGLY
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ HIS ADVENTURES AND OPINIONS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Edward Bulwer Lytton
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>BOOK I.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> <br /><b>BOOK</b> II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0033"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0034"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0035"> CHAPTER XX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0036"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0039"> <br /><b>BOOK</b> III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0037"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0038"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0039"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0040"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0041"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0042"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0043"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0044"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0045"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0046"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0047"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0048"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0049"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0050"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0051"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0052"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0053"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0054"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0055"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0056"> CHAPTER XX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0057"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0061"> <br /><b>BOOK</b> IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0058"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0059"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0060"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0061"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0062"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0063"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0064"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0065"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0066"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0067"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0072"> <br /><b>BOOK</b> V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0068"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0069"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0070"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0071"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0072"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0073"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0074"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0075"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0076"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0082"> <br /><b>BOOK</b> VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0077"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0078"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0079"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0080"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0081"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0082"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0083"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0084"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0085"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0086"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0087"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0088"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0089"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0090"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0091"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0092"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0093"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0100"> <br /><b>BOOK</b> VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0094"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0095"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0096"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0097"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0098"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0099"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0100"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0108"> <br /><b>BOOK</b> VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0101"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0102"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0103"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0104"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0105"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0106"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0107"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0108"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0109"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0110"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0111"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0112"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0113"> CHAPTER XIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0114"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0115"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0116"> CHAPTER THE LAST. </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ <br /><b>BOOK I.</b>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, of Exmundham, Baronet, F.R.S. and F.A.S., was the
+ representative of an ancient family, and a landed proprietor of some
+ importance. He had married young; not from any ardent inclination for the
+ connubial state, but in compliance with the request of his parents. They
+ took the pains to select his bride; and if they might have chosen better,
+ they might have chosen worse, which is more than can be said for many men
+ who choose wives for themselves. Miss Caroline Brotherton was in all
+ respects a suitable connection. She had a pretty fortune, which was of
+ much use in buying a couple of farms, long desiderated by the Chillinglys
+ as necessary for the rounding of their property into a ring-fence. She was
+ highly connected, and brought into the county that experience of
+ fashionable life acquired by a young lady who has attended a course of
+ balls for three seasons, and gone out in matrimonial honours, with credit
+ to herself and her chaperon. She was handsome enough to satisfy a
+ husband&rsquo;s pride, but not so handsome as to keep perpetually on the <i>qui
+ vive</i> a husband&rsquo;s jealousy. She was considered highly accomplished;
+ that is, she played upon the pianoforte so that any musician would say she
+ &ldquo;was very well taught;&rdquo; but no musician would go out of his way to hear
+ her a second time. She painted in water-colours&mdash;well enough to amuse
+ herself. She knew French and Italian with an elegance so lady-like that,
+ without having read more than selected extracts from authors in those
+ languages, she spoke them both with an accent more correct than we have
+ any reason to attribute to Rousseau or Ariosto. What else a young lady may
+ acquire in order to be styled highly accomplished I do not pretend to
+ know; but I am sure that the young lady in question fulfilled that
+ requirement in the opinion of the best masters. It was not only an
+ eligible match for Sir Peter Chillingly,&mdash;it was a brilliant match.
+ It was also a very unexceptionable match for Miss Caroline Brotherton.
+ This excellent couple got on together as most excellent couples do. A
+ short time after marriage, Sir Peter, by the death of his parents&mdash;who,
+ having married their heir, had nothing left in life worth the trouble of
+ living for&mdash;succeeded to the hereditary estates; he lived for nine
+ months of the year at Exmundham, going to town for the other three months.
+ Lady Chillingly and himself were both very glad to go to town, being bored
+ at Exmundham; and very glad to go back to Exmundham, being bored in town.
+ With one exception it was an exceedingly happy marriage, as marriages go.
+ Lady Chillingly had her way in small things; Sir Peter his way in great.
+ Small things happen every day; great things once in three years. Once in
+ three years Lady Chillingly gave way to Sir Peter; households so managed
+ go on regularly. The exception to their connubial happiness was, after
+ all, but of a negative description. Their affection was such that they
+ sighed for a pledge of it; fourteen years had he and Lady Chillingly
+ remained unvisited by the little stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, in default of male issue, Sir Peter&rsquo;s estates passed to a distant
+ cousin as heir-at-law; and during the last four years this heir-at-law had
+ evinced his belief that practically speaking he was already heir-apparent;
+ and (though Sir Peter was a much younger man than himself, and as healthy
+ as any man well can be) had made his expectations of a speedy succession
+ unpleasantly conspicuous. He had refused his consent to a small exchange
+ of lands with a neighbouring squire, by which Sir Peter would have
+ obtained some good arable land, for an outlying unprofitable wood that
+ produced nothing but fagots and rabbits, with the blunt declaration that
+ he, the heir-at-law, was fond of rabbit-shooting, and that the wood would
+ be convenient to him next season if he came into the property by that
+ time, which he very possibly might. He disputed Sir Peter&rsquo;s right to make
+ his customary fall of timber, and had even threatened him with a bill in
+ Chancery on that subject. In short, this heir-at-law was exactly one of
+ those persons to spite whom a landed proprietor would, if single, marry at
+ the age of eighty in the hope of a family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was it only on account of his very natural wish to frustrate the
+ expectations of this unamiable relation that Sir Peter Chillingly lamented
+ the absence of the little stranger. Although belonging to that class of
+ country gentlemen to whom certain political reasoners deny the
+ intelligence vouchsafed to other members of the community, Sir Peter was
+ not without a considerable degree of book-learning and a great taste for
+ speculative philosophy. He sighed for a legitimate inheritor to the stores
+ of his erudition, and, being a very benevolent man, for a more active and
+ useful dispenser of those benefits to the human race which philosophers
+ confer by striking hard against each other; just as, how full soever of
+ sparks a flint may be, they might lurk concealed in the flint till
+ doomsday, if the flint were not hit by the steel. Sir Peter, in short,
+ longed for a son amply endowed with the combative quality, in which he
+ himself was deficient, but which is the first essential to all seekers
+ after renown, and especially to benevolent philosophers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under these circumstances one may well conceive the joy that filled the
+ household of Exmundham and extended to all the tenantry on that venerable
+ estate, by whom the present possessor was much beloved and the prospect of
+ an heir-at-law with a special eye to the preservation of rabbits much
+ detested, when the medical attendant of the Chillinglys declared that &lsquo;her
+ ladyship was in an interesting way;&rsquo; and to what height that joy
+ culminated when, in due course of time, a male baby was safely enthroned
+ in his cradle. To that cradle Sir Peter was summoned. He entered the room
+ with a lively bound and a radiant countenance: he quitted it with a musing
+ step and an overclouded brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the baby was no monster. It did not come into the world with two
+ heads, as some babies are said to have done; it was formed as babies are
+ in general; was on the whole a thriving baby, a fine baby. Nevertheless,
+ its aspect awed the father as already it had awed the nurse. The creature
+ looked so unutterably solemn. It fixed its eyes upon Sir Peter with a
+ melancholy reproachful stare; its lips were compressed and drawn downward
+ as if discontentedly meditating its future destinies. The nurse declared
+ in a frightened whisper that it had uttered no cry on facing the light. It
+ had taken possession of its cradle in all the dignity of silent sorrow. A
+ more saddened and a more thoughtful countenance a human being could not
+ exhibit if he were leaving the world instead of entering it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; said Sir Peter to himself on regaining the solitude of his library;
+ &ldquo;a philosopher who contributes a new inhabitant to this vale of tears
+ takes upon himself very anxious responsibilities&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment the joy-bells rang out from the neighbouring church tower,
+ the summer sun shone into the windows, the bees hummed among the flowers
+ on the lawn. Sir Peter roused himself and looked forth, &ldquo;After all,&rdquo; said
+ he, cheerily, &ldquo;the vale of tears is not without a smile.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A FAMILY council was held at Exmundham Hall to deliberate on the name by
+ which this remarkable infant should be admitted into the Christian
+ community. The junior branches of that ancient house consisted, first, of
+ the obnoxious heir-at-law&mdash;a Scotch branch named Chillingly Gordon.
+ He was the widowed father of one son, now of the age of three, and happily
+ unconscious of the injury inflicted on his future prospects by the advent
+ of the new-born, which could not be truthfully said of his Caledonian
+ father. Mr. Chillingly Gordon was one of those men who get on in the world
+ with out our being able to discover why. His parents died in his infancy
+ and left him nothing; but the family interest procured him an admission
+ into the Charterhouse School, at which illustrious academy he obtained no
+ remarkable distinction. Nevertheless, as soon as he left it the State took
+ him under its special care, and appointed him to a clerkship in a public
+ office. From that moment he continued to get on in the world, and was now
+ a Commissioner of Customs, with a salary of L1500 a year. As soon as he
+ had been thus enabled to maintain a wife, he selected a wife who assisted
+ to maintain himself. She was an Irish peer&rsquo;s widow, with a jointure of
+ L2000 a year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few months after his marriage, Chillingly Gordon effected insurances on
+ his wife&rsquo;s life, so as to secure himself an annuity of L1000 a year in
+ case of her decease. As she appeared to be a fine healthy woman, some
+ years younger than her husband, the deduction from his income effected by
+ the annual payments for the insurance seemed an over-sacrifice of present
+ enjoyment to future contingencies. The result bore witness to his
+ reputation for sagacity, as the lady died in the second year of their
+ wedding, a few months after the birth of her only child, and of a
+ heart-disease which had been latent to the doctors, but which, no doubt,
+ Gordon had affectionately discovered before he had insured a life too
+ valuable not to need some compensation for its loss. He was now, then, in
+ the possession of L2500 a year, and was therefore very well off, in the
+ pecuniary sense of the phrase. He had, moreover, acquired a reputation
+ which gave him a social rank beyond that accorded to him by a discerning
+ State. He was considered a man of solid judgment, and his opinion upon all
+ matters, private and public, carried weight. The opinion itself,
+ critically examined, was not worth much, but the way he announced it was
+ imposing. Mr. Fox said that &lsquo;No one ever was so wise as Lord Thurlow
+ looked.&rsquo; Lord Thurlow could not have looked wiser than Mr. Chillingly
+ Gordon. He had a square jaw and large red bushy eyebrows, which he lowered
+ down with great effect when he delivered judgment. He had another
+ advantage for acquiring grave reputation. He was a very unpleasant man. He
+ could be rude if you contradicted him; and as few persons wish to provoke
+ rudeness, so he was seldom contradicted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Chillingly Mivers, another cadet of the house, was also distinguished,
+ but in a different way. He was a bachelor, now about the age of
+ thirty-five. He was eminent for a supreme well-bred contempt for everybody
+ and everything. He was the originator and chief proprietor of a public
+ journal called &ldquo;The Londoner,&rdquo; which had lately been set up on that
+ principle of contempt, and we need not say, was exceedingly popular with
+ those leading members of the community who admire nobody and believe in
+ nothing. Mr. Chillingly Mivers was regarded by himself and by others as a
+ man who might have achieved the highest success in any branch of
+ literature, if he had deigned to exhibit his talents therein. But he did
+ not so deign, and therefore he had full right to imply that, if he had
+ written an epic, a drama, a novel, a history, a metaphysical treatise,
+ Milton, Shakspeare, Cervantes, Hume, Berkeley would have been nowhere. He
+ held greatly to the dignity of the anonymous; and even in the journal
+ which he originated nobody could ever ascertain what he wrote. But, at all
+ events, Mr. Chillingly Mivers was what Mr. Chillingly Gordon was not;
+ namely, a very clever man, and by no means an unpleasant one in general
+ society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rev. John Stalworth Chillingly was a decided adherent to the creed of
+ what is called &ldquo;muscular Christianity,&rdquo; and a very fine specimen of it
+ too. A tall stout man with broad shoulders, and that division of lower
+ limb which intervenes between the knee and the ankle powerfully developed.
+ He would have knocked down a deist as soon as looked at him. It is told by
+ the Sieur de Joinville, in his Memoir of Louis, the sainted king, that an
+ assembly of divines and theologians convened the Jews of an Oriental city
+ for the purpose of arguing with them on the truths of Christianity, and a
+ certain knight, who was at that time crippled, and supporting himself on
+ crutches, asked and obtained permission to be present at the debate. The
+ Jews flocked to the summons, when a prelate, selecting a learned rabbi,
+ mildly put to him the leading question whether he owned the divine
+ conception of our Lord. &ldquo;Certainly not,&rdquo; replied the rabbi; whereon the
+ pious knight, shocked by such blasphemy, uplifted his crutch and felled
+ the rabbi, and then flung himself among the other misbelievers, whom he
+ soon dispersed in ignominious flight and in a very belaboured condition.
+ The conduct of the knight was reported to the sainted king, with a request
+ that it should be properly reprimanded; but the sainted king delivered
+ himself of this wise judgment:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If a pious knight is a very learned clerk, and can meet in fair argument
+ the doctrines of the misbeliever, by all means let him argue fairly; but
+ if a pious knight is not a learned clerk, and the argument goes against
+ him, then let the pious knight cut the discussion short by the edge of his
+ good sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rev. John Stalworth Chillingly was of the same opinion as Saint Louis;
+ otherwise, he was a mild and amiable man. He encouraged cricket and other
+ manly sports among his rural parishioners. He was a skilful and bold
+ rider, but he did not hunt; a convivial man&mdash;and took his bottle
+ freely. But his tastes in literature were of a refined and peaceful
+ character, contrasting therein the tendencies some might have expected
+ from his muscular development of Christianity. He was a great reader of
+ poetry, but he disliked Scott and Byron, whom he considered flashy and
+ noisy; he maintained that Pope was only a versifier, and that the greatest
+ poet in the language was Wordsworth; he did not care much for the ancient
+ classics; he refused all merit to the French poets; he knew nothing of the
+ Italian, but he dabbled in German, and was inclined to bore one about the
+ &ldquo;Hermann and Dorothea&rdquo; of Goethe. He was married to a homely little wife,
+ who revered him in silence, and thought there would be no schism in the
+ Church if he were in his right place as Archbishop of Canterbury; in this
+ opinion he entirely agreed with his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides these three male specimens of the Chillingly race, the fairer sex
+ was represented, in the absence of her ladyship, who still kept her room,
+ by three female Chillinglys, sisters of Sir Peter, and all three
+ spinsters. Perhaps one reason why they had remained single was, that
+ externally they were so like each other that a suitor must have been
+ puzzled which to choose, and may have been afraid that if he did choose
+ one, he should be caught next day kissing another one in mistake. They
+ were all tall, all thin, with long throats&mdash;and beneath the throats a
+ fine development of bone. They had all pale hair, pale eyelids, pale eyes,
+ and pale complexions. They all dressed exactly alike, and their favourite
+ colour was a vivid green: they were so dressed on this occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As there was such similitude in their persons, so, to an ordinary
+ observer, they were exactly the same in character and mind. Very well
+ behaved, with proper notions of female decorum: very distant and reserved
+ in manner to strangers; very affectionate to each other and their
+ relations or favourites; very good to the poor, whom they looked upon as a
+ different order of creation, and treated with that sort of benevolence
+ which humane people bestow upon dumb animals. Their minds had been
+ nourished on the same books&mdash;what one read the others had read. The
+ books were mainly divided into two classes,&mdash;novels, and what they
+ called &ldquo;good books.&rdquo; They had a habit of taking a specimen of each
+ alternately; one day a novel, then a good book, then a novel again, and so
+ on. Thus if the imagination was overwarmed on Monday, on Tuesday it was
+ cooled down to a proper temperature; and if frost-bitten on Tuesday, it
+ took a tepid bath on Wednesday. The novels they chose were indeed rarely
+ of a nature to raise the intellectual thermometer into blood heat: the
+ heroes and heroines were models of correct conduct. Mr. James&rsquo;s novels
+ were then in vogue, and they united in saying that those &ldquo;were novels a
+ father might allow his daughters to read.&rdquo; But though an ordinary observer
+ might have failed to recognize any distinction between these three ladies,
+ and, finding them habitually dressed in green, would have said they were
+ as much alike as one pea is to another, they had their idiosyncratic
+ differences, when duly examined. Miss Margaret, the eldest, was the
+ commanding one of the three; it was she who regulated their household
+ (they all lived together), kept the joint purse, and decided every
+ doubtful point that arose: whether they should or should not ask Mrs.
+ So-and-so to tea; whether Mary should or should not be discharged; whether
+ or not they should go to Broadstairs or to Sandgate for the month of
+ October. In fact, Miss Margaret was the WILL of the body corporate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Sibyl was of milder nature and more melancholy temperament; she had a
+ poetic turn of mind, and occasionally wrote verses. Some of these had been
+ printed on satin paper, and sold for objects of beneficence at charity
+ bazaars. The county newspapers said that the verses &ldquo;were characterized by
+ all the elegance of a cultured and feminine mind.&rdquo; The other two sisters
+ agreed that Sibyl was the genius of the household, but, like all geniuses,
+ not sufficiently practical for the world. Miss Sarah Chillingly, the
+ youngest of the three, and now just in her forty-fourth year, was looked
+ upon by the others as &ldquo;a dear thing, inclined to be naughty, but such a
+ darling that nobody could have the heart to scold her.&rdquo; Miss Margaret said
+ &ldquo;she was a giddy creature.&rdquo; Miss Sibyl wrote a poem on her, entitled,
+ &ldquo;Warning to a young Lady against the Pleasures of the World.&rdquo; They all
+ called her Sally; the other two sisters had no diminutive synonyms. Sally
+ is a name indicative of fastness. But this Sally would not have been
+ thought fast in another household, and she was now little likely to sally
+ out of the one she belonged to. These sisters, who were all many years
+ older than Sir Peter, lived in a handsome, old-fashioned, red-brick house,
+ with a large garden at the back, in the principal street of the capital of
+ their native county. They had each L10,000 for portion; and if he could
+ have married all three, the heir-at-law would have married them, and
+ settled the aggregate L30,000 on himself. But we have not yet come to
+ recognize Mormonism as legal, though if our social progress continues to
+ slide in the same grooves as at present, Heaven only knows what triumphs
+ over the prejudices of our ancestors may not be achieved by the wisdom of
+ our descendants!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ SIR PETER stood on his hearthstone, surveyed the guests seated in
+ semicircle, and said: &ldquo;Friends,&mdash;in Parliament, before anything
+ affecting the fate of a Bill is discussed, it is, I believe, necessary to
+ introduce the Bill.&rdquo; He paused a moment, rang the bell, and said to the
+ servant who entered, &ldquo;Tell Nurse to bring in the Baby.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. CHILLINGLY GORDON.&mdash;&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see the necessity for that, Sir
+ Peter. We may take the existence of the Baby for granted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. MIVERS.&mdash;&ldquo;It is an advantage to the reputation of Sir Peter&rsquo;s
+ work to preserve the incognito. <i>Omne ignotum pro magnifico</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE REV. JOHN STALWORTH CHILLINGLY.&mdash;&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t approve the cynical
+ levity of such remarks. Of course we must all be anxious to see, in the
+ earliest stage of being, the future representative of our name and race.
+ Who would not wish to contemplate the source, however small, of the Tigris
+ or the Nile!&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MISS SALLY (tittering).&mdash;&ldquo;He! he!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MISS MARGARET.&mdash;&ldquo;For shame, you giddy thing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Baby enters in the nurse&rsquo;s arms. All rise and gather round the Baby
+ with one exception,&mdash;Mr. Gordon, who has ceased to be heir-at-law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Baby returned the gaze of its relations with the most contemptuous
+ indifference. Miss Sibyl was the first to pronounce an opinion on the
+ Baby&rsquo;s attributes. Said she, in a solemn whisper, &ldquo;What a heavenly
+ mournful expression! it seems so grieved to have left the angels!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE REV. JOHN.&mdash;&ldquo;That is prettily said, Cousin Sibyl; but the infant
+ must pluck up its courage and fight its way among mortals with a good
+ heart, if it wants to get back to the angels again. And I think it will; a
+ fine child.&rdquo; He took it from the nurse, and moving it deliberately up and
+ down, as if to weigh it, said cheerfully, &ldquo;Monstrous heavy! by the time it
+ is twenty it will be a match for a prize-fighter of fifteen stone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therewith he strode to Gordon, who as if to show that he now considered
+ himself wholly apart from all interest in the affairs of a family who had
+ so ill-treated him in the birth of that Baby, had taken up the &ldquo;Times&rdquo;
+ newspaper and concealed his countenance beneath the ample sheet. The
+ Parson abruptly snatched away the &ldquo;Times&rdquo; with one hand, and, with the
+ other substituting to the indignant eyes of the <i>ci-devant</i>
+ heir-at-law the spectacle of the Baby, said, &ldquo;Kiss it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kiss it!&rdquo; echoed Chillingly Gordon, pushing back his chair&mdash;&ldquo;kiss
+ it! pooh, sir, stand off! I never kissed my own baby: I shall not kiss
+ another man&rsquo;s. Take the thing away, sir: it is ugly; it has black eyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter, who was near-sighted, put on his spectacles and examined the
+ face of the new-born. &ldquo;True,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;it has black eyes,&mdash;very
+ extraordinary: portentous: the first Chillingly that ever had black eyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Its mamma has black eyes,&rdquo; said Miss Margaret: &ldquo;it takes after its mamma;
+ it has not the fair beauty of the Chillinglys, but it is not ugly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sweet infant!&rdquo; sighed Sibyl; &ldquo;and so good; does not cry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It has neither cried nor crowed since it was born,&rdquo; said the nurse;
+ &ldquo;bless its little heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She took the Baby from the Parson&rsquo;s arms, and smoothed back the frill of
+ its cap, which had got ruffled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may go now, Nurse,&rdquo; said Sir Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I AGREE with Mr. Shandy,&rdquo; said Sir Peter, resuming his stand on the
+ hearthstone, &ldquo;that among the responsibilities of a parent the choice of
+ the name which his child is to bear for life is one of the gravest. And
+ this is especially so with those who belong to the order of baronets. In
+ the case of a peer his Christian name, fused into his titular designation,
+ disappears. In the case of a Mister, if his baptismal be cacophonous or
+ provocative of ridicule, he need not ostentatiously parade it: he may drop
+ it altogether on his visiting cards, and may be imprinted as Mr. Jones
+ instead of Mr. Ebenezer Jones. In his signature, save where the forms of
+ the law demand Ebenezer in full, he may only use an initial and be your
+ obedient servant E. Jones, leaving it to be conjectured that E. stands for
+ Edward or Ernest,&mdash;names inoffensive, and not suggestive of a
+ Dissenting Chapel, like Ebenezer. If a man called Edward or Ernest be
+ detected in some youthful indiscretion, there is no indelible stain on his
+ moral character: but if an Ebenezer be so detected he is set down as a
+ hypocrite; it produces that shock on the public mind which is felt when a
+ professed saint is proved to be a bit of a sinner. But a baronet never can
+ escape from his baptismal: it cannot lie <i>perdu</i>; it cannot shrink
+ into an initial, it stands forth glaringly in the light of day; christen
+ him Ebenezer, and he is Sir Ebenezer in full, with all its perilous
+ consequences if he ever succumb to those temptations to which even
+ baronets are exposed. But, my friends, it is not only the effect that the
+ sound of a name has upon others which is to be thoughtfully considered:
+ the effect that his name produces on the man himself is perhaps still more
+ important. Some names stimulate and encourage the owner; others deject and
+ paralyze him: I am a melancholy instance of that truth. Peter has been for
+ many generations, as you are aware, the baptismal to which the eldest-born
+ of our family has been devoted. On the altar of that name I have been
+ sacrificed. Never has there been a Sir Peter Chillingly who has, in any
+ way, distinguished himself above his fellows. That name has been a dead
+ weight on my intellectual energies. In the catalogue of illustrious
+ Englishmen there is, I think, no immortal Sir Peter, except Sir Peter
+ Teazle, and he only exists on the comic stage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MISS SIBYL.&mdash;&ldquo;Sir Peter Lely?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PETER CHILLINGLY.&mdash;&ldquo;That painter was not an Englishman. He was
+ born in Westphalia, famous for hams. I confine my remarks to the children
+ of our native land. I am aware that in foreign countries the name is not
+ an extinguisher to the genius of its owner. But why? In other countries
+ its sound is modified. Pierre Corneille was a great man; but I put it to
+ you whether, had he been an Englishman, he could have been the father of
+ European tragedy as Peter Crow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MISS SIBYL.&mdash;&ldquo;Impossible!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MISS SALLY.&mdash;&ldquo;He! he!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MISS MARGARET.&mdash;&ldquo;There is nothing to laugh at, you giddy child!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PETER.&mdash;&ldquo;My son shall not be petrified into Peter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MR. CHILLINGLY GORDON.&mdash;&ldquo;If a man is such a fool&mdash;and I don&rsquo;t
+ say your son will not be a fool, Cousin Peter&mdash;as to be influenced by
+ the sound of his own name, and you want the booby to turn the world
+ topsy-turvy, you had better call him Julius Caesar or Hannibal or Attila
+ or Charlemagne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PETER, (who excels mankind in imperturbability of temper).&mdash;&ldquo;On
+ the contrary, if you inflict upon a man the burden of one of those names,
+ the glory of which he cannot reasonably expect to eclipse or even to
+ equal, you crush him beneath the weight. If a poet were called John Milton
+ or William Shakspeare, he could not dare to publish even a sonnet. No: the
+ choice of a name lies between the two extremes of ludicrous insignificance
+ and oppressive renown. For this reason I have ordered the family pedigree
+ to be suspended on yonder wall. Let us examine it with care, and see
+ whether, among the Chillinglys themselves or their alliances, we can
+ discover a name that can be borne with becoming dignity by the destined
+ head of our house&mdash;a name neither too light nor too heavy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter here led the way to the family tree&mdash;a goodly roll of
+ parchment, with the arms of the family emblazoned at the top. Those arms
+ were simple, as ancient heraldic coats are,&mdash;three fishes <i>argent</i>
+ on a field <i>azure</i>; the crest a mermaid&rsquo;s head. All flocked to
+ inspect the pedigree except Mr. Gordon, who resumed the &ldquo;Times&rdquo; newspaper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never could quite make out what kind of fishes these are,&rdquo; said the
+ Rev. John Stalworth. &ldquo;They are certainly not pike which formed the
+ emblematic blazon of the Hotofts, and are still grim enough to frighten
+ future Shakspeares on the scutcheon of the Warwickshire Lucys.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe they are tenches,&rdquo; said Mr. Mivers. &ldquo;The tench is a fish that
+ knows how to keep itself safe by a philosophical taste for an obscure
+ existence in deep holes and slush.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PETER.&mdash;&ldquo;No, Mivers; the fishes are dace, a fish that, once
+ introduced into any pond, never can be got out again. You may drag the
+ water; you may let off the water; you may say, &lsquo;Those dace are
+ extirpated,&rsquo;&mdash;vain thought!&mdash;the dace reappear as before; and in
+ this respect the arms are really emblematic of the family. All the
+ disorders and revolutions that have occurred in England since the
+ Heptarchy have left the Chillinglys the same race in the same place.
+ Somehow or other the Norman Conquest did not despoil them; they held fiefs
+ under Eudo Dapifer as peacefully as they had held them under King Harold;
+ they took no part in the Crusades, nor the Wars of the Roses, nor the
+ Civil Wars between Charles the First and the Parliament. As the dace
+ sticks to the water and the water sticks by the dace, so the Chillinglys
+ stuck to the land and the land stuck by the Chillinglys. Perhaps I am
+ wrong to wish that the new Chillingly may be a little less like a dace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; cried Miss Margaret, who, mounted on a chair, had been inspecting
+ the pedigree through an eye-glass, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see a fine Christian name from
+ the beginning, except Oliver.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PETER.&mdash;&ldquo;That Chillingly was born in Oliver Cromwell&rsquo;s
+ Protectorate, and named Oliver in compliment to him, as his father, born
+ in the reign of James I., was christened James. The three fishes always
+ swam with the stream. Oliver!&mdash;Oliver not a bad name, but significant
+ of radical doctrines.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. MIVERS.&mdash;&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think so. Oliver Cromwell made short work of
+ radicals and their doctrines; but perhaps we can find a name less awful
+ and revolutionary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have it! I have it!&rdquo; cried the Parson. &ldquo;Here is a descent from Sir
+ Kenelm Digby and Venetia Stanley. Sir Kenelm Digby! No finer specimen of
+ muscular Christianity. He fought as well as he wrote; eccentric, it is
+ true, but always a gentleman. Call the boy Kenelm!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A sweet name,&rdquo; said Miss Sibyl: &ldquo;it breathes of romance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Kenelm Chillingly! It sounds well,&mdash;imposing!&rdquo; said Miss
+ Margaret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; remarked Mr. Mivers, &ldquo;it has this advantage&mdash;that while it has
+ sufficient association with honourable distinction to affect the mind of
+ the namesake and rouse his emulation, it is not that of so stupendous a
+ personage as to defy rivalry. Sir Kenelm Digby was certainly an
+ accomplished and gallant gentleman; but what with his silly superstition
+ about sympathetic powders, etc., any man nowadays might be clever in
+ comparison without being a prodigy. Yes, let us decide on Kenelm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter meditated. &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said he, after a pause, &ldquo;certainly the
+ name of Kenelm carries with it very crotchety associations; and I am
+ afraid that Sir Kenelm Digby did not make a prudent choice in marriage.
+ The fair Venetia was no better than she should be; and I should wish my
+ heir not to be led away by beauty but wed a woman of respectable character
+ and decorous conduct.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss MARGARET.&mdash;&ldquo;A British matron, of course!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THREE SISTERS (in chorus).&mdash;&ldquo;Of course! of course!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; resumed Sir Peter, &ldquo;I am crotchety myself, and crotchets are
+ innocent things enough; and as for marriage the Baby cannot marry
+ to-morrow, so that we have ample time to consider that matter. Kenelm
+ Digby was a man any family might be proud of; and, as you say, sister
+ Margaret, Kenelm Chillingly does not sound amiss: Kenelm Chillingly it
+ shall be!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Baby was accordingly christened Kenelm, after which ceremony its face
+ grew longer than before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ BEFORE his relations dispersed, Sir Peter summoned Mr. Gordon into his
+ library.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cousin,&rdquo; said he, kindly, &ldquo;I do not blame you for the want of family
+ affection, or even of humane interest, which you exhibit towards the
+ New-born.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blame me, Cousin Peter! I should think not. I exhibit as much family
+ affection and humane interest as could be expected from me,&mdash;circumstances
+ considered.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I own,&rdquo; said Sir Peter, with all his wonted mildness, &ldquo;that after
+ remaining childless for fourteen years of wedded life, the advent of this
+ little stranger must have occasioned you a disagreeable surprise. But,
+ after all, as I am many years younger than you, and in the course of
+ nature shall outlive you, the loss is less to yourself than to your son,
+ and upon that I wish to say a few words. You know too well the conditions
+ on which I hold my estate not to be aware that I have not legally the
+ power to saddle it with any bequest to your boy. The New-born succeeds to
+ the fee-simple as last in tail. But I intend, from this moment, to lay by
+ something every year for your son out of my income; and, fond as I am of
+ London for a part of the year, I shall now give up my town-house. If I
+ live to the years the Psalmist allots to man, I shall thus accumulate
+ something handsome for your son, which may be taken in the way of
+ compensation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Gordon was by no means softened by this generous speech. However, he
+ answered more politely than was his wont, &ldquo;My son will be very much
+ obliged to you, should he ever need your intended bequest.&rdquo; Pausing a
+ moment, he added with a cheerful smile, &ldquo;A large percentage of infants die
+ before attaining the age of twenty-one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but I am told your son is an uncommonly fine healthy child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My son, Cousin Peter! I was not thinking of my son, but of yours. Yours
+ has a big head. I should not wonder if he had water in it. I don&rsquo;t wish to
+ alarm you, but he may go off any day, and in that case it is not likely
+ that Lady Chillingly will condescend to replace him. So you will excuse me
+ if I still keep a watchful eye on my rights; and, however painful to my
+ feelings, I must still dispute your right to cut a stick of the field
+ timber.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is nonsense, Gordon. I am tenant for life without impeachment of
+ waste, and can cut down all timber not ornamental.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I advise you not, Cousin Peter. I have told you before that I shall try
+ the question at law, should you provoke it, amicably, of course. Rights
+ are rights; and if I am driven to maintain mine, I trust that you are of a
+ mind too liberal to allow your family affection for me and mine to be
+ influenced by a decree of the Court of Chancery. But my fly is waiting. I
+ must not miss the train.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, good-by, Gordon. Shake hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shake hands!&mdash;of course, of course. By the by, as I came through the
+ lodge, it seemed to me sadly out of repair. I believe you are liable for
+ dilapidations. Good-by.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The man is a hog in armour,&rdquo; soliloquized Sir Peter, when his cousin was
+ gone; &ldquo;and if it be hard to drive a common pig in the way he don&rsquo;t choose
+ to go, a hog in armour is indeed undrivable. But his boy ought not to
+ suffer for his father&rsquo;s hoggishness; and I shall begin at once to see what
+ I can lay by for him. After all, it is hard upon Gordon. Poor Gordon; poor
+ fellow! poor fellow! Still I hope he will not go to law with me. I hate
+ law. And a worm will turn, especially a worm that is put into Chancery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ DESPITE the sinister semi-predictions of the <i>ci-devant</i> heir-at-law,
+ the youthful Chillingly passed with safety, and indeed with dignity,
+ through the infant stages of existence. He took his measles and
+ whooping-cough with philosophical equanimity. He gradually acquired the
+ use of speech, but he did not too lavishly exercise that special attribute
+ of humanity. During the earlier years of childhood he spoke as little as
+ if he had been prematurely trained in the school of Pythagoras. But he
+ evidently spoke the less in order to reflect the more. He observed closely
+ and pondered deeply over what he observed. At the age of eight he began to
+ converse more freely, and it was in that year that he startled his mother
+ with the question, &ldquo;Mamma, are you not sometimes overpowered by the sense
+ of your own identity?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Chillingly,&mdash;I was about to say rushed, but Lady Chillingly
+ never rushed,&mdash;Lady Chillingly glided less sedately than her wont to
+ Sir Peter, and repeating her son&rsquo;s question, said, &ldquo;The boy is growing
+ troublesome, too wise for any woman: he must go to school.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter was of the same opinion. But where on earth did the child get
+ hold of so long a word as &ldquo;identity,&rdquo; and how did so extraordinary and
+ puzzling a metaphysical question come into his head? Sir Peter summoned
+ Kenelm, and ascertained that the boy, having free access to the library,
+ had fastened upon Locke on the Human Understanding, and was prepared to
+ dispute with that philosopher upon the doctrine of innate ideas. Quoth
+ Kenelm, gravely, &ldquo;A want is an idea; and if, as soon as I was born, I felt
+ the want of food and knew at once where to turn for it, without being
+ taught, surely I came into the world with an &lsquo;innate idea.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter, though he dabbled in metaphysics, was posed, and scratched his
+ head without getting out a proper answer as to the distinction between
+ ideas and instincts. &ldquo;My child,&rdquo; he said at last, &ldquo;you don&rsquo;t know what you
+ are talking about: go and take a good gallop on your black pony; and I
+ forbid you to read any books that are not given to you by myself or your
+ mamma. Stick to &lsquo;Puss in Boots.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ SIR PETER ordered his carriage and drove to the house of the stout parson.
+ That doughty ecclesiastic held a family living a few miles distant from
+ the Hall, and was the only one of the cousins with whom Sir Peter
+ habitually communed on his domestic affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found the Parson in his study, which exhibited tastes other than
+ clerical. Over the chimney-piece were ranged fencing-foils, boxing-gloves,
+ and staffs for the athletic exercise of single-stick; cricket-bats and
+ fishing-rods filled up the angles. There were sundry prints on the walls:
+ one of Mr. Wordsworth, flanked by two of distinguished race-horses; one of
+ a Leicestershire short-horn, with which the Parson, who farmed his own
+ glebe and bred cattle in its rich pastures, had won a prize at the county
+ show; and on either side of that animal were the portraits of Hooker and
+ Jeremy Taylor. There were dwarf book-cases containing miscellaneous works
+ very handsomely bound; at the open window, a stand of flower-pots, the
+ flowers in full bloom. The Parson&rsquo;s flowers were famous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The appearance of the whole room was that of a man who is tidy and neat in
+ his habits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cousin,&rdquo; said Sir Peter, &ldquo;I have come to consult you.&rdquo; And therewith he
+ related the marvellous precocity of Kenelm Chillingly. &ldquo;You see the name
+ begins to work on him rather too much. He must go to school; and now what
+ school shall it be? Private or public?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE REV. JOHN STALWORTH.&mdash;&ldquo;There is a great deal to be said for or
+ against either. At a public school the chances are that Kenelm will no
+ longer be overpowered by a sense of his own identity; he will more
+ probably lose identity altogether. The worst of a public school is that a
+ sort of common character is substituted for individual character. The
+ master, of course, can&rsquo;t attend to the separate development of each boy&rsquo;s
+ idiosyncrasy. All minds are thrown into one great mould, and come out of
+ it more or less in the same form. An Etonian may be clever or stupid, but,
+ as either, he remains emphatically Etonian. A public school ripens talent,
+ but its tendency is to stifle genius. Then, too, a public school for an
+ only son, heir to a good estate, which will be entirely at his own
+ disposal, is apt to encourage reckless and extravagant habits; and your
+ estate requires careful management, and leaves no margin for an heir&rsquo;s
+ notes-of-hand and post-obits. On the whole, I am against a public school
+ for Kenelm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well then, we will decide on a private one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; said the Parson: &ldquo;a private school has its drawbacks. You can
+ seldom produce large fishes in small ponds. In private schools the
+ competition is narrowed, the energies stinted. The schoolmaster&rsquo;s wife
+ interferes, and generally coddles the boys. There is not manliness enough
+ in those academies; no fagging, and very little fighting. A clever boy
+ turns out a prig; a boy of feebler intellect turns out a well-behaved
+ young lady in trousers. Nothing muscular in the system. Decidedly the
+ namesake and descendant of Kenelm Digby should not go to a private
+ seminary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So far as I gather from your reasoning,&rdquo; said Sir Peter, with
+ characteristic placidity, &ldquo;Kenelm Chillingly is not to go to school at
+ all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It does look like it,&rdquo; said the Parson, candidly; &ldquo;but, on consideration,
+ there is a medium. There are schools which unite the best qualities of
+ public and private schools, large enough to stimulate and develop energies
+ mental and physical, yet not so framed as to melt all character in one
+ crucible. For instance, there is a school which has at this moment one of
+ the first scholars in Europe for head-master,&mdash;a school which has
+ turned out some of the most remarkable men of the rising generation. The
+ master sees at a glance if a boy be clever, and takes pains with him
+ accordingly. He is not a mere teacher of hexameters and sapphics. His
+ learning embraces all literature, ancient and modern. He is a good writer
+ and a fine critic; admires Wordsworth. He winks at fighting: his boys know
+ how to use their fists; and they are not in the habit of signing
+ post-obits before they are fifteen. Merton School is the place for
+ Kenelm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said Sir Peter. &ldquo;It is a great comfort in life to find
+ somebody who can decide for one. I am an irresolute man myself, and in
+ ordinary matters willingly let Lady Chillingly govern me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should like to see a wife govern <i>me</i>,&rdquo; said the stout Parson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you are not married to Lady Chillingly. And now let us go into the
+ garden and look at your dahlias.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE youthful confuter of Locke was despatched to Merton School, and
+ ranked, according to his merits, as lag of the penultimate form. When he
+ came home for the Christmas holidays he was more saturnine than ever; in
+ fact, his countenance bore the impression of some absorbing grief. He
+ said, however, that he liked school very well, and eluded all other
+ questions. But early the next morning he mounted his black pony and rode
+ to the Parson&rsquo;s rectory. The reverend gentleman was in his farmyard
+ examining his bullocks when Kenelm accosted him thus briefly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, I am disgraced, and I shall die of it if you cannot help to set me
+ right in my own eyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear boy, don&rsquo;t talk in that way. Come into my study.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as they entered that room, and the Parson had carefully closed the
+ door, he took the boy&rsquo;s arm, turned him round to the light, and saw at
+ once that there was something very grave on his mind. Chucking him under
+ the chin, the Parson said cheerily, &ldquo;Hold up your head, Kenelm. I am sure
+ you have done nothing unworthy of a gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know that. I fought a boy very little bigger than myself, and I
+ have been licked. I did not give in, though; but the other boys picked me
+ up, for I could not stand any longer; and the fellow is a great bully; and
+ his name is Butt; and he&rsquo;s the son of a lawyer; and he got my head into
+ chancery; and I have challenged him to fight again next half; and unless
+ you can help me to lick him, I shall never be good for anything in the
+ world,&mdash;never. It will break my heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am very glad to hear you have had the pluck to challenge him. Just let
+ me see how you double your fist. Well, that&rsquo;s not amiss. Now, put yourself
+ into a fighting attitude, and hit out at me,&mdash;hard! harder! Pooh!
+ that will never do. You should make your blows as straight as an arrow.
+ And that&rsquo;s not the way to stand. Stop,&mdash;so: well on your haunches;
+ weight on the left leg; good! Now, put on these gloves, and I&rsquo;ll give you
+ a lesson in boxing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Five minutes afterwards Mrs. John Chillingly, entering the room to summon
+ her husband to breakfast, stood astounded to see him with his coat off,
+ and parrying the blows of Kenelm, who flew at him like a young tiger. The
+ good pastor at that moment might certainly have appeared a fine type of
+ muscular Christianity, but not of that kind of Christianity out of which
+ one makes Archbishops of Canterbury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good gracious me!&rdquo; faltered Mrs. John Chillingly; and then, wife-like,
+ flying to the protection of her husband, she seized Kenelm by the
+ shoulders, and gave him a good shaking. The Parson, who was sadly out of
+ breath, was not displeased at the interruption, but took that opportunity
+ to put on his coat, and said, &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll begin again to-morrow. Now, come to
+ breakfast.&rdquo; But during breakfast Kenelm&rsquo;s face still betrayed dejection,
+ and he talked little and ate less.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the meal was over, he drew the Parson into the garden and said,
+ &ldquo;I have been thinking, sir, that perhaps it is not fair to Butt that I
+ should be taking these lessons; and if it is not fair, I&rsquo;d rather not&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me your hand, my boy!&rdquo; cried the Parson, transported. &ldquo;The name of
+ Kenelm is not thrown away upon you. The natural desire of man in his
+ attribute of fighting animal (an attribute in which, I believe, he excels
+ all other animated beings, except a quail and a gamecock) is to beat his
+ adversary. But the natural desire of that culmination of man which we call
+ gentleman is to beat his adversary fairly. A gentleman would rather be
+ beaten fairly than beat unfairly. Is not that your thought?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied Kenelm, firmly; and then, beginning to philosophize, he
+ added, &ldquo;And it stands to reason; because if I beat a fellow unfairly, I
+ don&rsquo;t really beat him at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Excellent! But suppose that you and another boy go into examination upon
+ Caesar&rsquo;s Commentaries or the multiplication table, and the other boy is
+ cleverer than you, but you have taken the trouble to learn the subject and
+ he has not: should you say you beat him unfairly?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm meditated a moment, and then said decidedly, &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That which applies to the use of your brains applies equally to the use
+ of your fists. Do you comprehend me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir; I do now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the time of your namesake, Sir Kenelm Digby, gentlemen wore swords,
+ and they learned how to use them, because, in case of quarrel, they had to
+ fight with them. Nobody, at least in England, fights with swords now. It
+ is a democratic age, and if you fight at all, you are reduced to fists;
+ and if Kenelm Digby learned to fence, so Kenelm Chillingly must learn to
+ box; and if a gentleman thrashes a drayman twice his size, who has not
+ learned to box, it is not unfair; it is but an exemplification of the
+ truth that knowledge is power. Come and take another lesson on boxing
+ to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm remounted his pony and returned home. He found his father
+ sauntering in the garden with a book in his hand. &ldquo;Papa,&rdquo; said Kenelm,
+ &ldquo;how does one gentleman write to another with whom he has a quarrel, and
+ he don&rsquo;t want to make it up, but he has something to say about the quarrel
+ which it is fair the other gentleman should know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand what you mean.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, just before I went to school I remember hearing you say that you
+ had a quarrel with Lord Hautfort, and that he was an ass, and you would
+ write and tell him so. When you wrote did you say, &lsquo;You are an ass&rsquo;? Is
+ that the way one gentleman writes to another?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my honour, Kenelm, you ask very odd questions. But you cannot learn
+ too early this fact, that irony is to the high-bred what Billingsgate is
+ to the vulgar; and when one gentleman thinks another gentleman an ass, he
+ does not say it point-blank: he implies it in the politest terms he can
+ invent. Lord Hautfort denies my right of free warren over a trout-stream
+ that runs through his lands. I don&rsquo;t care a rush about the trout-stream,
+ but there is no doubt of my right to fish in it. He was an ass to raise
+ the question; for, if he had not, I should not have exercised the right.
+ As he did raise the question, I was obliged to catch his trout.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you wrote a letter to him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did you write, Papa? What did you say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something like this. &lsquo;Sir Peter Chillingly presents his compliments to
+ Lord Hautfort, and thinks it fair to his lordship to say that he has taken
+ the best legal advice with regard to his rights of free warren; and trusts
+ to be forgiven if he presumes to suggest that Lord Hautfort might do well
+ to consult his own lawyer before he decides on disputing them.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, Papa. I see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening Kenelm wrote the following letter:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Chillingly presents his compliments to Mr. Butt, and thinks it fair to
+ Mr. Butt to say that he is taking lessons in boxing; and trusts to be
+ forgiven if he presumes to suggest that Mr. Butt might do well to take
+ lessons himself before fighting with Mr. Chillingly next half.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Papa,&rdquo; said Kenelm the next morning, &ldquo;I want to write to a schoolfellow
+ whose name is Butt; he is the son of a lawyer who is called a serjeant. I
+ don&rsquo;t know where to direct to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is easily ascertained,&rdquo; said Sir Peter. &ldquo;Serjeant Butt is an eminent
+ man, and his address will be in the Court Guide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The address was found,&mdash;Bloomsbury Square; and Kenelm directed his
+ letter accordingly. In due course he received this answer,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You are an insolent little fool, and I&rsquo;ll thrash you within an inch of
+ your life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBERT BUTT.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the receipt of that polite epistle, Kenelm Chillingly&rsquo;s scruples
+ vanished, and he took daily lessons in muscular Christianity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm returned to school with a brow cleared from care, and three days
+ after his return he wrote to the Reverend John,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEAR SIR,&mdash;I have licked Butt. Knowledge is power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your affectionate KENELM.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ P. S.&mdash;Now that I have licked Butt, I have made it up with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that time Kenelm prospered. Eulogistic letters from the illustrious
+ head-master showered in upon Sir Peter. At the age of sixteen Kenelm
+ Chillingly was the head of the school, and, quitting it finally, brought
+ home the following letter from his Orbilius to Sir Peter, marked
+ &ldquo;confidential&rdquo;:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEAR SIR PETER CHILLINGLY,&mdash;I have never felt more anxious for the
+ future career of any of my pupils than I do for that of your son. He is so
+ clever that, with ease to himself, he may become a great man. He is so
+ peculiar that it is quite as likely that he may only make himself known to
+ the world as a great oddity. That distinguished teacher Dr. Arnold said
+ that the difference between one boy and another was not so much talent as
+ energy. Your son has talent, has energy: yet he wants something for
+ success in life; he wants the faculty of amalgamation. He is of a
+ melancholic and therefore unsocial temperament. He will not act in concert
+ with others. He is lovable enough: the other boys like him, especially the
+ smaller ones, with whom he is a sort of hero; but he has not one intimate
+ friend. So far as school learning is concerned, he might go to college at
+ once, and with the certainty of distinction provided he chose to exert
+ himself. But if I may venture to offer an advice, I should say employ the
+ next two years in letting him see a little more of real life and acquire a
+ due sense of its practical objects. Send him to a private tutor who is not
+ a pedant, but a man of letters or a man of the world, and if in the
+ metropolis so much the better. In a word, my young friend is unlike other
+ people; and, with qualities that might do anything in life, I fear, unless
+ you can get him to be like other people, that he will do nothing. Excuse
+ the freedom with which I write, and ascribe it to the singular interest
+ with which your son has inspired me. I have the honour to be, dear Sir
+ Peter,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yours truly, WILLIAM HORTON.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the strength of this letter Sir Peter did not indeed summon another
+ family council; for he did not consider that his three maiden sisters
+ could offer any practical advice on the matter. And as to Mr. Gordon, that
+ gentleman having gone to law on the great timber question, and having been
+ signally beaten thereon, had informed Sir Peter that he disowned him as a
+ cousin and despised him as a man; not exactly in those words,&mdash;more
+ covertly, and therefore more stingingly. But Sir Peter invited Mr. Mivers
+ for a week&rsquo;s shooting, and requested the Reverend John to meet him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Mivers arrived. The sixteen years that had elapsed since he was first
+ introduced to the reader had made no perceptible change in his appearance.
+ It was one of his maxims that in youth a man of the world should appear
+ older than he is; and in middle age, and thence to his dying day, younger.
+ And he announced one secret for attaining that art in these words: &ldquo;Begin
+ your wig early, thus you never become gray.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unlike most philosophers, Mivers made his practice conform to his
+ precepts; and while in the prime of youth inaugurated a wig in a fashion
+ that defied the flight of time, not curly and hyacinthine, but
+ straight-haired and unassuming. He looked five-and-thirty from the day he
+ put on that wig at the age of twenty-five. He looked five-and-thirty now
+ at the age of fifty-one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I mean,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;to remain thirty-five all my life. No better age to
+ stick at. People may choose to say I am more, but I shall not own it. No
+ one is bound to criminate himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Mivers had some other aphorisms on this important subject. One was,
+ &ldquo;Refuse to be ill. Never tell people you are ill; never own it to
+ yourself. Illness is one of those things which a man should resist on
+ principle at the onset. It should never be allowed to get in the thin end
+ of the wedge. But take care of your constitution, and, having ascertained
+ the best habits for it, keep to them like clockwork.&rdquo; Mr. Mivers would not
+ have missed his constitutional walk in the Park before breakfast if, by
+ going in a cab to St. Giles&rsquo;s, he could have saved the city of London from
+ conflagration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another aphorism of his was, &ldquo;If you want to keep young, live in a
+ metropolis; never stay above a few weeks at a time in the country. Take
+ two men of similar constitution at the age of twenty-five; let one live in
+ London and enjoy a regular sort of club life; send the other to some rural
+ district, preposterously called &lsquo;salubrious.&rsquo; Look at these men when they
+ have both reached the age of forty-five. The London man has preserved his
+ figure: the rural man has a paunch. The London man has an interesting
+ delicacy of complexion: the face of the rural man is coarse-grained and
+ perhaps jowly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A third axiom was, &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be a family man; nothing ages one like
+ matrimonial felicity and paternal ties. Never multiply cares, and pack up
+ your life in the briefest compass you can. Why add to your carpet-bag of
+ troubles the contents of a lady&rsquo;s imperials and bonnet-boxes, and the
+ travelling <i>fourgon</i> required by the nursery? Shun ambition: it is so
+ gouty. It takes a great deal out of a man&rsquo;s life, and gives him nothing
+ worth having till he has ceased to enjoy it.&rdquo; Another of his aphorisms was
+ this, &ldquo;A fresh mind keeps the body fresh. Take in the ideas of the day,
+ drain off those of yesterday. As to the morrow, time enough to consider it
+ when it becomes to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Preserving himself by attention to these rules, Mr. Mivers appeared at
+ Exmundham <i>totus, teres</i>, but not <i>rotundus</i>,&mdash;a man of
+ middle height, slender, upright, with well-cut, small, slight features,
+ thin lips, enclosing an excellent set of teeth, even, white, and not
+ indebted to the dentist. For the sake of those teeth he shunned acid
+ wines, especially hock in all its varieties, culinary sweets, and hot
+ drinks. He drank even his tea cold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;two things in life that a sage must preserve at
+ every sacrifice, the coats of his stomach and the enamel of his teeth.
+ Some evils admit of consolations: there are no comforters for dyspepsia
+ and toothache.&rdquo; A man of letters, but a man of the world, he had so
+ cultivated his mind as both that he was feared as the one and liked as the
+ other. As a man of letters he despised the world; as a man of the world he
+ despised letters. As the representative of both he revered himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ON the evening of the third day from the arrival of Mr. Mivers, he, the
+ Parson, and Sir Peter were seated in the host&rsquo;s parlour, the Parson in an
+ armchair by the ingle, smoking a short cutty-pipe; Mivers at length on the
+ couch, slowly inhaling the perfumes of one of his own choice <i>trabucos</i>.
+ Sir Peter never smoked. There were spirits and hot water and lemons on the
+ table. The Parson was famed for skill in the composition of toddy. From
+ time to time the Parson sipped his glass, and Sir Peter less frequently
+ did the same. It is needless to say that Mr. Mivers eschewed toddy; but
+ beside him, on a chair, was a tumbler and a large carafe of iced water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PETER.&mdash;&ldquo;Cousin Mivers, you have now had time to study Kenelm,
+ and to compare his character with that assigned to him in the Doctor&rsquo;s
+ letter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MIVERS (languidly).&mdash;&ldquo;Ay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PETER.&mdash;&ldquo;I ask you, as a man of the world, what you think I had
+ best do with the boy. Shall I send him to such a tutor as the Doctor
+ suggests? Cousin John is not of the same mind as the Doctor, and thinks
+ that Kenelm&rsquo;s oddities are fine things in their way, and should not be
+ prematurely ground out of him by contact with worldly tutors and London
+ pavements.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; repeated Mr. Mivers more languidly than before. After a pause he
+ added, &ldquo;Parson John, let us hear you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Parson laid aside his cutty-pipe and emptied his fourth tumbler of
+ toddy; then, throwing back his head in the dreamy fashion of the great
+ Coleridge when he indulged in a monologue, he thus began, speaking
+ somewhat through his nose,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At the morning of life&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Mivers shrugged his shoulders, turned round on his couch, and closed
+ his eyes with the sigh of a man resigning himself to a homily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At the morning of life, when the dews&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I knew the dews were coming,&rdquo; said Mivers. &ldquo;Dry them, if you please;
+ nothing so unwholesome. We anticipate what you mean to say, which is
+ plainly this, When a fellow is sixteen he is very fresh: so he is; pass
+ on; what then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you mean to interrupt me with your habitual cynicism,&rdquo; said the
+ Parson, &ldquo;why did you ask to hear me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was a mistake I grant; but who on earth could conceive that you were
+ going to commence in that florid style? Morning of life indeed! bosh!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cousin Mivers,&rdquo; said Sir Peter, &ldquo;you are not reviewing John&rsquo;s style in
+ &lsquo;The Londoner;&rsquo; and I will beg you to remember that my son&rsquo;s morning of
+ life is a serious thing to his father, and not to be nipped in its bud by
+ a cousin. Proceed, John!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth the Parson, good-humouredly, &ldquo;I will adapt my style to the taste of
+ my critic. When a fellow is at the age of sixteen, and very fresh to life,
+ the question is whether he should begin thus prematurely to exchange the
+ ideas that belong to youth for the ideas that properly belong to middle
+ age,&mdash;whether he should begin to acquire that knowledge of the world
+ which middle-aged men have acquired and can teach. I think not. I would
+ rather have him yet a while in the company of the poets; in the indulgence
+ of glorious hopes and beautiful dreams, forming to himself some type of
+ the Heroic, which he will keep before his eyes as a standard when he goes
+ into the world as man. There are two schools of thought for the formation
+ of character,&mdash;the Real and the Ideal. I would form the character in
+ the Ideal school, in order to make it bolder and grander and lovelier when
+ it takes its place in that every-day life which is called Real. And
+ therefore I am not for placing the descendant of Sir Kenelm Digby, in the
+ interval between school and college, with a man of the world, probably as
+ cynical as Cousin Mivers and living in the stony thoroughfares of London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MR. MIVERS (rousing himself).&mdash;&ldquo;Before we plunge into that Serbonian
+ bog&mdash;the controversy between the Realistic and the Idealistic
+ academicians&mdash;I think the first thing to decide is what you want
+ Kenelm to be hereafter. When I order a pair of shoes, I decide beforehand
+ what kind of shoes they are to be,&mdash;court pumps or strong walking
+ shoes; and I don&rsquo;t ask the shoemaker to give me a preliminary lecture upon
+ the different purposes of locomotion to which leather can be applied. If,
+ Sir Peter, you want Kenelm to scribble lackadaisical poems, listen to
+ Parson John; if you want to fill his head with pastoral rubbish about
+ innocent love, which may end in marrying the miller&rsquo;s daughter, listen to
+ Parson John; if you want him to enter life a soft-headed greenhorn, who
+ will sign any bill carrying 50 per cent to which a young scamp asks him to
+ be security, listen to Parson John; in fine, if you wish a clever lad to
+ become either a pigeon or a ring-dove, a credulous booby or a sentimental
+ milksop, Parson John is the best adviser you can have.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t want my son to ripen into either of those imbecile
+ developments of species.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then don&rsquo;t listen to Parson John; and there&rsquo;s an end of the discussion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, there is not. I have not heard your advice what to do if John&rsquo;s
+ advice is not to be taken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Mivers hesitated. He seemed puzzled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The fact is,&rdquo; said the Parson, &ldquo;that Mivers got up &lsquo;The Londoner&rsquo; upon a
+ principle that regulates his own mind,&mdash;find fault with the way
+ everything is done, but never commit yourself by saying how anything can
+ be done better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is true,&rdquo; said Mivers, candidly. &ldquo;The destructive order of mind is
+ seldom allied to the constructive. I and &lsquo;The Londoner&rsquo; are destructive by
+ nature and by policy. We can reduce a building into rubbish, but we don&rsquo;t
+ profess to turn rubbish into a building. We are critics, and, as you say,
+ not such fools as to commit ourselves to the proposition of amendments
+ that can be criticised by others. Nevertheless, for your sake, Cousin
+ Peter, and on the condition that if I give my advice you will never say
+ that I gave it, and if you take it that you will never reproach me if it
+ turns out, as most advice does, very ill,&mdash;I will depart from my
+ custom and hazard my opinion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I accept the conditions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well then, with every new generation there springs up a new order of
+ ideas. The earlier the age at which a man seizes the ideas that will
+ influence his own generation, the more he has a start in the race with his
+ contemporaries. If Kenelm comprehends at sixteen those intellectual signs
+ of the time which, when he goes up to college, he will find young men of
+ eighteen or twenty only just <i>prepared</i> to comprehend, he will
+ produce a deep impression of his powers for reasoning and their adaptation
+ to actual life, which will be of great service to him later. Now the ideas
+ that influence the mass of the rising generation never have their
+ well-head in the generation itself. They have their source in the
+ generation before them, generally in a small minority, neglected or
+ contemned by the great majority which adopt them later. Therefore a lad at
+ the age of sixteen, if he wants to get at such ideas, must come into close
+ contact with some superior mind in which they were conceived twenty or
+ thirty years before. I am consequently for placing Kenelm with a person
+ from whom the new ideas can be learned. I am also for his being placed in
+ the metropolis during the process of this initiation. With such
+ introductions as are at our command, he may come in contact not only with
+ new ideas, but with eminent men in all vocations. It is a great thing to
+ mix betimes with clever people. One picks their brains unconsciously.
+ There is another advantage, and not a small one, in this early entrance
+ into good society. A youth learns manners, self-possession, readiness of
+ resource; and he is much less likely to get into scrapes and contract
+ tastes for low vices and mean dissipation, when he comes into life wholly
+ his own master, after having acquired a predilection for refined
+ companionship under the guidance of those competent to select it. There, I
+ have talked myself out of breath. And you had better decide at once in
+ favour of my advice; for as I am of a contradictory temperament, myself of
+ to-morrow may probably contradict myself of to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter was greatly impressed with his cousin&rsquo;s argumentative eloquence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Parson smoked his cutty-pipe in silence until appealed to by Sir
+ Peter, and he then said, &ldquo;In this programme of education for a Christian
+ gentleman, the part of Christian seems to me left out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The tendency of the age,&rdquo; observed Mr. Mivers, calmly, &ldquo;is towards that
+ omission. Secular education is the necessary reaction from the special
+ theological training which arose in the dislike of one set of Christians
+ to the teaching of another set; and as these antagonists will not agree
+ how religion is to be taught, either there must be no teaching at all, or
+ religion must be eliminated from the tuition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That may do very well for some huge system of national education,&rdquo; said
+ Sir Peter, &ldquo;but it does not apply to Kenelm, as one of a family all of
+ whose members belong to the Established Church. He may be taught the creed
+ of his forefathers without offending a Dissenter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which Established Church is he to belong to?&rdquo; asked Mr. Mivers,&mdash;&ldquo;High
+ Church, Low Church, Broad Church, Puseyite Church, Ritualistic Church, or
+ any other Established Church that may be coming into fashion?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw!&rdquo; said the Parson. &ldquo;That sneer is out of place. You know very well
+ that one merit of our Church is the spirit of toleration, which does not
+ magnify every variety of opinion into a heresy or a schism. But if Sir
+ Peter sends his son at the age of sixteen to a tutor who eliminates the
+ religion of Christianity from his teaching, he deserves to be thrashed
+ within an inch of his life; and,&rdquo; continued the Parson, eying Sir Peter
+ sternly, and mechanically turning up his cuffs, &ldquo;I should <i>like</i> to
+ thrash him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gently, John,&rdquo; said Sir Peter, recoiling; &ldquo;gently, my dear kinsman. My
+ heir shall not be educated as a heathen, and Mivers is only bantering us.
+ Come, Mivers, do you happen to know among your London friends some man
+ who, though a scholar and a man of the world, is still a Christian?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A Christian as by law established?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who will receive Kenelm as a pupil?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course I am not putting such questions to you out of idle curiosity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know exactly the man. He was originally intended for orders, and is a
+ very learned theologian. He relinquished the thought of the clerical
+ profession on succeeding to a small landed estate by the sudden death of
+ an elder brother. He then came to London and bought experience: that is,
+ he was naturally generous; he became easily taken in; got into
+ difficulties; the estate was transferred to trustees for the benefit of
+ creditors, and on the payment of L400 a year to himself. By this time he
+ was married and had two children. He found the necessity of employing his
+ pen in order to add to his income, and is one of the ablest contributors
+ to the periodical press. He is an elegant scholar, an effective writer,
+ much courted by public men, a thorough gentleman, has a pleasant house,
+ and receives the best society. Having been once taken in, he defies any
+ one to take him in again. His experience was not bought too dearly. No
+ more acute and accomplished man of the world. The three hundred a year or
+ so that you would pay for Kenelm would suit him very well. His name is
+ Welby, and he lives in Chester Square.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No doubt he is a contributor to &lsquo;The Londoner,&rsquo;&rdquo; said the Parson,
+ sarcastically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True. He writes our classical, theological, and metaphysical articles.
+ Suppose I invite him to come here for a day or two, and you can see him
+ and judge for yourself, Sir Peter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MR. WELBY arrived, and pleased everybody. A man of the happiest manners,
+ easy and courteous. There was no pedantry in him, yet you could soon see
+ that his reading covered an extensive surface, and here and there had
+ dived deeply. He enchanted the Parson by his comments on Saint Chrysostom;
+ he dazzled Sir Peter with his lore in the antiquities of ancient Britain;
+ he captivated Kenelm by his readiness to enter into that most disputatious
+ of sciences called metaphysics; while for Lady Chillingly, and the three
+ sisters who were invited to meet him, he was more entertaining, but not
+ less instructive. Equally at home in novels and in good books, he gave to
+ the spinsters a list of innocent works in either; while for Lady
+ Chillingly he sparkled with anecdotes of fashionable life, the newest <i>bons
+ mots</i>, the latest scandals. In fact, Mr. Welby was one of those
+ brilliant persons who adorn any society amidst which they are thrown. If
+ at heart he was a disappointed man, the disappointment was concealed by an
+ even serenity of spirits; he had entertained high and justifiable hopes of
+ a brilliant career and a lasting reputation as a theologian and a
+ preacher; the succession to his estate at the age of twenty-three had
+ changed the nature of his ambition. The charm of his manner was such that
+ he sprang at once into the fashion, and became beguiled by his own genial
+ temperament into that lesser but pleasanter kind of ambition which
+ contents itself with social successes and enjoys the present hour. When
+ his circumstances compelled him to eke out his income by literary profits,
+ he slid into the grooves of periodical composition, and resigned all
+ thoughts of the labour required for any complete work, which might take
+ much time and be attended with scanty profits. He still remained very
+ popular in society, and perhaps his general reputation for ability made
+ him fearful to hazard it by any great undertaking. He was not, like
+ Mivers, a despiser of all men and all things; but he regarded men and
+ things as an indifferent though good-natured spectator regards the
+ thronging streets from a drawing-room window. He could not be called <i>blase</i>,
+ but he was thoroughly <i>desillusionne</i>. Once over-romantic, his
+ character now was so entirely imbued with the neutral tints of life that
+ romance offended his taste as an obtrusion of violent colour into a sober
+ woof. He was become a thorough Realist in his code of criticism, and in
+ his worldly mode of action and thought. But Parson John did not perceive
+ this, for Welby listened to that gentleman&rsquo;s eulogies on the Ideal school
+ without troubling himself to contradict them. He had grown too indolent to
+ be combative in conversation, and only as a critic betrayed such pugnacity
+ as remained to him by the polished cruelty of sarcasm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He came off with flying colours through an examination into his Church
+ orthodoxy instituted by the Parson and Sir Peter. Amid a cloud of
+ ecclesiastical erudition, his own opinions vanished in those of the
+ Fathers. In truth, he was a Realist, in religion as in everything else. He
+ regarded Christianity as a type of existent civilization, which ought to
+ be reverenced, as one might recognize the other types of that
+ civilization; such as the liberty of the press, the representative system,
+ white neckcloths and black coats of an evening, etc. He belonged,
+ therefore, to what he himself called the school of Eclectical
+ Christiology; and accommodated the reasonings of Deism to the doctrines of
+ the Church, if not as a creed, at least as an institution. Finally, he
+ united all the Chillingly votes in his favour; and when he departed from
+ the Hall carried off Kenelm for his initiation into the new ideas that
+ were to govern his generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM remained a year and a half with this distinguished preceptor.
+ During that time he learned much in book-lore; he saw much, too, of the
+ eminent men of the day, in literature, the law, and the senate. He saw,
+ also, a good deal of the fashionable world. Fine ladies, who had been
+ friends of his mother in her youth, took him up, counselled and petted
+ him,&mdash;one in especial, the Marchioness of Glenalvon, to whom he was
+ endeared by grateful association, for her youngest son had been a
+ fellow-pupil of Kenelm at Merton School, and Kenelm had saved his life
+ from drowning. The poor boy died of consumption later, and her grief for
+ his loss made her affection for Kenelm yet more tender. Lady Glenalvon was
+ one of the queens of the London world. Though in the fiftieth year she was
+ still very handsome: she was also very accomplished, very clever, and very
+ kind-hearted, as some of such queens are; just one of those women
+ invaluable in forming the manners and elevating the character of young men
+ destined to make a figure in after-life. But she was very angry with
+ herself in thinking that she failed to arouse any such ambition in the
+ heir of the Chillinglys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may here be said that Kenelm was not without great advantages of form
+ and countenance. He was tall, and the youthful grace of his proportions
+ concealed his physical strength, which was extraordinary rather from the
+ iron texture than the bulk of his thews and sinews. His face, though it
+ certainly lacked the roundness of youth, had a grave, sombre, haunting
+ sort of beauty, not artistically regular, but picturesque, peculiar, with
+ large dark expressive eyes, and a certain indescribable combination of
+ sweetness and melancholy in his quiet smile. He never laughed audibly, but
+ he had a quick sense of the comic, and his eye would laugh when his lips
+ were silent. He would say queer, droll, unexpected things which passed for
+ humour; but, save for that gleam in the eye, he could not have said them
+ with more seeming innocence of intentional joke if he had been a monk of
+ La Trappe looking up from the grave he was digging in order to utter
+ &ldquo;memento mori.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That face of his was a great &ldquo;take in.&rdquo; Women thought it full of romantic
+ sentiment; the face of one easily moved to love, and whose love would be
+ replete alike with poetry and passion. But he remained as proof as the
+ youthful Hippolytus to all female attraction. He delighted the Parson by
+ keeping up his practice in athletic pursuits; and obtained a reputation at
+ the pugilistic school, which he attended regularly, as the best gentleman
+ boxer about town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made many acquaintances, but still formed no friendships. Yet every one
+ who saw him much conceived affection for him. If he did not return that
+ affection, he did not repel it. He was exceedingly gentle in voice and
+ manner, and had all his father&rsquo;s placidity of temper: children and dogs
+ took to him as by instinct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On leaving Mr. Welby&rsquo;s, Kenelm carried to Cambridge a mind largely stocked
+ with the new ideas that were budding into leaf. He certainly astonished
+ the other freshmen, and occasionally puzzled the mighty Fellows of Trinity
+ and St. John&rsquo;s. But he gradually withdrew himself much from general
+ society. In fact, he was too old in mind for his years; and after having
+ mixed in the choicest circles of a metropolis, college suppers and wine
+ parties had little charm for him. He maintained his pugilistic renown; and
+ on certain occasions, when some delicate undergraduate had been bullied by
+ some gigantic bargeman, his muscular Christianity nobly developed itself.
+ He did not do as much as he might have done in the more intellectual ways
+ of academical distinction. Still, he was always among the first in the
+ college examinations; he won two university prizes, and took a very
+ creditable degree, after which he returned home, more odd, more saturnine&mdash;in
+ short, less like other people&mdash;than when he had left Merton School.
+ He had woven a solitude round him out of his own heart, and in that
+ solitude he sat still and watchful as a spider sits in his web.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether from natural temperament or from his educational training under
+ such teachers as Mr. Mivers, who carried out the new ideas of reform by
+ revering nothing in the past, and Mr. Welby, who accepted the routine of
+ the present as realistic, and pooh-poohed all visions of the future as
+ idealistic, Kenelm&rsquo;s chief mental characteristic was a kind of tranquil
+ indifferentism. It was difficult to detect in him either of those ordinary
+ incentives to action,&mdash;vanity or ambition, the yearning for applause
+ or the desire of power. To all female fascinations he had been hitherto
+ star-proof. He had never experienced love, but he had read a good deal
+ about it; and that passion seemed to him an unaccountable aberration of
+ human reason, and an ignominious surrender of the equanimity of thought
+ which it should be the object of masculine natures to maintain
+ undisturbed. A very eloquent book in praise of celibacy, and entitled &ldquo;The
+ Approach to the Angels,&rdquo; written by that eminent Oxford scholar, Decimus
+ Roach, had produced so remarkable an effect upon his youthful mind that,
+ had he been a Roman Catholic, he might have become a monk. Where he most
+ evinced ardour it was a logician&rsquo;s ardour for abstract truth; that is, for
+ what he considered truth: and, as what seems truth to one man is sure to
+ seem falsehood to some other man, this predilection of his was not without
+ its inconveniences and dangers, as may probably be seen in the following
+ chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, rightly to appreciate his conduct therein, I entreat thee, O
+ candid reader (not that any reader ever is candid), to remember that he is
+ brimful of new ideas, which, met by a deep and hostile undercurrent of old
+ ideas, become more provocatively billowy and surging.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THERE had been great festivities at Exmundham, in celebration of the
+ honour bestowed upon the world by the fact that Kenelm Chillingly had
+ lived twenty-one years in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young heir had made a speech to the assembled tenants and other
+ admitted revellers, which had by no means added to the exhilaration of the
+ proceedings. He spoke with a fluency and self-possession which were
+ surprising in a youth addressing a multitude for the first time. But his
+ speech was not cheerful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The principal tenant on the estate, in proposing his health, had naturally
+ referred to the long line of his ancestors. His father&rsquo;s merits as man and
+ landlord had been enthusiastically commemorated; and many happy auguries
+ for his own future career had been drawn, partly from the excellences of
+ his parentage, partly from his own youthful promise in the honours
+ achieved at the University.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm Chillingly in reply largely availed himself of those new ideas
+ which were to influence the rising generation, and with which he had been
+ rendered familiar by the journal of Mr. Mivers and the conversation of Mr.
+ Welby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He briefly disposed of the ancestral part of the question. He observed
+ that it was singular to note how long any given family or dynasty could
+ continue to flourish in any given nook of matter in creation, without any
+ exhibition of intellectual powers beyond those displayed by a succession
+ of vegetable crops. &ldquo;It is certainly true,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that the Chillinglys
+ have lived in this place from father to son for about a fourth part of the
+ history of the world, since the date which Sir Isaac Newton assigns to the
+ Deluge. But, so far as can be judged by existent records, the world has
+ not been in any way wiser or better for their existence. They were born to
+ eat as long as they could eat, and when they could eat no longer they
+ died. Not that in this respect they were a whit less insignificant than
+ the generality of their fellow-creatures. Most of us now present,&rdquo;
+ continued the youthful orator, &ldquo;are only born in order to die; and the
+ chief consolation of our wounded pride in admitting this fact is in the
+ probability that our posterity will not be of more consequence to the
+ scheme of Nature than we ourselves are.&rdquo; Passing from that philosophical
+ view of his own ancestors in particular, and of the human race in general,
+ Kenelm Chillingly then touched with serene analysis on the eulogies
+ lavished on his father as man and landlord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As man,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;my father no doubt deserves all that can be said by
+ man in favour of man. But what, at the best, is man? A crude, struggling,
+ undeveloped embryo, of whom it is the highest attribute that he feels a
+ vague consciousness that he is only an embryo, and cannot complete himself
+ till he ceases to be a man; that is, until he becomes another being in
+ another form of existence. We can praise a dog as a dog, because a dog is
+ a completed <i>ens</i>, and not an embryo. But to praise a man as man,
+ forgetting that he is only a germ out of which a form wholly different is
+ ultimately to spring, is equally opposed to Scriptural belief in his
+ present crudity and imperfection, and to psychological or metaphysical
+ examination of a mental construction evidently designed for purposes that
+ he can never fulfil as man. That my father is an embryo not more
+ incomplete than any present is quite true; but that, you will see on
+ reflection, is saying very little on his behalf. Even in the boasted
+ physical formation of us men, you are aware that the best-shaped amongst
+ us, according to the last scientific discoveries, is only a development of
+ some hideous hairy animal, such as a gorilla; and the ancestral gorilla
+ itself had its own aboriginal forefather in a small marine animal shaped
+ like a two-necked bottle. The probability is that, some day or other, we
+ shall be exterminated by a new development of species.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As for the merits assigned to my father as landlord, I must respectfully
+ dissent from the panegyrics so rashly bestowed on him. For all sound
+ reasoners must concur in this, that the first duty of an owner of land is
+ not to the occupiers to whom he leases it, but to the nation at large. It
+ is his duty to see that the land yields to the community the utmost it can
+ yield. In order to effect this object, a landlord should put up his farms
+ to competition, exacting the highest rent he can possibly get from
+ responsible competitors. Competitive examination is the enlightened order
+ of the day, even in professions in which the best men would have qualities
+ that defy examination. In agriculture, happily, the principle of
+ competitive examination is not so hostile to the choice of the best man as
+ it must be, for instance, in diplomacy, where a Talleyrand would be
+ excluded for knowing no language but his own; and still more in the army,
+ where promotion would be denied to an officer who, like Marlborough, could
+ not spell. But in agriculture a landlord has only to inquire who can give
+ the highest rent, having the largest capital, subject by the strictest
+ penalties of law to the conditions of a lease dictated by the most
+ scientific agriculturists under penalties fixed by the most cautious
+ conveyancers. By this mode of procedure, recommended by the most liberal
+ economists of our age,&mdash;barring those still more liberal who deny
+ that property in land is any property at all,&mdash;by this mode of
+ procedure, I say, a landlord does his duty to his country. He secures
+ tenants who can produce the most to the community by their capital, tested
+ through competitive examination in their bankers&rsquo; accounts and the
+ security they can give, and through the rigidity of covenants suggested by
+ a Liebig and reduced into law by a Chitty. But on my father&rsquo;s land I see a
+ great many tenants with little skill and less capital, ignorant of a
+ Liebig and revolting from a Chitty, and no filial enthusiasm can induce me
+ honestly to say that my father is a good landlord. He has preferred his
+ affection for individuals to his duties to the community. It is not, my
+ friends, a question whether a handful of farmers like yourselves go to the
+ workhouse or not. It is a consumer&rsquo;s question. Do you produce the maximum
+ of corn to the consumer?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With respect to myself,&rdquo; continued the orator, warming as the cold he had
+ engendered in his audience became more freezingly felt,&mdash;&ldquo;with
+ respect to myself, I do not deny that, owing to the accident of training
+ for a very faulty and contracted course of education, I have obtained what
+ are called &lsquo;honours&rsquo; at the University of Cambridge; but you must not
+ regard that fact as a promise of any worth in my future passage through
+ life. Some of the most useless persons&mdash;especially narrow-minded and
+ bigoted&mdash;have acquired far higher honours at the University than have
+ fallen to my lot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank you no less for the civil things you have said of me and of my
+ family; but I shall endeavour to walk to that grave to which we are all
+ bound with a tranquil indifference as to what people may say of me in so
+ short a journey. And the sooner, my friends, we get to our journey&rsquo;s end,
+ the better our chance of escaping a great many pains, troubles, sins, and
+ diseases. So that when I drink to your good healths, you must feel that in
+ reality I wish you an early deliverance from the ills to which flesh is
+ exposed, and which so generally increase with our years that good health
+ is scarcely compatible with the decaying faculties of old age. Gentlemen,
+ your good healths!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE morning after these birthday rejoicings, Sir Peter and Lady Chillingly
+ held a long consultation on the peculiarities of their heir, and the best
+ mode of instilling into his mind the expediency either of entertaining
+ more pleasing views, or at least of professing less unpopular sentiments;
+ compatibly of course, though they did not say it, with the new ideas that
+ were to govern his century. Having come to an agreement on this delicate
+ subject, they went forth, arm in arm, in search of their heir. Kenelm
+ seldom met them at breakfast. He was an early riser, and accustomed to
+ solitary rambles before his parents were out of bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The worthy pair found Kenelm seated on the banks of a trout-stream that
+ meandered through Chillingly Park, dipping his line into the water, and
+ yawning, with apparent relief in that operation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does fishing amuse you, my boy?&rdquo; said Sir Peter, heartily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in the least, sir,&rdquo; answered Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then why do you do it?&rdquo; asked Lady Chillingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I know nothing else that amuses me more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! that is it,&rdquo; said Sir Peter: &ldquo;the whole secret of Kenelm&rsquo;s oddities
+ is to be found in these words, my dear; he needs amusement. Voltaire says
+ truly, &lsquo;Amusement is one of the wants of man.&rsquo; And if Kenelm could be
+ amused like other people, he would be like other people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In that case,&rdquo; said Kenelm, gravely, and extracting from the water a
+ small but lively trout, which settled itself in Lady Chillingly&rsquo;s lap,&mdash;&ldquo;in
+ that case I would rather not be amused. I have no interest in the
+ absurdities of other people. The instinct of self-preservation compels me
+ to have some interest in my own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kenelm, sir,&rdquo; exclaimed Lady Chillingly, with an animation into which her
+ tranquil ladyship was very rarely betrayed, &ldquo;take away that horrid damp
+ thing! Put down your rod and attend to what your father says. Your strange
+ conduct gives us cause of serious anxiety.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm unhooked the trout, deposited the fish in his basket, and raising
+ his large eyes to his father&rsquo;s face, said, &ldquo;What is there in my conduct
+ that occasions you displeasure?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not displeasure, Kenelm,&rdquo; said Sir Peter, kindly, &ldquo;but anxiety; your
+ mother has hit upon the right word. You see, my dear son, that it is my
+ wish that you should distinguish yourself in the world. You might
+ represent this county, as your ancestors have done before. I have looked
+ forward to the proceedings of yesterday as an admirable occasion for your
+ introduction to your future constituents. Oratory is the talent most
+ appreciated in a free country, and why should you not be an orator?
+ Demosthenes says that delivery, delivery, delivery, is the art of oratory;
+ and your delivery is excellent, graceful, self-possessed, classical.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, my dear father, Demosthenes does not say delivery, nor action,
+ as the word is commonly rendered; he says, &lsquo;acting, or stage-play,&rsquo;&mdash;the
+ art by which a man delivers a speech in a feigned character, whence we get
+ the word hypocrisy. Hypocrisy, hypocrisy, hypocrisy! is, according to
+ Demosthenes, the triple art of the orator. Do you wish me to become triply
+ a hypocrite?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kenelm, I am ashamed of you. You know as well as I do that it is only by
+ metaphor that you can twist the word ascribed to the great Athenian into
+ the sense of hypocrisy. But assuming it, as you say, to mean not delivery,
+ but acting, I understand why your debut as an orator was not successful.
+ Your delivery was excellent, your acting defective. An orator should
+ please, conciliate, persuade, prepossess. You did the reverse of all this;
+ and though you produced a great effect, the effect was so decidedly to
+ your disadvantage that it would have lost you an election on any hustings
+ in England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I to understand, my dear father,&rdquo; said Kenelm, in the mournful and
+ compassionate tones with which a pious minister of the Church reproves
+ some abandoned and hoary sinner,&mdash;&ldquo;am I to understand that you would
+ commend to your son the adoption of deliberate falsehood for the gain of a
+ selfish advantage?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Deliberate falsehood! you impertinent puppy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Puppy!&rdquo; repeated Kenelm, not indignantly but musingly,&mdash;&ldquo;puppy! a
+ well-bred puppy takes after its parents.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter burst out laughing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Chillingly rose with dignity, shook her gown, unfolded her parasol,
+ and stalked away speechless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, look you, Kenelm,&rdquo; said Sir Peter, as soon as he had composed
+ himself. &ldquo;These quips and humours of yours are amusing enough to an
+ eccentric man like myself, but they will not do for the world; and how at
+ your age, and with the rare advantages you have had in an early
+ introduction to the best intellectual society, under the guidance of a
+ tutor acquainted with the new ideas which are to influence the conduct of
+ statesmen, you could have made so silly a speech as you did yesterday, I
+ cannot understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear father, allow me to assure you that the ideas I expressed are the
+ new ideas most in vogue,&mdash;ideas expressed in still plainer, or, if
+ you prefer the epithet, still sillier terms than I employed. You will find
+ them instilled into the public mind by &lsquo;The Londoner&rsquo; and by most
+ intellectual journals of a liberal character.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kenelm, Kenelm, such ideas would turn the world topsy-turvy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;New ideas always do tend to turn old ideas topsy-turvy. And the world,
+ after all, is only an idea, which is turned topsy-turvy with every
+ successive century.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You make me sick of the word &lsquo;ideas.&rsquo; Leave off your metaphysics and
+ study real life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is real life which I did study under Mr. Welby. He is the
+ Archimandrite of Realism. It is sham life which you wish me to study. To
+ oblige you I am willing to commence it. I dare say it is very pleasant.
+ Real life is not; on the contrary&mdash;dull,&rdquo; and Kenelm yawned again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you no young friends among your fellow-collegians?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friends! certainly not, sir. But I believe I have some enemies, who
+ answer the same purpose as friends, only they don&rsquo;t hurt one so much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean to say that you lived alone at Cambridge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I lived a good deal with Aristophanes, and a little with Conic
+ Sections and Hydrostatics.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Books. Dry company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More innocent, at least, than moist company. Did you ever get drunk,
+ sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Drunk!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tried to do so once with the young companions whom you would commend to
+ me as friends. I don&rsquo;t think I succeeded, but I woke with a headache. Real
+ life at college abounds with headache.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kenelm, my boy, one thing is clear: you must travel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As you please, sir. Marcus Antoninus says that it is all one to a stone
+ whether it be thrown upwards or downwards. When shall I start?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very soon. Of course there are preparations to make; you should have a
+ travelling companion. I don&rsquo;t mean a tutor,&mdash;you are too clever and
+ too steady to need one,&mdash;but a pleasant, sensible, well-mannered
+ young person of your own age.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My own age,&mdash;male or female?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter tried hard to frown. The utmost he could do was to reply
+ gravely, &ldquo;FEMALE! If I said you were too steady to need a tutor, it was
+ because you have hitherto seemed little likely to be led out of your way
+ by female allurements. Among your other studies may I inquire if you have
+ included that which no man has ever yet thoroughly mastered,&mdash;the
+ study of women?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly. Do you object to my catching another trout?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Trout be&mdash;blessed, or the reverse. So you have studied woman. I
+ should never have thought it. Where and when did you commence that
+ department of science?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When? ever since I was ten years old. Where? first in your own house,
+ then at college. Hush!&mdash;a bite,&rdquo; and another trout left its native
+ element and alighted on Sir Peter&rsquo;s nose, whence it was solemnly
+ transferred to the basket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At ten years old, and in my own house! That flaunting hussy Jane, the
+ under-housemaid&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jane! No, sir. Pamela, Miss Byron, Clarissa,&mdash;females in Richardson,
+ who, according to Dr. Johnson, &lsquo;taught the passions to move at the command
+ of virtue.&rsquo; I trust for your sake that Dr. Johnson did not err in that
+ assertion, for I found all these females at night in your own private
+ apartments.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Sir Peter, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All I remember at ten years old,&rdquo; replied Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And at Mr. Welby&rsquo;s or at college,&rdquo; proceeded Sir Peter, timorously, &ldquo;was
+ your acquaintance with females of the same kind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm shook his head. &ldquo;Much worse: they were very naughty indeed at
+ college.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think so, with such a lot of young fellows running after them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very few fellows run after the females. I mean&mdash;rather avoid them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So much the better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, my father, so much the worse; without an intimate knowledge of those
+ females there is little use going to college at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Explain yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Every one who receives a classical education is introduced into their
+ society,&mdash;Pyrrha and Lydia, Glycera and Corinna, and many more of the
+ same sort; and then the females in Aristophanes, what do you say to them,
+ sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it only females who lived two thousand or three thousand years ago, or
+ more probably never lived at all, whose intimacy you have cultivated? Have
+ you never admired any real women?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Real women! I never met one. Never met a woman who was not a sham, a sham
+ from the moment she is told to be pretty-behaved, conceal her sentiments,
+ and look fibs when she does not speak them. But if I am to learn sham
+ life, I suppose I must put up with sham women.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you been crossed in love that you speak so bitterly of the sex?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t speak bitterly of the sex. Examine any woman on her oath, and
+ she&rsquo;ll own she is a sham, always has been, and always will be, and is
+ proud of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am glad your mother is not by to hear you. You will think differently
+ one of these days. Meanwhile, to turn to the other sex, is there no young
+ man of your own rank with whom you would like to travel?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not. I hate quarrelling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As you please. But you cannot go quite alone: I will find you a good
+ travelling-servant. I must write to town to-day about your preparations,
+ and in another week or so I hope all will be ready. Your allowance will be
+ whatever you like to fix it at; you have never been extravagant, and&mdash;boy&mdash;I
+ love you. Amuse yourself, enjoy yourself, and come back cured of your
+ oddities, but preserving your honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter bent down and kissed his son&rsquo;s brow. Kenelm was moved; he rose,
+ put his arm round his father&rsquo;s shoulder, and lovingly said, in an
+ undertone, &ldquo;If ever I am tempted to do a base thing, may I remember whose
+ son I am: I shall be safe then.&rdquo; He withdrew his arm as he said this, and
+ took his solitary way along the banks of the stream, forgetful of rod and
+ line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE young man continued to skirt the side of the stream until he reached
+ the boundary pale of the park. Here, placed on a rough grass mound, some
+ former proprietor, of a social temperament, had built a kind of belvidere,
+ so as to command a cheerful view of the high road below. Mechanically the
+ heir of the Chillinglys ascended the mound, seated himself within the
+ belvidere, and leaned his chin on his hand in a thoughtful attitude. It
+ was rarely that the building was honoured by a human visitor: its habitual
+ occupants were spiders. Of those industrious insects it was a
+ well-populated colony. Their webs, darkened with dust and ornamented with
+ the wings and legs and skeletons of many an unfortunate traveller, clung
+ thick to angle and window-sill, festooned the rickety table on which the
+ young man leaned his elbow, and described geometrical circles and
+ rhomboids between the gaping rails that formed the backs of venerable
+ chairs. One large black spider&mdash;who was probably the oldest
+ inhabitant, and held possession of the best place by the window, ready to
+ offer perfidious welcome to every winged itinerant who might be tempted to
+ turn aside from the high road for the sake of a little cool and repose&mdash;rushed
+ from its innermost penetralia at the entrance of Kenelm, and remained
+ motionless in the centre of its meshes, staring at him. It did not seem
+ quite sure whether the stranger was too big or not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a wonderful proof of the wisdom of Providence,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;that
+ whenever any large number of its creatures forms a community or class, a
+ secret element of disunion enters into the hearts of the individuals
+ forming the congregation, and prevents their co-operating heartily and
+ effectually for their common interest. &lsquo;The fleas would have dragged me
+ out of bed if they had been unanimous,&rsquo; said the great Mr. Curran; and
+ there can be no doubt that if all the spiders in this commonwealth would
+ unite to attack me in a body, I should fall a victim to their combined
+ nippers. But spiders, though inhabiting the same region, constituting the
+ same race, animated by the same instincts, do not combine even against a
+ butterfly: each seeks his own special advantage, and not that of the
+ community at large. And how completely the life of each thing resembles a
+ circle in this respect, that it can never touch another circle at more
+ than one point. Nay, I doubt if it quite touches it even there,&mdash;there
+ is a space between every atom; self is always selfish: and yet there are
+ eminent masters in the Academe of New Ideas who wish to make us believe
+ that all the working classes of a civilized world could merge every
+ difference of race, creed, intellect, individual propensities and
+ interests into the construction of a single web, stocked as a larder in
+ common!&rdquo; Here the soliloquist came to a dead stop, and, leaning out of the
+ window, contemplated the high road. It was a very fine high road, straight
+ and level, kept in excellent order by turn pikes at every eight miles. A
+ pleasant greensward bordered it on either side, and under the belvidere
+ the benevolence of some mediaeval Chillingly had placed a little
+ drinking-fountain for the refreshment of wayfarers. Close to the fountain
+ stood a rude stone bench, overshadowed by a large willow, and commanding
+ from the high table-ground on which it was placed a wide view of
+ cornfields, meadows, and distant hills, suffused in the mellow light of
+ the summer sun. Along that road there came successively a wagon filled
+ with passengers seated on straw,&mdash;an old woman, a pretty girl, two
+ children; then a stout farmer going to market in his dog-cart; then three
+ flies carrying fares to the nearest railway station; then a handsome young
+ man on horseback, a handsome young lady by his side, a groom behind. It
+ was easy to see that the young man and young lady were lovers. See it in
+ his ardent looks and serious lips parted but for whispers only to be heard
+ by her; see it in her downcast eyes and heightened colour. &ldquo;&lsquo;Alas!
+ regardless of their doom,&rsquo;&rdquo; muttered Kenelm, &ldquo;what trouble those &lsquo;little
+ victims&rsquo; are preparing for themselves and their progeny! Would I could
+ lend them Decimus Roach&rsquo;s &lsquo;Approach to the Angels&rsquo;!&rdquo; The road now for some
+ minutes became solitary and still, when there was heard to the right a
+ sprightly sort of carol, half sung, half recited, in musical voice, with a
+ singularly clear enunciation, so that the words reached Kenelm&rsquo;s ear
+ distinctly. They ran thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Black Karl looked forth from his cottage door,
+ He looked on the forest green;
+ And down the path, with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Neirestein:
+ Singing, singing, lustily singing,
+ Down the path with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Neirestein.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ At a voice so English, attuned to a strain so Germanic, Kenelm pricked up
+ attentive ears, and, turning his eye down the road, beheld, emerging from
+ the shade of beeches that overhung the park pales, a figure that did not
+ altogether harmonize with the idea of a Ritter of Neirestein. It was,
+ nevertheless, a picturesque figure enough. The man was attired in a
+ somewhat threadbare suit of Lincoln green, with a high-crowned Tyrolese
+ hat; a knapsack was slung behind his shoulders, and he was attended by a
+ white Pomeranian dog, evidently foot-sore, but doing his best to appear
+ proficient in the chase by limping some yards in advance of his master,
+ and sniffing into the hedges for rats and mice, and such small deer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time the pedestrian had reached to the close of his refrain he had
+ gained the fountain, and greeted it with an exclamation of pleasure.
+ Slipping the knapsack from his shoulder, he filled the iron ladle attached
+ to the basin. He then called the dog by the name of Max, and held the
+ ladle for him to drink. Not till the animal had satisfied his thirst did
+ the master assuage his own. Then, lifting his hat and bathing his temples
+ and face, the pedestrian seated himself on the bench, and the dog nestled
+ on the turf at his feet. After a little pause the wayfarer began again,
+ though in a lower and slower tone, to chant his refrain, and proceeded,
+ with abrupt snatches, to link the verse on to another stanza. It was
+ evident that he was either endeavouring to remember or to invent, and it
+ seemed rather like the latter and more laborious operation of mind.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Why on foot, why on foot, Ritter Karl,&rsquo; quoth he,
+ &lsquo;And not on thy palfrey gray?&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Palfrey gray&mdash;hum&mdash;gray.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;The run of ill-luck was too strong for me,
+ &lsquo;And has galloped my steed away.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ That will do: good!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good indeed! He is easily satisfied,&rdquo; muttered Kenelm. &ldquo;But such
+ pedestrians don&rsquo;t pass the road every day. Let us talk to him.&rdquo; So saying
+ he slipped quietly out of the window, descended the mound, and letting
+ himself into the road by a screened wicket-gate, took his noiseless stand
+ behind the wayfarer and beneath the bowery willow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man had now sunk into silence. Perhaps he had tired himself of rhymes;
+ or perhaps the mechanism of verse-making had been replaced by that kind of
+ sentiment, or that kind of revery, which is common to the temperaments of
+ those who indulge in verse-making. But the loveliness of the scene before
+ him had caught his eye, and fixed it into an intent gaze upon wooded
+ landscapes stretching farther and farther to the range of hills on which
+ the heaven seemed to rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should like to hear the rest of that German ballad,&rdquo; said a voice,
+ abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wayfarer started, and, turning round, presented to Kenelm&rsquo;s view a
+ countenance in the ripest noon of manhood, with locks and beard of a deep
+ rich auburn, bright blue eyes, and a wonderful nameless charm both of
+ feature and expression, very cheerful, very frank, and not without a
+ certain nobleness of character which seemed to exact respect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg your pardon for my interruption,&rdquo; said Kenelm, lifting his hat:
+ &ldquo;but I overheard you reciting; and though I suppose your verses are a
+ translation from the German, I don&rsquo;t remember anything like them in such
+ popular German poets as I happen to have read.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not a translation, sir,&rdquo; replied the itinerant. &ldquo;I was only trying
+ to string together some ideas that came into my head this fine morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a poet, then?&rdquo; said Kenelm, seating himself on the bench.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dare not say poet. I am a verse-maker.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, I know there is a distinction. Many poets of the present day,
+ considered very good, are uncommonly bad verse-makers. For my part, I
+ could more readily imagine them to be good poets if they did not make
+ verses at all. But can I not hear the rest of the ballad?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! the rest of the ballad is not yet made. It is rather a long
+ subject, and my flights are very brief.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is much in their favour, and very unlike the poetry in fashion. You
+ do not belong, I think, to this neighbourhood. Are you and your dog
+ travelling far?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is my holiday time, and I ramble on through the summer. I am
+ travelling far, for I travel till September. Life amid summer fields is a
+ very joyous thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it indeed?&rdquo; said Kenelm, with much <i>naivete</i>. &ldquo;I should have
+ thought that long before September you would have got very much bored with
+ the fields and the dog and yourself altogether. But, to be sure, you have
+ the resource of verse-making, and that seems a very pleasant and absorbing
+ occupation to those who practise it,&mdash;from our old friend Horace,
+ kneading laboured Alcaics into honey in his summer rambles among the
+ watered woodlands of Tibur, to Cardinal Richelieu, employing himself on
+ French rhymes in the intervals between chopping off noblemen&rsquo;s heads. It
+ does not seem to signify much whether the verses be good or bad, so far as
+ the pleasure of the verse-maker himself is concerned; for Richelieu was as
+ much charmed with his occupation as Horace was, and his verses were
+ certainly not Horatian.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely at your age, sir, and with your evident education&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say culture; that&rsquo;s the word in fashion nowadays.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, your evident culture, you must have made verses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Latin verses, yes; and occasionally Greek. I was obliged to do so at
+ school. It did not amuse me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Try English.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm shook his head. &ldquo;Not I. Every cobbler should stick to his last.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, put aside the verse-making: don&rsquo;t you find a sensible enjoyment in
+ those solitary summer walks, when you have Nature all to yourself,&mdash;enjoyment
+ in marking all the mobile evanescent changes in her face,&mdash;her laugh,
+ her smile, her tears, her very frown!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Assuming that by Nature you mean a mechanical series of external
+ phenomena, I object to your speaking of a machinery as if it were a person
+ of the feminine gender,&mdash;<i>her</i> laugh, <i>her</i> smile, etc. As
+ well talk of the laugh and smile of a steam-engine. But to descend to
+ common-sense. I grant there is some pleasure in solitary rambles in fine
+ weather and amid varying scenery. You say that it is a holiday excursion
+ that you are enjoying. I presume, therefore, that you have some practical
+ occupation which consumes the time that you do not devote to a holiday?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; I am not altogether an idler. I work sometimes, though not so hard
+ as I ought. &lsquo;Life is earnest,&rsquo; as the poet says. But I and my dog are
+ rested now, and as I have still a long walk before me I must wish you
+ good-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with a grave and sweet politeness of tone and
+ manner, which he could command at times, and which, in its difference from
+ merely conventional urbanity, was not without fascination,&mdash;&ldquo;I fear
+ that I have offended you by a question that must have seemed to you
+ inquisitive, perhaps impertinent; accept my excuse: it is very rarely that
+ I meet any one who interests me; and you do.&rdquo; As he spoke he offered his
+ hand, which the wayfarer shook very cordially.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should be a churl indeed if your question could have given me offence.
+ It is rather perhaps I who am guilty of impertinence, if I take advantage
+ of my seniority in years and tender you a counsel. Do not despise Nature
+ or regard her as a steam-engine; you will find in her a very agreeable and
+ conversable friend if you will cultivate her intimacy. And I don&rsquo;t know a
+ better mode of doing so at your age, and with your strong limbs, than
+ putting a knapsack on your shoulders and turning foot-traveller like
+ myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, I thank you for your counsel; and I trust we may meet again and
+ interchange ideas as to the thing you call Nature,&mdash;a thing which
+ science and art never appear to see with the same eyes. If to an artist
+ Nature has a soul, why, so has a steam-engine. Art gifts with soul all
+ matter that it contemplates: science turns all that is already gifted with
+ soul into matter. Good-day, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Kenelm turned back abruptly, and the traveller went his way, silently
+ and thoughtfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM retraced his steps homeward under the shade of his &ldquo;old hereditary
+ trees.&rdquo; One might have thought his path along the greenswards, and by the
+ side of the babbling rivulet, was pleasanter and more conducive to
+ peaceful thoughts than the broad, dusty thoroughfare along which plodded
+ the wanderer he had quitted. But the man addicted to revery forms his own
+ landscapes and colours his own skies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is,&rdquo; soliloquized Kenelm Chillingly, &ldquo;a strange yearning I have long
+ felt,&mdash;to get out of myself, to get, as it were, into another man&rsquo;s
+ skin, and have a little variety of thought and emotion. One&rsquo;s self is
+ always the same self; and that is why I yawn so often. But if I can&rsquo;t get
+ into another man&rsquo;s skin, the next best thing is to get as unlike myself as
+ I possibly can do. Let me see what is myself. Myself is Kenelm Chillingly,
+ son and heir to a rich gentleman. But a fellow with a knapsack on his
+ back, sleeping at wayside inns, is not at all like Kenelm Chillingly;
+ especially if he is very short of money and may come to want a dinner.
+ Perhaps that sort of fellow may take a livelier view of things: he can&rsquo;t
+ take a duller one. Courage, Myself: you and I can but try.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the next two days Kenelm was observed to be unusually pleasant. He
+ yawned much less frequently, walked with his father, played piquet with
+ his mother, was more like other people. Sir Peter was charmed: he ascribed
+ this happy change to the preparations he was making for Kenelm&rsquo;s
+ travelling in style. The proud father was in active correspondence with
+ his great London friends, seeking letters of introduction for Kenelm to
+ all the courts of Europe. Portmanteaus, with every modern convenience,
+ were ordered; an experienced courier, who could talk all languages and
+ cook French dishes if required, was invited to name his terms. In short,
+ every arrangement worthy a young patrician&rsquo;s entrance into the great world
+ was in rapid progress, when suddenly Kenelm Chillingly disappeared,
+ leaving behind him on Sir Peter&rsquo;s library table the following letter:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY VERY DEAR FATHER,&mdash;Obedient to your desire, I depart in search of
+ real life and real persons, or of the best imitations of them. Forgive me,
+ I beseech you, if I commence that search in my own way. I have seen enough
+ of ladies and gentlemen for the present: they must be all very much alike
+ in every part of the world. You desired me to be amused. I go to try if
+ that be possible. Ladies and gentlemen are not amusing; the more ladylike
+ or gentlemanlike they are, the more insipid I find them. My dear father, I
+ go in quest of adventure like Amadis of Gaul, like Don Quixote, like Gil
+ Blas, like Roderick Random; like, in short, the only people seeking real
+ life, the people who never existed except in books. I go on foot; I go
+ alone. I have provided myself with a larger amount of money than I ought
+ to spend, because every man must buy experience, and the first fees are
+ heavy. In fact, I have put fifty pounds into my pocket-book and into my
+ purse five sovereigns and seventeen shillings. This sum ought to last me a
+ year; but I dare say inexperience will do me out of it in a month, so we
+ will count it as nothing. Since you have asked me to fix my own allowance,
+ I will beg you kindly to commence it this day in advance, by an order to
+ your banker to cash my checks to the amount of five pounds, and to the
+ same amount monthly; namely, at the rate of sixty pounds a year. With that
+ sum I can&rsquo;t starve, and if I want more it may be amusing to work for it.
+ Pray don&rsquo;t send after me, or institute inquiries, or disturb the household
+ and set all the neighbourhood talking, by any mention either of my project
+ or of your surprise at it. I will not fail to write to you from time to
+ time. You will judge best what to say to my dear mother. If you tell her
+ the truth, which of course I should do did I tell her anything, my request
+ is virtually frustrated, and I shall be the talk of the county. You, I
+ know, don&rsquo;t think telling fibs is immoral when it happens to be
+ convenient, as it would be in this case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I expect to be absent a year or eighteen months; if I prolong my travels
+ it shall be in the way you proposed. I will then take my place in polite
+ society, call upon you to pay all expenses, and fib on my own account to
+ any extent required by that world of fiction which is peopled by illusions
+ and governed by shams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heaven bless you, my dear Father, and be quite sure that if I get into any
+ trouble requiring a friend, it is to you I shall turn. As yet I have no
+ other friend on earth, and with prudence and good luck I may escape the
+ infliction of any other friend.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Yours ever affectionately,
+
+ KENELM.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ P. S.&mdash;Dear Father, I open my letter in your library to say again
+ &ldquo;Bless you,&rdquo; and to tell you how fondly I kissed your old beaver gloves,
+ which I found on the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Sir Peter came to that postscript he took off his spectacles and
+ wiped them: they were very moist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he fell into a profound meditation. Sir Peter was, as I have said, a
+ learned man; he was also in some things a sensible man, and he had a
+ strong sympathy with the humorous side of his son&rsquo;s crotchety character.
+ What was to be said to Lady Chillingly? That matron was quite guiltless of
+ any crime which should deprive her of a husband&rsquo;s confidence in a matter
+ relating to her only son. She was a virtuous matron; morals
+ irreproachable, manners dignified, and <i>she-baronety</i>. Any one seeing
+ her for the first time would intuitively say, &ldquo;Your ladyship.&rdquo; Was this a
+ matron to be suppressed in any well-ordered domestic circle? Sir Peter&rsquo;s
+ conscience loudly answered, &ldquo;No;&rdquo; but when, putting conscience into his
+ pocket, he regarded the question at issue as a man of the world, Sir Peter
+ felt that to communicate the contents of his son&rsquo;s letter to Lady
+ Chillingly would be the foolishest thing he could possibly do. Did she
+ know that Kenelm had absconded with the family dignity invested in his
+ very name, no marital authority short of such abuses of power as
+ constitute the offence of cruelty in a wife&rsquo;s action for divorce from
+ social board and nuptial bed could prevent Lady Chillingly from summoning
+ all the grooms, sending them in all directions with strict orders to bring
+ back the runaway dead or alive; the walls would be placarded with
+ hand-bills, &ldquo;Strayed from his home,&rdquo; etc.; the police would be
+ telegraphing private instructions from town to town; the scandal would
+ stick to Kenelm Chillingly for life, accompanied with vague hints of
+ criminal propensities and insane hallucinations; he would be ever
+ afterwards pointed out as &ldquo;THE MAN WHO HAD DISAPPEARED.&rdquo; And to disappear
+ and to turn up again, instead of being murdered, is the most hateful thing
+ a man can do: all the newspapers bark at him, &ldquo;Tray, Blanche, Sweetheart,
+ and all;&rdquo; strict explanations of the unseemly fact of his safe existence
+ are demanded in the name of public decorum, and no explanations are
+ accepted; it is life saved, character lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter seized his hat and walked forth, not to deliberate whether to
+ fib or not to fib to the wife of his bosom, but to consider what kind of
+ fib would the most quickly sink into the bosom of his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few turns to and fro on the terrace sufficed for the conception and
+ maturing of the fib selected; a proof that Sir Peter was a practised
+ fibber. He re-entered the house, passed into her ladyship&rsquo;s habitual
+ sitting-room, and said with careless gayety, &ldquo;My old friend the Duke of
+ Clareville is just setting off on a tour to Switzerland with his family.
+ His youngest daughter, Lady Jane, is a pretty girl, and would not be a bad
+ match for Kenelm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady Jane, the youngest daughter with fair hair, whom I saw last as a
+ very charming child, nursing a lovely doll presented to her by the Empress
+ Eugenie,&mdash;a good match indeed for Kenelm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am glad you agree with me. Would it not be a favourable step towards
+ that alliance, and an excellent thing for Kenelm generally, if he were to
+ visit the Continent as one of the Duke&rsquo;s travelling party?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course it would.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you approve what I have done; the Duke starts the day after
+ to-morrow, and I have packed Kenelm off to town, with a letter to my old
+ friend. You will excuse all leave taking. You know that though the best of
+ sons he is an odd fellow; and seeing that I had talked him into it, I
+ struck while the iron was hot, and sent him off by the express at nine
+ o&rsquo;clock this morning, for fear that if I allowed any delay he would talk
+ himself out of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean to say Kenelm is actually gone? Good gracious.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter stole softly from the room, and summoning his valet, said, &ldquo;I
+ have sent Mr. Chillingly to London. Pack up the clothes he is likely to
+ want, so that he can have them sent at once, whenever he writes for them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, by a judicious violation of truth on the part of his father,
+ that exemplary truth-teller Kenelm Chillingly saved the honour of his
+ house and his own reputation from the breath of scandal and the
+ inquisition of the police. He was not &ldquo;THE MAN WHO HAD DISAPPEARED.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM CHILLINGLY had quitted the paternal home at daybreak before any of
+ the household was astir. &ldquo;Unquestionably,&rdquo; said he, as he walked along the
+ solitary lanes,&mdash;&ldquo;unquestionably I begin the world as poets begin
+ poetry, an imitator and a plagiarist. I am imitating an itinerant
+ verse-maker, as, no doubt, he began by imitating some other maker of
+ verse. But if there be anything in me, it will work itself out in original
+ form. And, after all, the verse-maker is not the inventor of ideas.
+ Adventure on foot is a notion that remounts to the age of fable. Hercules,
+ for instance; that was the way in which he got to heaven, as a
+ foot-traveller. How solitary the world is at this hour! Is it not for that
+ reason that this is of all hours the most beautiful?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he paused, and looked around and above. It was the very height of
+ summer. The sun was just rising over gentle sloping uplands. All the dews
+ on the hedgerows sparkled. There was not a cloud in the heavens. Up rose
+ from the green blades of corn a solitary skylark. His voice woke up the
+ other birds. A few minutes more and the joyous concert began. Kenelm
+ reverently doffed his hat, and bowed his head in mute homage and
+ thanksgiving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ABOUT nine o&rsquo;clock Kenelm entered a town some twelve miles distant from
+ his father&rsquo;s house, and towards which he had designedly made his way,
+ because in that town he was scarcely if at all known by sight, and he
+ might there make the purchases he required without attracting any marked
+ observation. He had selected for his travelling costume a shooting-dress,
+ as the simplest and least likely to belong to his rank as a gentleman. But
+ still in its very cut there was an air of distinction, and every labourer
+ he had met on the way had touched his hat to him. Besides, who wears a
+ shooting-dress in the middle of June, or a shooting-dress at all, unless
+ he be either a game-keeper or a gentleman licensed to shoot?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm entered a large store-shop for ready-made clothes and purchased a
+ suit such as might be worn on Sundays by a small country yeoman or
+ tenant-farmer of a petty holding,&mdash;a stout coarse broadcloth upper
+ garment, half coat, half jacket, with waistcoat to match, strong corduroy
+ trousers, a smart Belcher neckcloth, with a small stock of linen and
+ woollen socks in harmony with the other raiment. He bought also a leathern
+ knapsack, just big enough to contain this wardrobe, and a couple of books,
+ which with his combs and brushes he had brought away in his pockets; for
+ among all his trunks at home there was no knapsack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These purchases made and paid for, he passed quickly through the town, and
+ stopped at a humble inn at the outskirt, to which he was attracted by the
+ notice, &ldquo;Refreshment for man and beast.&rdquo; He entered a little sanded
+ parlour, which at that hour he had all to himself, called for breakfast,
+ and devoured the best part of a fourpenny loaf with a couple of hard eggs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus recruited, he again sallied forth, and deviating into a thick wood by
+ the roadside, he exchanged the habiliments with which he had left home for
+ those he had purchased, and by the help of one or two big stones sunk the
+ relinquished garments into a small but deep pool which he was lucky enough
+ to find in a bush-grown dell much haunted by snipes in the winter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;I really begin to think I have got out of myself. I
+ am in another man&rsquo;s skin; for what, after all, is a skin but a soul&rsquo;s
+ clothing, and what is clothing but a decenter skin? Of its own natural
+ skin every civilized soul is ashamed. It is the height of impropriety for
+ any one but the lowest kind of savage to show it. If the purest soul now
+ existent upon earth, the Pope of Rome&rsquo;s or the Archbishop of Canterbury&rsquo;s,
+ were to pass down the Strand with the skin which Nature gave to it bare to
+ the eye, it would be brought up before a magistrate, prosecuted by the
+ Society for the Suppression of Vice, and committed to jail as a public
+ nuisance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Decidedly I am now in another man&rsquo;s skin. Kenelm Chillingly, I no longer
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Remain
+
+ &ldquo;Yours faithfully;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But am,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;With profound consideration,
+
+ &ldquo;Your obedient humble servant.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ With light step and elated crest, the wanderer, thus transformed, sprang
+ from the wood into the dusty thoroughfare. He had travelled on for about
+ an hour, meeting but few other passengers, when he heard to the right a
+ loud shrill young voice, &ldquo;Help! help! I will not go; I tell you, I will
+ not!&rdquo; Just before him stood, by a high five-barred gate, a pensive gray
+ cob attached to a neat-looking gig. The bridle was loose on the cob&rsquo;s
+ neck. The animal was evidently accustomed to stand quietly when ordered to
+ do so, and glad of the opportunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cries, &ldquo;Help, help!&rdquo; were renewed, mingled with louder tones in a
+ rougher voice, tones of wrath and menace. Evidently these sounds did not
+ come from the cob. Kenelm looked over the gate, and saw a few yards
+ distant in a grass field a well-dressed boy struggling violently against a
+ stout middle-aged man who was rudely hauling him along by the arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chivalry natural to a namesake of the valiant Sir Kenelm Digby was
+ instantly aroused. He vaulted over the gate, seized the man by the collar,
+ and exclaimed, &ldquo;For shame! what are you doing to that poor boy? let him
+ go!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why the devil do you interfere?&rdquo; cried the stout man, his eyes glaring
+ and his lips foaming with rage. &ldquo;Ah, are you the villain? yes, no doubt of
+ it. I&rsquo;ll give it to you, jackanapes,&rdquo; and still grasping the boy with one
+ hand, with the other the stout man darted a blow at Kenelm, from which
+ nothing less than the practised pugilistic skill and natural alertness of
+ the youth thus suddenly assaulted could have saved his eyes and nose. As
+ it was, the stout man had the worst of it: the blow was parried, returned
+ with a dexterous manoeuvre of Kenelm&rsquo;s right foot in Cornish fashion, and
+ <i>procumbit humi bos</i>; the stout man lay sprawling on his back. The
+ boy, thus released, seized hold of Kenelm by the arm, and hurrying him
+ along up the field, cried, &ldquo;Come, come before he gets up! save me! save
+ me!&rdquo; Ere he had recovered his own surprise, the boy had dragged Kenelm to
+ the gate, and jumped into the gig, sobbing forth, &ldquo;Get in, get in, I can&rsquo;t
+ drive; get in, and drive&mdash;you. Quick! Quick!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo; began Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get in, or I shall go mad.&rdquo; Kenelm obeyed; the boy gave him the reins,
+ and seizing the whip himself, applied it lustily to the cob. On sprang the
+ cob. &ldquo;Stop, stop, stop, thief! villain! Holloa! thieves! thieves! thieves!
+ stop!&rdquo; cried a voice behind. Kenelm involuntarily turned his head and
+ beheld the stout man perched upon the gate and gesticulating furiously. It
+ was but a glimpse; again the whip was plied, the cob frantically broke
+ into a gallop, the gig jolted and bumped and swerved, and it was not till
+ they had put a good mile between themselves and the stout man that Kenelm
+ succeeded in obtaining possession of the whip and calming the cob into a
+ rational trot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young gentleman,&rdquo; then said Kenelm, &ldquo;perhaps you will have the goodness
+ to explain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By and by; get on, that&rsquo;s a good fellow; you shall be well paid for it,
+ well and handsomely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth Kenelm, gravely, &ldquo;I know that in real life payment and service
+ naturally go together. But we will put aside the payment till you tell me
+ what is to be the service. And first, whither am I to drive you? We are
+ coming to a place where three roads meet; which of the three shall I
+ take?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t know; there is a finger-post. I want to get to,&mdash;but it
+ is a secret; you&rsquo;ll not betray me? Promise,&mdash;swear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t swear except when I am in a passion, which, I am sorry to say, is
+ very seldom; and I don&rsquo;t promise till I know what I promise; neither do I
+ go on driving runaway boys in other men&rsquo;s gigs unless I know that I am
+ taking them to a safe place, where their papas and mammas can get at
+ them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no papa, no mamma,&rdquo; said the boy, dolefully and with quivering
+ lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor boy! I suppose that burly brute is your schoolmaster, and you are
+ running away home for fear of a flogging.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy burst out laughing; a pretty, silvery, merry laugh: it thrilled
+ through Kenelm Chillingly. &ldquo;No, he would not flog me: he is not a
+ schoolmaster; he is worse than that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it possible? What is he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An uncle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hum! uncles are proverbial for cruelty; were so in the classical days,
+ and Richard III. was the only scholar in his family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh! classical and Richard III.!&rdquo; said the boy, startled, and looking
+ attentively at the pensive driver. &ldquo;Who are you? you talk like a
+ gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg pardon. I&rsquo;ll not do so again if I can help it.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Decidedly,&rdquo;
+ thought Kenelm, &ldquo;I am beginning to be amused. What a blessing it is to get
+ into another man&rsquo;s skin, and another man&rsquo;s gig too!&rdquo; Aloud, &ldquo;Here we are
+ at the fingerpost. If you are running away from your uncle, it is time to
+ inform me where you are running to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the boy leaned over the gig and examined the fingerpost. Then he
+ clapped his hands joyfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right! I thought so, &lsquo;To Tor-Hadham, eighteen miles.&rsquo; That&rsquo;s the road
+ to Tor-Hadham.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean to say I am to drive you all that way,&mdash;eighteen miles?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And to whom are you going?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will tell you by and by. Do go on; do, pray. I can&rsquo;t drive&mdash;never
+ drove in my life&mdash;or I would not ask you. Pray, pray, don&rsquo;t desert
+ me! If you are a gentleman you will not; and if you are not a gentleman, I
+ have got L10 in my purse, which you shall have when I am safe at
+ Tor-Hadham. Don&rsquo;t hesitate: my whole life is at stake!&rdquo; And the boy began
+ once more to sob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm directed the pony&rsquo;s head towards Tor-Hadham, and the boy ceased to
+ sob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a good, dear fellow,&rdquo; said the boy, wiping his eyes. &ldquo;I am afraid
+ I am taking you very much out of your road.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no road in particular, and would as soon go to Tor-Hadham, which I
+ have never seen, as anywhere else. I am but a wanderer on the face of the
+ earth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you lost your papa and mamma too? Why, you are not much older than I
+ am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Little gentleman,&rdquo; said Kenelm, gravely, &ldquo;I am just of age, and you, I
+ suppose, are about fourteen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What fun!&rdquo; cried the boy, abruptly. &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it fun?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will not be fun if I am sentenced to penal servitude for stealing your
+ uncle&rsquo;s gig, and robbing his little nephew of L10. By the by, that
+ choleric relation of yours meant to knock down somebody else when he
+ struck at me. He asked, &lsquo;Are you the villain?&rsquo; Pray who is the villain? he
+ is evidently in your confidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Villain! he is the most honourable, high-minded&mdash;But no matter now:
+ I&rsquo;ll introduce you to him when we reach Tor-Hadham. Whip that pony: he is
+ crawling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is up hill: a good man spares his beast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No art and no eloquence could extort from his young companion any further
+ explanation than Kenelm had yet received; and indeed, as the journey
+ advanced, and they approached their destination, both parties sank into
+ silence. Kenelm was seriously considering that his first day&rsquo;s experience
+ of real life in the skin of another had placed in some peril his own. He
+ had knocked down a man evidently respectable and well to do, had carried
+ off that man&rsquo;s nephew, and made free with that man&rsquo;s goods and chattels;
+ namely, his gig and horse. All this might be explained satisfactorily to a
+ justice of the peace, but how? By returning to his former skin; by avowing
+ himself to be Kenelm Chillingly, a distinguished university medalist, heir
+ to no ignoble name and some L10,000 a year. But then what a scandal! he
+ who abhorred scandal; in vulgar parlance, what a &ldquo;row!&rdquo; he who denied that
+ the very word &ldquo;row&rdquo; was sanctioned by any classic authorities in the
+ English language. He would have to explain how he came to be found
+ disguised, carefully disguised, in garments such as no baronet&rsquo;s eldest
+ son&mdash;even though that baronet be the least ancestral man of mark whom
+ it suits the convenience of a First Minister to recommend to the Sovereign
+ for exaltation over the rank of Mister&mdash;was ever beheld in, unless he
+ had taken flight to the gold-diggings. Was this a position in which the
+ heir of the Chillinglys, a distinguished family, whose coat-of-arms dated
+ from the earliest authenticated period of English heraldry under Edward
+ III. as Three Fishes <i>azure</i>, could be placed without grievous slur
+ on the cold and ancient blood of the Three Fishes?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then individually to himself, Kenelm, irrespectively of the Three
+ Fishes,&mdash;what a humiliation! He had put aside his respected father&rsquo;s
+ deliberate preparations for his entrance into real life; he had perversely
+ chosen his own walk on his own responsibility; and here, before half the
+ first day was over, what an infernal scrape he had walked himself into!
+ and what was his excuse? A wretched little boy, sobbing and chuckling by
+ turns, and yet who was clever enough to twist Kenelm Chillingly round his
+ finger; twist <i>him</i>, a man who thought himself so much wiser than his
+ parents,&mdash;a man who had gained honours at the University,&mdash;a man
+ of the gravest temperament,&mdash;a man of so nicely critical a turn of
+ mind that there was not a law of art or nature in which he did not detect
+ a flaw; that he should get himself into this mess was, to say the least of
+ it, an uncomfortable reflection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy himself, as Kenelm glanced at him from time to time, became impish
+ and Will-of-the-Wisp-ish. Sometimes he laughed to himself loudly,
+ sometimes he wept to himself quietly; sometimes, neither laughing nor
+ weeping, he seemed absorbed in reflection. Twice as they came nearer to
+ the town of Tor-Hadham, Kenelm nudged the boy, and said, &ldquo;My boy, I must
+ talk with you;&rdquo; and twice the boy, withdrawing his arm from the nudge, had
+ answered dreamily, &ldquo;Hush! I am thinking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so they entered the town of Tor-Hadham, the cob very much done up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;NOW, young sir,&rdquo; said Kenelm, in a tone calm, but peremptory,&mdash;&ldquo;now
+ we are in the town, where am I to take you? and wherever it be, there to
+ say good-by.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, not good-by. Stay with me a little bit. I begin to feel frightened,
+ and I am so friendless;&rdquo; and the boy, who had before resented the
+ slightest nudge on the part of Kenelm, now wound his arm into Kenelm&rsquo;s,
+ and clung to him caressingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I don&rsquo;t know what my readers have hitherto thought of Kenelm Chillingly:
+ but, amid all the curves and windings of his whimsical humour, there was
+ one way that went straight to his heart; you had only to be weaker than
+ himself and ask his protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned round abruptly; he forgot all the strangeness of his position,
+ and replied: &ldquo;Little brute that you are, I&rsquo;ll be shot if I forsake you if
+ in trouble. But some compassion is also due to the cob: for his sake say
+ where we are to stop.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure I can&rsquo;t say: I never was here before. Let us go to a nice quiet
+ inn. Drive slowly: we&rsquo;ll look out for one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tor-Hadham was a large town, not nominally the capital of the county, but,
+ in point of trade and bustle and life, virtually the capital. The straight
+ street, through which the cob went as slowly as if he had been drawing a
+ Triumphal Car up the Sacred Hill, presented an animated appearance. The
+ shops had handsome facades and plate-glass windows; the pavements
+ exhibited a lively concourse, evidently not merely of business, but of
+ pleasure, for a large proportion of the passers-by was composed of the
+ fair sex, smartly dressed, many of them young and some pretty. In fact a
+ regiment of her Majesty&rsquo;s &mdash;&mdash;-th Hussars had been sent into the
+ town two days before; and, between the officers of that fortunate regiment
+ and the fair sex in that hospitable town, there was a natural emulation
+ which should make the greater number of slain and wounded. The advent of
+ these heroes, professional subtracters from hostile and multipliers of
+ friendly populations, gave a stimulus to the caterers for those amusements
+ which bring young folks together,&mdash;archery-meetings, rifle-shootings,
+ concerts, balls, announced in bills attached to boards and walls and
+ exposed at shop-windows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy looked eagerly forth from the gig, scanning especially these
+ advertisements, till at length he uttered an excited exclamation, &ldquo;Ah, I
+ was right: there it is!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There what is?&rdquo; asked Kenelm,&mdash;&ldquo;the inn?&rdquo; His companion did not
+ answer, but Kenelm following the boy&rsquo;s eye perceived an immense hand-bill.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;TO-MORROW NIGHT THEATRE OPENS.
+
+ &ldquo;RICHARD III. Mr. COMPTON.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do just ask where the theatre is,&rdquo; said the boy, in a whisper, turning
+ away his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm stopped the cob, made the inquiry, and was directed to take the
+ next turning to the right. In a few minutes the compo portico of an ugly
+ dilapidated building, dedicated to the Dramatic Muses, presented itself at
+ the angle of a dreary, deserted lane. The walls were placarded with
+ play-bills, in which the name of Compton stood forth as gigantic as
+ capitals could make it. The boy drew a sigh. &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;let us look
+ out for an inn near here,&mdash;the nearest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No inn, however, beyond the rank of a small and questionable looking
+ public-house was apparent, until at a distance somewhat remote from the
+ theatre, and in a quaint, old-fashioned, deserted square, a neat, newly
+ whitewashed house displayed upon its frontispiece, in large black letters
+ of funereal aspect, &ldquo;Temperance Hotel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop,&rdquo; said the boy; &ldquo;don&rsquo;t you think that would suit us? it looks
+ quiet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Could not look more quiet if it were a tombstone,&rdquo; replied Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy put his hand upon the reins and stopped the cob. The cob was in
+ that condition that the slightest touch sufficed to stop him, though he
+ turned his head somewhat ruefully as if in doubt whether hay and corn
+ would be within the regulations of a Temperance Hotel. Kenelm descended
+ and entered the house. A tidy woman emerged from a sort of glass cupboard
+ which constituted the bar, minus the comforting drinks associated with the
+ <i>beau ideal</i> of a bar, but which displayed instead two large
+ decanters of cold water with tumblers <i>a discretion</i>, and sundry
+ plates of thin biscuits and sponge-cakes. This tidy woman politely
+ inquired what was his &ldquo;pleasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pleasure,&rdquo; answered Kenelm, with his usual gravity, &ldquo;is not the word I
+ should myself have chosen. But could you oblige my horse&mdash;I mean <i>that</i>
+ horse&mdash;with a stall and a feed of oats, and that young gentleman and
+ myself with a private room and a dinner?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dinner!&rdquo; echoed the hostess,&mdash;&ldquo;dinner!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A thousand pardons, ma&rsquo;am. But if the word &lsquo;dinner&rsquo; shock you I retract
+ it, and would say instead something to eat and drink.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Drink! This is strictly a Temperance Hotel, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, if you don&rsquo;t eat and drink here,&rdquo; exclaimed Kenelm, fiercely, for he
+ was famished, &ldquo;I wish you good morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay a bit, sir. We do eat and drink here. But we are very simple folks.
+ We allow no fermented liquors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not even a glass of beer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only ginger-beer. Alcohols are strictly forbidden. We have tea and coffee
+ and milk. But most of our customers prefer the pure liquid. As for eating,
+ sir,&mdash;anything you order, in reason.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm shook his head and was retreating, when the boy, who had sprung
+ from the gig and overheard the conversation, cried petulantly, &ldquo;What does
+ it signify? Who wants fermented liquors? Water will do very well. And as
+ for dinner,&mdash;anything convenient. Please, ma&rsquo;am, show us into a
+ private room: I am so tired.&rdquo; The last words were said in a caressing
+ manner, and so prettily, that the hostess at once changed her tone, and
+ muttering, &ldquo;Poor boy!&rdquo; and, in a still more subdued mutter, &ldquo;What a pretty
+ face he has!&rdquo; nodded, and led the way up a very clean old-fashioned
+ staircase.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the horse and gig, where are they to go?&rdquo; said Kenelm, with a pang of
+ conscience on reflecting how ill treated hitherto had been both horse and
+ owner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, as for the horse and gig, sir, you will find Jukes&rsquo;s livery-stables a
+ few yards farther down. We don&rsquo;t take in horses ourselves; our customers
+ seldom keep them: but you will find the best of accommodation at Jukes&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm conducted the cob to the livery-stables thus indicated, and waited
+ to see him walked about to cool, well rubbed down, and made comfortable
+ over half a peck of oats,&mdash;for Kenelm Chillingly was a humane man to
+ the brute creation,&mdash;and then, in a state of ravenous appetite,
+ returned to the Temperance Hotel, and was ushered into a small
+ drawing-room, with a small bit of carpet in the centre, six small chairs
+ with cane seats, prints on the walls descriptive of the various effects of
+ intoxicating liquors upon sundry specimens of mankind,&mdash;some
+ resembling ghosts, others fiends, and all with a general aspect of beggary
+ and perdition; contrasted by Happy-Family pictures,&mdash;smiling wives,
+ portly husbands, rosy infants, emblematic of the beatified condition of
+ members of the Temperance Society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A table with a spotless cloth, and knives and forks for two, chiefly,
+ however, attracted Kenelm&rsquo;s attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy was standing by the window, seemingly gazing on a small aquarium
+ which was there placed, and contained the usual variety of small fishes,
+ reptiles, and insects, enjoying the pleasures of Temperance in its native
+ element, including, of course, an occasional meal upon each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are they going to give us to eat?&rdquo; inquired Kenelm. &ldquo;It must be
+ ready by this time I should think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he gave a brisk tug at the bell-pull. The boy advanced from the
+ window, and as he did so Kenelm was struck with the grace of his bearing,
+ and the improvement in his looks, now that he was without his hat, and
+ rest and ablution had refreshed from heat and dust the delicate bloom of
+ his complexion. There was no doubt about it that he was an exceedingly
+ pretty boy, and if he lived to be a man would make many a lady&rsquo;s heart
+ ache. It was with a certain air of gracious superiority such as is seldom
+ warranted by superior rank if it be less than royal, and chiefly becomes a
+ marked seniority in years, that this young gentleman, approaching the
+ solemn heir of the Chillinglys, held out his hand and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, you have behaved extremely well, and I thank you very much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Royal Highness is condescending to say so,&rdquo; replied Kenelm
+ Chillingly, bowing low, &ldquo;but have you ordered dinner? and what are they
+ going to give us? No one seems to answer the bell here. As it is a
+ Temperance Hotel, probably all the servants are drunk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why should they be drunk at a Temperance Hotel?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why! because, as a general rule, people who flagrantly pretend to
+ anything are the reverse of that which they pretend to. A man who sets up
+ for a saint is sure to be a sinner, and a man who boasts that he is a
+ sinner is sure to have some feeble, maudlin, snivelling bit of saintship
+ about him which is enough to make him a humbug. Masculine honesty, whether
+ it be saint-like or sinner-like, does not label itself either saint or
+ sinner. Fancy Saint Augustine labelling himself saint, or Robert Burns
+ sinner; and therefore, though, little boy, you have probably not read the
+ poems of Robert Burns, and have certainly not read the &lsquo;Confessions&rsquo; of
+ Saint Augustine, take my word for it, that both those personages were very
+ good fellows; and with a little difference of training and experience,
+ Burns might have written the &lsquo;Confessions&rsquo; and Augustine the poems. Powers
+ above! I am starving. What did you order for dinner, and when is it to
+ appear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy, who had opened to an enormous width a naturally large pair of
+ hazel eyes, while his tall companion in fustian trousers and Belcher
+ neckcloth spoke thus patronizingly of Robert Burns and Saint Augustine,
+ now replied, with rather a deprecatory and shamefaced aspect, &ldquo;I am sorry
+ I was not thinking of dinner. I was not so mindful of you as I ought to
+ have been. The landlady asked me what we would have. I said, &lsquo;What you
+ like;&rsquo; and the landlady muttered something about&mdash;&rdquo; here the boy
+ hesitated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. About what? Mutton-chops?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. Cauliflowers and rice-pudding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm Chillingly never swore, never raged. Where ruder beings of human
+ mould swore or raged, he vented displeasure in an expression of
+ countenance so pathetically melancholic and lugubrious that it would have
+ melted the heart of an Hyrcanian tiger. He turned his countenance now on
+ the boy, and murmuring &ldquo;Cauliflower!&mdash;Starvation!&rdquo; sank into one of
+ the cane-bottomed chairs, and added quietly, &ldquo;so much for human
+ gratitude.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy was evidently smitten to the heart by the bitter sweetness of this
+ reproach. There were almost tears in his voice, as he said falteringly,
+ &ldquo;Pray forgive me, I <i>was</i> ungrateful. I&rsquo;ll run down and see what
+ there is;&rdquo; and, suiting the action to the word, he disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm remained motionless; in fact he was plunged into one of those
+ reveries, or rather absorptions of inward and spiritual being, into which
+ it is said that the consciousness of the Indian dervish can be by
+ prolonged fasting preternaturally resolved. The appetite of all men of
+ powerful muscular development is of a nature far exceeding the properties
+ of any reasonable number of cauliflowers and rice-puddings to satisfy.
+ Witness Hercules himself, whose cravings for substantial nourishment were
+ the standing joke of the classic poets. I don&rsquo;t know that Kenelm
+ Chillingly would have beaten the Theban Hercules either in fighting or in
+ eating; but, when he wanted to fight or when he wanted to eat, Hercules
+ would have had to put forth all his strength not to be beaten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After ten minutes&rsquo; absence, the boy came back radiant. He tapped Kenelm on
+ the shoulder, and said playfully, &ldquo;I made them cut a whole loin into
+ chops, besides the cauliflower; and such a big rice-pudding, and eggs and
+ bacon too! Cheer up! it will be served in a minute.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A-h!&rdquo; said Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are good people; they did not mean to stint you: but most of their
+ customers, it seems, live upon vegetables and farinaceous food. There is a
+ society here formed upon that principle; the landlady says they are
+ philosophers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the word &ldquo;philosophers&rdquo; Kenelm&rsquo;s crest rose as that of a practised
+ hunter at the cry of &ldquo;Yoiks! Tally-ho!&rdquo; &ldquo;Philosophers!&rdquo; said he,
+ &ldquo;philosophers indeed! O ignoramuses, who do not even know the structure of
+ the human tooth! Look you, little boy, if nothing were left on this earth
+ of the present race of man, as we are assured upon great authority will be
+ the case one of these days,&mdash;and a mighty good riddance it will be,&mdash;if
+ nothing, I say, of man were left except fossils of his teeth and his
+ thumbs, a philosopher of that superior race which will succeed to man
+ would at once see in those relics all his characteristics and all his
+ history; would say, comparing his thumb with the talons of an eagle, the
+ claws of a tiger, the hoof of a horse, the owner of that thumb must have
+ been lord over creatures with talons and claws and hoofs. You may say the
+ monkey tribe has thumbs. True; but compare an ape&rsquo;s thumb with a man&rsquo;s:
+ could the biggest ape&rsquo;s thumb have built Westminster Abbey? But even
+ thumbs are trivial evidence of man as compared with his teeth. Look at his
+ teeth!&rdquo;&mdash;here Kenelm expanded his jaws from ear to ear and displayed
+ semicircles of ivory, so perfect for the purposes of mastication that the
+ most artistic dentist might have despaired of his power to imitate them,&mdash;&ldquo;look,
+ I say, at his teeth!&rdquo; The boy involuntarily recoiled. &ldquo;Are the teeth those
+ of a miserable cauliflower-eater? or is it purely by farinaceous food that
+ the proprietor of teeth like man&rsquo;s obtains the rank of the sovereign
+ destroyer of creation? No, little boy, no,&rdquo; continued Kenelm, closing his
+ jaws, but advancing upon the infant, who at each stride receded towards
+ the aquarium,&mdash;&ldquo;no; man is the master of the world, because of all
+ created beings he devours the greatest variety and the greatest number of
+ created things. His teeth evince that man can live upon every soil from
+ the torrid to the frozen zone, because man can eat everything that other
+ creatures cannot eat. And the formation of his teeth proves it. A tiger
+ can eat a deer; so can man: but a tiger can&rsquo;t eat an eel; man can. An
+ elephant can eat cauliflowers and rice-pudding; so can man! but an
+ elephant can&rsquo;t eat a beefsteak; man can. In sum, man can live everywhere,
+ because he can eat anything, thanks to his dental formation!&rdquo; concluded
+ Kenelm, making a prodigious stride towards the boy. &ldquo;Man, when everything
+ else fails him, eats his own species.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t; you frighten me,&rdquo; said the boy. &ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; clapping his hands with a
+ sensation of gleeful relief, &ldquo;here come the mutton-chops!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wonderfully clean, well-washed, indeed well-washed-out, middle-aged
+ parlour-maid now appeared, dish in hand. Putting the dish on the table and
+ taking off the cover, the handmaiden said civilly, though frigidly, like
+ one who lived upon salad and cold water, &ldquo;Mistress is sorry to have kept
+ you waiting, but she thought you were Vegetarians.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After helping his young friend to a mutton-chop, Kenelm helped himself,
+ and replied gravely, &ldquo;Tell your mistress that if she had only given us
+ vegetables, I should have eaten you. Tell her that though man is partially
+ graminivorous, he is principally carnivorous. Tell her that though a swine
+ eats cabbages and such like, yet where a swine can get a baby, it eats the
+ baby. Tell her,&rdquo; continued Kenelm (now at his third chop), &ldquo;that there is
+ no animal that in digestive organs more resembles man than a swine. Ask
+ her if there is any baby in the house; if so, it would be safe for the
+ baby to send up some more chops.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the acutest observer could rarely be quite sure when Kenelm Chillingly
+ was in jest or in earnest, the parlour-maid paused a moment and attempted
+ a pale smile. Kenelm lifted his dark eyes, unspeakably sad and profound,
+ and said mournfully, &ldquo;I should be so sorry for the baby. Bring the chops!&rdquo;
+ The parlour-maid vanished. The boy laid down his knife and fork, and
+ looked fixedly and inquisitively on Kenelm. Kenelm, unheeding the look,
+ placed the last chop on the boy&rsquo;s plate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No more,&rdquo; cried the boy, impulsively, and returned the chop to the dish.
+ &ldquo;I have dined: I have had enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Little boy, you lie,&rdquo; said Kenelm; &ldquo;you have not had enough to keep body
+ and soul together. Eat that chop or I shall thrash you: whatever I say I
+ do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somehow or other the boy felt quelled; he ate the chop in silence, again
+ looked at Kenelm&rsquo;s face, and said to himself, &ldquo;I am afraid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parlour-maid here entered with a fresh supply of chops and a dish of
+ bacon and eggs, soon followed by a rice-pudding baked in a tin dish, and
+ of size sufficient to have nourished a charity school. When the repast was
+ finished, Kenelm seemed to forget the dangerous properties of the
+ carnivorous animal; and stretching himself indolently out, appeared to be
+ as innocently ruminative as the most domestic of animals graminivorous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then said the boy, rather timidly, &ldquo;May I ask you another favour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it to knock down another uncle, or to steal another gig and cob?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it is very simple: it is merely to find out the address of a friend
+ here; and when found to give him a note from me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does the commission press? &lsquo;After dinner, rest a while,&rsquo; saith the
+ proverb; and proverbs are so wise that no one can guess the author of
+ them. They are supposed to be fragments of the philosophy of the
+ antediluvians: came to us packed up in the ark.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Really, indeed,&rdquo; said the boy, seriously. &ldquo;How interesting! No, my
+ commission does not press for an hour or so. Do you think, sir, they had
+ any drama before the Deluge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Drama! not a doubt of it. Men who lived one or two thousand years had
+ time to invent and improve everything; and a play could have had its
+ natural length then. It would not have been necessary to crowd the whole
+ history of Macbeth, from his youth to his old age, into an absurd epitome
+ of three hours. One cannot trace a touch of real human nature in any
+ actor&rsquo;s delineation of that very interesting Scotchman, because the actor
+ always comes on the stage as if he were the same age when he murdered
+ Duncan, and when, in his sear and yellow leaf, he was lopped off by
+ Macduff.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think Macbeth was young when he murdered Duncan?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly. No man ever commits a first crime of violent nature, such as
+ murder, after thirty; if he begins before, he may go on up to any age. But
+ youth is the season for commencing those wrong calculations which belong
+ to irrational hope and the sense of physical power. You thus read in the
+ newspapers that the persons who murder their sweethearts are generally
+ from two to six and twenty; and persons who murder from other motives than
+ love&mdash;that is, from revenge, avarice, or ambition&mdash;are generally
+ about twenty-eight,&mdash;Iago&rsquo;s age. Twenty-eight is the usual close of
+ the active season for getting rid of one&rsquo;s fellow-creatures; a
+ prize-fighter falls off after that age. I take it that Macbeth was about
+ twenty-eight when he murdered Duncan, and from about fifty-four to sixty
+ when he began to whine about missing the comforts of old age. But can any
+ audience understand that difference of years in seeing a three-hours&rsquo;
+ play? or does any actor ever pretend to impress it on the audience, and
+ appear as twenty-eight in the first act and a sexagenarian in the fifth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never thought of that,&rdquo; said the boy, evidently interested. &ldquo;But I
+ never saw &lsquo;Macbeth.&rsquo; I have seen &lsquo;Richard III.:&rsquo; is not that nice? Don&rsquo;t
+ you dote on the play? I do. What a glorious life an actor&rsquo;s must be!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm, who had been hitherto rather talking to himself than to his
+ youthful companion, here roused his attention, looked on the boy intently,
+ and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see you are stage-stricken. You have run away from home in order to
+ turn player, and I should not wonder if this note you want me to give is
+ for the manager of the theatre or one of his company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young face that encountered Kenelm&rsquo;s dark eye became very flushed, but
+ set and defiant in its expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what if it were? would not you give it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! help a child of your age run away from his home, to go upon the
+ stage against the consent of his relations? Certainly not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not a child; but that has nothing to do with it. I don&rsquo;t want to go
+ on the stage, at all events without the consent of the person who has a
+ right to dictate my actions. My note is not to the manager of the theatre,
+ nor to one of his company; but it is to a gentleman who condescends to act
+ here for a few nights; a thorough gentleman,&mdash;a great actor,&mdash;my
+ friend, the only friend I have in the world. I say frankly I have run away
+ from home so that he may have that note, and if you will not give it some
+ one else will!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy had risen while he spoke, and he stood erect beside the recumbent
+ Kenelm, his lips quivering, his eyes suffused with suppressed tears, but
+ his whole aspect resolute and determined. Evidently, if he did not get his
+ own way in this world, it would not be for want of will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will take your note,&rdquo; said Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There it is; give it into the hands of the person it is addressed to,&mdash;Mr.
+ Herbert Compton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM took his way to the theatre, and inquired of the door-keeper for
+ Mr. Herbert Compton. That functionary replied, &ldquo;Mr. Compton does not act
+ to-night, and is not in the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where does he lodge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door-keeper pointed to a grocer&rsquo;s shop on the other side of the way,
+ and said tersely, &ldquo;There, private door; knock and ring.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm did as he was directed. A slatternly maid-servant opened the door,
+ and, in answer to his interrogatory, said that Mr. Compton was at home,
+ but at supper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sorry to disturb him,&rdquo; said Kenelm, raising his voice, for he heard
+ a clatter of knives and plates within a room hard by at his left, &ldquo;but my
+ business requires to see him forthwith;&rdquo; and, pushing the maid aside, he
+ entered at once the adjoining banquet-hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before a savoury stew smelling strongly of onions sat a man very much at
+ his ease, without coat or neckcloth,&mdash;a decidedly handsome man, his
+ hair cut short and his face closely shaven, as befits an actor who has
+ wigs and beards of all hues and forms at his command. The man was not
+ alone; opposite to him sat a lady, who might be a few years younger, of a
+ somewhat faded complexion, but still pretty, with good stage features and
+ a profusion of blond ringlets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Compton, I presume,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with a solemn bow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My name is Compton: any message from the theatre? or what do you want
+ with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&mdash;nothing!&rdquo; replied Kenelm; and then deepening his naturally
+ mournful voice into tones ominous and tragic, continued, &ldquo;By whom you are
+ wanted let this explain;&rdquo; therewith he placed in Mr. Compton&rsquo;s hand the
+ letter with which he was charged, and stretching his arms and interlacing
+ his fingers in the <i>pose</i> of Talma as Julius Caesar, added, &ldquo;&lsquo;Qu&rsquo;en
+ dis-tu, Brute?&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether it was from the sombre aspect and awe-inspiring delivery of the
+ messenger, or the sight of the handwriting on the address of the missive,
+ Mr. Compton&rsquo;s countenance suddenly fell, and his hand rested irresolute,
+ as if not daring to open the letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind me, dear,&rdquo; said the lady with blond ringlets, in a tone of
+ stinging affability: &ldquo;read your <i>billet-doux</i>; don&rsquo;t keep the young
+ man waiting, love!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense, Matilda, nonsense! <i>billet-doux</i> indeed! more likely a
+ bill from Duke the tailor. Excuse me for a moment, my dear. Follow me,
+ sir,&rdquo; and rising, still with shirtsleeves uncovered, he quitted the room,
+ closing the door after him, motioned Kenelm into a small parlour on the
+ opposite side of the passage, and by the light of a suspended gas-lamp ran
+ his eye hastily over the letter, which, though it seemed very short, drew
+ from him sundry exclamations. &ldquo;Good heavens, how very absurd! what&rsquo;s to be
+ done?&rdquo; Then, thrusting the letter into his trousers-pocket, he fixed upon
+ Kenelm a very brilliant pair of dark eyes, which soon dropped before the
+ steadfast look of that saturnine adventurer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you in the confidence of the writer of this letter?&rdquo; asked Mr.
+ Compton, rather confusedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not the confidant of the writer,&rdquo; answered Kenelm, &ldquo;but for the time
+ being I am the protector!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Protector!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Protector.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Compton again eyed the messenger, and this time fully realizing the
+ gladiatorial development of that dark stranger&rsquo;s physical form, he grew
+ many shades paler, and involuntarily retreated towards the bell-pull.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a short pause, he said, &ldquo;I am requested to call on the writer. If I
+ do so, may I understand that the interview will be strictly private?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So far as I am concerned, yes: on the condition that no attempt be made
+ to withdraw the writer from the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not, certainly not; quite the contrary,&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Compton,
+ with genuine animation. &ldquo;Say I will call in half an hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will give your message,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with a polite inclination of his
+ head; &ldquo;and pray pardon me if I remind you that I styled myself the
+ protector of your correspondent, and if the slightest advantage be taken
+ of that correspondent&rsquo;s youth and inexperience or the smallest
+ encouragement be given to plans of abduction from home and friends, the
+ stage will lose an ornament and Herbert Compton vanish from the scene.&rdquo;
+ With these words Kenelm left the player standing aghast. Gaining the
+ street-door, a lad with a band-box ran against him and was nearly upset.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stupid,&rdquo; cried the lad, &ldquo;can&rsquo;t you see where you are going? Give this to
+ Mrs. Compton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should deserve the title you give if I did for nothing the business for
+ which you are paid,&rdquo; replied Kenelm, sententiously, and striding on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I HAVE fulfilled my mission,&rdquo; said Kenelm, on rejoining his travelling
+ companion. &ldquo;Mr. Compton said he would be here in half an hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You saw him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course: I promised to give your letter into his own hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was he alone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; at supper with his wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His wife! what do you mean, sir?&mdash;wife! he has no wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Appearances are deceitful. At least he was with a lady who called him
+ &lsquo;dear&rsquo; and &lsquo;love&rsquo; in as spiteful a tone of voice as if she had been his
+ wife; and as I was coming out of his street-door a lad who ran against me
+ asked me to give a band-box to Mrs. Compton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy turned as white as death, staggered back a few steps, and dropped
+ into a chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A suspicion which during his absence had suggested itself to Kenelm&rsquo;s
+ inquiring mind now took strong confirmation. He approached softly, drew a
+ chair close to the companion whom fate had forced upon him, and said in a
+ gentle whisper,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is no boy&rsquo;s agitation. If you have been deceived or misled, and I
+ can in any way advise or aid you, count on me as women under the
+ circumstances count on men and gentlemen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy started to his feet, and paced the room with disordered steps, and
+ a countenance working with passions which he attempted vainly to suppress.
+ Suddenly arresting his steps, he seized Kenelm&rsquo;s hand, pressed it
+ convulsively, and said, in a voice struggling against a sob,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank you,&mdash;I bless you. Leave me now: I would be alone. Alone,
+ too, I must face this man. There may be some mistake yet; go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will promise not to leave the house till I return?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I promise that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if it be as I fear, you will then let me counsel with and advise
+ you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heaven help me, if so! Whom else should I trust to? Go, go!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm once more found himself in the streets, beneath the mingled light
+ of gas-lamps and the midsummer moon. He walked on mechanically till he
+ reached the extremity of the town. There he halted, and seating himself on
+ a milestone, indulged in these meditations:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kenelm, my friend, you are in a still worse scrape than I thought you
+ were an hour ago. You have evidently now got a woman on your hands. What
+ on earth are you to do with her? A runaway woman, who, meaning to run off
+ with somebody else&mdash;such are the crosses and contradictions in human
+ destiny&mdash;has run off with you instead. What mortal can hope to be
+ safe? The last thing I thought could befall me when I got up this morning
+ was that I should have any trouble about the other sex before the day was
+ over. If I were of an amatory temperament, the Fates might have some
+ justification for leading me into this snare, but, as it is, those
+ meddling old maids have none. Kenelm, my friend, do you think you ever can
+ be in love? and, if you were in love, do you think you could be a greater
+ fool than you are now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm had not decided this knotty question in the conference held with
+ himself, when a light and soft strain of music came upon his ear. It was
+ but from a stringed instrument, and might have sounded thin and tinkling
+ but for the stillness of the night, and that peculiar addition of fulness
+ which music acquires when it is borne along a tranquil air. Presently a
+ voice in song was heard from the distance accompanying the instrument. It
+ was a man&rsquo;s voice, a mellow and a rich voice, but Kenelm&rsquo;s ear could not
+ catch the words. Mechanically he moved on towards the quarter from which
+ the sounds came, for Kenelm Chillingly had music in his soul, though he
+ was not quite aware of it himself. He saw before him a patch of
+ greensward, on which grew a solitary elm with a seat for wayfarers beneath
+ it. From this sward the ground receded in a wide semicircle bordered
+ partly by shops, partly by the tea-gardens of a pretty cottage-like
+ tavern. Round the tables scattered throughout the gardens were grouped
+ quiet customers, evidently belonging to the class of small tradespeople or
+ superior artisans. They had an appearance of decorous respectability, and
+ were listening intently to the music. So were many persons at the
+ shop-doors and at the windows of upper rooms. On the sward, a little in
+ advance of the tree, but beneath its shadow, stood the musician, and in
+ that musician Kenelm recognized the wanderer from whose talk he had
+ conceived the idea of the pedestrian excursion which had already brought
+ him into a very awkward position. The instrument on which the singer
+ accompanied himself was a guitar, and his song was evidently a love-song,
+ though, as it was now drawing near to its close, Kenelm could but
+ imperfectly guess at its general meaning. He heard enough to perceive that
+ its words were at least free from the vulgarity which generally
+ characterizes street ballads, and were yet simple enough to please a very
+ homely audience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the singer ended there was no applause; but there was evident
+ sensation among the audience,&mdash;a feeling as if something that had
+ given a common enjoyment had ceased. Presently the white Pomeranian dog,
+ who had hitherto kept himself out of sight under the seat of the elm-tree,
+ advanced, with a small metal tray between his teeth, and, after looking
+ round him deliberately, as if to select whom of the audience should be
+ honoured with the commencement of a general subscription, gravely
+ approached Kenelm, stood on his hind legs, stared at him, and presented
+ the tray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm dropped a shilling into that depository, and the dog, looking
+ gratified, took his way towards the tea-gardens. Lifting his hat, for he
+ was, in his way, a very polite man, Kenelm approached the singer, and,
+ trusting to the alteration in his dress for not being recognized by a
+ stranger who had only once before encountered him he said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Judging by the little I heard, you sing very well, sir. May I ask who
+ composed the words?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are mine,&rdquo; replied the singer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the air?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mine too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Accept my compliments. I hope you find these manifestations of genius
+ lucrative?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The singer, who had not hitherto vouchsafed more than a careless glance at
+ the rustic garb of the questioner, now fixed his eyes full upon Kenelm,
+ and said, with a smile, &ldquo;Your voice betrays you, sir. We have met before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True; but I did not then notice your guitar, nor, though acquainted with
+ your poetical gifts, suppose that you selected this primitive method of
+ making them publicly known.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor did I anticipate the pleasure of meeting you again in the character
+ of Hobnail. Hist! let us keep each other&rsquo;s secret. I am known hereabouts
+ by no other designation than that of the &lsquo;Wandering Minstrel.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is in the capacity of minstrel that I address you. If it be not an
+ impertinent question, do you know any songs which take the other side of
+ the case?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What case? I don&rsquo;t understand you, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The song I heard seemed in praise of that sham called love. Don&rsquo;t you
+ think you could say something more new and more true, treating that
+ aberration from reason with the contempt it deserves?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not if I am to get my travelling expenses paid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! the folly is so popular?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does not your own heart tell you so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a bit of it,&mdash;rather the contrary. Your audience at present seem
+ folks who live by work, and can have little time for such idle phantasies;
+ for, as it is well observed by Ovid, a poet who wrote much on that
+ subject, and professed the most intimate acquaintance with it, &lsquo;Idleness
+ is the parent of love.&rsquo; Can&rsquo;t you sing something in praise of a good
+ dinner? Everybody who works hard has an appetite for food.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The singer again fixed on Kenelm his inquiring eye, but not detecting a
+ vestige of humour in the grave face he contemplated, was rather puzzled
+ how to reply, and therefore remained silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I perceive,&rdquo; resumed Kenelm, &ldquo;that my observations surprise you: the
+ surprise will vanish on reflection. It has been said by another poet, more
+ reflective than Ovid, that &lsquo;the world is governed by love and hunger.&rsquo; But
+ hunger certainly has the lion&rsquo;s share of the government; and if a poet is
+ really to do what he pretends to do,&mdash;namely, represent nature,&mdash;the
+ greater part of his lays should be addressed to the stomach.&rdquo; Here,
+ warming with his subject, Kenelm familiarly laid his hand on the
+ musician&rsquo;s shoulder, and his voice took a tone bordering on enthusiasm.
+ &ldquo;You will allow that a man in the normal condition of health does not fall
+ in love every day. But in the normal condition of health he is hungry
+ every day. Nay, in those early years when you poets say he is most prone
+ to love, he is so especially disposed to hunger that less than three meals
+ a day can scarcely satisfy his appetite. You may imprison a man for
+ months, for years, nay, for his whole life,&mdash;from infancy to any age
+ which Sir Cornewall Lewis may allow him to attain,&mdash;without letting
+ him be in love at all. But if you shut him up for a week without putting
+ something into his stomach, you will find him at the end of it as dead as
+ a door-nail.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the singer, who had gradually retreated before the energetic advance
+ of the orator, sank into the seat by the elm-tree and said pathetically,
+ &ldquo;Sir, you have fairly argued me down. Will you please to come to the
+ conclusion which you deduce from your premises?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Simply this, that where you find one human being who cares about love,
+ you will find a thousand susceptible to the charms of a dinner; and if you
+ wish to be the popular minne-singer or troubadour of the age, appeal to
+ nature, sir,&mdash;appeal to nature; drop all hackneyed rhapsodies about a
+ rosy cheek, and strike your lyre to the theme of a beefsteak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dog had for some minutes regained his master&rsquo;s side, standing on his
+ hind legs, with the tray, tolerably well filled with copper coins, between
+ his teeth; and now, justly aggrieved by the inattention which detained him
+ in that artificial attitude, dropped the tray and growled at Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time there came an impatient sound from the audience in the
+ tea-garden. They wanted another song for their money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The singer rose, obedient to the summons. &ldquo;Excuse me, sir; but I am called
+ upon to&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To sing again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And on the subject I suggest?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, indeed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! love, again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am afraid so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you good evening then. You seem a well-educated man,&mdash;more
+ shame to you. Perhaps we may meet once more in our rambles, when the
+ question can be properly argued out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm lifted his hat, and turned on his heel. Before he reached the
+ street, the sweet voice of the singer again smote his ears; but the only
+ word distinguishable in the distance, ringing out at the close of the
+ refrain, was &ldquo;love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fiddle-de-dee,&rdquo; said Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AS Kenelm regained the street dignified by the edifice of the Temperance
+ Hotel, a figure, dressed picturesquely in a Spanish cloak, brushed
+ hurriedly by him, but not so fast as to be unrecognized as the tragedian.
+ &ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; muttered Kenelm, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think there is much triumph in that face.
+ I suspect he has been scolded.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy&mdash;if Kenelm&rsquo;s travelling companion is still to be so
+ designated&mdash;was leaning against the mantelpiece as Kenelm re-entered
+ the dining-room. There was an air of profound dejection about the boy&rsquo;s
+ listless attitude and in the drooping tearless eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear child,&rdquo; said Kenelm, in the softest tones of his plaintive voice,
+ &ldquo;do not honour me with any confidence that may be painful. But let me hope
+ that you have dismissed forever all thoughts of going on the stage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; was the scarce audible answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now only remains the question, &lsquo;What is to be done?&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure I don&rsquo;t know, and I don&rsquo;t care.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you leave it to me to know and to care; and assuming for the moment
+ as a fact that which is one of the greatest lies in this mendacious world&mdash;namely,
+ that all men are brothers&mdash;you will consider me as an elder brother,
+ who will counsel and control you as he would an imprudent young&mdash;sister.
+ I see very well how it is. Somehow or other you, having first admired Mr.
+ Compton as Romeo or Richard III., made his acquaintance as Mr. Compton. He
+ allowed you to believe him a single man. In a romantic moment you escaped
+ from your home, with the design of adopting the profession of the stage
+ and of becoming Mrs. Compton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; broke out the girl, since her sex must now be declared, &ldquo;oh,&rdquo; she
+ exclaimed, with a passionate sob, &ldquo;what a fool I have been! Only do not
+ think worse of me than I deserve. The man did deceive me; he did not think
+ I should take him at his word, and follow him here, or his wife would not
+ have appeared. I should not have known he had one and&mdash;and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ here her voice was choked under her passion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But now you have discovered the truth, let us thank Heaven that you are
+ saved from shame and misery. I must despatch a telegram to your uncle:
+ give me his address.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is not a &lsquo;No&rsquo; possible in this case, my child. Your reputation and
+ your future must be saved. Leave me to explain all to your uncle. He is
+ your guardian. I must send for him; nay, nay, there is no option. Hate me
+ now for enforcing your will: you will thank me hereafter. And listen,
+ young lady; if it does pain you to see your uncle, and encounter his
+ reproaches, every fault must undergo its punishment. A brave nature
+ undergoes it cheerfully, as a part of atonement. You are brave. Submit,
+ and in submitting rejoice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something in Kenelm&rsquo;s voice and manner at once so kindly and so
+ commanding that the wayward nature he addressed fairly succumbed. She gave
+ him her uncle&rsquo;s address, &ldquo;John Bovill, Esq., Oakdale, near Westmere.&rdquo; And
+ after giving it, she fixed her eyes mournfully upon her young adviser, and
+ said with a simple, dreary pathos, &ldquo;Now, will you esteem me more, or
+ rather despise me less?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked so young, nay, so childlike, as she thus spoke, that Kenelm
+ felt a parental inclination to draw her on his lap and kiss away her
+ tears. But he prudently conquered that impulse, and said, with a
+ melancholy half-smile,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If human beings despise each other for being young and foolish, the
+ sooner we are exterminated by that superior race which is to succeed us on
+ earth the better it will be. Adieu, till your uncle comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! you leave me here&mdash;alone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, if your uncle found me under the same roof, now that I know you are
+ his niece, don&rsquo;t you think he would have a right to throw me out of the
+ window? Allow me to practise for myself the prudence I preach to you. Send
+ for the landlady to show you your room, shut yourself in there, go to bed,
+ and don&rsquo;t cry more than you can help.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm shouldered the knapsack he had deposited in a corner of the room,
+ inquired for the telegraph-office, despatched a telegram to Mr. Bovill,
+ obtained a bedroom at the Commercial Hotel, and fell asleep, muttering
+ these sensible words,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rouchefoucauld was perfectly right when he said, &lsquo;Very few people would
+ fall in love if they had not heard it so much talked about.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM CHILLINGLY rose with the sun, according to his usual custom, and
+ took his way to the Temperance Hotel. All in that sober building seemed
+ still in the arms of Morpheus. He turned towards the stables in which he
+ had left the gray cob, and had the pleasure to see that ill-used animal in
+ the healthful process of rubbing down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s right,&rdquo; said he to the hostler. &ldquo;I am glad to see you are so early
+ a riser.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; quoth the hostler, &ldquo;the gentleman as owns the pony knocked me up at
+ two o&rsquo;clock in the morning, and pleased enough he was to see the creature
+ again lying down in the clean straw.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, he has arrived at the hotel, I presume?&mdash;a stout gentleman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, stout enough; and a passionate gentleman too. Came in a yellow and
+ two posters, knocked up the Temperance and then knocked up me to see for
+ the pony, and was much put out as he could not get any grog at the
+ Temperance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dare say he was. I wish he had got his grog: it might have put him in
+ better humour. Poor little thing!&rdquo; muttered Kenelm, turning away; &ldquo;I am
+ afraid she is in for a regular vituperation. My turn next, I suppose. But
+ he must be a good fellow to have come at once for his niece in the dead of
+ the night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About nine o&rsquo;clock Kenelm presented himself again at the Temperance Hotel,
+ inquired for Mr. Bovill, and was shown by the prim maid-servant into the
+ drawing-room, where he found Mr. Bovill seated amicably at breakfast with
+ his niece, who of course was still in boy&rsquo;s clothing, having no other
+ costume at hand. To Kenelm&rsquo;s great relief, Mr. Bovill rose from the table
+ with a beaming countenance, and extending his hand to Kenelm, said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, you are a gentleman; sit down, sit down and take breakfast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, as soon as the maid was out of the room, the uncle continued,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have heard all your good conduct from this young simpleton. Things
+ might have been worse, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm bowed his head, and drew the loaf towards him in silence. Then,
+ considering that some apology was due to his entertainer, he said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope you forgive me for that unfortunate mistake, when&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You knocked me down, or rather tripped me up. All right now. Elsie, give
+ the gentleman a cup of tea. Pretty little rogue, is she not? and a good
+ girl, in spite of her nonsense. It was all my fault letting her go to the
+ play and be intimate with Miss Lockit, a stage-stricken, foolish old maid,
+ who ought to have known better than to lead her into all this trouble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, uncle,&rdquo; cried the girl, resolutely; &ldquo;don&rsquo;t blame her, nor any one but
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm turned his dark eyes approvingly towards the girl, and saw that her
+ lips were firmly set; there was an expression, not of grief nor shame, but
+ compressed resolution in her countenance. But when her eyes met his they
+ fell softly, and a blush mantled over her cheeks up to her very forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said the uncle, &ldquo;just like you, Elsie; always ready to take
+ everybody&rsquo;s fault on your own shoulders. Well, well, say no more about
+ that. Now, my young friend, what brings you across the country tramping it
+ on foot, eh? a young man&rsquo;s whim?&rdquo; As he spoke, he eyed Kenelm very
+ closely, and his look was that of an intelligent man not unaccustomed to
+ observe the faces of those he conversed with. In fact a more shrewd man of
+ business than Mr. Bovill is seldom met with on &lsquo;Change or in market.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I travel on foot to please myself, sir,&rdquo; answered Kenelm, curtly, and
+ unconsciously set on his guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course you do,&rdquo; cried Mr. Bovill, with a jovial laugh. &ldquo;But it seems
+ you don&rsquo;t object to a chaise and pony whenever you can get them for
+ nothing,&mdash;ha, ha!&mdash;excuse me,&mdash;a joke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herewith Mr. Bovill, still in excellent good-humour, abruptly changed the
+ conversation to general matters,&mdash;agricultural prospects, chance of a
+ good harvest, corn trade, money market in general, politics, state of the
+ nation. Kenelm felt there was an attempt to draw him out, to sound, to
+ pump him, and replied only by monosyllables, generally significant of
+ ignorance on the questions broached; and at the close, if the
+ philosophical heir of the Chillinglys was in the habit of allowing himself
+ to be surprised he would certainly have been startled when Mr. Bovill
+ rose, slapped him on the shoulder, and said in a tone of great
+ satisfaction, &ldquo;Just as I thought, sir; you know nothing of these matters:
+ you are a gentleman born and bred; your clothes can&rsquo;t disguise you, sir.
+ Elsie was right. My dear, just leave us for a few minutes: I have
+ something to say to our young friend. You can get ready meanwhile to go
+ with me.&rdquo; Elsie left the table and walked obediently towards the doorway.
+ There she halted a moment, turned round, and looked timidly towards
+ Kenelm. He had naturally risen from his seat as she rose, and advanced
+ some paces as if to open the door for her. Thus their looks encountered.
+ He could not interpret that shy gaze of hers: it was tender, it was
+ deprecating, it was humble, it was pleading; a man accustomed to female
+ conquests might have thought it was something more, something in which was
+ the key to all. But that something more was an unknown tongue to Kenelm
+ Chillingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the two men were alone, Mr. Bovill reseated himself and motioned to
+ Kenelm to do the same. &ldquo;Now, young sir,&rdquo; said the former, &ldquo;you and I can
+ talk at our ease. That adventure of yours yesterday may be the luckiest
+ thing that could happen to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is sufficiently lucky if I have been of any service to your niece. But
+ her own good sense would have been her safeguard if she had been alone,
+ and discovered, as she would have done, that Mr. Compton had, knowingly or
+ not, misled her to believe that he was a single man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hang Mr. Compton! we have done with him. I am a plain man, and I come to
+ the point. It is you who have carried off my niece; it is with you that
+ she came to this hotel. Now when Elsie told me how well you had behaved,
+ and that your language and manners were those of a real gentleman, my mind
+ was made up. I guess pretty well what you are; you are a gentleman&rsquo;s son;
+ probably a college youth; not overburdened with cash; had a quarrel with
+ your governor, and he keeps you short. Don&rsquo;t interrupt me. Well, Elsie is
+ a good girl and a pretty girl, and will make a good wife, as wives go;
+ and, hark ye, she has L20,000. So just confide in me; and if you don&rsquo;t
+ like your parents to know about it till the thing&rsquo;s done and they be only
+ got to forgive and bless you, why, you shall marry Elsie before you can
+ say Jack Robinson.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the first time in his life Kenelm Chillingly was seized with terror,&mdash;terror
+ and consternation. His jaw dropped; his tongue was palsied. If hair ever
+ stands on end, his hair did. At last, with superhuman effort, he gasped
+ out the word, &ldquo;Marry!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; marry. If you are a gentleman you are bound to it. You have
+ compromised my niece,&mdash;a respectable, virtuous girl, sir; an orphan,
+ but not unprotected. I repeat, it is you who have plucked her from my very
+ arms, and with violence and assault eloped with her; and what would the
+ world say if it knew? Would it believe in your prudent conduct?&mdash;conduct
+ only to be explained by the respect you felt due to your future wife. And
+ where will you find a better? Where will you find an uncle who will part
+ with his ward and L20,000 without asking if you have a sixpence? and the
+ girl has taken a fancy to you; I see it: would she have given up that
+ player so easily if you had not stolen her heart? Would you break that
+ heart? No, young man: you are not a villain. Shake hands on it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Bovill,&rdquo; said Kenelm, recovering his wonted equanimity, &ldquo;I am
+ inexpressibly flattered by the honour you propose to me, and I do not deny
+ that Miss Elsie is worthy of a much better man than myself. But I have
+ inconceivable prejudices against the connubial state. If it be permitted
+ to a member of the Established Church to cavil at any sentence written by
+ Saint Paul,&mdash;and I think that liberty may be permitted to a simple
+ layman, since eminent members of the clergy criticise the whole Bible as
+ freely as if it were the history of Queen Elizabeth by Mr. Froude,&mdash;I
+ should demur at the doctrine that it is better to marry than to burn: I
+ myself should prefer burning. With these sentiments it would ill become
+ any one entitled to that distinction of &lsquo;gentleman&rsquo; which you confer on me
+ to lead a fellow-victim to the sacrificial altar. As for any reproach
+ attached to Miss Elsie, since in my telegram I directed you to ask for a
+ young gentleman at this hotel, her very sex is not known in this place
+ unless you divulge it. And&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Kenelm was interrupted by a violent explosion of rage from the uncle.
+ He stamped his feet; he almost foamed at the mouth; he doubled his fist,
+ and shook it in Kenelm&rsquo;s face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, you are mocking me: John Bovill is not a man to be jeered in this
+ way. You <i>shall</i> marry the girl. I&rsquo;ll not have her thrust back upon
+ me to be the plague of my life with her whims and tantrums. You have taken
+ her, and you shall keep her, or I&rsquo;ll break every bone in your skin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Break them,&rdquo; said Kenelm, resignedly, but at the same time falling back
+ into a formidable attitude of defence, which cooled the pugnacity of his
+ accuser. Mr. Bovill sank into his chair, and wiped his forehead. Kenelm
+ craftily pursued the advantage he had gained, and in mild accents
+ proceeded to reason,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When you recover your habitual serenity of humour, Mr. Bovill, you will
+ see how much your very excusable desire to secure your niece&rsquo;s happiness,
+ and, I may add, to reward what you allow to have been forbearing and
+ well-bred conduct on my part, has hurried you into an error of judgment.
+ You know nothing of me. I may be, for what you know, an impostor or
+ swindler; I may have every bad quality, and yet you are to be contented
+ with my assurance, or rather your own assumption, that I am born a
+ gentleman, in order to give me your niece and her L20,000. This is
+ temporary insanity on your part. Allow me to leave you to recover from
+ your excitement.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop, sir,&rdquo; said Mr. Bovill, in a changed and sullen tone; &ldquo;I am not
+ quite the madman you think me. But I dare say I have been too hasty and
+ too rough. Nevertheless the facts are as I have stated them, and I do not
+ see how, as a man of honour, you can get off marrying my niece. The
+ mistake you made in running away with her was, no doubt, innocent on your
+ part: but still there it is; and supposing the case came before a jury, it
+ would be an ugly one for you and your family. Marriage alone could mend
+ it. Come, come, I own I was too business-like in rushing to the point at
+ once, and I no longer say, &lsquo;Marry my niece off-hand.&rsquo; You have only seen
+ her disguised and in a false position. Pay me a visit at Oakdale; stay
+ with me a month; and if at the end of that time you do not like her well
+ enough to propose, I&rsquo;ll let you off and say no more about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Mr. Bovill thus spoke, and Kenelm listened, neither saw that the
+ door had been noiselessly opened and that Elsie stood at the threshold.
+ Now, before Kenelm could reply, she advanced into the middle of the room,
+ and, her small figure drawn up to its fullest height, her cheeks glowing,
+ her lips quivering, exclaimed,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle, for shame!&rdquo; Then addressing Kenelm in a sharp tone of anguish,
+ &ldquo;Oh, do not believe I knew anything of this!&rdquo; she covered her face with
+ both hands and stood mute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All of chivalry that Kenelm had received with his baptismal appellation
+ was aroused. He sprang up, and, bending his knee as he drew one of her
+ hands into his own, he said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am as convinced that your uncle&rsquo;s words are abhorrent to you as I am
+ that you are a pure-hearted and high-spirited woman, of whose friendship I
+ shall be proud. We meet again.&rdquo; Then releasing her hand, he addressed Mr.
+ Bovill: &ldquo;Sir, you are unworthy the charge of your niece. Had you not been
+ so, she would have committed no imprudence. If she have any female
+ relation, to that relation transfer your charge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have! I have!&rdquo; cried Elsie; &ldquo;my lost mother&rsquo;s sister: let me go to
+ her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The woman who keeps a school!&rdquo; said Mr. Bovill sneeringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; asked Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She never would go there. I proposed it to her a year ago. The minx would
+ not go into a school.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will now, Uncle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, you shall at once; and I hope you&rsquo;ll be put on bread and
+ water. Fool! fool! you have spoilt your own game. Mr. Chillingly, now that
+ Miss Elsie has turned her back on herself, I can convince you that I am
+ not the mad man you thought me. I was at the festive meeting held when you
+ came of age: my brother is one of your father&rsquo;s tenants. I did not
+ recognize your face immediately in the excitement of our encounter and in
+ your change of dress; but in walking home it struck me that I had seen it
+ before, and I knew it at once when you entered the room to-day. It has
+ been a tussle between us which should beat the other. You have beat me;
+ and thanks to that idiot! If she had not put her spoke into my wheel, she
+ would have lived to be &lsquo;my lady.&rsquo; Now good-day, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Bovill, you offered to shake hands: shake hands now, and promise me,
+ with the good grace of one honourable combatant to another, that Miss
+ Elsie shall go to her aunt the schoolmistress at once if she wishes it.
+ Hark ye, my friend&rdquo; (this in Mr. Bovill&rsquo;s ear): &ldquo;a man can never manage a
+ woman. Till a woman marries, a prudent man leaves her to women; when she
+ does marry, she manages her husband, and there&rsquo;s an end of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, wise young man!&rdquo; murmured the uncle. &ldquo;Elsie, dear, how can you go to
+ your aunt&rsquo;s while you are in that dress?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elsie started as from a trance, her eyes directed towards the doorway
+ through which Kenelm had vanished. &ldquo;This dress,&rdquo; she said contemptuously,
+ &ldquo;this dress; is not that easily altered with shops in the town?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gad!&rdquo; muttered Mr. Bovill, &ldquo;that youngster is a second Solomon; and if I
+ can&rsquo;t manage Elsie, she&rsquo;ll manage a husband&mdash;whenever she gets one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;BY the powers that guard innocence and celibacy,&rdquo; soliloquized Kenelm
+ Chillingly, &ldquo;but I have had a narrow escape! and had that amphibious
+ creature been in girl&rsquo;s clothes instead of boy&rsquo;s, when she intervened like
+ the deity of the ancient drama, I might have plunged my armorial Fishes
+ into hot water. Though, indeed, it is hard to suppose that a young lady
+ head-over-ears in love with Mr. Compton yesterday could have consigned her
+ affections to me to-day. Still she looked as if she could, which proves
+ either that one is never to trust a woman&rsquo;s heart or never to trust a
+ woman&rsquo;s looks. Decimus Roach is right. Man must never relax his flight
+ from the women, if he strives to achieve an &lsquo;Approach to the Angels.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These reflections were made by Kenelm Chillingly as, having turned his
+ back upon the town in which such temptations and trials had befallen him,
+ he took his solitary way along a footpath that wound through meads and
+ cornfields, and shortened by three miles the distance to a cathedral town
+ at which he proposed to rest for the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had travelled for some hours, and the sun was beginning to slope
+ towards a range of blue hills in the west, when he came to the margin of a
+ fresh rivulet, overshadowed by feathery willows and the quivering leaves
+ of silvery Italian poplars. Tempted by the quiet and cool of this pleasant
+ spot, he flung himself down on the banks, drew from his knapsack some
+ crusts of bread with which he had wisely provided himself, and, dipping
+ them into the pure lymph as it rippled over its pebbly bed, enjoyed one of
+ those luxurious repasts for which epicures would exchange their banquet in
+ return for the appetite of youth. Then, reclining along the bank, and
+ crushing the wild thyme that grows best and sweetest in wooded coverts,
+ provided they be neighboured by water, no matter whether in pool or rill,
+ he resigned himself to that intermediate state between thought and
+ dream-land which we call &ldquo;revery.&rdquo; At a little distance he heard the low
+ still sound of the mower&rsquo;s scythe, and the air came to his brow sweet with
+ the fragrance of new-mown hay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was roused by a gentle tap on the shoulder, and turning lazily round,
+ saw a good-humoured jovial face upon a pair of massive shoulders, and
+ heard a hearty and winning voice say,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young man, if you are not too tired, will you lend a hand to get in my
+ hay? We are very short of hands, and I am afraid we shall have rain pretty
+ soon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm rose and shook himself, gravely contemplated the stranger, and
+ replied in his customary sententious fashion, &ldquo;Man is born to help his
+ fellow-man,&mdash;especially to get in hay while the sun shines. I am at
+ your service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s a good fellow, and I&rsquo;m greatly obliged to you. You see I had
+ counted on a gang of roving haymakers, but they were bought up by another
+ farmer. This way;&rdquo; and leading on through a gap in the brushwood, he
+ emerged, followed by Kenelm, into a large meadow, one-third of which was
+ still under the scythe, the rest being occupied with persons of both
+ sexes, tossing and spreading the cut grass. Among the latter, Kenelm,
+ stripped to his shirt-sleeves, soon found himself tossing and spreading
+ like the rest, with his usual melancholy resignation of mien and aspect.
+ Though a little awkward at first in the use of his unfamiliar implements,
+ his practice in all athletic accomplishments bestowed on him that
+ invaluable quality which is termed &ldquo;handiness,&rdquo; and he soon distinguished
+ himself by the superior activity and neatness with which he performed his
+ work. Something&mdash;it might be in his countenance or in the charm of
+ his being a stranger&mdash;attracted the attention of the feminine section
+ of haymakers, and one very pretty girl who was nearer to him than the rest
+ attempted to commence conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is new to you,&rdquo; she said smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing is new to me,&rdquo; answered Kenelm, mournfully. &ldquo;But allow me to
+ observe that to do things well you should only do one thing at a time. I
+ am here to make hay and not conversation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My!&rdquo; said the girl, in amazed ejaculation, and turned off with a toss of
+ her pretty head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder if that jade has got an uncle,&rdquo; thought Kenelm. The farmer, who
+ took his share of work with the men, halting now and then to look round,
+ noticed Kenelm&rsquo;s vigorous application with much approval, and at the close
+ of the day&rsquo;s work shook him heartily by the hand, leaving a two-shilling
+ piece in his palm. The heir of the Chillinglys gazed on that honorarium,
+ and turned it over with the finger and thumb of the left hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be n&rsquo;t it eno&rsquo;?&rdquo; said the farmer, nettled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me,&rdquo; answered Kenelm. &ldquo;But, to tell you the truth, it is the first
+ money I ever earned by my own bodily labour; and I regard it with equal
+ curiosity and respect. But if it would not offend you, I would rather
+ that, instead of the money, you had offered me some supper; for I have
+ tasted nothing but bread and water since the morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall have the money and supper both, my lad,&rdquo; said the farmer,
+ cheerily. &ldquo;And if you will stay and help till I have got in the hay, I
+ dare say my good woman can find you a better bed than you&rsquo;ll get in the
+ village inn; if, indeed, you can get one there at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are very kind. But before I accept your hospitality excuse one
+ question: have you any nieces about you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nieces!&rdquo; echoed the farmer, mechanically thrusting his hands into his
+ breeches-pockets as if in search of something there, &ldquo;nieces about me!
+ what do you mean? Be that a newfangled word for coppers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not for coppers, though perhaps for brass. But I spoke without metaphor.
+ I object to nieces upon abstract principle, confirmed by the test of
+ experience.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The farmer stared, and thought his new friend not quite so sound in his
+ mental as he evidently was in his physical conformation, but replied, with
+ a laugh, &ldquo;Make yourself easy, then. I have only one niece, and she is
+ married to an iron-monger and lives in Exeter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On entering the farmhouse, Kenelm&rsquo;s host conducted him straight into the
+ kitchen, and cried out, in a hearty voice, to a comely middle-aged dame,
+ who, with a stout girl, was intent on culinary operations, &ldquo;Hulloa! old
+ woman, I have brought you a guest who has well earned his supper, for he
+ has done the work of two, and I have promised him a bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The farmer&rsquo;s wife turned sharply round. &ldquo;He is heartily welcome to supper.
+ As to a bed,&rdquo; she said doubtfully, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know.&rdquo; But here her eyes
+ settled on Kenelm; and there was something in his aspect so unlike what
+ she expected to see in an itinerant haymaker, that she involuntarily
+ dropped a courtesy, and resumed, with a change of tone, &ldquo;The gentleman
+ shall have the guest-room: but it will take a little time to get ready;
+ you know, John, all the furniture is covered up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, wife, there will be leisure eno&rsquo; for that. He don&rsquo;t want to go to
+ roost till he has supped.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not,&rdquo; said Kenelm, sniffing a very agreeable odour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where are the girls?&rdquo; asked the farmer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They have been in these five minutes, and gone upstairs to tidy
+ themselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What girls?&rdquo; faltered Kenelm, retreating towards the door. &ldquo;I thought you
+ said you had no nieces.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I did not say I had no daughters. Why, you are not afraid of them,
+ are you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; replied Kenelm, with a polite and politic evasion of that question,
+ &ldquo;if your daughters are like their mother, you can&rsquo;t say that they are not
+ dangerous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; cried the farmer, looking very much pleased, while his dame smiled
+ and blushed, &ldquo;come, that&rsquo;s as nicely said as if you were canvassing the
+ county. &lsquo;Tis not among haymakers that you learned manners, I guess; and
+ perhaps I have been making too free with my betters.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; quoth the courteous Kenelm, &ldquo;do you mean to imply that you were
+ too free with your shillings? Apologize for that, if you like, but I don&rsquo;t
+ think you&rsquo;ll get back the shillings. I have not seen so much of this life
+ as you have, but, according to my experience, when a man once parts with
+ his money, whether to his betters or his worsers, the chances are that
+ he&rsquo;ll never see it again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this aphorism the farmer laughed ready to kill himself, his wife
+ chuckled, and even the maid-of-all-work grinned. Kenelm, preserving his
+ unalterable gravity, said to himself,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wit consists in the epigrammatic expression of a commonplace truth, and
+ the dullest remark on the worth of money is almost as sure of successful
+ appreciation as the dullest remark on the worthlessness of women.
+ Certainly I am a wit without knowing it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the farmer touched him on the shoulder&mdash;touched it, did not slap
+ it, as he would have done ten minutes before&mdash;and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must not disturb the Missis or we shall get no supper. I&rsquo;ll just go
+ and give a look into the cow-sheds. Do you know much about cows?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, cows produce cream and butter. The best cows are those which produce
+ at the least cost the best cream and butter. But how the best cream and
+ butter can be produced at a price which will place them free of expense on
+ a poor man&rsquo;s breakfast-table is a question to be settled by a Reformed
+ Parliament and a Liberal Administration. In the meanwhile let us not delay
+ the supper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The farmer and his guest quitted the kitchen and entered the farmyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are quite a stranger in these parts?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t even know my name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, except that I heard your wife call you John.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My name is John Saunderson.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! you come from the North, then? That&rsquo;s why you are so sensible and
+ shrewd. Names that end in &lsquo;son&rsquo; are chiefly borne by the descendants of
+ the Danes, to whom King Alfred, Heaven bless him! peacefully assigned no
+ less than sixteen English counties. And when a Dane was called somebody&rsquo;s
+ son, it is a sign that he was the son of a somebody.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By gosh! I never heard that before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I thought you had I should not have said it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I have told you my name, what is yours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A wise man asks questions and a fool answers them. Suppose for a moment
+ that I am not a fool.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farmer Saunderson scratched his head, and looked more puzzled than became
+ the descendant of a Dane settled by King Alfred in the north of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dash it,&rdquo; said he at last, &ldquo;but I think you are Yorkshire too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Man, who is the most conceited of all animals, says that he alone has the
+ prerogative of thought, and condemns the other animals to the meaner
+ mechanical operation which he calls instinct. But as instincts are
+ unerring and thoughts generally go wrong, man has not much to boast of
+ according to his own definition. When you say you think, and take it for
+ granted, that I am Yorkshire, you err. I am not Yorkshire. Confining
+ yourself to instinct, can you divine when we shall sup? The cows you are
+ about to visit divine to a moment when they shall be fed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Said the farmer, recovering his sense of superiority to the guest whom he
+ obliged with a supper, &ldquo;In ten minutes.&rdquo; Then, after a pause, and in a
+ tone of deprecation, as if he feared he might be thought fine, he
+ continued, &ldquo;We don&rsquo;t sup in the kitchen. My father did, and so did I till
+ I married; but my Bess, though she&rsquo;s as good a farmer&rsquo;s wife as ever wore
+ shoe-leather, was a tradesman&rsquo;s daughter, and had been brought up
+ different. You see she was not without a good bit of money: but even if
+ she had been, I should not have liked her folks to say I had lowered her;
+ so we sup in the parlour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth Kenelm, &ldquo;The first consideration is to sup at all. Supper conceded,
+ every man is more likely to get on in life who would rather sup in his
+ parlour than his kitchen. Meanwhile, I see a pump; while you go to the
+ cows I will stay here and wash my hands of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold! you seem a sharp fellow, and certainly no fool. I have a son, a
+ good smart chap, but stuck up; crows it over us all; thinks no small beer
+ of himself. You&rsquo;d do me a service, and him too, if you&rsquo;d let him down a
+ peg or two.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm, who was now hard at work at the pump-handle, only replied by a
+ gracious nod. But as he seldom lost an opportunity for reflection, he said
+ to himself, while he laved his face in the stream from the spout, &ldquo;One
+ can&rsquo;t wonder why every small man thinks it so pleasant to let down a big
+ one, when a father asks a stranger to let down his own son for even
+ fancying that he is not small beer. It is upon that principle in human
+ nature that criticism wisely relinquishes its pretensions as an analytical
+ science, and becomes a lucrative profession. It relies on the pleasure its
+ readers find in letting a man down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT was a pretty, quaint farmhouse, such as might well go with two or three
+ hundred acres of tolerably good land, tolerably well farmed by an active
+ old-fashioned tenant, who, though he did not use mowing-machines nor
+ steam-ploughs nor dabble in chemical experiments, still brought an
+ adequate capital to his land and made the capital yield a very fair return
+ of interest. The supper was laid out in a good-sized though low-pitched
+ parlour with a glazed door, now wide open, as were all the latticed
+ windows, looking into a small garden, rich in those straggling old English
+ flowers which are nowadays banished from gardens more pretentious and;
+ infinitely less fragrant. At one corner was an arbour covered with
+ honeysuckle, and opposite to it a row of beehives. The room itself had an
+ air of comfort, and that sort of elegance which indicates the presiding
+ genius of feminine taste. There were shelves suspended to the wall by blue
+ ribbons, and filled with small books neatly bound; there were flower-pots
+ in all the window-sills; there was a small cottage piano; the walls were
+ graced partly with engraved portraits of county magnates and prize oxen;
+ partly with samplers in worsted-work, comprising verses of moral character
+ and the names and birthdays of the farmer&rsquo;s grandmother, mother, wife, and
+ daughters. Over the chimney-piece was a small mirror, and above that the
+ trophy of a fox&rsquo;s brush; while niched into an angle in the room was a
+ glazed cupboard, rich with specimens of old china, Indian and English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The party consisted of the farmer, his wife, three buxom daughters, and a
+ pale-faced slender lad of about twenty, the only son, who did not take
+ willingly to farming: he had been educated at a superior grammar school,
+ and had high notions about the March of Intellect and the Progress of the
+ Age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm, though among the gravest of mortals, was one of the least shy. In
+ fact shyness is the usual symptom of a keen <i>amour propre</i>; and of
+ that quality the youthful Chillingly scarcely possessed more than did the
+ three Fishes of his hereditary scutcheon. He felt himself perfectly at
+ home with his entertainers; taking care, however, that his attentions were
+ so equally divided between the three daughters as to prevent all suspicion
+ of a particular preference. &ldquo;There is safety in numbers,&rdquo; thought he,
+ &ldquo;especially in odd numbers. The three Graces never married, neither did
+ the nine Muses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I presume, young ladies, that you are fond of music,&rdquo; said Kenelm,
+ glancing at the piano.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I love it dearly,&rdquo; said the eldest girl, speaking for the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth the farmer, as he heaped the stranger&rsquo;s plate with boiled beef and
+ carrots, &ldquo;Things are not what they were when I was a boy; then it was only
+ great tenant-farmers who had their girls taught the piano, and sent their
+ boys to a good school. Now we small folks are for helping our children a
+ step or two higher than our own place on the ladder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The schoolmaster is abroad,&rdquo; said the son, with the emphasis of a sage
+ adding an original aphorism to the stores of philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is, no doubt, a greater equality of culture than there was in the
+ last generation,&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;People of all ranks utter the same
+ commonplace ideas in very much the same arrangements of syntax. And in
+ proportion as the democracy of intelligence extends&mdash;a friend of
+ mine, who is a doctor, tells me that complaints formerly reserved to what
+ is called aristocracy (though what that word means in plain English I
+ don&rsquo;t know) are equally shared by the commonalty&mdash;<i>tic-douloureux</i>
+ and other neuralgic maladies abound. And the human race, in England at
+ least, is becoming more slight and delicate. There is a fable of a man
+ who, when he became exceedingly old, was turned into a grasshopper.
+ England is very old, and is evidently approaching the grasshopper state of
+ development. Perhaps we don&rsquo;t eat as much beef as our forefathers did. May
+ I ask you for another slice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s remarks were somewhat over the heads of his audience. But the
+ son, taking them as a slur upon the enlightened spirit of the age,
+ coloured up and said, with a knitted brow, &ldquo;I hope, sir, that you are not
+ an enemy to progress.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That depends: for instance, I prefer staying here, where I am well off,
+ to going farther and faring worse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well said!&rdquo; cried the farmer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not deigning to notice that interruption, the son took up Kenelm&rsquo;s reply
+ with a sneer, &ldquo;I suppose you mean that it is to fare worse, if you march
+ with the time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am afraid we have no option but to march with the time; but when we
+ reach that stage when to march any farther is to march into old age, we
+ should not be sorry if time would be kind enough to stand still; and all
+ good doctors concur in advising us to do nothing to hurry him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no sign of old age in this country, sir; and thank Heaven we are
+ not standing still!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Grasshoppers never do; they are always hopping and jumping, and making
+ what they think &lsquo;progress,&rsquo; till (unless they hop into the water and are
+ swallowed up prematurely by a carp or a frog) they die of the exhaustion
+ which hops and jumps unremitting naturally produce. May I ask you, Mrs.
+ Saunderson, for some of that rice-pudding?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The farmer, who, though he did not quite comprehend Kenelm&rsquo;s metaphorical
+ mode of arguing, saw delightedly that his wise son looked more posed than
+ himself, cried with great glee, &ldquo;Bob, my boy,&mdash;Bob, our visitor is a
+ little too much for you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; said Kenelm, modestly. &ldquo;But I honestly think Mr. Bob would be a
+ wiser man, and a weightier man, and more removed from the grasshopper
+ state, if he would think less and eat more pudding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the supper was over the farmer offered Kenelm a clay pipe filled with
+ shag, which that adventurer accepted with his habitual resignation to the
+ ills of life; and the whole party, excepting Mrs. Saunderson, strolled
+ into the garden. Kenelm and Mr. Saunderson seated themselves in the
+ honeysuckle arbour: the girls and the advocate of progress stood without
+ among the garden flowers. It was a still and lovely night, the moon at her
+ full. The farmer, seated facing his hayfields, smoked on placidly. Kenelm,
+ at the third whiff, laid aside his pipe, and glanced furtively at the
+ three Graces. They formed a pretty group, all clustered together near the
+ silenced beehives, the two younger seated on the grass strip that bordered
+ the flower-beds, their arms over each other&rsquo;s shoulders, the elder one
+ standing behind them, with the moonlight shining soft on her auburn hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Saunderson walked restlessly by himself to and fro the path of
+ gravel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a strange thing,&rdquo; ruminated Kenelm, &ldquo;that girls are not unpleasant
+ to look at if you take them collectively,&mdash;two or three bound up
+ together; but if you detach any one of them from the bunch, the odds are
+ that she is as plain as a pikestaff. I wonder whether that bucolical
+ grasshopper, who is so enamoured of the hop and jump that he calls
+ &lsquo;progress,&rsquo; classes the society of the Mormons among the evidences of
+ civilized advancement? There is a good deal to be said in favour of taking
+ a whole lot of wives as one may buy a whole lot of cheap razors. For it is
+ not impossible that out of a dozen a good one may be found. And then, too,
+ a whole nosegay of variegated blooms, with a faded leaf here and there,
+ must be more agreeable to the eye than the same monotonous solitary lady&rsquo;s
+ smock. But I fear these reflections are naughty; let us change them.
+ Farmer,&rdquo; he said aloud, &ldquo;I suppose your handsome daughters are too fine to
+ assist you much. I did not see them among the haymakers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, they were there, but by themselves, in the back part of the field. I
+ did not want them to mix with all the girls, many of whom are strangers
+ from other places. I don&rsquo;t know anything against them; but as I don&rsquo;t know
+ anything for them, I thought it as well to keep my lasses apart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I should have supposed it wiser to keep your son apart from them. I
+ saw him in the thick of those nymphs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the farmer, musingly, and withdrawing his pipe from his lips,
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think lasses not quite well brought up, poor things! do as much
+ harm to the lads as they can do to proper-behaved lasses; leastways my
+ wife does not think so. &lsquo;Keep good girls from bad girls,&rsquo; says she, &lsquo;and
+ good girls will never go wrong.&rsquo; And you will find there is something in
+ that when you have girls of your own to take care of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Without waiting for that time, which I trust may never occur, I can
+ recognize the wisdom of your excellent wife&rsquo;s observation. My own opinion
+ is, that a woman can more easily do mischief to her own sex than to ours;
+ since, of course, she cannot exist without doing mischief to somebody or
+ other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And good, too,&rdquo; said the jovial farmer, thumping his fist on the table.
+ &ldquo;What should we be without women?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very much better, I take it, sir. Adam was as good as gold, and never had
+ a qualm of conscience or stomach till Eve seduced him into eating raw
+ apples.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young man, thou&rsquo;st been crossed in love. I see it now. That&rsquo;s why thou
+ look&rsquo;st so sorrowful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sorrowful! Did you ever know a man crossed in love who looked less
+ sorrowful when he came across a pudding?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hey! but thou canst ply a good knife and fork, that I will say for thee.&rdquo;
+ Here the farmer turned round, and gazed on Kenelm with deliberate
+ scrutiny. That scrutiny accomplished, his voice took a somewhat more
+ respectful tone, as he resumed, &ldquo;Do you know that you puzzle me somewhat?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very likely. I am sure that I puzzle myself. Say on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Looking at your dress and&mdash;and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The two shillings you gave me? Yes&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I took you for the son of some small farmer like myself. But now I judge
+ from your talk that you are a college chap,&mdash;anyhow, a gentleman. Be
+ n&rsquo;t it so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Mr. Saunderson, I set out on my travels, which is not long ago,
+ with a strong dislike to telling lies. But I doubt if a man can get along
+ through this world without finding that the faculty of lying was bestowed
+ on him by Nature as a necessary means of self-preservation. If you are
+ going to ask me any questions about myself, I am sure that I shall tell
+ you lies. Perhaps, therefore, it may be best for both if I decline the bed
+ you proffered me, and take my night&rsquo;s rest under a hedge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh! I don&rsquo;t want to know more of a man&rsquo;s affairs than he thinks fit to
+ tell me. Stay and finish the haymaking. And I say, lad, I&rsquo;m glad you don&rsquo;t
+ seem to care for the girls; for I saw a very pretty one trying to flirt
+ with you, and if you don&rsquo;t mind she&rsquo;ll bring you into trouble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How? Does she want to run away from her uncle?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle! Bless you, she don&rsquo;t live with him! She lives with her father; and
+ I never knew that she wants to run away. In fact, Jessie Wiles&mdash;that&rsquo;s
+ her name&mdash;is, I believe, a very good girl, and everybody likes her,&mdash;perhaps
+ a little too much; but then she knows she&rsquo;s a beauty, and does not object
+ to admiration.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No woman ever does, whether she&rsquo;s a beauty or not. But I don&rsquo;t yet
+ understand why Jessie Wiles should bring me into trouble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because there is a big hulking fellow who has gone half out of his wits
+ for her; and when he fancies he sees any other chap too sweet on her he
+ thrashes him into a jelly. So, youngster, you just keep your skin out of
+ that trap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hem! And what does the girl say to those proofs of affection? Does she
+ like the man the better for thrashing other admirers into jelly?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor child! No; she hates the very sight of him. But he swears she shall
+ marry nobody else if he hangs for it. And, to tell you the truth, I
+ suspect that if Jessie does seem to trifle with others a little too
+ lightly, it is to draw away this bully&rsquo;s suspicion from the only man I
+ think she does care for,&mdash;a poor sickly young fellow who was crippled
+ by an accident, and whom Tom Bowles could brain with his little finger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is really interesting,&rdquo; cried Kenelm, showing something like
+ excitement. &ldquo;I should like to know this terrible suitor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s easy eno&rsquo;,&rdquo; said the farmer, dryly. &ldquo;You have only to take a
+ stroll with Jessie Wiles after sunset, and you&rsquo;ll know more of Tom Bowles
+ than you are likely to forget in a month.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you very much for your information,&rdquo; said Kenelm, in a soft tone,
+ grateful but pensive. &ldquo;I hope to profit by it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do. I should be sorry if any harm came to thee; and Tom Bowles in one of
+ his furies is as bad to cross as a mad bull. So now, as we must be up
+ early, I&rsquo;ll just take a look round the stables, and then off to bed; and I
+ advise you to do the same.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you for the hint. I see the young ladies have already gone in.
+ Good-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Passing through the garden, Kenelm encountered the junior Saunderson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear,&rdquo; said the Votary of Progress, &ldquo;that you have found the governor
+ awful slow. What have you been talking about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Girls,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;a subject always awful, but not necessarily slow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Girls,&mdash;the governor been talking about girls? You joke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I did joke, but that is a thing I could never do since I came upon
+ earth. Even in the cradle, I felt that life was a very serious matter, and
+ did not allow of jokes. I remember too well my first dose of castor-oil.
+ You too, Mr. Bob, have doubtless imbibed that initiatory preparation to
+ the sweets of existence. The corners of your mouth have not recovered from
+ the downward curves into which it so rigidly dragged them. Like myself,
+ you are of grave temperament, and not easily moved to jocularity,&mdash;nay,
+ an enthusiast for Progress is of necessity a man eminently dissatisfied
+ with the present state of affairs. And chronic dissatisfaction resents the
+ momentary relief of a joke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give off chaffing, if you please,&rdquo; said Bob, lowering the didascular
+ intonations of his voice, &ldquo;and just tell me plainly, did not my father say
+ anything particular about me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a word: the only person of the male sex of whom he said anything
+ particular was Tom Bowles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, fighting Tom! the terror of the whole neighbourhood! Ah, I guess
+ the old gentleman is afraid lest Tom may fall foul upon me. But Jessie
+ Wiles is not worth a quarrel with that brute. It is a crying shame in the
+ Government&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! has the Government failed to appreciate the heroism of Tom Bowles,
+ or rather to restrain the excesses of its ardour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stuff! it is a shame in the Government not to have compelled his father
+ to put him to school. If education were universal&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You think there would be no brutes in particular. It may be so; but
+ education is universal in China, and so is the bastinado. I thought,
+ however, that you said the schoolmaster was abroad, and that the age of
+ enlightenment was in full progress.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, in the towns, but not in these obsolete rural districts; and that
+ brings me to the point. I feel lost, thrown away here. I have something in
+ me, sir, and it can only come out by collision with equal minds. So do me
+ a favour, will you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With the greatest pleasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give the governor a hint that he can&rsquo;t expect me, after the education I
+ have had, to follow the plough and fatten pigs; and that Manchester is the
+ place for ME.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why Manchester?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I have a relation in business there who will give me a clerkship
+ if the governor will consent. And Manchester rules England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Bob Saunderson, I will do my best to promote your wishes. This is a
+ land of liberty, and every man should choose his own walk in it, so that,
+ at the last, if he goes to the dogs, he goes to them without that
+ disturbance of temper which is naturally occasioned by the sense of being
+ driven to their jaws by another man against his own will. He has then no
+ one to blame but himself. And that, Mr. Bob, is a great comfort. When,
+ having got into a scrape, we blame others, we unconsciously become unjust,
+ spiteful, uncharitable, malignant, perhaps revengeful. We indulge in
+ feelings which tend to demoralize the whole character. But when we only
+ blame ourselves, we become modest and penitent. We make allowances for
+ others. And indeed self-blame is a salutary exercise of conscience, which
+ a really good man performs every day of his life. And now, will you show
+ me the room in which I am to sleep, and forget for a few hours that I am
+ alive at all: the best thing that can happen to us in this world, my dear
+ Mr. Bob! There&rsquo;s never much amiss with our days, so long as we can forget
+ about them the moment we lay our heads on the pillow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two young men entered the house amicably, arm in arm. The girls had
+ already retired, but Mrs. Saunderson was still up to conduct her visitor
+ to the guest&rsquo;s chamber,&mdash;a pretty room which had been furnished
+ twenty-two years ago on the occasion of the farmer&rsquo;s marriage, at the
+ expense of Mrs. Saunderson&rsquo;s mother, for her own occupation when she paid
+ them a visit, and with its dimity curtains and trellised paper it still
+ looked as fresh and new as if decorated and furnished yesterday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Left alone, Kenelm undressed, and before he got into bed, bared his right
+ arm, and doubling it, gravely contemplated its muscular development,
+ passing his left hand over that prominence in the upper part which is
+ vulgarly called the ball. Satisfied apparently with the size and the
+ firmness of that pugilistic protuberance, he gently sighed forth, &ldquo;I fear
+ I shall have to lick Thomas Bowles.&rdquo; In five minutes more he was asleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE next day the hay-mowing was completed, and a large portion of the hay
+ already made carted away to be stacked. Kenelm acquitted himself with a
+ credit not less praiseworthy than had previously won Mr. Saunderson&rsquo;s
+ approbation. But instead of rejecting as before the acquaintance of Miss
+ Jessie Wiles, he contrived towards noon to place himself near to that
+ dangerous beauty, and commenced conversation. &ldquo;I am afraid I was rather
+ rude to you yesterday, and I want to beg pardon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; answered the girl, in that simple intelligible English which is more
+ frequent among our village folks nowadays than many popular novelists
+ would lead us into supposing, &ldquo;oh, I ought to ask pardon for taking a
+ liberty in speaking to you. But I thought you&rsquo;d feel strange, and I
+ intended it kindly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure you did,&rdquo; returned Kenelm, chivalrously raking her portion of
+ hay as well as his own, while he spoke. &ldquo;And I want to be good friends
+ with you. It is very near the time when we shall leave off for dinner, and
+ Mrs. Saunderson has filled my pockets with some excellent beef-sandwiches,
+ which I shall be happy to share with you, if you do not object to dine
+ with me here, instead of going home for your dinner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl hesitated, and then shook her head in dissent from the
+ proposition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you afraid that your neighbours will think it wrong?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie curled up her lips with a pretty scorn, and said, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t much
+ care what other folks say, but is n&rsquo;t it wrong?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in the least. Let me make your mind easy. I am here but for a day or
+ two: we are not likely ever to meet again; but, before I go, I should be
+ glad if I could do you some little service.&rdquo; As he spoke he had paused
+ from his work, and, leaning on his rake, fixed his eyes, for the first
+ time attentively, on the fair haymaker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, she was decidedly pretty,&mdash;pretty to a rare degree: luxuriant
+ brown hair neatly tied up, under a straw hat doubtless of her own
+ plaiting; for, as a general rule, nothing more educates the village maid
+ for the destinies of flirt than the accomplishment of straw-plaiting. She
+ had large, soft blue eyes, delicate small features, and a complexion more
+ clear in its healthful bloom than rural beauties generally retain against
+ the influences of wind and sun. She smiled and slightly coloured as he
+ gazed on her, and, lifting her eyes, gave him one gentle, trustful glance,
+ which might have bewitched a philosopher and deceived a <i>roue</i>. And
+ yet Kenelm by that intuitive knowledge of character which is often
+ truthfulest where it is least disturbed by the doubts and cavils of
+ acquired knowledge, felt at once that in that girl&rsquo;s mind coquetry,
+ perhaps unconscious, was conjoined with an innocence of anything worse
+ than coquetry as complete as a child&rsquo;s. He bowed his head, in withdrawing
+ his gaze, and took her into his heart as tenderly as if she had been a
+ child appealing to it for protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; he said inly, &ldquo;certainly I must lick Tom Bowles; yet stay,
+ perhaps after all she likes him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; he continued aloud, &ldquo;you do not see how I can be of any service to
+ you. Before I explain, let me ask which of the men in the field is Tom
+ Bowles?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tom Bowles?&rdquo; exclaimed Jessie, in a tone of surprise and alarm, and
+ turning pale as she looked hastily round; &ldquo;you frightened me, sir: but he
+ is not here; he does not work in the fields. But how came you to hear of
+ Tom Bowles?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dine with me and I&rsquo;ll tell you. Look, there is a quiet place in yon
+ corner under the thorn-trees by that piece of water. See, they are leaving
+ off work: I will go for a can of beer, and then, pray, let me join you
+ there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie paused for a moment as if doubtful still; then again glancing at
+ Kenelm, and assured by the grave kindness of his countenance, uttered a
+ scarce audible assent and moved away towards the thorn-trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the sun now stood perpendicularly over their heads, and the hand of the
+ clock in the village church tower, soaring over the hedgerows, reached the
+ first hour after noon, all work ceased in a sudden silence: some of the
+ girls went back to their homes; those who stayed grouped together, apart
+ from the men, who took their way to the shadows of a large oak-tree in the
+ hedgerow, where beer kegs and cans awaited them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;AND now,&rdquo; said Kenelm, as the two young persons, having finished their
+ simple repast, sat under the thorn-trees and by the side of the water,
+ fringed at that part with tall reeds through which the light summer breeze
+ stirred with a pleasant murmur, &ldquo;now I will talk to you about Tom Bowles.
+ Is it true that you don&rsquo;t like that brave young fellow? I say young, as I
+ take his youth for granted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Like him! I hate the sight of him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you always hate the sight of him? You must surely at one time have
+ allowed him to think that you did not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl winced, and made no answer, but plucked a daffodil from the soil,
+ and tore it ruthlessly to pieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am afraid you like to serve your admirers as you do that ill-fated
+ flower,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with some severity of tone. &ldquo;But concealed in the
+ flower you may sometimes find the sting of a bee. I see by your
+ countenance that you did not tell Tom Bowles that you hated him till it
+ was too late to prevent his losing his wits for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I was n&rsquo;t so bad as that,&rdquo; said Jessie, looking, nevertheless, rather
+ ashamed of herself; &ldquo;but I was silly and giddy-like, I own; and, when he
+ first took notice of me, I was pleased, without thinking much of it,
+ because, you see, Mr. Bowles (emphasis on <i>Mr.</i>) is higher up than a
+ poor girl like me. He is a tradesman, and I am only a shepherd&rsquo;s daughter;
+ though, indeed, Father is more like Mr. Saunderson&rsquo;s foreman than a mere
+ shepherd. But I never thought anything serious of it, and did not suppose
+ he did; that is, at first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So Tom Bowles is a tradesman. What trade?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A farrier, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, I am told, a very fine young man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know as to that: he is very big.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what made you hate him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The first thing that made me hate him was that he insulted Father, who is
+ a very quiet, timid man, and threatened I don&rsquo;t know what if Father did
+ not make me keep company with him. Make me indeed! But Mr. Bowles is a
+ dangerous, bad-hearted, violent man, and&mdash;don&rsquo;t laugh at me, sir, but
+ I dreamed one night he was murdering me. And I think he will too, if he
+ stays here: and so does his poor mother, who is a very nice woman, and
+ wants him to go away; but he will not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jessie,&rdquo; said Kenelm, softly, &ldquo;I said I wanted to make friends with you.
+ Do you think you can make a friend of me? I can never be more than friend.
+ But I should like to be that. Can you trust me as one?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered the girl, firmly, and, as she lifted her eyes to him,
+ their look was pure from all vestige of coquetry,&mdash;guileless, frank,
+ grateful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there not another young man who courts you more civilly than Tom
+ Bowles does, and whom you really could find it in your heart to like?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie looked round for another daffodil, and not finding one, contented
+ herself with a bluebell, which she did not tear to pieces, but caressed
+ with a tender hand. Kenelm bent his eyes down on her charming face with
+ something in their gaze rarely seen there,&mdash;something of that
+ unreasoning, inexpressible human fondness, for which philosophers of his
+ school have no excuse. Had ordinary mortals, like you or myself, for
+ instance, peered through the leaves of the thorn-trees, we should have
+ sighed or frowned, according to our several temperaments; but we should
+ all have said, whether spitefully or envyingly, &ldquo;Happy young lovers!&rdquo; and
+ should all have blundered lamentably in so saying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, there is no denying the fact that a pretty face has a very unfair
+ advantage over a plain one. And, much to the discredit of Kenelm&rsquo;s
+ philanthropy, it may be reasonably doubted whether, had Jessie Wiles been
+ endowed by nature with a snub nose and a squint, Kenelm would have
+ volunteered his friendly services, or meditated battle with Tom Bowles on
+ her behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was no touch of envy or jealousy in the tone with which he said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see there is some one you would like well enough to marry, and that you
+ make a great difference in the way you treat a daffodil and a bluebell.
+ Who and what is the young man whom the bluebell represents? Come,
+ confide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We were much brought up together,&rdquo; said Jessie, still looking down, and
+ still smoothing the leaves of the bluebell. &ldquo;His mother lived in the next
+ cottage; and my mother was very fond of him, and so was Father too; and,
+ before I was ten years old, they used to laugh when poor Will called me
+ his little wife.&rdquo; Here the tears which had started to Jessie&rsquo;s eyes began
+ to fall over the flower. &ldquo;But now Father would not hear of it; and it
+ can&rsquo;t be. And I&rsquo;ve tried to care for some one else, and I can&rsquo;t, and
+ that&rsquo;s the truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But why? Has he turned out ill?&mdash;taken to poaching or drink?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no, no; he&rsquo;s as steady and good a lad as ever lived. But&mdash;but&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; but&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is a cripple now; and I love him all the better for it.&rdquo; Here Jessie
+ fairly sobbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm was greatly moved, and prudently held his peace till she had a
+ little recovered herself; then, in answer to his gentle questionings, he
+ learned that Will Somers&mdash;till then a healthy and strong lad&mdash;had
+ fallen from the height of a scaffolding, at the age of sixteen, and been
+ so seriously injured that he was moved at once to the hospital. When he
+ came out of it&mdash;what with the fall, and what with the long illness
+ which had followed the effects of the accident&mdash;he was not only
+ crippled for life, but of health so delicate and weakly that he was no
+ longer fit for outdoor labour and the hard life of a peasant. He was an
+ only son of a widowed mother, and his sole mode of assisting her was a
+ very precarious one. He had taught himself basket-making; and though,
+ Jessie said, his work was very ingenious and clever, still there were but
+ few customers for it in that neighbourhood. And, alas! even if Jessie&rsquo;s
+ father would consent to give his daughter to the poor cripple, how could
+ the poor cripple earn enough to maintain a wife?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; said Jessie, &ldquo;still I was happy, walking out with him on Sunday
+ evenings, or going to sit with him and his mother; for we are both young,
+ and can wait. But I dare n&rsquo;t do it any more now: for Tom Bowles has sworn
+ that if I do he will beat him before my eyes; and Will has a high spirit,
+ and I should break my heart if any harm happened to him on my account.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As for Mr. Bowles, we&rsquo;ll not think of him at present. But if Will could
+ maintain himself and you, your father would not object nor you either to a
+ marriage with the poor cripple?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father would not; and as for me, if it weren&rsquo;t for disobeying Father, I&rsquo;d
+ marry him to-morrow. <i>I</i> can work.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are going back to the hay now; but after that task is over, let me
+ walk home with you, and show me Will&rsquo;s cottage and Mr. Bowles&rsquo;s shop or
+ forge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you&rsquo;ll not say anything to Mr. Bowles. He would n&rsquo;t mind your being a
+ gentleman, as I now see you are, sir; and he&rsquo;s dangerous,&mdash;oh, so
+ dangerous!&mdash;and so strong.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never fear,&rdquo; answered Kenelm, with the nearest approach to a laugh he had
+ ever made since childhood; &ldquo;but when we are relieved, wait for me a few
+ minutes at yon gate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM spoke no more to his new friend in the hayfields; but when the
+ day&rsquo;s work was over he looked round for the farmer to make an excuse for
+ not immediately joining the family supper. However, he did not see either
+ Mr. Saunderson or his son. Both were busied in the stackyard. Well pleased
+ to escape excuse and the questions it might provoke, Kenelm therefore put
+ on the coat he had laid aside and joined Jessie, who had waited for him at
+ the gate. They entered the lane side by side, following the stream of
+ villagers who were slowly wending their homeward way. It was a primitive
+ English village, not adorned on the one hand with fancy or model cottages,
+ nor on the other hand indicating penury and squalor. The church rose
+ before them gray and Gothic, backed by the red clouds in which the sun had
+ set, and bordered by the glebe-land of the half-seen parsonage. Then came
+ the village green, with a pretty schoolhouse; and to this succeeded a long
+ street of scattered whitewashed cottages, in the midst of their own little
+ gardens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they walked the moon rose in full splendour, silvering the road before
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is the Squire here?&rdquo; asked Kenelm. &ldquo;I should guess him to be a good
+ sort of man, and well off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Squire Travers; he is a great gentleman, and they say very rich. But
+ his place is a good way from this village. You can see it if you stay, for
+ he gives a harvest-home supper on Saturday, and Mr. Saunderson and all his
+ tenants are going. It is a beautiful park, and Miss Travers is a sight to
+ look at. Oh, she is lovely!&rdquo; continued Jessie, with an unaffected burst of
+ admiration; for women are more sensible of the charm of each other&rsquo;s
+ beauty than men give them credit for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As pretty as yourself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, pretty is not the word. She is a thousand times handsomer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Humph!&rdquo; said Kenelm, incredulously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a pause, broken by a quick sigh from Jessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are you sighing for?&mdash;tell me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was thinking that a very little can make folks happy, but that somehow
+ or other that very little is as hard to get as if one set one&rsquo;s heart on a
+ great deal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s very wisely said. Everybody covets a little something for which,
+ perhaps, nobody else would give a straw. But what&rsquo;s the very little thing
+ for which you are sighing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Bawtrey wants to sell that shop of hers. She is getting old, and has
+ had fits; and she can get nobody to buy; and if Will had that shop and I
+ could keep it,&mdash;but &lsquo;tis no use thinking of that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What shop do you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where? I see no shop.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it is <i>the</i> shop of the village,&mdash;the only one,&mdash;where
+ the post-office is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! I see something at the windows like a red cloak. What do they sell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Everything,&mdash;tea and sugar and candles and shawls and gowns and
+ cloaks and mouse-traps and letter-paper; and Mrs. Bawtrey buys poor Will&rsquo;s
+ baskets, and sells them for a good deal more than she pays.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems a nice cottage, with a field and orchard at the back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. Mrs. Bawtrey pays L8 a year for it; but the shop can well afford
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm made no reply. They both walked on in silence, and had now reached
+ the centre of the village street when Jessie, looking up, uttered an
+ abrupt exclamation, gave an affrighted start, and then came to a dead
+ stop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s eye followed the direction of hers, and saw, a few yards distant,
+ at the other side of the way, a small red brick house, with thatched sheds
+ adjoining it, the whole standing in a wide yard, over the gate of which
+ leaned a man smoking a small cutty-pipe. &ldquo;It is Tom Bowles,&rdquo; whispered
+ Jessie, and instinctively she twined her arm into Kenelm&rsquo;s; then, as if on
+ second thoughts, withdrew it, and said, still in a whisper, &ldquo;Go back now,
+ sir; do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I. It is Tom Bowles whom I want to know. Hush!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For here Tom Bowles had thrown down his pipe and was coming slowly across
+ the road towards them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm eyed him with attention. A singularly powerful man, not so tall as
+ Kenelm by some inches, but still above the middle height, herculean
+ shoulders and chest, the lower limbs not in equal proportion,&mdash;a sort
+ of slouching, shambling gait. As he advanced the moonlight fell on his
+ face; it was a handsome one. He wore no hat, and his hair, of a light
+ brown, curled close. His face was fresh-coloured, with aquiline features;
+ his age apparently about six or seven and twenty. Coming nearer and
+ nearer, whatever favourable impression the first glance at his physiognomy
+ might have made on Kenelm was dispelled, for the expression of his face
+ changed and became fierce and lowering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm was still walking on, Jessie by his side, when Bowles rudely thrust
+ himself between them, and seizing the girl&rsquo;s arm with one hand, he turned
+ his face full on Kenelm, with a menacing wave of the other hand, and said
+ in a deep burly voice,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who be you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let go that young woman before I tell you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you weren&rsquo;t a stranger,&rdquo; answered Bowles, seeming as if he tried to
+ suppress a rising fit of wrath, &ldquo;you&rsquo;d be in the kennel for those words.
+ But I s&rsquo;pose you don&rsquo;t know that I&rsquo;m Tom Bowles, and I don&rsquo;t choose the
+ girl as I&rsquo;m after to keep company with any other man. So you be off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I don&rsquo;t choose any other man to lay violent hands on any girl walking
+ by my side without telling him that he&rsquo;s a brute; and that I only wait
+ till he has both his hands at liberty to let him know that he has not a
+ poor cripple to deal with.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom Bowles could scarcely believe his ears. Amaze swallowed up for the
+ moment every other sentiment. Mechanically he loosened his hold of Jessie,
+ who fled off like a bird released. But evidently she thought of her new
+ friend&rsquo;s danger more than her own escape; for instead of sheltering
+ herself in her father&rsquo;s cottage, she ran towards a group of labourers who,
+ near at hand, had stopped loitering before the public-house, and returned
+ with those allies towards the spot in which she had left the two men. She
+ was very popular with the villagers, who, strong in the sense of numbers,
+ overcame their awe of Tom Bowles, and arrived at the place half running,
+ half striding, in time, they hoped, to interpose between his terrible arm
+ and the bones of the unoffending stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Bowles, having recovered his first astonishment, and scarcely
+ noticing Jessie&rsquo;s escape, still left his right arm extended towards the
+ place she had vacated, and with a quick back-stroke of the left levelled
+ at Kenelm&rsquo;s face, growled contemptuously, &ldquo;Thou&rsquo;lt find one hand enough
+ for thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But quick as was his aim, Kenelm caught the lifted arm just above the
+ elbow, causing the blow to waste itself on air, and with a simultaneous
+ advance of his right knee and foot dexterously tripped up his bulky
+ antagonist, and laid him sprawling on his back. The movement was so
+ sudden, and the stun it occasioned so utter, morally as well as
+ physically, that a minute or more elapsed before Tom Bowles picked himself
+ up. And he then stood another minute glowering at his antagonist, with a
+ vague sentiment of awe almost like a superstitious panic. For it is
+ noticeable that, however fierce and fearless a man or even a wild beast
+ may be, yet if either has hitherto been only familiar with victory and
+ triumph, never yet having met with a foe that could cope with its force,
+ the first effect of a defeat, especially from a despised adversary,
+ unhinges and half paralyzes the whole nervous system. But as fighting Tom
+ gradually recovered to the consciousness of his own strength, and the
+ recollection that it had been only foiled by the skilful trick of a
+ wrestler, and not the hand-to-hand might of a pugilist, the panic
+ vanished, and Tom Bowles was himself again. &ldquo;Oh, that&rsquo;s your sort, is it?
+ We don&rsquo;t fight with our heels hereabouts, like Cornishers and donkeys: we
+ fight with our fists, youngster; and since you <i>will</i> have a bout at
+ that, why, you must.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Providence,&rdquo; answered Kenelm, solemnly, &ldquo;sent me to this village for the
+ express purpose of licking Tom Bowles. It is a signal mercy vouchsafed to
+ yourself, as you will one day acknowledge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again a thrill of awe, something like that which the demagogue in
+ Aristophanes might have felt when braved by the sausage-maker, shot
+ through the valiant heart of Tom Bowles. He did not like those ominous
+ words, and still less the lugubrious tone of voice in which they were
+ uttered, But resolved, at least, to proceed to battle with more
+ preparation than he had at first designed, he now deliberately
+ disencumbered himself of his heavy fustian jacket and vest, rolled up his
+ shirt-sleeves, and then slowly advanced towards the foe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm had also, with still greater deliberation, taken off his coat&mdash;which
+ he folded up with care, as being both a new and an only one, and deposited
+ by the hedge-side&mdash;and bared arms, lean indeed and almost slight, as
+ compared with the vast muscle of his adversary, but firm in sinew as the
+ hind leg of a stag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the labourers, led by Jessie, had arrived at the spot, and
+ were about to crowd in between the combatants, when Kenelm waved them back
+ and said in a calm and impressive voice,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stand round, my good friends, make a ring, and see that it is fair play
+ on my side. I am sure it will be fair on Mr. Bowles&rsquo;s. He is big enough to
+ scorn what is little. And now, Mr. Bowles, just a word with you in the
+ presence of your neighbours. I am not going to say anything uncivil. If
+ you are rather rough and hasty, a man is not always master of himself&mdash;at
+ least so I am told&mdash;when he thinks more than he ought to do about a
+ pretty girl. But I can&rsquo;t look at your face even by this moonlight, and
+ though its expression at this moment is rather cross, without being sure
+ that you are a fine fellow at bottom, and that if you give a promise as
+ man to man you will keep it. Is that so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One or two of the bystanders murmured assent; the others pressed round in
+ silent wonder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&rsquo;s all that soft-sawder about?&rdquo; said Tom Bowles, somewhat
+ falteringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Simply this: if in the fight between us I beat you, I ask you to promise
+ before your neighbours that you will not by word or deed molest or
+ interfere again with Miss Jessie Wiles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh!&rdquo; roared Tom. &ldquo;Is it that you are after her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Suppose I am, if that pleases you; and on my side, I promise that if you
+ beat me, I quit this place as soon as you leave me well enough to do so,
+ and will never visit it again. What! do you hesitate to promise? Are you
+ really afraid I shall lick you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You! I&rsquo;d smash a dozen of you to powder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In that case, you are safe to promise. Come, &lsquo;tis a fair bargain. Is n&rsquo;t
+ it, neighbours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Won over by Kenelm&rsquo;s easy show of good temper, and by the sense of
+ justice, the bystanders joined in a common exclamation of assent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, Tom,&rdquo; said an old fellow, &ldquo;the gentleman can&rsquo;t speak fairer; and we
+ shall all think you be afeard if you hold back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom&rsquo;s face worked: but at last he growled, &ldquo;Well, I promise; that is, if
+ he beats me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;You hear, neighbours; and Tom Bowles could not
+ show that handsome face of his among you if he broke his word. Shake hands
+ on it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fighting Tom sulkily shook hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well now, that&rsquo;s what I call English,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;all pluck and no
+ malice. Fall back, friends, and leave a clear space for us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men all receded; and as Kenelm took his ground, there was a supple
+ ease in his posture which at once brought out into clearer evidence the
+ nervous strength of his build, and, contrasted with Tom&rsquo;s bulk of chest,
+ made the latter look clumsy and topheavy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two men faced each other a minute, the eyes of both vigilant and
+ steadfast. Tom&rsquo;s blood began to fire up as he gazed; nor, with all his
+ outward calm; was Kenelm insensible of that proud beat of the heart which
+ is aroused by the fierce joy of combat. Tom struck out first and a blow
+ was parried, but not returned; another and another blow,&mdash;still
+ parried, still unreturned. Kenelm, acting evidently on the defensive, took
+ all the advantages for that strategy which he derived from superior length
+ of arm and lighter agility of frame. Perhaps he wished to ascertain the
+ extent of his adversary&rsquo;s skill, or to try the endurance of his wind,
+ before he ventured on the hazards of attack. Tom, galled to the quick that
+ blows which might have felled an ox were thus warded off from their mark,
+ and dimly aware that he was encountering some mysterious skill which
+ turned his brute strength into waste force and might overmaster him in the
+ long run, came to a rapid conclusion that the sooner he brought that brute
+ strength to bear the better it would be for him. Accordingly, after three
+ rounds, in which without once breaking the guard of his antagonist he had
+ received a few playful taps on the nose and mouth, he drew back and made a
+ bull-like rush at his foe,&mdash;bull-like, for it butted full at him with
+ the powerful down-bent head, and the two fists doing duty as horns. The
+ rush spent, he found himself in the position of a man milled. I take it
+ for granted that every Englishman who can call himself a man&mdash;that
+ is, every man who has been an English boy, and, as such, been compelled to
+ the use of his fists&mdash;knows what a &ldquo;mill&rdquo; is. But I sing not only
+ &ldquo;pueris,&rdquo; but &ldquo;virginibus.&rdquo; Ladies, &ldquo;a mill,&rdquo;&mdash;using with reluctance
+ and contempt for myself that slang in which ladywriters indulge, and Girls
+ of the Period know much better than they do their Murray,&mdash;&ldquo;a mill,&rdquo;&mdash;speaking
+ not to ladywriters, not to Girls of the Period, but to innocent damsels,
+ and in explanation to those foreigners who only understand the English
+ language as taught by Addison and Macaulay,&mdash;a &ldquo;mill&rdquo;
+ periphrastically means this: your adversary, in the noble encounter
+ between fist and fist, has so plunged his head that it gets caught, as in
+ a vice, between the side and doubled left arm of the adversary, exposing
+ that head, unprotected and helpless, to be pounded out of recognizable
+ shape by the right fist of the opponent. It is a situation in which raw
+ superiority of force sometimes finds itself, and is seldom spared by
+ disciplined superiority of skill. Kenelm, his right fist raised, paused
+ for a moment, then, loosening the left arm, releasing the prisoner, and
+ giving him a friendly slap on the shoulder, he turned round to the
+ spectators and said apologetically, &ldquo;He has a handsome face: it would be a
+ shame to spoil it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom&rsquo;s position of peril was so obvious to all, and that good-humoured
+ abnegation of the advantage which the position gave to the adversary
+ seemed so generous, that the labourers actually hurrahed. Tom, himself
+ felt as if treated like a child; and alas, and alas for him! in wheeling
+ round, and regathering himself up, his eye rested on Jessie&rsquo;s face. Her
+ lips were apart with breathless terror: he fancied they were apart with a
+ smile of contempt. And now he became formidable. He fought as fights the
+ bull in the presence of the heifer, who, as he knows too well, will go
+ with the conqueror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Tom had never yet fought with a man taught by a prizefighter, so never
+ yet had Kenelm encountered a strength which, but for the lack of that
+ teaching, would have conquered his own. He could act no longer on the
+ defensive; he could no longer play, like a dexterous fencer, with the
+ sledge-hammers of those mighty arms. They broke through his guard; they
+ sounded on his chest as on an anvil. He felt that did they alight on his
+ head he was a lost man. He felt also that the blows spent on the chest of
+ his adversary were idle as the stroke of a cane on the hide of a
+ rhinoceros. But now his nostrils dilated; his eyes flashed fire: Kenelm
+ Chillingly had ceased to be a philosopher. Crash came his blow&mdash;how
+ unlike the swinging roundabout hits of Tom Bowles!&mdash;straight to its
+ aim as the rifle-ball of a Tyrolese or a British marksman at Aldershot,&mdash;all
+ the strength of nerve, sinew, purpose, and mind concentred in its vigour,&mdash;crash
+ just at that part of the front where the eyes meet, and followed up with
+ the rapidity of lightning, flash upon flash, by a more restrained but more
+ disabling blow with the left hand just where the left ear meets throat and
+ jaw-bone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the first blow Tom Bowles had reeled and staggered, at the second he
+ threw up his hands, made a jump in the air as if shot through the heart,
+ and then heavily fell forwards, an inert mass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spectators pressed round him in terror. They thought he was dead.
+ Kenelm knelt, passed quickly his hand over Tom&rsquo;s lips, pulse, and heart,
+ and then rising, said, humbly and with an air of apology,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If he had been a less magnificent creature, I assure you on my honour
+ that I should never have ventured that second blow. The first would have
+ done for any man less splendidly endowed by nature. Lift him gently; take
+ him home. Tell his mother, with my kind regards, that I&rsquo;ll call and see
+ her and him to-morrow. And, stop, does he ever drink too much beer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said one of the villagers, &ldquo;Tom <i>can</i> drink.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought so. Too much flesh for that muscle. Go for the nearest doctor.
+ You, my lad? good; off with you; quick. No danger, but perhaps it may be a
+ case for the lancet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom Bowles was lifted tenderly by four of the stoutest men present and
+ borne into his home, evincing no sign of consciousness; but his face,
+ where not clouted with blood, was very pale, very calm, with a slight
+ froth at the lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm pulled down his shirt-sleeves, put on his coat, and turned to
+ Jessie,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, my young friend, show me Will&rsquo;s cottage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl came to him, white and trembling. She did not dare to speak. The
+ stranger had become a new man in her eyes. Perhaps he frightened her as
+ much as Tom Bowles had done. But she quickened her pace, leaving the
+ public-house behind till she came to the farther end of the village.
+ Kenelm walked beside her, muttering to himself: and though Jessie caught
+ his words, happily she did not understand; for they repeated one of those
+ bitter reproaches on her sex as the main cause of all strife, bloodshed,
+ and mischief in general, with which the classic authors abound. His spleen
+ soothed by that recourse to the lessons of the ancients, Kenelm turned at
+ last to his silent companion, and said kindly but gravely,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Bowles has given me his promise, and it is fair that I should now ask
+ a promise from you. It is this: just consider how easily a girl so pretty
+ as you can be the cause of a man&rsquo;s death. Had Bowles struck me where I
+ struck him I should have been past the help of a surgeon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; groaned Jessie, shuddering, and covering her face with both hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, putting aside that danger, consider that a man may be hit mortally
+ on the heart as well as on the head, and that a woman has much to answer
+ for who, no matter what her excuse, forgets what misery and what guilt can
+ be inflicted by a word from her lip and a glance from her eye. Consider
+ this, and promise that, whether you marry Will Somers or not, you will
+ never again give a man fair cause to think you can like him unless your
+ own heart tells you that you can. Will you promise that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will, indeed,&mdash;indeed.&rdquo; Poor Jessie&rsquo;s voice died in sobs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There, my child, I don&rsquo;t ask you not to cry, because I know how much
+ women like crying; and in this instance it does you a great deal of good.
+ But we are just at the end of the village; which is Will&rsquo;s cottage?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie lifted her head, and pointed to a solitary, small thatched cottage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would ask you to come in and introduce me; but that might look too much
+ like crowing over poor Tom Bowles. So good-night to you, Jessie, and
+ forgive me for preaching.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ KENELM knocked at the cottage door; a voice said faintly, &ldquo;Come in.&rdquo;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ He stooped his head, and stepped over the threshold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since his encounter with Tom Bowles his sympathies had gone with that
+ unfortunate lover: it is natural to like a man after you have beaten him;
+ and he was by no means predisposed to favour Jessie&rsquo;s preference for a
+ sickly cripple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, when two bright, soft, dark eyes, and a pale intellectual
+ countenance, with that nameless aspect of refinement which delicate health
+ so often gives, especially to the young, greeted his quiet gaze, his heart
+ was at once won over to the side of the rival. Will Somers was seated by
+ the hearth, on which a few live embers despite the warmth of the summer
+ evening still burned; a rude little table was by his side, on which were
+ laid osier twigs and white peeled chips, together with an open book. His
+ hands, pale and slender, were at work on a small basket half finished. His
+ mother was just clearing away the tea-things from another table that stood
+ by the window. Will rose, with the good breeding that belongs to the rural
+ peasant, as the stranger entered; the widow looked round with surprise,
+ and dropped her simple courtesy,&mdash;a little thin woman, with a mild,
+ patient face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cottage was very tidily kept, as it is in most village homes where the
+ woman has it her own way. The deal dresser opposite the door had its
+ display of humble crockery. The whitewashed walls were relieved with
+ coloured prints, chiefly Scriptural subjects from the New Testament, such
+ as the Return of the Prodigal Son, in a blue coat and yellow
+ inexpressibles, with his stockings about his heels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At one corner there were piled up baskets of various sizes, and at another
+ corner was an open cupboard containing books,&mdash;an article of
+ decorative furniture found in cottages much more rarely than coloured
+ prints and gleaming crockery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this, of course, Kenelm could not at a glance comprehend in detail.
+ But as the mind of a man accustomed to generalization is marvellously
+ quick in forming a sound judgment, whereas a mind accustomed to dwell only
+ on detail is wonderfully slow at arriving at any judgment at all, and when
+ it does, the probability is that it will arrive at a wrong one, Kenelm
+ judged correctly when he came to this conclusion: &ldquo;I am among simple
+ English peasants; but, for some reason or other, not to be explained by
+ the relative amount of wages, it is a favourable specimen of that class.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg your pardon for intruding at this hour, Mrs. Somers,&rdquo; said Kenelm,
+ who had been too familiar with peasants from his earliest childhood not to
+ know how quickly, when in the presence of their household gods, they
+ appreciate respect, and how acutely they feel the want of it. &ldquo;But my stay
+ in the village is very short, and I should not like to leave without
+ seeing your son&rsquo;s basket-work, of which I have heard much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are very good, sir,&rdquo; said Will, with a pleased smile that wonderfully
+ brightened up his face. &ldquo;It is only just a few common things that I keep
+ by me. Any finer sort of work I mostly do by order.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see, sir,&rdquo; said Mrs. Somers, &ldquo;it takes so much more time for pretty
+ work-baskets, and such like; and unless done to order, it might be a
+ chance if he could get it sold. But pray be seated, sir,&rdquo; and Mrs. Somers
+ placed a chair for her visitor, &ldquo;while I just run up stairs for the
+ work-basket which my son has made for Miss Travers. It is to go home
+ to-morrow, and I put it away for fear of accidents.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm seated himself, and, drawing his chair near to Will&rsquo;s, took up the
+ half-finished basket which the young man had laid down on the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This seems to me very nice and delicate workmanship,&rdquo; said Kenelm; &ldquo;and
+ the shape, when you have finished it, will be elegant enough to please the
+ taste of a lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is for Mrs. Lethbridge,&rdquo; said Will: &ldquo;she wanted something to hold
+ cards and letters; and I took the shape from a book of drawings which Mr.
+ Lethbridge kindly lent me. You know Mr. Lethbridge, sir? He is a very good
+ gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I don&rsquo;t know him. Who is he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our clergyman, sir. This is the book.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Kenelm&rsquo;s surprise, it was a work on Pompeii, and contained woodcuts of
+ the implements and ornaments, mosaics and frescos, found in that memorable
+ little city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see this is your model,&rdquo; said Kenelm; &ldquo;what they call a <i>patera</i>,
+ and rather a famous one. You are copying it much more truthfully than I
+ should have supposed it possible to do in substituting basket-work for
+ bronze. But you observe that much of the beauty of this shallow bowl
+ depends on the two doves perched on the brim. You can&rsquo;t manage that
+ ornamental addition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Lethbridge thought of putting there two little stuffed
+ canary-birds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did she? Good heavens!&rdquo; exclaimed Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But somehow,&rdquo; continued Will, &ldquo;I did not like that, and I made bold to
+ say so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did not you do it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I don&rsquo;t know; but I did not think it would be the right thing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would have been very bad taste, and spoiled the effect of your
+ basket-work; and I&rsquo;ll endeavour to explain why. You see here, in the next
+ page, a drawing of a very beautiful statue. Of course this statue is
+ intended to be a representation of nature, but nature idealized. You don&rsquo;t
+ know the meaning of that hard word, idealized, and very few people do. But
+ it means the performance of a something in art according to the idea which
+ a man&rsquo;s mind forms to itself out of a something in nature. That something
+ in nature must, of course, have been carefully studied before the man can
+ work out anything in art by which it is faithfully represented. The
+ artist, for instance, who made that statue, must have known the
+ proportions of the human frame. He must have made studies of various parts
+ of it,&mdash;heads and hands, and arms and legs, and so forth,&mdash;and
+ having done so, he then puts together all his various studies of details,
+ so as to form a new whole, which is intended to personate an idea formed
+ in his own mind. Do you go with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Partly, sir; but I am puzzled a little still.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course you are; but you&rsquo;ll puzzle yourself right if you think over
+ what I say. Now if, in order to make this statue, which is composed of
+ metal or stone, more natural, I stuck on it a wig of real hair, would not
+ you feel at once that I had spoilt the work; that as you clearly express
+ it, &lsquo;it would not be the right thing&rsquo;? and instead of making the work of
+ art more natural, I should have made it laughably unnatural, by forcing
+ insensibly upon the mind of him who looked at it the contrast between the
+ real life, represented by a wig of actual hair, and the artistic life,
+ represented by an idea embodied in stone or metal. The higher the work of
+ art (that is, the higher the idea it represents as a new combination of
+ details taken from nature), the more it is degraded or spoilt by an
+ attempt to give it a kind of reality which is out of keeping with the
+ materials employed. But the same rule applies to everything in art,
+ however humble. And a couple of stuffed canary-birds at the brim of a
+ basket-work imitation of a Greek drinking-cup would be as bad taste as a
+ wig from the barber&rsquo;s on the head of a marble statue of Apollo.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said Will, his head downcast, like a man pondering,&mdash;&ldquo;at
+ least I think I see; and I&rsquo;m very much obliged to you, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Somers had long since returned with the work-basket, but stood with
+ it in her hands, not daring to interrupt the gentleman, and listening to
+ his discourse with as much patience and as little comprehension as if it
+ had been one of the controversial sermons upon Ritualism with which on
+ great occasions Mr. Lethbridge favoured his congregation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm having now exhausted his critical lecture&mdash;from which certain
+ poets and novelists who contrive to caricature the ideal by their attempt
+ to put wigs of real hair upon the heads of stone statues might borrow a
+ useful hint or two if they would condescend to do so, which is not likely&mdash;perceived
+ Mrs. Somers standing by him, took from her the basket, which was really
+ very pretty and elegant, subdivided into various compartments for the
+ implements in use among ladies, and bestowed on it a well-merited
+ eulogium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The young lady means to finish it herself with ribbons, and line it with
+ satin,&rdquo; said Mrs. Somers, proudly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The ribbons will not be amiss, sir?&rdquo; said Will, interrogatively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all. Your natural sense of the fitness of things tells you that
+ ribbons go well with straw and light straw-like work such as this; though
+ you would not put ribbons on those rude hampers and game-baskets in the
+ corner. Like to like; a stout cord goes suitably with them: just as a poet
+ who understands his art employs pretty expressions for poems intended to
+ be pretty and suit a fashionable drawing-room, and carefully shuns them to
+ substitute a simple cord for poems intended to be strong and travel far,
+ despite of rough usage by the way. But you really ought to make much more
+ money by this fancy-work than you could as a day-labourer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will sighed. &ldquo;Not in this neighbourhood, sir; I might in a town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not move to a town, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man coloured, and shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm turned appealingly to Mrs. Somers. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be willing to go wherever
+ it would be best for my boy, sir. But&mdash;&rdquo; and here she checked
+ herself, and a tear trickled silently down her cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will resumed, in a more cheerful tone, &ldquo;I am getting a little known now,
+ and work will come if one waits for it.&rdquo; Kenelm did not deem it courteous
+ or discreet to intrude further on Will&rsquo;s confidence in the first
+ interview; and he began to feel, more than he had done at first, not only
+ the dull pain of the bruises he had received in the recent combat, but
+ also somewhat more than the weariness which follows long summer-day&rsquo;s work
+ in the open air. He therefore, rather abruptly, now took his leave, saying
+ that he should be very glad of a few specimens of Will&rsquo;s ingenuity and
+ skill, and would call or write to give directions about them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as he came in sight of Tom Bowles&rsquo;s house on his way back to Mr.
+ Saunderson&rsquo;s, Kenelm saw a man mounting a pony that stood tied up at the
+ gate, and exchanging a few words with a respectable-looking woman before
+ he rode on. He was passing by Kenelm without notice, when that
+ philosophical vagrant stopped him, saying, &ldquo;If I am not mistaken, sir, you
+ are the doctor. There is not much the matter with Mr. Bowles?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor shook his head. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t say yet. He has had a very ugly blow
+ somewhere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was just under the left ear. I did not aim at that exact spot: but
+ Bowles unluckily swerved a little aside at the moment, perhaps in surprise
+ at a tap between his eyes immediately preceding it: and so, as you say, it
+ was an ugly blow that he received. But if it cures him of the habit of
+ giving ugly blows to other people who can bear them less safely, perhaps
+ it may be all for his good, as, no doubt, sir, your schoolmaster said when
+ he flogged you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bless my soul! are you the man who fought with him,&mdash;you? I can&rsquo;t
+ believe it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not! So far as I can judge by this light, though you are a tall
+ fellow, Tom Bowles must be a much heavier weight than you are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tom Spring was the champion of England; and according to the records of
+ his weight, which history has preserved in her archives, Tom Spring was a
+ lighter weight than I am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But are you a prize-fighter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am as much that as I am anything else. But to return to Mr. Bowles, was
+ it necessary to bleed him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; he was unconscious, or nearly so, when I came. I took away a few
+ ounces; and I am happy to say he is now sensible, but must be kept very
+ quiet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No doubt; but I hope he will be well enough to see me to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope so too; but I can&rsquo;t say yet. Quarrel about a girl,&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was not about money. And I suppose if there were no money and no women
+ in the world, there would be no quarrels and very few doctors. Good-night,
+ Sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a strange thing to me,&rdquo; said Kenelm, as he now opened the
+ garden-gate of Mr. Saunderson&rsquo;s homestead, &ldquo;that though I&rsquo;ve had nothing
+ to eat all day, except a few pitiful sandwiches, I don&rsquo;t feel the least
+ hungry. Such arrest of the lawful duties of the digestive organs never
+ happened to me before. There must be something weird and ominous in it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On entering the parlour, the family party, though they had long since
+ finished supper, were still seated round the table. They all rose at the
+ sight of Kenelm. The fame of his achievements had preceded him. He checked
+ the congratulations, the compliments, and the questions which the hearty
+ farmer rapidly heaped upon him, with a melancholic exclamation, &ldquo;But I
+ have lost my appetite! No honours can compensate for that. Let me go to
+ bed peaceably, and perhaps in the magic land of sleep Nature may restore
+ me by a dream of supper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM rose betimes the next morning somewhat stiff and uneasy, but
+ sufficiently recovered to feel ravenous. Fortunately, one of the young
+ ladies, who attended specially to the dairy, was already up, and supplied
+ the starving hero with a vast bowl of bread and milk. He then strolled
+ into the hayfield, in which there was now very little left to do, and but
+ few hands besides his own were employed. Jessie was not there. Kenelm was
+ glad of that. By nine o&rsquo;clock his work was over, and the farmer and his
+ men were in the yard completing the ricks. Kenelm stole away unobserved,
+ bent on a round of visits. He called first at the village shop kept by
+ Mrs. Bawtrey, which Jessie had pointed out to him, on pretence of buying a
+ gaudy neckerchief; and soon, thanks to his habitual civility, made
+ familiar acquaintance with the shopwoman. She was a little sickly old
+ lady, her head shaking, as with palsy, somewhat deaf, but still shrewd and
+ sharp, rendered mechanically so by long habits of shrewdness and
+ sharpness. She became very communicative, spoke freely of her desire to
+ give up the shop, and pass the rest of her days with a sister, widowed
+ like herself, in a neighbouring town. Since she had lost her husband, the
+ field and orchard attached to the shop had ceased to be profitable, and
+ become a great care and trouble; and the attention the shop required was
+ wearisome. But she had twelve years unexpired of the lease granted for
+ twenty-one years to her husband on low terms, and she wanted a premium for
+ its transfer, and a purchaser for the stock of the shop. Kenelm soon drew
+ from her the amount of the sum she required for all,&mdash;L45.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You be n&rsquo;t thinking of it for yourself?&rdquo; she asked, putting on her
+ spectacles, and examining him with care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps so, if one could get a decent living out of it. Do you keep a
+ book of your losses and your gains?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In course, sir,&rdquo; she said proudly. &ldquo;I kept the books in my goodman&rsquo;s
+ time, and he was one who could find out if there was a farthing wrong, for
+ he had been in a lawyer&rsquo;s office when a lad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did he leave a lawyer&rsquo;s office to keep a little shop?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, he was born a farmer&rsquo;s son in this neighbourhood, and he always had
+ a hankering after the country, and&mdash;and besides that&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you the truth; he had got into a way of drinking speerrits, and
+ he was a good young man, and wanted to break himself of it, and he took
+ the temperance oath; but it was too hard on him, for he could not break
+ himself of the company that led him into liquor. And so, one time when he
+ came into the neighbourhood to see his parents for the Christmas holiday,
+ he took a bit of liking to me; and my father, who was Squire Travers&rsquo;s
+ bailiff, had just died, and left me a little money. And so, somehow or
+ other, we came together, and got this house and the land from the Squire
+ on lease very reasonable; and my goodman being well eddyeated, and much
+ thought of, and never being tempted to drink, now that he had a missis to
+ keep him in order, had a many little things put into his way. He could
+ help to measure timber, and knew about draining, and he got some
+ bookkeeping from the farmers about; and we kept cows and pigs and poultry,
+ and so we did very well, specially as the Lord was merciful and sent us no
+ children.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what does the shop bring in a year since your husband died?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You had best judge for yourself. Will you look at the book, and take a
+ peep at the land and apple-trees? But they&rsquo;s been neglected since my
+ goodman died.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another minute the heir of the Chillinglys was seated in a neat little
+ back parlour, with a pretty though confined view of the orchard and grass
+ slope behind it, and bending over Mrs. Bawtrey&rsquo;s ledger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some customers for cheese and bacon coming now into the shop, the old
+ woman left him to his studies. Though they were not of a nature familiar
+ to him, he brought to them, at least, that general clearness of head and
+ quick seizure of important points which are common to most men who have
+ gone through some disciplined training of intellect, and been accustomed
+ to extract the pith and marrow out of many books on many subjects. The
+ result of his examination was satisfactory; there appeared to him a clear
+ balance of gain from the shop alone of somewhat over L40 a year, taking
+ the average of the last three years. Closing the book, he then let himself
+ out of the window into the orchard, and thence into the neighbouring grass
+ field. Both were, indeed, much neglected; the trees wanted pruning, the
+ field manure. But the soil was evidently of rich loam, and the fruit-trees
+ were abundant and of ripe age, generally looking healthy in spite of
+ neglect. With the quick intuition of a man born and bred in the country,
+ and picking up scraps of rural knowledge unconsciously, Kenelm convinced
+ himself that the land, properly managed, would far more than cover the
+ rent, rates, tithes, and all incidental outgoings, leaving the profits of
+ the shop as the clear income of the occupiers. And no doubt with clever
+ young people to manage the shop, its profits might be increased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not thinking it necessary to return at present to Mrs. Bawtrey&rsquo;s, Kenelm
+ now bent his way to Tom Bowles&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The house-door was closed. At the summons of his knock it was quickly
+ opened by a tall, stout, remarkably fine-looking woman, who might have
+ told fifty years, and carried them off lightly on her ample shoulders. She
+ was dressed very respectably in black, her brown hair braided simply under
+ a neat tight-fitting cap. Her features were aquiline and very regular:
+ altogether there was something about her majestic and Cornelia-like. She
+ might have sat for the model of that Roman matron, except for the fairness
+ of her Anglo-Saxon complexion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&rsquo;s your pleasure?&rdquo; she asked, in a cold and somewhat stern voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ma&rsquo;am,&rdquo; answered Kenelm, uncovering, &ldquo;I have called to see Mr. Bowles,
+ and I sincerely hope he is well enough to let me do so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir, he is not well enough for that; he is lying down in his own
+ room, and must be kept quiet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I then ask you the favour to let me in? I would say a few words to
+ you, who are his mother if I mistake not.&rdquo; Mrs. Bowles paused a moment as
+ if in doubt; but she was at no loss to detect in Kenelm&rsquo;s manner something
+ superior to the fashion of his dress, and supposing the visit might refer
+ to her son&rsquo;s professional business, she opened the door wider, drew aside
+ to let him pass first, and when he stood midway in the parlour, requested
+ him to take a seat, and, to set him the example, seated herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ma&rsquo;am,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;do not regret to have admitted me, and do not think
+ hardly of me when I inform you that I am the unfortunate cause of your
+ son&rsquo;s accident.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bowles rose with a start. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re the man who beat my boy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, ma&rsquo;am, do not say I beat him. He is not beaten. He is so brave and so
+ strong that he would easily have beaten me if I had not, by good luck,
+ knocked him down before he had time to do so. Pray, ma&rsquo;am, retain your
+ seat and listen to me patiently for a few moments.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bowles, with an indignant heave of her Juno-like bosom, and with a
+ superbly haughty expression of countenance which suited well with its
+ aquiline formation, tacitly obeyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will allow, ma&rsquo;am,&rdquo; recommenced Kenelm, &ldquo;that this is not the first
+ time by many that Mr. Bowles has come to blows with another man. Am I not
+ right in that assumption?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My son is of hasty temper,&rdquo; replied Mrs. Bowles, reluctantly, &ldquo;and people
+ should not aggravate him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You grant the fact, then?&rdquo; said Kenelm, imperturbably, but with a polite
+ inclination of head. &ldquo;Mr. Bowles has often been engaged in these
+ encounters, and in all of them it is quite clear that he provoked the
+ battle; for you must be aware that he is not the sort of man to whom any
+ other would be disposed to give the first blow. Yet, after these little
+ incidents had occurred, and Mr. Bowles had, say, half killed the person
+ who aggravated him, you did not feel any resentment against that person,
+ did you? Nay, if he had wanted nursing, you would have gone and nursed
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know as to nursing,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bowles, beginning to lose her
+ dignity of mien; &ldquo;but certainly I should have been very sorry for him. And
+ as for Tom,&mdash;though I say it who should not say,&mdash;he has no more
+ malice than a baby: he&rsquo;d go and make it up with any man, however badly he
+ had beaten him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just as I supposed; and if the man had sulked and would not make it up,
+ Tom would have called him a bad fellow, and felt inclined to beat him
+ again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Bowles&rsquo;s face relaxed into a stately smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; pursued Kenelm, &ldquo;I do but humbly imitate Mr. Bowles, and I
+ come to make it up and shake hands with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir,&mdash;no,&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Bowles, though in a low voice, and
+ turning pale. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t think of it. &lsquo;Tis not the blows; he&rsquo;ll get over those
+ fast enough: &lsquo;tis his pride that&rsquo;s hurt; and if he saw you there might be
+ mischief. But you&rsquo;re a stranger, and going away: do go soon; do keep out
+ of his way; do!&rdquo; And the mother clasped her hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Bowles,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with a change of voice and aspect,&mdash;a
+ voice and aspect so earnest and impressive that they stilled and awed her,&mdash;&ldquo;will
+ you not help me to save your son from the dangers into which that hasty
+ temper and that mischievous pride may at any moment hurry him? Does it
+ never occur to you that these are the causes of terrible crime, bringing
+ terrible punishment; and that against brute force, impelled by savage
+ passions, society protects itself by the hulks and the gallows?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir; how dare you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush! If one man kill another in a moment of ungovernable wrath, that is
+ a crime which, though heavily punished by the conscience, is gently dealt
+ with by the law, which calls it only manslaughter; but if a motive to the
+ violence, such as jealousy or revenge, can be assigned, and there should
+ be no witness by to prove that the violence was not premeditated, then the
+ law does not call it manslaughter, but murder. Was it not that thought
+ which made you so imploringly exclaim, &lsquo;Go soon; keep out of his way&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woman made no answer, but, sinking back in her chair, gasped for
+ breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, madam,&rdquo; resumed Kenelm, mildly; &ldquo;banish your fears. If you will help
+ me I feel sure that I can save your son from such perils, and I only ask
+ you to let me save him. I am convinced that he has a good and a noble
+ nature, and he is worth saving.&rdquo; And as he thus said he took her hand. She
+ resigned it to him and returned the pressure, all her pride softening as
+ she began to weep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, when she recovered voice, she said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is all along of that girl. He was not so till she crossed him, and
+ made him half mad. He is not the same man since then,&mdash;my poor Tom!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know that he has given me his word, and before his
+ fellow-villagers, that if he had the worst of the fight he would never
+ molest Jessie Wiles again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, he told me so himself; and it is that which weighs on him now. He
+ broods and broods and mutters, and will not be comforted; and&mdash;and I
+ do fear that he means revenge. And again, I implore you to keep out of his
+ way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not revenge on me that he thinks of. Suppose I go and am seen no
+ more, do you think in your own heart that that girl&rsquo;s life is safe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! My Tom kill a woman!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you never read in your newspaper of a man who kills his sweetheart, or
+ the girl who refuses to be his sweetheart? At all events, you yourself do
+ not approve this frantic suit of his. If I have heard rightly, you have
+ wished to get Tom out of the village for some time, till Jessie Wiles is&mdash;we&rsquo;ll
+ say, married, or gone elsewhere for good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, indeed, I have wished and prayed for it many&rsquo;s the time, both for
+ her sake and for his. And I am sure I don&rsquo;t know what we shall do if he
+ stays, for he has been losing custom fast. The Squire has taken away his,
+ and so have many of the farmers; and such a trade as it was in his good
+ father&rsquo;s time! And if he would go, his uncle, the veterinary at Luscombe,
+ would take him into partnership; for he has no son of his own, and he
+ knows how clever Tom is: there be n&rsquo;t a man who knows more about horses;
+ and cows, too, for the matter of that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if Luscombe is a large place, the business there must be more
+ profitable than it can be here, even if Tom got back his custom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh yes! five times as good,&mdash;if he would but go; but he&rsquo;ll not hear
+ of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Bowles, I am very much obliged to you for your confidence, and I
+ feel sure that all will end happily now we have had this talk. I&rsquo;ll not
+ press further on you at present. Tom will not stir out, I suppose, till
+ the evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, sir, he seems as if he had no heart to stir out again, unless for
+ something dreadful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Courage! I will call again in the evening, and then you just take me up
+ to Tom&rsquo;s room, and leave me there to make friends with him, as I have with
+ you. Don&rsquo;t say a word about me in the meanwhile.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;But,&rsquo; Mrs. Bowles, is a word that cools many a warm impulse, stifles
+ many a kindly thought, puts a dead stop to many a brotherly deed. Nobody
+ would ever love his neighbour as himself if he listened to all the Buts
+ that could be said on the other side of the question.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM now bent his way towards the parsonage, but just as he neared its
+ glebe-lands he met a gentleman whose dress was so evidently clerical that
+ he stopped and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I the honour to address Mr. Lethbridge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is my name,&rdquo; said the clergyman, smiling pleasantly. &ldquo;Anything I can
+ do for you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, a great deal, if you will let me talk to you about a few of your
+ parishioners.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My parishioners! I beg your pardon, but you are quite a stranger to me,
+ and, I should think, to the parish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To the parish,&mdash;no, I am quite at home in it; and I honestly believe
+ that it has never known a more officious busybody, thrusting himself into
+ its most private affairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lethbridge stared, and, after a short pause, said, &ldquo;I have heard of a
+ young man who has been staying at Mr. Saunderson&rsquo;s, and is indeed at this
+ moment the talk of the village. You are&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That young man. Alas! yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Mr. Lethbridge, kindly, &ldquo;I cannot myself, as a minister of the
+ Gospel, approve of your profession, and, if I might take the liberty, I
+ would try and dissuade you from it; but still, as for the one act of
+ freeing a poor girl from the most scandalous persecution, and
+ administering, though in a rough way, a lesson to a savage brute who has
+ long been the disgrace and terror of the neighbourhood, I cannot honestly
+ say that it has my condemnation. The moral sense of a community is
+ generally a right one: you have won the praise of the village. Under all
+ the circumstances, I do not withhold mine. You woke this morning and found
+ yourself famous. Do not sigh &lsquo;Alas.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord Byron woke one morning and found himself famous, and the result was
+ that he sighed &lsquo;Alas&rsquo; for the rest of his life. If there be two things
+ which a wise man should avoid, they are fame and love. Heaven defend me
+ from both!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the parson stared; but being of compassionate nature, and inclined
+ to take mild views of everything that belongs to humanity, he said, with a
+ slight inclination of his head,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have always heard that the Americans in general enjoy the advantage of
+ a better education than we do in England, and their reading public is
+ infinitely larger than ours; still, when I hear one of a calling not
+ highly considered in this country for intellectual cultivation or ethical
+ philosophy cite Lord Byron, and utter a sentiment at variance with the
+ impetuosity of inexperienced youth, but which has much to commend it in
+ the eyes of a reflective Christian impressed with the nothingness of the
+ objects mostly coveted by the human heart, I am surprised, and&mdash;oh,
+ my dear young friend, surely your education might fit you for something
+ better!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was among the maxims of Kenelm Chillingly&rsquo;s creed that a sensible man
+ should never allow himself to be surprised; but here he was, to use a
+ popular idiom, &ldquo;taken aback,&rdquo; and lowered himself to the rank of ordinary
+ minds by saying, simply, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; resumed the clergyman, shaking his head gently, &ldquo;as I always
+ suspected, that in the vaunted education bestowed on Americans, the
+ elementary principles of Christian right and wrong are more neglected than
+ they are among our own humble classes. Yes, my young friend, you may quote
+ poets, you may startle me by remarks on the nothingness of human fame and
+ human love, derived from the precepts of heathen poets, and yet not
+ understand with what compassion, and, in the judgment of most sober-minded
+ persons, with what contempt, a human being who practises your vocation is
+ regarded.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I a vocation?&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;I am very glad to hear it. What is my
+ vocation? And why must I be an American?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, surely I am not misinformed? You are the American&mdash;I forget his
+ name&mdash;who has come over to contest the belt of prize-fighting with
+ the champion of England. You are silent; you hang your head. By your
+ appearance, your length of limb, your gravity of countenance, your evident
+ education, you confirm the impression of your birth. Your prowess has
+ proved your profession.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Reverend sir,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with his unutterable seriousness of aspect,
+ &ldquo;I am on my travels in search of truth and in flight from shams, but so
+ great a take-in as myself I have not yet encountered. Remember me in your
+ prayers. I am not an American; I am not a prize-fighter. I honour the
+ first as the citizen of a grand republic trying his best to accomplish an
+ experiment in government in which he will find the very prosperity he
+ tends to create will sooner or later destroy his experiment. I honour the
+ last because strength, courage, and sobriety are essential to the
+ prize-fighter, and are among the chiefest ornaments of kings and heroes.
+ But I am neither one nor the other. And all I can say for myself is, that
+ I belong to that very vague class commonly called English gentlemen, and
+ that, by birth and education, I have a right to ask you to shake hands
+ with me as such.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lethbridge stared again, raised his hat, bowed, and shook hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will allow me now to speak to you about your parishioners. You take
+ an interest in Will Somers; so do I. He is clever and ingenious. But it
+ seems there is not sufficient demand here for his baskets, and he would,
+ no doubt, do better in some neighbouring town. Why does he object to
+ move?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear that poor Will would pine away to death if he lost sight of that
+ pretty girl for whom you did such chivalrous battle with Tom Bowles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The unhappy man, then, is really in love with Jessie Wiles? And do you
+ think she no less really cares for him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And would make him a good wife; that is, as wives go?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A good daughter generally makes a good wife. And there is not a father in
+ the place who has a better child than Jessie is to hers. She really is a
+ girl of a superior nature. She was the cleverest pupil at our school, and
+ my wife is much attached to her. But she has something better than mere
+ cleverness: she has an excellent heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you say confirms my own impressions. And the girl&rsquo;s father has no
+ other objection to Will Somers than his fear that Will could not support a
+ wife and family comfortably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He can have no other objection save that which would apply equally to all
+ suitors. I mean his fear lest Tom Bowles might do her some mischief, if he
+ knew she was about to marry any one else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You think, then, that Mr. Bowles is a thoroughly bad and dangerous
+ person?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thoroughly bad and dangerous, and worse since he has taken to drinking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose he did not take to drinking till he lost his wits for Jessie
+ Wiles?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I don&rsquo;t think he did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Mr. Lethbridge, have you never used your influence over this
+ dangerous man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course, I did try, but I only got insulted. He is a godless animal,
+ and has not been inside a church for years. He seems to have got a
+ smattering of such vile learning as may be found in infidel publications,
+ and I doubt if he has any religion at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor Polyphemus! no wonder his Galatea shuns him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old Wiles is terribly frightened, and asked my wife to find Jessie a
+ place as servant at a distance. But Jessie can&rsquo;t bear the thoughts of
+ leaving.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the same reason which attaches Will Somers to the native soil?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My wife thinks so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you believe that if Tom Bowles were out of the way, and Jessie and
+ Will were man and wife, they could earn a sufficient livelihood as
+ successors to Mrs. Bawtrey, Will adding the profits of his basket-work to
+ those of the shop and land?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A sufficient livelihood! of course. They would be quite rich. I know the
+ shop used to turn a great deal of money. The old woman, to be sure, is no
+ longer up to the business, but still she retains a good custom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will Somers seems in delicate health. Perhaps if he had a less weary
+ struggle for a livelihood, and no fear of losing Jessie, his health would
+ improve.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His life would be saved, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with a heavy sigh and a face as long as an
+ undertaker&rsquo;s, &ldquo;though I myself entertain a profound compassion for that
+ disturbance to our mental equilibrium which goes by the name of &lsquo;love,&rsquo;
+ and I am the last person who ought to add to the cares and sorrows which
+ marriage entails upon its victims,&mdash;I say nothing of the woes
+ destined to those whom marriage usually adds to a population already
+ overcrowded,&mdash;I fear that I must be the means of bringing these two
+ love-birds into the same cage. I am ready to purchase the shop and its
+ appurtenances on their behalf, on the condition that you will kindly
+ obtain the consent of Jessie&rsquo;s father to their union. As for my brave
+ friend Tom Bowles, I undertake to deliver them and the village from that
+ exuberant nature, which requires a larger field for its energies. Pardon
+ me for not letting you interrupt me. I have not yet finished what I have
+ to say. Allow me to ask if Mrs. Grundy resides in this village.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Grundy! Oh, I understand. Of course; wherever a woman has a tongue,
+ there Mrs. Grundy has a home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And seeing that Jessie is very pretty, and that in walking with her I
+ encountered Mr. Bowles, might not Mrs. Grundy say, with a toss of her
+ head, &lsquo;that it was not out of pure charity that the stranger had been so
+ liberal to Jessie Wiles&rsquo;? But if the money for the shop be paid through
+ you to Mrs. Bawtrey, and you kindly undertake all the contingent
+ arrangements, Mrs. Grundy will have nothing to say against any one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lethbridge gazed with amaze at the solemn countenance before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; he said, after a long pause, &ldquo;I scarcely know how to express my
+ admiration of a generosity so noble, so thoughtful, and accompanied with a
+ delicacy, and, indeed, with a wisdom, which&mdash;which&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pray, my dear sir, do not make me still more ashamed of myself than I am
+ at present for an interference in love matters quite alien to my own
+ convictions as to the best mode of making an &lsquo;Approach to the Angels.&rsquo; To
+ conclude this business, I think it better to deposit in your hands the sum
+ of L45, for which Mrs. Bawtrey has agreed to sell the remainder of her
+ lease and stock-in-hand; but, of course, you will not make anything public
+ till I am gone, and Tom Bowles too. I hope I may get him away to-morrow;
+ but I shall know to-night when I can depend on his departure, and till he
+ goes I must stay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, Kenelm transferred from his pocket-book to Mr. Lethbridge&rsquo;s
+ hand bank-notes to the amount specified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I at least ask the name of the gentleman who honours me with his
+ confidence, and has bestowed so much happiness on members of my flock?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no great reason why I should not tell you my name, but I see no
+ reason why I should. You remember Talleyrand&rsquo;s advice, &lsquo;If you are in
+ doubt whether to write a letter or not, don&rsquo;t.&rsquo; The advice applies to many
+ doubts in life besides that of letter-writing. Farewell, sir!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A most extraordinary young man,&rdquo; muttered the parson, gazing at the
+ receding form of the tall stranger; then gently shaking his head, he
+ added, &ldquo;Quite an original.&rdquo; He was contented with that solution of the
+ difficulties which had puzzled him. May the reader be the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0031" id="link2HCH0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AFTER the family dinner, at which the farmer&rsquo;s guest displayed more than
+ his usual powers of appetite, Kenelm followed his host towards the
+ stackyard, and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Mr. Saunderson, though you have no longer any work for me to do,
+ and I ought not to trespass further on your hospitality, yet if I might
+ stay with you another day or so, I should be very grateful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear lad,&rdquo; cried the farmer, in whose estimation Kenelm had risen
+ prodigiously since the victory over Tom Bowles, &ldquo;you are welcome to stay
+ as long as you like, and we shall be all sorry when you go. Indeed, at all
+ events, you must stay over Saturday, for you shall go with us to the
+ squire&rsquo;s harvest-supper. It will be a pretty sight, and my girls are
+ already counting on you for a dance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Saturday,&mdash;the day after to-morrow. You are very kind; but
+ merrymakings are not much in my way, and I think I shall be on my road
+ before you set off to the Squire&rsquo;s supper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh! you shall stay; and, I say, young &lsquo;un, if you want more to do, I
+ have a job for you quite in your line.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thrash my ploughman. He has been insolent this morning, and he is the
+ biggest fellow in the county, next to Tom Bowles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the farmer laughed heartily, enjoying his own joke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you for nothing,&rdquo; said Kenelm, rubbing his bruises. &ldquo;A burnt child
+ dreads the fire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man wandered alone into the fields. The day was becoming
+ overcast, and the clouds threatened rain. The air was exceedingly still;
+ the landscape, missing the sunshine, wore an aspect of gloomy solitude.
+ Kenelm came to the banks of the rivulet not far from the spot on which the
+ farmer had first found him. There he sat down, and leaned his cheek on his
+ hand, with eyes fixed on the still and darkened stream lapsing mournfully
+ away: sorrow entered into his heart and tinged its musings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it then true,&rdquo; said he, soliloquizing, &ldquo;that I am born to pass through
+ life utterly alone; asking, indeed, for no sister-half of myself,
+ disbelieving its possibility, shrinking from the thought of it,&mdash;half
+ scorning, half pitying those who sigh for it?&mdash;thing unattainable,&mdash;better
+ sigh for the moon!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet if other men sigh for it, why do I stand apart from them? If the
+ world be a stage, and all the men and women in it merely players, am I to
+ be the solitary spectator, with no part in the drama and no interest in
+ the vicissitudes of its plot? Many there are, no doubt, who covet as
+ little as I do the part of &lsquo;Lover,&rsquo; &lsquo;with a woful ballad, made to his
+ mistress&rsquo;s eyebrow;&rsquo; but then they covet some other part in the drama,
+ such as that of Soldier &lsquo;bearded as a pard,&rsquo; or that of Justice &lsquo;in fair
+ round belly with fat capon lined.&rsquo; But me no ambition fires: I have no
+ longing either to rise or to shine. I don&rsquo;t desire to be a colonel, nor an
+ admiral, nor a member of Parliament, nor an alderman; I do not yearn for
+ the fame of a wit, or a poet, or a philosopher, or a diner-out, or a crack
+ shot at a rifle-match or a <i>battue</i>. Decidedly, I am the one
+ looker-on, the one bystander, and have no more concern with the active
+ world than a stone has. It is a horrible phantasmal crotchet of Goethe,
+ that originally we were all monads, little segregated atoms adrift in the
+ atmosphere, and carried hither and thither by forces over which we had no
+ control, especially by the attraction of other monads, so that one monad,
+ compelled by porcine monads, crystallizes into a pig; another, hurried
+ along by heroic monads, becomes a lion or an Alexander. Now it is quite
+ clear,&rdquo; continued Kenelm, shifting his position and crossing the right leg
+ over the left, &ldquo;that a monad intended or fitted for some other planet may,
+ on its way to that destination, be encountered by a current of other
+ monads blowing earthward, and be caught up in the stream and whirled on,
+ till, to the marring of its whole proper purpose and scene of action, it
+ settles here,&mdash;conglomerated into a baby. Probably that lot has
+ befallen me: my monad, meant for another region in space, has been dropped
+ into this, where it can never be at home, never amalgamate with other
+ monads nor comprehend why they are in such a perpetual fidget. I declare I
+ know no more why the minds of human beings should be so restlessly
+ agitated about things which, as most of them own, give more pain than
+ pleasure, than I understand why that swarm of gnats, which has such a very
+ short time to live, does not give itself a moment&rsquo;s repose, but goes up
+ and down, rising and falling as if it were on a seesaw, and making as much
+ noise about its insignificant alternations of ascent and descent as if it
+ were the hum of men. And yet, perhaps, in another planet my monad would
+ have frisked and jumped and danced and seesawed with congenial monads, as
+ contentedly and as sillily as do the monads of men and gnats in this alien
+ Vale of Tears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm had just arrived at that conjectural solution of his perplexities
+ when a voice was heard singing, or rather modulated to that kind of chant
+ between recitative and song, which is so pleasingly effective where the
+ intonations are pure and musical. They were so in this instance, and
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s ear caught every word in the following song:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ CONTENT.
+
+ &ldquo;There are times when the troubles of life are still;
+ The bees wandered lost in the depths of June,
+ And I paused where the chime of a silver rill
+ Sang the linnet and lark to their rest at noon.
+
+ &ldquo;Said my soul, &lsquo;See how calmly the wavelets glide,
+ Though so narrow their way to their ocean vent;
+ And the world that I traverse is wide, is wide,
+ And yet is too narrow to hold content&rsquo;
+
+ &ldquo;O my son, never say that the world is wide;
+ The rill in its banks is less closely pent:
+ It is thou who art shoreless on every side,
+ And thy width will not let thee enclose content.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ As the voice ceased Kenelm lifted his head. But the banks of the brook
+ were so curving and so clothed with brushwood that for some minutes the
+ singer was invisible. At last the boughs before him were put aside, and
+ within a few paces of himself paused the man to whom he had commended the
+ praises of a beefsteak, instead of those which minstrelsy in its
+ immemorial error dedicates to love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Kenelm, half rising, &ldquo;well met once more. Have you ever
+ listened to the cuckoo?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; answered the minstrel, &ldquo;have you ever felt the presence of the
+ summer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Permit me to shake hands with you. I admire the question by which you
+ have countermet and rebuked my own. If you are not in a hurry, will you
+ sit down and let us talk?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel inclined his head and seated himself. His dog&mdash;now
+ emerged from the brushwood&mdash;gravely approached Kenelm, who with
+ greater gravity regarded him; then, wagging his tail, reposed on his
+ haunches, intent with ear erect on a stir in the neighbouring reeds,
+ evidently considering whether it was caused by a fish or a water-rat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I asked you, sir, if you had ever listened to the cuckoo from no
+ irrelevant curiosity; for often on summer days, when one is talking with
+ one&rsquo;s self,&mdash;and, of course, puzzling one&rsquo;s self,&mdash;a voice
+ breaks out, as it were from the heart of Nature, so far is it and yet so
+ near; and it says something very quieting, very musical, so that one is
+ tempted inconsiderately and foolishly to exclaim, &lsquo;Nature replies to me.&rsquo;
+ The cuckoo has served me that trick pretty often. Your song is a better
+ answer to a man&rsquo;s self-questionings than he can ever get from a cuckoo.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I doubt that,&rdquo; said the minstrel. &ldquo;Song, at the best, is but the echo of
+ some voice from the heart of Nature. And if the cuckoo&rsquo;s note seemed to
+ you such a voice, it was an answer to your questionings perhaps more
+ simply truthful than man can utter, if you had rightly construed the
+ language.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My good friend,&rdquo; answered Kenelm, &ldquo;what you say sounds very prettily; and
+ it contains a sentiment which has been amplified by certain critics into
+ that measureless domain of dunderheads which is vulgarly called BOSH. But
+ though Nature is never silent, though she abuses the privilege of her age
+ in being tediously gossiping and garrulous, Nature never replies to our
+ questions: she can&rsquo;t understand an argument; she has never read Mr. Mill&rsquo;s
+ work on Logic. In fact, as it is truly said by a great philosopher,
+ &lsquo;Nature has no mind.&rsquo; Every man who addresses her is compelled to force
+ upon her for a moment the loan of his own mind. And if she answers a
+ question which his own mind puts to her, it is only by such a reply as his
+ own mind teaches to her parrot-like lips. And as every man has a different
+ mind, so every man gets a different answer. Nature is a lying old humbug.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel laughed merrily; and his laugh was as sweet as his chant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poets would have a great deal to unlearn if they are to look upon Nature
+ in that light.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bad poets would, and so much the better for them and their readers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are not good poets students of Nature?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Students of Nature, certainly, as surgeons study anatomy by dissecting a
+ dead body. But the good poet, like the good surgeon, is the man who
+ considers that study merely as the necessary A B C, and not as the
+ all-in-all essential to skill in his practice. I do not give the fame of a
+ good surgeon to a man who fills a book with details, more or less
+ accurate, of fibres and nerves and muscles; and I don&rsquo;t give the fame of a
+ good poet to a man who makes an inventory of the Rhine or the Vale of
+ Gloucester. The good surgeon and the good poet are they who understand the
+ living man. What is that poetry of drama which Aristotle justly ranks as
+ the highest? Is it not a poetry in which description of inanimate Nature
+ must of necessity be very brief and general; in which even the external
+ form of man is so indifferent a consideration that it will vary with each
+ actor who performs the part? A Hamlet may be fair or dark. A Macbeth may
+ be short or tall. The merit of dramatic poetry consists in the
+ substituting for what is commonly called Nature (namely, external and
+ material Nature) creatures intellectual, emotional, but so purely
+ immaterial that they may be said to be all mind and soul, accepting the
+ temporary loans of any such bodies at hand as actors may offer, in order
+ to be made palpable and visible to the audience, but needing no such
+ bodies to be palpable and visible to readers. The highest kind of poetry
+ is therefore that which has least to do with external Nature. But every
+ grade has its merit more or less genuinely great, according as it instils
+ into Nature that which is not there,&mdash;the reason and the soul of
+ man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not much disposed,&rdquo; said the minstrel, &ldquo;to acknowledge any one form
+ of poetry to be practically higher than another; that is, so far as to
+ elevate the poet who cultivates what you call the highest with some
+ success above the rank of the poet who cultivates what you call a very
+ inferior school with a success much more triumphant. In theory, dramatic
+ poetry may be higher than lyric, and &lsquo;Venice Preserved&rsquo; is a very
+ successful drama; but I think Burns a greater poet than Otway.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Possibly he may be; but I know of no lyrical poet, at least among the
+ moderns, who treats less of Nature as the mere outward form of things, or
+ more passionately animates her framework with his own human heart, than
+ does Robert Burns. Do you suppose when a Greek, in some perplexity of
+ reason or conscience, addressed a question to the oracular oak-leaves of
+ Dodona that the oak-leaves answered him? Don&rsquo;t you rather believe that the
+ question suggested by his mind was answered by the mind of his fellow-man,
+ the priest, who made the oak-leaves the mere vehicle of communication, as
+ you and I might make such vehicle in a sheet of writing-paper? Is not the
+ history of superstition a chronicle of the follies of man in attempting to
+ get answers from external Nature?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said the minstrel, &ldquo;have I not somewhere heard or read that the
+ experiments of Science are the answers made by Nature to the questions put
+ to her by man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are the answers which his own mind suggests to her,&mdash;nothing
+ more. His mind studies the laws of matter, and in that study makes
+ experiments on matter; out of those experiments his mind, according to its
+ previous knowledge or natural acuteness, arrives at its own deductions,
+ and hence arise the sciences of mechanics and chemistry, etc. But the
+ matter itself gives no answer: the answer varies according to the mind
+ that puts the question; and the progress of science consists in the
+ perpetual correction of the errors and falsehoods which preceding minds
+ conceived to be the correct answers they received from Nature. It is the
+ supernatural within us,&mdash;namely, Mind,&mdash;which can alone guess at
+ the mechanism of the natural, namely, Matter. A stone cannot question a
+ stone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel made no reply. And there was a long silence, broken but by
+ the hum of the insects, the ripple of onward waves, and the sigh of the
+ wind through reeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0032" id="link2HCH0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ SAID Kenelm, at last breaking silence&mdash;
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Rapiamus, amici,
+ Occasionem de die, dumque virent genua,
+ Et decet, obducta solvatur fronte senectus!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is not that quotation from Horace?&rdquo; asked the minstrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; and I made it insidiously, in order to see if you had not acquired
+ what is called a classical education.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I might have received such education, if my tastes and my destinies had
+ not withdrawn me in boyhood from studies of which I did not then
+ comprehend the full value. But I did pick up a smattering of Latin at
+ school; and from time to time since I left school I have endeavoured to
+ gain some little knowledge of the most popular Latin poets; chiefly, I own
+ to my shame, by the help of literal English translations.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As a poet yourself, I am not sure that it would be an advantage to know a
+ dead language so well that its forms and modes of thought ran, though
+ perhaps unconsciously, into those of the living one in which you compose.
+ Horace might have been a still better poet if he had not known Greek
+ better than you know Latin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is at least courteous in you to say so,&rdquo; answered the singer, with a
+ pleased smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would be still more courteous,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;if you would pardon an
+ impertinent question, and tell me whether it is for a wager that you
+ wander through the land, Homer-like, as a wandering minstrel, and allow
+ that intelligent quadruped your companion to carry a tray in his mouth for
+ the reception of pennies?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it is not for a wager; it is a whim of mine, which I fancy from the
+ tone of your conversation you could understand, being apparently somewhat
+ whimsical yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So far as whim goes, be assured of my sympathy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, though I follow a calling by the exercise of which I secure a
+ modest income, my passion is verse. If the seasons were always summer, and
+ life were always youth, I should like to pass through the world singing.
+ But I have never ventured to publish any verses of mine. If they fell
+ still-born it would give me more pain than such wounds to vanity ought to
+ give to a bearded man; and if they were assailed or ridiculed it might
+ seriously injure me in my practical vocation. That last consideration,
+ were I quite alone in the world, might not much weigh on me; but there are
+ others for whose sake I should like to make fortune and preserve station.
+ Many years ago&mdash;it was in Germany&mdash;I fell in with a German
+ student who was very poor, and who did make money by wandering about the
+ country with lute and song. He has since become a poet of no mean
+ popularity, and he has told me that he is sure he found the secret of that
+ popularity in habitually consulting popular tastes during his roving
+ apprenticeship to song. His example strongly impressed me. So I began this
+ experiment; and for several years my summers have been all partly spent in
+ this way. I am only known, as I think I told you before, in the rounds I
+ take as &lsquo;The Wandering Minstrel;&rsquo; I receive the trifling moneys that are
+ bestowed on me as proofs of a certain merit. I should not be paid by poor
+ people if I did not please; and the songs which please them best are
+ generally those I love best myself. For the rest, my time is not thrown
+ away,&mdash;not only as regards bodily health, but healthfulness of mind:
+ all the current of one&rsquo;s ideas becomes so freshened by months of playful
+ exercise and varied adventure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, the adventure is varied enough,&rdquo; said Kenelm, somewhat ruefully; for
+ he felt, in shifting his posture, a sharp twinge of his bruised muscles.
+ &ldquo;But don&rsquo;t you find those mischief-makers, the women, always mix
+ themselves up with adventure?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bless them! of course,&rdquo; said the minstrel, with a ringing laugh. &ldquo;In
+ life, as on the stage, the petticoat interest is always the strongest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t agree with you there,&rdquo; said Kenelm, dryly. &ldquo;And you seem to me to
+ utter a claptrap beneath the rank of your understanding. However, this
+ warm weather indisposes one to disputation; and I own that a petticoat,
+ provided it be red, is not without the interest of colour in a picture.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, young gentleman,&rdquo; said the minstrel, rising, &ldquo;the day is wearing
+ on, and I must wish you good-by; probably, if you were to ramble about the
+ country as I do, you would see too many pretty girls not to teach you the
+ strength of petticoat interest,&mdash;not in pictures alone; and should I
+ meet you again I may find you writing love-verses yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;After a conjecture so unwarrantable, I part company with you less
+ reluctantly than I otherwise might do. But I hope we shall meet again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your wish flatters me much; but, if we do, pray respect the confidence I
+ have placed in you, and regard my wandering minstrelsy and my dog&rsquo;s tray
+ as sacred secrets. Should we not so meet, it is but a prudent reserve on
+ my part if I do not give you my right name and address.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There you show the cautious common-sense which belongs rarely to lovers
+ of verse and petticoat interest. What have you done with your guitar?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not pace the roads with that instrument: it is forwarded to me from
+ town to town under a borrowed name, together with other raiment that this,
+ should I have cause to drop my character of wandering minstrel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two men here exchanged a cordial shake of the hand. And as the
+ minstrel went his way along the river-side, his voice in chanting seemed
+ to lend to the wavelets a livelier murmur, to the reeds a less plaintive
+ sigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0033" id="link2HCH0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IN his room, solitary and brooding, sat the defeated hero of a hundred
+ fights. It was now twilight; but the shutters had been partially closed
+ all day, in order to exclude the sun, which had never before been
+ unwelcome to Tom Bowles, and they still remained so, making the twilight
+ doubly twilight, till the harvest moon, rising early, shot its ray through
+ the crevice, and forced a silvery track amid the shadows of the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man&rsquo;s head drooped on his breast; his strong hands rested listlessly
+ on his knees: his attitude was that of utter despondency and prostration.
+ But in the expression of his face there were the signs of some dangerous
+ and restless thought which belied not the gloom but the stillness of the
+ posture. His brow, which was habitually open and frank, in its defying
+ aggressive boldness, was now contracted into deep furrows, and lowered
+ darkly over his downcast, half-closed eyes. His lips were so tightly
+ compressed that the face lost its roundness, and the massive bone of the
+ jaw stood out hard and salient. Now and then, indeed, the lips opened,
+ giving vent to a deep, impatient sigh, but they reclosed as quickly as
+ they had parted. It was one of those crises in life which find all the
+ elements that make up a man&rsquo;s former self in lawless anarchy; in which the
+ Evil One seems to enter and direct the storm; in which a rude untutored
+ mind, never before harbouring a thought of crime, sees the crime start up
+ from an abyss, feels it to be an enemy, yet yields to it as a fate. So
+ that when, at the last, some wretch, sentenced to the gibbet, shudderingly
+ looks back to the moment &ldquo;that trembled between two worlds,&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ world of the man guiltless, the world of the man guilty,&mdash;he says to
+ the holy, highly educated, rational, passionless priest who confesses him
+ and calls him &ldquo;brother,&rdquo; &ldquo;The devil put it into my head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment the door opened; at its threshold there stood the man&rsquo;s
+ mother&mdash;whom he had never allowed to influence his conduct, though he
+ loved her well in his rough way&mdash;and the hated fellow-man whom he
+ longed to see dead at his feet. The door reclosed: the mother was gone,
+ without a word, for her tears choked her; the fellow-man was alone with
+ him. Tom Bowles looked up, recognized his visitor, cleared his brow, and
+ rubbed his mighty hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0034" id="link2HCH0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM CHILLINGLY drew a chair close to his antagonist&rsquo;s, and silently
+ laid a hand on his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom Bowles took up the hand in both his own, turned it curiously towards
+ the moonlight, gazed at it, poised it, then with a sound between groan and
+ laugh tossed it away as a thing hostile but trivial, rose and locked the
+ door, came back to his seat and said bluffly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you want with me now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want to ask you a favour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Favour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The greatest which man can ask from man,&mdash;friendship. You see, my
+ dear Tom,&rdquo; continued Kenelm, making himself quite at home, throwing his
+ arm over the back of Tom&rsquo;s chair, and stretching his legs comfortably as
+ one does by one&rsquo;s own fireside; &ldquo;you see, my dear Tom, that men like us&mdash;young,
+ single, not on the whole bad-looking as men go&mdash;can find sweethearts
+ in plenty. If one does not like us, another will; sweethearts are sown
+ everywhere like nettles and thistles. But the rarest thing in life is a
+ friend. Now, tell me frankly, in the course of your wanderings did you
+ ever come into a village where you could not have got a sweetheart if you
+ had asked for one; and if, having got a sweetheart, you had lost her, do
+ you think you would have had any difficulty in finding another? But have
+ you such a thing in the world, beyond the pale of your own family, as a
+ true friend,&mdash;a man friend; and supposing that you had such a friend,&mdash;a
+ friend who would stand by you through thick and thin; who would tell you
+ your faults to your face, and praise you for your good qualities behind
+ your back; who would do all he could to save you from a danger, and all he
+ could to get you out of one,&mdash;supposing you had such a friend and
+ lost him, do you believe that if you lived to the age of Methuselah you
+ could find another? You don&rsquo;t answer me; you are silent. Well, Tom, I ask
+ you to be such a friend to me, and I will be such a friend to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom was so thoroughly &ldquo;taken aback&rdquo; by this address that he remained
+ dumfounded. But he felt as if the clouds in his soul were breaking, and a
+ ray of sunlight were forcing its way through the sullen darkness. At
+ length, however, the receding rage within him returned, though with
+ vacillating step, and he growled between his teeth,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A pretty friend indeed, robbing me of my girl! Go along with you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She was not your girl any more than she was or ever can be mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, you be n&rsquo;t after her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not; I am going to Luscombe, and I ask you to come with me. Do
+ you think I am going to leave you here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Everything. Providence has permitted me to save you from the most
+ lifelong of all sorrows. For&mdash;think! Can any sorrow be more lasting
+ than had been yours if you had attained your wish; if you had forced or
+ frightened a woman to be your partner till death do part,&mdash;you loving
+ her, she loathing you; you conscious, night and day, that your very love
+ had insured her misery, and that misery haunting you like a ghost!&mdash;that
+ sorrow I have saved you. May Providence permit me to complete my work, and
+ save you also from the most irredeemable of all crimes! Look into your
+ soul, then recall the thoughts which all day long, and not least at the
+ moment I crossed this threshold, were rising up, making reason dumb and
+ conscience blind, and then lay your hand on your heart and say, &lsquo;I am
+ guiltless of a dream of murder.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wretched man sprang up erect, menacing, and, meeting Kenelm&rsquo;s calm,
+ steadfast, pitying gaze, dropped no less suddenly,&mdash;dropped on the
+ floor, covered his face with his hands, and a great cry came forth between
+ sob and howl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Brother,&rdquo; said Kenelm, kneeling beside him, and twining his arm round the
+ man&rsquo;s heaving breast, &ldquo;it is over now; with that cry the demon that
+ maddened you has fled forever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0035" id="link2HCH0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WHEN, some time after, Kenelm quitted the room and joined Mrs. Bowles
+ below, he said cheerily, &ldquo;All right; Tom and I are sworn friends. We are
+ going together to Luscombe the day after to-morrow,&mdash;Sunday; just
+ write a line to his uncle to prepare him for Tom&rsquo;s visit, and send thither
+ his clothes, as we shall walk, and steal forth unobserved betimes in the
+ morning. Now go up and talk to him; he wants a mother&rsquo;s soothing and
+ petting. He is a noble fellow at heart, and we shall be all proud of him
+ some day or other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he walked towards the farmhouse, Kenelm encountered Mr. Lethbridge, who
+ said, &ldquo;I have come from Mr. Saunderson&rsquo;s, where I went in search of you.
+ There is an unexpected hitch in the negotiation for Mrs. Bawtrey&rsquo;s shop.
+ After seeing you this morning I fell in with Mr. Travers&rsquo;s bailiff, and he
+ tells me that her lease does not give her the power to sublet without the
+ Squire&rsquo;s consent; and that as the premises were originally let on very low
+ terms to a favoured and responsible tenant, Mr. Travers cannot be expected
+ to sanction the transfer of the lease to a poor basket-marker: in fact,
+ though he will accept Mrs. Bawtrey&rsquo;s resignation, it must be in favour of
+ an applicant whom he desires to oblige. On hearing this, I rode over to
+ the Park and saw Mr. Travers himself. But he was obdurate to my pleadings.
+ All I could get him to say was, &lsquo;Let the stranger who interests himself in
+ the matter come and talk to me. I should like to see the man who thrashed
+ that brute Tom Bowles: if he got the better of him perhaps he may get the
+ better of me. Bring him with you to my harvest-supper to-morrow evening.&rsquo;
+ Now, will you come?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Kenelm, reluctantly; &ldquo;but if he only asks me in order to
+ gratify a very vulgar curiosity, I don&rsquo;t think I have much chance of
+ serving Will Somers. What do you say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Squire is a good man of business, and, though no one can call him
+ unjust or grasping, still he is very little touched by sentiment; and we
+ must own that a sickly cripple like poor Will is not a very eligible
+ tenant. If, therefore, it depended only on your chance with the Squire, I
+ should not be very sanguine. But we have an ally in his daughter. She is
+ very fond of Jessie Wiles, and she has shown great kindness to Will. In
+ fact, a sweeter, more benevolent, sympathizing nature than that of Cecilia
+ Travers does not exist. She has great influence with her father, and
+ through her you may win him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I particularly dislike having anything to do with women,&rdquo; said Kenelm,
+ churlishly. &ldquo;Parsons are accustomed to get round them. Surely, my dear
+ sir, you are more fit for that work than I am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Permit me humbly to doubt that proposition; one does n&rsquo;t get very quickly
+ round the women when one carries the weight of years on one&rsquo;s back. But
+ whenever you want the aid of a parson to bring your own wooing to a happy
+ conclusion, I shall be happy, in my special capacity of parson, to perform
+ the ceremony required.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Dii meliora</i>!&rdquo; said Kenelm, gravely. &ldquo;Some ills are too serious to
+ be approached even in joke. As for Miss Travers, the moment you call her
+ benevolent you inspire me with horror. I know too well what a benevolent
+ girl is,&mdash;officious, restless, fidgety, with a snub nose, and her
+ pocket full of tracts. I will not go to the harvest-supper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hist!&rdquo; said the Parson, softly. They were now passing the cottage of Mrs.
+ Somers; and while Kenelm was haranguing against benevolent girls, Mr.
+ Lethbridge had paused before it, and was furtively looking in at the
+ window. &ldquo;Hist! and come here,&mdash;gently.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm obeyed, and looked in through the window. Will was seated; Jessie
+ Wiles had nestled herself at his feet, and was holding his hand in both
+ hers, looking up into his face. Her profile alone was seen, but its
+ expression was unutterably soft and tender. His face, bent downwards
+ towards her, wore a mournful expression; nay, the tears were rolling
+ silently down his cheeks. Kenelm listened and heard her say, &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk
+ so, Will, you break my heart; it is I who am not worthy of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Parson,&rdquo; said Kenelm, as they walked on, &ldquo;I must go to that confounded
+ harvest-supper. I begin to think there is something true in the venerable
+ platitude about love in a cottage. And Will Somers must be married in
+ haste, in order to repent at leisure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see why a man should repent having married a good girl whom he
+ loves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t? Answer me candidly. Did you ever meet a man who repented
+ having married?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course I have; very often.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, think again, and answer as candidly. Did you ever meet a man who
+ repented not having married?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Parson mused, and was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;your reticence proves your honesty, and I respect
+ it.&rdquo; So saying, he bounded off, and left the Parson crying out wildly,
+ &ldquo;But&mdash;but&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0036" id="link2HCH0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MR. SAUNDERSON and Kenelm sat in the arbour: the former sipping his grog
+ and smoking his pipe; the latter looking forth into the summer night skies
+ with an earnest yet abstracted gaze, as if he were trying to count the
+ stars in the Milky Way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said Mr. Saunderson, who was concluding an argument; &ldquo;you see it
+ now, don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I? not a bit of it. You tell me that your grandfather was a farmer, and
+ your father was a farmer, and that you have been a farmer for thirty
+ years; and from these premises you deduce the illogical and irrational
+ conclusion that therefore your son must be a farmer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young man, you may think yourself very knowing &lsquo;cause you have been at
+ the &lsquo;Varsity, and swept away a headful of book-learning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop,&rdquo; quoth Kenelm. &ldquo;You grant that a university is learned.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I suppose so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how could it be learned if those who quitted it brought the learning
+ away? We leave it all behind us in the care of the tutors. But I know what
+ you were going to say,&mdash;that it is not because I had read more books
+ than you have that I was to give myself airs and pretend to have more
+ knowledge of life than a man of your years and experience. Agreed, as a
+ general rule. But does not every doctor, however wise and skilful, prefer
+ taking another doctor&rsquo;s opinion about himself, even though that other
+ doctor has just started in practice? And seeing that doctors, taking them
+ as a body, are monstrous clever fellows, is not the example they set us
+ worth following? Does it not prove that no man, however wise, is a good
+ judge of his own case? Now, your son&rsquo;s case is really your case: you see
+ it through the medium of your likings and dislikings; and insist upon
+ forcing a square peg into a round hole, because in a round hole you, being
+ a round peg, feel tight and comfortable. Now I call that irrational.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see why my son has any right to fancy himself a square peg,&rdquo; said
+ the farmer, doggedly, &ldquo;when his father and his grandfather and his
+ great-grandfather have been round pegs; and it is agin&rsquo; nature for any
+ creature not to take after its own kind. A dog is a pointer or a sheep-dog
+ according as its forebears were pointers or sheep-dogs. There,&rdquo; cried the
+ farmer, triumphantly, shaking the ashes out of his pipe. &ldquo;I think I have
+ posed you, young master!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; for you have taken it for granted that the breeds have not been
+ crossed. But suppose that a sheep-dog has married a pointer, are you sure
+ that his son will not be more of a pointer than a sheep-dog?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Saunderson arrested himself in the task of refilling his pipe, and
+ scratched his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see,&rdquo; continued Kenelm, &ldquo;that you have crossed the breed. You married
+ a tradesman&rsquo;s daughter, and I dare say her grandfather and
+ great-grandfather were tradesmen too. Now, most sons take after their
+ mothers, and therefore Mr. Saunderson junior takes after his kind on the
+ distaff side, and comes into the world a square peg, which can only be
+ tight and comfortable in a square hole. It is no use arguing, Farmer: your
+ boy must go to his uncle; and there&rsquo;s an end of the matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By goles!&rdquo; said the farmer, &ldquo;you seem to think you can talk me out of my
+ senses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; but I think if you had your own way you would talk your son into the
+ workhouse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! by sticking to the land like his father before him? Let a man stick
+ by the land, and the land will stick by him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let a man stick in the mud, and the mud will stick to him. You put your
+ heart in your farm, and your son would only put his foot into it. Courage!
+ Don&rsquo;t you see that Time is a whirligig, and all things come round? Every
+ day somebody leaves the land and goes off into trade. By and by he grows
+ rich, and then his great desire is to get back to the land again. He left
+ it the son of a farmer: he returns to it as a squire. Your son, when he
+ gets to be fifty, will invest his savings in acres, and have tenants of
+ his own. Lord, how he will lay down the law to them! I would not advise
+ you to take a farm under him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Catch me at it!&rdquo; said the farmer. &ldquo;He would turn all the contents of the
+ &lsquo;pothecary&rsquo;s shop into my fallows, and call it &lsquo;progress.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let him physic the fallows when he has farms of his own: keep yours out
+ of his chemical clutches. Come, I shall tell him to pack up and be off to
+ his uncle&rsquo;s next week?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; said the farmer, in a resigned tone: &ldquo;a wilful man must e&rsquo;en
+ have his way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the best thing a sensible man can do is not to cross it. Mr.
+ Saunderson, give me your honest hand. You are one of those men who put the
+ sons of good fathers in mind of their own; and I think of mine when I say
+ &lsquo;God bless you!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quitting the farmer, Kenelm re-entered the house, and sought Mr.
+ Saunderson junior in his own room. He found that young gentleman still up,
+ and reading an eloquent tract on the Emancipation of the Human Race from
+ all Tyrannical Control,&mdash;Political, Social, Ecclesiastical, and
+ Domestic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lad looked up sulkily, and said, on encountering Kenelm&rsquo;s melancholic
+ visage, &ldquo;Ah! I see you have talked with the old governor, and he&rsquo;ll not
+ hear of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the first place,&rdquo; answered Kenelm, &ldquo;since you value yourself on a
+ superior education, allow me to advise you to study the English language,
+ as the forms of it are maintained by the elder authors, whom, in spite of
+ an Age of Progress, men of superior education esteem. No one who has gone
+ through that study; no one, indeed, who has studied the Ten Commandments
+ in the vernacular,&mdash;commits the mistake of supposing that &lsquo;the old
+ governor&rsquo; is a synonymous expression for &lsquo;father.&rsquo; In the second place,
+ since you pretend to the superior enlightenment which results from a
+ superior education, learn to know better your own self before you set up
+ as a teacher of mankind. Excuse the liberty I take, as your sincere
+ well-wisher, when I tell you that you are at present a conceited fool,&mdash;in
+ short, that which makes one boy call another an &lsquo;ass.&rsquo; But when one has a
+ poor head he may redeem the average balance of humanity by increasing the
+ wealth of the heart. Try and increase yours. Your father consents to your
+ choice of your lot at the sacrifice of all his own inclinations. This is a
+ sore trial to a father&rsquo;s pride, a father&rsquo;s affection; and few fathers make
+ such sacrifices with a good grace. I have thus kept my promise to you, and
+ enforced your wishes on Mr. Saunderson&rsquo;s judgment, because I am sure you
+ would have been a very bad farmer. It now remains for you to show that you
+ can be a very good tradesman. You are bound in honour to me and to your
+ father to try your best to be so; and meanwhile leave the task of
+ upsetting the world to those who have no shop in it, which would go crash
+ in the general tumble. And so good-night to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To these admonitory words, <i>sacro digna silentio</i>, Saunderson junior
+ listened with a dropping jaw and fascinated staring eyes. He felt like an
+ infant to whom the nurse has given a hasty shake, and who is too stupefied
+ by that operation to know whether he is hurt or not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A minute after Kenelm had quitted the room he reappeared at the door, and
+ said in a conciliatory whisper, &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t take it to heart that I called you
+ a conceited fool and an ass. These terms are no doubt just as applicable
+ to myself. But there is a more conceited fool and a greater ass than
+ either of us; and that is the Age in which we have the misfortune to be
+ born,&mdash;an Age of Progress, Mr. Saunderson, junior!&mdash;an Age of
+ Prigs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0037" id="link2HCH0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IF there were a woman in the world who might be formed and fitted to
+ reconcile Kenelm Chillingly to the sweet troubles of love and the pleasant
+ bickerings of wedded life, one might reasonably suppose that that woman
+ could be found in Cecilia Travers. An only daughter and losing her mother
+ in childhood, she had been raised to the mistress-ship of a household at
+ an age in which most girls are still putting their dolls to bed; and thus
+ had early acquired that sense of responsibility, accompanied with the
+ habits of self-reliance, which seldom fails to give a certain nobility to
+ character; though almost as often, in the case of women, it steals away
+ the tender gentleness which constitutes the charm of their sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had not done so in the instance of Cecilia Travers, because she was so
+ womanlike that even the exercise of power could not make her manlike.
+ There was in the depth of her nature such an instinct of sweetness that
+ wherever her mind toiled and wandered it gathered and hoarded honey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had one advantage over most girls in the same rank of life,&mdash;she
+ had not been taught to fritter away such capacities for culture as
+ Providence gave her in the sterile nothingnesses which are called feminine
+ accomplishments. She did not paint figures out of drawing in meagre
+ water-colours; she had not devoted years of her life to the inflicting on
+ polite audiences the boredom of Italian bravuras, which they could hear
+ better sung by a third-rate professional singer in a metropolitan
+ music-hall. I am afraid she had no other female accomplishments than those
+ by which the sempstress or embroideress earns her daily bread. That sort
+ of work she loved, and she did it deftly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if she had not been profitlessly plagued by masters, Cecilia Travers
+ had been singularly favoured by her father&rsquo;s choice of a teacher: no great
+ merit in him either. He had a prejudice against professional governesses,
+ and it chanced that among his own family connections was a certain Mrs.
+ Campion, a lady of some literary distinction, whose husband had held a
+ high situation in one of our public offices, and living, much to his
+ satisfaction, up to a very handsome income, had died, much to the
+ astonishment of others, without leaving a farthing behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately, there were no children to provide for. A small government
+ pension was allotted to the widow; and as her husband&rsquo;s house had been
+ made by her one of the pleasantest in London, she was popular enough to be
+ invited by numerous friends to their country seats; among others, by Mr.
+ Travers. She came intending to stay a fortnight. At the end of that time
+ she had grown so attached to Cecilia, and Cecilia to her, and her presence
+ had become so pleasant and so useful to her host, that the Squire
+ entreated her to stay and undertake the education of his daughter. Mrs.
+ Campion, after some hesitation, gratefully consented; and thus Cecilia,
+ from the age of eight to her present age of nineteen, had the inestimable
+ advantage of living in constant companionship with a woman of richly
+ cultivated mind, accustomed to hear the best criticisms on the best books,
+ and adding to no small accomplishment in literature the refinement of
+ manners and that sort of prudent judgment which result from habitual
+ intercourse with an intellectual and gracefully world-wise circle of
+ society: so that Cecilia herself, without being at all blue or pedantic,
+ became one of those rare young women with whom a well-educated man can
+ converse on equal terms; from whom he gains as much as he can impart to
+ her; while a man who, not caring much about books, is still gentleman
+ enough to value good breeding, felt a relief in exchanging the forms of
+ his native language without the shock of hearing that a bishop was &ldquo;a
+ swell&rdquo; or a croquet-party &ldquo;awfully jolly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a word, Cecilia was one of those women whom Heaven forms for man&rsquo;s
+ helpmate; who, if he were born to rank and wealth, would, as his partner,
+ reflect on them a new dignity, and add to their enjoyment by bringing
+ forth their duties; who, not less if the husband she chose were poor and
+ struggling, would encourage, sustain, and soothe him, take her own share
+ of his burdens, and temper the bitterness of life with the
+ all-recompensing sweetness of her smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little, indeed, as yet had she ever thought of love or of lovers. She had
+ not even formed to herself any of those ideals which float before the eyes
+ of most girls when they enter their teens. But of two things she felt inly
+ convinced: first, that she could never wed where she did not love; and
+ secondly, that where she did love it would be for life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now I close this sketch with a picture of the girl herself. She has
+ just come into her room from inspecting the preparations for the evening
+ entertainment which her father is to give to his tenants and rural
+ neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She has thrown aside her straw hat, and put down the large basket which
+ she has emptied of flowers. She pauses before the glass, smoothing back
+ the ruffled bands of her hair,&mdash;hair of a dark, soft chestnut, silky
+ and luxuriant,&mdash;never polluted, and never, so long as she lives, to
+ be polluted by auricomous cosmetics, far from that delicate darkness,
+ every tint of the colours traditionally dedicated to the locks of Judas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her complexion, usually of that soft bloom which inclines to paleness, is
+ now heightened into glow by exercise and sunlight. The features are small
+ and feminine; the eyes dark with long lashes; the mouth singularly
+ beautiful, with a dimple on either side, and parted now in a half-smile at
+ some pleasant recollection, giving a glimpse of small teeth glistening as
+ pearls. But the peculiar charm of her face is in an expression of serene
+ happiness, that sort of happiness which seems as if it had never been
+ interrupted by a sorrow, had never been troubled by a sin,&mdash;that holy
+ kind of happiness which belongs to innocence, the light reflected from a
+ heart and conscience alike at peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0038" id="link2HCH0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT was a lovely summer evening for the Squire&rsquo;s rural entertainment. Mr.
+ Travers had some guests staying with him: they had dined early for the
+ occasion, and were now grouped with their host a little before six o&rsquo;clock
+ on the lawn. The house was of irregular architecture, altered or added to
+ at various periods from the reign of Elizabeth to that of Victoria: at one
+ end, the oldest part, a gable with mullion windows; at the other, the
+ newest part, a flat-roofed wing, with modern sashes opening to the ground,
+ the intermediate part much hidden by a veranda covered with creepers in
+ full bloom. The lawn was a spacious table-land facing the west, and backed
+ by a green and gentle hill, crowned with the ruins of an ancient priory.
+ On one side of the lawn stretched a flower-garden and pleasure-ground,
+ originally planned by Repton; on the opposite angles of the sward were
+ placed two large marquees,&mdash;one for dancing, the other for supper.
+ Towards the south the view was left open, and commanded the prospect of an
+ old English park, not of the stateliest character; not intersected with
+ ancient avenues, nor clothed with profitless fern as lairs for deer: but
+ the park of a careful agriculturist, uniting profit with show, the sward
+ duly drained and nourished, fit to fatten bullocks in an incredibly short
+ time, and somewhat spoilt to the eye by subdivisions of wire fence. Mr.
+ Travers was renowned for skilful husbandry, and the general management of
+ land to the best advantage. He had come into the estate while still in
+ childhood, and thus enjoyed the accumulations of a long minority. He had
+ entered the Guards at the age of eighteen, and having more command of
+ money than most of his contemporaries, though they might be of higher rank
+ and the sons of richer men, he had been much courted and much plundered.
+ At the age of twenty-five he found himself one of the leaders of fashion,
+ renowned chiefly for reckless daring where-ever honour could be plucked
+ out of the nettle danger: a steeple-chaser, whose exploits made a quiet
+ man&rsquo;s hair stand on end; a rider across country, taking leaps which a more
+ cautious huntsman carefully avoided. Known at Paris as well as in London,
+ he had been admired by ladies whose smiles had cost him duels, the marks
+ of which still remained in glorious scars on his person. No man ever
+ seemed more likely to come to direst grief before attaining the age of
+ thirty, for at twenty-seven all the accumulations of his minority were
+ gone; and his estate, which, when he came of age, was scarcely three
+ thousand a year, but entirely at his own disposal, was mortgaged up to its
+ eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His friends began to shake their heads and call him &ldquo;poor fellow;&rdquo; but,
+ with all his wild faults, Leopold Travers had been wholly pure from the
+ two vices out of which a man does not often redeem himself. He had never
+ drunk and he had never gambled. His nerves were not broken, his brain was
+ not besotted. There was plenty of health in him yet, mind and body. At the
+ critical period of his life he married for love, and his choice was a most
+ felicitous one. The lady had no fortune; but though handsome and
+ high-born, she had no taste for extravagance, and no desire for other
+ society than that of the man she loved. So when he said, &ldquo;Let us settle in
+ the country and try our best to live on a few hundreds, lay by, and keep
+ the old place out of the market,&rdquo; she consented with a joyful heart: and
+ marvel it was to all how this wild Leopold Travers did settle down; did
+ take to cultivating his home farm with his men from sunrise to sunset like
+ a common tenant-farmer; did contrive to pay the interest on the mortgages,
+ and keep his head above water. After some years of pupilage in this school
+ of thrift, during which his habits became formed and his whole character
+ braced, Leopold Travers suddenly found himself again rich, through the
+ wife whom he had so prudently married without other dower than her love
+ and her virtues. Her only brother, Lord Eagleton, a Scotch peer, had been
+ engaged in marriage to a young lady, considered to be a rare prize in the
+ lottery of wedlock. The marriage was broken off under very disastrous
+ circumstances; but the young lord, good-looking and agreeable, was
+ naturally expected to seek speedy consolation in some other alliance.
+ Nevertheless he did not do so: he became a confirmed invalid, and died
+ single, leaving to his sister all in his power to save from the distant
+ kinsman who succeeded to his lands and title,&mdash;a goodly sum, which
+ not only sufficed to pay off the mortgages on Neesdale Park but bestowed
+ on its owner a surplus which the practical knowledge of country life that
+ he had acquired enabled him to devote with extraordinary profit to the
+ general improvement of his estate. He replaced tumble-down old farm
+ buildings with new constructions on the most approved principles; bought
+ or pensioned off certain slovenly incompetent tenants; threw sundry petty
+ holdings into large farms suited to the buildings he constructed;
+ purchased here and there small bits of land, commodious to the farms they
+ adjoined, and completing the integrity of his ring-fence; stubbed up
+ profitless woods which diminished the value of neighbouring arables by
+ obstructing sun and air and harbouring legions of rabbits; and then,
+ seeking tenants of enterprise and capital, more than doubled his original
+ yearly rental, and perhaps more than tripled the market value of his
+ property. Simultaneously with this acquisition of fortune, he emerged from
+ the inhospitable and unsocial obscurity which his previous poverty had
+ compelled, took an active part in county business, proved himself an
+ excellent speaker at public meetings, subscribed liberally to the hunt,
+ and occasionally joined in it,&mdash;a less bold but a wiser rider than of
+ yore. In short, as Themistocles boasted that he could make a small state
+ great, so Leopold Travers might boast with equal truth, that, by his
+ energies, his judgment, and the weight of his personal character, he had
+ made the owner of a property which had been at his accession to it of
+ third-rate rank in the county a personage so considerable that no knight
+ of the shire against whom he declared could have been elected, and if he
+ had determined to stand himself he would have been chosen free of expense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he said, on being solicited to become a candidate, &ldquo;When a man once
+ gives himself up to the care and improvement of a landed estate, he has no
+ time and no heart for anything else. An estate is an income or a kingdom,
+ according as the owner chooses to take it. I take it as a kingdom, and I
+ cannot be <i>roi faineant</i>, with a steward for <i>maire du palais</i>.
+ A king does not go into the House of Commons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three years after this rise in the social ladder, Mrs. Travers was seized
+ with congestion of the lungs followed by pleurisy, and died after less
+ than a week&rsquo;s illness. Leopold never wholly recovered her loss. Though
+ still young and always handsome, the idea of another wife, the love of
+ another woman, were notions which he dismissed from his, mind with a quiet
+ scorn. He was too masculine a creature to parade grief. For some weeks,
+ indeed, he shut himself up in his own room, so rigidly secluded that he
+ would not see even his daughter. But one morning he appeared in his fields
+ as usual, and from that day resumed his old habits, and gradually renewed
+ that cordial interchange of hospitalities which had popularly
+ distinguished him since his accession to wealth. Still people felt that
+ the man was changed; he was more taciturn, more grave: if always just in
+ his dealings, he took the harder side of justice, where in his wife&rsquo;s time
+ he had taken the gentler. Perhaps, to a man of strong will, the habitual
+ intercourse with an amiable woman is essential for those occasions in
+ which Will best proves the fineness of its temper by the facility with
+ which it can be bent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be said that Leopold Travers might have found such intercourse in
+ the intimate companionship of his own daughter. But she was a mere child
+ when his wife died, and she grew up to womanhood too insensibly for him to
+ note the change. Besides, where a man has found a wife his all-in-all, a
+ daughter can never supply her place. The very reverence due to children
+ precludes unrestrained confidence; and there is not that sense of
+ permanent fellowship in a daughter which a man has in a wife,&mdash;any
+ day a stranger may appear and carry her off from him. At all events
+ Leopold did not own in Cecilia the softening influence to which he had
+ yielded in her mother. He was fond of her, proud of her, indulgent to her;
+ but the indulgence had its set limits. Whatever she asked solely for
+ herself he granted; whatever she wished for matters under feminine control&mdash;the
+ domestic household, the parish school, the alms-receiving poor&mdash;obtained
+ his gentlest consideration. But when she had been solicited by some
+ offending out-of-door dependant or some petty defaulting tenant to use her
+ good offices in favour of the culprit, Mr. Travers checked her
+ interference by a firm &ldquo;No,&rdquo; though uttered in a mild accent, and
+ accompanied with a masculine aphorism to the effect that &ldquo;there would be
+ no such things as strict justice and disciplined order in the world if a
+ man yielded to a woman&rsquo;s pleadings in any matter of business between man
+ and man.&rdquo; From this it will be seen that Mr. Lethbridge had overrated the
+ value of Cecilia&rsquo;s alliance in the negotiation respecting Mrs. Bawtrey&rsquo;s
+ premium and shop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0039" id="link2HCH0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IF, having just perused what has thus been written on the biographical
+ antecedents and mental characteristics of Leopold Travers, you, my dear
+ reader, were to be personally presented to that gentleman as he now
+ stands, the central figure of the group gathered round him, on his
+ terrace, you would probably be surprised,&mdash;nay, I have no doubt you
+ would say to yourself, &ldquo;Not at all the sort of man I expected.&rdquo; In that
+ slender form, somewhat below the middle height; in that fair countenance
+ which still, at the age of forty-eight, retains a delicacy of feature and
+ of colouring which is of almost womanlike beauty, and, from the quiet
+ placidity of its expression, conveys at first glance the notion of almost
+ womanlike mildness,&mdash;it would be difficult to recognize a man who in
+ youth had been renowned for reckless daring, in maturer years more
+ honourably distinguished for steadfast prudence and determined purpose,
+ and who, alike in faults or in merits, was as emphatically masculine as a
+ biped in trousers can possibly be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Travers is listening to a young man of about two and twenty, the
+ eldest son of the richest nobleman of the county, and who intends to start
+ for the representation of the shire at the next general election, which is
+ close at hand. The Hon. George Belvoir is tall, inclined to be stout, and
+ will look well on the hustings. He has had those pains taken with his
+ education which an English peer generally does take with the son intended
+ to succeed to the representation of an honourable name and the
+ responsibilities of high station. If eldest sons do not often make as
+ great a figure in the world as their younger brothers, it is not because
+ their minds are less cultivated, but because they have less motive power
+ for action. George Belvoir was well read, especially in that sort of
+ reading which befits a future senator,&mdash;history, statistics,
+ political economy, so far as that dismal science is compatible with the
+ agricultural interest. He was also well-principled, had a strong sense of
+ discipline and duty, was prepared in politics firmly to uphold as right
+ whatever was proposed by his own party, and to reject as wrong whatever
+ was proposed by the other. At present he was rather loud and noisy in the
+ assertion of his opinions,&mdash;young men fresh from the University
+ generally are. It was the secret wish of Mr. Travers that George Belvoir
+ should become his son-in-law; less because of his rank and wealth (though
+ such advantages were not of a nature to be despised by a practical man
+ like Leopold Travers) than on account of those qualities in his personal
+ character which were likely to render him an excellent husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seated on wire benches, just without the veranda, but shaded by its
+ fragrant festoons, were Mrs. Campion and three ladies, the wives of
+ neighbouring squires. Cecilia stood a little apart from them, bending over
+ a long-backed Skye terrier, whom she was teaching to stand on his hind
+ legs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But see, the company are arriving! How suddenly that green space, ten
+ minutes ago so solitary, has become animated and populous!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed the park now presented a very lively appearance: vans, carts, and
+ farmers&rsquo; chaises were seen in crowded procession along the winding road;
+ foot-passengers were swarming towards the house in all directions. The
+ herds and flocks in the various enclosures stopped grazing to stare at the
+ unwonted invaders of their pasture: yet the orderly nature of their host
+ imparted a respect for order to his ruder visitors; not even a turbulent
+ boy attempted to scale the fences, or creep through their wires; all
+ threaded the narrow turnstiles which gave egress from one subdivision of
+ the sward to another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Travers turned to George Belvoir: &ldquo;I see old farmer Steen&rsquo;s yellow
+ gig. Mind how you talk to him, George. He is full of whims and crotchets,
+ and if you once brush his feathers the wrong way he will be as vindictive
+ as a parrot. But he is the man who must second you at the nomination. No
+ other tenant-farmer carries the same weight with his class.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; said George, &ldquo;that if Mr. Steen is the best man to second me
+ at the hustings, he is a good speaker?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A good speaker? in one sense he is. He never says a word too much. The
+ last time he seconded the nomination of the man you are to succeed, this
+ was his speech: &lsquo;Brother Electors, for twenty years I have been one of the
+ judges at our county cattle-show. I know one animal from another. Looking
+ at the specimens before us to-day none of them are as good of their kind
+ as I&rsquo;ve seen elsewhere. But if you choose Sir John Hogg you&rsquo;ll not get the
+ wrong sow by the ear!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At least,&rdquo; said George, after a laugh at this sample of eloquence
+ unadorned, &ldquo;Mr. Steen does not err on the side of flattery in his
+ commendations of a candidate. But what makes him such an authority with
+ the farmers? Is he a first-rate agriculturist?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In thrift, yes!&mdash;in spirit, no! He says that all expensive
+ experiments should be left to gentlemen farmers. He is an authority with
+ other tenants: firstly, because he is a very keen censor of their
+ landlords; secondly, because he holds himself thoroughly independent of
+ his own; thirdly, because he is supposed to have studied the political
+ bearings of questions that affect the landed interest, and has more than
+ once been summoned to give his opinion on such subjects to Committees of
+ both Houses of Parliament. Here he comes. Observe, when I leave you to
+ talk to him: firstly, that you confess utter ignorance of practical
+ farming; nothing enrages him like the presumption of a gentleman farmer
+ like myself: secondly, that you ask his opinion on the publication of
+ Agricultural Statistics, just modestly intimating that you, as at present
+ advised, think that inquisitorial researches into a man&rsquo;s business involve
+ principles opposed to the British Constitution. And on all that he may say
+ as to the shortcomings of landlords in general, and of your father in
+ particular, make no reply, but listen with an air of melancholy
+ conviction. How do you do, Mr. Steen, and how&rsquo;s the mistress? Why have you
+ not brought her with you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My good woman is in the straw again, Squire. Who is that youngster?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hist! let me introduce Mr. Belvoir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Belvoir offers his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir!&rdquo; vociferates Steen, putting both his own hands behind him. &ldquo;No
+ offence, young gentleman. But I don&rsquo;t give my hand at first sight to a man
+ who wants to shake a vote out of it. Not that I know anything against you.
+ But, if you be a farmer&rsquo;s friend rabbits are not, and my lord your father
+ is a great one for rabbits.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed you are mistaken there!&rdquo; cries George, with vehement earnestness.
+ Mr. Travers gave him a nudge, as much as to say, &ldquo;Hold your tongue.&rdquo;
+ George understood the hint, and is carried off meekly by Mr. Steen down
+ the solitude of the plantations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The guests now arrived fast and thick. They consisted chiefly not only of
+ Mr. Travers&rsquo;s tenants, but of farmers and their families within the range
+ of eight or ten miles from the Park, with a few of the neighbouring gentry
+ and clergy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not a supper intended to include the labouring class; for Mr.
+ Travers had an especial dislike to the custom of exhibiting peasants at
+ feeding-time, as if they were so many tamed animals of an inferior
+ species. When he entertained work-people, he made them comfortable in
+ their own way; and peasants feel more comfortable when not invited to be
+ stared out of countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Lethbridge,&rdquo; said Mr. Travers, &ldquo;where is the young gladiator you
+ promised to bring?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did bring him, and he was by my side not a minute ago. He has suddenly
+ given me the slip: &lsquo;abiit, evasit, erupit.&rsquo; I was looking round for him in
+ vain when you accosted me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope he has not seen some guest of mine whom he wants to fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope not,&rdquo; answered the Parson, doubtfully. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s a strange fellow. But
+ I think you will be pleased with him; that is, if he can be found. Oh, Mr.
+ Saunderson, how do you do? Have you seen your visitor?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir, I have just come. My mistress, Squire, and my three girls; and
+ this is my son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A hearty welcome to all,&rdquo; said the graceful Squire; (turning to
+ Saunderson junior), &ldquo;I suppose you are fond of dancing. Get yourself a
+ partner. We may as well open the ball.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, sir, but I never dance,&rdquo; said Saunderson junior, with an air
+ of austere superiority to an amusement which the March of Intellect had
+ left behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you&rsquo;ll have less to regret when you are grown old. But the band is
+ striking up; we must adjourn to the marquee. George&rdquo; (Mr. Belvoir, escaped
+ from Mr. Steen, had just made his appearance), &ldquo;will you give your arm to
+ Cecilia, to whom I think you are engaged for the first quadrille?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope,&rdquo; said George to Cecilia, as they walked towards the marquee,
+ &ldquo;that Mr. Steen is not an average specimen of the electors I shall have to
+ canvass. Whether he has been brought up to honour his own father and
+ mother I can&rsquo;t pretend to say, but he seems bent upon teaching me not to
+ honour mine. Having taken away my father&rsquo;s moral character upon the
+ unfounded allegation that he loved rabbits better than mankind, he then
+ assailed my innocent mother on the score of religion, and inquired when
+ she was going over to the Church of Rome, basing that inquiry on the
+ assertion that she had taken away her custom from a Protestant grocer and
+ conferred it on a Papist.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Those are favourable signs, Mr. Belvoir. Mr. Steen always prefaces a
+ kindness by a great deal of incivility. I asked him once to lend me a
+ pony, my own being suddenly taken lame, and he seized that opportunity to
+ tell me that my father was an impostor in pretending to be a judge of
+ cattle; that he was a tyrant, screwing his tenants in order to indulge
+ extravagant habits of hospitality; and implied that it would be a great
+ mercy if we did not live to apply to him, not for a pony, but for
+ parochial relief. I went away indignant. But he sent me the pony. I am
+ sure he will give you his vote.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meanwhile,&rdquo; said George, with a timid attempt at gallantry, as they now
+ commenced the quadrille, &ldquo;I take encouragement from the belief that I have
+ the good wishes of Miss Travers. If ladies had votes, as Mr. Mill
+ recommends, why, then&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, I should vote as Papa does,&rdquo; said Miss Travers, simply. &ldquo;And
+ if women had votes, I suspect there would be very little peace in any
+ household where they did not vote as the man at the head of it wished
+ them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I believe, after all,&rdquo; said the aspirant to Parliament, seriously,
+ &ldquo;that the advocates for female suffrage would limit it to women
+ independent of masculine control, widows and spinsters voting in right of
+ their own independent tenements.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In that case,&rdquo; said Cecilia, &ldquo;I suppose they would still generally go by
+ the opinion of some man they relied on, or make a very silly choice if
+ they did not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You underrate the good sense of your sex.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope not. Do you underrate the good sense of yours, if, in far more
+ than half the things appertaining to daily life, the wisest men say,
+ &lsquo;Better leave <i>them</i> to the <i>women</i>&rsquo;? But you&rsquo;re forgetting the
+ figure, <i>cavalier seul</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the way,&rdquo; said George, in another interval of the dance, &ldquo;do you know
+ a Mr. Chillingly, the son of Sir Peter, of Exmundham, in Westshire?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; why do you ask?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I thought I caught a glimpse of his face: it was just as Mr.
+ Steen was bearing me away down that plantation. From what you say, I must
+ suppose I was mistaken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chillingly! But surely some persons were talking yesterday at dinner
+ about a young gentleman of that name as being likely to stand for
+ Westshire at the next election, but who had made a very unpopular and
+ eccentric speech on the occasion of his coming of age.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The same man: I was at college with him,&mdash;a very singular character.
+ He was thought clever; won a prize or two; took a good degree: but it was
+ generally said that he would have deserved a much higher one if some of
+ his papers had not contained covert jests either on the subject or the
+ examiners. It is a dangerous thing to set up as a humourist in practical
+ life,&mdash;especially public life. They say Mr. Pitt had naturally a
+ great deal of wit and humour, but he wisely suppressed any evidence of
+ those qualities in his Parliamentary speeches. Just like Chillingly, to
+ turn into ridicule the important event of festivities in honour of his
+ coming of age,&mdash;an occasion that can never occur again in the whole
+ course of his life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was bad taste,&rdquo; said Cecilia, &ldquo;if intentional. But perhaps he was
+ misunderstood, or taken by surprise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Misunderstood,&mdash;possibly; but taken by surprise,&mdash;no. The
+ coolest fellow I ever met. Not that I have met him very often. Latterly,
+ indeed, at Cambridge he lived much alone. It was said that he read hard. I
+ doubt that; for my rooms were just over his, and I know that he was much
+ more frequently out of doors than in. He rambled a good deal about the
+ country on foot. I have seen him in by-lanes a dozen miles distant from
+ the town when I have been riding back from the hunt. He was fond of the
+ water, and pulled a mighty strong oar, but declined to belong to our
+ University crew; yet if ever there was a fight between undergraduates and
+ bargemen, he was sure to be in the midst of it. Yes, a very great oddity
+ indeed, full of contradictions, for a milder, quieter fellow in general
+ intercourse you could not see; and as for the jests of which he was
+ accused in his examination papers, his very face should have acquitted him
+ of the charge before any impartial jury of his countrymen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You sketch quite an interesting picture of him,&rdquo; said Cecilia. &ldquo;I wish we
+ did know him: he would be worth seeing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, once seen, you would not easily forget him,&mdash;a dark, handsome
+ face, with large melancholy eyes, and with one of those spare slender
+ figures which enable a man to disguise his strength, as a fraudulent
+ billiard-player disguises his play.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dance had ceased during this conversation, and the speakers were now
+ walking slowly to and fro the lawn amid the general crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How well your father plays the part of host to these rural folks!&rdquo; said
+ George, with a secret envy. &ldquo;Do observe how quietly he puts that shy young
+ farmer at his ease, and now how kindly he deposits that lame old lady on
+ the bench, and places the stool under her feet. What a canvasser he would
+ be! and how young he still looks, and how monstrous handsome!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This last compliment was uttered as Travers, having made the old lady
+ comfortable, had joined the three Miss Saundersons, dividing his pleasant
+ smile equally between them; and seemingly unconscious of the admiring
+ glances which many another rural beauty directed towards him as he passed
+ along. About the man there was a certain indescribable elegance, a natural
+ suavity free from all that affectation, whether of forced heartiness or
+ condescending civility, which too often characterizes the well-meant
+ efforts of provincial magnates to accommodate themselves to persons of
+ inferior station and breeding. It is a great advantage to a man to have
+ passed his early youth in that most equal and most polished of all
+ democracies,&mdash;the best society of large capitals. And to such
+ acquired advantage Leopold Travers added the inborn qualities that please.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later in the evening Travers, again accosting Mr. Lethbridge, said, &ldquo;I
+ have been talking much to the Saundersons about that young man who did us
+ the inestimable service of punishing your ferocious parishioner, Tom
+ Bowles; and all I hear so confirms the interest your own account inspired
+ me with that I should really like much to make his acquaintance. Has not
+ he turned up yet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I fear he must have gone. But in that case I hope you will take his
+ generous desire to serve my poor basket-maker into benevolent
+ consideration.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not press me; I feel so reluctant to refuse any request of yours. But
+ I have my own theory as to the management of an estate, and my system does
+ not allow of favour. I should wish to explain that to the young stranger
+ himself; for I hold courage in such honour that I do not like a brave man
+ to leave these parts with an impression that Leopold Travers is an
+ ungracious churl. However, he may not have gone. I will go and look for
+ him myself. Just tell Cecilia that she has danced enough with the gentry,
+ and that I have told Farmer Turby&rsquo;s son, a fine young fellow and a capital
+ rider across country, that I expect him to show my daughter that he can
+ dance as well as he rides.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0040" id="link2HCH0040">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ QUITTING Mr. Lethbridge, Travers turned with quick step towards the more
+ solitary part of the grounds. He did not find the object of his search in
+ the walks of the plantation; and, on taking the circuit of his demesne,
+ wound his way back towards the lawn through a sequestered rocky hollow in
+ the rear of the marquee, which had been devoted to a fernery. Here he came
+ to a sudden pause; for, seated a few yards before him on a gray crag, and
+ the moonlight full on his face, he saw a solitary man, looking upwards
+ with a still and mournful gaze, evidently absorbed in abstract
+ contemplation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Recalling the description of the stranger which he had heard from Mr.
+ Lethbridge and the Saundersons, Mr. Travers felt sure that he had come on
+ him at last. He approached gently; and, being much concealed by the tall
+ ferns, Kenelm (for that itinerant it was) did not see him advance, until
+ he felt a hand on his shoulder, and, turning round, beheld a winning smile
+ and heard a pleasant voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think I am not mistaken,&rdquo; said Leopold Travers, &ldquo;in assuming you to be
+ the gentleman whom Mr. Lethbridge promised to introduce to me, and who is
+ staying with my tenant, Mr. Saunderson?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm rose and bowed. Travers saw at once that it was the bow of a man in
+ his own world, and not in keeping with the Sunday costume of a petty
+ farmer. &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;let us talk seated;&rdquo; and placing himself on the
+ crag, he made room for Kenelm beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the first place,&rdquo; resumed Travers, &ldquo;I must thank you for having done a
+ public service in putting down the brute force which has long tyrannized
+ over the neighbourhood. Often in my young days I have felt the
+ disadvantage of height and sinews, whenever it would have been a great
+ convenience to terminate dispute or chastise insolence by a resort to
+ man&rsquo;s primitive weapons; but I never more lamented my physical inferiority
+ than on certain occasions when I would have given my ears to be able to
+ thrash Tom Bowles myself. It has been as great a disgrace to my estate
+ that that bully should so long have infested it as it is to the King of
+ Italy not to be able with all his armies to put down a brigand in
+ Calabria.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, Mr. Travers, but I am one of those rare persons who do not
+ like to hear ill of their friends. Mr. Thomas Bowles is a particular
+ friend of mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh!&rdquo; cried Travers, aghast. &ldquo;&lsquo;Friend!&rsquo; you are joking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would not accuse me of joking if you knew me better. But surely you
+ have felt that there are few friends one likes more cordially, and ought
+ to respect more heedfully, than the enemy with whom one has just made it
+ up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You say well, and I accept the rebuke,&rdquo; said Travers, more and more
+ surprised. &ldquo;And I certainly have less right to abuse Mr. Bowles than you
+ have, since I had not the courage to fight him. To turn to another subject
+ less provocative. Mr. Lethbridge has told me of your amiable desire to
+ serve two of his young parishioners, Will Somers and Jessie Wiles, and of
+ your generous offer to pay the money Mrs. Bawtrey demands for the transfer
+ of her lease. To that negotiation my consent is necessary, and that
+ consent I cannot give. Shall I tell you why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pray do. Your reasons may admit of argument.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Every reason admits of argument,&rdquo; said Mr. Travers, amused at the calm
+ assurance of a youthful stranger in anticipating argument with a skilful
+ proprietor on the management of his own property. &ldquo;I do not, however, tell
+ you my reasons for the sake of argument, but in vindication of my seeming
+ want of courtesy towards yourself. I have had a very hard and a very
+ difficult task to perform in bringing the rental of my estate up to its
+ proper value. In doing so, I have been compelled to adopt one uniform
+ system, equally applied to my largest and my pettiest holdings. That
+ system consists in securing the best and safest tenants I can, at the
+ rents computed by a valuer in whom I have confidence. To this system,
+ universally adopted on my estate, though it incurred much unpopularity at
+ first, I have at length succeeded in reconciling the public opinion of my
+ neighbourhood. People began by saying I was hard; they now acknowledge I
+ am just. If I once give way to favour or sentiment, I unhinge my whole
+ system. Every day I am subjected to moving solicitations. Lord Twostars, a
+ keen politician, begs me to give a vacant farm to a tenant because he is
+ an excellent canvasser, and has always voted straight with the party. Mrs.
+ Fourstars, a most benevolent woman, entreats me not to dismiss another
+ tenant, because he is in distressed circumstances and has a large family;
+ very good reasons perhaps for my excusing him an arrear, or allowing him a
+ retiring pension, but the worst reasons in the world for letting him
+ continue to ruin himself and my land. Now, Mrs. Bawtrey has a small
+ holding on lease at the inadequate rent of L8 a year. She asks L45 for its
+ transfer, but she can&rsquo;t transfer the lease without my consent; and I can
+ get L12 a year as a moderate rental from a large choice of competent
+ tenants. It will better answer me to pay her the L45 myself, which I have
+ no doubt the incoming tenant would pay me back, at least in part; and if
+ he did not, the additional rent would be good interest for my expenditure.
+ Now, you happen to take a sentimental interest, as you pass through the
+ village, in the loves of a needy cripple whose utmost industry has but
+ served to save himself from parish relief, and a giddy girl without a
+ sixpence, and you ask me to accept these very equivocal tenants instead of
+ substantial ones, and at a rent one-third less than the market value.
+ Suppose that I yielded to your request, what becomes of my reputation for
+ practical, business-like justice? I shall have made an inroad into the
+ system by which my whole estate is managed, and have invited all manner of
+ solicitations on the part of friends and neighbours, which I could no
+ longer consistently refuse, having shown how easily I can be persuaded
+ into compliance by a stranger whom I may never see again. And are you
+ sure, after all, that, if you did prevail on me, you would do the
+ individual good you aim at? It is, no doubt, very pleasant to think one
+ has made a young couple happy. But if that young couple fail in keeping
+ the little shop to which you would transplant them (and nothing more
+ likely: peasants seldom become good shopkeepers), and find themselves,
+ with a family of children, dependent solely, not on the arm of a strong
+ labourer, but the ten fingers of a sickly cripple, who makes clever
+ baskets, for which there is but slight and precarious demand in the
+ neighbourhood, may you not have insured the misery of the couple you
+ wished to render happy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I withdraw all argument,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with an aspect so humiliated and
+ dejected, that it would have softened a Greenland bear, or a Counsel for
+ the Prosecution. &ldquo;I am more and more convinced that of all the shams in
+ the world that of benevolence is the greatest. It seems so easy to do
+ good, and it is so difficult to do it. Everywhere, in this hateful
+ civilized life, one runs one&rsquo;s head against a system. A system, Mr.
+ Travers, is man&rsquo;s servile imitation of the blind tyranny of what in our
+ ignorance we call &lsquo;Natural Laws,&rsquo; a mechanical something through which the
+ world is ruled by the cruelty of General Principles, to the utter
+ disregard of individual welfare. By Natural Laws creatures prey on each
+ other, and big fishes eat little ones upon system. It is, nevertheless, a
+ hard thing for the little fish. Every nation, every town, every hamlet,
+ every occupation, has a system, by which, somehow or other, the pond
+ swarms with fishes, of which a great many inferiors contribute to increase
+ the size of a superior. It is an idle benevolence to keep one solitary
+ gudgeon out of the jaws of a pike. Here am I doing what I thought the
+ simplest thing in the world, asking a gentleman, evidently as good-natured
+ as myself, to allow an old woman to let her premises to a deserving young
+ couple, and paying what she asks for it out of my own money. And I find
+ that I am running against a system, and invading all the laws by which a
+ rental is increased and an estate improved. Mr. Travers, you have no cause
+ for regret in not having beaten Tom Bowles. You have beaten his victor,
+ and I now give up all dream of further interference with the Natural Laws
+ that govern the village which I have visited in vain. I had meant to
+ remove Tom Bowles from that quiet community. I shall now leave him to
+ return to his former habits,&mdash;to marry Jessie Wiles, which he
+ certainly will do, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; cried Mr. Travers. &ldquo;Do you mean to say that you can induce Tom
+ Bowles to leave the village?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had induced him to do it, provided Jessie Wiles married the
+ basket-maker; but, as that is out of the question, I am bound to tell him
+ so, and he will stay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if he left, what would become of his business? His mother could not
+ keep it on; his little place is a freehold; the only house in the village
+ that does not belong to me, or I should have ejected him long ago. Would
+ he sell the premises to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not if he stays and marries Jessie Wiles. But if he goes with me to
+ Luscombe and settles in that town as a partner to his uncle, I suppose he
+ would be too glad to sell a house of which he can have no pleasant
+ recollections. But what then? You cannot violate your system for the sake
+ of a miserable forge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would not violate my system if, instead of yielding to a sentiment, I
+ gained an advantage; and, to say truth, I should be very glad to buy that
+ forge and the fields that go with it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis your affair now, not mine, Mr. Travers. I no longer presume to
+ interfere. I leave the neighbourhood to-morrow: see if you can negotiate
+ with Mr. Bowles. I have the honour to wish you a good evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, young gentleman, I cannot allow you to quit me thus. You have
+ declined apparently to join the dancers, but you will at least join the
+ supper. Come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you sincerely, no. I came here merely on the business which your
+ system has settled.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I am not sure that it is settled.&rdquo; Here Mr. Travers wound his arm
+ within Kenelm&rsquo;s, and looking him full in the face, said, &ldquo;I know that I am
+ speaking to a gentleman at least equal in rank to myself, but as I enjoy
+ the melancholy privilege of being the older man, do not think I take an
+ unwarrantable liberty in asking if you object to tell me your name. I
+ should like to introduce you to my daughter, who is very partial to Jessie
+ Wiles and to Will Somers. But I can&rsquo;t venture to inflame her imagination
+ by designating you as a prince in disguise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Travers, you express yourself with exquisite delicacy. But I am just
+ starting in life, and I shrink from mortifying my father by associating my
+ name with a signal failure. Suppose I were an anonymous contributor, say,
+ to &lsquo;The Londoner,&rsquo; and I had just brought that highly intellectual journal
+ into discredit by a feeble attempt at a good-natured criticism or a
+ generous sentiment, would that be the fitting occasion to throw off the
+ mask, and parade myself to a mocking world as the imbecile violator of an
+ established system? Should I not, in a moment so untoward, more than ever
+ desire to merge my insignificant unit in the mysterious importance which
+ the smallest Singular obtains when he makes himself a Plural, and speaks
+ not as &lsquo;I,&rsquo; but as &lsquo;We&rsquo;? <i>We</i> are insensible to the charm of young
+ ladies; <i>We</i> are not bribed by suppers; <i>We</i>, like the witches
+ of &lsquo;Macbeth,&rsquo; have no name on earth; <i>We</i> are the greatest wisdom of
+ the greatest number; <i>We</i> are so upon system; <i>We</i> salute you,
+ Mr. Travers, and depart unassailable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Kenelm rose, doffed and replaced his hat in majestic salutation,
+ turned towards the entrance of the fernery, and found himself suddenly
+ face to face with George Belvoir, behind whom followed, with a throng of
+ guests, the fair form of Cecilia. George Belvoir caught Kenelm by the
+ hand, and exclaimed, &ldquo;Chillingly! I thought I could not be mistaken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chillingly!&rdquo; echoed Leopold Travers from behind. &ldquo;Are you the son of my
+ old friend Sir Peter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus discovered and environed, Kenelm did not lose his wonted presence of
+ mind; he turned round to Leopold Travers, who was now close in his rear,
+ and whispered, &ldquo;If my father was your friend, do not disgrace his son. Do
+ not say I am a failure. Deviate from your system, and let Will Somers
+ succeed Mrs. Bawtrey.&rdquo; Then reverting his face to Mr. Belvoir, he said
+ tranquilly, &ldquo;Yes; we have met before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cecilia,&rdquo; said Travers, now interposing, &ldquo;I am happy to introduce to you
+ as Mr. Chillingly, not only the son of an old friend of mine, not only the
+ knight-errant of whose gallant conduct on behalf of your protegee Jessie
+ Wiles we have heard so much, but the eloquent arguer who has conquered my
+ better judgment in a matter on which I thought myself infallible. Tell Mr.
+ Lethbridge that I accept Will Somers as a tenant for Mrs. Bawtrey&rsquo;s
+ premises.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm grasped the Squire&rsquo;s hand cordially. &ldquo;May it be in my power to do a
+ kind thing to you, in spite of any system to the contrary!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Chillingly, give your arm to my daughter. You will not now object to
+ join the dancers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0041" id="link2HCH0041">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ CECILIA stole a shy glance at Kenelm as the two emerged from the fernery
+ into the open space of the lawn. His countenance pleased her. She thought
+ she discovered much latent gentleness under the cold and mournful gravity
+ of its expression; and, attributing the silence he maintained to some
+ painful sense of an awkward position in the abrupt betrayal of his
+ incognito, sought with womanly tact to dispel his supposed embarrassment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have chosen a delightful mode of seeing the country this lovely
+ summer weather, Mr. Chillingly. I believe such pedestrian exercises are
+ very common with university students during the long vacation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very common, though they generally wander in packs like wild dogs or
+ Australian dingoes. It is only a tame dog that one finds on the road
+ travelling by himself; and then, unless he behaves very quietly, it is ten
+ to one that he is stoned as a mad dog.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I am afraid, from what I hear, that you have not been travelling very
+ quietly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are quite right, Miss Travers, and I am a sad dog if not a mad one.
+ But pardon me: we are nearing the marquee; the band is striking up, and,
+ alas! I am not a dancing dog.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He released Cecilia&rsquo;s arm, and bowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us sit here a while, then,&rdquo; said she, motioning to a garden-bench. &ldquo;I
+ have no engagement for the next dance, and, as I am a little tired, I
+ shall be glad of a reprieve.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm sighed, and, with the air of a martyr stretching himself on the
+ rack, took his place beside the fairest girl in the county.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were at college with Mr. Belvoir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was thought clever there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have not a doubt of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know he is canvassing our county for the next election. My father
+ takes a warm interest in his success, and thinks he will be a useful
+ member of Parliament.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of that I am certain. For the first five years he will be called pushing,
+ noisy, and conceited, much sneered at by men of his own age, and coughed
+ down on great occasions; for the five following years he will be
+ considered a sensible man in committees, and a necessary feature in
+ debate; at the end of those years he will be an under-secretary; in five
+ years more he will be a Cabinet Minister, and the representative of an
+ important section of opinions; he will be an irreproachable private
+ character, and his wife will be seen wearing the family diamonds at all
+ the great parties. She will take an interest in politics and theology; and
+ if she die before him, her husband will show his sense of wedded happiness
+ by choosing another lady, equally fitted to wear the family diamonds and
+ to maintain the family consequences.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of her laughter, Cecilia felt a certain awe at the solemnity of
+ voice and manner with which Kenelm delivered these oracular sentences, and
+ the whole prediction seemed strangely in unison with her own impressions
+ of the character whose fate was thus shadowed out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you a fortune-teller, Mr. Chillingly?&rdquo; she asked, falteringly, and
+ after a pause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As good a one as any whose hand you could cross with a shilling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you tell me my fortune?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I never tell the fortunes of ladies, because your sex is credulous,
+ and a lady might believe what I tell her. And when we believe such and
+ such is to be our fate, we are too apt to work out our life into the
+ verification of the belief. If Lady Macbeth had disbelieved in the
+ witches, she would never have persuaded her lord to murder Duncan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But can you not predict me a more cheerful fortune than that tragical
+ illustration of yours seems to threaten?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The future is never cheerful to those who look on the dark side of the
+ question. Mr. Gray is too good a poet for people to read nowadays,
+ otherwise I should refer you to his lines in the &lsquo;Ode to Eton College,&rsquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;See how all around us wait
+ The ministers of human fate,
+ And black Misfortune&rsquo;s baleful train.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meanwhile it is something to enjoy the present. We are young; we are
+ listening to music; there is no cloud over the summer stars; our
+ conscience is clear; our hearts untroubled: why look forward in search of
+ happiness? shall we ever be happier than we are at this moment?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Mr. Travers came up. &ldquo;We are going to supper in a few minutes,&rdquo; said
+ he; &ldquo;and before we lose sight of each other, Mr. Chillingly, I wish to
+ impress on you the moral fact that one good turn deserves another. I have
+ yielded to your wish, and now you must yield to mine. Come and stay a few
+ days with me, and see your benevolent intentions carried out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm paused. Now that he was discovered, why should he not pass a few
+ days among his equals? Realities or shams might be studied with squires no
+ less than with farmers; besides, he had taken a liking to Travers. That
+ graceful <i>ci-devant</i> Wildair, with the slight form and the delicate
+ face, was unlike rural squires in general. Kenelm paused, and then said
+ frankly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I accept your invitation. Would the middle of next week suit you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The sooner the better. Why not to-morrow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-morrow I am pre-engaged to an excursion with Mr. Bowles. That may
+ occupy two or three days, and meanwhile I must write home for other
+ garments than those in which I am a sham.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come any day you like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Agreed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Agreed; and, hark! the supper-bell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Supper,&rdquo; said Kenelm, offering his arm to Miss Travers,&mdash;&ldquo;supper is
+ a word truly interesting, truly poetical. It associates itself with the
+ entertainments of the ancients, with the Augustan age, with Horace and
+ Maecenas; with the only elegant but too fleeting period of the modern
+ world; with the nobles and wits of Paris, when Paris had wits and nobles;
+ with Moliere and the warm-hearted Duke who is said to have been the
+ original of Moliere&rsquo;s Misanthrope; with Madame de Sevigne and the Racine
+ whom that inimitable letter-writer denied to be a poet; with Swift and
+ Bolingbroke; with Johnson, Goldsmith, and Garrick. Epochs are signalized
+ by their eatings. I honour him who revives the Golden Age of suppers.&rdquo; So
+ saying, his face brightened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0042" id="link2HCH0042">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM CHILLINGLY, ESQ., TO SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, BART., ETC.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR FATHER,&mdash;I am alive and unmarried. Providence has watched
+ over me in these respects; but I have had narrow escapes. Hitherto I have
+ not acquired much worldly wisdom in my travels. It is true that I have
+ been paid two shillings as a day labourer, and, in fact, have fairly
+ earned at least six shillings more; but against that additional claim I
+ generously set off, as an equivalent, my board and lodging. On the other
+ hand, I have spent forty-five pounds out of the fifty which I devoted to
+ the purchase of experience. But I hope you will be a gainer by that
+ investment. Send an order to Mr. William Somers, basket-maker, Graveleigh,
+ &mdash;&mdash;-shire, for the hampers and game-baskets you require, and I
+ undertake to say that you will save twenty per cent on that article (all
+ expenses of carriage deducted) and do a good action into the bargain. You
+ know, from long habit, what a good action is worth better than I do. I
+ dare say you will be more pleased to learn than I am to record the fact
+ that I have been again decoyed into the society of ladies and gentlemen,
+ and have accepted an invitation to pass a few days at Neesdale Park with
+ Mr. Travers,&mdash;christened Leopold, who calls you &ldquo;his old friend,&rdquo;&mdash;a
+ term which I take for granted belongs to that class of poetic exaggeration
+ in which the &ldquo;dears&rdquo; and &ldquo;darlings&rdquo; of conjugal intercourse may be
+ categorized. Having for that visit no suitable garments in my knapsack,
+ kindly tell Jenkes to forward me a portmanteau full of those which I
+ habitually wore as Kenelm Chillingly, directed to me at &ldquo;Neesdale Park,
+ near Beaverston.&rdquo; Let me find it there on Wednesday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I leave this place to-morrow morning in company with a friend of the name
+ of Bowles: no relation to the reverend gentleman of that name who held the
+ doctrine that a poet should bore us to death with fiddle-faddle minutia of
+ natural objects in preference to that study of the insignificant creature
+ Man, in his relations to his species, to which Mr. Pope limited the range
+ of his inferior muse; and who, practising as he preached, wrote some very
+ nice verses, to which the Lake school and its successors are largely
+ indebted. My Mr. Bowles has exercised his faculty upon Man, and has a
+ powerful inborn gift in that line which only requires cultivation to
+ render him a match for any one. His more masculine nature is at present
+ much obscured by that passing cloud which, in conventional language, is
+ called &ldquo;a hopeless attachment.&rdquo; But I trust, in the course of our
+ excursion, which is to be taken on foot, that this vapour may consolidate
+ by motion, as some old-fashioned astronomers held that the nebula does
+ consolidate into a matter-of-fact world. Is it Rochefoucauld who says that
+ a man is never more likely to form a hopeful attachment for one than when
+ his heart is softened by a hopeless attachment to another? May it be long,
+ my dear father, before you condole with me on the first or congratulate me
+ on the second.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Your affectionate son,
+
+ KENELM.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Direct to me at Mr. Travers&rsquo;s. Kindest love to my mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The answer to this letter is here subjoined as the most convenient place
+ for its insertion, though of course it was not received till some days
+ after the date of my next chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, BART., TO KENELM CHILLINGLY, ESQ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR Boy,&mdash;With this I despatch the portmanteau you require to the
+ address that you give. I remember well Leopold Travers when he was in the
+ Guards,&mdash;a very handsome and a very wild young fellow. But he had
+ much more sense than people gave him credit for, and frequented
+ intellectual society; at least I met him very often at my friend
+ Campion&rsquo;s, whose house was then the favourite rendezvous of distinguished
+ persons. He had very winning manners, and one could not help taking an
+ interest in him. I was very glad when I heard he had married and reformed.
+ Here I beg to observe that a man who contracts a taste for low company may
+ indeed often marry, but he seldom reforms when he does so. And, on the
+ whole, I should be much pleased to hear that the experience which has cost
+ you forty-five pounds had convinced you that you might be better employed
+ than earning two, or even six shillings as a day-labourer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have not given your love to your mother, as you requested. In fact, you
+ have placed me in a very false position towards that other author of your
+ eccentric being. I could only guard you from the inquisition of the police
+ and the notoriety of descriptive hand-bills by allowing my lady to suppose
+ that you had gone abroad with the Duke of Clairville and his family. It is
+ easy to tell a fib, but it is very difficult to untell it. However, as
+ soon as you have made up your mind to resume your normal position among
+ ladies and gentlemen, I should be greatly obliged if you would apprise me.
+ I don&rsquo;t wish to keep a fib on my conscience a day longer than may be
+ necessary to prevent the necessity of telling another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From what you say of Mr. Bowles&rsquo;s study of Man, and his inborn talent for
+ that scientific investigation, I suppose that he is a professed
+ Metaphysician, and I should be glad of his candid opinion upon the Primary
+ Basis of Morals, a subject upon which I have for three years meditated the
+ consideration of a critical paper. But having lately read a controversy
+ thereon between two eminent philosophers, in which each accuses the other
+ of not understanding him, I have resolved for the present to leave the
+ Basis in its unsettled condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You rather alarm me when you say you have had a narrow escape from
+ marriage. Should you, in order to increase the experience you set out to
+ acquire, decide on trying the effect of a Mrs. Chillingly upon your
+ nervous system, it would be well to let me know a little beforehand, so
+ that I might prepare your mother&rsquo;s mind for that event. Such household
+ trifles are within her special province; and she would be much put out if
+ a Mrs. Chillingly dropped on her unawares.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This subject, however, is too serious to admit of a jest even between two
+ persons who understand, so well as you and I do, the secret cipher by
+ which each other&rsquo;s outward style of jest is to be gravely interpreted into
+ the irony which says one thing and means another. My dear boy, you are
+ very young; you are wandering about in a very strange manner, and may, no
+ doubt, meet with many a pretty face by the way, with which you may fancy
+ that you fall in love. You cannot think me a barbarous, tyrant if I ask
+ you to promise me, on your honour, that you will not propose to any young
+ lady before you come first to me and submit the case to my examination and
+ approval. You know me too well to suppose that I should unreasonably
+ withhold my consent if convinced that your happiness was at stake. But
+ while what a young man may fancy to be love is often a trivial incident in
+ his life, marriage is the greatest event in it; if on one side it may
+ involve his happiness, on the other side it may insure his misery.
+ Dearest, best, and oddest of sons, give me the promise I ask, and you will
+ free my breast from a terribly anxious thought which now sits on it like a
+ nightmare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your recommendation of a basket-maker comes opportunely. All such matters
+ go through the bailiff&rsquo;s hands, and it was but the other day that Green
+ was complaining of the high prices of the man he employed for hampers and
+ game-baskets. Green shall write to your protege.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Keep me informed of your proceedings as much as your anomalous character
+ will permit; so that nothing may diminish my confidence that the man who
+ had the honour to be christened Kenelm will not disgrace his name, but
+ acquire the distinction denied to a Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your affectionate father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0043" id="link2HCH0043">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ VILLAGERS lie abed on Sundays later than on workdays, and no shutter was
+ unclosed in a window of the rural street through which Kenelm Chillingly
+ and Tom Bowles went, side by side, in the still soft air of the Sabbath
+ morn. Side by side they went on, crossing the pastoral glebe-lands, where
+ the kine still drowsily reclined under the bowery shade of glinting
+ chestnut leaves; and diving thence into a narrow lane or by-road, winding
+ deep between lofty banks all tangled with convolvulus and wild-rose and
+ honeysuckle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They walked in silence, for Kenelm, after one or two vain attempts at
+ conversation, had the tact to discover that his companion was in no mood
+ for talk; and being himself one of those creatures whose minds glide
+ easily into the dreamy monologue of revery, he was not displeased to muse
+ on undisturbed, drinking quietly into his heart the subdued joy of the
+ summer morn, with the freshness of its sparkling dews, the wayward carol
+ of its earliest birds, the serene quietude of its limpid breezy air. Only
+ when they came to fresh turnings in the road that led towards the town to
+ which they were bound, Tom Bowles stepped before his companion, indicating
+ the way by a monosyllable or a gesture. Thus they journeyed for hours,
+ till the sun attained power, and a little wayside inn near a hamlet
+ invited Kenelm to the thought of rest and food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tom,&rdquo; said he then, rousing from his revery, &ldquo;what do you say to
+ breakfast?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Answered Tom sullenly, &ldquo;I am not hungry; but as you like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, then we will stop here a while. I find it difficult to believe
+ that you are not hungry, for you are very strong, and there are two things
+ which generally accompany great physical strength: the one is a keen
+ appetite; the other is&mdash;though you may not suppose it, and it is not
+ commonly known&mdash;a melancholic temperament.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh!&mdash;a what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A tendency to melancholy. Of course you have heard of Hercules: you know
+ the saying &lsquo;as strong as Hercules&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I was first led to the connection between strength, appetite, and
+ melancholy, by reading in an old author named Plutarch that Hercules was
+ among the most notable instances of melancholy temperament which the
+ author was enabled to quote. That must have been the traditional notion of
+ the Herculean constitution; and as for appetite, the appetite of Hercules
+ was a standard joke of the comic writers. When I read that observation it
+ set me thinking, being myself melancholic and having an exceedingly good
+ appetite. Sure enough, when I began to collect evidence, I found that the
+ strongest men with whom I made acquaintance, including prize-fighters and
+ Irish draymen, were disposed to look upon life more on the shady than the
+ sunny side of the way; in short, they were melancholic. But the kindness
+ of Providence allowed them to enjoy their meals, as you and I are about to
+ do.&rdquo; In the utterance of this extraordinary crotchet Kenelm had halted his
+ steps; but now striding briskly forward he entered the little inn, and
+ after a glance at its larder, ordered the whole contents to be brought out
+ and placed within a honeysuckle arbour which he spied in the angle of a
+ bowling-green at the rear of the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to the ordinary condiments of loaf and butter and eggs and
+ milk and tea, the board soon groaned beneath the weight of pigeon-pie,
+ cold ribs of beef, and shoulder of mutton, remains of a feast which the
+ members of a monthly rustic club had held there the day before. Tom ate
+ little at first; but example is contagious, and gradually he vied with his
+ companion in the diminution of the solid viands before him. Then he called
+ for brandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;No, Tom; you have promised me friendship, and that is
+ not compatible with brandy. Brandy is the worst enemy a man like you can
+ have; and would make you quarrel even with me. If you want a stimulus I
+ allow you a pipe. I don&rsquo;t smoke myself, as a rule, but there have been
+ times in my life when I required soothing, and then I have felt that a
+ whiff of tobacco stills and softens one like the kiss of a little child.
+ Bring this gentleman a pipe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom grunted, but took to the pipe kindly, and in a few minutes, during
+ which Kenelm left him in silence, a lowering furrow between his brows
+ smoothed itself away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gradually he felt the sweetening influences of the day and the place, of
+ the merry sunbeams at play amid the leaves of the arbour, of the frank
+ perfume of the honeysuckle, of the warble of the birds before they sank
+ into the taciturn repose of a summer noon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was with a reluctant sigh that he rose at last, when Kenelm said, &ldquo;We
+ have yet far to go: we must push on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The landlady, indeed, had already given them a hint that she and the
+ family wanted to go to church, and to shut up the house in their absence.
+ Kenelm drew out his purse, but Tom did the same with a return of cloud on
+ his brow, and Kenelm saw that he would be mortally offended if suffered to
+ be treated as an inferior; so each paid his due share, and the two men
+ resumed their wandering. This time it was along a by-path amid fields,
+ which was a shorter cut than the lane they had previously followed, to the
+ main road to Luscombe. They walked slowly till they came to a rustic
+ foot-bridge which spanned a gloomy trout-stream, not noisy, but with a
+ low, sweet murmur, doubtless the same stream beside which, many miles
+ away, Kenelm had conversed with the minstrel. Just as they came to this
+ bridge there floated to their ears the distant sound of the hamlet
+ church-bell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now let us sit here a while and listen,&rdquo; said Kenelm, seating himself on
+ the baluster of the bridge. &ldquo;I see that you brought away your pipe from
+ the inn, and provided yourself with tobacco: refill the pipe and listen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom half smiled and obeyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O friend,&rdquo; said Kenelm, earnestly, and after a long pause of thought, &ldquo;do
+ you not feel what a blessed thing it is in this mortal life to be ever and
+ anon reminded that you have a soul?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom, startled, withdrew the pipe from his lips, and muttered,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm continued,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You and I, Tom, are not so good as we ought to be: of that there is no
+ doubt; and good people would say justly that we should now be within yon
+ church itself rather than listening to its bell. Granted, my friend,
+ granted; but still it is something to hear that bell, and to feel by the
+ train of thought which began in our innocent childhood, when we said our
+ prayers at the knees of a mother, that we were lifted beyond this visible
+ Nature, beyond these fields and woods and waters, in which, fair though
+ they be, you and I miss something; in which neither you nor I are as happy
+ as the kine in the fields, as the birds on the bough, as the fishes in the
+ water: lifted to a consciousness of a sense vouchsafed to you and to me,
+ not vouchsafed to the kine, to the bird, and the fish,&mdash;a sense to
+ comprehend that Nature has a God, and Man has a life hereafter. The bell
+ says that to you and to me. Were that bell a thousand times more musical
+ it could not say that to beast, bird, and fish. Do you understand me,
+ Tom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom remains silent for a minute, and then replies, &ldquo;I never thought of it
+ before; but, as you put it, I understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nature never gives to a living thing capacities not practically meant for
+ its benefit and use. If Nature gives to us capacities to believe that we
+ have a Creator whom we never saw, of whom we have no direct proof, who is
+ kind and good and tender beyond all that we know of kind and good and
+ tender on earth, it is because the endowment of capacities to conceive
+ such a Being must be for our benefit and use: it would not be for our
+ benefit and use if it were a lie. Again, if Nature has given to us a
+ capacity to receive the notion that we live again, no matter whether some
+ of us refuse so to believe, and argue against it,&mdash;why, the very
+ capacity to receive the idea (for unless we receive it we could not argue
+ against it) proves that it is for our benefit and use; and if there were
+ no such life hereafter, we should be governed and influenced, arrange our
+ modes of life, and mature our civilization, by obedience to a lie, which
+ Nature falsified herself in giving us the capacity to believe. You still
+ understand me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; it bothers me a little, for you see I am not a parson&rsquo;s man; but I
+ do understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, my friend, study to apply,&mdash;for it requires constant study,&mdash;study
+ to apply that which you understand to your own case. You are something
+ more than Tom Bowles, the smith and doctor of horses; something more than
+ the magnificent animal who rages for his mate and fights every rival: the
+ bull does that. You are a soul endowed with the capacity to receive the
+ idea of a Creator so divinely wise and great and good that, though acting
+ by the agency of general laws, He can accommodate them to all individual
+ cases, so that&mdash;taking into account the life hereafter, which He
+ grants to you the capacity to believe&mdash;all that troubles you now will
+ be proved to you wise and great and good either in this life or the other.
+ Lay that truth to your heart, friend, now&mdash;before the bell stops
+ ringing; recall it every time you hear the church-bell ring again. And oh,
+ Tom, you have such a noble nature!&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&mdash;I! don&rsquo;t jeer me,&mdash;don&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such a noble nature; for you can love so passionately, you can war so
+ fiercely, and yet, when convinced that your love would be misery to her
+ you love, can resign it; and yet, when beaten in your war, can so forgive
+ your victor that you are walking in this solitude with him as a friend,
+ knowing that you have but to drop a foot behind him in order to take his
+ life in an unguarded moment; and rather than take his life, you would
+ defend it against an army. Do you think I am so dull as not to see all
+ that? and is not all that a noble nature?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom Bowles covered his face with his hands, and his broad breast heaved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, to that noble nature I now trust. I myself have done little
+ good in life. I may never do much; but let me think that I have not
+ crossed your life in vain for you and for those whom your life can colour
+ for good or for bad. As you are strong, be gentle; as you can love one, be
+ kind to all; as you have so much that is grand as Man,&mdash;that is, the
+ highest of God&rsquo;s works on earth,&mdash;let all your acts attach your
+ manhood to the idea of Him, to whom the voice of the bell appeals. Ah! the
+ bell is hushed; but not your heart, Tom,&mdash;that speaks still.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom was weeping like a child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0044" id="link2HCH0044">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ NOW when our two travellers resumed their journey, the relationship
+ between them had undergone a change; nay, you might have said that their
+ characters were also changed. For Tom found himself pouring out his
+ turbulent heart to Kenelm, confiding to this philosophical scoffer at love
+ all the passionate humanities of love,&mdash;its hope, its anguish, its
+ jealousy, its wrath,&mdash;the all that links the gentlest of emotions to
+ tragedy and terror. And Kenelm, listening tenderly, with softened eyes,
+ uttered not one cynic word,&mdash;nay, not one playful jest. He, felt that
+ the gravity of all he heard was too solemn for mockery, too deep even for
+ comfort. True love of this sort was a thing he had never known, never
+ wished to know, never thought he could know, but he sympathized in it not
+ the less. Strange, indeed, how much we do sympathize, on the stage, for
+ instance, or in a book, with passions that have never agitated ourselves!
+ Had Kenelm jested or reasoned or preached, Tom would have shrunk at once
+ into dreary silence; but Kenelm said nothing, save now and then, as he
+ rested his arm, brother-like, on the strong man&rsquo;s shoulder, he murmured,
+ &ldquo;Poor fellow!&rdquo; So, then, when Tom had finished his confessions, he felt
+ wondrously relieved and comforted. He had cleansed his bosom of the
+ perilous stuff that weighed upon the heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was this good result effected by Kenelm&rsquo;s artful diplomacy, or by that
+ insight into human passions vouchsafed unconsciously to himself, by gleams
+ or in flashes, to this strange man who surveyed the objects and pursuits
+ of his fellows with a yearning desire to share them, murmuring to himself,
+ &ldquo;I cannot, I do not stand in this world; like a ghost I glide beside it,
+ and look on &ldquo;?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the two men continued their way slowly, amid soft pastures and
+ yellowing cornfields, out at length into the dusty thoroughfares of the
+ main road. That gained, their talk insensibly changed its tone: it became
+ more commonplace; and Kenelm permitted himself the license of those
+ crotchets by which he extracted a sort of quaint pleasantry out of
+ commonplace itself; so that from time to time Tom was startled into the
+ mirth of laughter. This big fellow had one very agreeable gift, which is
+ only granted, I think, to men of genuine character and affectionate
+ dispositions,&mdash;a spontaneous and sweet laugh, manly and frank, but
+ not boisterous, as you might have supposed it would be. But that sort of
+ laugh had not before come from his lips, since the day on which his love
+ for Jessie Wiles had made him at war with himself and the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun was setting when from the brow of a hill they beheld the spires of
+ Luscombe, imbedded amid the level meadows that stretched below, watered by
+ the same stream that had wound along their more rural pathway, but which
+ now expanded into stately width, and needed, to span it, a mighty bridge
+ fit for the convenience of civilized traffic. The town seemed near, but it
+ was full two miles off by road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is a short cut across the fields beyond that stile, which leads
+ straight to my uncle&rsquo;s house,&rdquo; said Tom; &ldquo;and I dare say, sir, that you
+ will be glad to escape the dirty suburb by which the road passes before we
+ get into the town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A good thought, Tom. It is very odd that fine towns always are approached
+ by dirty suburbs; a covert symbolical satire, perhaps, on the ways to
+ success in fine towns. Avarice or ambition go through very mean little
+ streets before they gain the place which they jostle the crowd to win,&mdash;in
+ the Townhall or on &lsquo;Change. Happy the man who, like you, Tom, finds that
+ there is a shorter and a cleaner and a pleasanter way to goal or to
+ resting-place than that through the dirty suburbs!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They met but few passengers on their path through the fields,&mdash;a
+ respectable, staid, elderly couple, who had the air of a Dissenting
+ minister and his wife; a girl of fourteen leading a little boy seven years
+ younger by the hand; a pair of lovers, evidently lovers at least to the
+ eye of Tom Bowles; for, on regarding them as they passed unheeding him, he
+ winced, and his face changed. Even after they had passed, Kenelm saw on
+ the face that pain lingered there: the lips were tightly compressed, and
+ their corners gloomily drawn down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just at this moment a dog rushed towards them with a short quick bark,&mdash;a
+ Pomeranian dog with pointed nose and pricked ears. It hushed its bark as
+ it neared Kenelm, sniffed his trousers, and wagged its tail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the sacred Nine,&rdquo; cried Kenelm, &ldquo;thou art the dog with the tin tray!
+ where is thy master?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dog seemed to understand the question, for it turned its head
+ significantly; and Kenelm saw, seated under a lime-tree, at a good
+ distance from the path, a man, with book in hand, evidently employed in
+ sketching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come this way,&rdquo; he said to Tom: &ldquo;I recognize an acquaintance. You will
+ like him.&rdquo; Tom desired no new acquaintance at that moment, but he followed
+ Kenelm submissively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0045" id="link2HCH0045">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;YOU see we are fated to meet again,&rdquo; said Kenelm, stretching himself at
+ his ease beside the Wandering Minstrel, and motioning Tom to do the same.
+ &ldquo;But you seem to add the accomplishment of drawing to that of
+ verse-making! You sketch from what you call Nature?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From what I call Nature! yes, sometimes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And do you not find in drawing, as in verse-making, the truth that I have
+ before sought to din into your reluctant ears; namely, that Nature has no
+ voice except that which man breathes into her out of his mind? I would lay
+ a wager that the sketch you are now taking is rather an attempt to make
+ her embody some thought of your own, than to present her outlines as they
+ appear to any other observer. Permit me to judge for myself.&rdquo; And he bent
+ over the sketch-book. It is often difficult for one who is not himself an
+ artist nor a connoisseur to judge whether the pencilled jottings in an
+ impromptu sketch are by the hand of a professed master or a mere amateur.
+ Kenelm was neither artist nor connoisseur, but the mere pencil-work seemed
+ to him much what might be expected from any man with an accurate eye who
+ had taken a certain number of lessons from a good drawing-master. It was
+ enough for him, however, that it furnished an illustration of his own
+ theory. &ldquo;I was right,&rdquo; he cried triumphantly. &ldquo;From this height there is a
+ beautiful view, as it presents itself to me; a beautiful view of the town,
+ its meadows, its river, harmonized by the sunset; for sunset, like
+ gilding, unites conflicting colours, and softens them in uniting. But I
+ see nothing of that view in your sketch. What I do see is to me
+ mysterious.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The view you suggest,&rdquo; said the minstrel, &ldquo;is no doubt very fine, but it
+ is for a Turner or a Claude to treat it. My grasp is not wide enough for
+ such a landscape.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see indeed in your sketch but one figure, a child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hist! there she stands. Hist! while I put in this last touch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm strained his sight, and saw far off a solitary little girl, who was
+ tossing something in the air (he could not distinguish what), and catching
+ it as it fell. She seemed standing on the very verge of the upland, backed
+ by rose-clouds gathered round the setting sun; below lay in confused
+ outlines the great town. In the sketch those outlines seemed infinitely
+ more confused, being only indicated by a few bold strokes; but the figure
+ and face of the child were distinct and lovely. There was an ineffable
+ sentiment in her solitude; there was a depth of quiet enjoyment in her
+ mirthful play, and in her upturned eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But at that distance,&rdquo; asked Kenelm, when the wanderer had finished his
+ last touch, and, after contemplating it, silently closed his book, and
+ turned round with a genial smile, &ldquo;but at that distance, how can you
+ distinguish the girl&rsquo;s face? How can you discover that the dim object she
+ has just thrown up and recaught is a ball made of flowers? Do you know the
+ child?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never saw her before this evening; but as I was seated here she was
+ straying around me alone, weaving into chains some wild-flowers which she
+ had gathered by the hedgerows yonder, next the high road; and as she
+ strung them she was chanting to herself some pretty nursery rhymes. You
+ can well understand that when I heard her thus chanting I became
+ interested, and as she came near me I spoke to her, and we soon made
+ friends. She told me she was an orphan, and brought up by a very old man
+ distantly related to her, who had been in some small trade and now lived
+ in a crowded lane in the heart of the town. He was very kind to her, and
+ being confined himself to the house by age or ailment he sent her out to
+ play in the fields on summer Sundays. She had no companions of her own
+ age. She said she did not like the other little girls in the lane; and the
+ only little girl she liked at school had a grander station in life, and
+ was not allowed to play with her, and so she came out to play alone; and
+ as long as the sun shines and the flowers bloom, she says she never wants
+ other society.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tom, do you hear that? As you will be residing in Luscombe, find out this
+ strange little girl, and be kind to her, Tom, for my sake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom put his large hand upon Kenelm&rsquo;s, making no other answer; but he
+ looked hard at the minstrel, recognized the genial charm of his voice and
+ face, and slid along the grass nearer to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel continued: &ldquo;While the child was talking to me I mechanically
+ took the flower-chains from her hands, and not thinking what I was about,
+ gathered them up into a ball. Suddenly she saw what I had done, and
+ instead of scolding me for spoiling her pretty chains, which I richly
+ deserved, was delighted to find I had twisted them into a new plaything.
+ She ran off with the ball, tossing it about till, excited with her own
+ joy, she got to the brow of the hill, and I began my sketch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that charming face you have drawn like hers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; only in part. I was thinking of another face while I sketched, but it
+ is not like that either; in fact, it is one of those patchworks which we
+ call &lsquo;fancy heads,&rsquo; and I meant it to be another version of a thought that
+ I had just put into rhyme when the child came across me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May we hear the rhyme?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear that if it did not bore yourself it would bore your friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure not. Tom, do you sing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I <i>have</i> sung,&rdquo; said Tom, hanging his head sheepishly, &ldquo;and I
+ should like to hear this gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I do not know these verses, just made, well enough to sing them; it
+ is enough if I can recall them well enough to recite.&rdquo; Here the minstrel
+ paused a minute or so as if for recollection, and then, in the sweet clear
+ tones and the rare purity of enunciation which characterized his
+ utterance, whether in recital or song, gave to the following verses a
+ touching and a varied expression which no one could discover in merely
+ reading them.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE FLOWER-GIRL BY THE CROSSING.
+
+ &ldquo;By the muddy crossing in the crowded streets
+ Stands a little maid with her basket full of posies,
+ Proffering all who pass her choice of knitted sweets,
+ Tempting Age with heart&rsquo;s-ease, courting Youth with roses.
+
+ &ldquo;Age disdains the heart&rsquo;s-ease,
+ Love rejects the roses;
+ London life is busy,&mdash;
+ Who can stop for posies?
+
+ &ldquo;One man is too grave, another is too gay;
+ This man has his hothouse, that man not a penny:
+ Flowerets too are common in the month of May,
+ And the things most common least attract the many.
+
+ &ldquo;Ill, on London crossings,
+ Fares the sale of posies;
+ Age disdains the heart&rsquo;s-ease,
+ Youth rejects the roses.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ When the verse-maker had done, he did not pause for approbation, nor look
+ modestly down, as do most people who recite their own verses, but
+ unaffectedly thinking much more of his art than his audience, hurried on
+ somewhat disconsolately,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see with great grief that I am better at sketching than rhyming. Can
+ you&rdquo; (appealing to Kenelm) &ldquo;even comprehend what I mean by the verses?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM.&mdash;&ldquo;Do you comprehend, Tom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TOM (in a whisper).&mdash;&ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM.&mdash;&ldquo;I presume that by his flower-girl our friend means to
+ represent not only poetry, but a poetry like his own, which is not at all
+ the sort of poetry now in fashion. I, however, expand his meaning, and by
+ his flower-girl I understand any image of natural truth or beauty for
+ which, when we are living the artificial life of crowded streets, we are
+ too busy to give a penny.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take it as you please,&rdquo; said the minstrel, smiling and sighing at the
+ same time; &ldquo;but I have not expressed in words that which I did mean half
+ so well as I have expressed it in my sketch-book.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! and how?&rdquo; asked Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The image of my thought in the sketch, be it poetry or whatever you
+ prefer to call it, does not stand forlorn in the crowded streets: the
+ child stands on the brow of the green hill, with the city stretched in
+ confused fragments below, and, thoughtless of pennies and passers-by, she
+ is playing with the flowers she has gathered; but in play casting them
+ heavenward, and following them with heavenward eyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; muttered Kenelm, &ldquo;good!&rdquo; and then, after a long pause, he added,
+ in a still lower mutter, &ldquo;Pardon me that remark of mine the other day
+ about a beefsteak. But own that I am right: what you call a sketch from
+ Nature is but a sketch of your own thought.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0046" id="link2HCH0046">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE child with the flower-ball had vanished from the brow of the hill;
+ sinking down amid the streets below, the rose-clouds had faded from the
+ horizon; and night was closing round, as the three men entered the thick
+ of the town. Tom pressed Kenelm to accompany him to his uncle&rsquo;s, promising
+ him a hearty welcome and bed and board, but Kenelm declined. He
+ entertained a strong persuasion that it would be better for the desired
+ effect on Tom&rsquo;s mind that he should be left alone with his relations that
+ night, but proposed that they should spend the next day together, and
+ agreed to call at the veterinary surgeon&rsquo;s in the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Tom quitted them at his uncle&rsquo;s door, Kenelm said to the minstrel, &ldquo;I
+ suppose you are going to some inn; may I accompany you? We can sup
+ together, and I should like to hear you talk upon poetry and Nature.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You flatter me much; but I have friends in the town, with whom I lodge,
+ and they are expecting me. Do you not observe that I have changed my
+ dress? I am not known here as the &lsquo;Wandering Minstrel.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm glanced at the man&rsquo;s attire, and for the first time observed the
+ change. It was still picturesque in its way, but it was such as gentlemen
+ of the highest rank frequently wear in the country,&mdash;the
+ knickerbocker costume,&mdash;very neat, very new, and complete, to the
+ square-toed shoes with their latchets and buckles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear,&rdquo; said Kenelm, gravely, &ldquo;that your change of dress betokens the
+ neighbourhood of those pretty girls of whom you spoke in an earlier
+ meeting. According to the Darwinian doctrine of selection, fine plumage
+ goes far in deciding the preference of Jenny Wren and her sex, only we are
+ told that fine-feathered birds are very seldom songsters as well. It is
+ rather unfair to rivals when you unite both attractions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel laughed. &ldquo;There is but one girl in my friend&rsquo;s house,&mdash;his
+ niece; she is very plain, and only thirteen. But to me the society of
+ women, whether ugly or pretty, is an absolute necessity; and I have been
+ trudging without it for so many days that I can scarcely tell you how my
+ thoughts seemed to shake off the dust of travel when I found myself again
+ in the presence of&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Petticoat interest,&rdquo; interrupted Kenelm. &ldquo;Take care of yourself. My poor
+ friend with whom you found me is a grave warning against petticoat
+ interest, from which I hope to profit. He is passing through a great
+ sorrow; it might have been worse than sorrow. My friend is going to stay
+ in this town. If you are staying here too, pray let him see something of
+ you. It will do him a wondrous good if you can beguile him from this real
+ life into the gardens of poetland; but do not sing or talk of love to
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I honour all lovers,&rdquo; said the minstrel, with real tenderness in his
+ tone, &ldquo;and would willingly serve to cheer or comfort your friend, if I
+ could; but I am bound elsewhere, and must leave Luscombe, which I visit on
+ business&mdash;money business&mdash;the day after to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So, too, must I. At least give us both some hours of your time
+ to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly; from twelve to sunset I shall be roving about,&mdash;a mere
+ idler. If you will both come with me, it will be a great pleasure to
+ myself. Agreed! Well, then, I will call at your inn to-morrow at twelve;
+ and I recommend for your inn the one facing us,&mdash;The Golden Lamb. I
+ have heard it recommended for the attributes of civil people and good
+ fare.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm felt that he here received his <i>conge</i>, and well comprehended
+ the fact that the minstrel, desiring to preserve the secret of his name,
+ did not give the address of the family with whom he was a guest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But one word more,&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;Your host or hostess, if resident here,
+ can, no doubt, from your description of the little girl and the old man
+ her protector, learn the child&rsquo;s address. If so, I should like my
+ companion to make friends with her. Petticoat interest there at least will
+ be innocent and safe. And I know nothing so likely to keep a big,
+ passionate heart like Tom&rsquo;s, now aching with a horrible void, occupied and
+ softened, and turned to directions pure and gentle, as an affectionate
+ interest in a little child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel changed colour: he even started. &ldquo;Sir, are you a wizard that
+ you say that to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not a wizard, but I guess from your question that you have a little
+ child of your own. So much the better: the child may keep you out of much
+ mischief. Remember the little child. Good evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm crossed the threshold of The Golden Lamb, engaged his room, made
+ his ablutions, ordered, and, with his usual zest, partook of his evening
+ meal; and then, feeling the pressure of that melancholic temperament which
+ he so strangely associated with Herculean constitutions, roused himself
+ up, and, seeking a distraction from thought, sauntered forth into the
+ gaslit streets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a large handsome town,&mdash;handsomer than Tor-Hadham, on account
+ of its site in a valley surrounded by wooded hills, and watered by the
+ fair stream whose windings we have seen as a brook,&mdash;handsomer, also,
+ because it boasted a fair cathedral, well cleared to the sight, and
+ surrounded by venerable old houses, the residences of the clergy or of the
+ quiet lay gentry with mediaeval tastes. The main street was thronged with
+ passengers,&mdash;some soberly returning home from the evening service;
+ some, the younger, lingering in pleasant promenade with their sweethearts
+ or families, or arm in arm with each other, and having the air of
+ bachelors or maidens unattached. Through this street Kenelm passed with
+ inattentive eye. A turn to the right took him towards the cathedral and
+ its surroundings. There all was solitary. The solitude pleased him, and he
+ lingered long, gazing on the noble church lifting its spires and turrets
+ into the deep blue starry air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Musingly, then, he strayed on, entering a labyrinth of gloomy lanes, in
+ which, though the shops were closed, many a door stood open, with men of
+ the working class lolling against the threshold, idly smoking their pipes,
+ or women seated on the doorsteps gossiping, while noisy children were
+ playing or quarrelling in the kennel. The whole did not present the
+ indolent side of an English Sabbath in the pleasantest and rosiest point
+ of view. Somewhat quickening his steps, he entered a broader street,
+ attracted to it involuntarily by a bright light in the centre. On nearing
+ the light he found that it shone forth from a gin-palace, of which the
+ mahogany doors opened and shut momently as customers went in and out. It
+ was the handsomest building he had seen in his walk, next to that of the
+ cathedral. &ldquo;The new civilization versus the old,&rdquo; murmured Kenelm. As he
+ so murmured, a hand was laid on his arm with a sort of timid impudence. He
+ looked down and saw a young face, but it had survived the look of youth;
+ it was worn and hard, and the bloom on it was not that of Nature&rsquo;s giving.
+ &ldquo;Are you kind to-night?&rdquo; asked a husky voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kind!&rdquo; said Kenelm, with mournful tones and softened eyes, &ldquo;kind! Alas,
+ my poor sister mortal! if pity be kindness, who can see you and not be
+ kind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl released his arm, and he walked on. She stood some moments gazing
+ after him till out of sight, then she drew her hand suddenly across her
+ eyes, and retracing her steps, was, in her turn, caught hold of by a
+ rougher hand than hers, as she passed the gin-palace. She shook off the
+ grasp with a passionate scorn, and went straight home. Home! is that the
+ right word? Poor sister mortal!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0047" id="link2HCH0047">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AND now Kenelm found himself at the extremity of the town, and on the
+ banks of the river. Small squalid houses still lined the bank for some
+ way, till, nearing the bridge, they abruptly ceased, and he passed through
+ a broad square again into the main street. On the other side of the street
+ there was a row of villa-like mansions, with gardens stretching towards
+ the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All around in the thoroughfare was silent and deserted. By this time the
+ passengers had gone home. The scent of night-flowers from the
+ villa-gardens came sweet on the starlit air. Kenelm paused to inhale it,
+ and then lifting his eyes, hitherto downcast, as are the eyes of men in
+ meditative moods, he beheld, on the balcony of the nearest villa, a group
+ of well-dressed persons. The balcony was unusually wide and spacious. On
+ it was a small round table, on which were placed wine and fruits. Three
+ ladies were seated round the table on wire-work chairs, and on the side
+ nearest to Kenelm, one man. In that man, now slightly turning his profile,
+ as if to look towards the river, Kenelm recognized the minstrel. He was
+ still in his picturesque knickerbocker dress, and his clear-cut features,
+ with the clustering curls of hair, and Rubens-like hue and shape of beard,
+ had more than their usual beauty, softened in the light of skies, to which
+ the moon, just risen, added deeper and fuller radiance. The ladies were in
+ evening dress, but Kenelm could not distinguish their faces hidden behind
+ the minstrel. He moved softly across the street, and took his stand behind
+ a buttress in the low wall of the garden, from which he could have full
+ view of the balcony, unseen himself. In this watch he had no other object
+ than that of a vague pleasure. The whole grouping had in it a kind of
+ scenic romance, and he stopped as one stops before a picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then saw that of the three ladies one was old; another was a slight
+ girl of the age of twelve or thirteen; the third appeared to be somewhere
+ about seven or eight and twenty. She was dressed with more elegance than
+ the others. On her neck, only partially veiled by a thin scarf, there was
+ the glitter of jewels; and, as she now turned her full face towards the
+ moon, Kenelm saw that she was very handsome,&mdash;a striking kind of
+ beauty, calculated to fascinate a poet or an artist,&mdash;not unlike
+ Raphael&rsquo;s Fornarina, dark, with warm tints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now there appeared at the open window a stout, burly, middle-aged
+ gentleman, looking every inch of him a family man, a moneyed man, sleek
+ and prosperous. He was bald, fresh-coloured, and with light whiskers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Holloa,&rdquo; he said, in an accent very slightly foreign, and with a loud
+ clear voice, which Kenelm heard distinctly, &ldquo;is it not time for you to
+ come in?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be so tiresome, Fritz,&rdquo; said the handsome lady, half petulantly,
+ half playfully, in the way ladies address the tiresome spouses they lord
+ it over. &ldquo;Your friend has been sulking the whole evening, and is only just
+ beginning to be pleasant as the moon rises.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The moon has a good effect on poets and other mad folks, I dare say,&rdquo;
+ said the bald man, with a good-humoured laugh. &ldquo;But I can&rsquo;t have my little
+ niece laid up again just as she is on the mend: Annie, come in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl obeyed reluctantly. The old lady rose too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Mother, you are wise,&rdquo; said the bald man; &ldquo;and a game at euchre is
+ safer than poetizing in night air.&rdquo; He wound his arm round the old lady
+ with a careful fondness, for she moved with some difficulty as if rather
+ lame. &ldquo;As for you two sentimentalists and moon-gazers, I give you ten
+ minutes&rsquo; time,&mdash;not more, mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tyrant!&rdquo; said the minstrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The balcony now held only two forms,&mdash;the minstrel and the handsome
+ lady. The window was closed, and partially veiled by muslin draperies, but
+ Kenelm caught glimpses of the room within. He could see that the room, lit
+ by a lamp on the centre table and candles elsewhere, was decorated and
+ fitted up with cost and in a taste not English. He could see, for
+ instance, that the ceiling was painted, and the walls were not papered,
+ but painted in panels between arabesque pilasters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are foreigners,&rdquo; thought Kenelm, &ldquo;though the man does speak English
+ so well. That accounts for playing euchre of a Sunday evening, as if there
+ were no harm in it. Euchre is an American game. The man is called Fritz.
+ Ah! I guess&mdash;Germans who have lived a good deal in America; and the
+ verse-maker said he was at Luscombe on pecuniary business. Doubtless his
+ host is a merchant, and the verse-maker in some commercial firm. That
+ accounts for his concealment of name, and fear of its being known that he
+ was addicted in his holiday to tastes and habits so opposed to his
+ calling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he was thus thinking, the lady had drawn her chair close to the
+ minstrel, and was speaking to him with evident earnestness, but in tones
+ too low for Kenelm to hear. Still it seemed to him, by her manner and by
+ the man&rsquo;s look, as if she were speaking in some sort of reproach, which he
+ sought to deprecate. Then he spoke, also in a whisper, and she averted her
+ face for a moment; then she held out her hand, and the minstrel kissed it.
+ Certainly, thus seen, the two might well be taken for lovers; and the soft
+ night, the fragrance of the flowers, silence and solitude, stars and moon
+ light, all girt them as with an atmosphere of love. Presently the man rose
+ and leaned over the balcony, propping his cheek on his hand, and gazing on
+ the river. The lady rose too, and also leaned over the balustrade, her
+ dark hair almost touching the auburn locks of her companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm sighed. Was it from envy, from pity, from fear? I know not; but he
+ sighed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a brief pause, the lady said, still in low tones, but not too low
+ this time to escape Kenelm&rsquo;s fine sense of hearing,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me those verses again. I must remember every word of them when you
+ are gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man shook his head gently, and answered, but inaudibly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do,&rdquo; said the lady; &ldquo;set them to music later; and the next time you come
+ I will sing them. I have thought of a title for them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What?&rdquo; asked the minstrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Love&rsquo;s quarrel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel turned his head, and their eyes met, and, in meeting,
+ lingered long. Then he moved away, and with face turned from her and
+ towards the river, gave the melody of his wondrous voice to the following
+ lines:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ LOVE&rsquo;S QUARREL.
+
+ &ldquo;Standing by the river, gazing on the river,
+ See it paved with starbeams,&mdash;heaven is at our feet;
+ Now the wave is troubled, now the rushes quiver;
+ Vanished is the starlight: it was a deceit.
+
+ &ldquo;Comes a little cloudlet &lsquo;twixt ourselves and heaven,
+ And from all the river fades the silver track;
+ Put thine arms around me, whisper low, &lsquo;Forgiven!&rsquo;
+ See how on the river starlight settles back.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ When he had finished, still with face turned aside, the lady did not,
+ indeed, whisper &ldquo;Forgiven,&rdquo; nor put her arms around him; but, as if by
+ irresistible impulse, she laid her hand lightly on his shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There came to his ear,&mdash;he knew not from whence, from whom,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mischief! mischief! Remember the little child!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; he said, staring round. &ldquo;Did you not hear a voice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only yours,&rdquo; said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was our guardian angel&rsquo;s, Amalie. It came in time. We will go within.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0048" id="link2HCH0048">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE next morning betimes Kenelm visited Tom at his uncle&rsquo;s home. A
+ comfortable and respectable home it was, like that of an owner in easy
+ circumstances. The veterinary surgeon himself was intelligent, and
+ apparently educated beyond the range of his calling; a childless widower,
+ between sixty and seventy, living with a sister, an old maid. They were
+ evidently much attached to Tom, and delighted by the hope of keeping him
+ with them. Tom himself looked rather sad, but not sullen, and his face
+ brightened wonderfully at first sight of Kenelm. That oddity made himself
+ as pleasant and as much like other people as he could in conversing with
+ the old widower and the old maid, and took leave, engaging Tom to be at
+ his inn at half past twelve, and spend the day with him and the minstrel.
+ He then returned to the Golden Lamb, and waited there for his first
+ visitant; the minstrel. That votary of the muse arrived punctually at
+ twelve o&rsquo;clock. His countenance was less cheerful and sunny than usual.
+ Kenelm made no allusion to the scene he had witnessed, nor did his visitor
+ seem to suspect that Kenelm had witnessed it or been the utterer of that
+ warning voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM.&mdash;&ldquo;I have asked my friend Tom Bowles to come a little later,
+ because I wished you to be of use to him, and, in order to be so, I should
+ suggest how.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE MINSTREL.&mdash;&ldquo;Pray do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM.&mdash;&ldquo;You know that I am not a poet, and I do not have much
+ reverence for verse-making merely as a craft.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE MINSTREL.&mdash;&ldquo;Neither have I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM.&mdash;&ldquo;But I have a great reverence for poetry as a priesthood. I
+ felt that reverence for you when you sketched and talked priesthood last
+ evening, and placed in my heart&mdash;I hope forever while it beats&mdash;the
+ image of the child on the sunlit hill, high above the abodes of men,
+ tossing her flower-ball heavenward and with heavenward eyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The singer&rsquo;s cheek coloured high, and his lip quivered: he was very
+ sensitive to praise; most singers are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm resumed, &ldquo;I have been educated in the Realistic school, and with
+ realism I am discontented, because in realism as a school there is no
+ truth. It contains but a bit of truth, and that the coldest and hardest
+ bit of it, and he who utters a bit of truth and suppresses the rest of it
+ tells a lie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE MINSTREL (slyly).&mdash;&ldquo;Does the critic who says to me, &lsquo;Sing of
+ beefsteak, because the appetite for food is a real want of daily life, and
+ don&rsquo;t sing of art and glory and love, because in daily life a man may do
+ without such ideas,&rsquo;&mdash;tell a lie?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM.&mdash;&ldquo;Thank you for that rebuke. I submit to it. No doubt I did
+ tell a lie,&mdash;that is, if I were quite in earnest in my
+ recommendation, and if not in earnest, why&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE MINSTREL.&mdash;&ldquo;You belied yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM.&mdash;&ldquo;Very likely. I set out on my travels to escape from shams,
+ and begin to discover that I am a sham <i>par excellence</i>. But I
+ suddenly come across you, as a boy dulled by his syntax and his vulgar
+ fractions suddenly comes across a pleasant poem or a picture-book, and
+ feels his wits brighten up. I owe you much: you have done me a world of
+ good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot guess how.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Possibly not, but you have shown me how the realism of Nature herself
+ takes colour and life and soul when seen on the ideal or poetic side of
+ it. It is not exactly the words that you say or sing that do me the good,
+ but they awaken within me new trains of thought, which I seek to follow
+ out. The best teacher is the one who suggests rather than dogmatizes, and
+ inspires his listener with the wish to teach himself. Therefore, O singer!
+ whatever be the worth in critical eyes of your songs, I am glad to
+ remember that you would like to go through the world always singing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me: you forget that I added, &lsquo;if life were always young, and the
+ seasons were always summer.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not forget. But if youth and summer fade for you, you leave youth
+ and summer behind you as you pass along,&mdash;behind in hearts which mere
+ realism would make always old, and counting their slothful beats under the
+ gray of a sky without sun or stars; wherefore I pray you to consider how
+ magnificent a mission the singer&rsquo;s is,&mdash;to harmonize your life with
+ your song, and toss your flowers, as your child does, heavenward, with
+ heavenward eyes. Think only of this when you talk with my sorrowing
+ friend, and you will do him good, as you have done me, without being able
+ to guess how a seeker after the Beautiful, such as you, carries us along
+ with him on his way; so that we, too, look out for beauty, and see it in
+ the wild-flowers to which we had been blind before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Tom entered the little sanded parlour where this dialogue had been
+ held, and the three men sallied forth, taking the shortest cut from the
+ town into the fields and woodlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0049" id="link2HCH0049">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WHETHER or not his spirits were raised by Kenelm&rsquo;s praise and
+ exhortations, the minstrel that day talked with a charm that spellbound
+ Tom, and Kenelm was satisfied with brief remarks on his side tending to
+ draw out the principal performer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The talk was drawn from outward things, from natural objects,&mdash;objects
+ that interest children, and men who, like Tom Bowles, have been accustomed
+ to view surroundings more with the heart&rsquo;s eye than the mind&rsquo;s eye. This
+ rover about the country knew much of the habits of birds and beasts and
+ insects, and told anecdotes of them with a mixture of humour and pathos,
+ which fascinated Tom&rsquo;s attention, made him laugh heartily, and sometimes
+ brought tears into his big blue eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They dined at an inn by the wayside, and the dinner was mirthful; then
+ they wended their way slowly back. By the declining daylight their talk
+ grew somewhat graver, and Kenelm took more part in it. Tom listened mute,&mdash;still
+ fascinated. At length, as the town came in sight, they agreed to halt a
+ while, in a bosky nook soft with mosses and sweet with wild thyme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, as they lay stretched at their ease, the birds hymning vesper songs
+ amid the boughs above, or dropping, noiseless and fearless, for their
+ evening food on the swards around them, the wanderer said to Kenelm, &ldquo;You
+ tell me that you are no poet, yet I am sure you have a poet&rsquo;s perception:
+ you must have written poetry?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I; as I before told you, only school verses in dead languages: but I
+ found in my knapsack this morning a copy of some rhymes, made by a
+ fellow-collegian, which I put into my pocket meaning to read them to you
+ both. They are not verses like yours, which evidently burst from you
+ spontaneously, and are not imitated from any other poets. These verses
+ were written by a Scotchman, and smack of imitation from the old ballad
+ style. There is little to admire in the words themselves, but there is
+ something in the idea which struck me as original, and impressed me
+ sufficiently to keep a copy, and somehow or other it got into the leaves
+ of one of the two books I carried with me from home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are those books? Books of poetry both, I will venture to wager&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wrong! Both metaphysical, and dry as a bone. Tom, light your pipe, and
+ you, sir, lean more at ease on your elbow; I should warn you that the
+ ballad is long. Patience!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Attention!&rdquo; said the minstrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fire!&rdquo; added Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm began to read,&mdash;and he read well.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ LORD RONALD&rsquo;S BRIDE.
+
+ PART I.
+
+ &ldquo;WHY gathers the crowd in the market-place
+ Ere the stars have yet left the sky?&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;For a holiday show and an act of grace,&mdash;
+ At the sunrise a witch shall die.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;What deed has she done to deserve that doom?
+ Has she blighted the standing corn,
+ Or rifled for philters a dead man&rsquo;s tomb,
+ Or rid mothers of babes new-born?&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Her pact with the fiend was not thus revealed,
+ She taught sinners the Word to hear;
+ The hungry she fed, and the sick she healed,
+ And was held as a Saint last year.
+
+ &ldquo;But a holy man, who at Rome had been,
+ Had discovered, by book and bell,
+ That the marvels she wrought were through arts unclean,
+ And the lies of the Prince of Hell.
+
+ &ldquo;And our Mother the Church, for the dame was rich,
+ And her husband was Lord of Clyde,
+ Would fain have been mild to this saint-like witch
+ If her sins she had not denied.
+
+ &ldquo;But hush, and come nearer to see the sight,
+ Sheriff, halberds, and torchmen,&mdash;look!
+ That&rsquo;s the witch standing mute in her garb of white,
+ By the priest with his bell and book.&rdquo;
+
+ So the witch was consumed on the sacred pyre,
+ And the priest grew in power and pride,
+ And the witch left a son to succeed his sire
+ In the halls and the lands of Clyde.
+
+ And the infant waxed comely and strong and brave,
+ But his manhood had scarce begun,
+ When his vessel was launched on the northern wave
+ To the shores which are near the sun.
+
+ PART II.
+
+ Lord Ronald has come to his halls in Clyde
+ With a bride of some unknown race;
+ Compared with the man who would kiss that bride
+ Wallace wight were a coward base.
+
+ Her eyes had the glare of the mountain-cat
+ When it springs on the hunter&rsquo;s spear,
+ At the head of the board when that lady sate
+ Hungry men could not eat for fear.
+
+ And the tones of her voice had that deadly growl
+ Of the bloodhound that scents its prey;
+ No storm was so dark as that lady&rsquo;s scowl
+ Under tresses of wintry gray.
+
+ &ldquo;Lord Ronald! men marry for love or gold,
+ Mickle rich must have been thy bride!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Man&rsquo;s heart may be bought, woman&rsquo;s hand be sold,
+ On the banks of our northern Clyde.
+
+ &ldquo;My bride is, in sooth, mickle rich to me
+ Though she brought not a groat in dower,
+ For her face, couldst thou see it as I do see,
+ Is the fairest in hall or bower!&rdquo;
+
+ Quoth the bishop one day to our lord the king,
+ &ldquo;Satan reigns on the Clyde alway,
+ And the taint in the blood of the witch doth cling
+ To the child that she brought to day.
+
+ &ldquo;Lord Ronald hath come from the Paynim land
+ With a bride that appals the sight;
+ Like his dam she hath moles on her dread right hand,
+ And she turns to a snake at night.
+
+ &ldquo;It is plain that a Scot who can blindly dote
+ On the face of an Eastern ghoul,
+ And a ghoul who was worth not a silver groat,
+ Is a Scot who has lost his soul.
+
+ &ldquo;It were wise to have done with this demon tree
+ Which has teemed with such caukered fruit;
+ Add the soil where it stands to my holy See,
+ And consign to the flames its root.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Holy man!&rdquo; quoth King James, and he laughed, &ldquo;we know
+ That thy tongue never wags in vain,
+ But the Church cist is full, and the king&rsquo;s is low,
+ And the Clyde is a fair domain.
+
+ &ldquo;Yet a knight that&rsquo;s bewitched by a laidly fere
+ Needs not much to dissolve the spell;
+ We will summon the bride and the bridegroom here
+ Be at hand with thy book and bell.&rdquo;
+
+ PART III.
+
+ Lord Ronald stood up in King James&rsquo;s court,
+ And his dame by his dauntless side;
+ The barons who came in the hopes of sport
+ Shook with fright when they saw the bride.
+
+ The bishop, though armed with his bell and book,
+ Grew as white as if turned to stone;
+ It was only our king who could face that look,
+ But he spoke with a trembling tone.
+
+ &ldquo;Lord Ronald, the knights of thy race and mine
+ Should have mates in their own degree;
+ What parentage, say, hath that bride of thine
+ Who hath come from the far countree?
+
+ &ldquo;And what was her dowry in gold or land,
+ Or what was the charm, I pray,
+ That a comely young gallant should woo the hand
+ Of the ladye we see to-day?&rdquo;
+
+ And the lords would have laughed, but that awful dame
+ Struck them dumb with her thunder-frown:
+ &ldquo;Saucy king, did I utter my father&rsquo;s name,
+ Thou wouldst kneel as his liegeman down.
+
+ &ldquo;Though I brought to Lord Ronald nor lands nor gold,
+ Nor the bloom of a fading cheek;
+ Yet, were I a widow, both young and old
+ Would my hand and my dowry seek.
+
+ &ldquo;For the wish that he covets the most below,
+ And would hide from the saints above,
+ Which he dares not to pray for in weal or woe,
+ Is the dowry I bring my love.
+
+ &ldquo;Let every man look in his heart and see
+ What the wish he most lusts to win,
+ And then let him fasten his eyes on me
+ While he thinks of his darling sin.&rdquo;
+
+ And every man&mdash;bishop, and lord, and king
+ Thought of what he most wished to win,
+ And, fixing his eye on that grewsome thing,
+ He beheld his own darling sin.
+
+ No longer a ghoul in that face he saw;
+ It was fair as a boy&rsquo;s first love:
+ The voice that had curdled his veins with awe
+ Was the coo of the woodland dove.
+
+ Each heart was on flame for the peerless dame
+ At the price of the husband&rsquo;s life;
+ Bright claymores flash out, and loud voices shout,
+ &ldquo;In thy widow shall be my wife.&rdquo;
+
+ Then darkness fell over the palace hall,
+ More dark and more dark it fell,
+ And a death-groan boomed hoarse underneath the pall,
+ And was drowned amid roar and yell.
+
+ When light through the lattice-pane stole once more,
+ It was gray as a wintry dawn,
+ And the bishop lay cold on the regal floor,
+ With a stain on his robes of lawn.
+
+ Lord Ronald was standing beside the dead,
+ In the scabbard he plunged his sword,
+ And with visage as wan as the corpse, he said,
+ &ldquo;Lo! my ladye hath kept her word.
+
+ &ldquo;Now I leave her to others to woo and win,
+ For no longer I find her fair;
+ Could I look on the face of my darling sin,
+ I should see but a dead man&rsquo;s there.
+
+ &ldquo;And the dowry she brought me is here returned,
+ For the wish of my heart has died,
+ It is quenched in the blood of the priest who burned
+ My sweet mother, the Saint of Clyde.&rdquo;
+
+ Lord Ronald strode over the stony floor,
+ Not a hand was outstretched to stay;
+ Lord Ronald has passed through the gaping door,
+ Not an eye ever traced the way.
+
+ And the ladye, left widowed, was prized above
+ All the maidens in hall and bower,
+ Many bartered their lives for that ladye&rsquo;s love,
+ And their souls for that ladye&rsquo;s dower.
+
+ God grant that the wish which I dare not pray
+ Be not that which I lust to win,
+ And that ever I look with my first dismay
+ On the face of my darling sin!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As he ceased, Kenelm&rsquo;s eye fell on Tom&rsquo;s face upturned to his own, with
+ open lips, an intent stare, and paled cheeks, and a look of that higher
+ sort of terror which belongs to awe. The man, then recovering himself,
+ tried to speak, and attempted a sickly smile, but neither would do. He
+ rose abruptly and walked away, crept under the shadow of a dark
+ beech-tree, and stood there leaning against the trunk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What say you to the ballad?&rdquo; asked Kenelm of the singer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not without power,&rdquo; answered he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, of a certain kind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel looked hard at Kenelm, and dropped his eyes, with a
+ heightened glow on his cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Scotch are a thoughtful race. The Scot who wrote this thing may have
+ thought of a day when he saw beauty in the face of a darling sin; but, if
+ so, it is evident that his sight recovered from that glamoury. Shall we
+ walk on? Come, Tom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel left them at the entrance of the town, saying, &ldquo;I regret that
+ I cannot see more of either of you, as I quit Luscombe at daybreak. Here,
+ by the by, I forgot to give it before, is the address you wanted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM.&mdash;&ldquo;Of the little child. I am glad you remembered her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel again looked hard at Kenelm, this time without dropping his
+ eyes. Kenelm&rsquo;s expression of face was so simply quiet that it might be
+ almost called vacant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm and Tom continued to walk on towards the veterinary surgeon&rsquo;s
+ house, for some minutes silently. Then Tom said in a whisper, &ldquo;Did you not
+ mean those rhymes to hit me here&mdash;<i>here</i>?&rdquo; and he struck his
+ breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The rhymes were written long before I saw you, Tom; but it is well if
+ their meaning strike us all. Of you, my friend, I have no fear now. Are
+ you not already a changed man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I feel as if I were going through a change,&rdquo; answered Tom, in slow,
+ dreary accents. &ldquo;In hearing you and that gentleman talk so much of things
+ that I never thought of, I felt something in me,&mdash;you will laugh when
+ I tell you,&mdash;something like a bird.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Like a bird,&mdash;good!&mdash;a bird has wings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you felt wings that you were unconscious of before, fluttering and
+ beating themselves as against the wires of a cage. You were true to your
+ instincts then, my dear fellow-man,&mdash;instincts of space and Heaven.
+ Courage!&mdash;the cage-door will open soon. And now, practically
+ speaking, I give you this advice in parting: You have a quick and
+ sensitive mind which you have allowed that strong body of yours to
+ incarcerate and suppress. Give that mind fair play. Attend to the business
+ of your calling diligently; the craving for regular work is the healthful
+ appetite of mind: but in your spare hours cultivate the new ideas which
+ your talk with men who have been accustomed to cultivate the mind more
+ than the body has sown within you. Belong to a book-club, and interest
+ yourself in books. A wise man has said, &lsquo;Books widen the present by adding
+ to it the past and the future.&rsquo; Seek the company of educated men and
+ educated women too; and when you are angry with another, reason with him:
+ don&rsquo;t knock him down; and don&rsquo;t be knocked down yourself by an enemy much
+ stronger than yourself,&mdash;Drink. Do all this, and when I see you again
+ you will be&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop, sir,&mdash;you will see me again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, if we both live, I promise it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see, Tom, we have both of us something in our old selves which we
+ must work off. You will work off your something by repose, and I must work
+ off mine, if I can, by moving about. So I am on my travels. May we both
+ have new selves better than the old selves, when we again shake hands! For
+ your part try your best, dear Tom, and Heaven prosper you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Heaven bless you!&rdquo; cried Tom, fervently, with tears rolling unheeded
+ from his bold blue eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0050" id="link2HCH0050">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THOUGH Kenelm left Luscombe on Tuesday morning, he did not appear at
+ Neesdale Park till the Wednesday, a little before the dressing-bell for
+ dinner. His adventures in the interim are not worth repeating. He had
+ hoped he might fall in again with the minstrel, but he did not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His portmanteau had arrived, and he heaved a sigh as he cased himself in a
+ gentleman&rsquo;s evening dress. &ldquo;Alas! I have soon got back again into my own
+ skin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were several other guests in the house, though not a large party,&mdash;they
+ had been asked with an eye to the approaching election,&mdash;consisting
+ of squires and clergy from remoter parts of the county. Chief among the
+ guests in rank and importance, and rendered by the occasion the central
+ object of interest, was George Belvoir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm bore his part in this society with a resignation that partook of
+ repentance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first day he spoke very little, and was considered a very dull young
+ man by the lady he took in to dinner. Mr. Travers in vain tried to draw
+ him out. He had anticipated much amusement from the eccentricities of his
+ guest, who had talked volubly enough in the fernery, and was sadly
+ disappointed. &ldquo;I feel,&rdquo; he whispered to Mrs. Campion, &ldquo;like poor Lord
+ Pomfret, who, charmed with Punch&rsquo;s lively conversation, bought him, and
+ was greatly surprised that, when he had once brought him home, Punch would
+ not talk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But your Punch listens,&rdquo; said Mrs. Campion, &ldquo;and he observes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George Belvoir, on the other hand, was universally declared to be very
+ agreeable. Though not naturally jovial, he forced himself to appear so,&mdash;laughing
+ loud with the squires, and entering heartily with their wives and
+ daughters into such topics as county-balls and croquet-parties; and when
+ after dinner he had, Cato-like, &lsquo;warmed his virtue with wine,&rsquo; the virtue
+ came out very lustily in praise of good men,&mdash;namely, men of his own
+ party,&mdash;and anathemas on bad men,&mdash;namely, men of the other
+ party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now and then he appealed to Kenelm, and Kenelm always returned the same
+ answer, &ldquo;There is much in what you say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first evening closed in the usual way in country houses. There was
+ some lounging under moonlight on the terrace before the house; then there
+ was some singing by young lady amateurs, and a rubber of whist for the
+ elders; then wine-and-water, hand-candlesticks, a smoking-room for those
+ who smoked, and bed for those who did not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of the evening, Cecilia, partly in obedience to the duties
+ of hostess and partly from that compassion for shyness which kindly and
+ high-bred persons entertain, had gone a little out of her way to allure
+ Kenelm forth from the estranged solitude he had contrived to weave around
+ him. In vain for the daughter as for the father. He replied to her with
+ the quiet self-possession which should have convinced her that no man on
+ earth was less entitled to indulgence for the gentlemanlike infirmity of
+ shyness, and no man less needed the duties of any hostess for the
+ augmentation of his comforts, or rather for his diminished sense of
+ discomfort; but his replies were in monosyllables, and made with the air
+ of a man who says in his heart, &ldquo;If this creature would but leave me
+ alone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia, for the first time in her life, was piqued, and, strange to say,
+ began to feel more interest about this indifferent stranger than about the
+ popular, animated, pleasant George Belvoir, who she knew by womanly
+ instinct was as much in love with her as he could be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia Travers that night on retiring to rest told her maid, smilingly,
+ that she was too tired to have her hair done; and yet, when the maid was
+ dismissed, she looked at herself in the glass more gravely and more
+ discontentedly than she had ever looked there before; and, tired though
+ she was, stood at the window gazing into the moonlit night for a good hour
+ after the maid left her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0051" id="link2HCH0051">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM CHILLINGLY has now been several days a guest at Neesdale Park. He
+ has recovered speech; the other guests have gone, including George
+ Belvoir. Leopold Travers has taken a great fancy to Kenelm. Leopold was
+ one of those men, not uncommon perhaps in England, who, with great mental
+ energies, have little book-knowledge, and when they come in contact with a
+ book-reader who is not a pedant feel a pleasant excitement in his society,
+ a source of interest in comparing notes with him, a constant surprise in
+ finding by what venerable authorities the deductions which their own
+ mother-wit has drawn from life are supported, or by what cogent arguments
+ derived from books those deductions are contravened or upset. Leopold
+ Travers had in him that sense of humour which generally accompanies a
+ strong practical understanding (no man, for instance, has more practical
+ understanding than a Scot, and no man has a keener susceptibility to
+ humour), and not only enjoyed Kenelm&rsquo;s odd way of expressing himself, but
+ very often mistook Kenelm&rsquo;s irony for opinion spoken in earnest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since his early removal from the capital and his devotion to agricultural
+ pursuits, it was so seldom that Leopold Travers met a man by whose
+ conversation his mind was diverted to other subjects than those which were
+ incidental to the commonplace routine of his life that he found in
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s views of men and things a source of novel amusement, and a
+ stirring appeal to such metaphysical creeds of his own as had been formed
+ unconsciously, and had long reposed unexamined in the recesses of an
+ intellect shrewd and strong, but more accustomed to dictate than to argue.
+ Kenelm, on his side, saw much in his host to like and to admire; but,
+ reversing their relative positions in point of years, he conversed with
+ Travers as with a mind younger than his own. Indeed, it was one of his
+ crotchety theories that each generation is in substance mentally older
+ than the generation preceding it, especially in all that relates to
+ science; and, as he would say, &ldquo;The study of life is a science, and not an
+ art.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Cecilia,&mdash;what impression did she create upon the young visitor?
+ Was he alive to the charm of her rare beauty, to the grace of a mind
+ sufficiently stored for commune with those who love to think and to
+ imagine, and yet sufficiently feminine and playful to seize the sportive
+ side of realities, and allow their proper place to the trifles which make
+ the sum of human things? An impression she did make, and that impression
+ was new to him and pleasing. Nay, sometimes in her presence and sometimes
+ when alone, he fell into abstracted consultations with himself, saying,
+ &ldquo;Kenelm Chillingly, now that thou hast got back into thy proper skin, dost
+ thou not think that thou hadst better remain there? Couldst thou not be
+ contented with thy lot as erring descendant of Adam, if thou couldst win
+ for thy mate so faultless a descendant of Eve as now flits before thee?&rdquo;
+ But he could not abstract from himself any satisfactory answer to the
+ question he had addressed to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once he said abruptly to Travers, as, on their return from their rambles,
+ they caught a glimpse of Cecilia&rsquo;s light form bending over the flower-beds
+ on the lawn, &ldquo;Do you admire Virgil?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To say truth I have not read Virgil since I was a boy; and, between you
+ and me, I then thought him rather monotonous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps because his verse is so smooth in its beauty?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Probably. When one is very young one&rsquo;s taste is faulty; and if a poet is
+ not faulty, we are apt to think he wants vivacity and fire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you for your lucid explanation,&rdquo; answered Kenelm, adding musingly
+ to himself, &ldquo;I am afraid I should yawn very often if I were married to a
+ Miss Virgil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0052" id="link2HCH0052">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE house of Mr. Travers contained a considerable collection of family
+ portraits, few of them well painted, but the Squire was evidently proud of
+ such evidences of ancestry. They not only occupied a considerable space on
+ the walls of the reception rooms, but swarmed into the principal
+ sleeping-chambers, and smiled or frowned on the beholder from dark
+ passages and remote lobbies. One morning, Cecilia, on her way to the china
+ closet, found Kenelm gazing very intently upon a female portrait consigned
+ to one of those obscure receptacles by which through a back staircase he
+ gained the only approach from the hall to his chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t pretend to be a good judge of paintings,&rdquo; said Kenelm, as Cecilia
+ paused beside him; &ldquo;but it strikes me that this picture is very much
+ better than most of those to which places of honour are assigned in your
+ collection. And the face itself is so lovely that it would add an
+ embellishment to the princeliest galleries.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Cecilia, with a half-sigh. &ldquo;The face is lovely, and the
+ portrait is considered one of Lely&rsquo;s rarest masterpieces. It used to hang
+ over the chimney-piece in the drawing-room. My father had it placed here
+ many years ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps because he discovered it was not a family portrait?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the contrary,&mdash;because it grieves him to think it is a family
+ portrait. Hush! I hear his footstep: don&rsquo;t speak of it to him; don&rsquo;t let
+ him see you looking at it. The subject is very painful to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Cecilia vanished into the china closet and Kenelm turned off to his
+ own room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What sin committed by the original in the time of Charles II. but only
+ discovered in the reign of Victoria could have justified Leopold Travers
+ in removing the most pleasing portrait in the house from the honoured
+ place it had occupied, and banishing it to so obscure a recess? Kenelm
+ said no more on the subject, and indeed an hour afterwards had dismissed
+ it from his thoughts. The next day he rode out with Travers and Cecilia.
+ Their way passed through quiet shady lanes without any purposed direction,
+ when suddenly, at the spot where three of those lanes met on an angle of
+ common ground, a lonely gray tower, in the midst of a wide space of
+ grass-land which looked as if it had once been a park, with huge boles of
+ pollarded oak dotting the space here and there, rose before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cissy!&rdquo; cried Travers, angrily reining in his horse and stopping short in
+ a political discussion which he had forced upon Kenelm, &ldquo;Cissy! How comes
+ this? We have taken the wrong turn! No matter, I see there,&rdquo; pointing to
+ the right, &ldquo;the chimney-pots of old Mondell&rsquo;s homestead. He has not yet
+ promised his vote to George Belvoir. I&rsquo;ll go and have a talk with him.
+ Turn back, you and Mr. Chillingly,&mdash;meet me at Terner&rsquo;s Green, and
+ wait for me there till I come. I need not excuse myself to you,
+ Chillingly. A vote is a vote.&rdquo; So saying, the Squire, whose ordinary
+ riding-horse was an old hunter, halted, turned, and, no gate being
+ visible, put the horse over a stiff fence and vanished in the direction of
+ old Mondell&rsquo;s chimney-pots. Kenelm, scarcely hearing his host&rsquo;s
+ instructions to Cecilia and excuses to himself, remained still and gazing
+ on the old tower thus abruptly obtruded on his view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though no learned antiquarian like his father, Kenelm had a strange
+ fascinating interest in all relics of the past; and old gray towers, where
+ they are not church towers, are very rarely to be seen in England. All
+ around the old gray tower spoke with an unutterable mournfulness of a past
+ in ruins: you could see remains of some large Gothic building once
+ attached to it, rising here and there in fragments of deeply buttressed
+ walls; you could see in a dry ditch, between high ridges, where there had
+ been a fortified moat: nay, you could even see where once had been the
+ bailey hill from which a baron of old had dispensed justice. Seldom indeed
+ does the most acute of antiquarians discover that remnant of Norman times
+ on lands still held by the oldest of Anglo-Norman families. Then, the wild
+ nature of the demesne around; those ranges of sward, with those old giant
+ oak-trunks, hollowed within and pollarded at top,&mdash;all spoke, in
+ unison with the gray tower, of a past as remote from the reign of Victoria
+ as the Pyramids are from the sway of the Viceroy of Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us turn back,&rdquo; said Miss Travers; &ldquo;my father would not like me to
+ stay here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me a moment. I wish my father were here; he would stay till
+ sunset. But what is the history of that old tower? a history it must
+ have.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Every home has a history, even a peasant&rsquo;s hut,&rdquo; said Cecilia. &ldquo;But do
+ pardon me if I ask you to comply with my father&rsquo;s request. I at least must
+ turn back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus commanded, Kenelm reluctantly withdrew his gaze from the ruin and
+ regained Cecilia, who was already some paces in return down the lane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am far from a very inquisitive man by temperament,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;so
+ far as the affairs of the living are concerned. But I should not care to
+ open a book if I had no interest in the past. Pray indulge my curiosity to
+ learn something about that old tower. It could not look more melancholy
+ and solitary if I had built it myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Its most melancholy associations are with a very recent past,&rdquo; answered
+ Cecilia. &ldquo;The tower, in remote times, formed the keep of a castle
+ belonging to the most ancient and once the most powerful family in these
+ parts. The owners were barons who took active share in the Wars of the
+ Roses. The last of them sided with Richard III., and after the battle of
+ Bosworth the title was attainted, and the larger portion of the lands was
+ confiscated. Loyalty to a Plantagenet was of course treason to a Tudor.
+ But the regeneration of the family rested with their direct descendants,
+ who had saved from the general wreck of their fortunes what may be called
+ a good squire&rsquo;s estate,&mdash;about, perhaps, the same rental as my
+ father&rsquo;s, but of much larger acreage. These squires, however, were more
+ looked up to in the county than the wealthiest peer. They were still by
+ far the oldest family in the county; and traced in their pedigree
+ alliances with the most illustrious houses in English history. In
+ themselves too for many generations they were a high-spirited, hospitable,
+ popular race, living unostentatiously on their income, and contented with
+ their rank of squires. The castle, ruined by time and siege, they did not
+ attempt to restore. They dwelt in a house near to it, built about
+ Elizabeth&rsquo;s time, which you could not see, for it lies in a hollow behind
+ the tower,&mdash;a moderate-sized, picturesque, country gentleman&rsquo;s house.
+ Our family intermarried with them,&mdash;the portrait you saw was a
+ daughter of their house,&mdash;and very proud was any squire in the county
+ of intermarriage with the Fletwodes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fletwode,&mdash;that was their name? I have a vague recollection of
+ having heard the name connected with some disastrous&mdash;oh, but it
+ can&rsquo;t be the same family: pray go on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear it is the same family. But I will finish the story as I have heard
+ it. The property descended at last to one Bertram Fletwode, who,
+ unfortunately, obtained the reputation of being a very clever man of
+ business. There was some mining company in which, with other gentlemen in
+ the county, he took great interest; invested largely in shares; became the
+ head of the direction&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see; and was of course ruined.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; worse than that: he became very rich; and, unhappily, became desirous
+ of being richer still. I have heard that there was a great mania for
+ speculations just about that time. He embarked in these, and prospered,
+ till at last he was induced to invest a large share of the fortune thus
+ acquired in the partnership of a bank which enjoyed a high character. Up
+ to that time he had retained popularity and esteem in the county; but the
+ squires who shared in the adventures of the mining company, and knew
+ little or nothing about other speculations in which his name did not
+ appear, professed to be shocked at the idea of a Fletwode of Fletwode
+ being ostensibly joined in partnership with a Jones of Clapham in a London
+ bank.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Slow folks, those country squires,&mdash;behind the progress of the age.
+ Well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have heard that Bertram Fletwode was himself very reluctant to take
+ this step, but was persuaded to do so by his son. This son, Alfred, was
+ said to have still greater talents for business than the father, and had
+ been not only associated with but consulted by him in all the later
+ speculations which had proved so fortunate. Mrs. Campion knew Alfred
+ Fletwode very well. She describes him as handsome, with quick, eager eyes;
+ showy and imposing in his talk; immensely ambitious, more ambitious than
+ avaricious,&mdash;collecting money less for its own sake than for that
+ which it could give,&mdash;rank and power. According to her it was the
+ dearest wish of his heart to claim the old barony, but not before there
+ could go with the barony a fortune adequate to the lustre of a title so
+ ancient, and equal to the wealth of modern peers with higher nominal
+ rank.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A poor ambition at the best; of the two I should prefer that of a poet in
+ a garret. But I am no judge. Thank Heaven I have no ambition. Still, all
+ ambition, all desire to rise, is interesting to him who is ignominiously
+ contented if he does not fall. So the son had his way, and Fletwode joined
+ company with Jones on the road to wealth and the peerage; meanwhile did
+ the son marry? if so, of course the daughter of a duke or a millionnaire.
+ Tuft-hunting, or money-making, at the risk of degradation and the
+ workhouse. Progress of the age!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied Cecilia, smiling at this outburst, but smiling sadly,
+ &ldquo;Fletwode did not marry the daughter of a duke or a millionnaire; but
+ still his wife belonged to a noble family,&mdash;very poor, but very
+ proud. Perhaps he married from motives of ambition, though not of gain.
+ Her father was of much political influence that might perhaps assist his
+ claim to the barony. The mother, a woman of the world, enjoying a high
+ social position, and nearly related to a connection of ours,&mdash;Lady
+ Glenalvon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady Glenalvon, the dearest of my lady friends! You are connected with
+ her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; Lord Glenalvon was my mother&rsquo;s uncle. But I wish to finish my story
+ before my father joins us. Alfred Fletwode did not marry till long after
+ the partnership in the bank. His father, at his desire, had bought up the
+ whole business, Mr. Jones having died. The bank was carried on in the
+ names of Fletwode and Son. But the father had become merely a nominal or
+ what I believe is called a &lsquo;sleeping&rsquo; partner. He had long ceased to
+ reside in the county. The old house was not grand enough for him. He had
+ purchased a palatial residence in one of the home counties; lived there in
+ great splendour; was a munificent patron of science and art; and in spite
+ of his earlier addictions to business-like speculations he appears to have
+ been a singularly accomplished, high-bred gentleman. Some years before his
+ son&rsquo;s marriage, Mr. Fletwode had been afflicted with partial paralysis,
+ and his medical attendant enjoined rigid abstention from business. From
+ that time he never interfered with his son&rsquo;s management of the bank. He
+ had an only daughter, much younger than Alfred. Lord Eagleton, my mother&rsquo;s
+ brother, was engaged to be married to her. The wedding-day was fixed,&mdash;when
+ the world was startled by the news that the great firm of Fletwode and Son
+ had stopped payment; is that the right phrase?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A great many people were ruined in that failure. The public indignation
+ was very great. Of course all the Fletwode property went to the creditors.
+ Old Mr. Fletwode was legally acquitted of all other offence than that of
+ overconfidence in his son. Alfred was convicted of fraud,&mdash;of
+ forgery. I don&rsquo;t, of course, know the particulars, they are very
+ complicated. He was sentenced to a long term of servitude, but died the
+ day he was condemned; apparently by poison, which he had long secreted
+ about his person. Now you can understand why my father, who is almost
+ gratuitously sensitive on the point of honour, removed into a dark corner
+ the portrait of Arabella Fletwode,&mdash;his own ancestress, but also the
+ ancestress of a convicted felon: you can understand why the whole subject
+ is so painful to him. His wife&rsquo;s brother was to have married the felon&rsquo;s
+ sister; and though, of course, that marriage was tacitly broken off by the
+ terrible disgrace that had befallen the Fletwodes, yet I don&rsquo;t think my
+ poor uncle ever recovered the blow to his hopes. He went abroad, and died
+ in Madeira of a slow decline.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the felon&rsquo;s sister, did she die too?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; not that I know of. Mrs. Campion says that she saw in a newspaper the
+ announcement of old Mr. Fletwode&rsquo;s death, and a paragraph to the effect
+ that after that event Miss Fletwode had sailed from Liverpool to New
+ York.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alfred Fletwode&rsquo;s wife went back, of course, to her family?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! no,&mdash;poor thing! She had not been many months married when the
+ bank broke; and among his friends her wretched husband appears to have
+ forged the names of the trustees to her marriage settlement, and sold out
+ the sums which would otherwise have served her as a competence. Her
+ father, too, was a great sufferer by the bankruptcy, having by his
+ son-in-law&rsquo;s advice placed a considerable portion of his moderate fortune
+ in Alfred&rsquo;s hands for investment, all of which was involved in the general
+ wreck. I am afraid he was a very hard-hearted man: at all events his poor
+ daughter never returned to him. She died, I think, even before the death
+ of Bertram Fletwode. The whole story is very dismal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dismal indeed, but pregnant with salutary warnings to those who live in
+ an age of progress. Here you see a family of fair fortune, living
+ hospitably, beloved, revered, more looked up to by their neighbours than
+ the wealthiest nobles; no family not proud to boast alliance with it. All
+ at once, in the tranquil record of this happy race, appears that darling
+ of the age, that hero of progress,&mdash;a clever man of business. He be
+ contented to live as his fathers! He be contented with such trifles as
+ competence, respect, and love! Much too clever for that. The age is
+ money-making,&mdash;go with the age! He goes with the age. Born a
+ gentleman only, he exalts himself into a trader. But at least he, it
+ seems, if greedy, was not dishonest. He was born a gentleman, but his son
+ was born a trader. The son is a still cleverer man of business; the son is
+ consulted and trusted. Aha! He too goes with the age; to greed he links
+ ambition. The trader&rsquo;s son wishes to return&mdash;what? to the rank of
+ gentleman?&mdash;gentleman! nonsense! everybody is a gentleman nowadays,&mdash;to
+ the title of Lord. How ends it all! Could I sit but for twelve hours in
+ the innermost heart of that Alfred Fletwode; could I see how, step by step
+ from his childhood, the dishonest son was avariciously led on by the
+ honest father to depart from the old <i>vestigia</i> of Fletwodes of
+ Fletwode,&mdash;scorning The Enough to covet The More, gaining The More to
+ sigh, &lsquo;It is not The Enough,&rsquo;&mdash;I think I might show that the age
+ lives in a house of glass, and had better not for its own sake throw
+ stones on the felon!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, but, Mr. Chillingly, surely this is a very rare exception in the
+ general&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rare!&rdquo; interrupted Kenelm, who was excited to a warmth of passion which
+ would have startled his most intimate friend,-if indeed an intimate friend
+ had ever been vouchsafed to him,&mdash;&ldquo;rare! nay, how common&mdash;I
+ don&rsquo;t say to the extent of forgery and fraud, but to the extent of
+ degradation and ruin&mdash;is the greed of a Little More to those who have
+ The Enough! is the discontent with competence, respect, and love, when
+ catching sight of a money-bag! How many well-descended county families,
+ cursed with an heir who is called a clever man of business, have vanished
+ from the soil! A company starts, the clever man joins it one bright day.
+ Pouf! the old estates and the old name are powder. Ascend higher. Take
+ nobles whose ancestral titles ought to be to English ears like the sound
+ of clarions, awakening the most slothful to the scorn of money-bags and
+ the passion for renown. Lo! in that mocking dance of death called the
+ Progress of the Age, one who did not find Enough in a sovereign&rsquo;s revenue,
+ and seeks The Little More as a gambler on the turf by the advice of
+ blacklegs! Lo! another, with lands wider than his greatest ancestors ever
+ possessed, must still go in for The Little More, adding acre to acre,
+ heaping debt upon debt! Lo! a third, whose name, borne by his ancestors,
+ was once the terror of England&rsquo;s foes,&mdash;the landlord of a hotel! A
+ fourth,&mdash;but why go on through the list? Another and another still
+ succeeds; each on the Road to Ruin, each in the Age of Progress. Ah, Miss
+ Travers! in the old time it was through the Temple of Honour that one
+ passed to the Temple of Fortune. In this wise age the process is reversed.
+ But here comes your father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A thousand pardons!&rdquo; said Leopold Travers. &ldquo;That numskull Mondell kept me
+ so long with his old-fashioned Tory doubts whether liberal politics are
+ favourable to agricultural prospects. But as he owes a round sum to a Whig
+ lawyer I had to talk with his wife, a prudent woman; convinced her that
+ his own agricultural prospects were safest on the Whig side of the
+ question; and, after kissing his baby and shaking his hand, booked his
+ vote for George Belvoir,&mdash;a plumper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; said Kenelm to himself, and with that candour which
+ characterized him whenever he talked to himself, &ldquo;that Travers has taken
+ the right road to the Temple, not of Honour, but of honours, in every
+ country, ancient or modern, which has adopted the system of popular
+ suffrage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0053" id="link2HCH0053">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE next day Mrs. Campion and Cecilia were seated under the veranda. They
+ were both ostensibly employed on two several pieces of embroidery, one
+ intended for a screen, the other for a sofa-cushion; but the mind of
+ neither was on her work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MRS. CAMPION.&mdash;&ldquo;Has Mr. Chillingly said when he means to take leave?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CECILIA.&mdash;&ldquo;Not to me. How much my dear father enjoys his
+ conversation!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MRS. CAMPION.&mdash;&ldquo;Cynicism and mockery were not so much the fashion
+ among young men in your father&rsquo;s day as I suppose they are now, and
+ therefore they seem new to Mr. Travers. To me they are not new, because I
+ saw more of the old than the young when I lived in London, and cynicism
+ and mockery are more natural to men who are leaving the world than to
+ those who are entering it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CECILIA.&mdash;&ldquo;Dear Mrs. Campion, how bitter you are, and how unjust! You
+ take much too literally the jesting way in which Mr. Chillingly expresses
+ himself. There can be no cynicism in one who goes out of his way to make
+ others happy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MRS. CAMPION.&mdash;&ldquo;You mean in the whim of making an ill-assorted
+ marriage between a pretty village flirt and a sickly cripple, and settling
+ a couple of peasants in a business for which they are wholly unfitted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CECILIA.&mdash;&ldquo;Jessie Wiles is not a flirt, and I am convinced that she
+ will make Will Somers a very good wife, and that the shop will be a great
+ success.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MRS. CAMPION.&mdash;&ldquo;We shall see. Still, if Mr. Chillingly&rsquo;s talk belies
+ his actions, he may be a good man, but he is a very affected one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CECILIA.&mdash;&ldquo;Have I not heard you say that there are persons so natural
+ that they seem affected to those who do not understand them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Campion raised her eyes to Cecilia&rsquo;s face, dropped them again over
+ her work, and said, in grave undertones,&mdash;&ldquo;Take care, Cecilia.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take care of what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dearest child, forgive me; but I do not like the warmth with which you
+ defend Mr. Chillingly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would not my father defend him still more warmly if he had heard you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Men judge of men in their relations to men. I am a woman, and judge of
+ men in their relations to women. I should tremble for the happiness of any
+ woman who joined her fate with that of Kenelm Chillingly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear friend, I do not understand you to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay; I did not mean to be so solemn, my love. After all, it is nothing to
+ us whom Mr. Chillingly may or may not marry. He is but a passing visitor,
+ and, once gone, the chances are that we may not see him again for years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus speaking, Mrs. Campion again raised her eyes from her work, stealing
+ a sidelong glance at Cecilia; and her mother-like heart sank within her,
+ on noticing how suddenly pale the girl had become, and how her lips
+ quivered. Mrs. Campion had enough knowledge of life to feel aware that she
+ had committed a grievous blunder. In that earliest stage of virgin
+ affection, when a girl is unconscious of more than a certain vague
+ interest in one man which distinguishes him from others in her thoughts,&mdash;if
+ she hears him unjustly disparaged, if some warning against him is implied,
+ if the probability that he will never be more to her than a passing
+ acquaintance is forcibly obtruded on her,&mdash;suddenly that vague
+ interest, which might otherwise have faded away with many another girlish
+ fancy, becomes arrested, consolidated; the quick pang it occasions makes
+ her involuntarily, and for the first time, question herself, and ask, &ldquo;Do
+ I love?&rdquo; But when a girl of a nature so delicate as that of Cecilia
+ Travers can ask herself the question, &ldquo;Do I love?&rdquo; her very modesty, her
+ very shrinking from acknowledging that any power over her thoughts for
+ weal or for woe can be acquired by a man, except through the sanction of
+ that love which only becomes divine in her eyes when it is earnest and
+ pure and self-devoted, makes her prematurely disposed to answer &ldquo;yes.&rdquo; And
+ when a girl of such a nature in her own heart answers &ldquo;yes&rdquo; to such a
+ question, even if she deceive herself at the moment, she begins to cherish
+ the deceit till the belief in her love becomes a reality. She has adopted
+ a religion, false or true, and she would despise herself if she could be
+ easily converted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Campion had so contrived that she had forced that question upon
+ Cecilia, and she feared, by the girl&rsquo;s change of countenance, that the
+ girl&rsquo;s heart had answered &ldquo;yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0054" id="link2HCH0054">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WHILE the conversation just narrated took place, Kenelm had walked forth
+ to pay a visit to Will Somers. All obstacles to Will&rsquo;s marriage were now
+ cleared away; the transfer of lease for the shop had been signed, and the
+ banns were to be published for the first time on the following Sunday. We
+ need not say that Will was very happy. Kenelm then paid a visit to Mrs.
+ Bowles, with whom he stayed an hour. On reentering the Park, he saw
+ Travers, walking slowly, with downcast eyes and his hands clasped behind
+ him (his habit when in thought). He did not observe Kenelm&rsquo;s approach till
+ within a few feet of him, and he then greeted his guest in listless
+ accents, unlike his usual cheerful tones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been visiting the man you have made so happy,&rdquo; said Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who can that be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will Somers. Do you make so many people happy that your reminiscence of
+ them is lost in their number?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Travers smiled faintly, and shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm went on. &ldquo;I have also seen Mrs. Bowles, and you will be pleased to
+ hear that Tom is satisfied with his change of abode: there is no chance of
+ his returning to Graveleigh; and Mrs. Bowles took very kindly to my
+ suggestion that the little property you wish for should be sold to you,
+ and, in that case, she would remove to Luscombe to be near her son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank you much for your thought of me,&rdquo; said Travers, &ldquo;and the affair
+ shall be seen to at once, though the purchase is no longer important to
+ me. I ought to have told you three days ago, but it slipped my memory,
+ that a neighbouring squire, a young fellow just come into his property,
+ has offered to exchange a capital farm, much nearer to my residence, for
+ the lands I hold in Graveleigh, including Saunderson&rsquo;s farm and the
+ cottages: they are quite at the outskirts of my estate, but run into his,
+ and the exchange will be advantageous to both. Still I am glad that the
+ neighbourhood should be thoroughly rid of a brute like Tom Bowles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would not call him brute if you knew him; but I am sorry to hear that
+ Will Somers will be under another landlord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It does not matter, since his tenure is secured for fourteen years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What sort of man is the new landlord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know much of him. He was in the army till his father died, and
+ has only just made his appearance in the county. He has, however, already
+ earned the character of being too fond of the other sex: it is well that
+ pretty Jessie is to be safely married.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Travers then relapsed into a moody silence from which Kenelm found it
+ difficult to rouse him. At length the latter said kindly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Mr. Travers, do not think I take a liberty if I venture to guess
+ that something has happened this morning which troubles or vexes you. When
+ that is the case, it is often a relief to say what it is, even to a
+ confidant so unable to advise or to comfort as myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a good fellow, Chillingly, and I know not, at least in these
+ parts, a man to whom I would unburden myself more freely. I am put out, I
+ confess; disappointed unreasonably, in a cherished wish, and,&rdquo; he added,
+ with a slight laugh, &ldquo;it always annoys me when I don&rsquo;t have my own way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So it does me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you think that George Belvoir is a very fine young man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> call him handsome; he is steadier, too, than most men of his
+ age, and of his command of money; and yet he does not want spirit nor
+ knowledge of life. To every advantage of rank and fortune he adds the
+ industry and the ambition which attain distinction in public life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite true. Is he going to withdraw from the election after all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good heavens, no!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then how does he not let you have your own way?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not he,&rdquo; said Travers, peevishly; &ldquo;it is Cecilia. Don&rsquo;t you
+ understand that George is precisely the husband I would choose for her;
+ and this morning came a very well written manly letter from him, asking my
+ permission to pay his addresses to her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But that is your own way so far.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and here comes the balk. Of course I had to refer it to Cecilia, and
+ she positively declines, and has no reasons to give; does not deny that
+ George is good-looking and sensible, that he is a man of whose preference
+ any girl might be proud; but she chooses to say she cannot love him, and
+ when I ask why she cannot love him, has no other answer than that &lsquo;she
+ cannot say.&rsquo; It is too provoking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is provoking,&rdquo; answered Kenelm; &ldquo;but then Love is the most
+ dunderheaded of all the passions; it never will listen to reason. The very
+ rudiments of logic are unknown to it. &lsquo;Love has no wherefore,&rsquo; says one of
+ those Latin poets who wrote love-verses called elegies,&mdash;a name which
+ we moderns appropriate to funeral dirges. For my own part, I can&rsquo;t
+ understand how any one can be expected voluntarily to make up his mind to
+ go out of his mind. And if Miss Travers cannot go out of her mind because
+ George Belvoir does, you could not argue her into doing so if you talked
+ till doomsday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Travers smiled in spite of himself, but he answered gravely, &ldquo;Certainly, I
+ would not wish Cissy to marry any man she disliked, but she does not
+ dislike George; no girl could: and where that is the case, a girl so
+ sensible, so affectionate, so well brought up, is sure to love, after
+ marriage, a thoroughly kind and estimable man, especially when she has no
+ previous attachment,&mdash;which, of course, Cissy never had. In fact,
+ though I do not wish to force my daughter&rsquo;s will, I am not yet disposed to
+ give up my own. Do you understand?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perfectly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am the more inclined to a marriage so desirable in every way, because
+ when Cissy comes out in London, which she has not yet done, she is sure to
+ collect round her face and her presumptive inheritance all the handsome
+ fortune-hunters and titled <i>vauriens</i>; and if in love there is no
+ wherefore, how can I be sure that she may not fall in love with a scamp?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think you may be sure of that,&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;Miss Travers has too much
+ mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, at present; but did you not say that in love people go out of their
+ mind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True! I forgot that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not then disposed to dismiss poor George&rsquo;s offer with a decided
+ negative, and yet it would be unfair to mislead him by encouragement. In
+ fact, I&rsquo;ll be hanged if I know how to reply.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You think Miss Travers does not dislike George Belvoir, and if she saw
+ more of him may like him better, and it would be good for her as well as
+ for him not to put an end to that, chance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Exactly so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not then write: &lsquo;My dear George,&mdash;You have my best wishes, but
+ my daughter does not seem disposed to marry at present. Let me consider
+ your letter not written, and continue on the same terms as we were
+ before.&rsquo; Perhaps, as George knows Virgil, you might find your own
+ schoolboy recollections of that poet useful here, and add, <i>Varium et
+ mutabile semper femina</i>; hackneyed, but true.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Chillingly, your suggestion is capital. How the deuce at your age
+ have you contrived to know the world so well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm answered in the pathetic tones so natural to his voice, &ldquo;By being
+ only a looker-on; alas!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leopold Travers felt much relieved after he had written his reply to
+ George. He had not been quite so ingenuous in his revelation to Chillingly
+ as he may have seemed. Conscious, like all proud and fond fathers, of his
+ daughter&rsquo;s attractions, he was not without some apprehension that Kenelm
+ himself might entertain an ambition at variance with that of George
+ Belvoir: if so, he deemed it well to put an end to such ambition while yet
+ in time: partly because his interest was already pledged to George; partly
+ because, in rank and fortune, George was the better match; partly because
+ George was of the same political party as himself,&mdash;while Sir Peter,
+ and probably Sir Peter&rsquo;s heir, espoused the opposite side; and partly also
+ because, with all his personal liking to Kenelm, Leopold Travers, as a
+ very sensible, practical man of the world, was not sure that a baronet&rsquo;s
+ heir who tramped the country on foot in the dress of a petty farmer, and
+ indulged pugilistic propensities in martial encounters with stalwart
+ farriers, was likely to make a safe husband and a comfortable son-in-law.
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s words, and still more his manner, convinced Travers that any
+ apprehensions of rivalry that he had previously conceived were utterly
+ groundless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0055" id="link2HCH0055">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE same evening, after dinner (during that lovely summer month they dined
+ at Neesdale Park at an unfashionably early hour), Kenelm, in company with
+ Travers and Cecilia, ascended a gentle eminence at the back of the
+ gardens, on which there were some picturesque ivy-grown ruins of an
+ ancient priory, and commanding the best view of a glorious sunset and a
+ subject landscape of vale and wood, rivulet and distant hills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is the delight in scenery,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;really an acquired gift, as
+ some philosophers tell us? Is it true that young children and rude savages
+ do not feel it; that the eye must be educated to comprehend its charm, and
+ that the eye can be only educated through the mind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think your philosophers are right,&rdquo; said Travers. &ldquo;When I was a
+ schoolboy, I thought no scenery was like the flat of a cricket ground;
+ when I hunted at Melton, I thought that unpicturesque country more
+ beautiful than Devonshire. It is only of late years that I feel a sensible
+ pleasure in scenery for its own sake, apart from associations of custom or
+ the uses to which we apply them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what say you, Miss Travers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I scarcely know what to say,&rdquo; answered Cecilia, musingly. &ldquo;I can remember
+ no time in my childhood when I did not feel delight in that which seemed
+ to me beautiful in scenery, but I suspect that I vaguely distinguished one
+ kind of beauty from another. A common field with daisies and buttercups
+ was beautiful to me then, and I doubt if I saw anything more beautiful in
+ extensive landscapes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True,&rdquo; said Kenelm: &ldquo;it is not in early childhood that we carry the sight
+ into distance: as is the mind so is the eye; in early childhood the mind
+ revels in the present, and the eye rejoices most in the things nearest to
+ it. I don&rsquo;t think in childhood that we&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Watched with wistful eyes the setting sun.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! what a world of thought in that word &lsquo;wistful&rsquo;!&rdquo; murmured Cecilia, as
+ her gaze riveted itself on the western heavens, towards which Kenelm had
+ pointed as he spoke, where the enlarging orb rested half its disk on the
+ rim of the horizon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had seated herself on a fragment of the ruin, backed by the hollows of
+ a broken arch. The last rays of the sun lingered on her young face, and
+ then lost themselves in the gloom of the arch behind. There was a silence
+ for some minutes, during which the sun had sunk. Rosy clouds in thin
+ flakes still floated, momently waning: and the eve-star stole forth
+ steadfast, bright, and lonely,&mdash;nay, lonely not now; that sentinel
+ has aroused a host.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Said a voice, &ldquo;No sign of rain yet, Squire. What will become of the
+ turnips?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Real life again! Who can escape it?&rdquo; muttered Kenelm, as his eye rested
+ on the burly figure of the Squire&rsquo;s bailiff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! North,&rdquo; said Travers, &ldquo;what brings you here? No bad news, I hope?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, yes, Squire. The Durham bull&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Durham bull! What of him? You frighten me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Taken bad. Colic.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Excuse me, Chillingly,&rdquo; cried Travers; &ldquo;I must be off. A most valuable
+ animal, and no one I can trust to doctor him but myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s true enough,&rdquo; said the bailiff, admiringly. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s not a
+ veterinary in the county like the Squire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Travers was already gone, and the panting bailiff had hard work to catch
+ him up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm seated himself beside Cecilia on the ruined fragment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How I envy your father!&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why just at this moment,&mdash;because he knows how to doctor the bull?&rdquo;
+ said Cecilia, with a sweet low laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that is something to envy. It is a pleasure to relieve from pain
+ any of God&rsquo;s creatures,&mdash;even a Durham bull.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, yes. I am justly rebuked.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the contrary you are to be justly praised. Your question suggested to
+ me an amiable sentiment in place of the selfish one which was uppermost in
+ my thoughts. I envied your father because he creates for himself so many
+ objects of interest; because while he can appreciate the mere sensuous
+ enjoyment of a landscape and a sunset, he can find mental excitement in
+ turnip crops and bulls. Happy, Miss Travers, is the Practical Man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When my dear father was as young as you, Mr. Chillingly, I am sure that
+ he had no more interest in turnips and bulls than you have. I do not doubt
+ that some day you will be as practical as he is in that respect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think so&mdash;sincerely?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia made no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm repeated the question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sincerely, then, I do not know whether you will take interest in
+ precisely the same things that interest my father; but there are other
+ things than turnips and cattle which belong to what you call &lsquo;practical
+ life,&rsquo; and in these you will take interest, as you took in the fortunes of
+ Will Somers and Jessie Wiles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was no practical interest. I got nothing by it. But even if that
+ interest were practical,&mdash;I mean productive, as cattle and turnip
+ crops are,&mdash;a succession of Somerses and Wileses is not to be hoped
+ for. History never repeats itself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I answer you, though very humbly?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Travers, the wisest man that ever existed never was wise enough to
+ know woman; but I think most men ordinarily wise will agree in this, that
+ woman is by no means a humble creature, and that when she says she
+ &lsquo;answers very humbly,&rsquo; she does not mean what she says. Permit me to
+ entreat you to answer very loftily.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia laughed and blushed. The laugh was musical; the blush was&mdash;what?
+ Let any man, seated beside a girl like Cecilia at starry twilight, find
+ the right epithet for that blush. I pass it by epithetless. But she
+ answered, firmly though sweetly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are there not things very practical, and affecting the happiness, not of
+ one or two individuals, but of innumerable thousands, in which a man like
+ Mr. Chillingly cannot fail to feel interest, long before he is my father&rsquo;s
+ age?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgive me: you do not answer; you question. I imitate you, and ask what
+ are those things as applicable to a man like Mr. Chillingly?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia gathered herself up, as with the desire to express a great deal in
+ short substance, and then said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the expression of thought, literature; in the conduct of action,
+ politics.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm Chillingly stared, dumfounded. I suppose the greatest enthusiast
+ for woman&rsquo;s rights could not assert more reverentially than he did the
+ cleverness of women; but among the things which the cleverness of woman
+ did not achieve, he had always placed &ldquo;laconics.&rdquo; &ldquo;No woman,&rdquo; he was wont
+ to say, &ldquo;ever invented an axiom or a proverb.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Travers,&rdquo; he said at last, &ldquo;before we proceed further, vouchsafe to
+ tell me if that very terse reply of yours is spontaneous and original; or
+ whether you have not borrowed it from some book which I have not chanced
+ to read?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia pondered honestly, and then said, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think it is from any
+ book; but I owe so many of my thoughts to Mrs. Campion, and she lived so
+ much among clever men, that&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see it all, and accept your definition, no matter whence it came. You
+ think I might become an author or a politician. Did you ever read an essay
+ by a living author called &lsquo;Motive Power&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That essay is designed to intimate that without motive power a man,
+ whatever his talents or his culture, does nothing practical. The
+ mainsprings of motive power are Want and Ambition. They are absent from my
+ mechanism. By the accident of birth I do not require bread and cheese; by
+ the accident of temperament and of philosophical culture I care nothing
+ about praise or blame. But without want of bread and cheese, and with a
+ most stolid indifference to praise and blame, do you honestly think that a
+ man will do anything practical in literature or politics? Ask Mrs.
+ Campion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not ask her. Is the sense of duty nothing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! we interpret duty so variously. Of mere duty, as we commonly
+ understand the word, I do not think I shall fail more than other men. But
+ for the fair development of all the good that is in us, do you believe
+ that we should adopt some line of conduct against which our whole heart
+ rebels? Can you say to the clerk, &lsquo;Be a poet&rsquo;? Can you say to the poet,
+ &lsquo;Be a clerk&rsquo;? It is no more to the happiness of a man&rsquo;s being to order him
+ to take to one career when his whole heart is set on another, than it is
+ to order him to marry one woman when it is to another woman that his heart
+ will turn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia here winced and looked away. Kenelm had more tact than most men of
+ his age,&mdash;that is, a keener perception of subjects to avoid; but then
+ Kenelm had a wretched habit of forgetting the person he talked to and
+ talking to himself. Utterly oblivious of George Belvoir, he was talking to
+ himself now. Not then observing the effect his <i>mal-a-propos</i> dogma
+ had produced on his listener, he went on, &ldquo;Happiness is a word very
+ lightly used. It may mean little; it may mean much. By the word happiness
+ I would signify, not the momentary joy of a child who gets a plaything,
+ but the lasting harmony between our inclinations and our objects; and
+ without that harmony we are a discord to ourselves, we are incompletions,
+ we are failures. Yet there are plenty of advisers who say to us, &lsquo;It is a
+ duty to be a discord.&rsquo; I deny it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Cecilia rose and said in a low voice, &ldquo;It is getting late. We must go
+ homeward.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They descended the green eminence slowly, and at first in silence. The
+ bats, emerging from the ivied ruins they left behind, flitted and skimmed
+ before them, chasing the insects of the night. A moth, escaping from its
+ pursuer, alighted on Cecilia&rsquo;s breast, as if for refuge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The bats are practical,&rdquo; said Kenelm; &ldquo;they are hungry, and their motive
+ power to-night is strong. Their interest is in the insects they chase.
+ They have no interest in the stars; but the stars lure the moth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia drew her slight scarf over the moth, so that it might not fly off
+ and become a prey to the bats. &ldquo;Yet,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;the moth is practical
+ too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, just now, since it has found an asylum from the danger that
+ threatened it in its course towards the stars.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia felt the beating of her heart, upon which lay the moth concealed.
+ Did she think that a deeper and more tender meaning than they outwardly
+ expressed was couched in these words? If so, she erred. They now neared
+ the garden gate, and Kenelm paused as he opened it. &ldquo;See,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the
+ moon has just risen over those dark firs, making the still night stiller.
+ Is it not strange that we mortals, placed amid perpetual agitation and
+ tumult and strife, as if our natural element, conceive a sense of holiness
+ in the images antagonistic to our real life; I mean in images of repose? I
+ feel at the moment as if I suddenly were made better, now that heaven and
+ earth have suddenly become yet more tranquil. I am now conscious of a
+ purer and sweeter moral than either I or you drew from the insect you have
+ sheltered. I must come to the poets to express it,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;The desire of the moth for the star,
+ Of the night for the morrow;
+ The devotion to something afar
+ From the sphere of our sorrow.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, that something afar! that something afar! never to be reached on this
+ earth,&mdash;never, never!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was such a wail in that cry from the man&rsquo;s heart that Cecilia could
+ not resist the impulse of a divine compassion. She laid her hand on his,
+ and looked on the dark wildness of his upward face with eyes that Heaven
+ meant to be wells of comfort to grieving man. At the light touch of that
+ hand Kenelm started, looked down, and met those soothing eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am happy to tell you that I have saved my Durham,&rdquo; cried out Mr.
+ Travers from the other side of the gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0056" id="link2HCH0056">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AS Kenelm that night retired to his own room, he paused on the
+ landing-place opposite to the portrait which Mr. Travers had consigned to
+ that desolate exile. This daughter of a race dishonoured in its extinction
+ might well have been the glory of the house she had entered as a bride.
+ The countenance was singularly beautiful, and of a character of beauty
+ eminently patrician; there was in its expression a gentleness and modesty
+ not often found in the female portraits of Sir Peter Lely, and in the eyes
+ and in the smile a wonderful aspect of innocent happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What a speaking homily,&rdquo; soliloquized Kenelm, addressing the picture,
+ &ldquo;against the ambition thy fair descendant would awake in me, art thou, O
+ lovely image! For generations thy beauty lived in this canvas, a thing of
+ joy, the pride of the race it adorned. Owner after owner said to admiring
+ guests, &lsquo;Yes, a fine portrait, by Lely; she was my ancestress,&mdash;a
+ Fletwode of Fletwode.&rsquo; Now, lest guests should remember that a Fletwode
+ married a Travers thou art thrust out of sight; not even Lely&rsquo;s art can
+ make thee of value, can redeem thine innocent self from disgrace. And the
+ last of the Fletwodes, doubtless the most ambitious of all, the most bent
+ on restoring and regilding the old lordly name, dies a felon; the infamy
+ of one living man is so large that it can blot out the honour of the
+ dead.&rdquo; He turned his eyes from the smile of the portrait, entered his own
+ room, and, seating himself by the writing-table, drew blotting-book and
+ note-paper towards him, took up the pen, and instead of writing fell into
+ deep revery. There was a slight frown on his brow, on which frowns were
+ rare. He was very angry with himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kenelm,&rdquo; he said, entering into his customary dialogue with that self,
+ &ldquo;it becomes you, forsooth, to moralize about the honour of races which
+ have no affinity with you. Son of Sir Peter Chillingly, look at home. Are
+ you quite sure that you have not said or done or looked a something that
+ may bring trouble to the hearth on which you are received as guest? What
+ right had you to be moaning forth your egotisms, not remembering that your
+ words fell on compassionate ears, and that such words, heard at moonlight
+ by a girl whose heart they move to pity, may have dangers for her peace?
+ Shame on you, Kenelm! shame! knowing too what her father&rsquo;s wish is; and
+ knowing too that you have not the excuse of desiring to win that fair
+ creature for yourself. What do you mean, Kenelm? I don&rsquo;t hear you; speak
+ out. Oh, &lsquo;that I am a vain coxcomb to fancy that she could take a fancy to
+ me:&rsquo; well, perhaps I am; I hope so earnestly; and at all events, there has
+ been and shall be no time for much mischief. We are off to-morrow, Kenelm;
+ bestir yourself and pack up, write your letters, and then &lsquo;put out the
+ light,&mdash;put out <i>the</i> light!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this converser with himself did not immediately set to work, as agreed
+ upon by that twofold one. He rose and walked restlessly to and fro the
+ floor, stopping ever and anon to look at the pictures on the walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several of the worst painted of the family portraits had been consigned to
+ the room tenanted by Kenelm, which, though both the oldest and largest
+ bed-chamber in the house, was always appropriated to a bachelor male
+ guest, partly because it was without dressing-room, remote, and only
+ approached by the small back-staircase, to the landing-place of which
+ Arabella had been banished in disgrace; and partly because it had the
+ reputation of being haunted, and ladies are more alarmed by that
+ superstition than men are supposed to be. The portraits on which Kenelm
+ now paused to gaze were of various dates, from the reign of Elizabeth to
+ that of George III., none of them by eminent artists, and none of them the
+ effigies of ancestors who had left names in history,&mdash;in short, such
+ portraits as are often seen in the country houses of well-born squires.
+ One family type of features or expression pervaded most of these
+ portraits; features clear-cut and hardy, expression open and honest. And
+ though not one of those dead men had been famous, each of them had
+ contributed his unostentatious share, in his own simple way, to the
+ movements of his time. That worthy in ruff and corselet had manned his own
+ ship at his own cost against the Armada; never had been repaid by the
+ thrifty Burleigh the expenses which had harassed him and diminished his
+ patrimony; never had been even knighted. That gentleman with short
+ straight hair, which overhung his forehead, leaning on his sword with one
+ hand, and a book open in the other hand, had served as representative of
+ his county town in the Long Parliament, fought under Cromwell at Marston
+ Moor, and, resisting the Protector when he removed the &ldquo;bauble,&rdquo; was one
+ of the patriots incarcerated in &ldquo;Hell hole.&rdquo; He, too, had diminished his
+ patrimony, maintaining two troopers and two horses at his own charge, and
+ &ldquo;Hell hole&rdquo; was all he got in return. A third, with a sleeker expression
+ of countenance, and a large wig, flourishing in the quiet times of Charles
+ II., had only been a justice of the peace, but his alert look showed that
+ he had been a very active one. He had neither increased nor diminished his
+ ancestral fortune. A fourth, in the costume of William III.&lsquo;s reign, had
+ somewhat added to the patrimony by becoming a lawyer. He must have been a
+ successful one. He is inscribed &ldquo;Sergeant-at-law.&rdquo; A fifth, a lieutenant
+ in the army, was killed at Blenheim; his portrait was that of a very young
+ and handsome man, taken the year before his death. His wife&rsquo;s portrait is
+ placed in the drawing-room because it was painted by Kneller. She was
+ handsome too, and married again a nobleman, whose portrait, of course, was
+ not in the family collection. Here there was a gap in chronological
+ arrangement, the lieutenant&rsquo;s heir being an infant; but in the time of
+ George II. another Travers appeared as the governor of a West India
+ colony. His son took part in a very different movement of the age. He is
+ represented old, venerable, with white hair, and underneath his effigy is
+ inscribed, &ldquo;Follower of Wesley.&rdquo; His successor completes the collection.
+ He is in naval uniform; he is in full length, and one of his legs is a
+ wooden one. He is Captain, R.N., and inscribed, &ldquo;Fought under Nelson at
+ Trafalgar.&rdquo; That portrait would have found more dignified place in the
+ reception-rooms if the face had not been forbiddingly ugly, and the
+ picture itself a villanous daub.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said Kenelm, stopping short, &ldquo;why Cecilia Travers has been reared
+ to talk of duty as a practical interest in life. These men of a former
+ time seem to have lived to discharge a duty, and not to follow the
+ progress of the age in the chase of a money-bag,&mdash;except perhaps one,
+ but then to be sure he was a lawyer. Kenelm, rouse up and listen to me;
+ whatever we are, whether active or indolent, is not my favourite maxim a
+ just and a true one; namely, &lsquo;A good man does good by living&rsquo;? But, for
+ that, he must be a harmony and not a discord. Kenelm, you lazy dog, we
+ must pack up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm then refilled his portmanteau, and labelled and directed it to
+ Exmundham, after which he wrote these three notes:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NOTE I. TO THE MARCHIONESS OF GLENALVON.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR FRIEND AND MONITRESS,&mdash;I have left your last letter a month
+ unanswered. I could not reply to your congratulations on the event of my
+ attaining the age of twenty-one. That event is a conventional sham, and
+ you know how I abhor shams and conventions. The truth is that I am either
+ much younger than twenty-one or much older. As to all designs on my peace
+ in standing for our county at the next election, I wished to defeat them,
+ and I have done so; and now I have commenced a course of travel. I had
+ intended on starting to confine it to my native country. Intentions are
+ mutable. I am going abroad. You shall hear of my whereabout. I write this
+ from the house of Leopold Travers, who, I understand from his fair
+ daughter, is a connection of yours; a man to be highly esteemed and
+ cordially liked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, in spite of all your flattering predictions, I shall never be anything
+ in this life more distinguished than what I am now. Lady Glenalvon allows
+ me to sign myself her grateful friend,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ K. C. NOTE II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEAR COUSIN MIVERS,&mdash;I am going abroad. I may want money; for, in
+ order to rouse motive power within me, I mean to want money if I can. When
+ I was a boy of sixteen you offered me money to write attacks upon veteran
+ authors for &ldquo;The Londoner.&rdquo; Will you give me money now for a similar
+ display of that grand New Idea of our generation; namely, that the less a
+ man knows of a subject the better he understands it? I am about to travel
+ into countries which I have never seen, and among races I have never
+ known. My arbitrary judgments on both will be invaluable to &ldquo;The Londoner&rdquo;
+ from a Special Correspondent who shares your respect for the anonymous,
+ and whose name is never to be divulged. Direct your answer by return to
+ me, <i>poste restante</i>, Calais.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yours truly,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ K. C. NOTE III.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR FATHER,&mdash;I found your letter here, whence I depart to-morrow.
+ Excuse haste. I go abroad, and shall write to you from Calais.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I admire Leopold Travers very much. After all, how much of self-balance
+ there is in a true English gentleman! Toss him up and down where you will,
+ and he always alights on his feet,&mdash;a gentleman. He has one child, a
+ daughter named Cecilia,&mdash;handsome enough to allure into wedlock any
+ mortal whom Decimus Roach had not convinced that in celibacy lay the right
+ &ldquo;Approach to the Angels.&rdquo; Moreover, she is a girl whom one can talk with.
+ Even you could talk with her. Travers wishes her to marry a very
+ respectable, good-looking, promising gentleman, in every way &ldquo;suitable,&rdquo;
+ as they say. And if she does, she will rival that pink and perfection of
+ polished womanhood, Lady Glenalvon. I send you back my portmanteau. I have
+ pretty well exhausted my experience-money, but have not yet encroached on
+ my monthly allowance. I mean still to live upon that, eking it out, if
+ necessary, by the sweat of my brow or brains. But if any case requiring
+ extra funds should occur,&mdash;a case in which that extra would do such
+ real good to another that I feel <i>you</i> would do it,&mdash;why, I must
+ draw a check on your bankers. But understand that is your expense, not
+ mine, and it is <i>you</i> who are to be repaid in Heaven. Dear father,
+ how I do love and honour you every day more and more! Promise you not to
+ propose to any young lady till I come first to you for consent!&mdash;oh,
+ my dear father, how could you doubt it? how doubt that I could not be
+ happy with any wife whom you could not love as a daughter? Accept that
+ promise as sacred. But I wish you had asked me something in which
+ obedience was not much too facile to be a test of duty. I could not have
+ obeyed you more cheerfully if you had asked me to promise never to propose
+ to any young lady at all. Had you asked me to promise that I would
+ renounce the dignity of reason for the frenzy of love, or the freedom of
+ man for the servitude of husband, then I might have sought to achieve the
+ impossible; but I should have died in the effort!&mdash;and thou wouldst
+ have known that remorse which haunts the bed of the tyrant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your affectionate son,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ K. C. <a name="link2HCH0057" id="link2HCH0057">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE next morning Kenelm surprised the party at breakfast by appearing in
+ the coarse habiliments in which he had first made his host&rsquo;s acquaintance.
+ He did not glance towards Cecilia when he announced his departure; but,
+ his eye resting on Mrs. Campion, he smiled, perhaps a little sadly, at
+ seeing her countenance brighten up and hearing her give a short sigh of
+ relief. Travers tried hard to induce him to stay a few days longer, but
+ Kenelm was firm. &ldquo;The summer is wearing away,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and I have far to
+ go before the flowers fade and the snows fall. On the third night from
+ this I shall sleep on foreign soil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are going abroad, then?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Campion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A sudden resolution, Mr. Chillingly. The other day you talked of visiting
+ the Scotch lakes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True; but, on reflection, they will be crowded with holiday tourists,
+ many of whom I shall probably know. Abroad I shall be free, for I shall be
+ unknown.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose you will be back for the hunting season,&rdquo; said Travers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think not. I do not hunt foxes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Probably we shall at all events meet in London,&rdquo; said Travers. &ldquo;I think,
+ after long rustication, that a season or two in the bustling capital may
+ be a salutary change for mind as well as for body; and it is time that
+ Cecilia were presented and her court-dress specially commemorated in the
+ columns of the &lsquo;Morning Post.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia was seemingly too busied behind the tea-urn to heed this reference
+ to her debut.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall miss you terribly,&rdquo; cried Travers, a few moments afterwards, and
+ with a hearty emphasis. &ldquo;I declare that you have quite unsettled me. Your
+ quaint sayings will be ringing in my ears long after you are gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a rustle as of a woman&rsquo;s dress in sudden change of movement
+ behind the tea-urn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cissy,&rdquo; said Mrs. Campion, &ldquo;are we ever to have our tea?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg pardon,&rdquo; answered a voice behind the urn. &ldquo;I hear Pompey&rdquo; (the Skye
+ terrier) &ldquo;whining on the lawn. They have shut him out. I will be back
+ presently.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia rose and was gone. Mrs. Campion took her place at the tea-urn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is quite absurd of Cissy to be so fond of that hideous dog,&rdquo; said
+ Travers, petulantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Its hideousness is its beauty,&rdquo; returned Mrs. Campion, laughing. &ldquo;Mr.
+ Belvoir selected it for her as having the longest back and the shortest
+ legs of any dog he could find in Scotland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, George gave it to her; I forgot that,&rdquo; said Travers, laughing
+ pleasantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was some minutes before Miss Travers returned with the Skye terrier,
+ and she seemed to have recovered her spirits in regaining that ornamental
+ accession to the party; talking very quickly and gayly, and with flushed
+ cheeks, like a young person excited by her own overflow of mirth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when, half an hour afterwards, Kenelm took leave of her and Mrs.
+ Campion at the hall-door, the flush was gone, her lips were tightly
+ compressed, and her parting words were not audible. Then, as his figure
+ (side by side with her father, who accompanied his guest to the lodge)
+ swiftly passed across the lawn and vanished amid the trees beyond, Mrs.
+ Campion wound a mother-like arm around her waist and kissed her. Cecilia
+ shivered and turned her face to her friend smiling; but such a smile,&mdash;one
+ of those smiles that seem brimful of tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, dear,&rdquo; she said meekly; and, gliding away towards the
+ flower-garden, lingered a while by the gate which Kenelm had opened the
+ night before. Then she went with languid steps up the green slopes towards
+ the ruined priory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0061" id="link2H_4_0061">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0058" id="link2HCH0058">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT is somewhat more than a year and a half since Kenelm Chillingly left
+ England, and the scene now is in London, during that earlier and more
+ sociable season which precedes the Easter holidays,&mdash;season in which
+ the charm of intellectual companionship is not yet withered away in the
+ heated atmosphere of crowded rooms,&mdash;season in which parties are
+ small, and conversation extends beyond the interchange of commonplace with
+ one&rsquo;s next neighbour at a dinner-table,&mdash;season in which you have a
+ fair chance of finding your warmest friends not absorbed by the superior
+ claims of their chilliest acquaintances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was what is called a <i>conversazione</i> at the house of one of
+ those Whig noblemen who yet retain the graceful art of bringing agreeable
+ people together, and collecting round them the true aristocracy, which
+ combines letters and art and science with hereditary rank and political
+ distinction,&mdash;that art which was the happy secret of the Lansdownes
+ and Hollands of the last generation. Lord Beaumanoir was himself a genial,
+ well-read man, a good judge of art, and a pleasant talker. He had a
+ charming wife, devoted to him and to her children, but with enough love of
+ general approbation to make herself as popular in the fashionable world as
+ if she sought in its gayeties a refuge from the dulness of domestic life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amongst the guests at the Beaumanoirs, this evening were two men, seated
+ apart in a small room, and conversing familiarly. The one might be about
+ fifty-four; he was tall, strongly built, but not corpulent, somewhat bald,
+ with black eyebrows, dark eyes, bright and keen, mobile lips round which
+ there played a shrewd and sometimes sarcastic smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This gentleman, the Right Hon. Gerard Danvers, was a very influential
+ member of Parliament. He had, when young for English public life, attained
+ to high office; but&mdash;partly from a great distaste to the drudgery of
+ administration; partly from a pride of temperament, which unfitted him for
+ the subordination that a Cabinet owes to its chief; partly, also, from a
+ not uncommon kind of epicurean philosophy, at once joyous and cynical,
+ which sought the pleasures of life and held very cheap its honours&mdash;he
+ had obstinately declined to re-enter office, and only spoke on rare
+ occasions. On such occasions he carried great weight, and, by the brief
+ expression of his opinions, commanded more votes than many an orator
+ infinitely more eloquent. Despite his want of ambition, he was fond of
+ power in his own way,&mdash;power over the people who <i>had</i> power;
+ and, in the love of political intrigue, he found an amusement for an
+ intellect very subtle and very active. At this moment he was bent on a new
+ combination among the leaders of different sections in the same party, by
+ which certain veterans were to retire, and certain younger men to be
+ admitted into the Administration. It was an amiable feature in his
+ character that he had a sympathy with the young, and had helped to bring
+ into Parliament, as well as into office, some of the ablest of a
+ generation later than his own. He gave them sensible counsel, was pleased
+ when they succeeded, and encouraged them when they failed,&mdash;always
+ provided that they had stuff enough in them to redeem the failure; if not,
+ he gently dropped them from his intimacy, but maintained sufficiently
+ familiar terms with them to be pretty sure that he could influence their
+ votes whenever he so desired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gentleman with whom he was now conversing was young, about
+ five-and-twenty; not yet in Parliament, but with an intense desire to
+ obtain a seat in it, and with one of those reputations which a youth
+ carries away from school and college, justified, not by honours purely
+ academical, but by an impression of ability and power created on the minds
+ of his contemporaries and endorsed by his elders. He had done little at
+ the University beyond taking a fair degree, except acquiring at the
+ debating society the fame of an exceedingly ready and adroit speaker. On
+ quitting college he had written one or two political articles in a
+ quarterly review, which created a sensation; and though belonging to no
+ profession, and having but a small yet independent income, society was
+ very civil to him, as to a man who would some day or other attain a
+ position in which he could damage his enemies and serve his friends.
+ Something in this young man&rsquo;s countenance and bearing tended to favour the
+ credit given to his ability and his promise. In his countenance there was
+ no beauty; in his bearing no elegance. But in that countenance there was
+ vigour, there was energy, there was audacity. A forehead wide but low,
+ protuberant in those organs over the brow which indicate the qualities
+ fitted for perception and judgment,&mdash;qualities for every-day life;
+ eyes of the clear English blue, small, somewhat sunken, vigilant,
+ sagacious, penetrating; a long straight upper lip, significant of resolute
+ purpose; a mouth in which a student of physiognomy would have detected a
+ dangerous charm. The smile was captivating, but it was artificial,
+ surrounded by dimples, and displaying teeth white, small, strong, but
+ divided from each other. The expression of that smile would have been
+ frank and candid to all who failed to notice that it was not in harmony
+ with the brooding forehead and the steely eye; that it seemed to stand
+ distinct from the rest of the face, like a feature that had learned its
+ part. There was that physical power in the back of the head which belongs
+ to men who make their way in life,&mdash;combative and destructive. All
+ gladiators have it; so have great debaters and great reformers,&mdash;that
+ is, reformers who can destroy, but not necessarily reconstruct. So, too,
+ in the bearing of the man there was a hardy self-confidence, much too
+ simple and unaffected for his worst enemy to call it self-conceit. It was
+ the bearing of one who knew how to maintain personal dignity without
+ seeming to care about it. Never servile to the great, never arrogant to
+ the little; so little over-refined that it was never vulgar,&mdash;a
+ popular bearing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The room in which these gentlemen were seated was separated from the
+ general suite of apartments by a lobby off the landing-place, and served
+ for Lady Beaumanoir&rsquo;s boudoir. Very pretty it was, but simply furnished,
+ with chintz draperies. The walls were adorned with drawings in
+ water-colours, and precious specimens of china on fanciful Parian
+ brackets. At one corner, by a window that looked southward and opened on a
+ spacious balcony, glazed in and filled with flowers, stood one of those
+ high trellised screens, first invented, I believe, in Vienna, and along
+ which ivy is so trained as to form an arbour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The recess thus constructed, and which was completely out of sight from
+ the rest of the room, was the hostess&rsquo;s favourite writing-nook. The two
+ men I have described were seated near the screen, and had certainly no
+ suspicion that any one could be behind it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mr. Danvers, from an ottoman niched in another recess of the
+ room, &ldquo;I think there will be an opening at Saxboro&rsquo; soon: Milroy wants a
+ Colonial Government; and if we can reconstruct the Cabinet as I propose,
+ he would get one. Saxboro&rsquo; would thus be vacant. But, my dear fellow,
+ Saxboro&rsquo; is a place to be wooed through love, and only won through money.
+ It demands liberalism from a candidate,&mdash;two kinds of liberalism
+ seldom united; the liberalism in opinion which is natural enough to a very
+ poor man, and the liberalism in expenditure which is scarcely to be
+ obtained except from a very rich one. You may compute the cost of Saxboro&rsquo;
+ at L3000 to get in, and about L2000 more to defend your seat against a
+ petition,&mdash;the defeated candidate nearly always petitions. L5000 is a
+ large sum; and the worst of it is, that the extreme opinions to which the
+ member for Saxboro&rsquo; must pledge himself are a drawback to an official
+ career. Violent politicians are not the best raw material out of which to
+ manufacture fortunate placemen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The opinions do not so much matter; the expense does. I cannot afford
+ L5000, or even L3000.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would not Sir Peter assist? He has, you say, only one son; and if
+ anything happen to that son, you are the next heir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My father quarrelled with Sir Peter, and harassed him by an imprudent and
+ ungracious litigation. I scarcely think I could apply to him for money to
+ obtain a seat in Parliament upon the democratic side of the question; for,
+ though I know little of his politics, I take it for granted that a country
+ gentleman of old family and L10,000 a year cannot well be a democrat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I presume you would not be a democrat if, by the death of your
+ cousin, you became heir to the Chillinglys.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not sure what I might be in that case. There are times when a
+ democrat of ancient lineage and good estates could take a very high place
+ amongst the aristocracy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Humph! my dear Gordon, <i>vous irez loin</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope to do so. Measuring myself against the men of my own day, I do not
+ see many who should outstrip me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What sort of a fellow is your cousin Kenelm? I met him once or twice when
+ he was very young, and reading with Welby in London. People then said that
+ he was very clever; he struck me as very odd.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never saw him, but from all I hear, whether he be clever or whether he
+ be odd, he is not likely to do anything in life,&mdash;a dreamer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Writes poetry perhaps?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Capable of it, I dare say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then some other guests came into the room, amongst them a lady of an
+ appearance at once singularly distinguished and singularly prepossessing,
+ rather above the common height, and with a certain indescribable nobility
+ of air and presence. Lady Glenalvon was one of the queens of the London
+ world, and no queen of that world was ever less worldly or more
+ queen-like. Side by side with the lady was Mr. Chillingly Mivers. Gordon
+ and Mivers interchanged friendly nods, and the former sauntered away and
+ was soon lost amid a crowd of other young men, with whom, as he could
+ converse well and lightly on things which interested them, he was rather a
+ favourite, though he was not an intimate associate. Mr. Danvers retired
+ into a corner of the adjoining lobby, where he favoured the French
+ ambassador with his views on the state of Europe and the reconstruction of
+ Cabinets in general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Lady Glenalvon to Chillingly Mivers, &ldquo;are you quite sure that
+ my old young friend Kenelm is here? Since you told me so, I have looked
+ everywhere for him in vain. I should so much like to see him again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I certainly caught a glimpse of him half an hour ago; but before I could
+ escape from a geologist who was boring me about the Silurian system,
+ Kenelm had vanished.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps it was his ghost!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, we certainly live in the most credulous and superstitious age upon
+ record; and so many people tell me that they converse with the dead under
+ the table that it seems impertinent in me to say that I don&rsquo;t believe in
+ ghosts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me some of those incomprehensible stories about table-rapping,&rdquo; said
+ Lady Glenalvon. &ldquo;There is a charming, snug recess here behind the screen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely had she entered the recess when she drew back with a start and an
+ exclamation of amaze. Seated at the table within the recess, his chin
+ resting on his hand, and his face cast down in abstracted revery, was a
+ young man. So still was his attitude, so calmly mournful the expression of
+ his face, so estranged did he seem from all the motley but brilliant
+ assemblage which circled around the solitude he had made for himself, that
+ he might well have been deemed one of those visitants from another world
+ whose secrets the intruder had wished to learn. Of that intruder&rsquo;s
+ presence he was evidently unconscious. Recovering her surprise, she stole
+ up to him, placed her hand on his shoulder, and uttered his name in a low
+ gentle voice. At that sound Kenelm Chillingly looked up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you not remember me?&rdquo; asked Lady Glenalvon. Before he could answer,
+ Mivers, who had followed the marchioness into the recess, interposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Kenelm, how are you? When did you come to London? Why have you
+ not called on me; and what on earth are you hiding yourself for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm had now recovered the self-possession which he rarely lost long in
+ the presence of others. He returned cordially his kinsman&rsquo;s greeting, and
+ kissed with his wonted chivalrous grace the fair hand which the lady
+ withdrew from his shoulder and extended to his pressure. &ldquo;Remember you!&rdquo;
+ he said to Lady Glenalvon with the kindliest expression of his soft dark
+ eyes; &ldquo;I am not so far advanced towards the noon of life as to forget the
+ sunshine that brightened its morning. My dear Mivers, your questions are
+ easily answered. I arrived in England two weeks ago, stayed at Exmundham
+ till this morning, to-day dined with Lord Thetford, whose acquaintance I
+ made abroad, and was persuaded by him to come here and be introduced to
+ his father and mother, the Beaumanoirs. After I had undergone that
+ ceremony, the sight of so many strange faces frightened me into shyness.
+ Entering this room at a moment when it was quite deserted, I resolved to
+ turn hermit behind the screen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, you must have seen your cousin Gordon as you came into the room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you forget I don&rsquo;t know him by sight. However, there was no one in
+ the room when I entered; a little later some others came in, for I heard a
+ faint buzz, like that of persons talking in a whisper. However, I was no
+ eavesdropper, as a person behind a screen is on the dramatic stage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was true. Even had Gordon and Danvers talked in a louder tone, Kenelm
+ had been too absorbed in his own thoughts to have heard a word of their
+ conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You ought to know young Gordon; he is a very clever fellow, and has an
+ ambition to enter Parliament. I hope no old family quarrel between his
+ bear of a father and dear Sir Peter will make you object to meet him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Peter is the most forgiving of men, but he would scarcely forgive me
+ if I declined to meet a cousin who had never offended him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well said. Come and meet Gordon at breakfast to-morrow,&mdash;ten
+ o&rsquo;clock. I am still in the old rooms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the kinsmen thus conversed, Lady Glenalvon had seated herself on the
+ couch beside Kenelm, and was quietly observing his countenance. Now she
+ spoke. &ldquo;My dear Mr. Mivers, you will have many opportunities of talking
+ with Kenelm; do not grudge me five minutes&rsquo; talk with him now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I leave your ladyship alone in your hermitage. How all the men in this
+ assembly will envy the hermit!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0059" id="link2HCH0059">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I AM glad to see you once more in the world,&rdquo; said Lady Glenalvon; &ldquo;and I
+ trust that you are now prepared to take that part in it which ought to be
+ no mean one if you do justice to your talents and your nature.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM.&mdash;&ldquo;When you go to the theatre, and see one of the pieces which
+ appear now to be the fashion, which would you rather be,&mdash;an actor or
+ a looker-on?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LADY GLENALVON.&mdash;&ldquo;My dear young friend, your question saddens me.&rdquo;
+ (After a pause.)&mdash;&ldquo;But though I used a stage metaphor when I
+ expressed my hope that you would take no mean part in the world, the world
+ is not really a theatre. Life admits of no lookers-on. Speak to me
+ frankly, as you used to do. Your face retains its old melancholy
+ expression. Are you not happy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM.&mdash;&ldquo;Happy, as mortals go, I ought to be. I do not think I am
+ unhappy. If my temper be melancholic, melancholy has a happiness of its
+ own. Milton shows that there are as many charms in life to be found on the
+ <i>Penseroso</i> side of it as there are on the <i>Allegro</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LADY GLENALVON.&mdash;&ldquo;Kenelm, you saved the life of my poor son, and
+ when, later, he was taken from me, I felt as if he had commended you to my
+ care. When at the age of sixteen, with a boy&rsquo;s years and a man&rsquo;s heart,
+ you came to London, did I not try to be to you almost as a mother? and did
+ you not often tell me that you could confide to me the secrets of your
+ heart more readily than to any other?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were to me,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with emotion, &ldquo;that most precious and
+ sustaining good genius which a youth can find at the threshold of life,&mdash;a
+ woman gently wise, kindly sympathizing, shaming him by the spectacle of
+ her own purity from all grosser errors, elevating him from mean tastes and
+ objects by the exquisite, ineffable loftiness of soul which is only found
+ in the noblest order of womanhood. Come, I will open my heart to you
+ still. I fear it is more wayward than ever. It still feels estranged from
+ the companionship and pursuits natural to my age and station. However, I
+ have been seeking to brace and harden my nature, for the practical ends of
+ life, by travel and adventure, chiefly among rougher varieties of mankind
+ than we meet in drawing-rooms. Now, in compliance with the duty I owe to
+ my dear father&rsquo;s wishes, I come back to these circles, which under your
+ auspices I entered in boyhood, and which even then seemed to me so inane
+ and artificial. Take a part in the world of these circles; such is your
+ wish. My answer is brief. I have been doing my best to acquire a motive
+ power, and have not succeeded. I see nothing that I care to strive for,
+ nothing that I care to gain. The very times in which we live are to me, as
+ to Hamlet, out of joint; and I am not born like Hamlet to set them right.
+ Ah! if I could look on society through the spectacles with which the poor
+ hidalgo in &lsquo;Gil Blas&rsquo; looked on his meagre board,&mdash;spectacles by
+ which cherries appear the size of peaches, and tomtits as large as
+ turkeys! The imagination which is necessary to ambition is a great
+ magnifier.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have known more than one man, now very eminent, very active, who at
+ your age felt the same estrangement from the practical pursuits of
+ others.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what reconciled those men to such pursuits?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That diminished sense of individual personality, that unconscious fusion
+ of one&rsquo;s own being into other existences, which belong to home and
+ marriage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t object to home, but I do to marriage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Depend on it there is no home for man where there is no woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Prettily said. In that case I resign the home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean seriously to tell me that you never see the woman you could
+ love enough to make her your wife, and never enter any home that you do
+ not quit with a touch of envy at the happiness of married life?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seriously, I never see such a woman; seriously, I never enter such a
+ home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Patience, then; your time will come, and I hope it is at hand. Listen to
+ me. It was only yesterday that I felt an indescribable longing to see you
+ again,&mdash;to know your address that I might write to you; for
+ yesterday, when a certain young lady left my house after a week&rsquo;s visit, I
+ said this girl would make a perfect wife, and, above all, the exact wife
+ to suit Kenelm Chillingly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kenelm Chillingly is very glad to hear that this young lady has left your
+ house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But she has not left London: she is here to-night. She only stayed with
+ me till her father came to town, and the house he had taken for the season
+ was vacant; those events happened yesterday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fortunate events for me: they permit me to call on you without danger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you no curiosity to know, at least, who and what is the young lady
+ who appears to me so well suited to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No curiosity, but a vague sensation of alarm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I cannot talk pleasantly with you while you are in this irritating
+ mood, and it is time to quit the hermitage. Come, there are many persons
+ here, with some of whom you should renew old acquaintance, and to some of
+ whom I should like to make you known.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am prepared to follow Lady Glenalvon wherever she deigns to lead me,&mdash;except
+ to the altar with another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0060" id="link2HCH0060">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE rooms were now full,&mdash;not overcrowded, but full,&mdash;and it was
+ rarely even in that house that so many distinguished persons were
+ collected together. A young man thus honoured by so <i>grande</i> a dame
+ as Lady Glenalvon could not but be cordially welcomed by all to whom she
+ presented him, Ministers and Parliamentary leaders, ball-givers, and
+ beauties in vogue,&mdash;even authors and artists; and there was something
+ in Kenelm Chillingly, in his striking countenance and figure, in that calm
+ ease of manner natural to his indifference to effect, which seemed to
+ justify the favour shown to him by the brilliant princess of fashion and
+ mark him out for general observation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That first evening of his reintroduction to the polite world was a success
+ which few young men of his years achieve. He produced a sensation. Just as
+ the rooms were thinning, Lady Glenalvon whispered to Kenelm,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come this way: there is one person I must reintroduce you to; thank me
+ for it hereafter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm followed the marchioness, and found himself face to face with
+ Cecilia Travers. She was leaning on her father&rsquo;s arm, looking very
+ handsome, and her beauty was heightened by the blush which overspread her
+ cheeks as Kenelm Chillingly approached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Travers greeted him with great cordiality; and Lady Glenalvon asking him
+ to escort her to the refreshment-room, Kenelm had no option but to offer
+ his arm to Cecilia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm felt somewhat embarrassed. &ldquo;Have you been long in town, Miss
+ Travers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A little more than a week, but we only settled into our house yesterday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, indeed! were you then the young lady who&mdash;&rdquo; He stopped short,
+ and his face grew gentler and graver in its expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The young lady who&mdash;what?&rdquo; asked Cecilia with a smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who has been staying with Lady Glenalvon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; did she tell you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She did not mention your name, but praised that young lady so justly that
+ I ought to have guessed it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia made some not very audible answer, and on entering the
+ refreshment-room other young men gathered round her, and Lady Glenalvon
+ and Kenelm remained silent in the midst of a general small-talk. When
+ Travers, after giving his address to Kenelm, and, of course, pressing him
+ to call, left the house with Cecilia, Kenelm said to Lady Glenalvon,
+ musingly, &ldquo;So that is the young lady in whom I was to see my fate: you
+ knew that we had met before?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, she told me when and where. Besides, it is not two years since you
+ wrote to me from her father&rsquo;s house. Do you forget?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Kenelm, so abstractedly that he seemed to be dreaming, &ldquo;no man
+ with his eyes open rushes on his fate: when he does so his sight is gone.
+ Love is blind. They say the blind are very happy, yet I never met a blind
+ man who would not recover his sight if he could.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0061" id="link2HCH0061">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mr. CHILLINGLY MIVERS never gave a dinner at his own rooms. When he did
+ give a dinner it was at Greenwich or Richmond. But he gave
+ breakfast-parties pretty often, and they were considered pleasant. He had
+ handsome bachelor apartments in Grosvenor Street, daintily furnished, with
+ a prevalent air of exquisite neatness, a good library stored with books of
+ reference, and adorned with presentation copies from authors of the day,
+ very beautifully bound. Though the room served for the study of the
+ professed man of letters, it had none of the untidy litter which generally
+ characterizes the study of one whose vocation it is to deal with books and
+ papers. Even the implements for writing were not apparent, except when
+ required. They lay concealed in a vast cylinder bureau, French made, and
+ French polished. Within that bureau were numerous pigeon-holes and secret
+ drawers, and a profound well with a separate patent lock. In the well were
+ deposited the articles intended for publication in &ldquo;The Londoner,&rdquo;
+ proof-sheets, etc.; pigeon-holes were devoted to ordinary correspondence;
+ secret drawers to confidential notes, and outlines of biographies of
+ eminent men now living, but intended to be completed for publication the
+ day after their death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No man wrote such funeral compositions with a livelier pen than that of
+ Chillingly Mivers; and the large and miscellaneous circle of his visiting
+ acquaintances allowed him to ascertain, whether by authoritative report or
+ by personal observation, the signs of mortal disease in the illustrious
+ friends whose dinners he accepted, and whose failing pulses he
+ instinctively felt in returning the pressure of their hands; so that he
+ was often able to put the finishing-stroke to their obituary memorials
+ days, weeks, even months, before their fate took the public by surprise.
+ That cylinder bureau was in harmony with the secrecy in which this
+ remarkable man shrouded the productions of his brain. In his literary life
+ Mivers had no &ldquo;I,&rdquo; there he was ever the inscrutable, mysterious &ldquo;We.&rdquo; He
+ was only &ldquo;I&rdquo; when you met him in the world, and called him Mivers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adjoining the library on one side was a small dining or rather breakfast
+ room, hung with valuable pictures,&mdash;presents from living painters.
+ Many of these painters had been severely handled by Mr. Mivers in his
+ existence as &ldquo;We,&rdquo;&mdash;not always in &ldquo;The Londoner.&rdquo; His most pungent
+ criticisms were often contributed to other intellectual journals conducted
+ by members of the same intellectual clique. Painters knew not how
+ contemptuously &ldquo;We&rdquo; had treated them when they met Mr. Mivers. His &ldquo;I&rdquo; was
+ so complimentary that they sent him a tribute of their gratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other side was his drawing-room, also enriched by many gifts,
+ chiefly from fair hands,&mdash;embroidered cushions and table-covers, bits
+ of Sevres or old Chelsea, elegant knick-knacks of all kinds. Fashionable
+ authoresses paid great court to Mr. Mivers; and in the course of his life
+ as a single man, he had other female adorers besides fashionable
+ authoresses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Mivers had already returned from his early constitutional walk in the
+ Park, and was now seated by the cylinder <i>secretaire</i> with a
+ mild-looking man, who was one of the most merciless contributors to &ldquo;The
+ Londoner&rdquo; and no unimportant councillor in the oligarchy of the clique
+ that went by the name of the &ldquo;Intellectuals.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mivers, languidly, &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t even get through the book; it is
+ as dull as the country in November. But, as you justly say, the writer is
+ an &lsquo;Intellectual,&rsquo; and a clique would be anything but intellectual if it
+ did not support its members. Review the book yourself; mind and make the
+ dulness of it the signal proof of its merit. Say: &lsquo;To the ordinary class
+ of readers this exquisite work may appear less brilliant than the flippant
+ smartness of&rsquo;&mdash;any other author you like to name; &lsquo;but to the well
+ educated and intelligent every line is pregnant with,&rsquo; etc. By the way,
+ when we come by and by to review the exhibition at Burlington House, there
+ is one painter whom we must try our best to crush. I have not seen his
+ pictures myself, but he is a new man; and our friend, who has seen him, is
+ terribly jealous of him, and says that if the good judges do not put him
+ down at once, the villanous taste of the public will set him up as a
+ prodigy. A low-lived fellow too, I hear. There is the name of the man and
+ the subject of the pictures. See to it when the time comes. Meanwhile,
+ prepare the way for onslaught on the pictures by occasional sneers at the
+ painter.&rdquo; Here Mr. Mivers took out of his cylinder a confidential note
+ from the jealous rival and handed it to his mild-looking <i>confrere</i>;
+ then rising, he said, &ldquo;I fear we must suspend our business till to-morrow;
+ I expect two young cousins to breakfast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the mild-looking man was gone, Mr. Mivers sauntered to his
+ drawing-room window, amiably offering a lump of sugar to a canary-bird
+ sent to him as a present the day before, and who, in the gilded cage which
+ made part of the present, scanned him suspiciously and refused the sugar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time had remained very gentle in its dealings with Chillingly Mivers. He
+ scarcely looked a day older than when he was first presented to the reader
+ on the birth of his kinsman Kenelm. He was reaping the fruit of his own
+ sage maxims. Free from whiskers and safe in wig, there was no sign of
+ gray, no suspicion of dye. Superiority to passion, abnegation of sorrow,
+ indulgence of amusement, avoidance of excess, had kept away the
+ crow&rsquo;s-feet, preserved the elasticity of his frame and the unflushed
+ clearness of his gentlemanlike complexion. The door opened, and a
+ well-dressed valet, who had lived long enough with Mivers to grow very
+ much like him, announced Mr. Chillingly Gordon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good morning,&rdquo; said Mivers; &ldquo;I was much pleased to see you talking so
+ long and so familiarly with Danvers: others, of course, observed it, and
+ it added a step to your career. It does you great good to be seen in a
+ drawing-room talking apart with a Somebody. But may I ask if the talk
+ itself was satisfactory?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all: Danvers throws cold water on the notion of Saxboro&rsquo;, and does
+ not even hint that his party will help me to any other opening. Party has
+ few openings at its disposal nowadays for any young man. The schoolmaster
+ being abroad has swept away the school for statesmen as he has swept away
+ the school for actors,&mdash;an evil, and an evil of a far greater
+ consequence to the destinies of the nation than any good likely to be got
+ from the system that succeeded it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it is of no use railing against things that can&rsquo;t be helped. If I
+ were you, I would postpone all ambition of Parliament and read for the
+ bar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The advice is sound, but too unpalatable to be taken. I am resolved to
+ find a seat in the House, and where there is a will there is a way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not so sure of that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Judging by what your contemporaries at the University tell me of your
+ speeches at the Debating Society, you were not then an ultra-Radical. But
+ it is only an ultra-Radical who has a chance of success at Saxboro&rsquo;.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am no fanatic in politics. There is much to be said on all sides: <i>coeteris
+ paribus</i>, I prefer the winning side to the losing; nothing succeeds
+ like success.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, but in politics there is always reaction. The winning side one day
+ may be the losing side another. The losing side represents a minority, and
+ a minority is sure to comprise more intellect than a majority: in the long
+ run intellect will force its way, get a majority and then lose it, because
+ with a majority it will become stupid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cousin Mivers, does not the history of the world show you that a single
+ individual can upset all theories as to the comparative wisdom of the few
+ or the many? Take the wisest few you can find, and one man of genius not a
+ tithe so wise crushes them into powder. But then that man of genius,
+ though he despises the many, must make use of them. That done, he rules
+ them. Don&rsquo;t you see how in free countries political destinations resolve
+ themselves into individual impersonations? At a general election it is one
+ name around which electors rally. The candidate may enlarge as much as he
+ pleases on political principles, but all his talk will not win him votes
+ enough for success, unless he says, &lsquo;I go with Mr. A.,&rsquo; the minister, or
+ with Mr. Z., the chief of the opposition. It was not the Tories who beat
+ the Whigs when Mr. Pitt dissolved Parliament. It was Mr. Pitt who beat Mr.
+ Fox, with whom in general political principle&mdash;slave-trade, Roman
+ Catholic emancipation, Parliamentary reform&mdash;he certainly agreed much
+ more than he did with any man in his own cabinet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take care, my young cousin,&rdquo; cried Mivers, in accents of alarm; &ldquo;don&rsquo;t
+ set up for a man of genius. Genius is the worst quality a public man can
+ have nowadays: nobody heeds it, and everybody is jealous of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, you mistake; my remark was purely objective, and intended as a
+ reply to your argument. I prefer at present to go with the many because it
+ is the winning side. If we then want a man of genius to keep it the
+ winning side, by subjugating its partisans to his will, he will be sure to
+ come. The few will drive him to us, for the few are always the enemies of
+ the one man of genius. It is they who distrust,&mdash;it is they who are
+ jealous,&mdash;not the many. You have allowed your judgment, usually so
+ clear, to be somewhat dimmed by your experience as a critic. The critics
+ are the few. They have infinitely more culture than the many. But when a
+ man of real genius appears and asserts himself, the critics are seldom
+ such fair judges of him as the many are. If he be not one of their
+ oligarchical clique, they either abuse, or disparage, or affect to ignore
+ him; though a time at last comes when, having gained the many, the critics
+ acknowledge him. But the difference between the man of action and the
+ author is this, that the author rarely finds this acknowledgment till he
+ is dead, and it is necessary to the man of action to enforce it while he
+ is alive. But enough of this speculation: you ask me to meet Kenelm; is he
+ not coming?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but I did not ask him till ten o&rsquo;clock. I asked you at half-past
+ nine, because I wished to hear about Danvers and Saxboro&rsquo;, and also to
+ prepare you somewhat for your introduction to your cousin. I must be brief
+ as to the last, for it is only five minutes to the hour, and he is a man
+ likely to be punctual. Kenelm is in all ways your opposite. I don&rsquo;t know
+ whether he is cleverer or less clever; there is no scale of measurement
+ between you: but he is wholly void of ambition, and might possibly assist
+ yours. He can do what he likes with Sir Peter; and considering how your
+ poor father&mdash;a worthy man, but cantankerous&mdash;harassed and
+ persecuted Sir Peter, because Kenelm came between the estate and you, it
+ is probable that Sir Peter bears you a grudge, though Kenelm declares him
+ incapable of it; and it would be well if you could annul that grudge in
+ the father by conciliating the goodwill of the son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should be glad so to annul it; but what is Kenelm&rsquo;s weak side?&mdash;the
+ turf? the hunting-field? women? poetry? One can only conciliate a man by
+ getting on his weak side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hist! I see him from the windows. Kenelm&rsquo;s weak side was, when I knew him
+ some years ago, and I rather fancy it still is&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, make haste! I hear his ring at your door-bell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A passionate longing to find ideal truth in real life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Gordon, &ldquo;as I thought,&mdash;a mere dreamer&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0062" id="link2HCH0062">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM entered the room. The young cousins were introduced, shook hands,
+ receded a step, and gazed at each other. It is scarcely possible to
+ conceive a greater contrast outwardly than that between the two Chillingly
+ representatives of the rising generation. Each was silently impressed by
+ the sense of that contrast. Each felt that the contrast implied
+ antagonism, and that if they two met in the same arena it must be as rival
+ combatants; still, by some mysterious intuition, each felt a certain
+ respect for the other, each divined in the other a power that he could not
+ fairly estimate, but against which his own power would be strongly tasked
+ to contend. So might exchange looks a thorough-bred deer-hound and a
+ half-bred mastiff: the bystander could scarcely doubt which was the nobler
+ animal; but he might hesitate which to bet on, if the two came to deadly
+ quarrel. Meanwhile the thorough-bred deer-hound and the half-bred mastiff
+ sniffed at each other in polite salutation. Gordon was the first to give
+ tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have long wished to know you personally,&rdquo; said he, throwing into his
+ voice and manner that delicate kind of deference which a well-born cadet
+ owes to the destined head of his house. &ldquo;I cannot conceive how I missed
+ you last night at Lady Beaumanoir&rsquo;s, where Mivers tells me he met you; but
+ I left early.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Mivers led the way to the breakfast-room, and, there seated, the host
+ became the principal talker, running with lively glibness over the
+ principal topics of the day,&mdash;the last scandal, the last new book,
+ the reform of the army, the reform of the turf, the critical state of
+ Spain, and the debut of an Italian singer. He seemed an embodied Journal,
+ including the Leading Article, the Law Reports, Foreign Intelligence, the
+ Court Circular, down to the Births, Deaths, and Marriages. Gordon from
+ time to time interrupted this flow of soul with brief, trenchant remarks,
+ which evinced his own knowledge of the subjects treated, and a habit of
+ looking on all subjects connected with the pursuits and business of
+ mankind from a high ground appropriated to himself, and through the medium
+ of that blue glass which conveys a wintry aspect to summer landscapes.
+ Kenelm said little, but listened attentively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conversation arrested its discursive nature, to settle upon a
+ political chief, the highest in fame and station of that party to which
+ Mivers professed&mdash;not to belong, he belonged to himself alone, but to
+ appropinquate. Mivers spoke of this chief with the greatest distrust, and
+ in a spirit of general depreciation. Gordon acquiesced in the distrust and
+ the depreciation, adding, &ldquo;But he is master of the position, and must, of
+ course, be supported through thick and thin for the present.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, for the present,&rdquo; said Mivers, &ldquo;one has no option. But you will see
+ some clever articles in &lsquo;The Londoner&rsquo; towards the close of the session,
+ which will damage him greatly, by praising him in the wrong place, and
+ deepening the alarm of important followers,&mdash;an alarm now at work,
+ though suppressed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Kenelm asked, in humble tones, why Gordon thought that a minister he
+ considered so untrustworthy and dangerous must for the present be
+ supported through thick and thin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because at present a member elected so to support him would lose his seat
+ if he did not: needs must when the devil drives.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM.&mdash;&ldquo;When the devil drives, I should have thought it better to
+ resign one&rsquo;s seat on the coach; perhaps one might be of some use, out of
+ it, in helping to put on the drag.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MIVERS.&mdash;&ldquo;Cleverly said, Kenelm. But, metaphor apart, Gordon is
+ right. A young politician must go with his party; a veteran journalist
+ like myself is more independent. So long as the journalist blames
+ everybody, he will have plenty of readers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm made no reply, and Gordon changed the conversation from men to
+ measures. He spoke of some Bills before Parliament with remarkable
+ ability, evincing much knowledge of the subject, much critical acuteness,
+ illustrating their defects, and proving the danger of their ultimate
+ consequences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm was greatly struck with the vigour of this cold, clear mind, and
+ owned to himself that the House of Commons was a fitting place for its
+ development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Mivers, &ldquo;would you not be obliged to defend these Bills if you
+ were member for Saxboro&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before I answer your question, answer me this: dangerous as the Bills
+ are, is it not necessary that they shall pass? Have not the public so
+ resolved?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There can be no doubt of that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then the member for Saxboro&rsquo; cannot be strong enough to go against the
+ public.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Progress of the age!&rdquo; said Kenelm, musingly. &ldquo;Do you think the class of
+ gentlemen will long last in England?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you call gentlemen? The aristocracy by birth?&mdash;the <i>gentilshommes</i>?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I suppose no laws can take away a man&rsquo;s ancestors, and a class of
+ well-born men is not to be exterminated. But a mere class of well-born men&mdash;without
+ duties, responsibilities, or sentiment of that which becomes good birth in
+ devotion to country or individual honour&mdash;does no good to a nation.
+ It is a misfortune which statesmen of democratic creed ought to recognize,
+ that the class of the well-born cannot be destroyed: it must remain as it
+ remained in Rome and remains in France, after all efforts to extirpate it,
+ as the most dangerous class of citizens when you deprive it of the
+ attributes which made it the most serviceable. I am not speaking of that
+ class; I speak of that unclassified order peculiar to England, which, no
+ doubt, forming itself originally from the ideal standard of honour and
+ truth supposed to be maintained by the <i>gentilshommes</i>, or well-born,
+ no longer requires pedigrees and acres to confer upon its members the
+ designation of gentleman; and when I hear a &lsquo;gentleman&rsquo; say that he has no
+ option but to think one thing and say another, at whatever risk to his
+ country, I feel as if in the progress of the age the class of gentleman
+ was about to be superseded by some finer development of species.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therewith Kenelm rose, and would have taken his departure, if Gordon had
+ not seized his hand and detained him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear cousin, if I may so call you,&rdquo; he said, with the frank manner
+ which was usual to him, and which suited well the bold expression of his
+ face and the clear ring of his voice, &ldquo;I am one of those who, from an
+ over-dislike to sentimentality and cant, often make those not intimately
+ acquainted with them think worse of their principles than they deserve. It
+ may be quite true that a man who goes with his party dislikes the measures
+ he feels bound to support, and says so openly when among friends and
+ relations, yet that man is not therefore devoid of loyalty and honour; and
+ I trust, when you know me better, you will not think it likely I should
+ derogate from that class of gentlemen to which we both belong.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me if I seemed rude,&rdquo; answered Kenelm; &ldquo;ascribe it to my ignorance
+ of the necessities of public life. It struck me that where a politician
+ thought a thing evil, he ought not to support it as good. But I dare say I
+ am mistaken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Entirely mistaken,&rdquo; said Mivers, &ldquo;and for this reason: in politics
+ formerly there was a direct choice between good and evil. That rarely
+ exists now. Men of high education, having to choose whether to accept or
+ reject a measure forced upon their option by constituent bodies of very
+ low education, are called upon to weigh evil against evil,&mdash;the evil
+ of accepting or the evil of rejecting; and if they resolve on the first,
+ it is as the lesser evil of the two.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your definition is perfect,&rdquo; said Gordon, &ldquo;and I am contented to rest on
+ it my excuse for what my cousin deems insincerity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose that is real life,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with his mournful smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course it is,&rdquo; said Mivers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Every day I live,&rdquo; sighed Kenelm, &ldquo;still more confirms my conviction that
+ real life is a phantasmal sham. How absurd it is in philosophers to deny
+ the existence of apparitions! what apparitions we, living men, must seem
+ to the ghosts!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;The spirits of the wise
+ Sit in the clouds and mock us.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0063" id="link2HCH0063">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ CHILLINGLY GORDON did not fail to confirm his acquaintance with Kenelm. He
+ very often looked in upon him of a morning, sometimes joined him in his
+ afternoon rides, introduced him to men of his own set who were mostly busy
+ members of Parliament, rising barristers, or political journalists, but
+ not without a proportion of brilliant idlers,&mdash;club men, sporting
+ men, men of fashion, rank, and fortune. He did so with a purpose, for
+ these persons spoke well of him,&mdash;spoke well not only of his talents,
+ but of his honourable character. His general nickname amongst them was
+ &ldquo;HONEST GORDON.&rdquo; Kenelm at first thought this sobriquet must be ironical;
+ not a bit of it. It was given to him on account of the candour and
+ boldness with which he expressed opinions embodying that sort of cynicism
+ which is vulgarly called &ldquo;the absence of humbug.&rdquo; The man was certainly no
+ hypocrite; he affected no beliefs which he did not entertain. And he had
+ very few beliefs in anything, except the first half of the adage, &ldquo;Every
+ man for himself,&mdash;and God for us all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But whatever Chillingly Gordon&rsquo;s theoretical disbeliefs in things which
+ make the current creed of the virtuous, there was nothing in his conduct
+ which evinced predilection for vices: he was strictly upright in all his
+ dealings, and in delicate matters of honour was a favourite umpire amongst
+ his coevals. Though so frankly ambitious, no one could accuse him of
+ attempting to climb on the shoulders of patrons. There was nothing servile
+ in his nature; and, though he was perfectly prepared to bribe electors if
+ necessary, no money could have bought himself. His one master-passion was
+ the desire of power. He sneered at patriotism as a worn-out prejudice, at
+ philanthropy as a sentimental catch-word. He did not want to serve his
+ country, but to rule it. He did not want to raise mankind, but to rise
+ himself. He was therefore unscrupulous, unprincipled, as hungerers after
+ power for itself too often are; yet still if he got power he would
+ probably use it well, from the clearness and strength of his mental
+ perceptions. The impression he made on Kenelm may be seen in the following
+ letter:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ TO SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, BART., ETC.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR FATHER,&mdash;You and my dear mother will be pleased to hear that
+ London continues very polite to me: that &ldquo;arida nutrix leonum&rdquo; enrolls me
+ among the pet class of lions which ladies of fashion admit into the
+ society of their lapdogs. It is somewhere about six years since I was
+ allowed to gaze on this peep-show through the loopholes of Mr. Welby&rsquo;s
+ retreat. It appears to me, perhaps erroneously, that even within that
+ short space of time the tone of &ldquo;society&rdquo; is perceptibly changed. That the
+ change is for the better is an assertion I leave to those who belong to
+ the <i>progressista</i> party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I don&rsquo;t think nearly so many young ladies six years ago painted their
+ eyelids and dyed their hair: a few of them there might be, imitators of
+ the slang invented by schoolboys and circulated through the medium of
+ small novelists; they might use such expressions as &ldquo;stunning,&rdquo; &ldquo;cheek,&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;awfully jolly,&rdquo; etc. But now I find a great many who have advanced to a
+ slang beyond that of verbal expressions,&mdash;a slang of mind, a slang of
+ sentiment, a slang in which very little seems left of the woman and
+ nothing at all of the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Newspaper essayists assert that the young men of the day are to blame for
+ this; that the young men like it; and the fair husband-anglers dress their
+ flies in the colours most likely to attract a nibble. Whether this excuse
+ be the true one I cannot pretend to judge; but it strikes me that the men
+ about my own age who affect to be fast are a more languid race than the
+ men from ten to twenty years older, whom they regard as <i>slow</i>. The
+ habit of dram-drinking in the morning is a very new idea, an idea greatly
+ in fashion at the moment. Adonis calls for a &ldquo;pick-me-up&rdquo; before he has
+ strength enough to answer a <i>billet-doux</i> from Venus. Adonis has not
+ the strength to get nobly drunk, but his delicate constitution requires
+ stimulants, and he is always tippling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men of high birth or renown for social success belonging, my dear
+ father, to your time, are still distinguished by an air of good breeding,
+ by a style of conversation more or less polished and not without evidences
+ of literary culture, from men of the same rank in my generation, who
+ appear to pride themselves on respecting nobody and knowing nothing, not
+ even grammar. Still we are assured that the world goes on steadily
+ improving. <i>That</i> new idea is in full vigour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Society in the concrete has become wonderfully conceited as to its own
+ progressive excellences, and the individuals who form the concrete
+ entertain the same complacent opinion of themselves. There are, of course,
+ even in my brief and imperfect experience, many exceptions to what appear
+ to me the prevalent characteristics of the rising generation in &ldquo;society.&rdquo;
+ Of these exceptions I must content myself with naming the most remarkable.
+ <i>Place aux dames</i>, the first I name is Cecilia Travers. She and her
+ father are now in town, and I meet them frequently. I can conceive no
+ civilized era in the world which a woman like Cecilia Travers would not
+ grace and adorn, because she is essentially the type of woman as man likes
+ to imagine woman; namely, on the fairest side of the womanly character.
+ And I say &ldquo;woman&rdquo; rather than &ldquo;girl,&rdquo; because among &ldquo;Girls of the Period&rdquo;
+ Cecilia Travers cannot be classed. You might call her damsel, virgin,
+ maiden, but you could no more call her girl than you could call a
+ well-born French demoiselle <i>fille</i>. She is handsome enough to please
+ the eye of any man, however fastidious, but not that kind of beauty which
+ dazzles all men too much to fascinate one man; for&mdash;speaking, thank
+ Heaven, from mere theory&mdash;I apprehend that the love for woman has in
+ it a strong sense of property; that one requires to individualize one&rsquo;s
+ possession as being wholly one&rsquo;s own, and not a possession which all the
+ public are invited to admire. I can readily understand how a rich man, who
+ has what is called a show place, in which the splendid rooms and the
+ stately gardens are open to all inspectors, so that he has no privacy in
+ his own demesnes, runs away to a pretty cottage which he has all to
+ himself, and of which he can say, &ldquo;<i>This</i> is home; <i>this</i> is all
+ mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there are some kinds of beauty which are eminently show places,&mdash;which
+ the public think they have as much a right to admire as the owner has; and
+ the show place itself would be dull and perhaps fall out of repair, if the
+ public could be excluded from the sight of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beauty of Cecilia Travers is not that of a show place. There is a
+ feeling of safety in her. If Desdemona had been like her, Othello would
+ not have been jealous. But then Cecilia would not have deceived her
+ father; nor I think have told a blackamoor that she wished &ldquo;Heaven had
+ made her such a man.&rdquo; Her mind harmonizes with her person: it is a
+ companionable mind. Her talents are not showy, but, take them altogether,
+ they form a pleasant whole: she has good sense enough in the practical
+ affairs of life, and enough of that ineffable womanly gift called tact to
+ counteract the effects of whimsical natures like mine, and yet enough
+ sense of the humouristic views of life not to take too literally all that
+ a whimsical man like myself may say. As to temper, one never knows what a
+ woman&rsquo;s temper is&mdash;till one puts her out of it. But I imagine hers,
+ in its normal state, to be serene, and disposed to be cheerful. Now, my
+ dear father, if you were not one of the cleverest of men you would infer
+ from this eulogistic mention of Cecilia Travers that I was in love with
+ her. But you no doubt will detect the truth that a man in love with a
+ woman does not weigh her merits with so steady a hand as that which guides
+ this steel pen. I am not in love with Cecilia Travers. I wish I were. When
+ Lady Glenalvon, who remains wonderfully kind to me, says, day after day,
+ &ldquo;Cecilia Travers would make you a perfect wife,&rdquo; I have no answer to give;
+ but I don&rsquo;t feel the least inclined to ask Cecilia Travers if she would
+ waste her perfection on one who so coldly concedes it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I find that she persisted in rejecting the man whom her father wished her
+ to marry, and that he has consoled himself by marrying somebody else. No
+ doubt other suitors as worthy will soon present themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, dearest of all my friends,&mdash;sole friend whom I regard as a
+ confidant,&mdash;shall I ever be in love? and if not, why not? Sometimes I
+ feel as if, with love as with ambition, it is because I have some
+ impossible ideal in each, that I must always remain indifferent to the
+ sort of love and the sort of ambition which are within my reach. I have an
+ idea that if I did love, I should love as intensely as Romeo, and that
+ thought inspires me with vague forebodings of terror; and if I did find an
+ object to arouse my ambition, I could be as earnest in its pursuit as&mdash;whom
+ shall I name?&mdash;Caesar or Cato? I like Cato&rsquo;s ambition the better of
+ the two. But people nowadays call ambition an impracticable crotchet, if
+ it be invested on the losing side. Cato would have saved Rome from the mob
+ and the dictator; but Rome could not be saved, and Cato falls on his own
+ sword. Had we a Cato now, the verdict at a coroner&rsquo;s inquest would be,
+ &ldquo;suicide while in a state of unsound mind;&rdquo; and the verdict would have
+ been proved by his senseless resistance to a mob and a dictator! Talking
+ of ambition, I come to the other exception to the youth of the day; I have
+ named a <i>demoiselle</i>, I now name a <i>damoiseau</i>. Imagine a man of
+ about five-and-twenty, and who is morally about fifty years older than a
+ healthy man of sixty,&mdash;imagine him with the brain of age and the
+ flower of youth; with a heart absorbed into the brain, and giving warm
+ blood to frigid ideas: a man who sneers at everything I call lofty, yet
+ would do nothing that he thinks mean; to whom vice and virtue are as
+ indifferent as they were to the Aesthetics of Goethe; who would never
+ jeopardize his career as a practical reasoner by an imprudent virtue, and
+ never sully his reputation by a degrading vice. Imagine this man with an
+ intellect keen, strong, ready, unscrupulous, dauntless,&mdash;all
+ cleverness and no genius. Imagine this man, and then do not be astonished
+ when I tell you he is a Chillingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chillingly race culminates in him, and becomes Chillinglyest. In fact,
+ it seems to me that we live in a day precisely suited to the Chillingly
+ idiosyncrasies. During the ten centuries or more that our race has held
+ local habitation and a name, it has been as airy nothings. Its
+ representatives lived in hot-blooded times, and were compelled to skulk in
+ still water with their emblematic daces. But the times now, my dear
+ father, are so cold-blooded that you can&rsquo;t be too cold-blooded to prosper.
+ What could Chillingly Mivers have been in an age when people cared
+ twopence-halfpenny about their religious creeds, and their political
+ parties deemed their cause was sacred and their leaders were heroes?
+ Chillingly Mivers would not have found five subscribers to &ldquo;The Londoner.&rdquo;
+ But now &ldquo;The Londoner&rdquo; is the favourite organ of the intellectual public;
+ it sneers away all the foundations of the social system, without an
+ attempt at reconstruction; and every new journal set up, if it keep its
+ head above water, models itself on &ldquo;The Londoner.&rdquo; Chillingly Mivers is a
+ great man, and the most potent writer of the age, though nobody knows what
+ he has written. Chillingly Gordon is a still more notable instance of the
+ rise of the Chillingly worth in the modern market.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a general impression in the most authoritative circles that
+ Chillingly Gordon will have high rank in the van of the coming men. His
+ confidence in himself is so thorough that it infects all with whom he
+ comes into contact,&mdash;myself included.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said to me the other day, with a <i>sang-froid</i> worthy of the iciest
+ Chillingly, &ldquo;I mean to be Prime Minister of England: it is only a question
+ of time.&rdquo; Now, if Chillingly Gordon is to be Prime Minister, it will be
+ because the increasing cold of our moral and social atmosphere will
+ exactly suit the development of his talents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is the man above all others to argue down the declaimers of
+ old-fashioned sentimentalities,&mdash;love of country, care for its
+ position among nations, zeal for its honour, pride in its renown. (Oh, if
+ you could hear him philosophically and logically sneer away the word
+ &ldquo;prestige&rdquo;!) Such notions are fast being classified as &ldquo;bosh.&rdquo; And when
+ that classification is complete,&mdash;when England has no colonies to
+ defend, no navy to pay for, no interest in the affairs of other nations,
+ and has attained to the happy condition of Holland,&mdash;then Chillingly
+ Gordon will be her Prime Minister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet while, if ever I am stung into political action, it will be by
+ abnegation of the Chillingly attributes, and in opposition, however
+ hopeless, to Chillingly Gordon, I feel that this man cannot be suppressed,
+ and ought to have fair play; his ambition will be infinitely more
+ dangerous if it become soured by delay. I propose, my dear father, that
+ you should have the honour of laying this clever kinsman under an
+ obligation, and enabling him to enter Parliament. In our last conversation
+ at Exmundham, you told me of the frank resentment of Gordon <i>pere</i>,
+ when my coming into the world shut him out from the Exmundham inheritance;
+ you confided to me your intention at that time to lay by yearly a sum that
+ might ultimately serve as a provision for Gordon <i>fils</i>, and as some
+ compensation for the loss of his expectations when you realized your hope
+ of an heir; you told me also how this generous intention on your part had
+ been frustrated by a natural indignation at the elder Gordon&rsquo;s conduct in
+ his harassing and costly litigation, and by the addition you had been
+ tempted to make to the estate in a purchase which added to its acreage,
+ but at a rate of interest which diminished your own income, and precluded
+ the possibility of further savings. Now, chancing to meet your lawyer, Mr.
+ Vining, the other day, I learned from him that it had been long a wish
+ which your delicacy prevented your naming to me, that I, to whom the
+ fee-simple descends, should join with you in cutting off the entail and
+ resettling the estate. He showed me what an advantage this would be to the
+ property, because it would leave your hands free for many improvements in
+ which I heartily go with the progress of the age, for which, as merely
+ tenant for life, you could not raise the money except upon ruinous terms;
+ new cottages for labourers, new buildings for tenants, the consolidation
+ of some old mortgages and charges on the rent-roll, etc. And allow me to
+ add that I should like to make a large increase to the jointure of my dear
+ mother. Vining says, too, that there is a part of the outlying land which,
+ as being near a town, could be sold to considerable profit if the estate
+ were resettled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us hasten to complete the necessary deeds, and so obtain the L20,000
+ required for the realization of your noble and, let me add, your just
+ desire to do something for Chillingly Gordon. In the new deeds of
+ settlement we could insure the power of willing the estate as we pleased,
+ and I am strongly against devising it to Chillingly Gordon. It may be a
+ crotchet of mine, but one which I think you share, that the owner of
+ English soil should have a son&rsquo;s love for the native land, and Gordon will
+ never have that. I think, too, that it will be best for his own career,
+ and for the establishment of a frank understanding between us and himself,
+ that he should be fairly told that he would not be benefited in the event
+ of our death. Twenty thousand pounds given to him now would be a greater
+ boon to him than ten times the sum twenty years later. With that at his
+ command, he can enter Parliament, and have an income, added to what he now
+ possesses, if modest, still sufficient to make him independent of a
+ minister&rsquo;s patronage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pray humour me, my dearest father, in the proposition I venture to submit
+ to you.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Your affectionate son, KENELM.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ FROM SIR PETER CHILLINGLY TO KENELM CHILLINGLY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR BOY,&mdash;You are not worthy to be a Chillingly; you are
+ decidedly warm-blooded: never was a load lifted off a man&rsquo;s mind with a
+ gentler hand. Yes, I have wished to cut off the entail and resettle the
+ property; but, as it was eminently to my advantage to do so, I shrank from
+ asking it, though eventually it would be almost as much to your own
+ advantage. What with the purchase I made of the Faircleuch lands&mdash;which
+ I could only effect by money borrowed at high interest on my personal
+ security, and paid off by yearly instalments, eating largely into income&mdash;and
+ the old mortgages, etc., I own I have been pinched of late years. But what
+ rejoices me the most is the power to make homes for our honest labourers
+ more comfortable, and nearer to their work, which last is the chief point,
+ for the old cottages in themselves are not bad; the misfortune is, when
+ you build an extra room for the children, the silly people let it out to a
+ lodger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My dear boy, I am very much touched by your wish to increase your mother&rsquo;s
+ jointure,&mdash;a very proper wish, independently of filial feeling, for
+ she brought to the estate a very pretty fortune, which, the trustees
+ consented to my investing in land; and though the land completed our
+ ring-fence, it does not bring in two per cent, and the conditions of the
+ entail limited the right of jointure to an amount below that which a
+ widowed Lady Chillingly may fairly expect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I care more about the provision on these points than I do for the
+ interests of old Chillingly Gordon&rsquo;s son. I had meant to behave very
+ handsomely to the father; and when the return for behaving handsomely is
+ being put into Chancery&mdash;A Worm Will Turn. Nevertheless, I agree with
+ you that a son should not be punished for his father&rsquo;s faults; and, if the
+ sacrifice of L20,000 makes you and myself feel that we are better
+ Christians and truer gentlemen, we shall buy that feeling very cheaply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter then proceeded, half jestingly, half seriously, to combat
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s declaration that he was not in love with Cecilia Travers; and,
+ urging the advantages of marriage with one whom Kenelm allowed would be a
+ perfect wife, astutely remarked that unless Kenelm had a son of his own it
+ did not seem to him quite just to the next of kin to will the property
+ from him, upon no better plea than the want of love for his native
+ country. &ldquo;He would love his country fast enough if he had 10,000 acres in
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm shook his head when he came to this sentence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is even then love for one&rsquo;s country but cupboard-love after all?&rdquo; said
+ he; and he postponed finishing the perusal of his father&rsquo;s letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0064" id="link2HCH0064">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM CHILLINGLY did not exaggerate the social position he had acquired
+ when he classed himself amongst the lions of the fashionable world. I dare
+ not count the number of three-cornered notes showered upon him by the fine
+ ladies who grow romantic upon any kind of celebrity; or the carefully
+ sealed envelopes, containing letters from fair Anonymas, who asked if he
+ had a heart, and would be in such a place in the Park at such an hour.
+ What there was in Kenelm Chillingly that should make him thus favoured,
+ especially by the fair sex, it would be difficult to say, unless it was
+ the two-fold reputation of being unlike other people, and of being
+ unaffectedly indifferent to the gain of any reputation at all. He might,
+ had he so pleased, have easily established a proof that the prevalent
+ though vague belief in his talents was not altogether unjustified. For the
+ articles he had sent from abroad to &ldquo;The Londoner&rdquo; and by which his
+ travelling expenses were defrayed, had been stamped by that sort of
+ originality in tone and treatment which rarely fails to excite curiosity
+ as to the author, and meets with more general praise than perhaps it
+ deserves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mivers was true to his contract to preserve inviolable the incognito
+ of the author, and Kenelm regarded with profound contempt the articles
+ themselves and the readers who praised them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as misanthropy with some persons grows out of benevolence
+ disappointed, so there are certain natures&mdash;and Kenelm Chillingly&rsquo;s
+ was perhaps one of them&mdash;in which indifferentism grows out of
+ earnestness baffled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had promised himself pleasure in renewing acquaintance with his old
+ tutor, Mr. Welby,&mdash;pleasure in refreshing his own taste for
+ metaphysics and casuistry and criticism. But that accomplished professor
+ of realism had retired from philosophy altogether, and was now enjoying a
+ holiday for life in the business of a public office. A minister in favour
+ of whom, when in opposition, Mr. Welby, in a moment of whim, wrote some
+ very able articles in a leading journal, had, on acceding to power,
+ presented the realist with one of those few good things still left to
+ ministerial patronage,&mdash;a place worth about L1,200 a year. His
+ mornings thus engaged in routine work, Mr. Welby enjoyed his evenings in a
+ convivial way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Inveni portum</i>,&rdquo; he said to Kenelm; &ldquo;I plunge into no troubled
+ waters now. But come and dine with me to-morrow, tete-a-tete. My wife is
+ at St. Leonard&rsquo;s with my youngest born for the benefit of sea-air.&rdquo; Kenelm
+ accepted the invitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dinner would have contented a Brillat-Savarin: it was faultless; and
+ the claret was that rare nectar, the Lafitte of 1848.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never share this,&rdquo; said Welby, &ldquo;with more than one friend at a time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm sought to engage his host in discussion on certain new works in
+ vogue, and which were composed according to purely realistic canons of
+ criticism. &ldquo;The more realistic; these books pretend to be, the less real
+ they are,&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;I am half inclined to think that the whole school
+ you so systematically sought to build up is a mistake, and that realism in
+ art is a thing impossible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dare say you are right. I took up that school in earnest because I was
+ in a passion with pretenders to the Idealistic school; and whatever one
+ takes up in earnest is generally a mistake, especially if one is in a
+ passion. I was not in earnest and I was not in a passion when I wrote
+ those articles to which I am indebted for my office.&rdquo; Mr. Welby here
+ luxuriously stretched his limbs, and lifting his glass to his lips,
+ voluptuously inhaled its bouquet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You sadden me,&rdquo; returned Kenelm. &ldquo;It is a melancholy thing to find that
+ one&rsquo;s mind was influenced in youth by a teacher who mocks at his own
+ teachings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Welby shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;Life consists in the alternate process of
+ learning and unlearning; but it is often wiser to unlearn than to learn.
+ For the rest, as I have ceased to be a critic, I care little whether I was
+ wrong or right when I played that part. I think I am right now as a
+ placeman. Let the world go its own way, provided the world lets you live
+ upon it. I drain my wine to the lees, and cut down hope to the brief span
+ of life. Reject realism in art if you please, and accept realism in
+ conduct. For the first time in my life I am comfortable: my mind, having
+ worn out its walking-shoes, is now enjoying the luxury of slippers. Who
+ can deny the realism of comfort?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has a man a right,&rdquo; Kenelm said to himself, as he entered his brougham,
+ &ldquo;to employ all the brilliancy of a rare wit, all the acquisitions of as
+ rare a scholarship, to the scaring of the young generation out of the safe
+ old roads which youth left to itself would take,&mdash;old roads skirted
+ by romantic rivers and bowery trees,&mdash;directing them into new paths
+ on long sandy flats, and then, when they are faint and footsore, to tell
+ them that he cares not a pin whether they have worn out their shoes in
+ right paths or wrong paths, for that he has attained the <i>summum bonum</i>
+ of philosophy in the comfort of easy slippers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before he could answer the question he thus put to himself, his brougham
+ stopped at the door of the minister whom Welby had contributed to bring
+ into power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night there was a crowded muster of the fashionable world at the
+ great man&rsquo;s house. It happened to be a very critical moment for the
+ minister. The fate of his cabinet depended on the result of a motion about
+ to be made the following week in the House of Commons. The great man stood
+ at the entrance of the apartments to receive his guests, and among the
+ guests were the framers of the hostile motion and the leaders of the
+ opposition. His smile was not less gracious to them than to his dearest
+ friends and stanchest supporters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose this is realism,&rdquo; said Kenelm to himself; &ldquo;but it is not truth,
+ and it is not comfort.&rdquo; Leaning against the wall near the doorway, he
+ contemplated with grave interest the striking countenance of his
+ distinguished host. He detected beneath that courteous smile and that
+ urbane manner the signs of care. The eye was absent, the cheek pinched,
+ the brow furrowed. Kenelm turned away his looks, and glanced over the
+ animated countenances of the idle loungers along commoner thoroughfares in
+ life. Their eyes were not absent; their brows were not furrowed; their
+ minds seemed quite at home in exchanging nothings. Interest many of them
+ had in the approaching struggle, but it was much such an interest as
+ betters of small sums may have on the Derby day,&mdash;just enough to give
+ piquancy to the race; nothing to make gain a great joy, or loss a keen
+ anguish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our host is looking ill,&rdquo; said Mivers, accosting Kenelm. &ldquo;I detect
+ symptoms of suppressed gout. You know my aphorism, &lsquo;nothing so gouty as
+ ambition,&rsquo; especially Parliamentary ambition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not one of those friends who press on my choice of life that
+ source of disease; allow me to thank you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your thanks are misplaced. I strongly advise you to devote yourself to a
+ political career.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Despite the gout?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Despite the gout. If you could take the world as I do, my advice might be
+ different. But your mind is overcrowded with doubts and fantasies and
+ crotchets, and you have no choice but to give them vent in active life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You had something to do in making me what I am,&mdash;an idler; something
+ to answer for as to my doubts, fantasies, and crotchets. It was by your
+ recommendation that I was placed under the tuition of Mr. Welby, and at
+ that critical age in which the bent of the twig forms the shape of the
+ tree.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I pride myself on that counsel. I repeat the reasons for which I gave
+ it: it is an incalculable advantage for a young man to start in life
+ thoroughly initiated into the New Ideas which will more or less influence
+ his generation. Welby was the ablest representative of these ideas. It is
+ a wondrous good fortune when the propagandist of the New Ideas is
+ something more than a bookish philosopher,&mdash;when he is a thorough
+ &lsquo;man of the world,&rsquo; and is what we emphatically call &lsquo;practical.&rsquo; Yes, you
+ owe me much that I secured to you such tuition, and saved you from twaddle
+ and sentiment, the poetry of Wordsworth and the muscular Christianity of
+ Cousin John.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What you say that you saved me from might have done me more good than all
+ you conferred on me. I suspect that when education succeeds in placing an
+ old head upon young shoulders the combination is not healthful: it clogs
+ the blood and slackens the pulse. However, I must not be ungrateful; you
+ meant kindly. Yes, I suppose Welby is practical: he has no belief, and he
+ has got a place. But our host, I presume, is also practical; his place is
+ a much higher one than Welby&rsquo;s, and yet he is surely not without belief?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was born before the new ideas came into practical force; but in
+ proportion as they have done so, his beliefs have necessarily disappeared.
+ I don&rsquo;t suppose that he believes in much now, except the two propositions:
+ firstly, that if he accept the new ideas he will have power and keep it,
+ and if he does not accept them power is out of the question; and,
+ secondly, that if the new ideas are to prevail he is the best man to
+ direct them safely,&mdash;beliefs quite enough for a minister. No wise
+ minister should have more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does he not believe that the motion he is to resist next week is a bad
+ one?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A bad one of course, in its consequences, for if it succeed it will upset
+ him; a good one in itself I am sure he must think it, for he would bring
+ it on himself if he were in opposition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see that Pope&rsquo;s definition is still true, &lsquo;Party is the madness of the
+ many for the gain of the few.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it is not true. Madness is a wrong word applied to the many: the many
+ are sane enough; they know their own objects, and they make use of the
+ intellect of the few in order to gain their objects. In each party it is
+ the many that control the few who nominally lead them. A man becomes Prime
+ Minister because he seems to the many of his party the fittest person to
+ carry out their views. If he presume to differ from these views, they put
+ him into a moral pillory, and pelt him with their dirtiest stones and
+ their rottenest eggs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then the maxim should be reversed, and party is rather the madness of the
+ few for the gain of the many?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of the two, that is the more correct definition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me keep my senses and decline to be one of the few.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm moved away from his cousin&rsquo;s side, and entering one of the less
+ crowded rooms, saw Cecilia Travers seated there in a recess with Lady
+ Glenalvon. He joined them, and after a brief interchange of a few
+ commonplaces, Lady Glenalvon quitted her post to accost a foreign
+ ambassadress, and Kenelm sank into the chair she vacated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a relief to his eye to contemplate Cecilia&rsquo;s candid brow; to his
+ ear to hearken to the soft voice that had no artificial tones, and uttered
+ no cynical witticisms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you think it strange,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;that we English should so
+ mould all our habits as to make even what we call pleasure as little
+ pleasurable as possible? We are now in the beginning of June, the fresh
+ outburst of summer, when every day in the country is a delight to eye and
+ ear, and we say, &lsquo;The season for hot rooms is beginning.&rsquo; We alone of
+ civilized races spend our summer in a capital, and cling to the country
+ when the trees are leafless and the brooks frozen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly that is a mistake; but I love the country in all seasons, even
+ in winter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Provided the country house is full of London people?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; that is rather a drawback. I never want companions in the country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True; I should have remembered that you differ from young ladies in
+ general, and make companions of books. They are always more conversable in
+ the country than they are in town; or rather, we listen there to them with
+ less distracted attention. Ha! do I not recognize yonder the fair whiskers
+ of George Belvoir? Who is the lady leaning on his arm?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you know?&mdash;Lady Emily Belvoir, his wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! I was told that he had married. The lady is handsome. She will become
+ the family diamonds. Does she read Blue-books?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will ask her if you wish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, it is scarcely worth while. During my rambles abroad I saw but few
+ English newspapers. I did, however, learn that George had won his
+ election. Has he yet spoken in Parliament?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; he moved the answer to the Address this session, and was much
+ complimented on the excellent tone and taste of his speech. He spoke again
+ a few weeks afterwards, I fear not so successfully.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Coughed down?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something like it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do him good; he will recover the cough, and fulfil my prophecy of his
+ success.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you done with poor George for the present? If so, allow me to ask
+ whether you have quite forgotten Will Somers and Jessie Wiles?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgotten them! no.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you have never asked after them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I took it for granted that they were as happy as could be expected. Pray
+ assure me that they are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust so now; but they have had trouble, and have left Graveleigh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Trouble! left Graveleigh! You make me uneasy. Pray explain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They had not been three months married and installed in the home they
+ owed to you, when poor Will was seized with a rheumatic fever. He was
+ confined to his bed for many weeks; and, when at last he could move from
+ it, was so weak as to be still unable to do any work. During his illness
+ Jessie had no heart and little leisure to attend to the shop. Of course I&mdash;that
+ is, my dear father&mdash;gave them all necessary assistance; but&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand; they were reduced to objects of charity. Brute that I am,
+ never to have thought of the duties I owed to the couple I had brought
+ together. But pray go on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are aware that just before you left us my father received a proposal
+ to exchange his property at Graveleigh for some lands more desirable to
+ him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I remember. He closed with that offer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; Captain Stavers, the new landlord of Graveleigh, seems to be a very
+ bad man; and though he could not turn the Somerses out of the cottage so
+ long as they paid rent, which we took care they did pay,&mdash;yet out of
+ a very wicked spite he set up a rival shop in one of his other cottages in
+ the village, and it became impossible for these poor young people to get a
+ livelihood at Graveleigh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What excuse for spite against so harmless a young couple could Captain
+ Stavers find or invent?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia looked down and coloured. &ldquo;It was a revengeful feeling against
+ Jessie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, I comprehend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But they have now left the village, and are happily settled elsewhere.
+ Will has recovered his health, and they are prospering much more than they
+ could ever have done at Graveleigh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In that change you were their benefactress, Miss Travers?&rdquo; said Kenelm,
+ in a more tender voice and with a softer eye than he had ever before
+ evinced towards the heiress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, it is not I whom they have to thank and bless.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who, then, is it? Your father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. Do not question me. I am bound not to say. They do not themselves
+ know; they rather believe that their gratitude is due to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To me! Am I to be forever a sham in spite of myself? My dear Miss
+ Travers, it is essential to my honour that I should undeceive this
+ credulous pair; where can I find them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must not say; but I will ask permission of their concealed benefactor,
+ and send you their address.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A touch was laid on Kenelm&rsquo;s arm, and a voice whispered, &ldquo;May I ask you to
+ present me to Miss Travers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Travers,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;I entreat you to add to the list of your
+ acquaintances a cousin of mine,&mdash;Mr. Chillingly Gordon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Gordon addressed to Cecilia the well-bred conventionalisms with
+ which acquaintance in London drawing-rooms usually commences, Kenelm,
+ obedient to a sign from Lady Glenalvon, who had just re-entered the room,
+ quitted his seat, and joined the marchioness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is not that young man whom you left talking with Miss Travers your clever
+ cousin Gordon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The same.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is listening to him with great attention. How his face brightens up
+ as he talks! He is positively handsome, thus animated.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I could fancy him a dangerous wooer. He has wit and liveliness and
+ audacity; he could be very much in love with a great fortune, and talk to
+ the owner of it with a fervour rarely exhibited by a Chillingly. Well, it
+ is no affair of mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It ought to be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas and alas! that &ldquo;ought to be;&rdquo; what depths of sorrowful meaning lie
+ within that simple phrase! How happy would be our lives, how grand our
+ actions, how pure our souls, if all could be with us as it ought to be!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0065" id="link2HCH0065">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WE often form cordial intimacies in the confined society of a country
+ house, or a quiet watering-place, or a small Continental town, which fade
+ away into remote acquaintanceship in the mighty vortex of London life,
+ neither party being to blame for the estrangement. It was so with Leopold
+ Travers and Kenelm Chillingly. Travers, as we have seen, had felt a
+ powerful charm in the converse of the young stranger, so in contrast with
+ the routine of the rural companionships to which his alert intellect had
+ for many years circumscribed its range. But on reappearing in London the
+ season before Kenelm again met him, he had renewed old friendships with
+ men of his own standing,&mdash;officers in the regiment of which he had
+ once been a popular ornament, some of them still unmarried, a few of them
+ like himself widowed, others who had been his rivals in fashion, and were
+ still pleasant idlers about town; and it rarely happens in a metropolis
+ that we have intimate friendships with those of another generation, unless
+ there be some common tie in the cultivation of art and letters, or the
+ action of kindred sympathies in the party strife of politics. Therefore
+ Travers and Kenelm had had little familiar communication with each other
+ since they first met at the Beaumanoirs&rsquo;. Now and then they found
+ themselves at the same crowded assemblies, and interchanged nods and
+ salutations. But their habits were different; the houses at which they
+ were intimate were not the same, neither did they frequent the same clubs.
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s chief bodily exercise was still that of long and early rambles
+ into rural suburbs; Leopold&rsquo;s was that of a late ride in the Row. Of the
+ two, Leopold was much more the man of pleasure. Once restored to
+ metropolitan life, a temper constitutionally eager, ardent, and convivial
+ took kindly, as in earlier youth, to its light range of enjoyments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the intercourse between the two men been as frankly familiar as it had
+ been at Neesdale Park, Kenelm would probably have seen much more of
+ Cecilia at her own home; and the admiration and esteem with which she
+ already inspired him might have ripened into much warmer feeling, had he
+ thus been brought into clearer comprehension of the soft and womanly
+ heart, and its tender predisposition towards himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had said somewhat vaguely in his letter to Sir Peter, that &ldquo;sometimes
+ he felt as if his indifference to love, as to ambition, was because he had
+ some impossible ideal in each.&rdquo; Taking that conjecture to task, he could
+ not honestly persuade himself that he had formed any ideal of woman and
+ wife with which the reality of Cecilia Travers was at war. On the
+ contrary, the more he thought over the characteristics of Cecilia, the
+ more they seemed to correspond to any ideal that had floated before him in
+ the twilight of dreamy revery; and yet he knew that he was not in love
+ with her, that his heart did not respond to his reason; and mournfully he
+ resigned himself to the conviction that nowhere in this planet, from the
+ normal pursuits of whose inhabitants he felt so estranged, was there
+ waiting for him the smiling playmate, the earnest helpmate. As this
+ conviction strengthened, so an increased weariness of the artificial life
+ of the metropolis, and of all its objects and amusements, turned his
+ thoughts with an intense yearning towards the Bohemian freedom and fresh
+ excitements of his foot ramblings. He often thought with envy of the
+ wandering minstrel, and wondered whether, if he again traversed the same
+ range of country, he might encounter again that vagrant singer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0066" id="link2HCH0066">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT is nearly a week since Kenelm had met Cecilia, and he is sitting in his
+ rooms with Lord Thetford at that hour of three in the afternoon which is
+ found the most difficult to dispose of by idlers about town. Amongst young
+ men of his own age and class with whom Kenelm assorted in the fashionable
+ world, perhaps the one whom he liked the best, and of whom he saw the
+ most, was this young heir of the Beaumanoirs; and though Lord Thetford has
+ nothing to do with the direct stream of my story, it is worth pausing a
+ few minutes to sketch an outline of one of the best whom the last
+ generation has produced for a part that, owing to accidents of birth and
+ fortune, young men like Lord Thetford must play on that stage from which
+ the curtain is not yet drawn up. Destined to be the head of a family that
+ unites with princely possessions and a historical name a keen though
+ honourable ambition for political power, Lord Thetford has been care fully
+ educated, especially in the new ideas of his time. His father, though a
+ man of no ordinary talents, has never taken a prominent part in public
+ life. He desires his eldest son to do so. The Beaumanoirs have been Whigs
+ from the time of William III. They have shared the good and the ill
+ fortunes of a party which, whether we side with it or not, no politician
+ who dreads extremes in the government of a State so pre-eminently
+ artificial that a prevalent extreme at either end of the balance would be
+ fatal to equilibrium, can desire to become extinct or feeble so long as a
+ constitutional monarchy exists in England. From the reign of George I. to
+ the death of George IV., the Beaumanoirs were in the ascendant. Visit
+ their family portrait gallery, and you must admire the eminence of a house
+ which, during that interval of less than a century, contributed so many
+ men to the service of the State or the adornment of the Court,&mdash;so
+ many Ministers, Ambassadors, Generals, Lord Chamberlains, and Masters of
+ the Horse. When the younger Pitt beat the great Whig Houses, the
+ Beaumanoirs vanish into comparative obscurity; they reemerge with the
+ accession of William IV., and once more produce bulwarks of the State and
+ ornaments of the Crown. The present Lord of Beaumanoir, <i>poco curante</i>
+ in politics though he be, has at least held high offices at Court; and, as
+ a matter of course, he is Lord Lieutenant of his county, as well as Knight
+ of the Garter. He is a man whom the chiefs of his party have been
+ accustomed to consult on critical questions. He gives his opinions
+ confidentially and modestly, and when they are rejected never takes
+ offence. He thinks that a time is coming when the head of the Beaumanoirs
+ should descend into the lists and fight hand-to-hand with any Hodge or
+ Hobson in the cause of his country for the benefit of the Whigs. Too lazy
+ or too old to do this himself, he says to his son, &ldquo;You must do it:
+ without effort of mine the thing may last my life. It needs effort of
+ yours that the thing may last through your own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Thetford cheerfully responds to the paternal admonition. He curbs his
+ natural inclinations, which are neither inelegant nor unmanly; for, on the
+ one side, he is very fond of music and painting, an accomplished amateur,
+ and deemed a sound connoisseur in both; and, on the other side, he has a
+ passion for all field sports, and especially for hunting. He allows no
+ such attractions to interfere with diligent attention to the business of
+ the House of Commons. He serves in Committees, he takes the chair at
+ public meetings on sanitary questions or projects for social improvement,
+ and acquits himself well therein. He has not yet spoken in debate, but he
+ has only been two years in Parliament, and he takes his father&rsquo;s wise
+ advice not to speak till the third. But he is not without weight among the
+ well-born youth of the party, and has in him the stuff out of which, when
+ it becomes seasoned, the Corinthian capitals of a Cabinet may be very
+ effectively carved. In his own heart he is convinced that his party are
+ going too far and too fast; but with that party he goes on
+ light-heartedly, and would continue to do so if they went to Erebus. But
+ he would prefer their going the other way. For the rest, a pleasant,
+ bright-eyed young fellow, with vivid animal spirits; and, in the holiday
+ moments of reprieve from public duty he brings sunshine into draggling
+ hunting-fields, and a fresh breeze into heated ballrooms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear fellow,&rdquo; said Lord Thetford, as he threw aside his cigar, &ldquo;I
+ quite understand that you bore yourself: you have nothing else to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What can I do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Work.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Work!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you are clever enough to feel that you have a mind; and mind is a
+ restless inmate of body: it craves occupation of some sort, and regular
+ occupation too; it needs its daily constitutional exercise. Do you give
+ your mind that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure I don&rsquo;t know, but my mind is always busying itself about
+ something or other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In a desultory way,&mdash;with no fixed object.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Write a book, and then it will have its constitutional.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my mind is always writing a book (though it may not publish one),
+ always jotting down impressions, or inventing incidents, or investigating
+ characters; and between you and me, I do not think that I do bore myself
+ so much as I did formerly. Other people bore me more than they did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because you will not create an object in common with other people: come
+ into Parliament, side with a party, and you have that object.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean seriously to tell me that you are not bored in the House of
+ Commons?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With the speakers very often, yes; but with the strife between the
+ speakers, no. The House of Commons life has a peculiar excitement scarcely
+ understood out of it; but you may conceive its charm when you observe that
+ a man who has once been in the thick of it feels forlorn and shelved if he
+ lose his seat, and even repines when the accident of birth transfers him
+ to the serener air of the Upper House. Try that life, Chillingly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I might if I were an ultra-Radical, a Republican, a Communist, a
+ Socialist, and wished to upset everything existing, for then the strife
+ would at least be a very earnest one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But could not you be equally in earnest against those revolutionary
+ gentlemen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you and your leaders in earnest against them? They don&rsquo;t appear to me
+ so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thetford was silent for a minute. &ldquo;Well, if you doubt the principles of my
+ side, go with the other side. For my part, I and many of our party would
+ be glad to see the Conservatives stronger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no doubt they would. No sensible man likes to be carried off his
+ legs by the rush of the crowd behind him; and a crowd is less headlong
+ when it sees a strong force arrayed against it in front. But it seems to
+ me that, at present, Conservatism can but be what it now is,&mdash;a party
+ that may combine for resistance, and will not combine for inventive
+ construction. We are living in an age in which the process of unsettlement
+ is going blindly at work, as if impelled by a Nemesis as blind as itself.
+ New ideas come beating into surf and surge against those which former
+ reasoners had considered as fixed banks and breakwaters; and the new ideas
+ are so mutable, so fickle, that those which were considered novel ten
+ years ago are deemed obsolete to-day, and the new ones of to-day will in
+ their turn be obsolete to-morrow. And, in a sort of fatalism, you see
+ statesmen yielding way to these successive mockeries of experiment,&mdash;for
+ they are experiments against experience,&mdash;and saying to each other
+ with a shrug of the shoulders, &lsquo;Bismillah! it must be so; the country will
+ have it, even though it sends the country to the dogs.&rsquo; I don&rsquo;t feel sure
+ that the country will not go there the sooner, if you can only strengthen
+ the Conservative element enough to set it up in office, with the certainty
+ of knocking it down again. Alas! I am too dispassionate a looker-on to be
+ fit for a partisan: would I were not! Address yourself to my cousin
+ Gordon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Chillingly Gordon is a coming man, and has all the earnestness you
+ find absent in party and in yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You call him earnest?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thoroughly, in the pursuit of one object,&mdash;the advancement of
+ Chillingly Gordon. If he get into the House of Commons, and succeed there,
+ I hope he will never become my leader; for if he thought Christianity in
+ the way of his promotion, he would bring in a bill for its abolition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In that case would he still be your leader?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Kenelm, you don&rsquo;t know what is the spirit of party, and how
+ easily it makes excuses for any act of its leader. Of course, if Gordon
+ brought in a bill for the abolition of Christianity, it would be on the
+ plea that the abolition was good for the Christians, and his followers
+ would cheer that enlightened sentiment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with a sigh, &ldquo;I own myself the dullest of blockheads;
+ for instead of tempting me into the field of party politics, your talk
+ leaves me in stolid amaze that you do not take to your heels, where honour
+ can only be saved by flight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh! my dear Chillingly, we cannot run away from the age in which we
+ live: we must accept its conditions and make the best of them; and if the
+ House of Commons be nothing else, it is a famous debating society and a
+ capital club. Think over it. I must leave you now. I am going to see a
+ picture at the Exhibition which has been most truculently criticised in
+ &lsquo;The Londoner,&rsquo; but which I am assured, on good authority, is a work of
+ remarkable merit. I can&rsquo;t bear to see a man snarled and sneered down, no
+ doubt by jealous rivals, who have their influence in journals, so I shall
+ judge of the picture for myself. If it be really as good as I am told, I
+ shall talk about it to everybody I meet; and in matters of art I fancy my
+ word goes for something. Study art, my dear Kenelm. No gentleman&rsquo;s
+ education is complete if he does n&rsquo;t know a good picture from a bad one.
+ After the Exhibition I shall just have time for a canter round the Park
+ before the debate of the session, which begins to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a light step the young man quitted the room, humming an air from the
+ &ldquo;Figaro&rdquo; as he descended the stairs. From the window Kenelm watched him
+ swinging himself with careless grace into his saddle and riding briskly
+ down the street,&mdash;in form and face and bearing a very model of young,
+ high-born, high-bred manhood. &ldquo;The Venetians,&rdquo; muttered Kenelm,
+ &ldquo;decapitated Marino Faliero for conspiring against his own order,&mdash;the
+ nobles. The Venetians loved their institutions, and had faith in them. Is
+ there such love and such faith among the English?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he thus soliloquized he heard a shrilling sort of squeak; and a showman
+ stationed before his window the stage on which Punch satirizes the laws
+ and moralities of the world, &ldquo;kills the beadle and defies the devil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0067" id="link2HCH0067">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM turned from the sight of Punch and Punch&rsquo;s friend the cur, as his
+ servant, entering, said a person from the country, who would not give his
+ name, asked to see him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thinking it might be some message from his father, Kenelm ordered the
+ stranger to be admitted, and in another minute there entered a young man
+ of handsome countenance and powerful frame, in whom, after a surprised
+ stare, Kenelm recognized Tom Bowles. Difficult indeed would have been that
+ recognition to an unobservant beholder: no trace was left of the sullen
+ bully or the village farrier; the expression of the face was mild and
+ intelligent,&mdash;more bashful than hardy; the brute strength of the form
+ had lost its former clumsiness, the simple dress was that of a gentleman,&mdash;to
+ use an expressive idiom, the whole man was wonderfully &ldquo;toned down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am afraid, sir, I am taking a liberty,&rdquo; said Tom, rather nervously,
+ twiddling his hat between his fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should be a greater friend to liberty than I am if it were always taken
+ in the same way,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with a touch of his saturnine humour; but
+ then yielding at once to the warmer impulse of his nature, he grasped his
+ old antagonist&rsquo;s hand and exclaimed, &ldquo;My dear Tom, you are so welcome. I
+ am so glad to see you. Sit down, man; sit down: make yourself at home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not know you were back in England, sir, till within the last few
+ days; for you did say that when you came back I should see or hear from
+ you,&rdquo; and there was a tone of reproach in the last words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am to blame, forgive me,&rdquo; said Kenelm, remorsefully. &ldquo;But how did you
+ find me out? you did not then, I think, even know my name. That, however,
+ it was easy enough to discover; but who gave you my address in this
+ lodging?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir, it was Miss Travers; and she bade me come to you. Otherwise,
+ as you did not send for me, it was scarcely my place to call uninvited.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, my dear Tom, I never dreamed that you were in London. One don&rsquo;t ask
+ a man whom one supposes to be more than a hundred miles off to pay one an
+ afternoon call. You are still with your uncle, I presume? and I need not
+ ask if all thrives well with you: you look a prosperous man, every inch of
+ you, from crown to toe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Tom; &ldquo;thank you kindly, sir, I am doing well in the way of
+ business, and my uncle is to give me up the whole concern at Christmas.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Tom thus spoke Kenelm had summoned his servant, and ordered up such
+ refreshments as could be found in the larder of a bachelor in lodgings.
+ &ldquo;And what brings you to town, Tom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Travers wrote to me about a little business which she was good
+ enough to manage for me, and said you wished to know about it; and so,
+ after turning it over in my mind for a few days, I resolved to come to
+ town: indeed,&rdquo; added Tom, heartily, &ldquo;I did wish to see your face again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you talk riddles. What business of yours could Miss Travers imagine I
+ wished to know about?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom coloured high, and looked very embarrassed. Luckily, the servant here
+ entering with the refreshment-tray allowed him time to recover himself.
+ Kenelm helped him to a liberal slice of cold pigeon-pie, pressed wine on
+ him, and did not renew the subject till he thought his guest&rsquo;s tongue was
+ likely to be more freely set loose; then he said, laying a friendly hand
+ on Tom&rsquo;s shoulders, &ldquo;I have been thinking over what passed between me and
+ Miss Travers. I wished to have the new address of Will Somers; she
+ promised to write to his benefactor to ask permission to give it. You are
+ that benefactor?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say benefactor, sir. I will tell how it came about if you will let
+ me. You see, I sold my little place at Graveleigh to the new Squire, and
+ when Mother removed to Luscombe to be near me, she told me how poor Jessie
+ had been annoyed by Captain Stavers, who seems to think his purchase
+ included the young women on the property along with the standing timber;
+ and I was half afraid that she had given some cause for his persecution,
+ for you know she has a blink of those soft eyes of hers that might charm a
+ wise man out of his skin and put a fool there instead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I hope she has done with those blinks since her marriage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, and I honestly think she has. It is certain she did not encourage
+ Captain Stavers, for I went over to Graveleigh myself on the sly, and
+ lodged concealed with one of the cottagers who owed me a kindness; and one
+ day, as I was at watch, I saw the Captain peering over the stile which
+ divides Holmwood from the glebe,&mdash;you remember Holmwood?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t say I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The footway from the village to Squire Travers&rsquo;s goes through the wood,
+ which is a few hundred yards at the back of Will Somers&rsquo;s orchard.
+ Presently the Captain drew himself suddenly back from the stile, and
+ disappeared among the trees, and then I saw Jessie coming from the orchard
+ with a basket over her arm, and walking quick towards the wood. Then, sir,
+ my heart sank. I felt sure she was going to meet the Captain. However, I
+ crept along the hedgerow, hiding myself, and got into the wood almost as
+ soon as Jessie got there, by another way. Under the cover of the brushwood
+ I stole on till I saw the Captain come out from the copse on the other
+ side of the path, and plant himself just before Jessie. Then I saw at once
+ I had wronged her. She had not expected to see him, for she hastily turned
+ back, and began to run homeward; but he caught her up, and seized her by
+ the arm. I could not hear what he said, but I heard her voice quite sharp
+ with fright and anger. And then he suddenly seized her round the waist,
+ and she screamed, and I sprang forward&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thrashed the Captain?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I did not,&rdquo; said Tom; &ldquo;I had made a vow to myself that I never would
+ be violent again if I could help it. So I took him with one hand by the
+ cuff of the neck, and with the other by the waistband, and just pitched
+ him on a bramble bush,&mdash;quite mildly. He soon picked himself up, for
+ he is a dapper little chap, and became very blustering and abusive. But I
+ kept my temper, and said civilly, &lsquo;Little gentleman, hard words break no
+ bones; but if ever you molest Mrs. Somers again, I will carry you into her
+ orchard, souse you into the duck-pond there, and call all the villagers to
+ see you scramble out of it again; and I will do it now if you are not off.
+ I dare say you have heard of my name: I am Tom Bowles.&rsquo; Upon that his
+ face, which was before very red, grew very white, and muttering something
+ I did not hear, he walked away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jessie&mdash;I mean Mrs. Somers&mdash;seemed at first as much frightened
+ at me as she had been at the Captain; and though I offered to walk with
+ her to Miss Travers&rsquo;s, where she was going with a basket which the young
+ lady had ordered, she refused, and went back home. I felt hurt, and
+ returned to my uncle&rsquo;s the same evening; and it was not for months that I
+ heard the Captain had been spiteful enough to set up an opposition shop,
+ and that poor Will had been taken ill, and his wife was confined about the
+ same time, and the talk was that they were in distress and might have to
+ be sold up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I heard all this, I thought that after all it was my rough tongue
+ that had so angered the Captain and been the cause of his spite, and so it
+ was my duty to make it up to poor Will and his wife. I did not know how to
+ set about mending matters, but I thought I&rsquo;d go and talk to Miss Travers;
+ and if ever there was a kind heart in a girl&rsquo;s breast, hers is one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right there, I guess. What did Miss Travers say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay; I hardly know what she did say, but she set me thinking, and it
+ struck me that Jessie&mdash;Mrs. Somers&mdash;had better move to a
+ distance, and out of the Captain&rsquo;s reach, and that Will would do better in
+ a less out-of-the-way place. And then, by good luck, I read in the
+ newspaper that a stationary and a fancywork business, with a circulating
+ library, was to be sold on moderate terms at Moleswich, the other side of
+ London. So I took the train and went to the place, and thought the shop
+ would just suit these young folks, and not be too much work for either;
+ then I went to Miss Travers, and I had a lot of money lying by me from the
+ sale of the old forge and premises, which I did not know what to do with;
+ and so, to cut short a long story, I bought the business, and Will and his
+ wife are settled at Moleswich, thriving and happy, I hope, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom&rsquo;s voice quivered at the last words, and he turned aside quickly,
+ passing his hand over his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm was greatly moved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And they don&rsquo;t know what you did for them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To be sure not. I don&rsquo;t think Will would have let him self be beholden to
+ me. Ah! the lad has a spirit of his own, and Jessie&mdash;Mrs. Somers&mdash;would
+ have felt pained and humbled that I should even think of such a thing.
+ Miss Travers managed it all. They take the money as a loan which is to be
+ paid by instalments. They have sent Miss Travers more than one instalment
+ already, so I know they are doing well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A loan from Miss Travers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; Miss Travers wanted to have a share in it, but I begged her not. It
+ made me happy to do what I did all myself; and Miss Travers felt for me
+ and did not press. They perhaps think it is Squire Travers (though he is
+ not a man who would like to say it, for fear it should bring applicants on
+ him), or some other gentleman who takes an interest in them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I always said you were a grand fellow, Tom. But you are grander still
+ than I thought you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If there be any good in me, I owe it to you, sir. Think what a drunken,
+ violent brute I was when I first met you. Those walks with you, and I may
+ say that other gentleman&rsquo;s talk, and then that long kind letter I had from
+ you, not signed in your name, and written from abroad,&mdash;all these
+ changed me, as the child is changed at nurse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have evidently read a good deal since we parted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; I belong to our young men&rsquo;s library and institute; and when of an
+ evening I get hold of a book, especially a pleasant story-book, I don&rsquo;t
+ care for other company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you never seen any other girl you could care for, and wish to
+ marry?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, sir,&rdquo; answered Tom, &ldquo;a man does not go so mad for a girl as I did for
+ Jessie Wiles, and when it is all over, and he has come to his senses, put
+ his heart into joint again as easily as if it were only a broken leg. I
+ don&rsquo;t say that I may not live to love and to marry another woman: it is my
+ wish to do so. But I know that I shall love Jessie to my dying day; but
+ not sinfully, sir,&mdash;not sinfully. I would not wrong her by a
+ thought.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a long pause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last Kenelm said, &ldquo;You promised to be kind to that little girl with the
+ flower-ball; what has become of her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is quite well, thank you, sir. My aunt has taken a great fancy to
+ her, and so has my mother. She comes to them very often of an evening, and
+ brings her work with her. A quick, intelligent little thing, and full of
+ pretty thoughts. On Sundays, if the weather is fine, we stroll out
+ together in the fields.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has been a comfort to you, Tom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And loves you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure she does; an affectionate, grateful child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She will be a woman soon, Tom, and may love you as a woman then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom looked indignant and rather scornful at that suggestion, and hastened
+ to revert to the subject more immediately at his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Travers said you would like to call on Will Somers and his wife;
+ will you? Moleswich is not far from London, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly, I will call.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do hope you will find them happy; and if so, perhaps you will kindly
+ let me know; and&mdash;and&mdash;I wonder whether Jessie&rsquo;s child is like
+ her? It is a boy; somehow or other I would rather it had been a girl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will write you full particulars. But why not come with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I don&rsquo;t think I could do that, just at present. It unsettled me sadly
+ when I did again see her sweet face at Graveleigh, and she was still
+ afraid of me too! that was a sharp pang.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She ought to know what you have done for her, and will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On no account, sir; promise me that. I should feel mean if I humbled
+ them,&mdash;that way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand, though I will not as yet make you any positive promise.
+ Meanwhile, if you are staying in town, lodge with me; my landlady can find
+ you a room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you heartily, sir; but I go back by the evening train; and, bless
+ me! how late it is now! I must wish you good-by. I have some commissions
+ to do for my aunt, and I must buy a new doll for Susey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Susey is the name of the little girl with the flower-ball?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. I must run off now; I feel quite light at heart seeing you again and
+ finding that you receive me still so kindly, as if we were equals.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Tom, I wish I was your equal,&mdash;nay, half as noble as Heaven has
+ made you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom laughed incredulously, and went his way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This mischievous passion of love,&rdquo; said Kenelm to himself, &ldquo;has its good
+ side, it seems, after all. If it was nearly making a wild beast of that
+ brave fellow,&mdash;nay, worse than wild beast, a homicide doomed to the
+ gibbet,&mdash;so, on the other hand, what a refined, delicate, chivalrous
+ nature of gentleman it has developed out of the stormy elements of its
+ first madness! Yes, I will go and look at this new-married couple. I dare
+ say they are already snarling and spitting at each other like cat and dog.
+ Moleswich is within reach of a walk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0072" id="link2H_4_0072">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0068" id="link2HCH0068">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ TWO days after the interview recorded in the last chapter of the previous
+ Book, Travers, chancing to call at Kenelm&rsquo;s lodgings, was told by his
+ servant that Mr. Chillingly had left London, alone, and had given no
+ orders as to forwarding letters. The servant did not know where he had
+ gone, or when he would return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Travers repeated this news incidentally to Cecilia, and she felt somewhat
+ hurt that he had not written her a line respecting Tom&rsquo;s visit. She,
+ however, guessed that he had gone to see the Somerses, and would return to
+ town in a day or so. But weeks passed, the season drew to its close, and
+ of Kenelm Chillingly she saw or heard nothing: he had wholly vanished from
+ the London world. He had but written a line to his servant, ordering him
+ to repair to Exmundham and await him there, and enclosing him a check to
+ pay outstanding bills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must now follow the devious steps of the strange being who has grown
+ into the hero of this story. He had left his apartment at daybreak long
+ before his servant was up, with his knapsack, and a small portmanteau,
+ into which he had thrust&mdash;besides such additional articles of dress
+ as he thought he might possibly require, and which his knapsack could not
+ contain&mdash;a few of his favourite books. Driving with these in a
+ hack-cab to the Vauxhall station, he directed the portmanteau to be
+ forwarded to Moleswich, and flinging the knapsack on his shoulders, walked
+ slowly along the drowsy suburbs that stretched far into the landscape,
+ before, breathing more freely, he found some evidences of rural culture on
+ either side of the high road. It was not, however, till he had left the
+ roofs and trees of pleasant Richmond far behind him that he began to feel
+ he was out of reach of the metropolitan disquieting influences. Finding at
+ a little inn, where he stopped to breakfast, that there was a path along
+ fields, and in sight of the river, through which he could gain the place
+ of his destination, he then quitted the high road, and traversing one of
+ the loveliest districts in one of our loveliest counties, he reached
+ Moleswich about noon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0069" id="link2HCH0069">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ON entering the main street of the pretty town, the name of Somers, in
+ gilt capitals, was sufficiently conspicuous over the door of a very
+ imposing shop. It boasted two plate-glass windows, at one of which were
+ tastefully exhibited various articles of fine stationery, embroidery
+ patterns, etc.; at the other, no less tastefully, sundry specimens of
+ ornamental basket-work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm crossed the threshold and recognized behind the counter&mdash;fair
+ as ever, but with an expression of face more staid, and a figure more
+ rounded and matron-like&mdash;his old friend Jessie. There were two or
+ three customers before her, between whom she was dividing her attention.
+ While a handsome young lady, seated, was saying, in a somewhat loud but
+ cheery and pleasant voice, &ldquo;Do not mind me, Mrs. Somers: I can wait,&rdquo;
+ Jessie&rsquo;s quick eye darted towards the stranger, but too rapidly to
+ distinguish his features, which, indeed, he turned away, and began to
+ examine the baskets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a minute or so the other customers were served and had departed; and
+ the voice of the lady was again heard, &ldquo;Now, Mrs. Somers, I want to see
+ your picture-books and toys. I am giving a little children&rsquo;s party this
+ afternoon, and I want to make them as happy as possible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Somewhere or other, on this planet, or before my Monad was whisked away
+ to it, I have heard that voice,&rdquo; muttered Kenelm. While Jessie was alertly
+ bringing forth her toys and picture-books, she said, &ldquo;I am sorry to keep
+ you waiting, sir; but if it is the baskets you come about, I can call my
+ husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do,&rdquo; said Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;William, William,&rdquo; cried Mrs. Somers; and after a delay long enough to
+ allow him to slip on his jacket, William Somers emerged from the back
+ parlour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His face had lost its old trace of suffering and ill health; it was still
+ somewhat pale, and retained its expression of intellectual refinement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How you have improved in your art!&rdquo; said Kenelm, heartily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William started, and recognized Kenelm at once. He sprang forward and took
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s outstretched hand in both his own, and, in a voice between
+ laughing and crying, exclaimed, &ldquo;Jessie, Jessie, it is he!&mdash;he whom
+ we pray for every night. God bless you! God bless and make you as happy as
+ He permitted you to make me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before this little speech was faltered out, Jessie was by her husband&rsquo;s
+ side, and she added, in a lower voice, but tremulous with deep feeling,
+ &ldquo;And me too!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By your leave, Will,&rdquo; said Kenelm, and he saluted Jessie&rsquo;s white forehead
+ with a kiss that could not have been kindlier or colder if it had been her
+ grandfather&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the lady had risen noiselessly and unobserved, and stealing up
+ to Kenelm, looked him full in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have another friend here, sir, who has also some cause to thank you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought I remembered your voice,&rdquo; said Kenelm, looking puzzled. &ldquo;But
+ pardon me if I cannot recall your features. Where have we met before?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me your arm when we go out, and I will bring myself to your
+ recollection. But no: I must not hurry you away now. I will call again in
+ half an hour. Mrs. Somers, meanwhile put up the things I have selected. I
+ will take them away with me when I come back from the vicarage, where I
+ have left the pony-carriage.&rdquo; So, with a parting nod and smile to Kenelm,
+ she turned away, and left him bewildered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But who is that lady, Will?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A Mrs. Braefield. She is a new comer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She may well be that, Will,&rdquo; said Jessie, smiling, &ldquo;for she has only been
+ married six months.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what was her name before she married?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure I don&rsquo;t know, sir. It is only three months since we came here,
+ and she has been very kind to us and an excellent customer. Everybody
+ likes her. Mr. Braefield is a city gentleman and very rich; and they live
+ in the finest house in the place, and see a great deal of company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I am no wiser than I was before,&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;People who ask
+ questions very seldom are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how did you find us out, sir?&rdquo; said Jessie. &ldquo;Oh! I guess,&rdquo; she added,
+ with an arch glance and smile. &ldquo;Of course, you have seen Miss Travers, and
+ she told you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right. I first learned your change of residence from her, and
+ thought I would come and see you, and be introduced to the baby,&mdash;a
+ boy, I understand? Like you, Will?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir, the picture of Jessie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense, Will; it is you all over, even to its little hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And your good mother, Will, how did you leave her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, sir!&rdquo; cried Jessie, reproachfully; &ldquo;do you think we could have the
+ heart to leave Mother,&mdash;so lone and rheumatic too? She is tending
+ baby now,&mdash;always does while I am in the shop.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Kenelm followed the young couple into the parlour, where, seated by
+ the window, they found old Mrs. Somers reading the Bible and rocking the
+ baby, who slept peacefully in its cradle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will,&rdquo; said Kenelm, bending his dark face over the infant, &ldquo;I will tell
+ you a pretty thought of a foreign poet&rsquo;s, which has been thus badly
+ translated:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Blest babe, a boundless world this bed so narrow seems to thee;
+ Grow man, and narrower than this bed the boundless world shall
+ be.&rsquo;&rdquo; 1
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1)Schiller.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think that is true, sir,&rdquo; said Will, simply; &ldquo;for a happy home is
+ a world wide enough for any man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tears started into Jessie&rsquo;s eyes; she bent down and kissed&mdash;not the
+ baby, but the cradle. &ldquo;Will made it.&rdquo; She added blushing, &ldquo;I mean the
+ cradle, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time flew past while Kenelm talked with Will and the old mother, for
+ Jessie was soon summoned back to the shop; and Kenelm was startled when he
+ found the half-hour&rsquo;s grace allowed to him was over, and Jessie put her
+ head in at the door and said, &ldquo;Mrs. Braefield is waiting for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good-by, Will; I shall come to see you again soon; and my mother gives me
+ a commission to buy I don&rsquo;t know how many specimens of your craft.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0070" id="link2HCH0070">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A SMART pony-phaeton, with a box for a driver in livery equally smart,
+ stood at the shop-door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Mr. Chillingly,&rdquo; said Mrs. Braefield, &ldquo;it is my turn to run away
+ with you; get in!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eh!&rdquo; murmured Kenelm, gazing at her with large dreamy eyes. &ldquo;Is it
+ possible?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite possible; get in. Coachman, home! Yes, Mr. Chillingly, you meet
+ again that giddy creature whom you threatened to thrash; it would have
+ served her right. I ought to feel so ashamed to recall myself to your
+ recollection, and yet I am not a bit ashamed. I am proud to show you that
+ I have turned out a steady, respectable woman, and, my husband tells me, a
+ good wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have only been six months married, I hear,&rdquo; said Kenelm, dryly. &ldquo;I
+ hope your husband will say the same six years hence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He will say the same sixty years hence, if we live as long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How old is he now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thirty-eight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When a man wants only two years of his hundredth, he probably has learned
+ to know his own mind; but then, in most cases, very little mind is left to
+ him to know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be satirical, sir; and don&rsquo;t talk as if you were railing at
+ marriage, when you have just left as happy a young couple as the sun ever
+ shone upon; and owing,&mdash;for Mrs. Somers has told me all about her
+ marriage,&mdash;owing their happiness to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Their happiness to me! not in the least. I helped them to marry, and in
+ spite of marriage they helped each other to be happy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are still unmarried yourself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, thank Heaven!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And are you happy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I can&rsquo;t make myself happy: myself is a discontented brute.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then why do you say &lsquo;thank Heaven&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because it is a comfort to think I am not making somebody else unhappy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you believe that if you loved a wife who loved you, you should make
+ her unhappy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure I don&rsquo;t know; but I have not seen a woman whom I could love as
+ a wife. And we need not push our inquiries further. What has become of
+ that ill-treated gray cob?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was quite well, thank you, when I last heard of him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the uncle who would have inflicted me upon you, if you had not so
+ gallantly defended yourself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is living where he did live, and has married his housekeeper. He felt
+ a delicate scruple against taking that step till I was married myself and
+ out of the way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Mrs. Braefield, beginning to speak very hurriedly, as women who seek
+ to disguise emotion often do, informed Kenelm how unhappy she had felt for
+ weeks after having found an asylum with her aunt,&mdash;how she had been
+ stung by remorse and oppressed by a sense of humiliation at the thought of
+ her folly and the odious recollection of Mr. Compton,&mdash;how she had
+ declared to herself that she would never marry any one now&mdash;never!
+ How Mr. Braefield happened to be on a visit in the neighbourhood, and saw
+ her at church,&mdash;how he had sought an introduction to her,&mdash;and
+ how at first she rather disliked him than not; but he was so good and so
+ kind, and when at last he proposed&mdash;and she had frankly told him all
+ about her girlish flight and infatuation&mdash;how generously he had
+ thanked her for a candour which had placed her as high in his esteem as
+ she had been before in his love. &ldquo;And from that moment,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+ Braefield, passionately, &ldquo;my whole heart leaped to him. And now you know
+ all; and here we are at the Lodge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pony-phaeton went with great speed up a broad gravel-drive, bordered
+ with rare evergreens, and stopped at a handsome house with a portico in
+ front, and a long conservatory at the garden side,&mdash;one of those
+ houses which belong to &ldquo;city gentlemen,&rdquo; and often contain more comfort
+ and exhibit more luxury than many a stately manorial mansion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Braefield evidently felt some pride as she led Kenelm through the
+ handsome hall, paved with Malvern tiles and adorned with Scagliola
+ columns, and into a drawing-room furnished with much taste and opening on
+ a spacious flower-garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But where is Mr. Braefield?&rdquo; asked Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, he has taken the rail to his office; but he will be back long before
+ dinner, and of course you dine with us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&rsquo;re very hospitable, but&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No buts: I will take no excuse. Don&rsquo;t fear that you shall have only
+ mutton-chops and a rice-pudding; and, besides, I have a children&rsquo;s party
+ coming at two o&rsquo;clock, and there will be all sorts of fun. You are fond of
+ children, I am sure?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I rather think I am not. But I have never clearly ascertained my own
+ inclinations upon that subject.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you shall have ample opportunity to do so to-day. And oh! I promise
+ you the sight of the loveliest face that you can picture to yourself when
+ you think of your future wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My future wife, I hope, is not yet born,&rdquo; said Kenelm, wearily, and with
+ much effort suppressing a yawn. &ldquo;But at all events, I will stay till after
+ two o&rsquo;clock; for two o&rsquo;clock, I presume, means luncheon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Braefield laughed. &ldquo;You retain your appetite?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most single men do, provided they don&rsquo;t fall in love and become doubled
+ up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this abominable attempt at a pun, Mrs. Braefield disdained to laugh;
+ but turning away from its perpetrator she took off her hat and gloves and
+ passed her hands lightly over her forehead, as if to smooth back some
+ vagrant tress in locks already sufficiently sheen and trim. She was not
+ quite so pretty in female attire as she had appeared in boy&rsquo;s dress, nor
+ did she look quite as young. In all other respects she was wonderfully
+ improved. There was a serener, a more settled intelligence in her frank
+ bright eyes, a milder expression in the play of her parted lips. Kenelm
+ gazed at her with pleased admiration. And as now, turning from the glass,
+ she encountered his look, a deeper colour came into the clear delicacy of
+ her cheeks, and the frank eyes moistened. She came up to him as he sat,
+ and took his hand in both hers, pressing it warmly. &ldquo;Ah, Mr. Chillingly,&rdquo;
+ she said, with impulsive tremulous tones, &ldquo;look round, look round this
+ happy, peaceful home!&mdash;the life so free from a care, the husband whom
+ I so love and honour; all the blessings that I might have so recklessly
+ lost forever had I not met with you, had I been punished as I deserved.
+ How often I thought of your words, that &lsquo;you would be proud of my
+ friendship when we met again&rsquo;! What strength they gave me in my hours of
+ humbled self-reproach!&rdquo; Her voice here died away as if in the effort to
+ suppress a sob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She released his hand, and, before he could answer, passed quickly through
+ the open sash into the garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0071" id="link2HCH0071">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE children have come,&mdash;some thirty of them, pretty as English
+ children generally are, happy in the joy of the summer sunshine, and the
+ flower lawns, and the feast under cover of an awning suspended between
+ chestnut-trees, and carpeted with sward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No doubt Kenelm held his own at the banquet, and did his best to increase
+ the general gayety, for whenever he spoke the children listened eagerly,
+ and when he had done they laughed mirthfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The fair face I promised you,&rdquo; whispered Mrs. Braefield, &ldquo;is not here
+ yet. I have a little note from the young lady to say that Mrs. Cameron
+ does not feel very well this morning, but hopes to recover sufficiently to
+ come later in the afternoon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And pray who is Mrs. Cameron?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! I forgot that you are a stranger to the place. Mrs. Cameron is the
+ aunt with whom Lily resides. Is it not a pretty name, Lily?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very! emblematic of a spinster that does not spin, with a white head and
+ a thin stalk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then the name belies my Lily, as you will see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children now finished their feast, and betook themselves to dancing in
+ an alley smoothed for a croquet-ground, and to the sound of a violin
+ played by the old grandfather of one of the party. While Mrs. Braefield
+ was busying herself with forming the dance, Kenelm seized the occasion to
+ escape from a young nymph of the age of twelve who had sat next him at the
+ banquet, and taken so great a fancy to him that he began to fear she would
+ vow never to forsake his side, and stole away undetected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are times when the mirth of others only saddens us, especially the
+ mirth of children with high spirits, that jar on our own quiet mood.
+ Gliding through a dense shrubbery, in which, though the lilacs were faded,
+ the laburnum still retained here and there the waning gold of its
+ clusters, Kenelm came into a recess which bounded his steps and invited
+ him to repose. It was a circle, so formed artificially by slight
+ trellises, to which clung parasite roses heavy with leaves and flowers. In
+ the midst played a tiny fountain with a silvery murmuring sound; at the
+ background, dominating the place, rose the crests of stately trees, on
+ which the sunlight shimmered, but which rampired out all horizon beyond.
+ Even as in life do the great dominant passions&mdash;love, ambition,
+ desire of power or gold or fame or knowledge&mdash;form the proud
+ background to the brief-lived flowerets of our youth, lift our eyes beyond
+ the smile of their bloom, catch the glint of a loftier sunbeam, and yet,
+ and yet, exclude our sight from the lengths and the widths of the space
+ which extends behind and beyond them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm threw himself on the turf beside the fountain. From afar came the
+ whoop and the laugh of the children in their sports or their dance. At the
+ distance their joy did not sadden him,&mdash;he marvelled why; and thus,
+ in musing revery, thought to explain the why to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The poet,&rdquo; so ran his lazy thinking, &ldquo;has told us that &lsquo;distance lends
+ enchantment to the view,&rsquo; and thus compares to the charm of distance the
+ illusion of hope. But the poet narrows the scope of his own illustration.
+ Distance lends enchantment to the ear as well as to the sight; nor to
+ these bodily senses alone. Memory no less than hope owes its charm to &lsquo;the
+ far away.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot imagine myself again a child when I am in the midst of young
+ noisy children. But as their noise reaches me here, subdued and mellowed,
+ and knowing, thank Heaven, that the urchins are not within reach of me, I
+ could readily dream myself back into childhood, and into sympathy with the
+ lost playfields of school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So surely it must be with grief: how different the terrible agony for a
+ beloved one just gone from earth, to the soft regret for one who
+ disappeared into Heaven years ago! So with the art of poetry: how
+ imperatively, when it deals with the great emotions of tragedy, it must
+ remove the actors from us, in proportion as the emotions are to elevate,
+ and the tragedy is to please us by the tears it draws! Imagine our shock
+ if a poet were to place on the stage some wise gentleman with whom we
+ dined yesterday, and who was discovered to have killed his father and
+ married his mother. But when Oedipus commits those unhappy mistakes nobody
+ is shocked. Oxford in the nineteenth century is a long way off from Thebes
+ three thousand or four thousand years ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; continued Kenelm, plunging deeper into the maze of metaphysical
+ criticism, &ldquo;even where the poet deals with persons and things close upon
+ our daily sight,&mdash;if he would give them poetic charm he must resort
+ to a sort of moral or psychological distance; the nearer they are to us in
+ external circumstance, the farther they must be in some internal
+ peculiarities. Werter and Clarissa Harlowe are described as contemporaries
+ of their artistic creation, and with the minutest details of apparent
+ realism; yet they are at once removed from our daily lives by their
+ idiosyncrasies and their fates. We know that while Werter and Clarissa are
+ so near to us in much that we sympathize with them as friends and
+ kinsfolk, they are yet as much remote from us in the poetic and idealized
+ side of their natures as if they belonged to the age of Homer; and this it
+ is that invests with charm the very pain which their fate inflicts on us.
+ Thus, I suppose, it must be in love. If the love we feel is to have the
+ glamour of poetry, it must be love for some one morally at a distance from
+ our ordinary habitual selves; in short, differing from us in attributes
+ which, however near we draw to the possessor, we can never approach, never
+ blend, in attributes of our own; so that there is something in the loved
+ one that always remains an ideal,&mdash;a mystery,&mdash;&lsquo;a sun-bright
+ summit mingling with the sky&rsquo;!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herewith the soliloquist&rsquo;s musings glided vaguely into mere revery. He
+ closed his eyes drowsily, not asleep, nor yet quite awake; as sometimes in
+ bright summer days when we recline on the grass we do close our eyes, and
+ yet dimly recognize a golden light bathing the drowsy lids; and athwart
+ that light images come and go like dreams, though we know that we are not
+ dreaming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0072" id="link2HCH0072">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ FROM this state, half comatose, half unconscious, Kenelm was roused
+ slowly, reluctantly. Something struck softly on his cheek,&mdash;again a
+ little less softly; he opened his eyes, they fell first upon two tiny
+ rosebuds, which, on striking his face, had fallen on his breast; and then
+ looking up, he saw before him, in an opening of the trellised circle, a
+ female child&rsquo;s laughing face. Her hand was still uplifted charged with
+ another rosebud, but behind the child&rsquo;s figure, looking over her shoulder
+ and holding back the menacing arm, was a face as innocent but lovelier
+ far,&mdash;the face of a girl in her first youth, framed round with the
+ blossoms that festooned the trellise. How the face became the flowers! It
+ seemed the fairy spirit of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm started and rose to his feet. The child, the one whom he had so
+ ungallantly escaped from ran towards him through a wicket in the circle.
+ Her companion disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it you?&rdquo; said Kenelm to the child, &ldquo;you who pelted me so cruelly?
+ Ungrateful creature! Did I not give you the best strawberries in the dish
+ and all my own cream?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But why did you run away and hide yourself when you ought to be dancing
+ with me?&rdquo; replied the young lady, evading, with the instinct of her sex,
+ all answer to the reproach she had deserved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not run away, and it is clear that I did not mean to hide myself,
+ since you so easily found me out. But who was the young lady with you? I
+ suspect she pelted me too, for she seems to have run away to hide
+ herself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, she did not pelt you; she wanted to stop me, and you would have had
+ another rosebud&mdash;oh, so much bigger!&mdash;if she had not held back
+ my arm. Don&rsquo;t you know her,&mdash;don&rsquo;t you know Lily?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; so that is Lily? You shall introduce me to her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time they had passed out of the circle through the little wicket
+ opposite the path by which Kenelm had entered, and opening at once on the
+ lawn. Here at some distance the children were grouped, some reclined on
+ the grass, some walking to and fro, in the interval of the dance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the space between the group and the trellise Lily was walking alone and
+ quickly. The child left Kenelm&rsquo;s side and ran after her friend, soon
+ overtook, but did not succeed in arresting her steps. Lily did not pause
+ till she had reached the grassy ball-room, and here all the children came
+ round her and shut out her delicate form from Kenelm&rsquo;s sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before he had reached the place, Mrs. Braefield met him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lily is come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know it: I have seen her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is not she beautiful?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must see more of her if I am to answer critically; but before you
+ introduce me, may I be permitted to ask who and what is Lily?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Braefield paused a moment before she answered, and yet the answer was
+ brief enough not to need much consideration. &ldquo;She is a Miss Mordaunt, an
+ orphan; and, as I before told you, resides with her aunt, Mrs. Cameron, a
+ widow. They have the prettiest cottage you ever saw on the banks of the
+ river, or rather rivulet, about a mile from this place. Mrs. Cameron is a
+ very good, simple-hearted woman. As to Lily, I can praise her beauty only
+ with safe conscience, for as yet she is a mere child,&mdash;her mind quite
+ unformed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you ever meet any man, much less any woman, whose mind was formed?&rdquo;
+ muttered Kenelm. &ldquo;I am sure mine is not, and never will be on this earth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Braefield did not hear this low-voiced observation. She was looking
+ about for Lily; and perceiving her at last as the children who surrounded
+ her were dispersing to renew the dance, she took Kenelm&rsquo;s arm, led him to
+ the young lady, and a formal introduction took place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Formal as it could be on those sunlit swards, amidst the joy of summer and
+ the laugh of children. In such scene and such circumstance formality does
+ not last long. I know not how it was, but in a very few minutes Kenelm and
+ Lily had ceased to be strangers to each other. They found themselves
+ seated apart from the rest of the merry-makers, on the bank shadowed by
+ lime-trees; the man listening with downcast eyes, the girl with mobile
+ shifting glances now on earth, now on heaven, and talking freely; gayly,&mdash;like
+ the babble of a happy stream, with a silvery dulcet voice and a sparkle of
+ rippling smiles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No doubt this is a reversal of the formalities of well-bred life, and
+ conventional narrating thereof. According to them, no doubt, it is for the
+ man to talk and the maid to listen; but I state the facts as they were,
+ honestly. And Lily knew no more of the formalities of drawing-room life
+ than a skylark fresh from its nest knows of the song-teacher and the cage.
+ She was still so much of a child. Mrs. Braefield was right: her mind was
+ still so unformed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What she did talk about in that first talk between them that could make
+ the meditative Kenelm listen so mutely, so intently, I know not, at least
+ I could not jot it down on paper. I fear it was very egotistical, as the
+ talk of children generally is,&mdash;about herself and her aunt, and her
+ home and her friends; all her friends seemed children like herself, though
+ younger,&mdash;Clemmy the chief of them. Clemmy was the one who had taken
+ a fancy to Kenelm. And amidst all this ingenuous prattle there came
+ flashes of a quick intellect, a lively fancy,&mdash;nay, even a poetry of
+ expression or of sentiment. It might be the talk of a child, but certainly
+ not of a silly child. But as soon as the dance was over, the little ones
+ again gathered round Lily. Evidently she was the prime favourite of them
+ all; and as her companion had now become tired of dancing, new sports were
+ proposed, and Lily was carried off to &ldquo;Prisoner&rsquo;s Base.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am very happy to make your acquaintance, Mr. Chillingly,&rdquo; said a frank,
+ pleasant voice; and a well-dressed, good-looking man held out his hand to
+ Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My husband,&rdquo; said Mrs. Braefield, with a certain pride in her look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm responded cordially to the civilities of the master of the house,
+ who had just returned from his city office, and left all its cares behind
+ him. You had only to look at him to see that he was prosperous, and
+ deserved to be so. There were in his countenance the signs of strong
+ sense, of good-humour,&mdash;above all, of an active energetic
+ temperament. A man of broad smooth forehead, keen hazel eyes, firm lips
+ and jaw; with a happy contentment in himself, his house, the world in
+ general, mantling over his genial smile, and outspoken in the metallic
+ ring of his voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will stay and dine with us, of course,&rdquo; said Mr. Braefield; &ldquo;and,
+ unless you want very much to be in town to-night, I hope you will take a
+ bed here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm hesitated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do stay at least till to-morrow,&rdquo; said Mrs. Braefield. Kenelm hesitated
+ still; and while hesitating his eye rested on Lily, leaning on the arm of
+ a middle-aged lady, and approaching the hostess,&mdash;evidently to take
+ leave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot resist so tempting an invitation,&rdquo; said Kenelm, and he fell back
+ a little behind Lily and her companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you much for so pleasant a day,&rdquo; said Mrs. Cameron to the hostess.
+ &ldquo;Lily has enjoyed herself extremely. I only regret we could not come
+ earlier.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you are walking home,&rdquo; said Mr. Braefield, &ldquo;let me accompany you. I
+ want to speak to your gardener about his heart&rsquo;s-ease: it is much finer
+ than mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If so,&rdquo; said Kenelm to Lily, &ldquo;may I come too? Of all flowers that grow,
+ heart&rsquo;s-ease is the one I most prize.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes afterwards Kenelm was walking by the side of Lily along the
+ banks of a little stream, tributary to the Thames; Mrs. Cameron and Mr.
+ Braefield in advance, for the path only held two abreast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly Lily left his side, allured by a rare butterfly&mdash;I think it
+ is called the Emperor of Morocco&mdash;that was sunning its yellow wings
+ upon a group of wild reeds. She succeeded in capturing this wanderer in
+ her straw hat, over which she drew her sun-veil. After this notable
+ capture she returned demurely to Kenelm&rsquo;s side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you collect insects?&rdquo; said that philosopher, as much surprised as it
+ was his nature to be at anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only butterflies,&rdquo; answered Lily; &ldquo;they are not insects, you know; they
+ are souls.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Emblems of souls you mean,&mdash;at least, so the Greeks prettily
+ represented them to be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, real souls,&mdash;the souls of infants that die in their cradles
+ unbaptized; and if they are taken care of, and not eaten by birds, and
+ live a year then they pass into fairies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a very poetical idea, Miss Mordaunt, and founded on evidence quite
+ as rational as other assertions of the metamorphosis of one creature into
+ another. Perhaps you can do what the philosophers cannot,&mdash;tell me
+ how you learned a new idea to be an incontestable fact?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; replied Lily, looking very much puzzled; &ldquo;perhaps I
+ learned it in a book, or perhaps I dreamed it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You could not make a wiser answer if you were a philosopher. But you talk
+ of taking care of butterflies; how do you do that? Do you impale them on
+ pins stuck into a glass case?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Impale them! How can you talk so cruelly? You deserve to be pinched by
+ the fairies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am afraid,&rdquo; thought Kenelm, compassionately, &ldquo;that my companion has no
+ mind to be formed; what is euphoniously called &lsquo;an innocent.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shook his head and remained silent. Lily resumed,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will show you my collection when we get home; they seem so happy. I am
+ sure there are some of them who know me: they will feed from my hand. I
+ have only had one die since I began to collect them last summer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you have kept them a year: they ought to have turned into fairies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose many of them have. Of course I let out all those that had been
+ with me twelve months: they don&rsquo;t turn to fairies in the cage, you know.
+ Now I have only those I caught this year, or last autumn; the prettiest
+ don&rsquo;t appear till the autumn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl here bent her uncovered head over the straw hat, her tresses
+ shadowing it, and uttered loving words to the prisoner. Then again she
+ looked up and around her, and abruptly stopped, and exclaimed,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How can people live in towns? How can people say they are ever dull in
+ the country? Look,&rdquo; she continued, gravely and earnestly, &ldquo;look at that
+ tall pine-tree, with its long branch sweeping over the water; see how, as
+ the breeze catches it, it changes its shadow, and how the shadow changes
+ the play of the sunlight on the brook:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Wave your tops, ye pines;
+ With every plant, in sign of worship wave.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What an interchange of music there must be between Nature and a poet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm was startled. This &ldquo;an innocent&rdquo;!&mdash;this a girl who had no mind
+ to be formed! In that presence he could not be cynical; could not speak of
+ Nature as a mechanism, a lying humbug, as he had done to the man poet. He
+ replied gravely,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Creator has gifted the whole universe with language, but few are the
+ hearts that can interpret it. Happy those to whom it is no foreign tongue,
+ acquired imperfectly with care and pain, but rather a native language,
+ learned unconsciously from the lips of the great mother. To them the
+ butterfly&rsquo;s wing may well buoy into heaven a fairy&rsquo;s soul!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had thus said Lily turned, and for the first time attentively
+ looked into his dark soft eyes; then instinctively she laid her light hand
+ on his arm, and said in a low voice, &ldquo;Talk on; talk thus: I like to hear
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Kenelm did not talk on. They had now arrived at the garden-gate of
+ Mrs. Cameron&rsquo;s cottage, and the elder persons in advance paused at the
+ gate and walked with them to the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a long, low, irregular cottage, without pretension to architectural
+ beauty, yet exceedingly picturesque,&mdash;a flower-garden, large, but in
+ proportion to the house, with parterres in which the colours were
+ exquisitely assorted, sloping to the grassy margin of the rivulet, where
+ the stream expanded into a lake-like basin, narrowed at either end by
+ locks, from which with gentle sound flowed shallow waterfalls. By the
+ banks was a rustic seat, half overshadowed by the drooping boughs of a
+ vast willow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inside of the house was in harmony with the exterior,&mdash;cottage-like,
+ but with an unmistakable air of refinement about the rooms, even in the
+ little entrance-hall, which was painted in Pompeian frescos.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come and see my butterfly-cage,&rdquo; said Lily, whisperingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm followed her through the window that opened on the garden; and at
+ one end of a small conservatory, or rather greenhouse, was the habitation
+ of these singular favourites. It was as large as a small room; three sides
+ of it formed by minute wirework, with occasional draperies of muslin or
+ other slight material, and covered at intervals, sometimes within,
+ sometimes without, by dainty creepers; a tiny cistern in the centre, from
+ which upsprang a sparkling jet. Lily cautiously lifted a sash-door and
+ glided in, closing it behind her. Her entrance set in movement a multitude
+ of gossamer wings, some fluttering round her, some more boldly settling on
+ her hair or dress. Kenelm thought she had not vainly boasted when she said
+ that some of the creatures had learned to know her. She released the
+ Emperor of Morocco from her hat; it circled round her fearlessly, and then
+ vanished amidst the leaves of the creepers. Lily opened the door and came
+ out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have heard of a philosopher who tamed a wasp,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;but never
+ before of a young lady who tamed butterflies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Lily, proudly; &ldquo;I believe I am the first who attempted it. I
+ don&rsquo;t think I should have attempted it if I had been told that others had
+ succeeded before me. Not that I have succeeded quite. No matter; if they
+ don&rsquo;t love me, I love them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They re-entered the drawing-room, and Mrs. Cameron addressed Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know much of this part of the country, Mr. Chillingly?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is quite new to me, and more rural than many districts farther from
+ London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is the good fortune of most of our home counties,&rdquo; said Mr.
+ Braefield; &ldquo;they escape the smoke and din of manufacturing towns, and
+ agricultural science has not demolished their leafy hedgerows. The walks
+ through our green lanes are as much bordered with convolvulus and
+ honeysuckle as they were when Izaak Walton sauntered through them to angle
+ in that stream!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does tradition say that he angled in that stream? I thought his haunts
+ were rather on the other side of London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Possibly; I am not learned in Walton or in his art, but there is an old
+ summer-house, on the other side of the lock yonder, on which is carved the
+ name of Izaak Walton, but whether by his own hand or another&rsquo;s who shall
+ say? Has Mr. Melville been here lately, Mrs. Cameron?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, not for several months.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has had a glorious success this year. We may hope that at last his
+ genius is acknowledged by the world. I meant to buy his picture, but I was
+ not in time: a Manchester man was before me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is Mr. Melville? any relation to you?&rdquo; whispered Kenelm to Lily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Relation,&mdash;I scarcely know. Yes, I suppose so, because he is my
+ guardian. But if he were the nearest relation on earth, I could not love
+ him more,&rdquo; said Lily, with impulsive eagerness, her cheeks flushing, her
+ eyes filling with tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And he is an artist,&mdash;a painter?&rdquo; asked Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes; no one paints such beautiful pictures,&mdash;no one so clever,
+ no one so kind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm strove to recollect if he had ever heard the name of Melville as a
+ painter, but in vain. Kenelm, however, knew but little of painters: they
+ were not in his way; and he owned to himself, very humbly, that there
+ might be many a living painter of eminent renown whose name and works
+ would be strange to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He glanced round the wall; Lily interpreted his look. &ldquo;There are no
+ pictures of his here,&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;there is one in my own room. I will show
+ it you when you come again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said Mr. Braefield, rising, &ldquo;I must just have a word with your
+ gardener, and then go home. We dine earlier here than in London, Mr.
+ Chillingly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the two gentlemen, after taking leave, re-entered the hall, Lily
+ followed them and said to Kenelm, &ldquo;What time will you come to-morrow to
+ see the picture?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm averted his head, and then replied, not with his wonted courtesy,
+ but briefly and brusquely,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear I cannot call to-morrow. I shall be far away by sunrise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily made no answer, but turned back into the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Braefield found the gardener watering a flower-border, conferred with
+ him about the heart&rsquo;s-ease, and then joined Kenelm, who had halted a few
+ yards beyond the garden-gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A pretty little place that,&rdquo; said Mr. Braefield, with a sort of lordly
+ compassion, as became the owner of Braefieldville. &ldquo;What I call quaint.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, quaint,&rdquo; echoed Kenelm, abstractedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is always the case with houses enlarged by degrees. I have heard my
+ poor mother say that when Melville or Mrs. Cameron first bought it, it was
+ little better than a mere labourer&rsquo;s cottage, with a field attached to it.
+ And two or three years afterwards a room or so more was built, and a bit
+ of the field taken in for a garden; and then by degrees the whole part now
+ inhabited by the family was built, leaving only the old cottage as a
+ scullery and washhouse; and the whole field was turned into the garden, as
+ you see. But whether it was Melville&rsquo;s money or the aunt&rsquo;s that did it, I
+ don&rsquo;t know. More likely the aunt&rsquo;s. I don&rsquo;t see what interest Melville has
+ in the place: he does not go there often, I fancy; it is not his home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Melville, it seems, is a painter, and, from what I heard you say, a
+ successful one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fancy he had little success before this year. But surely you saw his
+ pictures at the Exhibition?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am ashamed to say I have not been to the Exhibition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You surprise me. However, Melville had three pictures there,&mdash;all
+ very good; but the one I wished to buy made much more sensation than the
+ others, and has suddenly lifted him from obscurity into fame.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He appears to be a relation of Miss Mordaunt&rsquo;s, but so distant a one that
+ she could not even tell me what grade of cousinship he could claim.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor can I. He is her guardian, I know. The relationship, if any, must, as
+ you say, be very distant; for Melville is of humble extraction, while any
+ one can see that Mrs. Cameron is a thorough gentlewoman, and Lily Mordaunt
+ is her sister&rsquo;s child. I have heard my mother say that it was Melville,
+ then a very young man, who bought the cottage, perhaps with Mrs. Cameron&rsquo;s
+ money; saying it was for a widowed lady, whose husband had left her with
+ very small means. And when Mrs. Cameron arrived with Lily, then a mere
+ infant, she was in deep mourning, and a very young woman herself,&mdash;pretty
+ too. If Melville had been a frequent visitor then, of course there would
+ have been scandal; but he very seldom came, and when he did, he lodged in
+ a cottage, Cromwell Lodge, on the other side of the brook; now and then
+ bringing with him a fellow-lodger,&mdash;some other young artist, I
+ suppose, for the sake of angling. So there could be no cause for scandal,
+ and nothing can be more blameless than poor Mrs. Cameron&rsquo;s life. My
+ mother, who then resided at Braefieldville, took a great fancy to both
+ Lily and her aunt, and when by degrees the cottage grew into a genteel
+ sort of place, the few gentry in the neighbourhood followed my mother&rsquo;s
+ example and were very kind to Mrs. Cameron, so that she has now her place
+ in the society about here, and is much liked.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Mr. Melville?&mdash;does he still very seldom come here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To say truth, he has not been at all since I settled at Braefieldville.
+ The place was left to my mother for her life, and I was not much there
+ during her occupation. In fact, I was then a junior partner in our firm,
+ and conducted the branch business in New York, coming over to England for
+ my holiday once a year or so. When my mother died, there was much to
+ arrange before I could settle personally in England, and I did not come to
+ settle at Braefieldville till I married. I did see Melville on one of my
+ visits to the place some years ago; but, between ourselves, he is not the
+ sort of person whose intimate acquaintance one would wish to court. My
+ mother told me he was an idle, dissipated man, and I have heard from
+ others that he was very unsteady. Mr. &mdash;&mdash;-, the great painter,
+ told me that he was a loose fish; and I suppose his habits were against
+ his getting on, till this year, when, perhaps, by a lucky accident, he has
+ painted a picture that raises him to the top of the tree. But is not Miss
+ Lily wondrously nice to look at? What a pity her education has been so
+ much neglected!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have not you discovered that already? She has not had even a
+ music-master, though my wife says she has a good ear, and can sing
+ prettily enough. As for reading I don&rsquo;t think she has read anything but
+ fairy tales and poetry, and such silly stuff. However, she is very young
+ yet; and now that her guardian can sell his pictures, it is to be hoped
+ that he will do more justice to his ward. Painters and actors are not so
+ regular in their private lives as we plain men are, and great allowance is
+ to be made for them; still, every one is bound to do his duty. I am sure
+ you agree with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with an emphasis which startled the merchant.
+ &ldquo;That is an admirable maxim of yours: it seems a commonplace, yet how
+ often, when it is put into our heads, it strikes as a novelty! A duty may
+ be a very difficult thing, a very disagreeable thing, and, what is
+ strange, it is often a very invisible thing. It is present,&mdash;close
+ before us, and yet we don&rsquo;t see it; somebody shouts its name in our ears,
+ &lsquo;Duty,&rsquo; and straight it towers before us a grim giant. Pardon me if I
+ leave you: I can&rsquo;t stay to dine. Duty summons me elsewhere. Make my
+ excuses to Mrs. Braefield.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Mr. Braefield could recover his self-possession, Kenelm had vaulted
+ over a stile and was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0073" id="link2HCH0073">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM walked into the shop kept by the Somerses, and found Jessie still
+ at the counter. &ldquo;Give me back my knap sack. Thank you,&rdquo; he said, flinging
+ the knapsack across his shoulders. &ldquo;Now, do me a favour. A portmanteau of
+ mine ought to be at the station. Send for it, and keep it till I give
+ further directions. I think of going to Oxford for a day or two. Mrs.
+ Somers, one more word with you. Think, answer frankly, are you, as you
+ said this morning, thoroughly happy, and yet married to the man you
+ loved?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, so happy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And wish for nothing beyond? Do not wish Will to be other than he is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God forbid! You frighten me, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Frighten you! Be it so. Everyone who is happy should be frightened lest
+ happiness fly away. Do your best to chain it, and you will, for you attach
+ Duty to Happiness; and,&rdquo; muttered Kenelm, as he turned from the shop,
+ &ldquo;Duty is sometimes not a rose-coloured tie, but a heavy iron-hued clog.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He strode on through the street towards the sign-post with &ldquo;To Oxford&rdquo;
+ inscribed thereon. And whether he spoke literally of the knapsack, or
+ metaphorically of duty, he murmured, as he strode,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;A pedlar&rsquo;s pack that bows the bearer down.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0074" id="link2HCH0074">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM might have reached Oxford that night, for he was a rapid and
+ untirable pedestrian; but he halted a little after the moon rose, and laid
+ himself down to rest beneath a new-mown haystack, not very far from the
+ high road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not sleep. Meditatingly propped on his elbow, he said to himself,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is long since I have wondered at nothing. I wonder now: can this be
+ love,&mdash;really love,&mdash;unmistakably love? Pooh! it is impossible;
+ the very last person in the world to be in love with. Let us reason upon
+ it,&mdash;you, myself, and I. To begin with,&mdash;face! What is face? In
+ a few years the most beautiful face may be very plain. Take the Venus at
+ Florence. Animate her; see her ten years after; a chignon, front teeth
+ (blue or artificially white), mottled complexion, double chin,&mdash;all
+ that sort of plump prettiness goes into double chin. Face, bah! What man
+ of sense&mdash;what pupil of Welby, the realist&mdash;can fall in love
+ with a face? and even if I were simpleton enough to do so, pretty faces
+ are as common as daisies. Cecilia Travers has more regular features;
+ Jessie Wiles a richer colouring. I was not in love with them,&mdash;not a
+ bit of it. Myself, you have nothing to say there. Well, then, mind? Talk
+ of mind, indeed! a creature whose favourite companionship is that of
+ butterflies, and who tells me that butterflies are the souls of infants
+ unbaptized. What an article for &lsquo;The Londoner,&rsquo; on the culture of young
+ women! What a girl for Miss Garrett and Miss Emily Faithfull! Put aside
+ Mind as we have done Face. What rests?&mdash;the Frenchman&rsquo;s ideal of
+ happy marriage? congenial circumstance of birth, fortune, tastes, habits.
+ Worse still. Myself, answer honestly, are you not floored?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereon &ldquo;Myself&rdquo; took up the parable and answered, &ldquo;O thou fool! why wert
+ thou so ineffably blessed in one presence? Why, in quitting that presence,
+ did Duty become so grim? Why dost thou address to me those inept pedantic
+ questionings, under the light of yon moon, which has suddenly ceased to be
+ to thy thoughts an astronomical body and has become, forever and forever,
+ identified in thy heart&rsquo;s dreams with romance and poesy and first love?
+ Why, instead of gazing on that uncomfortable orb, art thou not quickening
+ thy steps towards a cozy inn and a good supper at Oxford? Kenelm, my
+ friend, thou art in for it. No disguising the fact: thou art in love!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be hanged if I am,&rdquo; said the Second in the Dualism of Kenelm&rsquo;s mind;
+ and therewith he shifted his knapsack into a pillow, turned his eyes from
+ the moon, and still could not sleep. The face of Lily still haunted his
+ eyes; the voice of Lily still rang in his ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, my reader! dost thou here ask me to tell thee what Lily was like?&mdash;was
+ she dark? was she fair? was she tall? was she short? Never shalt thou
+ learn these secrets from me. Imagine to thyself the being to which thine
+ whole of life, body and mind and soul, moved irresistibly as the needle to
+ the pole. Let her be tall or short, dark or fair, she is that which out of
+ all womankind has suddenly become the one woman for thee. Fortunate art
+ thou, my reader, if thou chance to have heard the popular song of &ldquo;My
+ Queen&rdquo; sung by the one lady who alone can sing it with expression worthy
+ the verse of the poetess and the music of the composition, by the sister
+ of the exquisite songstress. But if thou hast not heard the verse thus
+ sung, to an accompaniment thus composed, still the words themselves are,
+ or ought to be, familiar to thee, if thou art, as I take for granted, a
+ lover of the true lyrical muse. Recall then the words supposed to be
+ uttered by him who knows himself destined to do homage to one he has not
+ yet beheld:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;She is standing somewhere,&mdash;she I shall honour,
+ She that I wait for, my queen, my queen;
+ Whether her hair be golden or raven,
+ Whether her eyes be hazel or blue,
+ I know not now, it will be engraven
+ Some day hence as my loveliest hue.
+ She may be humble or proud, my lady,
+ Or that sweet calm which is just between;
+ But whenever she comes, she will find me ready
+ To do her homage, my queen, my queen.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Was it possible that the cruel boy-god &ldquo;who sharpens his arrows on the
+ whetstone of the human heart&rdquo; had found the moment to avenge himself for
+ the neglect of his altars and the scorn of his power? Must that redoubted
+ knight-errant, the hero of this tale, despite the Three Fishes on his
+ charmed shield, at last veil the crest and bow the knee, and murmur to
+ himself, &ldquo;She has come, my queen&rdquo;?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0075" id="link2HCH0075">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE next morning Kenelm arrived at Oxford,&mdash;&ldquo;Verum secretumque
+ Mouseion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there be a place in this busy island which may distract the passion of
+ youth from love to scholarship, to Ritualism, to mediaeval associations,
+ to that sort of poetical sentiment or poetical fanaticism which a Mivers
+ and a Welby and an advocate of the Realistic School would hold in
+ contempt,&mdash;certainly that place is Oxford,&mdash;home; nevertheless,
+ of great thinkers and great actors in the practical world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vacation had not yet commenced, but the commencement was near at hand.
+ Kenelm thought he could recognize the leading men by their slower walk and
+ more abstracted expression of countenance. Among the Fellows was the
+ eminent author of that book which had so powerfully fascinated the earlier
+ adolescence of Kenelm Chillingly, and who had himself been subject to the
+ fascination of a yet stronger spirit. The Rev. Decimus Roach had been ever
+ an intense and reverent admirer of John Henry Newman,&mdash;an admirer, I
+ mean, of the pure and lofty character of the man, quite apart from
+ sympathy with his doctrines. But although Roach remained an unconverted
+ Protestant of orthodox, if High Church, creed, yet there was one tenet he
+ did hold in common with the author of the &ldquo;Apologia.&rdquo; He ranked celibacy
+ among the virtues most dear to Heaven. In that eloquent treatise, &ldquo;The
+ Approach to the Angels,&rdquo; he not only maintained that the state of single
+ blessedness was strictly incumbent on every member of a Christian
+ priesthood, but to be commended to the adoption of every conscientious
+ layman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the desire to confer with this eminent theologian that had induced
+ Kenelm to direct his steps to Oxford.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Roach was a friend of Welby, at whose house, when a pupil, Kenelm had
+ once or twice met him, and been even more charmed by his conversation than
+ by his treatise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm called on Mr. Roach, who received him very graciously, and, not
+ being a tutor or examiner, placed his time at Kenelm&rsquo;s disposal; took him
+ the round of the colleges and the Bodleian; invited him to dine in his
+ college-hall; and after dinner led him into his own rooms, and gave him an
+ excellent bottle of Chateau Margeaux.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Roach was somewhere about fifty,&mdash;a good-looking man and
+ evidently thought himself so; for he wore his hair long behind and parted
+ in the middle, which is not done by men who form modest estimates of their
+ personal appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm was not long in drawing out his host on the subject to which that
+ profound thinker had devoted so much meditation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can scarcely convey to you,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;the intense admiration with
+ which I have studied your noble work, &lsquo;Approach to the Angels.&rsquo; It
+ produced a great effect on me in the age between boyhood and youth. But of
+ late some doubts on the universal application of your doctrine have crept
+ into my mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, indeed?&rdquo; said Mr. Roach, with an expression of interest in his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I come to you for their solution.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Roach turned away his head, and pushed the bottle to Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am quite willing to concede,&rdquo; resumed the heir of the Chillinglys,
+ &ldquo;that a priesthood should stand apart from the distracting cares of a
+ family, and pure from all carnal affections.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hem, hem,&rdquo; grunted Mr. Roach, taking his knee on his lap and caressing
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I go further,&rdquo; continued Kenelm, &ldquo;and supposing with you that the
+ Confessional has all the importance, whether in its monitory or its
+ cheering effects upon repentant sinners, which is attached to it by the
+ Roman Catholics, and that it ought to be no less cultivated by the
+ Reformed Church, it seems to me essential that the Confessor should have
+ no better half to whom it can be even suspected he may, in an unguarded
+ moment, hint at the frailties of one of her female acquaintances.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I pushed that argument too far,&rdquo; murmured Roach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a bit of it. Celibacy in the Confessor stands or falls with the
+ Confessional. Your argument there is as sound as a bell. But when it comes
+ to the layman, I think I detect a difference.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Roach shook his head, and replied stoutly, &ldquo;No; if celibacy be
+ incumbent on the one, it is equally incumbent on the other. I say &lsquo;if.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Permit me to deny that assertion. Do not fear that I shall insult your
+ understanding by the popular platitude; namely, that if celibacy were
+ universal, in a very few years the human race would be extinct. As you
+ have justly observed, in answer to that fallacy, &lsquo;It is the duty of each
+ human soul to strive towards the highest perfection of the spiritual state
+ for itself, and leave the fate of the human race to the care of the
+ Creator.&rsquo; If celibacy be necessary to spiritual perfection, how do we know
+ but that it may be the purpose and decree of the All Wise that the human
+ race, having attained to that perfection, should disappear from earth?
+ Universal celibacy would thus be the euthanasia of mankind. On the other
+ hand, if the Creator decided that the human race, having culminated to
+ this crowning but barren flower of perfection, should nevertheless
+ continue to increase and multiply upon earth, have you not victoriously
+ exclaimed, &lsquo;Presumptuous mortal! how canst thou presume to limit the
+ resources of the Almighty? Would it not be easy for Him to continue some
+ other mode, unexposed to trouble and sin and passion, as in the nuptials
+ of the vegetable world, by which the generations will be renewed? Can we
+ suppose that the angels&mdash;the immortal companies of heaven&mdash;are
+ not hourly increasing in number, and extending their population throughout
+ infinity? and yet in heaven there is no marrying nor giving in marriage.&rsquo;
+ All this, clothed by you in words which my memory only serves me to quote
+ imperfectly,&mdash;all this I unhesitatingly concede.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Roach rose and brought another bottle of the Chateau Margeaux from his
+ cellaret, filled Kenelm&rsquo;s glass, reseated himself, and took the other knee
+ into his lap to caress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; resumed Kenelm, &ldquo;my doubt is this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; cried Mr. Roach, &ldquo;let us hear the doubt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the first place, is celibacy essential to the highest state of
+ spiritual perfection; and, in the second place, if it were, are mortals,
+ as at present constituted, capable of that culmination?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well put,&rdquo; said Mr. Roach, and he tossed off his glass with more
+ cheerful aspect than he had hitherto exhibited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;we are compelled in this, as in other questions
+ of philosophy, to resort to the inductive process, and draw our theories
+ from the facts within our cognizance. Now looking round the world, is it
+ the fact that old maids and old bachelors are so much more spiritually
+ advanced than married folks? Do they pass their time, like an Indian
+ dervish, in serene contemplation of divine excellence and beatitude? Are
+ they not quite as worldly in their own way as persons who have been
+ married as often as the Wife of Bath, and, generally speaking, more
+ selfish, more frivolous, and more spiteful? I am sure I don&rsquo;t wish to
+ speak uncharitably against old maids and old bachelors. I have three aunts
+ who are old maids, and fine specimens of the genus; but I am sure they
+ would all three have been more agreeable companions, and quite as
+ spiritually gifted, if they had been happily married, and were caressing
+ their children, instead of lapdogs. So, too, I have an old bachelor
+ cousin, Chillingly Mivers, whom you know. As clever as a man can be. But,
+ Lord bless you! as to being wrapped in spiritual meditation, he could not
+ be more devoted to the things of earth if he had married as many wives as
+ Solomon, and had as many children as Priam. Finally, have not half the
+ mistakes in the world arisen from a separation between the spiritual and
+ the moral nature of man? Is it not, after all, through his dealings with
+ his fellow-men that man makes his safest &lsquo;approach to the angels&rsquo;? And is
+ not the moral system a very muscular system? Does it not require for
+ healthful vigour plenty of continued exercise, and does it not get that
+ exercise naturally by the relationships of family, with all the wider
+ collateral struggles with life which the care of family necessitates?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I put these questions to you with the humblest diffidence. I expect to
+ hear such answers as will thoroughly convince my reason, and I shall be
+ delighted if so. For at the root of the controversy lies the passion of
+ love. And love must be a very disquieting, troublesome emotion, and has
+ led many heroes and sages into wonderful weaknesses and follies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gently, gently, Mr. Chillingly; don&rsquo;t exaggerate. Love, no doubt, is&mdash;ahem&mdash;a
+ disquieting passion. Still, every emotion that changes life from a
+ stagnant pool into the freshness and play of a running stream is
+ disquieting to the pool. Not only love and its fellow-passions, such as
+ ambition, but the exercise of the reasoning faculty, which is always at
+ work in changing our ideas, is very disquieting. Love, Mr. Chillingly, has
+ its good side as well as its bad. Pass the bottle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM (passing the bottle).&mdash;&ldquo;Yes, yes; you are quite right in
+ putting the adversary&rsquo;s case strongly, before you demolish it: all good
+ rhetoricians do that. Pardon me if I am up to that trick in argument.
+ Assume that I know all that can be said in favour of the abnegation of
+ common-sense, euphoniously called &lsquo;love,&rsquo; and proceed to the demolition of
+ the case.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE REV. DECIMUS ROACH (hesitatingly).&mdash;&ldquo;The demolition of the case?
+ humph! The passions are ingrafted in the human system as part and parcel
+ of it, and are not to be demolished so easily as you seem to think. Love,
+ taken rationally and morally by a man of good education and sound
+ principles, is&mdash;is&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ KENELM.&mdash;&ldquo;Well, is what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE REV. DECIMUS ROACH.&mdash;&ldquo;A&mdash;a&mdash;a&mdash;thing not to be
+ despised. Like the sun, it is the great colourist of life, Mr. Chillingly.
+ And you are so right: the moral system does require daily exercise. What
+ can give that exercise to a solitary man, when he arrives at the practical
+ age in which he cannot sit for six hours at a stretch musing on the divine
+ essence; and rheumatism or other ailments forbid his adventure into the
+ wilds of Africa as a missionary? At that age, Nature, which will be heard,
+ Mr. Chillingly, demands her rights. A sympathizing female companion by
+ one&rsquo;s side; innocent little children climbing one&rsquo;s knee,&mdash;lovely,
+ bewitching picture! Who can be Goth enough to rub it out, who fanatic
+ enough to paint over it the image of a Saint Simeon sitting alone on a
+ pillar? Take another glass. You don&rsquo;t drink enough, Mr. Chillingly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have drunk enough,&rdquo; replied Kenelm, in a sullen voice, &ldquo;to think I see
+ double. I imagined that before me sat the austere adversary of the
+ insanity of love and the miseries of wedlock. Now, I fancy I listen to a
+ puling sentimentalist uttering the platitudes which the other Decimus
+ Roach had already refuted. Certainly either I see double, or you amuse
+ yourself with mocking my appeal to your wisdom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, Mr. Chillingly. But the fact is, that when I wrote that book of
+ which you speak I was young, and youth is enthusiastic and one-sided. Now,
+ with the same disdain of the excesses to which love may hurry weak
+ intellects, I recognize its benignant effects when taken, as I before
+ said, rationally,&mdash;taken rationally, my young friend. At that period
+ of life when the judgment is matured, the soothing companionship of an
+ amiable female cannot but cheer the mind, and prevent that morose
+ hoar-frost into which solitude is chilled and made rigid by increasing
+ years. In short, Mr. Chillingly, having convinced myself that I erred in
+ the opinion once too rashly put forth, I owe it to Truth, I owe it to
+ Mankind, to make my conversion known to the world. And I am about next
+ month to enter into the matrimonial state with a young lady who&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say no more, say no more, Mr. Roach. It must be a painful subject to you.
+ Let us drop it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not a painful subject at all!&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Roach, with warmth. &ldquo;I
+ look forward to the fulfilment of my duty with the pleasure which a
+ well-trained mind always ought to feel in recanting a fallacious doctrine.
+ But you do me the justice to understand that of course I do not take this
+ step I propose&mdash;for my personal satisfaction. No, sir, it is the
+ value of my example to others which purifies my motives and animates my
+ soul.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this concluding and noble sentence, the conversation drooped. Host
+ and guest both felt they had had enough of each other. Kenelm soon rose to
+ depart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Roach, on taking leave of, him at the door, said, with marked
+ emphasis,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not for my personal satisfaction,&mdash;remember that. Whenever you hear
+ my conversion discussed in the world, say that from my own lips you heard
+ these words,&mdash;NOT FOR MY PERSONAL SATISFACTION. No! my kind regards
+ to Welby,&mdash;a married man himself, and a father: he will understand
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0076" id="link2HCH0076">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ON quitting Oxford, Kenelm wandered for several days about the country,
+ advancing to no definite goal, meeting with no noticeable adventure. At
+ last he found himself mechanically retracing his steps. A magnetic
+ influence he could not resist drew him back towards the grassy meads and
+ the sparkling rill of Moleswich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There must be,&rdquo; said he to himself, &ldquo;a mental, like an optical, illusion.
+ In the last, we fancy we have seen a spectre. If we dare not face the
+ apparition,&mdash;dare not attempt to touch it,&mdash;run superstitiously
+ away from it,&mdash;what happens? We shall believe to our dying day that
+ it was not an illusion, that it was a spectre; and so we may be crazed for
+ life. But if we manfully walk up to the phantom, stretch our hands to
+ seize it, oh! it fades into thin air, the cheat of our eyesight is
+ dispelled, and we shall never be ghost-ridden again. So it must be with
+ this mental illusion of mine. I see an image strange to my experience: it
+ seems to me, at first sight, clothed with a supernatural charm; like an
+ unreasoning coward, I run away from it. It continues to haunt me; I cannot
+ shut out its apparition. It pursues me by day alike in the haunts of men,&mdash;alike
+ in the solitudes of nature; it visits me by night in my dreams. I begin to
+ say this must be a real visitant from another world: it must be love; the
+ love of which I read in the Poets, as in the Poets I read of witchcraft
+ and ghosts. Surely I must approach that apparition as a philosopher like
+ Sir David Brewster would approach the black cat seated on a hearth-rug,
+ which he tells us that some lady of his acquaintance constantly saw till
+ she went into a world into which black cats are not held to be admitted.
+ The more I think of it the less it appears to me possible that I can be
+ really in love with a wild, half-educated, anomalous creature, merely
+ because the apparition of her face haunts me. With perfect safety,
+ therefore, I can approach the creature; in proportion as I see more of her
+ the illusion will vanish. I will go back to Moleswich manfully.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus said Kenelm to himself, and himself answered,&mdash;&ldquo;Go; for thou
+ canst not help it. Thinkest thou that Daces can escape the net that has
+ meshed a Roach? No,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;Come it will, the day decreed by fate,&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ when thou must succumb to the &lsquo;Nature which will be heard.&rsquo; Better succumb
+ now, and with a good grace, than resist till thou hast reached thy
+ fiftieth year, and then make a rational choice not for thy personal
+ satisfaction.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereupon Kenelm answered to himself, indignantly, &ldquo;Pooh! thou flippant.
+ My <i>alter ego</i>, thou knowest not what thou art talking about! It is
+ not a question of Nature; it is a question of the supernatural,&mdash;an
+ illusion,&mdash;a phantom!&rdquo; Thus Kenelm and himself continued to quarrel
+ with each other; and the more they quarrelled, the nearer they approached
+ to the haunted spot in which had been seen, and fled from, the fatal
+ apparition of first love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0082" id="link2H_4_0082">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0077" id="link2HCH0077">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ SIR PETER had not heard from Kenelm since a letter informing him that his
+ son had left town on an excursion, which would probably be short, though
+ it might last a few weeks; and the good Baronet now resolved to go to
+ London himself, take his chance of Kenelm&rsquo;s return, and if still absent,
+ at least learn from Mivers and others how far that very eccentric planet
+ had contrived to steer a regular course amidst the fixed stars of the
+ metropolitan system. He had other reasons for his journey. He wished to
+ make the acquaintance of Chillingly Gordon before handing him over the
+ L20,000 which Kenelm had released in that resettlement of estates, the
+ necessary deeds of which the young heir had signed before quitting London
+ for Moleswich. Sir Peter wished still more to see Cecilia Travers, in whom
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s accounts of her had inspired a very strong interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day after his arrival in town Sir Peter breakfasted with Mivers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my word you are very comfortable here,&rdquo; said Sir Peter, glancing at
+ the well-appointed table, and round the well-furnished rooms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Naturally so: there is no one to prevent my being comfortable. I am not
+ married; taste that omelette.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some men declare they never knew comfort till they were married, Cousin
+ Miners.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some men are reflecting bodies, and catch a pallid gleam from the comfort
+ which a wife concentres on herself. With a fortune so modest and secure,
+ what comforts, possessed by me now, would not a Mrs. Chillingly Mivers
+ ravish from my hold and appropriate to herself! Instead of these pleasant
+ rooms, where should I be lodged? In a dingy den looking on a backyard
+ excluded from the sun by day and vocal with cats by night; while Mrs.
+ Mivers luxuriated in two drawing-rooms with southern aspect and perhaps a
+ boudoir. My brougham would be torn from my uses and monopolized by &lsquo;the
+ angel of my hearth,&rsquo; clouded in her crinoline and halved by her chignon.
+ No! if ever I marry&mdash;and I never deprive myself of the civilities and
+ needlework which single ladies waste upon me by saying I shall not marry&mdash;it
+ will be when women have fully established their rights; for then men may
+ have a chance of vindicating their own. Then if there are two
+ drawing-rooms in the house I shall take one; if not, we will toss up who
+ shall have the back parlour; if we keep a brougham, it will be exclusively
+ mine three days in the week; if Mrs. M. wants L200 a year for her wardrobe
+ she must be contented with one, the other half will belong to my personal
+ decoration; if I am oppressed by proof-sheets and printers&rsquo; devils, half
+ of the oppression falls to her lot, while I take my holiday on the croquet
+ ground at Wimbledon. Yes, when the present wrongs of women are exchanged
+ for equality with men, I will cheerfully marry; and to do the thing
+ generous, I will not oppose Mrs. M.&lsquo;s voting in the vestry or for
+ Parliament. I will give her my own votes with pleasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear, my dear cousin, that you have infected Kenelm with your selfish
+ ideas on the nuptial state. He does not seem inclined to marry,&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not that I know of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What sort of girl is Cecilia Travers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One of those superior girls who are not likely to tower into that
+ terrible giantess called a &lsquo;superior woman.&rsquo; A handsome, well-educated,
+ sensible young lady, not spoiled by being an heiress; in fine, just the
+ sort of girl whom you could desire to fix on for a daughter-in-law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you don&rsquo;t think Kenelm has a fancy for her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Honestly speaking, I do not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Any counter-attraction? There are some things in which sons do not
+ confide in their fathers. You have never heard that Kenelm has been a
+ little wild?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wild he is, as the noble savage who ran in the woods,&rdquo; said Cousin
+ Mivers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You frighten me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before the noble savage ran across the squaws, and was wise enough to run
+ away from them. Kenelm has run away now somewhere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, he does not tell me where, nor do they know at his lodgings. A heap
+ of notes on his table and no directions where they are to be forwarded. On
+ the whole, however, he has held his own in London society,&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly! he has been more courted than most young men, and perhaps more
+ talked of. Oddities generally are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You own he has talents above the average? Do you not think he will make a
+ figure in the world some day, and discharge that debt to the literary
+ stores or the political interests of his country, which alas, I and my
+ predecessors, the other Sir Peters, failed to do; and for which I hailed
+ his birth, and gave him the name of Kenelm?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my word,&rdquo; answered Mivers,&mdash;who had now finished his breakfast,
+ retreated to an easy-chair, and taken from the chimney-piece one of his
+ famous trabucos,&mdash;&ldquo;upon my word, I can&rsquo;t guess; if some great reverse
+ of fortune befell him, and he had to work for his livelihood, or if some
+ other direful calamity gave a shock to his nervous system and jolted it
+ into a fussy, fidgety direction, I dare say he might make a splash in that
+ current of life which bears men on to the grave. But you see he wants, as
+ he himself very truly says, the two stimulants to definite action,&mdash;poverty
+ and vanity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely there have been great men who were neither poor nor vain?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I doubt it. But vanity is a ruling motive that takes many forms and many
+ aliases: call it ambition, call it love of fame, still its substance is
+ the same,&mdash;the desire of applause carried into fussiness of action.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There may be the desire for abstract truth without care for applause.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly. A philosopher on a desert island may amuse himself by
+ meditating on the distinction between light and heat. But if, on returning
+ to the world, he publish the result of his meditations, vanity steps in
+ and desires to be applauded.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense, Cousin Mivers, he may rather desire to be of use and benefit to
+ mankind. You don&rsquo;t deny that there is such a thing as philanthropy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t deny that there is such a thing as humbug. And whenever I meet a
+ man who has the face to tell me that he is taking a great deal of trouble,
+ and putting himself very much out of his way, for a philanthropical
+ object, without the slightest idea of reward either in praise or pence, I
+ know that I have a humbug before me,&mdash;a dangerous humbug, a swindling
+ humbug, a fellow with his pocket full of villanous prospectuses and
+ appeals to subscribers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh, pooh; leave off that affectation of cynicism: you are not a
+ bad-hearted fellow; you must love mankind; you must have an interest in
+ the welfare of posterity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Love mankind? Interest in posterity? Bless my soul, Cousin Peter, I hope
+ you have no prospectuses in <i>your</i> pockets; no schemes for draining
+ the Pontine Marshes out of pure love to mankind; no propositions for
+ doubling the income-tax, as a reserve fund for posterity, should our
+ coal-fields fail three thousand years hence. Love of mankind! Rubbish!
+ This comes of living in the country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you do love the human race; you do care for the generations that are
+ to come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I! Not a bit of it. On the contrary, I rather dislike the human race,
+ taking it altogether, and including the Australian bushmen; and I don&rsquo;t
+ believe any man who tells me that he would grieve half as much if ten
+ millions of human beings were swallowed up by an earthquake at a
+ considerable distance from his own residence, say Abyssinia, as he would
+ for a rise in his butcher&rsquo;s bills. As to posterity, who would consent to
+ have a month&rsquo;s fit of the gout or tic-douloureux in order that in the
+ fourth thousand year, A. D., posterity should enjoy a perfect system of
+ sewage?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter, who had recently been afflicted by a very sharp attack of
+ neuralgia, shook his head, but was too conscientious not to keep silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To turn the subject,&rdquo; said Mivers, relighting the cigar which he had laid
+ aside while delivering himself of his amiable opinions, &ldquo;I think you would
+ do well, while in town, to call on your old friend Travers, and be
+ introduced to Cecilia. If you think as favourably of her as I do, why not
+ ask father and daughter to pay you a visit at Exmundham? Girls think more
+ about a man when they see the place which he can offer to them as a home,
+ and Exmundham is an attractive place to girls,&mdash;picturesque and
+ romantic.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A very good idea,&rdquo; cried Sir Peter, heartily. &ldquo;And I want also to make
+ the acquaintance of Chillingly Gordon. Give me his address.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is his card on the chimney-piece, take it; you will always find him
+ at home till two o&rsquo;clock. He is too sensible to waste the forenoon in
+ riding out in Hyde Park with young ladies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me your frank opinion of that young kinsman. Kenelm tells me that he
+ is clever and ambitious.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kenelm speaks truly. He is not a man who will talk stuff about love of
+ mankind and posterity. He is of our day, with large, keen, wide-awake
+ eyes, that look only on such portions of mankind as can be of use to him,
+ and do not spoil their sight by poring through cracked telescopes to catch
+ a glimpse of posterity. Gordon is a man to be a Chancellor of the
+ Exchequer, perhaps a Prime Minister.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And old Gordon&rsquo;s son is cleverer than my boy,&mdash;than the namesake of
+ Kenelm Digby!&rdquo; and Sir Peter sighed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not say that. I am cleverer than Chillingly Gordon, and the proof
+ of it is that I am too clever to wish to be Prime Minister,&mdash;very
+ disagreeable office, hard work, irregular hours for meals, much abuse and
+ confirmed dyspepsia.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter went away rather down-hearted. He found Chillingly Gordon at
+ home in a lodging in Jermyn Street. Though prepossessed against him by all
+ he had heard, Sir Peter was soon propitiated in his favour. Gordon had a
+ frank man-of-the-world way with him, and much too fine a tact to utter any
+ sentiments likely to displease an old-fashioned country gentleman, and a
+ relation who might possibly be of service in his career. He touched
+ briefly, and with apparent feeling, on the unhappy litigation commenced by
+ his father; spoke with affectionate praise of Kenelm; and with a
+ discriminating good-nature of Mivers, as a man who, to parody the epigram
+ on Charles II.,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Never says a kindly thing
+ And never does a harsh one.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Then he drew Sir Peter on to talk of the country and agricultural
+ prospects. Learned that among his objects in visiting town was the wish to
+ inspect a patented hydraulic ram that might be very useful for his
+ farm-yard, which was ill supplied with water. Startled the Baronet by
+ evincing some practical knowledge of mechanics; insisted on accompanying
+ him to the city to inspect the ram; did so, and approved the purchase;
+ took him next to see a new American reaping-machine, and did not part with
+ him till he had obtained Sir Peter&rsquo;s promise to dine with him at the
+ Garrick; an invitation peculiarly agreeable to Sir Peter, who had a
+ natural curiosity to see some of the more recently distinguished
+ frequenters of that social club. As, on quitting Gordon, Sir Peter took
+ his way to the house of Leopold Travers, his thoughts turned with much
+ kindliness towards his young kinsman. &ldquo;Mivers and Kenelm,&rdquo; quoth he to
+ himself, &ldquo;gave me an unfavourable impression of this lad; they represent
+ him as worldly, self-seeking, and so forth. But Mivers takes such cynical
+ views of character, and Kenelm is too eccentric to judge fairly of a
+ sensible man of the world. At all events, it is not like an egotist to put
+ himself out of his way to be so civil to an old fellow like me. A young
+ man about town must have pleasanter modes of passing his day than
+ inspecting hydraulic rams and reaping-machines. Clever they allow him to
+ be. Yes, decidedly clever, and not offensively clever,&mdash;practical.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter found Travers in the dining-room with his daughter, Mrs.
+ Campion, and Lady Glenalvon. Travers was one of those men rare in middle
+ age, who are more often to be found in their drawing-room than in their
+ private study; he was fond of female society; and perhaps it was this
+ predilection which contributed to preserve in him the charm of good
+ breeding and winning manners. The two men had not met for many years; not
+ indeed since Travers was at the zenith of his career of fashion, and Sir
+ Peter was one of those pleasant <i>dilettanti</i> and half humoristic
+ conversationalists who become popular and courted diners-out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter had originally been a moderate Whig because his father had been
+ one before him; but he left the Whig party with the Duke of Richmond, Mr.
+ Stanley (afterwards Lord Derby), and others, when it seemed to him that
+ that party had ceased to be moderate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leopold Travers had, as a youth in the Guards, been a high Tory, but,
+ siding with Sir Robert Peel on the repeal of the Corn Laws, remained with
+ the Peelites after the bulk of the Tory party had renounced the guidance
+ of their former chief, and now went with these Peelites in whatever
+ direction the progress of the age might impel their strides in advance of
+ Whigs and in defiance of Tories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, it is not the politics of these two gentlemen that are in
+ question now. As I have just said, they had not met for many years.
+ Travers was very little changed. Sir Peter recognized him at a glance; Sir
+ Peter was much changed, and Travers hesitated before, on hearing his name
+ announced, he felt quite sure that it was the right Sir Peter towards whom
+ he advanced, and to whom he extended his cordial hand. Travers preserved
+ the colour of his hair and the neat proportions of his figure, and was as
+ scrupulously well dressed as in his dandy days. Sir Peter, originally very
+ thin and with fair locks and dreamy blue eyes, had now become rather
+ portly,&mdash;at least towards the middle of him,&mdash;and very gray; had
+ long ago taken to spectacles; his dress, too, was very old-fashioned, and
+ made by a country tailor. He looked quite as much a gentleman as Travers
+ did; quite perhaps as healthy, allowing for difference of years; quite as
+ likely to last his time. But between them there was the difference of the
+ nervous temperament and the lymphatic. Travers, with less brain than Sir
+ Peter, had kept his brain constantly active; Sir Peter had allowed his
+ brain to dawdle over old books and lazily delight in letting the hours
+ slip by. Therefore Travers still looked young, alert,&mdash;up to his day,
+ up to anything; while Sir Peter, entering that drawing-room, seemed a sort
+ of Rip van Winkle who had slept through the past generation, and looked on
+ the present with eyes yet drowsy. Still, in those rare moments when he was
+ thoroughly roused up, there would have been found in Sir Peter a glow of
+ heart, nay, even a vigour of thought, much more expressive than the
+ constitutional alertness that characterized Leopold Travers, of the
+ attributes we most love and admire in the young.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Sir Peter, is it you? I am so glad to see you again,&rdquo; said
+ Travers. &ldquo;What an age since we met, and how condescendingly kind you were
+ then to me; silly fop that I was! But bygones are bygones; come to the
+ present. Let me introduce to you, first, my valued friend, Mrs. Campion,
+ whose distinguished husband you remember. Ah, what pleasant meetings we
+ had at his house! And next, that young lady of whom she takes motherly
+ charge, my daughter Cecilia. Lady Glenalvon, your wife&rsquo;s friend, of course
+ needs no introduction: time stands still with her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter lowered his spectacles, which in reality he only wanted for
+ books in small print, and gazed attentively on the three ladies,&mdash;at
+ each gaze a bow. But while his eyes were still lingeringly fixed on
+ Cecilia, Lady Glenalvon advanced, naturally in right of rank and the claim
+ of old acquaintance, the first of the three to greet him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas, my dear Sir Peter! time does not stand still for any of us; but
+ what matter, if it leaves pleasant footprints? When I see you again, my
+ youth comes before me,&mdash;my early friend, Caroline Brotherton, now
+ Lady Chillingly; our girlish walks with each other; wreaths and
+ ball-dresses the practical topic; prospective husbands, the dream at a
+ distance. Come and sit here: tell me all about Caroline.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter, who had little to say about Caroline that could possibly
+ interest anybody but himself, nevertheless took his seat beside Lady
+ Glenalvon, and, as in duty bound, made the most flattering account of his
+ She Baronet which experience or invention would allow. All the while,
+ however, his thoughts were on Kenelm, and his eyes on Cecilia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia resumes some mysterious piece of lady&rsquo;s work, no matter what,&mdash;perhaps
+ embroidery for a music-stool, perhaps a pair of slippers for her father
+ (which, being rather vain of his feet and knowing they looked best in
+ plain morocco, he will certainly never wear). Cecilia appears absorbed in
+ her occupation; but her eyes and her thoughts are on Sir Peter. Why, my
+ lady reader may guess. And oh, so flatteringly, so lovingly fixed! She
+ thinks he has a most charming, intelligent, benignant countenance. She
+ admires even his old-fashioned frock-coat, high neckcloth, and strapped
+ trousers. She venerates his gray hairs, pure of dye. She tries to find a
+ close resemblance between that fair, blue-eyed, plumpish, elderly
+ gentleman and the lean, dark-eyed, saturnine, lofty Kenelm; she detects
+ the likeness which nobody else would. She begins to love Sir Peter, though
+ he has not said a word to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ah! on this, a word for what it is worth to you, my young readers. You,
+ sir, wishing to marry a girl who is to be deeply, lastingly in love with
+ you, and a thoroughly good wife practically, consider well how she takes
+ to your parents; how she attaches to them an inexpressible sentiment, a
+ disinterested reverence; even should you but dimly recognize the
+ sentiment, or feel the reverence, how if between you and your parents some
+ little cause of coldness arise, she will charm you back to honour your
+ father and your mother, even though they are not particularly genial to
+ her: well, if you win that sort of girl as your wife think you have got a
+ treasure. You have won a woman to whom Heaven has given the two best
+ attributes,&mdash;intense feeling of love, intense sense of duty. What, my
+ dear lady reader, I say of one sex, I say of another, though in a less
+ degree; because a girl who marries becomes of her husband&rsquo;s family, and
+ the man does not become of his wife&rsquo;s. Still I distrust the depth of any
+ man&rsquo;s love to a woman, if he does not feel a great degree of tenderness
+ (and forbearance where differences arise) for her parents. But the wife
+ must not so put them in the foreground as to make the husband think he is
+ cast in the cold of the shadow. Pardon this intolerable length of
+ digression, dear reader: it is not altogether a digression, for it belongs
+ to my tale that you should clearly understand the sort of girl that is
+ personified in Cecilia Travers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What has become of Kenelm?&rdquo; asked Lady Glenalvon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I could tell you,&rdquo; answered Sir Peter. &ldquo;He wrote me word that he
+ was going forth on rambles into &lsquo;fresh woods and pastures new,&rsquo; perhaps
+ for some weeks. I have not had a word from him since.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You make me uneasy,&rdquo; said Lady Glenalvon. &ldquo;I hope nothing can have
+ happened to him: he cannot have fallen ill.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia stops her work, and looks up wistfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make your mind easy,&rdquo; said Travers with a laugh; &ldquo;I am in this secret. He
+ has challenged the champion of England, and gone into the country to
+ train.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very likely,&rdquo; said Sir Peter, quietly: &ldquo;I should not be in the least
+ surprised; should you, Miss Travers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think it more probable that Mr. Chillingly is doing some kindness to
+ others which he wishes to keep concealed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter was pleased with this reply, and drew his chair nearer to
+ Cecilia&rsquo;s. Lady Glenalvon, charmed to bring those two together, soon rose
+ and took leave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter remained nearly an hour talking chiefly with Cecilia, who won
+ her way into his heart with extraordinary ease; and he did not quit the
+ house till he had engaged her father, Mrs. Campion, and herself to pay him
+ a week&rsquo;s visit at Exmundham, towards the end of the London season, which
+ was fast approaching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having obtained this promise, Sir Peter went away, and ten minutes after
+ Mr. Chillingly Gordon entered the drawing-room. He had already established
+ a visiting acquaintance with the Traverses. Travers had taken a liking to
+ him. Mrs. Campion found him an extremely well-informed, unaffected young
+ man, very superior to young men in general. Cecilia was cordially polite
+ to Kenelm&rsquo;s cousin. Altogether that was a very happy day for Sir Peter. He
+ enjoyed greatly his dinner at the Garrick, where he met some old
+ acquaintance and was presented to some new &ldquo;celebrities.&rdquo; He observed that
+ Gordon stood well with these eminent persons. Though as yet
+ undistinguished himself, they treated him with a certain respect, as well
+ as with evident liking. The most eminent of them, at least the one with
+ the most solidly established reputation, said in Sir Peter&rsquo;s ear, &ldquo;You may
+ be proud of your nephew Gordon!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is not my nephew, only the son of a very distant cousin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sorry for that. But he will shed lustre on kinsfolk, however distant.
+ Clever fellow, yet popular; rare combination,&mdash;sure to rise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter suppressed a gulp in the throat. &ldquo;Ah, if some one as eminent had
+ spoken thus of Kenelm!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he was too generous to allow that half-envious sentiment to last more
+ than a moment. Why should he not be proud of any member of the family who
+ could irradiate the antique obscurity of the Chillingly race? And how
+ agreeable this clever young man made himself to Sir Peter!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day Gordon insisted on accompanying him to see the latest
+ acquisitions in the British Museum, and various other exhibitions, and
+ went at night to the Prince of Wales&rsquo;s Theatre, where Sir Peter was
+ infinitely delighted with an admirable little comedy by Mr. Robertson,
+ admirably placed on the stage by Marie Wilton. The day after, when Gordon
+ called on him at his hotel, he cleared his throat, and thus plunged at
+ once into the communication he had hitherto delayed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gordon, my boy, I owe you a debt, and I am now, thanks to Kenelm, able to
+ pay it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gordon gave a little start of surprise, but remained silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told your father, shortly after Kenelm was born, that I meant to give
+ up my London house, and lay by L1000 a year for you, in compensation for
+ your chance of succeeding to Exmundham should I have died childless. Well,
+ your father did not seem to think much of that promise, and went to law
+ with me about certain unquestionable rights of mine. How so clever a man
+ could have made such a mistake would puzzle me, if I did not remember that
+ he had a quarrelsome temper. Temper is a thing that often dominates
+ cleverness,&mdash;an uncontrollable thing; and allowances must be made for
+ it. Not being of a quarrelsome temper myself (the Chillinglys are a placid
+ race), I did not make the allowance for your father&rsquo;s differing, and (for
+ a Chillingly) abnormal, constitution. The language and the tone of his
+ letter respecting it nettled me. I did not see why, thus treated, I should
+ pinch myself to lay by a thousand a year. Facilities for buying a property
+ most desirable for the possessor of Exmundham presented themselves. I
+ bought it with borrowed money, and though I gave up the house in London, I
+ did not lay by the thousand a year.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Sir Peter, I have always regretted that my poor father was misled&mdash;perhaps
+ out of too paternal a care for my supposed interests&mdash;into that
+ unhappy and fruitless litigation, after which no one could doubt that any
+ generous intentions on your part would be finally abandoned. It has been a
+ grateful surprise to me that I have been so kindly and cordially received
+ into the family by Kenelm and yourself. Pray oblige me by dropping all
+ reference to pecuniary matters: the idea of compensation to a very distant
+ relative for the loss of expectations he had no right to form, is too
+ absurd, for me at least, ever to entertain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I am absurd enough to entertain it, though you express yourself in a
+ very high-minded way. To come to the point, Kenelm is of age, and we have
+ cut off the entail. The estate of course remains absolutely with Kenelm to
+ dispose of, as it did before, and we must take it for granted that he will
+ marry; at all events he cannot fall into your poor father&rsquo;s error: but
+ whatever Kenelm hereafter does with his property, it is nothing to you,
+ and is not to be counted upon. Even the title dies with Kenelm if he has
+ no son. On resettling the estate, however, sums of money have been
+ realized which, as I stated before, enable me to discharge the debt which
+ Kenelm heartily agrees with me is due to you. L20,000 are now lying at my
+ bankers&rsquo; to be transferred to yours; meanwhile, if you will call on my
+ solicitor, Mr. Vining, Lincoln&rsquo;s-inn, you can see the new deed and give to
+ him your receipt for the L20,000, for which he holds my cheque. Stop!
+ stop! stop! I will not hear a. word: no thanks; they are not due.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Gordon, who had during this speech uttered various brief
+ exclamations, which Sir Peter did not heed, caught hold of his kinsman&rsquo;s
+ hand, and, despite of all struggles, pressed his lips on it. &ldquo;I must thank
+ you; I must give some vent to my emotions,&rdquo; cried Gordon. &ldquo;This sum, great
+ in itself, is far more to me than you can imagine: it opens my career; it
+ assures my future.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So Kenelm tells me; he said that sum would be more use to you now than
+ ten times the amount twenty years hence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So it will,&mdash;it will. And Kenelm consents to this sacrifice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Consents! urges it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gordon turned away his face, and Sir Peter resumed: &ldquo;You want to get into
+ Parliament; very natural ambition for a clever young fellow. I don&rsquo;t
+ presume to dictate politics to you. I hear you are what is called a
+ Liberal; a man may be a Liberal, I suppose, without being a Jacobin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope so, indeed. For my part I am anything but a violent man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Violent, no! Who ever heard of a violent Chillingly? But I was reading in
+ the newspaper to-day a speech addressed to some popular audience, in which
+ the orator was for dividing all the lands and all the capital belonging to
+ other people among the working class, calmly and quietly, without any
+ violence, and deprecating violence: but saying, perhaps very truly, that
+ the people to be robbed might not like it, and might offer violence; in
+ which case woe betide them; it was they who would be guilty of violence;
+ and they must take the consequences if they resisted the reasonable,
+ propositions of himself and his friends! That, I suppose, is among the new
+ ideas with which Kenelm is more familiar than I am. Do you entertain those
+ new ideas?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not: I despise the fools who do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you will not abet revolutionary measures if you get into Parliament?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Sir Peter, I fear you have heard very false reports of my
+ opinions if you put such questions. Listen,&rdquo; and therewith Gordon launched
+ into dissertations very clever, very subtle, which committed him to
+ nothing, beyond the wisdom of guiding popular opinions into right
+ directions: what might be right directions he did not define; he left Sir
+ Peter to guess them. Sir Peter did guess them, as Gordon meant he should,
+ to be the directions which he, Sir Peter, thought right; and he was
+ satisfied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That subject disposed of, Gordon said, with much apparent feeling, &ldquo;May I
+ ask you to complete the favours you have lavished on me? I have never seen
+ Exmundham, and the home of the race from which I sprang has a deep
+ interest for time. Will you allow me to spend a few days with you, and
+ under the shade of your own trees take lessons in political science from
+ one who has evidently reflected on it profoundly?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Profoundly, no; a little,&mdash;a little, as a mere bystander,&rdquo; said Sir
+ Peter, modestly, but much flattered. &ldquo;Come, my dear boy, by all means; you
+ will have a hearty welcome. By the by, Travers and his handsome daughter
+ promised to visit me in about a fortnight, why not come at the same time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sudden flash lit up the young man&rsquo;s countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall be so delighted,&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;I am but slightly acquainted with
+ Mr. Travers, but I like him much, and Mrs. Campion is so well informed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what say you to the girl?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The girl, Miss Travers. Oh, she is very well in her way. But I don&rsquo;t talk
+ with young ladies more than I can help.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you are like your cousin Kenelm?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I were like him in other things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, one such oddity in a family is quite enough. But though I would not
+ have you change to a Kenelm, I would not change Kenelm for the most
+ perfect model of a son that the world can exhibit.&rdquo; Delivering himself of
+ this burst of parental fondness, Sir Peter shook hands with Gordon, and
+ walked off to Mivers, who was to give him luncheon and then accompany him
+ to the station. Sir Peter was to return to Exmundham by the afternoon
+ express.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Left alone, Gordon indulged in one of those luxurious guesses into the
+ future which form the happiest moments in youth when so ambitious as his.
+ The sum Sir Peter placed at his disposal would insure his entrance in
+ Parliament. He counted with confidence on early successes there. He
+ extended the scope of his views. With such successes he might calculate
+ with certainty on a brilliant marriage, augmenting his fortune, and
+ confirming his position. He had previously fixed his thoughts on Cecilia
+ Travers. I will do him the justice to say not from mercenary motives
+ alone, but not certainly with the impetuous ardour of youthful love. He
+ thought her exactly fitted to be the wife of an eminent public man, in
+ person, acquirement, dignified yet popular manners. He esteemed her, he
+ liked her, and then her fortune would add solidity to his position. In
+ fact, he had that sort of rational attachment to Cecilia which wise men,
+ like Lord Bacon and Montaigne, would commend to another wise man seeking a
+ wife. What opportunities of awaking in herself a similar, perhaps a
+ warmer, attachment the visit to Exmundham would afford! He had learned
+ when he had called on the Traverses that they were going thither, and
+ hence that burst of family sentiment which had procured the invitation to
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he must be cautious, he must not prematurely awaken Travers&rsquo;s
+ suspicions. He was not as yet a match that the squire could approve of for
+ his heiress. And, though he was ignorant of Sir Peter&rsquo;s designs on that,
+ young lady, he was much too prudent to confide his own to a kinsman of
+ whose discretion he had strong misgivings. It was enough for him at
+ present that way was opened for his own resolute energies. And cheerfully,
+ though musingly, he weighed its obstacles, and divined its goal, as he
+ paced his floor with bended head and restless strides, now quick, now
+ slow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter, in the meanwhile, found a very good luncheon prepared for him
+ at Mivers&rsquo;s rooms, which he had all to himself, for his host never &ldquo;spoilt
+ his dinner and insulted his breakfast&rdquo; by that intermediate meal. He
+ remained at his desk writing brief notes of business, or of pleasure,
+ while Sir Peter did justice to lamb cutlets and grilled chicken. But he
+ looked up from his task, with raised eyebrows, when Sir Peter, after a
+ somewhat discursive account of his visit to the Traverses, his admiration
+ of Cecilia, and the adroitness with which, acting on his cousin&rsquo;s hint, he
+ had engaged the family to spend a few days at Exmundham, added, &ldquo;And, by
+ the by, I have asked young Gordon to meet them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To meet them! meet Mr. and Miss Travers! you have? I thought you wished
+ Kenelm to marry Cecilia. I was mistaken, you meant Gordon!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gordon,&rdquo; exclaimed Sir Peter, dropping his knife and fork. &ldquo;Nonsense, you
+ don&rsquo;t suppose that Miss Travers prefers him to Kenelm, or that he has the
+ presumption to fancy that her father would sanction his addresses?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I indulge in no suppositions of the sort. I content myself with thinking
+ that Gordon is clever, insinuating, young; and it is a very good chance of
+ bettering himself that you have thrown in his way. However, it is no
+ affair of mine; and though on the whole I like Kenelm better than Gordon,
+ still I like Gordon very well, and I have an interest in following his
+ career which I can&rsquo;t say I have in conjecturing what may be Kenelm&rsquo;s&mdash;more
+ likely no career at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mivers, you delight in provoking me; you do say such uncomfortable
+ things. But, in the first place, Gordon spoke rather slightingly of Miss
+ Travers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, indeed; that&rsquo;s a bad sign,&rdquo; muttered Mivers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter did not hear him, and went on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, besides, I feel pretty sure that the dear girl has already a regard
+ for Kenelm which allows no room for a rival. However, I shall not forget
+ your hint, but keep a sharp lookout; and, if I see the young man wants to
+ be too sweet on Cecilia, I shall cut short his visit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give yourself no trouble in the matter; it will do no good. Marriages are
+ made in heaven. Heaven&rsquo;s will be done. If I can get away I will run down
+ to you for a day or two. Perhaps in that case you can ask Lady Glenalvon.
+ I like her, and she likes Kenelm. Have you finished? I see the brougham is
+ at the door, and we have to call at your hotel to take up your
+ carpet-bag.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mivers was deliberately sealing his notes while he thus spoke. He now rang
+ for his servant, gave orders for their delivery, and then followed Sir
+ Peter down stairs and into the brougham. Not a word would he say more
+ about Gordon, and Sir Peter shrank from telling him about the L20,000.
+ Chillingly Mivers was perhaps the last person to whom Sir Peter would be
+ tempted to parade an act of generosity. Mivers might not unfrequently do a
+ generous act himself, provided it was not divulged; but he had always a
+ sneer for the generosity of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0078" id="link2HCH0078">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WANDERING back towards Moleswich, Kenelm found himself a little before
+ sunset on the banks of the garrulous brook, almost opposite to the house
+ inhabited by Lily Mordaunt. He stood long and silently by the grassy
+ margin, his dark shadow falling over the stream, broken into fragments by
+ the eddy and strife of waves, fresh from their leap down the neighbouring
+ waterfall. His eyes rested on the house and the garden lawn in the front.
+ The upper windows were open. &ldquo;I wonder which is hers,&rdquo; he said to himself.
+ At last he caught a glimpse of the gardener, bending over a flower border
+ with his watering-pot, and then moving slowly through the little
+ shrubbery, no doubt to his own cottage. Now the lawn was solitary, save
+ that a couple of thrushes dropped suddenly on the sward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good evening, sir,&rdquo; said a voice. &ldquo;A capital spot for trout this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm turned his head, and beheld on the footpath, just behind him, a
+ respectable elderly man, apparently of the class of a small retail
+ tradesman, with a fishing-rod in his hand and a basket belted to his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For trout,&rdquo; replied Kenelm; &ldquo;I dare say. A strangely attractive spot
+ indeed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you an angler, sir, if I may make bold to inquire?&rdquo; asked the elderly
+ man, somewhat perhaps puzzled as to the rank of the stranger; noticing, on
+ the one hand, his dress and his mien, on the other, slung to his
+ shoulders, the worn and shabby knapsack which Kenelm had carried, at home
+ and abroad, the preceding year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, I am an angler.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then this is the best place in the whole stream. Look, sir, there is
+ Izaak Walton&rsquo;s summer-house; and further down you see that white,
+ neat-looking house. Well, that is my house, sir, and I have an apartment
+ which I let to gentleman anglers. It is generally occupied throughout the
+ summer months. I expect every day to have a letter to engage it, but it is
+ vacant now. A very nice apartment, sir,&mdash;sitting-room and bedroom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Descende ceolo, et dic age tibia</i>,&rdquo; said Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir?&rdquo; said the elderly man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg you ten thousand pardons. I have had the misfortune to have been at
+ the university, and to have learned a little Latin, which sometimes comes
+ back very inopportunely. But, speaking in plain English, what I meant to
+ say is this: I invoked the Muse to descend from heaven and bring with her&mdash;the
+ original says a fife, but I meant&mdash;a fishing-rod. I should think your
+ apartment would suit me exactly; pray show it to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With the greatest pleasure,&rdquo; said the elderly man. &ldquo;The Muse need not
+ bring a fishing-rod! we have all sorts of tackle at your service, and a
+ boat too, if you care for that. The stream hereabouts is so shallow and
+ narrow that a boat is of little use till you get farther down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want to get farther down; but should I want to get to the
+ opposite bank, without wading across, would the boat take me or is there a
+ bridge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The boat can take you. It is a flat-bottomed punt, and there is a bridge
+ too for foot-passengers, just opposite my house; and between this and
+ Moleswich, where the stream widens, there is a ferry. The stone bridge for
+ traffic is at the farther end of the town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good. Let us go at once to your house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two men walked on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the by,&rdquo; said Kenelm, as they walked, &ldquo;do you know much of the family
+ that inhabit the pretty cottage on the opposite side, which we have just
+ left behind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Cameron&rsquo;s. Yes, of course, a very good lady; and Mr. Melville, the
+ painter. I am sure I ought to know, for he has often lodged with me when
+ he came to visit Mrs. Cameron. He recommends my apartment to his friends,
+ and they are my best lodgers. I like painters, sir, though I don&rsquo;t know
+ much about paintings. They are pleasant gentlemen, and easily contented
+ with my humble roof and fare.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are quite right. I don&rsquo;t know much about paintings myself; but I am
+ inclined to believe that painters, judging not from what I have seen of
+ them, for I have not a single acquaintance among them personally, but from
+ what I have read of their lives, are, as a general rule, not only pleasant
+ but noble gentlemen. They form within themselves desires to beautify or
+ exalt commonplace things, and they can only accomplish their desires by a
+ constant study of what is beautiful and what is exalted. A man constantly
+ so engaged ought to be a very noble gentleman, even though he may be the
+ son of a shoeblack. And living in a higher world than we do, I can
+ conceive that he is, as you say, very well contented with humble roof and
+ fare in the world we inhabit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Exactly, sir; I see&mdash;I see now, though you put it in a way that
+ never struck me before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; said Kenelm, looking benignly at the speaker, &ldquo;you seem to me a
+ well-educated and intelligent man; reflective on things in general,
+ without being unmindful of your interests in particular, especially when
+ you have lodgings to let. Do not be offended. That sort of man is not
+ perhaps born to be a painter, but I respect him highly. The world, sir,
+ requires the vast majority of its inhabitants to live in it,&mdash;to live
+ by it. &lsquo;Each for himself, and God for us all.&rsquo; The greatest happiness of
+ the greatest number is best secured by a prudent consideration for Number
+ One.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somewhat to Kenelm&rsquo;s surprise (allowing that he had now learned enough of
+ life to be occasionally surprised) the elderly man here made a dead halt,
+ stretched out his hand cordially, and cried, &ldquo;Hear, hear! I see that, like
+ me, you are a decided democrat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Democrat! Pray, may I ask, not why you are one,&mdash;that would be a
+ liberty, and democrats resent any liberty taken with themselves; but why
+ you suppose I am?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You spoke of the greatest happiness of the greatest number. That is a
+ democratic sentiment surely! Besides, did not you say, sir, that painters,&mdash;painters,
+ sir, painters, even if they were the sons of shoeblacks, were the true
+ gentlemen,&mdash;the true noblemen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not say that exactly, to the disparagement of other gentlemen and
+ nobles. But if I did, what then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, I agree with you. I despise rank; I despise dukes and earls and
+ aristocrats. &lsquo;An honest man&rsquo;s the noblest work of God.&rsquo; Some poet says
+ that. I think Shakspeare. Wonderful man, Shakspeare. A tradesman&rsquo;s son,&mdash;butcher,
+ I believe. Eh! My uncle was a butcher, and might have been an alderman. I
+ go along with you heartily, heartily. I am a democrat, every inch of me.
+ Shake hands, sir, shake hands; we are all equals. &lsquo;Each man for himself,
+ and God for us all.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no objection to shake hands,&rdquo; said Kenelm; &ldquo;but don&rsquo;t let me owe
+ your condescension to false pretences. Though we are all equal before the
+ law, except the rich man, who has little chance of justice as against a
+ poor man when submitted to an English jury, yet I utterly deny that any
+ two men you select can be equals. One must beat the other in something;
+ and, when one man beats another, democracy ceases and aristocracy begins.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aristocracy! I don&rsquo;t see that. What do you mean by aristocracy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The ascendency of the better man. In a rude State the better man is the
+ stronger; in a corrupt State, perhaps the more roguish; in modern
+ republics the jobbers get the money and the lawyers get the power. In
+ well-ordered States alone aristocracy appears at its genuine worth: the
+ better man in birth, because respect for ancestry secures a higher
+ standard of honour; the better man in wealth, because of the immense uses
+ to enterprise, energy, and the fine arts, which rich men must be if they
+ follow their natural inclinations; the better man in character, the better
+ man in ability, for reasons too obvious to define; and these two last will
+ beat the others in the government of the State, if the State be
+ flourishing and free. All these four classes of better men constitute true
+ aristocracy; and when a better government than a true aristocracy shall be
+ devised by the wit of man, we shall not be far off from the Millennium and
+ the reign of saints. But here we are at the house,&mdash;yours, is it not?
+ I like the look of it extremely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The elderly man now entered the little porch, over which clambered
+ honeysuckle and ivy intertwined, and ushered Kenelm into a pleasant
+ parlour, with a bay window, and an equally pleasant bedroom behind it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will it do, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perfectly. I take it from this moment. My knapsack contains all I shall
+ need for the night. There is a portmanteau of mine at Mr. Somers&rsquo;s shop,
+ which can be sent here in the morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But we have not settled about the terms,&rdquo; said the elderly man, beginning
+ to feel rather doubtful whether he ought thus to have installed in his
+ home a stalwart pedestrian of whom he knew nothing, and who, though
+ talking glibly enough on other things, had preserved an ominous silence on
+ the subject of payment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Terms? true, name them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Including board?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly. Chameleons live on air; democrats on wind bags. I have a more
+ vulgar appetite, and require mutton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meat is very dear now-a-days,&rdquo; said the elderly man, &ldquo;and I am afraid,
+ for board and lodging I cannot charge you less than L3 3s.,&mdash;say L3 a
+ week. My lodgers usually pay a week in advance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Agreed,&rdquo; said Kenelm, extracting three sovereigns from his purse. &ldquo;I have
+ dined already: I want nothing more this evening; let me detain you no
+ further. Be kind enough to shut the door after you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he was alone, Kenelm seated himself in the recess of the bay window,
+ against the casement, and looked forth intently. Yes; he was right: he
+ could see from thence the home of Lily. Not, indeed, more than a white
+ gleam of the house through the interstices of trees and shrubs, but the
+ gentle lawn sloping to the brook, with the great willow at the end dipping
+ its boughs into the water, and shutting out all view beyond itself by its
+ bower of tender leaves. The young man bent his face on his hands and mused
+ dreamily: the evening deepened; the stars came forth; the rays of the moon
+ now peered aslant through the arching dips of the willow, silvering their
+ way as they stole to the waves below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shall I bring lights, sir? or do you prefer a lamp or candles?&rdquo; asked a
+ voice behind,&mdash;the voice of the elderly man&rsquo;s wife. &ldquo;Do you like the
+ shutters closed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question startled the dreamer. They seemed mocking his own old
+ mockings on the romance of love. Lamp or candles, practical lights for
+ prosaic eyes, and shutters closed against moon and stars!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, ma&rsquo;am, not yet,&rdquo; he said; and rising quietly he placed his
+ hand on the window-sill, swung himself through the open casement, and
+ passed slowly along the margin of the rivulet, by a path checkered
+ alternately with shade and starlight; the moon yet more slowly rising
+ above the willows, and lengthening its track along the wavelets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0079" id="link2HCH0079">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THOUGH Kenelm did not think it necessary at present to report to his
+ parents or his London acquaintances his recent movements and his present
+ resting-place, it never entered into his head to lurk <i>perdu</i> in the
+ immediate vicinity of Lily&rsquo;s house, and seek opportunities of meeting her
+ clandestinely. He walked to Mrs. Braefield&rsquo;s the next morning, found her
+ at home, and said in rather a more off-hand manner than was habitual to
+ him, &ldquo;I have hired a lodging in your neighbourhood, on the banks of the
+ brook, for the sake of its trout-fishing. So you will allow me to call on
+ you sometimes, and one of these days I hope you will give me the dinner I
+ so unceremoniously rejected some days ago. I was then summoned away
+ suddenly, much against my will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; my husband said that you shot off from him with a wild exclamation
+ about duty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite true; my reason, and I may say my conscience, were greatly
+ perplexed upon a matter extremely important and altogether new to me. I
+ went to Oxford,&mdash;the place above all others in which questions of
+ reason and conscience are most deeply considered, and perhaps least
+ satisfactorily solved. Relieved in my mind by my visit to a distinguished
+ ornament of that university, I felt I might indulge in a summer holiday,
+ and here I am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! I understand. You had religious doubts,&mdash;thought perhaps of
+ turning Roman Catholic. I hope you are not going to do so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My doubts were not necessarily of a religious nature. Pagans have
+ entertained them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whatever they were I am pleased to see they did not prevent your return,&rdquo;
+ said Mrs. Braefield, graciously. &ldquo;But where have you found a lodging; why
+ not have come to us? My husband would have been scarcely less glad than
+ myself to receive you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You say that so sincerely, and so cordially, that to answer by a brief &lsquo;I
+ thank you&rsquo; seems rigid and heartless. But there are times in life when one
+ yearns to be alone,&mdash;to commune with one&rsquo;s own heart, and, if
+ possible, be still; I am in one of those moody times. Bear with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Braefield looked at him with affectionate, kindly interest. She had
+ gone before him through the solitary road of young romance. She remembered
+ her dreamy, dangerous girlhood, when she, too, had yearned to be alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bear with you; yes, indeed. I wish, Mr. Chillingly, that I were your
+ sister, and that you would confide in me. Something troubles you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Troubles me,&mdash;no. My thoughts are happy ones, and they may sometimes
+ perplex me, but they do not trouble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm said this very softly; and in the warmer light of his musing eyes,
+ the sweeter play of his tranquil smile, there was an expression which did
+ not belie his words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have not told me where you have found a lodging,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+ Braefield, somewhat abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did I not?&rdquo; replied Kenelm, with an unconscious start, as from an
+ abstracted reverie. &ldquo;With no undistinguished host, I presume, for when I
+ asked him this morning for the right address of this cottage, in order to
+ direct such luggage as I have to be sent there, he gave me his card with a
+ grand air, saying, &lsquo;I am pretty well known at Moleswich, by and beyond
+ it.&rsquo; I have not yet looked at his card. Oh, here it is,&mdash;&lsquo;Algernon
+ Sidney Gale Jones, Cromwell Lodge;&rsquo; you laugh. What do you know of him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish my husband were here; he would tell you more about him. Mr. Jones
+ is quite a character.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So I perceive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A great radical,&mdash;very talkative and troublesome at the vestry; but
+ our vicar, Mr. Emlyn, says there is no real harm in him, that his bark is
+ worse than his bite, and that his republican or radical notions must be
+ laid to the door of his godfathers! In addition to his name of Jones, he
+ was unhappily christened Gale; Gale Jones being a noted radical orator at
+ the time of his birth. And I suppose Algernon Sidney was prefixed to Gale
+ in order to devote the new-born more emphatically to republican
+ principles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Naturally, therefore, Algernon Sidney Gale Jones baptizes his house
+ Cromwell Lodge, seeing that Algernon Sidney held the Protectorate in
+ especial abhorrence, and that the original Gale Jones, if an honest
+ radical, must have done the same, considering what rough usage the
+ advocates of Parliamentary Reform met with at the hands of his Highness.
+ But we must be indulgent to men who have been unfortunately christened
+ before they had any choice of the names that were to rule their fate. I
+ myself should have been less whimsical had I not been named after a Kenelm
+ who believed in sympathetic powders. Apart from his political doctrines, I
+ like my landlord: he keeps his wife in excellent order. She seems
+ frightened at the sound of her own footsteps, and glides to and fro, a
+ pallid image of submissive womanhood in list slippers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Great recommendations certainly, and Cromwell Lodge is very prettily
+ situated. By the by, it is very near Mrs. Cameron&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I think of it, so it is,&rdquo; said Kenelm, innocently. Ah! my friend
+ Kenelm, enemy of shams, and truth-teller, <i>par excellence</i>, what hast
+ thou come to? How are the mighty fallen! &ldquo;Since you say you will dine with
+ us, suppose we fix the day after to-morrow, and I will ask Mrs. Cameron
+ and Lily.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The day after to-morrow: I shall be delighted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An early hour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The earlier the better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is six o&rsquo;clock too early?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Too early! certainly not; on the contrary. Good-day: I must now go to
+ Mrs. Somers; she has charge of my portmanteau.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Kenelm rose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor dear Lily!&rdquo; said Mrs. Braefield; &ldquo;I wish she were less of a child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm reseated himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is she a child? I don&rsquo;t think she is actually a child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in years; she is between seventeen and eighteen: but my husband says
+ that she is too childish to talk to, and always tells me to take her off
+ his hands; he would rather talk with Mrs. Cameron.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still I find something in her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not exactly childish, nor quite womanish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t exactly define. But you know what Mr. Melville and Mrs. Cameron
+ call her as a pet name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fairy! Fairies have no age; fairy is neither child nor woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fairy. She is called fairy by those who know her best? Fairy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And she believes in fairies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does she?&mdash;so do I. Pardon me, I must be off. The day after
+ to-morrow,&mdash;six o&rsquo;clock.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait one moment,&rdquo; said Elsie, going to her writing-table. &ldquo;Since you pass
+ Grasmere on your way home, will you kindly leave this note?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought Grasmere was a lake in the north?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; but Mr. Melville chose to call the cottage by the name of the lake.
+ I think the first picture he ever sold was a view of Wordsworth&rsquo;s house
+ there. Here is my note to ask Mrs. Cameron to meet you; but if you object
+ to be my messenger&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Object! my dear Mrs. Braefield. As you say, I pass close by the cottage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0080" id="link2HCH0080">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM went with somewhat rapid pace from Mrs. Braefield&rsquo;s to the shop in
+ the High Street kept by Will Somers. Jessie was behind the counter, which
+ was thronged with customers. Kenelm gave her a brief direction about his
+ portmanteau, and then passed into the back parlour, where her husband was
+ employed on his baskets,&mdash;with the baby&rsquo;s cradle in the corner, and
+ its grandmother rocking it mechanically, as she read a wonderful
+ missionary tract full of tales of miraculous conversions: into what sort
+ of Christians we will not pause to inquire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so you are happy, Will?&rdquo; said Kenelm, seating himself between the
+ basket-maker and the infant; the dear old mother beside him, reading the
+ tract which linked her dreams of life eternal with life just opening in
+ the cradle that she rocked. He not happy! How he pitied the man who could
+ ask such a question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Happy, sir! I should think so, indeed. There is not a night on which
+ Jessie and I, and mother too, do not pray that some day or other you may
+ be as happy. By and by the baby will learn to pray &lsquo;God bless papa, and
+ mamma, grandmamma, and Mr. Chillingly.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is some one else much more deserving of prayers than I, though
+ needing them less. You will know some day: pass it by now. To return to
+ the point: you are happy; if I asked why, would you not say, &lsquo;Because I
+ have married the girl I love, and have never repented&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir, that is about it; though, begging your pardon, I think it
+ could be put more prettily somehow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right there. But perhaps love and happiness never yet found any
+ words that could fitly express them. Good-bye, for the present.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ah! if it were as mere materialists, or as many middle-aged or elderly
+ folks, who, if materialists, are so without knowing it, unreflectingly
+ say, &ldquo;The main element of happiness is bodily or animal health and
+ strength,&rdquo; that question which Chillingly put would appear a very
+ unmeaning or a very insulting one addressed to a pale cripple, who however
+ improved of late in health, would still be sickly and ailing all his life,&mdash;put,
+ too, by a man of the rarest conformation of physical powers that nature
+ can adapt to physical enjoyment,&mdash;a man who, since the age in which
+ memory commences, had never known what it was to be unwell, who could
+ scarcely understand you if you talked of a finger-ache, and whom those
+ refinements of mental culture which multiply the delights of the senses
+ had endowed with the most exquisite conceptions of such happiness as mere
+ nature and its instincts can give! But Will did not think the question
+ unmeaning or insulting. He, the poor cripple, felt a vast superiority on
+ the scale of joyous being over the young Hercules, well born, cultured,
+ and wealthy, who could know so little of happiness as to ask the crippled
+ basket-maker if he were happy.&mdash;he, blessed husband and father!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0081" id="link2HCH0081">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ LILY was seated on the grass under a chestnut-tree on the lawn. A white
+ cat, not long emerged from kittenhood, curled itself by her side. On her
+ lap was an open volume, which she was reading with the greatest delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cameron came from the house, looked round, perceived the girl, and
+ approached; and either she moved so gently, or Lily was so absorbed in the
+ book, that the latter was not aware of her presence till she felt a light
+ hand on her shoulder, and, looking up, recognized her aunt&rsquo;s gentle face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! Fairy, Fairy, that silly book, when you ought to be at your French
+ verbs. What will your guardian say when he comes and finds you have so
+ wasted time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He will say that fairies never waste their time; and he will scold you
+ for saying so.&rdquo; Therewith Lily threw down the book, sprang to her feet,
+ wound her arm round Mrs. Cameron&rsquo;s neck, and kissed her fondly. &ldquo;There! is
+ that wasting time? I love you so, aunty. In a day like this I think I love
+ everybody and everything!&rdquo; As she said this, she drew up her lithe form,
+ looked into the blue sky, and with parted lips seemed to drink in air and
+ sunshine. Then she woke up the dozing cat, and began chasing it round the
+ lawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cameron stood still, regarding her with moistened eyes. Just at that
+ moment Kenelm entered through the garden gate. He, too, stood still, his
+ eyes fixed on the undulating movements of Fairy&rsquo;s exquisite form. She had
+ arrested her favourite, and was now at play with it, shaking off her straw
+ hat, and drawing the ribbon attached to it tantalizingly along the smooth
+ grass. Her rich hair, thus released and dishevelled by the exercise, fell
+ partly over her face in wavy ringlets; and her musical laugh and words of
+ sportive endearment sounded on Kenelm&rsquo;s ear more joyously than the thrill
+ of the skylark, more sweetly than the coo of the ring-dove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He approached towards Mrs. Cameron. Lily turned suddenly and saw him.
+ Instinctively she smoothed back her loosened tresses, replaced the straw
+ hat, and came up demurely to his side just as he had accosted her aunt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon my intrusion, Mrs. Cameron. I am the bearer of this note from Mrs.
+ Braefield.&rdquo; While the aunt read the note, he turned to the niece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You promised to show me the picture, Miss Mordaunt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But that was a long time ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Too long to expect a lady&rsquo;s promise to be kept?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily seemed to ponder that question, and hesitated before she answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will show you the picture. I don&rsquo;t think I ever broke a promise yet,
+ but I shall be more careful how I make one in future.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because you did not value mine when I made it, and that hurt me.&rdquo; Lily
+ lifted up her head with a bewitching stateliness, and added gravely, &ldquo;I
+ was offended.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Braefield is very kind,&rdquo; said Mrs. Cameron; &ldquo;she asks us to dine the
+ day after to-morrow. You would like to go, Lily?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All grown-up people, I suppose? No, thank you, dear aunt. You go alone, I
+ would rather stay at home. May I have little Clemmy to play with? She will
+ bring Juba, and Blanche is very partial to Juba, though she does scratch
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well, my dear, you shall have your playmate, and I will go by
+ myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm stood aghast. &ldquo;You will not go, Miss Mordaunt; Mrs. Braefield will
+ be so disappointed. And if you don&rsquo;t go, whom shall I have to talk to? I
+ don&rsquo;t like grown-up people better than you do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are going?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if I go you will talk to me? I am afraid of Mr. Braefield. He is so
+ wise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will save you from him, and will not utter a grain of wisdom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aunty, I will go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Lily made a bound and caught up Blanche, who, taking her kisses
+ resignedly, stared with evident curiosity upon Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here a bell within the house rang the announcement of luncheon. Mrs.
+ Cameron invited Kenelm to partake of that meal. He felt as Romulus might
+ have felt when first invited to taste the ambrosia of the gods. Yet
+ certainly that luncheon was not such as might have pleased Kenelm
+ Chillingly in the early days of the Temperance Hotel. But somehow or other
+ of late he had lost appetite; and on this occasion a very modest share of
+ a very slender dish of chicken fricasseed, and a few cherries daintily
+ arranged on vine leaves, which Lily selected for him, contented him,&mdash;as
+ probably a very little ambrosia contented Romulus while feasting his eyes
+ on Hebe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luncheon over, while Mrs. Cameron wrote her reply to Elsie, Kenelm was
+ conducted by Lily into her own <i>own</i> room, in vulgar parlance her <i>boudoir</i>,
+ though it did not look as if any one ever <i>bouder&rsquo;d</i> there. It was
+ exquisitely pretty,&mdash;pretty not as a woman&rsquo;s, but as a child&rsquo;s dream
+ of the own <i>own</i> room she would like to have,&mdash;wondrously neat
+ and cool, and pure-looking; a trellis paper, the trellis gay with roses
+ and woodbine, and birds and butterflies; draperies of muslin, festooned
+ with dainty tassels and ribbons; a dwarf bookcase, that seemed well
+ stored, at least as to bindings; a dainty little writing-table in French
+ <i>marqueterie</i>, looking too fresh and spotless to have known hard
+ service. The casement was open, and in keeping with the trellis paper;
+ woodbine and roses from without encroached on the window-sides, gently
+ stirred by the faint summer breeze, and wafted sweet odours into the
+ little room. Kenelm went to the window, and glanced on the view beyond. &ldquo;I
+ was right,&rdquo; he said to himself; &ldquo;I divined it.&rdquo; But though he spoke in a
+ low inward whisper, Lily, who had watched his movements in surprise,
+ overheard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You divined it. Divined what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing, nothing; I was but talking to myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me what you divined: I insist upon it!&rdquo; and Fairy petulantly stamped
+ her tiny foot on the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you? Then I obey. I have taken a lodging for a short time on the other
+ side of the brook,&mdash;Cromwell Lodge,&mdash;and seeing your house as I
+ passed, I divined that your room was in this part of it. How soft here is
+ the view of the water! Ah! yonder is Izaak Walton&rsquo;s summer-house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk about Izaak Walton, or I shall quarrel with you, as I did with
+ Lion when he wanted me to like that cruel book.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is Lion?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lion,&mdash;of course, my guardian. I called him Lion when I was a little
+ child. It was on seeing in one of his books a print of a lion playing with
+ a little child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! I know the design well,&rdquo; said Kenelm, with a slight sigh. &ldquo;It is from
+ an antique Greek gem. It is not the lion that plays with the child, it is
+ the child that masters the lion, and the Greeks called the child &lsquo;Love.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This idea seemed beyond Lily&rsquo;s perfect comprehension. She paused before
+ she answered, with the naivete of a child six years old,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see now why I mastered Blanche, who will not make friends with any one
+ else: I love Blanche. Ah, that reminds me,&mdash;come and look at the
+ picture.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She went to the wall over the writing-table, drew a silk curtain aside
+ from a small painting in a dainty velvet framework, and pointing to it,
+ cried with triumph, &ldquo;Look there! is it not beautiful?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm had been prepared to see a landscape, or a group, or anything but
+ what he did see: it was the portrait of Blanche when a kitten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little elevated though the subject was, it was treated with graceful
+ fancy. The kitten had evidently ceased from playing with the cotton reel
+ that lay between her paws, and was fixing her gaze intently on a bulfinch
+ that had lighted on a spray within her reach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You understand,&rdquo; said Lily, placing her hand on his arm, and drawing him
+ towards what she thought the best light for the picture; &ldquo;it is Blanche&rsquo;s
+ first sight of a bird. Look well at her face; don&rsquo;t you see a sudden
+ surprise,&mdash;half joy, half fear? She ceases to play with the reel. Her
+ intellect&mdash;or, as Mr. Braefield would say, &lsquo;her instinct&rsquo;&mdash;is
+ for the first time aroused. From that moment Blanche was no longer a mere
+ kitten. And it required, oh, the most careful education, to teach her not
+ to kill the poor little birds. She never does now, but I had such trouble
+ with her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot say honestly that I do see all that you do in the picture; but
+ it seems to me very simply painted, and was, no doubt, a striking likeness
+ of Blanche at that early age.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So it was. Lion drew the first sketch from life with his pencil; and when
+ he saw how pleased I was with it&mdash;he was so good&mdash;he put it on
+ canvas, and let me sit by him while he painted it. Then he took it away,
+ and brought it back finished and framed as you see, last May, a present
+ for my birthday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were born in May&mdash;with the flowers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The best of all the flowers are born in May,&mdash;violets.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But they are born in the shade, and cling to it. Surely, as a child of
+ May, you love the sun!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I love the sun; it is never too bright nor too warm for me. But I don&rsquo;t
+ think that, though born in May, I was born in sunlight. I feel more like
+ my own native self when I creep into the shade and sit down alone. I can
+ weep then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she thus shyly ended, the character of her whole countenance was
+ changed: its infantine mirthfulness was gone; a grave, thoughtful, even a
+ sad expression settled on the tender eyes and the tremulous lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm was so touched that words failed him, and there was silence for
+ some moments between the two. At length Kenelm said, slowly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You say your own native self. Do you, then, feel, as I often do, that
+ there is a second, possibly a <i>native</i>, self, deep hid beneath the
+ self,&mdash;not merely what we show to the world in common (that may be
+ merely a mask), but the self that we ordinarily accept even when in
+ solitude as our own, an inner innermost self, oh so different and so
+ rarely coming forth from its hiding-place, asserting its right of
+ sovereignty, and putting out the other self as the sun puts out a star?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Kenelm thus spoken to a clever man of the world&mdash;to a Chillingly
+ Mivers, to a Chillingly Gordon&mdash;they certainly would not have
+ understood him. But to such men he never would have thus spoken. He had a
+ vague hope that this childlike girl, despite so much of childlike talk,
+ would understand him; and she did at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Advancing close to him, again laying her hand on his arm, and looking up
+ towards his bended face with startled wondering eyes, no longer sad, yet
+ not mirthful,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How true! You have felt that too? Where <i>is</i> that innermost self, so
+ deep down,&mdash;so deep; yet when it does come forth, so much higher,&mdash;higher,&mdash;immeasurably
+ higher than one&rsquo;s everyday self? It does not tame the butterflies; it
+ longs to get to the stars. And then,&mdash;and then,&mdash;ah, how soon it
+ fades back again! You have felt that. Does it not puzzle you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are there no wise books about it that help to explain?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No wise books in my very limited reading even hint at the puzzle. I fancy
+ that it is one of those insoluble questions that rest between the infant
+ and his Maker. Mind and soul are not the same things, and what you and I
+ call &lsquo;wise men&rsquo; are always confounding the two&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately for all parties&mdash;especially the reader; for Kenelm had
+ here got on the back of one of his most cherished hobbies, the distinction
+ between psychology and metaphysics, soul and mind scientifically or
+ logically considered&mdash;Mrs. Cameron here entered the room, and asked
+ him how he liked the picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very much. I am no great judge of the art. But it pleased me at once, and
+ now that Miss Mordaunt has interpreted the intention of the painter I
+ admire it yet more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lily chooses to interpret his intention in her own way, and insists that
+ Blanche&rsquo;s expression of countenance conveys an idea of her capacity to
+ restrain her destructive instinct, and be taught to believe that it is
+ wrong to kill birds for mere sport. For food she need not kill them,
+ seeing that Lily takes care that she has plenty to eat. But I don&rsquo;t think
+ that Mr. Melville had the slightest suspicion that he had indicated that
+ capacity in his picture.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He must have done so, whether he suspected it or not,&rdquo; said Lily,
+ positively; &ldquo;otherwise he would not be truthful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not truthful?&rdquo; asked Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you see? If you were called upon to describe truthfully the
+ character of any little child, would you only speak of such naughty
+ impulses as all children have in common, and not even hint at the capacity
+ to be made better?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Admirably put!&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;There is no doubt that a much fiercer
+ animal than a cat&mdash;a tiger, for instance, or a conquering hero&mdash;may
+ be taught to live on the kindest possible terms with the creatures on
+ which it was its natural instinct to prey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, yes; hear that, aunty! You remember the Happy Family that we saw
+ eight years ago, at Moleswich fair, with a cat not half so nice as Blanche
+ allowing a mouse to bite her ear? Well, then, would Lion not have been
+ shamefully false to Blanche if he had not&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily paused and looked half shyly, half archly, at Kenelm, then added, in
+ slow, deep-drawn tones&mdash;&ldquo;given a glimpse of her innermost self?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Innermost self!&rdquo; repeated Mrs. Cameron, perplexed and laughing gently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily stole nearer to Kenelm and whispered,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is not one&rsquo;s innermost self one&rsquo;s best self?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm smiled approvingly. The fairy was rapidly deepening her spell upon
+ him. If Lily had been his sister, his betrothed, his wife, how fondly he
+ would have kissed her! She had expressed a thought over which he had often
+ inaudibly brooded, and she had clothed it with all the charm of her own
+ infantine fancy and womanlike tenderness. Goethe has said somewhere, or is
+ reported to have said, &ldquo;There is something in every man&rsquo;s heart, that, if
+ you knew it, would make you hate him.&rdquo; What Goethe said, still more what
+ Goethe is reported to have said, is never to be taken quite literally. No
+ comprehensive genius&mdash;genius at once poet and thinker&mdash;ever can
+ be so taken. The sun shines on a dunghill. But the sun has no predilection
+ for a dunghill. It only comprehends a dunghill as it does a rose. Still
+ Kenelm had always regarded that loose ray from Goethe&rsquo;s prodigal orb with
+ an abhorrence most unphilosophical for a philosopher so young as generally
+ to take upon oath any words of so great a master. Kenelm thought that the
+ root of all private benevolence, of all enlightened advance in social
+ reform, lay in the adverse theorem,&mdash;that in every man&rsquo;s nature there
+ lies a something that, could we get at it, cleanse it, polish it, render
+ it visibly clear to our eyes, would make us love him. And in this
+ spontaneous, uncultured sympathy with the results of so many laborious
+ struggles of his own scholastic intellect against the dogma of the German
+ giant, he felt as if he had found a younger&mdash;true, but oh, how much
+ more subduing, because so much younger&mdash;sister of his own man&rsquo;s soul.
+ Then came, so strongly, the sense of her sympathy with his own strange
+ innermost self, which a man will never feel more than once in his life
+ with a daughter of Eve, that he dared not trust himself to speak. He
+ somewhat hurried his leave-taking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Passing in the rear of the garden towards the bridge which led to his
+ lodging, he found on the opposite bank, at the other end of the bridge,
+ Mr. Algernon Sidney Gale Jones peacefully angling for trout.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you not try the stream to-day, sir? Take my rod.&rdquo; Kenelm remembered
+ that Lily had called Izaak Walton&rsquo;s book &ldquo;a cruel one,&rdquo; and shaking his
+ head gently, went his way into the house. There he seated himself silently
+ by the window, and looked towards the grassy lawn and the dipping willows,
+ and the gleam of the white walls through the girdling trees, as he had
+ looked the eve before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he murmured at last, &ldquo;if, as I hold, a man but tolerably good does
+ good unconsciously merely by the act of living,&mdash;if he can no more
+ traverse his way from the cradle to the grave, without letting fall, as he
+ passes, the germs of strength, fertility, and beauty, than can a reckless
+ wind or a vagrant bird, which, where it passes, leaves behind it the oak,
+ the corn-sheaf, or the flower,&mdash;ah, if that be so, how tenfold the
+ good must be, if the man find the gentler and purer duplicate of his own
+ being in that mysterious, undefinable union which Shakspeares and
+ day-labourers equally agree to call love; which Newton never recognizes,
+ and which Descartes (his only rival in the realms of thought at once
+ severe and imaginative) reduces into links of early association,
+ explaining that he loved women who squinted, because, when he was a boy, a
+ girl with that infirmity squinted at him from the other side of his
+ father&rsquo;s garden-wall! Ah! be this union between man and woman what it may;
+ if it be really love, really the bond which embraces the innermost and
+ bettermost self of both,&mdash;how daily, hourly, momently, should we
+ bless God for having made it so easy to be happy and to be good!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0082" id="link2HCH0082">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE dinner-party at Mr. Braefield&rsquo;s was not quite so small as Kenelm had
+ anticipated. When the merchant heard from his wife that Kenelm was coming,
+ he thought it would be but civil to the young gentleman to invite a few
+ other persons to meet him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see, my dear,&rdquo; he said to Elsie, &ldquo;Mrs. Cameron is a very good, simple
+ sort of woman, but not particularly amusing; and Lily, though a pretty
+ girl, is so exceedingly childish. We owe much, my sweet Elsie, to this Mr.
+ Chillingly,&rdquo;&mdash;here there was a deep tone of feeling in his voice and
+ look,&mdash;&ldquo;and we must make it as pleasant for him as we can. I will
+ bring down my friend Sir Thomas, and you ask Mr. Emlyn and his wife. Sir
+ Thomas is a very sensible man, and Emlyn a very learned one. So Mr.
+ Chillingly will find people worth talking to. By the by, when I go to town
+ I will send down a haunch of venison from Groves&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So when Kenelm arrived, a little before six o&rsquo;clock, he found in the
+ drawing-room the Rev. Charles Emlyn, vicar of Moleswich proper, with his
+ spouse, and a portly middle-aged man, to whom, as Sir Thomas Pratt, Kenelm
+ was introduced. Sir Thomas was an eminent city banker. The ceremonies of
+ introduction over, Kenelm stole to Elsie&rsquo;s side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought I was to meet Mrs. Cameron. I don&rsquo;t see her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She will be here presently. It looks as if it might rain, and I have sent
+ the carriage for her and Lily. Ah, here they are!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cameron entered, clothed in black silk. She always wore black; and
+ behind her came Lily, in the spotless colour that became her name; no
+ ornament, save a slender gold chain to which was appended a single locket,
+ and a single blush rose in her hair. She looked wonderfully lovely; and
+ with that loveliness there was a certain nameless air of distinction,
+ possibly owing to delicacy of form and colouring; possibly to a certain
+ grace of carriage, which was not without a something of pride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Braefield, who was a very punctual man, made a sign to his servant,
+ and in another moment or so dinner was announced. Sir Thomas, of course,
+ took in the hostess; Mr. Braefield, the vicar&rsquo;s wife (she was a dean&rsquo;s
+ daughter); Kenelm, Mrs. Cameron; and the vicar, Lily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On seating themselves at the table Kenelm was on the left hand, next to
+ the hostess, and separated from Lily by Mrs. Cameron and Mr. Emlyn; and
+ when the vicar had said grace, Lily glanced behind his back and her aunt&rsquo;s
+ at Kenelm (who did the same thing), making at him what the French call a
+ <i>moue</i>. The pledge to her had been broken. She was between two men
+ very much grown up,&mdash;the vicar and the host. Kenelm returned the <i>moue</i>
+ with a mournful smile and an involuntary shrug.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All was silent till, after his soup and his first glass of sherry, Sir
+ Thomas began,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think, Mr. Chillingly, we have met before, though I had not the honour
+ then of making your acquaintance.&rdquo; Sir Thomas paused before he added, &ldquo;Not
+ long ago; the last State ball at Buckingham Palace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm bent his head acquiescingly. He had been at that ball.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were talking with a very charming woman,&mdash;a friend of mine,&mdash;Lady
+ Glenalvon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (Sir Thomas was Lady Glenalvon&rsquo;s banker.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I remember perfectly,&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;We were seated in the picture
+ gallery. You came to speak to Lady Glenalvon, and I yielded to you my
+ place on the settee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite true; and I think you joined a young lady, very handsome,&mdash;the
+ great heiress, Miss Travers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm again bowed, and, turning away as politely as he could, addressed
+ himself to Mrs. Cameron. Sir Thomas, satisfied that he had impressed on
+ his audience the facts of his friendship with Lady Glenalvon and his
+ attendance at the court ball, now directed his conversational powers
+ towards the vicar, who, utterly foiled in the attempt to draw out Lily,
+ met the baronet&rsquo;s advances with the ardour of a talker too long
+ suppressed. Kenelm continued, unmolested, to ripen his acquaintance with
+ Mrs. Cameron. She did not, however, seem to lend a very attentive ear to
+ his preliminary commonplace remarks about scenery or weather, but at his
+ first pause, said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Thomas spoke about a Miss Travers: is she related to a gentleman who
+ was once in the Guards, Leopold Travers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is his daughter. Did you ever know Leopold Travers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have heard him mentioned by friends of mine long ago,&mdash;long ago,&rdquo;
+ replied Mrs. Cameron with a sort of weary languor, not unwonted, in her
+ voice and manner; and then, as if dismissing the bygone reminiscence from
+ her thoughts, changed the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lily tells me, Mr. Chillingly, that you said you were staying at Mr.
+ Jones&rsquo;s, Cromwell Lodge. I hope you are made comfortable there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very. The situation is singularly pleasant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, it is considered the prettiest spot on the brook-side, and used to
+ be a favourite resort for anglers; but the trout, I believe, are growing
+ scarce; at least, now that the fishing in the Thames is improved, poor Mr.
+ Jones complains that his old lodgers desert him. Of course you took the
+ rooms for the sake of the fishing. I hope the sport may be better than it
+ is said to be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is of little consequence to me: I do not care much about fishing; and
+ since Miss Mordaunt calls the book which first enticed me to take to it &lsquo;a
+ cruel one,&rsquo; I feel as if the trout had become as sacred as crocodiles were
+ to the ancient Egyptians.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lily is a foolish child on such matters. She cannot bear the thought of
+ giving pain to any dumb creature; and just before our garden there are a
+ few trout which she has tamed. They feed out of her hand; she is always
+ afraid they will wander away and get caught.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Mr. Melville is an angler?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Several years ago he would sometimes pretend to fish, but I believe it
+ was rather an excuse for lying on the grass and reading &lsquo;the cruel book,&rsquo;
+ or perhaps, rather, for sketching. But now he is seldom here till autumn,
+ when it grows too cold for such amusement.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Sir Thomas&rsquo;s voice was so loudly raised that it stopped the
+ conversation between Kenelm and Mrs. Cameron. He had got into some
+ question of politics on which he and the vicar did not agree, and the
+ discussion threatened to become warm, when Mrs. Braefield, with a woman&rsquo;s
+ true tact, broached a new topic, in which Sir Thomas was immediately
+ interested, relating to the construction of a conservatory for orchids
+ that he meditated adding to his country-house, and in which frequent
+ appeal was made to Mrs. Cameron, who was considered an accomplished
+ florist, and who seemed at some time or other in her life to have acquired
+ a very intimate acquaintance with the costly family of orchids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the ladies retired Kenelm found himself seated next to Mr. Emlyn, who
+ astounded him by a complimentary quotation from one of his own Latin prize
+ poems at the university, hoped he would make some stay at Moleswich, told
+ him of the principal places in the neighbourhood worth visiting, and
+ offered him the run of his library, which he flattered himself was rather
+ rich, both in the best editions of Greek and Latin classics and in early
+ English literature. Kenelm was much pleased with the scholarly vicar,
+ especially when Mr. Emlyn began to speak about Mrs. Cameron and Lily. Of
+ the first he said, &ldquo;She is one of those women in whom quiet is so
+ predominant that it is long before one can know what undercurrents of good
+ feeling flow beneath the unruffled surface. I wish, however, she was a
+ little more active in the management and education of her niece,&mdash;a
+ girl in whom I feel a very anxious interest, and whom I doubt if Mrs.
+ Cameron understands. Perhaps, however, only a poet, and a very peculiar
+ sort of poet, can understand her: Lily Mordaunt is herself a poem.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I like your definition of her,&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;There is certainly
+ something about her which differs much from the prose of common life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You probably know Wordsworth&rsquo;s lines:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;... and she shall lean her ear
+ In many a secret place
+ Where rivulets dance their wayward round,
+ And beauty, born of murmuring sound,
+ Shall pass into her face.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are lines that many critics have found unintelligible; but Lily
+ seems like the living key to them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s dark face lighted up, but he made no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only,&rdquo; continued Mr. Emlyn, &ldquo;how a girl of that sort, left wholly to
+ herself, untrained, undisciplined, is to grow up into the practical uses
+ of womanhood, is a question that perplexes and saddens me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Any more wine?&rdquo; asked the host, closing a conversation on commercial
+ matters with Sir Thomas. &ldquo;No?&mdash;shall we join the ladies?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0083" id="link2HCH0083">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE drawing-room was deserted; the ladies were in the garden. As Kenelm
+ and Mr. Emlyn walked side by side towards the group (Sir Thomas and Mr.
+ Braefield following at a little distance), the former asked, somewhat
+ abruptly, &ldquo;What sort of man is Miss Cameron&rsquo;s guardian, Mr. Melville?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can scarcely answer that question. I see little of him when he comes
+ here. Formerly, he used to run down pretty often with a harum-scarum set
+ of young fellows, quartered at Cromwell Lodge,&mdash;Grasmere had no
+ accommodation for them,&mdash;students in the Academy, I suppose. For some
+ years he has not brought those persons, and when he does come himself it
+ is but for a few days. He has the reputation of being very wild.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Further conversation was here stopped. The two men, while they thus
+ talked, had been diverging from the straight way across the lawn towards
+ the ladies, turning into sequestered paths through the shrubbery; now they
+ emerged into the open sward, just before a table, on which coffee was
+ served, and round which all the rest of the party were gathered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope, Mr. Emlyn,&rdquo; said Elsie&rsquo;s cheery voice, &ldquo;that you have dissuaded
+ Mr. Chillingly from turning Papist. I am sure you have taken time enough
+ to do so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Emlyn, Protestant every inch of him, slightly recoiled from Kenelm&rsquo;s
+ side. &ldquo;Do you meditate turning&mdash;&rdquo; He could not conclude the sentence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be not alarmed, my dear sir. I did but own to Mrs. Braefield that I had
+ paid a visit to Oxford in order to confer with a learned man on a question
+ that puzzled me, and as abstract as that feminine pastime, theology, is
+ now-a-days. I cannot convince Mrs. Braefield that Oxford admits other
+ puzzles in life than those which amuse the ladies.&rdquo; Here Kenelm dropped
+ into a chair by the side of Lily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily half turned her back to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I offended again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily shrugged her shoulders slightly and would not answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suspect, Miss Mordaunt, that among your good qualities, nature has
+ omitted one; the bettermost self within you should replace it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily here abruptly turned to him her front face: the light of the skies
+ was becoming dim, but the evening star shone upon it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How! what do you mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I to answer politely or truthfully?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truthfully! Oh, truthfully! What is life without truth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even though one believes in fairies?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fairies are truthful, in a certain way. But you are not truthful. You
+ were not thinking of fairies when you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Found fault with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not sure of that. But I will translate to you my thoughts, so far as
+ I can read them myself, and to do so I will resort to the fairies. Let us
+ suppose that a fairy has placed her changeling into the cradle of a
+ mortal: that into the cradle she drops all manner of fairy gifts which are
+ not bestowed on mere mortals; but that one mortal attribute she forgets.
+ The changeling grows up; she charms those around her: they humour, and
+ pet, and spoil her. But there arises a moment in which the omission of the
+ one mortal gift is felt by her admirers and friends. Guess what that is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily pondered. &ldquo;I see what you mean; the reverse of truthfulness,
+ politeness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, not exactly that, though politeness slides into it unawares: it is a
+ very humble quality, a very unpoetic quality; a quality that many dull
+ people possess; and yet without it no fairy can fascinate mortals, when on
+ the face of the fairy settles the first wrinkle. Can you not guess it
+ now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No: you vex me; you provoke me;&rdquo; and Lily stamped her foot petulantly, as
+ in Kenelm&rsquo;s presence she had stamped it once before. &ldquo;Speak plainly, I
+ insist.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Mordaunt, excuse me: I dare not,&rdquo; said Kenelm, rising with a sort of
+ bow one makes to the Queen; and he crossed over to Mrs. Braefield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily remained, still pouting fiercely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Thomas took the chair Kenelm had vacated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0084" id="link2HCH0084">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE hour for parting came. Of all the guests, Sir Thomas alone stayed at
+ the house a guest for the night. Mr. and Mrs. Emlyn had their own
+ carriage. Mrs. Braefield&rsquo;s carriage came to the door for Mrs. Cameron and
+ Lily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Said Lily, impatiently and discourteously, &ldquo;Who would not rather walk on
+ such a night?&rdquo; and she whispered to her aunt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cameron, listening to the whisper and obedient to every whim of
+ Lily&rsquo;s, said, &ldquo;You are too considerate, dear Mrs. Braefield; Lily prefers
+ walking home; there is no chance of rain now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm followed the steps of the aunt and niece, and soon overtook them on
+ the brook-side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A charming night, Mr. Chillingly,&rdquo; said Mrs. Cameron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An English summer night; nothing like it in such parts of the world as I
+ have visited. But, alas! of English summer nights there are but few.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have travelled much abroad?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Much, no, a little; chiefly on foot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily hitherto had not said a word, and had been walking with downcast
+ head. Now she looked up and said, in the mildest and most conciliatory of
+ human voices,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have been abroad;&rdquo; then, with an acquiescence in the manners of the
+ world which to him she had never yet manifested, she added his name, &ldquo;Mr.
+ Chillingly,&rdquo; and went on, more familiarly. &ldquo;What a breadth of meaning the
+ word &lsquo;abroad&rsquo; conveys! Away, afar from one&rsquo;s self, from one&rsquo;s everyday
+ life. How I envy you! you have been abroad: so has Lion&rdquo; (here drawing
+ herself up), &ldquo;I mean my guardian, Mr. Melville.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly, I have been abroad, but afar from myself&mdash;never. It is an
+ old saying,&mdash;all old sayings are true; most new sayings are false,&mdash;a
+ man carries his native soil at the sole of his foot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the path somewhat narrowed. Mrs. Cameron went on first, Kenelm and
+ Lily behind; she, of course, on the dry path, he on the dewy grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stopped him. &ldquo;You are walking in the wet, and with those thin shoes.&rdquo;
+ Lily moved instinctively away from the dry path.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Homely though that speech of Lily&rsquo;s be, and absurd as said by a fragile
+ girl to a gladiator like Kenelm, it lit up a whole world of womanhood: it
+ showed all that undiscoverable land which was hidden to the learned Mr.
+ Emlyn, all that land which an uncomprehended girl seizes and reigns over
+ when she becomes wife and mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that homely speech, and that impulsive movement, Kenelm halted, in a
+ sort of dreaming maze. He turned timidly, &ldquo;Can you forgive me for my rude
+ words? I presumed to find fault with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so justly. I have been thinking over all you said, and I feel you
+ were so right; only I still do not quite understand what you meant by the
+ quality for mortals which the fairy did not give to her changeling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I did not dare say it before, I should still less dare to say it now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do.&rdquo; There was no longer the stamp of the foot, no longer the flash from
+ her eyes, no longer the wilfulness which said, &ldquo;I insist;&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do;&rdquo; soothingly, sweetly, imploringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus pushed to it, Kenelm plucked up courage, and not trusting himself to
+ look at Lily, answered brusquely,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The quality desirable for men, but more essential to women in proportion
+ as they are fairy-like, though the tritest thing possible, is good
+ temper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily made a sudden bound from his side, and joined her aunt, walking
+ through the wet grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they reached the garden-gate, Kenelm advanced and opened it. Lily
+ passed him by haughtily; they gained the cottage-door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t ask you in at this hour,&rdquo; said Mrs. Cameron. &ldquo;It would be but a
+ false compliment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm bowed and retreated. Lily left her aunt&rsquo;s side, and came towards
+ him, extending her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall consider your words, Mr. Chillingly,&rdquo; she said, with a strangely
+ majestic air. &ldquo;At present I think you are not right. I am not
+ ill-tempered; but&mdash;&rdquo; here she paused, and then added with a loftiness
+ of mien which, had she not been so exquisitely pretty, would have been
+ rudeness&mdash;&ldquo;in any case I forgive you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0085" id="link2HCH0085">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THERE were a good many pretty villas in the outskirts of Moleswich, and
+ the owners of them were generally well off, and yet there was little of
+ what is called visiting society; owing perhaps to the fact that there not
+ being among these proprietors any persons belonging to what is commonly
+ called &ldquo;the aristocratic class,&rdquo; there was a vast deal of aristocratic
+ pretension. The family of Mr. A&mdash;&mdash;-, who had enriched himself
+ as a stock-jobber, turned up its nose at the family of Mr. B&mdash;&mdash;-,
+ who had enriched himself still more as a linen-draper, while the family of
+ Mr. B&mdash;&mdash;- showed a very cold shoulder to the family of Mr. C&mdash;&mdash;-,
+ who had become richer than either of them as a pawnbroker, and whose wife
+ wore diamonds, but dropped her h&rsquo;s. England would be a community so
+ aristocratic that there would be no living in it, if one could exterminate
+ what is now called &ldquo;aristocracy.&rdquo; The Braefields were the only persons who
+ really drew together the antagonistic atoms of the Moleswich society,
+ partly because they were acknowledged to be the first persons there, in
+ right not only of old settlement (the Braefields had held Braefieldville
+ for four generations), but of the wealth derived from those departments of
+ commercial enterprise which are recognized as the highest, and of an
+ establishment considered to be the most elegant in the neighbourhood;
+ principally because Elsie, while exceedingly genial and cheerful in
+ temper, had a certain power of will (as her runaway folly had manifested),
+ and when she got people together compelled them to be civil to each other.
+ She had commenced this gracious career by inaugurating children&rsquo;s parties,
+ and when the children became friends the parents necessarily grew closer
+ together. Still her task had only recently begun, and its effects were not
+ in full operation. Thus, though it became known at Moleswich that a young
+ gentleman, the heir to a baronetcy and a high estate, was sojourning at
+ Cromwell Lodge, no overtures were made to him on the part of the A&rsquo;s, B&rsquo;s,
+ and C&rsquo;s. The vicar, who called on Kenelm the day after the dinner at
+ Braefieldville, explained to him the social conditions of the place. &ldquo;You
+ understand,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that it will be from no want of courtesy on the
+ part of my neighbours if they do not offer you any relief from the
+ pleasures of solitude. It will be simply because they are shy, not because
+ they are uncivil. And, it is this consideration that makes me, at the risk
+ of seeming too forward, entreat you to look into the vicarage any morning
+ or evening on which you feel tired of your own company; suppose you drink
+ tea with us this evening,&mdash;you will find a young lady whose heart you
+ have already won.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whose heart I have won!&rdquo; faltered Kenelm, and the warm blood rushed to
+ his cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; continued the vicar, smiling, &ldquo;she has no matrimonial designs on
+ you at present. She is only twelve years old,&mdash;my little girl
+ Clemmy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Clemmy!&mdash;she is your daughter? I did not know that. I very
+ gratefully accept your invitation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must not keep you longer from your amusement. The sky is just clouded
+ enough for sport. What fly do you use?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To say truth, I doubt if the stream has much to tempt me in the way of
+ trout, and I prefer rambling about the lanes and by-paths to
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;The noiseless angler&rsquo;s solitary stand.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am an indefatigable walker, and the home scenery round the place has
+ many charms for me. Besides,&rdquo; added Kenelm, feeling conscious that he
+ ought to find some more plausible excuse than the charms of home scenery
+ for locating himself long in Cromwell Lodge, &ldquo;besides, I intend to devote
+ myself a good deal to reading. I have been very idle of late, and the
+ solitude of this place must be favourable to study.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are not intended, I presume, for any of the learned professions?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The learned professions,&rdquo; replied Kenelm, &ldquo;is an invidious form of speech
+ that we are doing our best to eradicate from the language. All professions
+ now-a-days are to have much about the same amount of learning. The
+ learning of the military profession is to be levelled upwards, the
+ learning of the scholastic to be levelled downwards. Cabinet ministers
+ sneer at the uses of Greek and Latin. And even such masculine studies as
+ Law and Medicine are to be adapted to the measurements of taste and
+ propriety in colleges for young ladies. No, I am not intended for any
+ profession; but still an ignorant man like myself may not be the worse for
+ a little book-reading now and then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You seem to be badly provided with books here,&rdquo; said the vicar, glancing
+ round the room, in which, on a table in the corner, lay half-a-dozen
+ old-looking volumes, evidently belonging not to the lodger but to the
+ landlord. &ldquo;But, as I before said, my library is at your service. What
+ branch of reading do you prefer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm was, and looked, puzzled. But after a pause he answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The more remote it be from the present day, the better for me. You said
+ your collection was rich in mediaeval literature. But the Middle Ages are
+ so copied by the modern Goths, that I might as well read translations of
+ Chaucer or take lodgings in Wardour Street. If you have any books about
+ the manners and habits of those who, according to the newest idea in
+ science, were our semi-human progenitors in the transition state between a
+ marine animal and a gorilla, I should be very much edified by the loan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; said Mr. Emlyn, laughing, &ldquo;no such books have been left to us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No such books? You must be mistaken. There must be plenty of them
+ somewhere. I grant all the wonderful powers of invention bestowed on the
+ creators of poetic romance; still not the sovereign masters in that realm
+ of literature&mdash;not Scott, not Cervantes, not Goethe, not even
+ Shakspeare&mdash;could have presumed to rebuild the past without such
+ materials as they found in the books that record it. And though I, no less
+ cheerfully, grant that we have now living among us a creator of poetic
+ romance immeasurably more inventive than they,&mdash;appealing to our
+ credulity in portents the most monstrous, with a charm of style the most
+ conversationally familiar,&mdash;still I cannot conceive that even that
+ unrivalled romance-writer can so bewitch our understandings as to make us
+ believe that, if Miss Mordaunt&rsquo;s cat dislikes to wet her feet, it is
+ probably because in the prehistoric age her ancestors lived in the dry
+ country of Egypt; or that when some lofty orator, a Pitt or a Gladstone,
+ rebuts with a polished smile which reveals his canine teeth the rude
+ assault of an opponent, he betrays his descent from a &lsquo;semi-human
+ progenitor&rsquo; who was accustomed to snap at his enemy. Surely, surely there
+ must be some books still extant written by philosophers before the birth
+ of Adam, in which there is authority, even though but in mythic fable, for
+ such poetic inventions. Surely, surely some early chroniclers must depose
+ that they saw, saw with their own eyes, the great gorillas who scratched
+ off their hairy coverings to please the eyes of the young ladies of their
+ species, and that they noted the gradual metamorphosis of one animal into
+ another. For, if you tell me that this illustrious romance-writer is but a
+ cautious man of science, and that we must accept his inventions according
+ to the sober laws of evidence and fact, there is not the most incredible
+ ghost story which does not better satisfy the common sense of a sceptic.
+ However, if you have no such books, lend me the most unphilosophical you
+ possess,&mdash;on magic, for instance,&mdash;the philosopher&rsquo;s stone&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have some of them,&rdquo; said the vicar, laughing; &ldquo;you shall choose for
+ yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you are going homeward, let me accompany you part of the way: I don&rsquo;t
+ yet know where the church and the vicarage are, and I ought to know before
+ I come in the evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm and the vicar walked side by side, very sociably, across the bridge
+ and on the side of the rivulet on which stood Mrs. Cameron&rsquo;s cottage. As
+ they skirted the garden pale at the rear of the cottage, Kenelm suddenly
+ stopped in the middle of some sentence which had interested Mr. Emlyn, and
+ as suddenly arrested his steps on the turf that bordered the lane. A
+ little before him stood an old peasant woman, with whom Lily, on the
+ opposite side of the garden pale, was conversing. Mr. Emlyn did not at
+ first see what Kenelm saw; turning round rather to gaze on his companion,
+ surprised by his abrupt halt and silence. The girl put a small basket into
+ the old woman&rsquo;s hand, who then dropped a low curtsy, and uttered low a
+ &ldquo;God bless you.&rdquo; Low though it was, Kenelm overheard it, and said
+ abstractedly to Mr. Emlyn, &ldquo;Is there a greater link between this life and
+ the next than God&rsquo;s blessing on the young, breathed from the lips of the
+ old?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0086" id="link2HCH0086">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;AND how is your good man, Mrs. Haley?&rdquo; said the vicar, who had now
+ reached the spot on which the old woman stood,&mdash;with Lily&rsquo;s fair face
+ still bended down to her,&mdash;while Kenelm slowly followed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you kindly, sir, he is better; out of his bed now. The young lady
+ has done him a power of good&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; said Lily, colouring. &ldquo;Make haste home now; you must not keep him
+ waiting for his dinner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old woman again curtsied, and went off at a brisk pace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know, Mr. Chillingly,&rdquo; said Mr. Emlyn, &ldquo;that Miss Mordaunt is the
+ best doctor in the place? Though if she goes on making so many cures she
+ will find the number of her patients rather burdensome.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was only the other day,&rdquo; said Lily, &ldquo;that you scolded me for the best
+ cure I have yet made.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I?&mdash;Oh! I remember; you led that silly child Madge to believe that
+ there was a fairy charm in the arrowroot you sent her. Own you deserved a
+ scolding there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I did not. I dressed the arrowroot, and am I not Fairy? I have just
+ got such a pretty note from Clemmy, Mr. Emlyn, asking me to come up this
+ evening and see her new magic lantern. Will you tell her to expect me?
+ And, mind, no scolding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And all magic?&rdquo; said Mr. Emlyn; &ldquo;be it so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily and Kenelm had not hitherto exchanged a word. She had replied with a
+ grave inclination of her head to his silent bow. But now she turned to him
+ shyly and said, &ldquo;I suppose you have been fishing all the morning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; the fishes hereabout are under the protection of a Fairy,&mdash;whom
+ I dare not displease.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily&rsquo;s face brightened, and she extended her hand to him over the palings.
+ &ldquo;Good-day; I hear aunty&rsquo;s voice: those dreadful French verbs!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She disappeared among the shrubs, amid which they heard the thrill of her
+ fresh young voice singing to herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That child has a heart of gold,&rdquo; said Mr. Emlyn, as the two men walked
+ on. &ldquo;I did not exaggerate when I said she was the best doctor in the
+ place. I believe the poor really do believe that she is a fairy. Of course
+ we send from the vicarage to our ailing parishioners who require it, food
+ and wine; but it never seems to do them the good that her little dishes
+ made by her own tiny hands do; and I don&rsquo;t know if you noticed the basket
+ that old woman took away,&mdash;Miss Lily taught Will Somers to make the
+ prettiest little baskets; and she puts her jellies or other savouries into
+ dainty porcelain gallipots nicely fitted into the baskets, which she trims
+ with ribbons. It is the look of the thing that tempts the appetite of the
+ invalids, and certainly the child may well be called Fairy at present; but
+ I wish Mrs. Cameron would attend a little more strictly to her education.
+ She can&rsquo;t be a fairy forever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm sighed, but made no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Emlyn then turned the conversation to erudite subjects, and so they
+ came in sight of the town, when the vicar stopped and pointed towards the
+ church, of which the spire rose a little to the left, with two aged
+ yew-trees half shadowing the burial-ground, and in the rear a glimpse of
+ the vicarage seen amid the shrubs of its garden ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will know your way now,&rdquo; said the vicar; &ldquo;excuse me if I quit you: I
+ have a few visits to make; among others, to poor Haley, husband to the old
+ woman you saw. I read to him a chapter in the Bible every day; yet still I
+ fancy that he believes in fairy charms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better believe too much, than too little,&rdquo; said Kenelm; and he turned
+ aside into the village and spent half-an-hour with Will, looking at the
+ pretty baskets Lily had taught Will to make. Then, as he went slowly
+ homeward, he turned aside into the churchyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church, built in the thirteenth century, was not large, but it
+ probably sufficed for its congregation, since it betrayed no signs of
+ modern addition; restoration or repair it needed not. The centuries had
+ but mellowed the tints of its solid walls, as little injured by the huge
+ ivy stems that shot forth their aspiring leaves to the very summit of the
+ stately tower as by the slender roses which had been trained to climb up a
+ foot or so of the massive buttresses. The site of the burial-ground was
+ unusually picturesque: sheltered towards the north by a rising ground
+ clothed with woods, sloping down at the south towards the glebe
+ pasture-grounds through which ran the brooklet, sufficiently near for its
+ brawling gurgle to be heard on a still day. Kenelm sat himself on an
+ antique tomb, which was evidently appropriated to some one of higher than
+ common rank in bygone days, but on which the sculpture was wholly
+ obliterated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stillness and solitude of the place had their charms for his
+ meditative temperament; and he remained there long, forgetful of time, and
+ scarcely hearing the boom of the clock that warned him of its lapse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When suddenly, a shadow&mdash;the shadow of a human form&mdash;fell on the
+ grass on which his eyes dreamily rested. He looked up with a start, and
+ beheld Lily standing before him mute and still. Her image was so present
+ in his thoughts at the moment that he felt a thrill of awe, as if the
+ thoughts had conjured up her apparition. She was the first to speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You here, too?&rdquo; she said very softly, almost whisperingly. &ldquo;Too!&rdquo; echoed
+ Kenelm, rising; &ldquo;too! &lsquo;Tis no wonder that I, a stranger to the place,
+ should find my steps attracted towards its most venerable building. Even
+ the most careless traveller, halting at some remote abodes of the living,
+ turns aside to gaze on the burial-ground of the dead. But my surprise is
+ that you, Miss Mordaunt, should be attracted towards the same spot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is my favourite spot,&rdquo; said Lily, &ldquo;and always has been. I have sat
+ many an hour on that tombstone. It is strange to think that no one knows
+ who sleeps beneath it. The &lsquo;Guide Book to Moleswich,&rsquo; though it gives the
+ history of the church from the reign in which it was first built, can only
+ venture a guess that this tomb, the grandest and oldest in the
+ burial-ground, is tenanted by some member of a family named Montfichet,
+ that was once very powerful in the county, and has become extinct since
+ the reign of Henry VI. But,&rdquo; added Lily, &ldquo;there is not a letter of the
+ name Montfichet left. I found out more than any one else has done; I
+ learned black-letter on purpose; look here,&rdquo; and she pointed to a small
+ spot in which the moss had been removed. &ldquo;Do you see those figures? are
+ they not XVIII? and look again, in what was once the line above the
+ figures, ELE. It must have been an Eleanor, who died at the age of
+ eighteen&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I rather think it more probable that the figures refer to the date of the
+ death, 1318 perhaps; and so far as I can decipher black-letter, which is
+ more in my father&rsquo;s line than mine, I think it is AL, not EL, and that it
+ seems as if there had been a letter between L and the second E, which is
+ now effaced. The tomb itself is not likely to belong to any powerful
+ family then resident at the place. Their monuments, according to usage,
+ would have been within the church,&mdash;probably in their own mortuary
+ chapel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t try to destroy my fancy,&rdquo; said Lily, shaking her head; &ldquo;you cannot
+ succeed, I know her history too well. She was young, and some one loved
+ her, and built over her the finest tomb he could afford; and see how long
+ the epitaph must have been! how much it must have spoken in her praise and
+ of his grief. And then he went his way, and the tomb was neglected, and
+ her fate forgotten.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Miss Mordaunt, this is indeed a wild romance to spin out of so
+ slender a thread. But even if true, there is no reason to think that a
+ life is forgotten, though a tomb be neglected.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps not,&rdquo; said Lily, thoughtfully. &ldquo;But when I am dead, if I can look
+ down, I think it would please me to see my grave not neglected by those
+ who had loved me once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She moved from him as she said this, and went to a little mound that
+ seemed not long since raised; there was a simple cross at the head and a
+ narrow border of flowers round it. Lily knelt beside the flowers and
+ pulled out a stray weed. Then she rose, and said to Kenelm, who had
+ followed, and now stood beside her,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She was the little grandchild of poor old Mrs. Hales. I could not cure
+ her, though I tried hard: she was so fond of me, and died in my arms. No,
+ let me not say &lsquo;died,&rsquo;&mdash;surely there is no such thing as dying. &lsquo;Tis
+ but a change of life,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;Less than the void between two waves of air,
+ The space between existence and a soul.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whose lines are those?&rdquo; asked Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know; I learnt them from Lion. Don&rsquo;t you believe them to be
+ true?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. But the truth does not render the thought of quitting this scene of
+ life for another more pleasing to most of us. See how soft and gentle and
+ bright is all that living summer land beyond; let us find subject for talk
+ from that, not from the graveyard on which we stand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But is there not a summer land fairer than that we see now; and which we
+ do see, as in a dream, best when we take subjects of talk from the
+ graveyard?&rdquo; Without waiting for a reply, Lily went on. &ldquo;I planted these
+ flowers: Mr. Emlyn was angry with me; he said it was &lsquo;Popish.&rsquo; But he had
+ not the heart to have them taken up; I come here very often to see to
+ them. Do you think it wrong? Poor little Nell! she was so fond of flowers.
+ And the Eleanor in the great tomb, she too perhaps knew some one who
+ called her Nell; but there are no flowers round her tomb. Poor Eleanor!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She took the nosegay she wore on her bosom, and as she repassed the tomb
+ laid it on the mouldering stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0087" id="link2HCH0087">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THEY quitted the burial-ground, taking their way to Grasmere. Kenelm
+ walked by Lily&rsquo;s side; not a word passed between them till they came in
+ sight of the cottage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Lily stopped abruptly, and lifting towards him her charming face,
+ said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told you I would think over what you said to me last night. I have done
+ so, and feel I can thank you honestly. You were very kind: I never before
+ thought that I had a bad temper; no one ever told me so. But I see now
+ what you mean; sometimes I feel very quickly, and then I show it. But how
+ did I show it to you, Mr. Chillingly?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you not turn your back to me when I seated myself next you in Mrs.
+ Braefield&rsquo;s garden, vouchsafing me no reply when I asked if I had
+ offended?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily&rsquo;s face became bathed in blushes, and her voice faltered, as she
+ answered,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was not offended; I was not in a bad temper then: it was worse than
+ that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Worse? what could it possibly be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am afraid it was envy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Envy of what? of whom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know how to explain; after all, I fear aunty is right, and the
+ fairy tales put very silly, very naughty thoughts into one&rsquo;s head. When
+ Cinderella&rsquo;s sisters went to the king&rsquo;s ball, and Cinderella was left
+ alone, did not she long to go too? Did not she envy her sisters?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! I understand now: Sir Charles spoke of the Court Ball.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you were there talking with handsome ladies&mdash;and&mdash;oh! I was
+ so foolish and felt sore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You, who when we first met wondered how people who could live in the
+ country preferred to live in towns, do then sometimes contradict yourself,
+ and sigh for the great world that lies beyond these quiet water banks. You
+ feel that you have youth and beauty, and wish to be admired!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not that exactly,&rdquo; said Lily, with a perplexed look in her
+ ingenuous countenance, &ldquo;and in my better moments, when the &lsquo;bettermost
+ self&rsquo; comes forth, I know that I am not made for the great world you speak
+ of. But you see&mdash;&rdquo; Here she paused again, and as they had now entered
+ the garden, dropped wearily on a bench beside the path. Kenelm seated
+ himself there too, waiting for her to finish her broken sentence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see,&rdquo; she continued, looking down embarrassed, and describing vague
+ circles on the gravel with her fairy-like foot, &ldquo;that at home, ever since
+ I can remember, they have treated me as if&mdash;well, as if I were&mdash;what
+ shall I say? the child of one of your great ladies. Even Lion, who is so
+ noble, so grand, seemed to think when I was a mere infant that I was a
+ little queen: once when I told a fib he did not scold me; but I never saw
+ him look so sad and so angry as when he said, &lsquo;Never again forget that you
+ are a lady.&rsquo; And, but I tire you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tire me, indeed! go on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I have said enough to explain why I have at times proud thoughts, and
+ vain thoughts; and why, for instance, I said to myself, &lsquo;Perhaps my place
+ of right is among those fine ladies whom he&mdash;&rsquo; but it is all over
+ now.&rdquo; She rose hastily with a pretty laugh, and bounded towards Mrs.
+ Cameron, who was walking slowly along the lawn with a book in her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0088" id="link2HCH0088">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT was a very merry party at the vicarage that evening. Lily had not been
+ prepared to meet Kenelm there, and her face brightened wonderfully as at
+ her entrance he turned from the book-shelves to which Mr. Emlyn was
+ directing his attention. But instead of meeting his advance, she darted
+ off to the lawn, where Clemmy and several other children greeted her with
+ a joyous shout.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not acquainted with Macleane&rsquo;s Juvenal?&rdquo; said the reverend scholar; &ldquo;you
+ will be greatly pleased with it; here it is,&mdash;a posthumous work,
+ edited by George Long. I can lend you Munro&rsquo;s Lucretius, &lsquo;69. Aha! we have
+ some scholars yet to pit against the Germans.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am heartily glad to hear it,&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;It will be a long time
+ before they will ever wish to rival us in that game which Miss Clemmy is
+ now forming on the lawn, and in which England has recently acquired a
+ European reputation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t take you. What game?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Puss in the Corner. With your leave I will look out and see whether it be
+ a winning game for puss&mdash;in the long-run.&rdquo; Kenelm joined the
+ children, amidst whom Lily seemed not the least childlike. Resisting all
+ overtures from Clemmy to join their play, he seated himself on a sloping
+ bank at a little distance,&mdash;an idle looker-on. His eye followed
+ Lily&rsquo;s nimble movements, his ear drank in the music of her joyous laugh.
+ Could that be the same girl whom he had seen tending the flower-bed amid
+ the gravestones? Mrs. Emlyn came across the lawn and joined him, seating
+ herself also on the bank. Mrs. Emlyn was an exceedingly clever woman:
+ nevertheless she was not formidable,&mdash;on the contrary, pleasing; and
+ though the ladies in the neighbourhood said &lsquo;she talked like a book,&rsquo; the
+ easy gentleness of her voice carried off that offence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose, Mr. Chillingly,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;I ought to apologize for my
+ husband&rsquo;s invitation to what must seem to you so frivolous an
+ entertainment as a child&rsquo;s party. But when Mr. Emlyn asked you to come to
+ us this evening, he was not aware that Clemmy had also invited her young
+ friends. He had looked forward to rational conversation with you on his
+ own favourite studies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not so long since I left school, but that I prefer a half holiday
+ to lessons, even from a tutor so pleasant as Mr. Emlyn,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Ah, happy years,&mdash;once more who would not be a boy!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Mrs. Emlyn, with a grave smile. &ldquo;Who that had started so
+ fairly as Mr. Chillingly in the career of man would wish to go back and
+ resume a place among boys?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, my dear Mrs. Emlyn, the line I quoted was wrung from the heart of a
+ man who had already outstripped all rivals in the race-ground he had
+ chosen, and who at that moment was in the very Maytime of youth and of
+ fame. And if such a man at such an epoch in his career could sigh to &lsquo;be
+ once more a boy,&rsquo; it must have been when he was thinking of the boy&rsquo;s half
+ holiday, and recoiling from the task work he was condemned to learn as
+ man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The line you quote is, I think, from &lsquo;Childe Harold,&rsquo; and surely you
+ would not apply to mankind in general the sentiment of a poet so
+ peculiarly self-reflecting (if I may use that expression), and in whom
+ sentiment is often so morbid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right, Mrs. Emlyn,&rdquo; said Kenelm, ingenuously. &ldquo;Still a boy&rsquo;s half
+ holiday is a very happy thing; and among mankind in general there must be
+ many who would be glad to have it back again,&mdash;Mr. Emlyn himself, I
+ should think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Emlyn has his half holiday now. Do you not see him standing just
+ outside the window? Do you not hear him laughing? He is a child again in
+ the mirth of his children. I hope you will stay some time in the
+ neighbourhood; I am sure you and he will like each other. And it is such a
+ rare delight to him to get a scholar like yourself to talk to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, I am not a scholar; a very noble title that, and not to be
+ given to a lazy trifler on the surface of book-lore like myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are too modest. My husband has a copy of your Cambridge prize verses,
+ and says &lsquo;the Latinity of them is quite beautiful.&rsquo; I quote his very
+ words.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Latin verse-making is a mere knack, little more than a proof that one had
+ an elegant scholar for one&rsquo;s tutor, as I certainly had. But it is by
+ special grace that a real scholar can send forth another real scholar, and
+ a Kennedy produce a Munro. But to return to the more interesting question
+ of half holidays; I declare that Clemmy is leading off your husband in
+ triumph. He is actually going to be Puss in the Corner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When you know more of Charles,&mdash;I mean my husband,&mdash;you will
+ discover that his whole life is more or less of a holiday. Perhaps because
+ he is not what you accuse yourself of being: he is not lazy; he never
+ wishes to be a boy once more; and taskwork itself is holiday to him. He
+ enjoys shutting himself up in his study and reading; he enjoys a walk with
+ the children; he enjoys visiting the poor; he enjoys his duties as a
+ clergyman. And though I am not always contented for him, though I think he
+ should have had those honours in his profession which have been lavished
+ on men with less ability and less learning, yet he is never discontented
+ himself. Shall I tell you his secret?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is a <i>Thanks-giving Man</i>. You, too, must have much to thank God
+ for, Mr. Chillingly; and in thanksgiving to God does there not blend
+ usefulness to man, and such sense of pastime in the usefulness as makes
+ each day a holiday?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm looked up into the quiet face of this obscure pastor&rsquo;s wife with a
+ startled expression in his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see, ma&rsquo;am,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that you have devoted much thought to the study
+ of the aesthetical philosophy as expounded by German thinkers, whom it is
+ rather difficult to understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I, Mr. Chillingly! good gracious! No! What do you mean by your
+ aesthetical philosophy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;According to aesthetics, I believe man arrives at his highest state of
+ moral excellence when labour and duty lose all the harshness of effort,&mdash;when
+ they become the impulse and habit of life; when as the essential
+ attributes of the beautiful, they are, like beauty, enjoyed as pleasure;
+ and thus, as you expressed, each day becomes a holiday: a lovely doctrine,
+ not perhaps so lofty as that of the Stoics, but more bewitching. Only,
+ very few of us can practically merge our cares and our worries into so
+ serene an atmosphere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some do so without knowing anything of aesthetics and with no pretence to
+ be Stoics; but, then, they are Christians.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are some such Christians, no doubt; but they are rarely to be met
+ with. Take Christendom altogether, and it appears to comprise the most
+ agitated population in the world; the population in which there is the
+ greatest grumbling as to the quantity of labour to be done, the loudest
+ complaints that duty instead of a pleasure is a very hard and disagreeable
+ struggle, and in which holidays are fewest and the moral atmosphere least
+ serene. Perhaps,&rdquo; added Kenelm, with a deeper shade of thought on his
+ brow, &ldquo;it is this perpetual consciousness of struggle; this difficulty in
+ merging toil into ease, or stern duty into placid enjoyment; this refusal
+ to ascend for one&rsquo;s self into the calm of an air aloof from the cloud
+ which darkens, and the hail-storm which beats upon, the fellow-men we
+ leave below,&mdash;that makes the troubled life of Christendom dearer to
+ Heaven, and more conducive to Heaven&rsquo;s design in rendering earth the
+ wrestling-ground and not the resting-place of man, than is that of the
+ Brahmin, ever seeking to abstract himself from the Christian&rsquo;s conflicts
+ of action and desire, and to carry into its extremest practice the
+ aesthetic theory, of basking undisturbed in the contemplation of the most
+ absolute beauty human thought can reflect from its idea of divine good!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever Mrs. Emlyn might have said in reply was interrupted by the rush
+ of the children towards her; they were tired of play, and eager for tea
+ and the magic lantern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0089" id="link2HCH0089">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE room is duly obscured and the white sheet attached to the wall; the
+ children are seated, hushed, and awe-stricken. And Kenelm is placed next
+ to Lily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tritest things in our mortal experience are among the most mysterious.
+ There is more mystery in the growth of a blade of grass than there is in
+ the wizard&rsquo;s mirror or the feats of a spirit medium. Most of us have known
+ the attraction that draws one human being to another, and makes it so
+ exquisite a happiness to sit quiet and mute by another&rsquo;s side; which
+ stills for the moment the busiest thoughts in our brain, the most
+ turbulent desires in our heart, and renders us but conscious of a present
+ ineffable bliss. Most of us have known that. But who has ever been
+ satisfied with any metaphysical account of its why or wherefore? We can
+ but say it is love, and love at that earlier section of its history which
+ has not yet escaped from romance; but by what process that other person
+ has become singled out of the whole universe to attain such special power
+ over one is a problem that, though many have attempted to solve it, has
+ never attained to solution. In the dim light of the room Kenelm could only
+ distinguish the outlines of Lily&rsquo;s delicate face, but at each new surprise
+ in the show, the face intuitively turned to his, and once, when the
+ terrible image of a sheeted ghost, pursuing a guilty man, passed along the
+ wall, she drew closer to him in her childish fright, and by an involuntary
+ innocent movement laid her hand on his. He detained it tenderly, but,
+ alas! it was withdrawn the next moment; the ghost was succeeded by a
+ couple of dancing dogs. And Lily&rsquo;s ready laugh&mdash;partly at the dogs,
+ partly at her own previous alarm&mdash;vexed Kenelm&rsquo;s ear. He wished there
+ had been a succession of ghosts, each more appalling than the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The entertainment was over, and after a slight refreshment of cakes and
+ wine-and-water the party broke up; the children visitors went away
+ attended by servant-maids who had come for them. Mrs. Cameron and Lily
+ were to walk home on foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a lovely night, Mrs. Cameron,&rdquo; said Mr. Emlyn, &ldquo;and I will attend
+ you to your gate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Permit me also,&rdquo; said Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said the vicar, &ldquo;it is your own way to Cromwell Lodge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The path led them through the churchyard as the nearest approach to the
+ brook-side. The moonbeams shimmered through the yew-trees and rested on
+ the old tomb; playing, as it were, round the flowers which Lily&rsquo;s hand had
+ that day dropped upon its stone. She was walking beside Kenelm, the elder
+ two a few paces in front.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How silly I was,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;to be so frightened at the false ghost! I
+ don&rsquo;t think a real one would frighten me, at least if seen here, in this
+ loving moonlight, and on God&rsquo;s ground!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ghosts, were they permitted to appear except in a magic lantern, could
+ not harm the innocent. And I wonder why the idea of their apparition
+ should always have been associated with such phantasies of horror,
+ especially by sinless children, who have the least reason to dread them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, that is true,&rdquo; cried Lily; &ldquo;but even when we are grown up there must
+ be times in which we should so long to see a ghost, and feel what a
+ comfort, what a joy it would be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand you. If some one very dear to us had vanished from our life;
+ if we felt the anguish of the separation so intensely as to efface the
+ thought that life, as you said so well, &lsquo;never dies;&rsquo; well, yes, then I
+ can conceive that the mourner would yearn to have a glimpse of the
+ vanished one, were it but to ask the sole and only question he could
+ desire to put, &lsquo;Art thou happy? May I hope that we shall meet again, never
+ to part,&mdash;never?&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s voice trembled as he spoke, tears stood in his eyes. A melancholy&mdash;vague,
+ unaccountable, overpowering&mdash;passed across his heart, as the shadow
+ of some dark-winged bird passes over a quiet stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have never yet felt this?&rdquo; asked Lily doubtingly, in a soft voice,
+ full of tender pity, stopping short and looking into his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I? No. I have never yet lost one whom I so loved and so yearned to see
+ again. I was but thinking that such losses may befall us all ere we too
+ vanish out of sight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lily!&rdquo; called forth Mrs. Cameron, halting at the gate of the
+ burial-ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, auntie?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Emlyn wants to know how far you have got in &lsquo;Numa Pompilius.&rsquo; Come
+ and answer for yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, those tiresome grown-up people!&rdquo; whispered Lily, petulantly, to
+ Kenelm. &ldquo;I do like Mr. Emlyn; he is one of the very best of men. But still
+ he is grown up, and his &lsquo;Numa Pompilius&rsquo; is so stupid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My first French lesson-book. No, it is not stupid. Read on. It has hints
+ of the prettiest fairy tale I know, and of the fairy in especial who
+ bewitched my fancies as a boy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time they had gained the gate of the burial-ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What fairy tale? what fairy?&rdquo; asked Lily, speaking quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She was a fairy, though in heathen language she is called a nymph,&mdash;Egeria.
+ She was the link between men and gods to him she loved; she belongs to the
+ race of gods. True, she, too, may vanish, but she can never die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Miss Lily,&rdquo; said the vicar, &ldquo;and how far in the book I lent you,&mdash;&lsquo;Numa
+ Pompilius.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ask me this day next week.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will; but mind you are to translate as you go on. I must see the
+ translation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well. I will do my best,&rdquo; answered Lily meekly. Lily now walked by
+ the vicar&rsquo;s side, and Kenelm by Mrs. Cameron&rsquo;s, till they reached
+ Grasmere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will go on with you to the bridge, Mr. Chillingly,&rdquo; said the vicar,
+ when the ladies had disappeared within their garden. &ldquo;We had little time
+ to look over my books, and, by the by, I hope you at least took the
+ Juvenal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, Mr. Emlyn; who can quit your house with an inclination for satire? I
+ must come some morning and select a volume from those works which give
+ pleasant views of life and bequeath favourable impressions of mankind.
+ Your wife, with whom I have had an interesting conversation, upon the
+ principles of aesthetical philosophy&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My wife! Charlotte! She knows nothing about aesthetical philosophy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She calls it by another name, but she understands it well enough to
+ illustrate the principles by example. She tells me that labour and duty
+ are so taken up by you&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;In den heitern Regionen
+ Wo die reinen Formen wohnen,&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ that they become joy and beauty,&mdash;is it so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure that Charlotte never said anything half so poetical. But, in
+ plain words, the days pass with me very happily. I should be ungrateful if
+ I were not happy. Heaven has bestowed on me so many sources of love,&mdash;wife,
+ children, books, and the calling which, when one quits one&rsquo;s own
+ threshold, carries love along with it into the world beyond; a small world
+ in itself,&mdash;only a parish,&mdash;but then my calling links it with
+ infinity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see; it is from the sources of love that you draw the supplies for
+ happiness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely; without love one may be good, but one could scarcely be happy. No
+ one can dream of a heaven except as the abode of love. What writer is it
+ who says, &lsquo;How well the human heart was understood by him who first called
+ God by the name of Father&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not remember, but it is beautifully said. You evidently do not
+ subscribe to the arguments in Decimus Roach&rsquo;s &lsquo;Approach to the Angels.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Mr. Chillingly! your words teach me how lacerated a man&rsquo;s happiness
+ may be if he does not keep the claws of vanity closely pared. I actually
+ feel a keen pang when you speak to me of that eloquent panegyric on
+ celibacy, ignorant that the only thing I ever published which I fancied
+ was not without esteem by intellectual readers is a Reply to &lsquo;The Approach
+ to the Angels,&rsquo;&mdash;a youthful book, written in the first year of my
+ marriage. But it obtained success: I have just revised the tenth edition
+ of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is the book I will select from your library. You will be pleased to
+ hear that Mr. Roach, whom I saw at Oxford a few days ago, recants his
+ opinions, and, at the age of fifty, is about to be married; he begs me to
+ add, &lsquo;not for his own personal satisfaction.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Going to be married!&mdash;Decimus Roach! I thought my Reply would
+ convince him at last.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall look to your Reply to remove some lingering doubts in my own
+ mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Doubts in favour of celibacy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, if not for laymen, perhaps for a priesthood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The most forcible part of my Reply is on that head: read it attentively.
+ I think that, of all sections of mankind, the clergy are those to whom,
+ not only for their own sakes, but for the sake of the community, marriage
+ should be most commended. Why, sir,&rdquo; continued the vicar, warming up into
+ oratorical enthusiasm, &ldquo;are you not aware that there are no homes in
+ England from which men who have served and adorned their country have
+ issued forth in such prodigal numbers as those of the clergy of our
+ Church? What other class can produce a list so crowded with eminent names
+ as we can boast in the sons we have reared and sent forth into the world?
+ How many statesmen, soldiers, sailors, lawyers, physicians, authors, men
+ of science, have been the sons of us village pastors? Naturally: for with
+ us they receive careful education; they acquire of necessity the simple
+ tastes and disciplined habits which lead to industry and perseverance;
+ and, for the most part, they carry with them throughout life a purer moral
+ code, a more systematic reverence for things and thoughts religious,
+ associated with their earliest images of affection and respect, than can
+ be expected from the sons of laymen whose parents are wholly temporal and
+ worldly. Sir, I maintain that this is a cogent argument, to be considered
+ well by the nation, not only in favour of a married clergy,&mdash;for, on
+ that score, a million of Roaches could not convert public opinion in this
+ country,&mdash;but in favour of the Church, the Established Church, which
+ has been so fertile a nursery of illustrious laymen; and I have often
+ thought that one main and undetected cause of the lower tone of morality,
+ public and private, of the greater corruption of manners, of the more
+ prevalent scorn of religion which we see, for instance, in a country so
+ civilized as France, is, that its clergy can train no sons to carry into
+ the contests of earth the steadfast belief in accountability to Heaven.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank you with a full heart,&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;I shall ponder well over
+ all that you have so earnestly said. I am already disposed to give up all
+ lingering crotchets as to a bachelor clergy; but, as a layman, I fear that
+ I shall never attain to the purified philanthropy of Mr. Decimus Roach,
+ and, if ever I do marry, it will be very much for my personal
+ satisfaction.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Emlyn laughed good-humouredly, and, as they had now reached the
+ bridge, shook hands with Kenelm, and walked homewards, along the
+ brook-side and through the burial-ground, with the alert step and the
+ uplifted head of a man who has joy in life and admits of no fear in death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0090" id="link2HCH0090">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ FOR the next two weeks or so Kenelm and Lily met not indeed so often as
+ the reader might suppose, but still frequently; five times at Mrs.
+ Braefield&rsquo;s, once again at the vicarage, and twice when Kenelm had called
+ at Grasmere; and, being invited to stay to tea at one of those visits, he
+ stayed the whole evening. Kenelm was more and more fascinated in
+ proportion as he saw more and more of a creature so exquisitely strange to
+ his experience. She was to him not only a poem, but a poem in the
+ Sibylline Books; enigmatical, perplexing conjecture, and somehow or other
+ mysteriously blending its interest with visions of the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily was indeed an enchanting combination of opposites rarely blended into
+ harmony. Her ignorance of much that girls know before they number half her
+ years was so relieved by candid, innocent simplicity, so adorned by pretty
+ fancies and sweet beliefs, and so contrasted and lit up by gleams of a
+ knowledge that the young ladies we call well educated seldom exhibit,&mdash;knowledge
+ derived from quick observation of external Nature, and impressionable
+ susceptibility to its varying and subtle beauties. This knowledge had been
+ perhaps first instilled, and subsequently nourished, by such poetry as she
+ had not only learned by heart, but taken up as inseparable from the
+ healthful circulation of her thoughts; not the poetry of our own day,&mdash;most
+ young ladies know enough of that,&mdash;but selected fragments from the
+ verse of old, most of them from poets now little read by the young of
+ either sex, poets dear to spirits like Coleridge or Charles Lamb,&mdash;none
+ of them, however, so dear to her as the solemn melodies of Milton. Much of
+ such poetry she had never read in books: it had been taught her in
+ childhood by her guardian the painter. And with all this imperfect,
+ desultory culture, there was such dainty refinement in her every look and
+ gesture, and such deep woman-tenderness of heart. Since Kenelm had
+ commended &ldquo;Numa Pompilius&rdquo; to her study, she had taken very lovingly to
+ that old-fashioned romance, and was fond of talking to him about Egeria as
+ of a creature who had really existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what was the effect that he,&mdash;the first man of years
+ correspondent to her own with whom she had ever familiarly conversed,&mdash;what
+ was the effect that Kenelm Chillingly produced on the mind and the heart
+ of Lily?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was, after all, the question that puzzled him the most,&mdash;not
+ without reason: it might have puzzled the shrewdest bystander. The artless
+ candour with which she manifested her liking to him was at variance with
+ the ordinary character of maiden love; it seemed more the fondness of a
+ child for a favourite brother. And it was this uncertainty that, in his
+ own thoughts, justified Kenelm for lingering on, and believing that it was
+ necessary to win, or at least to learn more of, her secret heart before he
+ could venture to disclose his own. He did not flatter himself with the
+ pleasing fear that he might be endangering her happiness; it was only his
+ own that was risked. Then, in all those meetings, all those conversations
+ to themselves, there had passed none of the words which commit our destiny
+ to the will of another. If in the man&rsquo;s eyes love would force its way,
+ Lily&rsquo;s frank, innocent gaze chilled it back again to its inward cell.
+ Joyously as she would spring forward to meet him, there was no tell-tale
+ blush on her cheek, no self-betraying tremor in her clear, sweet-toned
+ voice. No; there had not yet been a moment when he could say to himself,
+ &ldquo;She loves me.&rdquo; Often he said to himself, &ldquo;She knows not yet what love
+ is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the intervals of time not passed in Lily&rsquo;s society, Kenelm would take
+ long rambles with Mr. Emlyn, or saunter into Mrs. Braefield&rsquo;s
+ drawing-room. For the former he conceived a more cordial sentiment of
+ friendship than he entertained for any man of his own age,&mdash;a
+ friendship that admitted the noble elements of admiration and respect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles Emlyn was one of those characters in which the colours appear pale
+ unless the light be brought very close to them, and then each tint seems
+ to change into a warmer and richer one. The manner which, at first, you
+ would call merely gentle, becomes unaffectedly genial; the mind you at
+ first might term inert, though well-informed, you now acknowledge to be
+ full of disciplined vigour. Emlyn was not, however, without his little
+ amiable foibles; and it was, perhaps, these that made him lovable. He was
+ a great believer in human goodness, and very easily imposed upon by
+ cunning appeals to &ldquo;his well-known benevolence.&rdquo; He was disposed to
+ overrate the excellence of all that he once took to his heart. He thought
+ he had the best wife in the world, the best children, the best servants,
+ the best beehive, the best pony, and the best house-dog. His parish was
+ the most virtuous, his church the most picturesque, his vicarage the
+ prettiest, certainly, in the whole shire,&mdash;perhaps, in the whole
+ kingdom. Probably it was this philosophy of optimism which contributed to
+ lift him into the serene realm of aesthetic joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not without his dislikes as well as likings. Though a liberal
+ Churchman towards Protestant dissenters, he cherished the <i>odium
+ theologicum</i> for all that savoured of Popery. Perhaps there was another
+ cause for this besides the purely theological one. Early in life a young
+ sister of his had been, to use his phrase, &ldquo;secretly entrapped&rdquo; into
+ conversion to the Roman Catholic faith, and had since entered a convent.
+ His affections had been deeply wounded by this loss to the range of them.
+ Mr. Emlyn had also his little infirmities of self-esteem rather than of
+ vanity. Though he had seen very little of any world beyond that of his
+ parish, he piqued himself on his knowledge of human nature and of
+ practical affairs in general. Certainly no man had read more about them,
+ especially in the books of the ancient classics. Perhaps it was owing to
+ this that he so little understood Lily,&mdash;a character to which the
+ ancient classics afforded no counterpart nor clue; and perhaps it was this
+ also that made Lily think him &ldquo;so terribly grown up.&rdquo; Thus, despite his
+ mild good-nature, she did not get on very well with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The society of this amiable scholar pleased Kenelm the more, because the
+ scholar evidently had not the remotest idea that Kenelm&rsquo;s sojourn at
+ Cromwell Lodge was influenced by the vicinity to Grasmere. Mr. Emlyn was
+ sure that he knew human nature, and practical affairs in general, too well
+ to suppose that the heir to a rich baronet could dream of taking for wife
+ a girl without fortune or rank, the orphan ward of a low-born artist only
+ just struggling into reputation; or, indeed, that a Cambridge prizeman,
+ who had evidently read much on grave and dry subjects, and who had no less
+ evidently seen a great deal of polished society, could find any other
+ attraction in a very imperfectly-educated girl, who tamed butterflies and
+ knew no more than they did of fashionable life, than Mr. Emlyn himself
+ felt in the presence of a pretty wayward innocent child, the companion and
+ friend of his Clemmy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Braefield was more discerning; but she had a good deal of tact, and
+ did not as yet scare Kenelm away from her house by letting him see how
+ much she had discerned. She would not even tell her husband, who, absent
+ from the place on most mornings, was too absorbed in the cares of his own
+ business to interest himself much in the affairs of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Elsie, being still of a romantic turn of mind, had taken it into her
+ head that Lily Mordaunt, if not actually the princess to be found in
+ poetic dramas whose rank was for a while kept concealed, was yet one of
+ the higher-born daughters of the ancient race whose name she bore, and in
+ that respect no derogatory alliance for Kenelm Chillingly. A conclusion
+ she had arrived at from no better evidence than the well-bred appearance
+ and manners of the aunt, and the exquisite delicacy of the niece&rsquo;s form
+ and features, with the undefinable air of distinction which accompanied
+ even her most careless and sportive moments. But Mrs. Braefield also had
+ the wit to discover that, under the infantine ways and phantasies of this
+ almost self-taught girl, there lay, as yet undeveloped, the elements of a
+ beautiful womanhood. So that altogether, from the very day she first
+ re-encountered Kenelm, Elsie&rsquo;s thought had been that Lily was the wife to
+ suit him. Once conceiving that idea, her natural strength of will made her
+ resolve on giving all facilities to carry it out silently and
+ unobtrusively, and therefore skilfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am so glad to think,&rdquo; she said one day, when Kenelm had joined her walk
+ through the pleasant shrubberies in her garden ground, &ldquo;that you have made
+ such friends with Mr. Emlyn. Though all hereabouts like him so much for
+ his goodness, there are few who can appreciate his learning. To you it
+ must be a surprise as well as pleasure to find, in this quiet humdrum
+ place, a companion so clever and well-informed: it compensates for your
+ disappointment in discovering that our brook yields such bad sport.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t disparage the brook; it yields the pleasantest banks on which to
+ lie down under old pollard oaks at noon, or over which to saunter at morn
+ and eve. Where those charms are absent even a salmon could not please.
+ Yes; I rejoice to have made friends with Mr. Emlyn. I have learned a great
+ deal from him, and am often asking myself whether I shall ever make peace
+ with my conscience by putting what I have learned into practice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I ask what special branch of learning is that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I scarcely know how to define it. Suppose we call it &lsquo;Worth-whileism.&rsquo;
+ Among the New Ideas which I was recommended to study as those that must
+ govern my generation, the Not-worth-while Idea holds a very high rank; and
+ being myself naturally of calm and equable constitution, that new idea
+ made the basis of my philosophical system. But since I have become
+ intimate with Charles Emlyn I think there is a great deal to be said in
+ favour of Worth-whileism, old idea though it be. I see a man who, with
+ very commonplace materials for interest or amusement at his command,
+ continues to be always interested or generally amused; I ask myself why
+ and how? And it seems to me as if the cause started from fixed beliefs
+ which settle his relations with God and man, and that settlement he will
+ not allow any speculations to disturb. Be those beliefs questionable or
+ not by others, at least they are such as cannot displease a Deity, and
+ cannot fail to be kindly and useful to fellow-mortals. Then he plants
+ these beliefs on the soil of a happy and genial home, which tends to
+ confirm and strengthen and call them into daily practice; and when he goes
+ forth from home, even to the farthest verge of the circle that surrounds
+ it, he carries with him the home influences of kindliness and use.
+ Possibly my line of life may be drawn to the verge of a wider circle than
+ his; but so much the better for interest and amusement, if it can be drawn
+ from the same centre; namely, fixed beliefs daily warmed into vital action
+ in the sunshine of a congenial home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Braefield listened to this speech with pleased attention, and as it
+ came to its close, the name of Lily trembled on her tongue, for she
+ divined that when he spoke of home Lily was in his thoughts; but she
+ checked the impulse, and replied by a generalized platitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly the first thing in life is to secure a happy and congenial
+ home. It must be a terrible trial for the best of us if we marry without
+ love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Terrible, indeed, if the one loves and the other does not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That can scarcely be your case, Mr. Chillingly, for I am sure you could
+ not marry where you did not love; and do not think I flatter you when I
+ say that a man far less gifted than you can scarcely fail to be loved by
+ the woman he wooes and wins.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm, in this respect one of the modestest of human beings, shook his
+ head doubtingly, and was about to reply in self-disparagement, when,
+ lifting his eyes and looking round, he halted mute and still as if rooted
+ to the spot. They had entered the trellised circle through the roses of
+ which he had first caught sight of the young face that had haunted him
+ ever since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he said abruptly; &ldquo;I cannot stay longer here, dreaming away the
+ work-day hours in a fairy ring. I am going to town to-day by the next
+ train.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yoa are coming back?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course,&mdash;this evening. I left no address at my lodgings in
+ London. There must be a large accumulation of letters; some, no doubt,
+ from my father and mother. I am only going for them. Good-by. How kindly
+ you have listened to me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shall we fix a day next week for seeing the remains of the old Roman
+ villa? I will ask Mrs. Cameron and her niece to be of the party.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Any day you please,&rdquo; said Kenelm joyfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0091" id="link2HCH0091">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM did indeed find a huge pile of letters and notes on reaching his
+ forsaken apartment in Mayfair; many of them merely invitations for days
+ long past, none of them of interest except two from Sir Peter, three from
+ his mother, and one from Tom Bowles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter&rsquo;s were short. In the first he gently scolded Kenelm for going
+ away without communicating any address; and stated the acquaintance he had
+ formed with Gordon, the favourable impression that young gentleman had
+ made on him, the transfer of the L20,000 and the invitation given to
+ Gordon, the Traverses, and Lady Glenalvon. The second, dated much later,
+ noted the arrival of his invited guests, dwelt with warmth unusual to Sir
+ Peter on the attractions of Cecilia, and took occasion to refer, not the
+ less emphatically because as it were incidentally, to the sacred promise
+ which Kenelm had given him never to propose to a young lady until the case
+ had been submitted to the examination and received the consent of Sir
+ Peter. &ldquo;Come to Exmundham, and if I do not give my consent to propose to
+ Cecilia Travers hold me a tyrant and rebel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Chillingly&rsquo;s letters were much longer. They dwelt more complainingly
+ on his persistence in eccentric habits; so exceedingly unlike other
+ people, quitting London at the very height of the season, going without
+ even a servant nobody knew where: she did not wish to wound his feelings;
+ but still those were not the ways natural to a young gentleman of station.
+ If he had no respect for himself, he ought to have some consideration for
+ his parents, especially his poor mother. She then proceeded to comment on
+ the elegant manners of Leopold Travers, and the good sense and pleasant
+ conversation of Chillingly Gordon, a young man of whom any mother might be
+ proud. From that subject she diverged to mildly querulous references to
+ family matters. Parson John had expressed himself very rudely to Mr.
+ Chillingly Gordon upon some book by a foreigner,&mdash;Comte or Count, or
+ some such name,&mdash;on which, so far as she could pretend to judge, Mr.
+ Gordon had uttered some very benevolent sentiments about humanity, which,
+ in the most insolent manner, Parson John had denounced as an attack on
+ religion. But really Parson John was too High Church for her. Having thus
+ disposed of Parson John, she indulged some ladylike wailings on the
+ singular costume of the three Miss Chillinglys. They had been asked by Sir
+ Peter, unknown to her&mdash;so like him&mdash;to meet their guests; to
+ meet Lady Glenalvon and Miss Travers, whose dress was so perfect (here she
+ described their dress); and they came in pea-green with pelerines of mock
+ blonde, and Miss Sally with corkscrew ringlets and a wreath of jessamine,
+ &ldquo;which no girl after eighteen would venture to wear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, my dear,&rdquo; added her ladyship, &ldquo;your poor father&rsquo;s family are
+ certainly great oddities. I have more to put up with than any one knows. I
+ do my best to carry it off. I know my duties, and will do them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Family grievances thus duly recorded and lamented, Lady Chillingly
+ returned to her guests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evidently unconscious of her husband&rsquo;s designs on Cecilia, she dismissed
+ her briefly: &ldquo;A very handsome young lady, though rather too blonde for her
+ taste, and certainly with an air <i>distingue</i>.&rdquo; Lastly, she enlarged
+ on the extreme pleasure she felt on meeting again the friend of her youth,
+ Lady Glenalvon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at all spoilt by the education of the great world, which, alas!
+ obedient to the duties of wife and mother, however little my sacrifices
+ are appreciated, I have long since relinquished. Lady Glenalvon suggests
+ turning that hideous old moat into a fernery,&mdash;a great improvement.
+ Of course your poor father makes objections.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom&rsquo;s letter was written on black-edged paper, and ran thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEAR SIR,&mdash;Since I had the honour to see you in London I have had a
+ sad loss: my poor uncle is no more. He died very suddenly after a hearty
+ supper. One doctor says it was apoplexy, another valvular disease of the
+ heart. He has left me his heir, after providing for his sister: no one had
+ an idea that he had saved so much money. I am quite a rich man now. And I
+ shall leave the veterinary business, which of late&mdash;since I took to
+ reading, as you kindly advised&mdash;is not much to my liking The
+ principal corn-merchant here has offered to take me into partnership; and,
+ from what I can see, it will be a very good thing and a great rise in
+ life. But, sir, I can&rsquo;t settle to it at present; I can&rsquo;t settle, as I
+ would wish to anything. I know you will not laugh at me when I say I have
+ a strange longing to travel for a while. I have been reading books of
+ travels, and they get into my head more than any other books. But I don&rsquo;t
+ think I could leave the country with a contented heart till I have had
+ just another look at you know whom,&mdash;just to see her, and know she is
+ happy. I am sure I could shake hands with Will and kiss her little one
+ without a wrong thought. What do you say to that, dear sir? You promised
+ to write to me about her. But I have not heard from you. Susey, the little
+ girl with the flower-ball, has had a loss too: the poor old man she lived
+ with died within a few days of my dear uncle&rsquo;s decease. Mother moved here,
+ as I think you know, when the forge at Graveleigh was sold; and she is
+ going to take Susey to live with her. She is quite fond of Susey. Pray let
+ me hear from you soon; and do, dear sir, give me your advice about
+ travelling&mdash;and about Her. You see I should like Her to think of me
+ more kindly when I am in distant parts.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I remain, dear sir,
+
+ Your grateful servant,
+
+ T. BOWLES.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ P.S.&mdash;Miss Travers has sent me Will&rsquo;s last remittance. There is very
+ little owed me now; so they must be thriving. I hope she is not
+ overworked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On returning by the train that evening, Kenelm went to the house of Will
+ Somers. The shop was already closed, but he was admitted by a trusty
+ servant-maid to the parlour, where he found them all at supper, except
+ indeed the baby, who had long since retired to the cradle, and the cradle
+ had been removed upstairs. Will and Jessie were very proud when Kenelm
+ invited himself to share their repast, which, though simple, was by no
+ means a bad one. When the meal was over and the supper things removed,
+ Kenelm drew his chair near to the glass door which led into a little
+ garden very neatly kept&mdash;for it was Will&rsquo;s pride to attend to it
+ before he sat down to his more professional work. The door was open, and
+ admitted the coolness of the starlit air and the fragrance of the sleeping
+ flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have a pleasant home here, Mrs. Somers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have, indeed, and know how to bless him we owe it to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am rejoiced to think that. How often when God designs a special
+ kindness to us He puts the kindness into the heart of a fellow-man,&mdash;perhaps
+ the last fellow-man we should have thought of; but in blessing him we
+ thank God who inspired him. Now, my dear friends, I know that you all
+ three suspect me of being the agent whom God chose for His benefits. You
+ fancy that it was from me came the loan which enabled you to leave
+ Graveleigh and settle here. You are mistaken,&mdash;you look incredulous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It could not be the Squire,&rdquo; exclaimed Jessie. &ldquo;Miss Travers assured me
+ that it was neither he nor herself. Oh, it must be you, sir. I beg pardon,
+ but who else could it be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your husband shall guess. Suppose, Will, that you had behaved ill to some
+ one who was nevertheless dear to you, and on thinking over it afterwards
+ felt very sorry and much ashamed of yourself, and suppose that later you
+ had the opportunity and the power to render a service to that person, do
+ you think you would do it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should be a bad man if I did not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bravo! And supposing that when the person you thus served came to know it
+ was you who rendered the service, he did not feel thankful, he did not
+ think it handsome of you, thus to repair any little harm he might have
+ done you before, but became churlish and sore and cross-grained, and with
+ a wretched false pride said that because he had offended you once he
+ resented your taking the liberty of befriending him now, would you not
+ think that person an ungrateful fellow; ungrateful not only to you his
+ fellow-man,&mdash;that is of less moment,&mdash;but ungrateful to the God
+ who put it into your heart to be His human agent in the benefit received?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, sir, yes, certainly,&rdquo; said Will, with all the superior refinement
+ of his intellect to that of Jessie, unaware of what Kenelm was driving at;
+ while Jessie, pressing her hands tightly together, turned pale, and with a
+ frightened hurried glance towards Will&rsquo;s face, answered, impulsively,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Mr. Chillingly, I hope you are not thinking, not speaking, of Mr.
+ Bowles?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whom else should I think or speak of?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will rose nervously from his chair, all his features writhing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, sir, this is a bitter blow,&mdash;very bitter, very.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie rushed to Will, flung her arms round him and sobbed. Kenelm turned
+ quietly to old Mrs. Somers, who had suspended the work on which since
+ supper she had been employed, knitting socks for the baby,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Mrs. Somers, what is the good of being a grandmother and knitting
+ socks for baby grandchildren, if you cannot assure those silly children of
+ yours that they are too happy in each other to harbour any resentment
+ against a man who would have parted them, and now repents?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somewhat to Kenelm&rsquo;s admiration, I dare not say surprise, old Mrs. Somers,
+ thus appealed to, rose from her seat, and, with a dignity of thought or of
+ feeling no one could have anticipated from the quiet peasant woman,
+ approached the wedded pair, lifted Jessie&rsquo;s face with one hand, laid the
+ other on Will&rsquo;s head, and said, &ldquo;If you don&rsquo;t long to see Mr. Bowles again
+ and say &lsquo;The Lord bless you, sir!&rsquo; you don&rsquo;t deserve the Lord&rsquo;s blessing
+ upon you.&rdquo; Therewith she went back to her seat, and resumed her knitting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank Heaven, we have paid back the best part of the loan,&rdquo; said Will, in
+ very agitated tones, &ldquo;and I think, with a little pinching, Jessie, and
+ with selling off some of the stock, we might pay the rest; and then,&rdquo;&mdash;and
+ then he turned to Kenelm,&mdash;&ldquo;and then, sir, we will&rdquo; (here a gulp)
+ &ldquo;thank Mr. Bowles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This don&rsquo;t satisfy me at all, Will,&rdquo; answered Kenelm; &ldquo;and since I helped
+ to bring you two together, I claim the right to say I would never have
+ done so could I have guessed you could have trusted your wife so little as
+ to allow a remembrance of Mr. Bowles to be a thought of pain. You did not
+ feel humiliated when you imagined that it was to me you owed some moneys
+ which you have been honestly paying off. Well, then, I will lend you
+ whatever trifle remains to discharge your whole debts to Mr. Bowles, so
+ that you may sooner be able to say to him, &lsquo;Thank you.&rsquo; But between you
+ and me, Will, I think you will be a finer fellow and a manlier fellow if
+ you decline to borrow that trifle of me; if you feel you would rather say
+ &lsquo;Thank you&rsquo; to Mr. Bowles, without the silly notion that when you have
+ paid him his money you owe him nothing for his kindness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will looked away irresolutely. Kenelm went on: &ldquo;I have received a letter
+ from Mr. Bowles to-day. He has come into a fortune, and thinks of going
+ abroad for a time; but before he goes, he says he should like to shake
+ hands with Will, and be assured by Jessie that all his old rudeness is
+ forgiven. He had no notion that I should blab about the loan: he wished
+ that to remain always a secret. But between friends there need be no
+ secrets. What say you, Will? As head of this household, shall Mr. Bowles
+ be welcomed here as a friend or not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kindly welcome,&rdquo; said old Mrs. Somers, looking up from the socks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Will, with sudden energy, &ldquo;look here; you have never been in
+ love, I dare say. If you had, you would not be so hard on me. Mr. Bowles
+ was in love with my wife there. Mr. Bowles is a very fine man, and I am a
+ cripple.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Will! Will!&rdquo; cried Jessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I trust my wife with my whole heart and soul; and, now that the first
+ pang is over, Mr. Bowles shall be, as mother says, kindly welcome,&mdash;heartily
+ welcome.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shake hands. Now you speak like a man, Will. I hope to bring Bowles here
+ to supper before many days are over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And that night Kenelm wrote to Mr. Bowles:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR TOM,&mdash;Come and spend a few days with me at Cromwell Lodge,
+ Moleswich. Mr. and Mrs. Somers wish much to see and to thank you. I could
+ not remain forever degraded in order to gratify your whim. They would have
+ it that I bought their shop, etc., and I was forced in self-defence to say
+ who it was. More on this and on travels when you come.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Your true friend,
+
+ K. C.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0092" id="link2HCH0092">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MRS. CAMERON was seated alone in her pretty drawing-room, with a book
+ lying open, but unheeded, on her lap. She was looking away from its pages,
+ seemingly into the garden without, but rather into empty space.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To a very acute and practised observer, there was in her countenance an
+ expression which baffled the common eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the common eye it was simply vacant; the expression of a quiet, humdrum
+ woman, who might have been thinking of some quiet humdrum household
+ detail,&mdash;found that too much for her, and was now not thinking at
+ all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to the true observer, there were in that face indications of a
+ troubled past, still haunted with ghosts never to be laid at rest,&mdash;indications,
+ too, of a character in herself that had undergone some revolutionary
+ change; it had not always been the character of a woman quiet and humdrum.
+ The delicate outlines of the lip and nostril evinced sensibility, and the
+ deep and downward curve of it bespoke habitual sadness. The softness of
+ the look into space did not tell of a vacant mind, but rather of a mind
+ subdued and over-burdened by the weight of a secret sorrow. There was also
+ about her whole presence, in the very quiet which made her prevalent
+ external characteristic, the evidence of manners formed in a high-bred
+ society,&mdash;the society in which quiet is connected with dignity and
+ grace. The poor understood this better than her rich acquaintances at
+ Moleswich, when they said, &ldquo;Mrs. Cameron was every inch a lady.&rdquo; To judge
+ by her features she must once have been pretty, not a showy prettiness,
+ but decidedly pretty. Now, as the features were small, all prettiness had
+ faded away in cold gray colourings, and a sort of tamed and slumbering
+ timidity of aspect. She was not only not demonstrative, but must have
+ imposed on herself as a duty the suppression of demonstration. Who could
+ look at the formation of those lips, and not see that they belonged to the
+ nervous, quick, demonstrative temperament? And yet, observing her again
+ more closely, that suppression of the constitutional tendency to candid
+ betrayal of emotion would the more enlist our curiosity or interest;
+ because, if physiognomy and phrenology have any truth in them, there was
+ little strength in her character. In the womanly yieldingness of the short
+ curved upper lip, the pleading timidity of the regard, the
+ disproportionate but elegant slenderness of the head between the ear and
+ the neck, there were the tokens of one who cannot resist the will, perhaps
+ the whim, of another whom she either loves or trusts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The book open on her lap is a serious book on the doctrine of grace,
+ written by a popular clergyman of what is termed &ldquo;the Low Church.&rdquo; She
+ seldom read any but serious books, except where such care as she gave to
+ Lily&rsquo;s education compelled her to read &ldquo;Outlines of History and
+ Geography,&rdquo; or the elementary French books used in seminaries for young
+ ladies. Yet if any one had decoyed Mrs. Cameron into familiar
+ conversation, he would have discovered that she must early have received
+ the education given to young ladies of station. She could speak and write
+ French and Italian as a native. She had read, and still remembered, such
+ classic authors in either language as are conceded to the use of pupils by
+ the well-regulated taste of orthodox governesses. She had a knowledge of
+ botany, such as botany was taught twenty years ago. I am not sure that, if
+ her memory had been fairly aroused, she might not have come out strong in
+ divinity and political economy, as expounded by the popular manuals of
+ Mrs. Marcet. In short, you could see in her a thoroughbred English lady,
+ who had been taught in a generation before Lily&rsquo;s, and immeasurably
+ superior in culture to the ordinary run of English young ladies taught
+ nowadays. So, in what after all are very minor accomplishments,&mdash;now
+ made major accomplishments,&mdash;such as music, it was impossible that a
+ connoisseur should hear her play on the piano without remarking, &ldquo;That
+ woman has had the best masters of her time.&rdquo; She could only play pieces
+ that belonged to her generation. She had learned nothing since. In short,
+ the whole intellectual culture had come to a dead stop long years ago,
+ perhaps before Lily was born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, while she is gazing into space Mrs. Braefield is announced. Mrs.
+ Cameron does not start from revery. She never starts. But she makes a
+ weary movement of annoyance, resettles herself, and lays the serious book
+ on the sofa table. Elsie enters, young, radiant, dressed in all the
+ perfection of the fashion, that is, as ungracefully as in the eyes of an
+ artist any gentlewoman can be; but rich merchants who are proud of their
+ wives so insist, and their wives, in that respect, submissively obey them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ladies interchange customary salutations, enter into the customary
+ preliminaries of talk, and after a pause Elsie begins in earnest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t I see Lily? Where is she?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear she has gone into the town. A poor little boy, who did our
+ errands, has met with an accident,&mdash;fallen from a cherry-tree.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which he was robbing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Probably.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Lily has gone to lecture him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know as to that; but he is much hurt, and Lily has gone to see
+ what is the matter with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Braefield, in her frank outspoken way,&mdash;&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t take much to
+ girls of Lily&rsquo;s age in general, though I am passionately fond of children.
+ You know how I do take to Lily; perhaps because she is so like a child.
+ But she must be an anxious charge to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cameron replied by an anxious &ldquo;No; she is still a child, a very good
+ one; why should I be anxious?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Braefield, impulsively,&mdash;&ldquo;Why, your child must now be eighteen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cameron,&mdash;&ldquo;Eighteen&mdash;is it possible! How time flies! though
+ in a life so monotonous as mine, time does not seem to fly, it slips on
+ like the lapse of water. Let me think,&mdash;eighteen? No, she is but
+ seventeen,&mdash;seventeen last May.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Braefield,&mdash;&ldquo;Seventeen! A very anxious age for a girl; an age in
+ which dolls cease and lovers begin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cameron, not so languidly, but still quietly,&mdash;&ldquo;Lily never cared
+ much for dolls,&mdash;never much for lifeless pets; and as to lovers, she
+ does not dream of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Braefield, briskly,&mdash;&ldquo;There is no age after six in which girls
+ do not dream of lovers. And here another question arises. When a girl so
+ lovely as Lily is eighteen next birthday, may not a lover dream of her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cameron, with that wintry cold tranquillity of manner, which implies
+ that in putting such questions an interrogator is taking a liberty,&mdash;&ldquo;As
+ no lover has appeared, I cannot trouble myself about his dreams.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Said Elsie inly to herself, &ldquo;This is the stupidest woman I ever met!&rdquo; and
+ aloud to Mrs. Cameron,&mdash;&ldquo;Do you not think that your neighbour, Mr.
+ Chillingly, is a very fine young man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose he would be generally considered so. He is very tall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A handsome face?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Handsome, is it? I dare say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What does Lily say?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About Mr. Chillingly. Does she not think him handsome?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never asked her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Mrs. Cameron, would it not be a very pretty match for Lily? The
+ Chillinglys are among the oldest families in Burke&rsquo;s &lsquo;Landed Gentry,&rsquo; and
+ I believe his father, Sir Peter, has a considerable property.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the first time in this conversation Mrs. Cameron betrayed emotion. A
+ sudden flush overspread her countenance, and then left it paler than
+ before. After a pause she recovered her accustomed composure, and replied,
+ rudely,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would be no friend to Lily who could put such notions into her head;
+ and there is no reason to suppose that they have entered into Mr.
+ Chillingly&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would you be sorry if they did? Surely you would like your niece to marry
+ well, and there are few chances of her doing so at Moleswich.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, Mrs. Braefield, but the question of Lily&rsquo;s marriage I have
+ never discussed, even with her guardian. Nor, considering the childlike
+ nature of her tastes and habits, rather than the years she has numbered,
+ can I think the time has yet come for discussing it at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elsie, thus rebuked, changed the subject to some newspaper topic which
+ interested the public mind at the moment and very soon rose to depart.
+ Mrs. Cameron detained the hand that her visitor held out, and said in low
+ tones, which, though embarrassed, were evidently earnest, &ldquo;My dear Mrs.
+ Braefield, let me trust to your good sense and the affection with which
+ you have honoured my niece not to incur the risk of unsettling her mind by
+ a hint of the ambitious projects for her future on which you have spoken
+ to me. It is extremely improbable that a young man of Mr. Chillingly&rsquo;s
+ expectations would entertain any serious thoughts of marrying out of his
+ own sphere of life, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop, Mrs. Cameron, I must interrupt you. Lily&rsquo;s personal attractions and
+ grace of manner would adorn any station; and have I not rightly understood
+ you to say that though her guardian, Mr. Melville, is, as we all know, a
+ man who has risen above the rank of his parents, your niece, Miss
+ Mordaunt, is like yourself, by birth a gentlewoman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, by birth a gentlewoman,&rdquo; said Mrs. Cameron, raising her head with a
+ sudden pride. But she added, with as sudden a change to a sort of freezing
+ humility, &ldquo;What does that matter? A girl without fortune, without
+ connection, brought up in this little cottage, the ward of a professional
+ artist, who was the son of a city clerk, to whom she owes even the home
+ she has found, is not in the same sphere of life as Mr. Chillingly, and
+ his parents could not approve of such an alliance for him. It would be
+ most cruel to her, if you were to change the innocent pleasure she may
+ take in the conversation of a clever and well-informed stranger into the
+ troubled interest which, since you remind me of her age, a girl even so
+ childlike and beautiful as Lily might conceive in one represented to her
+ as the possible partner of her life. Don&rsquo;t commit that cruelty; don&rsquo;t&mdash;don&rsquo;t,
+ I implore you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Trust me,&rdquo; cried the warm-hearted Elsie, with tears rushing to her eyes.
+ &ldquo;What you say so sensibly, so nobly, never struck me before. I do not know
+ much of the world,&mdash;knew nothing of it till I married,&mdash;and
+ being very fond of Lily, and having a strong regard for Mr. Chillingly, I
+ fancied I could not serve both better than&mdash;than&mdash;but I see now;
+ he is very young, very peculiar; his parents might object, not to Lily
+ herself, but to the circumstances you name. And you would not wish her to
+ enter any family where she was not as cordially welcomed as she deserves
+ to be. I am glad to have had this talk with you. Happily, I have done no
+ mischief as yet. I will do none. I had come to propose an excursion to the
+ remains of the Roman Villa, some miles off, and to invite you and Mr.
+ Chillingly. I will no longer try to bring him and Lily together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you. But you still misconstrue me. I do not think that Lily cares
+ half so much for Mr. Chillingly as she does for a new butterfly. I do not
+ fear their coming together, as you call it, in the light in which she now
+ regards him, and in which, from all I observe, he regards her. My only
+ fear is that a hint might lead her to regard him in another way, and that
+ way impossible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elsie left the house extremely bewildered, and with a profound contempt
+ for Mrs. Cameron&rsquo;s knowledge of what may happen to two young persons
+ &ldquo;brought together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0093" id="link2HCH0093">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ NOW, on that very day, and about the same hour in which the conversation
+ just recorded between Elsie and Mrs. Cameron took place, Kenelm, in his
+ solitary noonday wanderings, entered the burial-ground in which Lily had
+ some short time before surprised him. And there he found her, standing
+ beside the flower border which she had placed round the grave of the child
+ whom she had tended and nursed in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day was cloudless and sunless; one of those days that so often instil
+ a sentiment of melancholy into the heart of an English summer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You come here too often, Miss Mordaunt,&rdquo; said Kenelm, very softly, as he
+ approached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily turned her face to him, without any start of surprise, with no
+ brightening change in its pensive expression,&mdash;an expression rare to
+ the mobile play of her features.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not too often. I promised to come as often as I could; and, as I told you
+ before, I have never broken a promise yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm made no answer. Presently the girl turned from the spot, and Kenelm
+ followed her silently till she halted before the old tombstone with its
+ effaced inscription.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See,&rdquo; she said, with a faint smile, &ldquo;I have put fresh flowers there.
+ Since the day we met in this churchyard, I have thought so much of that
+ tomb, so neglected, so forgotten, and&mdash;&rdquo; she paused a moment, and
+ went on abruptly, &ldquo;do you not often find that you are much too&mdash;what
+ is the word? ah! too egotistical, considering and pondering and dreaming
+ greatly too much about yourself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you are right there; though, till you so accused me, my conscience
+ did not detect it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And don&rsquo;t you find that you escape from being so haunted by the thought
+ of yourself, when you think of the dead? they can never have any share in
+ your existence <i>here</i>. When you say, &lsquo;I shall do this or that
+ to-day;&rsquo; when you dream, &lsquo;I may be this or that to-morrow,&rsquo; you are
+ thinking and dreaming, all by yourself, for yourself. But you are out of
+ yourself, beyond yourself, when you think and dream of the dead, who can
+ have nothing to do with your to-day or your to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we all know, Kenelm Chillingly made it one of the rules of his life
+ never to be taken by surprise. But when the speech I have written down
+ came from the lips of that tamer of butterflies, he was so startled that
+ all it occurred to him to say, after a long pause, was,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The dead are the past; and with the past rests all in the present or the
+ future that can take us out of our natural selves. The past decides our
+ present. By the past we divine our future. History, poetry, science, the
+ welfare of states, the advancement of individuals, are all connected with
+ tombstones of which inscriptions are effaced. You are right to honour the
+ mouldered tombstones with fresh flowers. It is only in the companionship
+ of the dead that one ceases to be an egotist.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the imperfectly educated Lily had been above the quick comprehension of
+ the academical Kenelm in her speech, so Kenelm was now above the
+ comprehension of Lily. She, too, paused before she replied,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I knew you better, I think I could understand you better. I wish you
+ knew Lion. I should like to hear you talk with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While thus conversing, they had left the burial-ground, and were in the
+ pathway trodden by the common wayfarer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily resumed,&mdash;&ldquo;Yes, I should like to hear you talk with Lion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean your guardian, Mr. Melville?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, you know that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why should you like to hear me talk to him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because there are some things in which I doubt if he was altogether
+ right, and I would ask you to express my doubts to him; you would, would
+ you not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But why can you not express them yourself to your guardian; are you
+ afraid of him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Afraid, no indeed! But&mdash;ah, how many people there are coming this
+ way! There is some tiresome public meeting in the town to-day. Let us take
+ the ferry: the other side of the stream is much pleasanter; we shall have
+ it more to ourselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning aside to the right while she thus spoke, Lily descended a gradual
+ slope to the margin of the stream, on which they found an old man dozily
+ reclined in his ferry-boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As, seated side by side, they were slowly borne over the still waters
+ under a sunless sky, Kenelm would have renewed the subject which his
+ companion had begun, but she shook her head, with a significant glance at
+ the ferryman. Evidently what she had to say was too confidential to admit
+ of a listener, not that the old ferryman seemed likely to take the trouble
+ of listening to any talk that was not addressed to him. Lily soon did
+ address her talk to him, &ldquo;So, Brown, the cow has quite recovered.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Miss, thanks to you, and God bless you. To think of your beating the
+ old witch like that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis not I who beat the witch, Brown; &lsquo;tis the fairy. Fairies, you know,
+ are much more powerful than witches.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So I find, Miss.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily here turned to Kenelm; &ldquo;Mr. Brown has a very nice milch-cow that was
+ suddenly taken very ill, and both he and his wife were convinced that the
+ cow was bewitched.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course it were, that stands to reason. Did not Mother Wright tell my
+ old woman that she would repent of selling milk, and abuse her dreadful;
+ and was not the cow taken with shivers that very night?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gently, Brown. Mother Wright did not say that your wife would repent of
+ selling milk, but of putting water into it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how did she know that, if she was not a witch? We have the best of
+ customers among the gentlefolks, and never any one that complained.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; answered Lily to Kenelm, unheeding this last observation, which was
+ made in a sullen manner, &ldquo;Brown had a horrid notion of enticing Mother
+ Wright into his ferry-boat and throwing her into the water, in order to
+ break the spell upon the cow. But I consulted the fairies, and gave him a
+ fairy charm to tie round the cow&rsquo;s neck. And the cow is quite well now,
+ you see. So, Brown, there was no necessity to throw Mother Wright into the
+ water, because she said you put some of it into the milk. But,&rdquo; she added,
+ as the boat now touched the opposite bank, &ldquo;shall I tell you, Brown, what
+ the fairies said to me this morning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do, Miss.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was this: If Brown&rsquo;s cow yields milk without any water in it, and if
+ water gets into it when the milk is sold, we, the fairies, will pinch Mr.
+ Brown black and blue; and when Brown has his next fit of rheumatics he
+ must not look to the fairies to charm it away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herewith Lily dropped a silver groat into Brown&rsquo;s hand, and sprang lightly
+ ashore, followed by Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have quite converted him, not only as to the existence, but as to the
+ beneficial power of fairies,&rdquo; said Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; answered Lily very gravely, &ldquo;ah, but would it not be nice if there
+ were fairies still? good fairies, and one could get at them? tell them all
+ that troubles and puzzles us, and win from them charms against the
+ witchcraft we practise on ourselves?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I doubt if it would be good for us to rely on such supernatural
+ counsellors. Our own souls are so boundless that the more we explore them
+ the more we shall find worlds spreading upon worlds into infinities; and
+ among the worlds is Fairyland.&rdquo; He added, inly to himself, &ldquo;Am I not in
+ Fairyland now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; whispered Lily. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t speak more yet awhile. I am thinking over
+ what you have just said, and trying to understand it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus walking silently they gained the little summer-house which tradition
+ dedicated to the memory of Izaak Walton. Lily entered it and seated
+ herself; Kenelm took his place beside her. It was a small octagon building
+ which, judging by its architecture, might have been built in the troubled
+ reign of Charles I.; the walls plastered within were thickly covered with
+ names and dates, and inscriptions in praise of angling, in tribute to
+ Izaak, or with quotations from his books. On the opposite side they could
+ see the lawn of Grasmere, with its great willows dipping into the water.
+ The stillness of the place, with its associations of the angler&rsquo;s still
+ life, were in harmony with the quiet day, its breezeless air, and
+ cloud-vested sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were to tell me your doubts in connection with your guardian, doubts
+ if he were right in something which you left unexplained, which you could
+ not yourself explain to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily started as from thoughts alien to the subject thus reintroduced.
+ &ldquo;Yes, I cannot mention my doubts to him because they relate to me, and he
+ is so good. I owe him so much that I could not bear to vex him by a word
+ that might seem like reproach or complaint. You remember,&rdquo; here she drew
+ nearer to him; and with that ingenuous confiding look and movement which
+ had, not unfrequently, enraptured him at the moment, and saddened him on
+ reflection,&mdash;too ingenuous, too confiding, for the sentiment with
+ which he yearned to inspire her,&mdash;she turned towards him her frank
+ untimorous eyes, and laid her hand on his arm: &ldquo;you remember that I said
+ in the burial-ground how much I felt that one is constantly thinking too
+ much of one&rsquo;s self. That must be wrong. In talking to you only about
+ myself I know I am wrong, but I cannot help it: I must do so. Do not think
+ ill of me for it. You see I have not been brought up like other girls. Was
+ my guardian right in that? Perhaps if he had insisted upon not letting me
+ have my own wilful way, if he had made me read the books which Mr. and
+ Mrs. Emlyn wanted to force on me, instead of the poems and fairy tales
+ which he gave me, I should have had so much more to think of that I should
+ have thought less of myself. You said that the dead were the past; one
+ forgets one&rsquo;s self when one thinks of the dead. If I had read more of the
+ past, had more subjects of interest in the dead whose history it tells,
+ surely I should be less shut up, as it were, in my own small, selfish
+ heart? It is only very lately I have thought of this, only very lately
+ that I have felt sorrow and shame in the thought that I am so ignorant of
+ what other girls know, even little Clemmy. And I dare not say this to Lion
+ when I see him next, lest he should blame himself, when he only meant to
+ be kind, and used to say, &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t want Fairy to be learned, it is enough
+ for me to think she is happy.&rsquo; And oh, I was so happy, till&mdash;till of
+ late!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because till of late you only knew yourself as a child. But, now that you
+ feel the desire of knowledge, childhood is vanishing. Do not vex yourself.
+ With the mind which nature has bestowed on you, such learning as may fit
+ you to converse with those dreaded &lsquo;grown-up folks&rsquo; will come to you very
+ easily and quickly. You will acquire more in a month now than you would
+ have acquired in a year when you were a child, and task-work was loathed,
+ not courted. Your aunt is evidently well instructed, and if I might
+ venture to talk to her about the choice of books&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, don&rsquo;t do that. Lion would not like it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your guardian would not like you to have the education common to other
+ young ladies?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lion forbade my aunt to teach me much that I rather wished to learn. She
+ wanted to do so, but she has given it up at his wish. She only now teases
+ me with those horrid French verbs, and that I know is a mere make-belief.
+ Of course on Sunday it is different; then I must not read anything but the
+ Bible and sermons. I don&rsquo;t care so much for the sermons as I ought, but I
+ could read the Bible all day, every week-day as well as Sunday; and it is
+ from the Bible that I learn that I ought to think less about myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm involuntarily pressed the little hand that lay so innocently on his
+ arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know the difference between one kind of poetry and another?&rdquo; asked
+ Lily, abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not sure. I ought to know when one kind is good and another kind is
+ bad. But in that respect I find many people, especially professed critics,
+ who prefer the poetry which I call bad to the poetry I think good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The difference between one kind of poetry and another, supposing them
+ both to be good,&rdquo; said Lily, positively, and with an air of triumph, &ldquo;is
+ this,&mdash;I know, for Lion explained it to me,&mdash;in one kind of
+ poetry the writer throws himself entirely out of his existence, he puts
+ himself into other existences quite strange to his own. He may be a very
+ good man, and he writes his best poetry about very wicked men: he would
+ not hurt a fly, but he delights in describing murderers. But in the other
+ kind of poetry the writer does not put himself into other existences, he
+ expresses his own joys and sorrows, his own individual heart and mind. If
+ he could not hurt a fly, he certainly could not make himself at home in
+ the cruel heart of a murderer. There, Mr. Chillingly, that is the
+ difference between one kind of poetry and another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very true,&rdquo; said Kenelm, amused by the girl&rsquo;s critical definitions. &ldquo;The
+ difference between dramatic poetry and lyrical. But may I ask what that
+ definition has to do with the subject into which you so suddenly
+ introduced it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Much; for when Lion was explaining this to my aunt, he said, &lsquo;A perfect
+ woman is a poem; but she can never be a poem of the one kind, never can
+ make herself at home in the hearts with which she has no connection, never
+ feel any sympathy with crime and evil; she must be a poem of the other
+ kind, weaving out poetry from her own thoughts and fancies.&rsquo; And, turning
+ to me, he said, smiling, &lsquo;That is the poem I wish Lily to be. Too many dry
+ books would only spoil the poem.&rsquo; And you now see why I am so ignorant,
+ and so unlike other girls, and why Mr. and Mrs. Emlyn look down upon me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You wrong at least Mr. Emlyn, for it was he who first said to me, &lsquo;Lily
+ Mordaunt is a poem.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did he? I shall love him for that. How pleased Lion will be!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Melville seems to have an extraordinary influence over your mind,&rdquo;
+ said Kenelm, with a jealous pang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course. I have neither father nor mother: Lion has been both to me.
+ Aunty has often said, &lsquo;You cannot be too grateful to your guardian;
+ without him I should have no home to shelter you, no bread to give you.&rsquo;
+ He never said that: he would be very angry with aunty if he knew she had
+ said it. When he does not call me Fairy he calls me Princess. I would not
+ displease him for the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is very much older than you; old enough to be your father, I hear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dare say. But if he were twice as old I could not love him better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm smiled: the jealousy was gone. Certainly not thus could any girl,
+ even Lily, speak of one with whom, however she might love him, she was
+ likely to fall in love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily now rose up, rather slowly and wearily. &ldquo;It is time to go home: aunty
+ will be wondering what keeps me away,&mdash;come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They took their way towards the bridge opposite to Cromwell Lodge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not for some minutes that either broke silence. Lily was the first
+ to do so, and with one of those abrupt changes of topic which were common
+ to the restless play of her secret thoughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have father and mother still living, Mr. Chillingly?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank Heaven, yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which do you love the best?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is scarcely a fair question. I love my mother very much; but my
+ father and I understand each other better than&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see: it is so difficult to be understood. No one understands me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily shook her head with an energetic movement of dissent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At least as well as a man can understand a young lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What sort of young lady is Miss Cecilia Travers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cecilia Travers! When and how did you ever hear that such a person
+ existed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That big London man whom they call Sir Thomas mentioned her name the day
+ we dined at Braefieldville.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I remember,&mdash;as having been at the Court ball.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He said she was very handsome.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So she is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is she a poem too?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; that never struck me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Emlyn, I suppose, would call her perfectly brought up,&mdash;well
+ educated. He would not raise his eyebrows at her as he does at me,&mdash;poor
+ me, Cinderella!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Miss Mordaunt, you need not envy her. Again let me say that you could
+ very soon educate yourself to the level of any young ladies who adorn the
+ Court balls.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay; but then I should not be a poem,&rdquo; said Lily, with a shy, arch
+ side-glance at his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were now on the bridge, and before Kenelm could answer Lily resumed
+ quickly, &ldquo;You need not come any farther; it is out of your way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot be so disdainfully dismissed, Miss Mordaunt; I insist on seeing
+ you to at least your garden gate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily made no objection and again spoke,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What sort of country do you live in when at home; is it like this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so pretty; the features are larger, more hill and dale and woodland:
+ yet there is one feature in our grounds which reminds me a little of this
+ landscape,&mdash;a light stream, somewhat wider, indeed, than your
+ brooklet; but here and there the banks are so like those by Cromwell Lodge
+ that I sometimes start and fancy myself at home. I have a strange love for
+ rivulets and all running waters, and in my foot wanderings I find myself
+ magnetically attracted towards them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily listened with interest, and after a short pause said, with a
+ half-suppressed sigh, &ldquo;Your home is much finer than any place here, even
+ than Braefieldville, is it not? Mrs. Braefield says your father is very
+ rich.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I doubt if he is richer than Mr. Braefield; and, though his house may be
+ larger than Braefieldville, it is not so smartly furnished, and has no
+ such luxurious hothouses and conservatories. My father&rsquo;s tastes are like
+ mine, very simple. Give him his library, and he would scarcely miss his
+ fortune if he lost it. He has in this one immense advantage over me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would miss fortune?&rdquo; said Lily, quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not that; but my father is never tired of books. And shall I own it?
+ there are days when books tire me almost as much as they do you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were now at the garden gate. Lily, with one hand on the latch, held
+ out the other to Kenelm, and her smile lit up the dull sky like a burst of
+ sunshine, as she looked in his face and vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0100" id="link2H_4_0100">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0094" id="link2HCH0094">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM did not return home till dusk, and just as he was sitting down to
+ his solitary meal there was a ring at the bell, and Mrs. Jones ushered in
+ Mr. Thomas Bowles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though that gentleman had never written to announce the day of his
+ arrival, he was not the less welcome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;if you preserve the appetite I have lost, I fear you
+ will find meagre fare to-day. Sit down, man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, kindly, but I dined two hours ago in London, and I really can
+ eat nothing more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm was too well-bred to press unwelcome hospitalities. In a very few
+ minutes his frugal repast was ended; the cloth removed, the two men were
+ left alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your room is here, of course, Tom; that was engaged from the day I asked
+ you, but you ought to have given me a line to say when to expect you, so
+ that I could have put our hostess on her mettle as to dinner or supper.
+ You smoke still, of course: light your pipe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, Mr. Chillingly, I seldom smoke now; but if you will excuse a
+ cigar,&rdquo; and Tom produced a very smart cigar-case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do as you would at home. I shall send word to Will Somers that you and I
+ sup there to-morrow. You forgive me for letting out your secret. All
+ straightforward now and henceforth. You come to their hearth as a friend,
+ who will grow dearer to them both every year. Ah, Tom, this love for woman
+ seems to me a very wonderful thing. It may sink a man into such deeps of
+ evil, and lift a man into such heights of good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know as to the good,&rdquo; said Tom, mournfully, and laying aside his
+ cigar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on smoking: I should like to keep you company; can you spare me one of
+ your cigars?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom offered his case. Kenelm extracted a cigar, lighted it, drew a few
+ whiffs, and, when he saw that Tom had resumed his own cigar, recommenced
+ conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t know as to the good; but tell me honestly, do you think if you
+ had not loved Jessie Wiles, you would be as good a man as you are now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I am better than I was, it is not because of my love for the girl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The loss of her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm started, turned very pale, threw aside the cigar, rose, and walked
+ the room to and fro with very quick but very irregular strides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom continued quietly. &ldquo;Suppose I had won Jessie and married her, I don&rsquo;t
+ think any idea of improving myself would have entered my head. My uncle
+ would have been very much offended at my marrying a day-labourer&rsquo;s
+ daughter, and would not have invited me to Luscombe. I should have
+ remained at Graveleigh, with no ambition of being more than a common
+ farrier, an ignorant, noisy, quarrelsome man; and if I could not have made
+ Jessie as fond of me as I wished, I should not have broken myself of
+ drinking, and I shudder to think what a brute I might have been, when I
+ see in the newspapers an account of some drunken wife-beater. How do we
+ know but what that wife-beater loved his wife dearly before marriage, and
+ she did not care for him? His home was unhappy, and so he took to drink
+ and to wife-beating.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was right, then,&rdquo; said Kenelm, halting his strides, &ldquo;when I told you it
+ would be a miserable fate to be married to a girl whom you loved to
+ distraction, and whose heart you could never warm to you, whose life you
+ could never render happy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So right!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us drop that part of the subject at present,&rdquo; said Kenelm, reseating
+ himself, &ldquo;and talk about your wish to travel. Though contented that you
+ did not marry Jessie, though you can now, without anguish, greet her as
+ the wife of another, still there are some lingering thoughts of her that
+ make you restless; and you feel that you could more easily wrench yourself
+ from these thoughts in a marked change of scene and adventure, that you
+ might bury them altogether in the soil of a strange land. Is it so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, something of that, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Kenelm roused himself to talk of foreign lands, and to map out a plan
+ of travel that might occupy some months. He was pleased to find that Tom
+ had already learned enough of French to make himself understood at least
+ upon commonplace matters, and still more pleased to discover that he had
+ been not only reading the proper guide-books or manuals descriptive of the
+ principal places in Europe worth visiting, but that he had acquired an
+ interest in the places; interest in the fame attached to them by their
+ history in the past, or by the treasures of art they contained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they talked far into the night; and when Tom retired to his room,
+ Kenelm let himself out of the house noiselessly, and walked with slow
+ steps towards the old summer-house in which he had sat with Lily. The wind
+ had risen, scattering the clouds that had veiled the preceding day, so
+ that the stars were seen in far chasms of the sky beyond,&mdash;seen for a
+ while in one place, and, when the swift clouds rolled over them there,
+ shining out elsewhere. Amid the varying sounds of the trees, through which
+ swept the night gusts, Kenelm fancied he could distinguish the sigh of the
+ willow on the opposite lawn of Grasmere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0095" id="link2HCH0095">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM despatched a note to Will Somers early the next morning, inviting
+ himself and Mr. Bowles to supper that evening. His tact was sufficient to
+ make him aware that in such social meal there would be far less restraint
+ for each and all concerned than in a more formal visit from Tom during the
+ day-time; and when Jessie, too, was engaged with customers to the shop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he led Tom through the town and showed him the shop itself, with its
+ pretty goods at the plate-glass windows, and its general air of prosperous
+ trade; then he carried him off into the lanes and fields of the country,
+ drawing out the mind of his companion, and impressed with great admiration
+ of its marked improvement in culture, and in the trains of thought which
+ culture opens out and enriches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But throughout all their multiform range of subject Kenelm could perceive
+ that Tom was still preoccupied and abstracted: the idea of the coming
+ interview with Jessie weighed upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they left Cromwell Lodge at nightfall, to repair to the supper at
+ Will&rsquo;s; Kenelm noticed that Bowles had availed himself of the contents of
+ his carpet-bag to make some refined alterations in his dress. The
+ alterations became him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they entered the parlour, Will rose from his chair with the evidence
+ of deep emotion on his face, advanced to Tom, took his hand and grasped
+ and dropped it without a word. Jessie saluted both guests alike, with
+ drooping eyelids and an elaborate curtsy. The old mother alone was
+ perfectly self-possessed and up to the occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am heartily glad to see you, Mr. Bowles,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;and so all three
+ of us are, and ought to be; and if baby was older, there would be four.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And where on earth have you hidden baby?&rdquo; cried Kenelm. &ldquo;Surely he might
+ have been kept up for me to-night, when I was expected; the last time I
+ supped here I took you by surprise, and therefore had no right to complain
+ of baby&rsquo;s want of respect to her parents&rsquo; friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie raised the window-curtain, and pointed to the cradle behind it.
+ Kenelm linked his arm in Tom&rsquo;s, led him to the cradle, and, leaving him
+ alone to gaze on the sleeping inmate, seated himself at the table, between
+ old Mrs. Somers and Will. Will&rsquo;s eyes were turned away towards the
+ curtain, Jessie holding its folds aside, and the formidable Tom, who had
+ been the terror of his neighbourhood, bending smiling over the cradle:
+ till at last he laid his large hand on the pillow, gently, timidly,
+ careful not to awake the helpless sleeper, and his lips moved, doubtless
+ with a blessing; then he, too, came to the table, seating himself, and
+ Jessie carried the cradle upstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will fixed his keen, intelligent eyes on his bygone rival; and noticing
+ the changed expression of the once aggressive countenance, the changed
+ costume in which, without tinge of rustic foppery, there was the token of
+ a certain gravity of station scarcely compatible with a return to old
+ loves and old habits in the village world, the last shadow of jealousy
+ vanished from the clear surface of Will&rsquo;s affectionate nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Bowles,&rdquo; he exclaimed, impulsively, &ldquo;you have a kind heart, and a
+ good heart, and a generous heart. And your corning here to-night on this
+ friendly visit is an honour which&mdash;which&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Which,&rdquo; interrupted
+ Kenelm, compassionating Will&rsquo;s embarrassment, &ldquo;is on the side of us single
+ men. In this free country a married man who has a male baby may be father
+ to the Lord Chancellor or the Archbishop of Canterbury. But&mdash;well, my
+ friends, such a meeting as we have to-night does not come often; and after
+ supper let us celebrate it with a bowl of punch. If we have headaches the
+ next morning none of us will grumble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Mrs. Somers laughed out jovially. &ldquo;Bless you, sir, I did not think of
+ the punch; I will go and see about it,&rdquo; and, baby&rsquo;s socks still in her
+ hands, she hastened from the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What with the supper, what with the punch, and what with Kenelm&rsquo;s art of
+ cheery talk on general subjects, all reserve, all awkwardness, all shyness
+ between the convivialists, rapidly disappeared. Jessie mingled in the
+ talk; perhaps (excepting only Kenelm) she talked more than the others,
+ artlessly, gayly, no vestige of the old coquetry; but, now and then, with
+ a touch of genteel finery, indicative of her rise in life, and of the
+ contact of the fancy shopkeeper with noble customers. It was a pleasant
+ evening; Kenelm had resolved that it should be so. Not a hint of the
+ obligations to Mr. Bowles escaped until Will, following his visitor to the
+ door, whispered to Tom, &ldquo;You don&rsquo;t want thanks, and I can&rsquo;t express them.
+ But when we say our prayers at night, we have always asked God to bless
+ him who brought us together, and has since made us so prosperous,&mdash;I
+ mean Mr. Chillingly. To-night there will be another besides him, for whom
+ we shall pray, and for whom baby, when he is older, will pray too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therewith Will&rsquo;s voice thickened; and he prudently receded, with no
+ unreasonable fear lest the punch might make him too demonstrative of
+ emotion if he said more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom was very silent on the return to Cromwell Lodge; it did not seem the
+ silence of depressed spirits, but rather of quiet meditation, from which
+ Kenelm did not attempt to rouse him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not till they reached the garden pales of Grasmere that Tom,
+ stopping short, and turning his face to Kenelm, said, &ldquo;I am very grateful
+ to you for this evening,&mdash;very.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It has revived no painful thoughts then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I feel so much calmer in mind than I ever believed I could have been,
+ after seeing her again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it possible!&rdquo; said Kenelm, to himself. &ldquo;How should I feel if I ever
+ saw in Lily the wife of another man, the mother of his child?&rdquo; At that
+ question he shuddered, and an involuntary groan escaped from his lips.
+ Just then having, willingly in those precincts, arrested his steps when
+ Tom paused to address him, something softly touched the arm which he had
+ rested on the garden pale. He looked, and saw that it was Blanche. The
+ creature, impelled by its instincts towards night-wanderings, had, somehow
+ or other, escaped from its own bed within the house, and hearing a voice
+ that had grown somewhat familiar to its ear, crept from among the shrubs
+ behind upon the edge of the pale. There it stood, with arched back,
+ purring low as in pleased salutation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm bent down and covered with kisses the blue ribbon which Lily&rsquo;s hand
+ had bound round the favourite&rsquo;s neck. Blanche submitted to the caress for
+ a moment, and then catching a slight rustle among the shrubs made by some
+ awaking bird, sprang into the thick of the quivering leaves and vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm moved on with a quick impatient stride, and no further words were
+ exchanged between him and his companion till they reached their lodging
+ and parted for the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0096" id="link2HCH0096">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE next day, towards noon, Kenelm and his visitor, walking together along
+ the brook-side, stopped before Izaak Walton&rsquo;s summer-house, and, at
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s suggestion, entered therein to rest, and more at their ease to
+ continue the conversation they had begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have just told me,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;that you feel as if a load were
+ taken off your heart, now that you have again met Jessie Somers, and that
+ you find her so changed that she is no longer the woman you loved. As to
+ the change, whatever it be, I own, it seems to me for the better, in
+ person, in manners, in character; of course I should not say this, if I
+ were not convinced of your perfect sincerity when you assured me that you
+ are cured of the old wound. But I feel so deeply interested in the
+ question how a fervent love, once entertained and enthroned in the heart
+ of a man so earnestly affectionate and so warm-blooded as yourself, can
+ be, all of a sudden, at a single interview, expelled or transferred into
+ the calm sentiment of friendship, that I pray you to explain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is what puzzles me, sir,&rdquo; answered Tom, passing his hand over his
+ forehead. &ldquo;And I don&rsquo;t know if I can explain it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Think over it, and try.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom mused for some moments and then began. &ldquo;You see, sir, that I was a
+ very different man myself when I fell in love with Jessie Wiles, and said,
+ &lsquo;Come what may, that girl shall be my wife. Nobody else shall have her.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Agreed; go on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But while I was becoming a different man, when I thought of her&mdash;and
+ I was always thinking of her&mdash;I still pictured her to myself as the
+ same Jessie Wiles; and though, when I did see her again at Graveleigh,
+ after she had married&mdash;the day&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You saved her from the insolence of the Squire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She was but very recently married. I did not realize her as married. I
+ did not see her husband, and the difference within myself was only then
+ beginning. Well, so all the time I was reading and thinking, and striving
+ to improve my old self at Luscombe, still Jessie Wiles haunted me as the
+ only girl I had ever loved, ever could love; I could not believe it
+ possible that I could ever marry any one else. And lately I have been much
+ pressed to marry some one else; all my family wish it: but the face of
+ Jessie rose up before me, and I said to myself, &lsquo;I should be a base man if
+ I married one woman, while I could not get another woman out of my head.&rsquo;
+ I must see Jessie once more, must learn whether her face is now really the
+ face that haunts me when I sit alone; and I have seen her, and it is not
+ that face: it may be handsomer, but it is not a girl&rsquo;s face, it is the
+ face of a wife and a mother. And, last evening, while she was talking with
+ an open-heartedness which I had never found in her before, I became
+ strangely conscious of the difference in myself that had been silently at
+ work within the last two years or so. Then, sir, when I was but an
+ ill-conditioned, uneducated, petty village farrier, there was no
+ inequality between me and a peasant girl; or, rather, in all things except
+ fortune, the peasant girl was much above me. But last evening I asked
+ myself, watching her and listening to her talk, &lsquo;If Jessie were now free,
+ should I press her to be my wife?&rsquo; and I answered myself, &lsquo;No.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm listened with rapt attention, and exclaimed briefly, but
+ passionately, &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems as if I were giving myself airs to say why. But, sir, lately I
+ have been thrown among persons, women as well as men, of a higher class
+ than I was born in; and in a wife I should want a companion up to their
+ mark, and who would keep me up to mine; and ah, sir, I don&rsquo;t feel as if I
+ could find that companion in Mrs. Somers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand you now, Tom. But you are spoiling a silly romance of mine.
+ I had fancied the little girl with the flower face would grow up to supply
+ the loss of Jessie; and, I am so ignorant of the human heart, I did think
+ it would take all the years required for the little girl to open into a
+ woman, before the loss of the old love could be supplied. I see now that
+ the poor little child with the flower face has no chance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chance? Why, Mr. Chillingly,&rdquo; cried Tom, evidently much nettled, &ldquo;Susey
+ is a dear little thing, but she is scarcely more than a mere charity girl.
+ Sir, when I last saw you in London you touched on that matter as if I were
+ still the village farrier&rsquo;s son, who might marry a village labourer&rsquo;s
+ daughter. But,&rdquo; added Tom, softening down his irritated tone of voice,
+ &ldquo;even if Susey were a lady born I think a man would make a very great
+ mistake, if he thought he could bring up a little girl to regard him as a
+ father; and then, when she grew up, expect her to accept him as a lover.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, you think that!&rdquo; exclaimed Kenelm, eagerly, and turning eyes that
+ sparkled with joy towards the lawn of Grasmere. &ldquo;You think that; it is
+ very sensibly said,&mdash;well, and you have been pressed to marry, and
+ have hung back till you had seen again Mrs. Somers. Now you will be better
+ disposed to such a step; tell me about it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I said, last evening, that one of the principal capitalists at Luscombe,
+ the leading corn-merchant, had offered to take me into partnership. And,
+ sir, he has an only daughter, she is a very amiable girl, has had a
+ first-rate education, and has such pleasant manners and way of talk, quite
+ a lady. If I married her I should soon be the first man in Luscombe, and
+ Luscombe, as you are no doubt aware, returns two members to Parliament;
+ who knows, but that some day the farrier&rsquo;s son might be&mdash;&rdquo; Tom
+ stopped abruptly, abashed at the aspiring thought which, while speaking,
+ had deepened his hardy colour and flashed from his honest eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Kenelm, almost mournfully, &ldquo;is it so? must each man in his life
+ play many parts? Ambition succeeds to love, the reasoning brain to the
+ passionate heart. True, you are changed; my Tom Bowles is gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not gone in his undying gratitude to you, sir,&rdquo; said Tom, with great
+ emotion. &ldquo;Your Tom Bowles would give up all his dreams of wealth or of
+ rising in life, and go through fire and water to serve the friend who
+ first bid him be a new Tom Bowles! Don&rsquo;t despise me as your own work: you
+ said to me that terrible day, when madness was on my brow and crime within
+ my heart, &lsquo;I will be to you the truest friend man ever found in man.&rsquo; So
+ you have been. You commanded me to read; you commanded me to think; you
+ taught me that body should be the servant of mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, hush, times are altered; it is you who can teach me now. Teach me,
+ teach me; how does ambition replace love? How does the desire to rise in
+ life become the all-mastering passion, and, should it prosper, the
+ all-atoning consolation of our life? We can never be as happy, though we
+ rose to the throne of the Caesars, as we dream that we could have been,
+ had Heaven but permitted us to dwell in the obscurest village, side by
+ side with the woman we love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom was exceedingly startled by such a burst of irrepressible passion from
+ the man who had told him that, though friends were found only once in a
+ life, sweethearts were as plentiful as blackberries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again he swept his hand over his forehead, and replied hesitatingly: &ldquo;I
+ can&rsquo;t pretend to say what maybe the case with others. But to judge by my
+ own case, it seems to me this: a young man who, out of his own business,
+ has nothing to interest or excite him, finds content, interest, and
+ excitement when he falls in love; and then, whether for good or ill, he
+ thinks there is nothing like love in the world, he don&rsquo;t care a fig for
+ ambition then. Over and over again did my poor uncle ask me to come to him
+ at Luscombe, and represent all the worldly advantage it would be to me;
+ but I could not leave the village in which Jessie lived, and, besides, I
+ felt myself unfit to be anything higher than I was. But when I had been
+ some time at Luscombe, and gradually got accustomed to another sort of
+ people, and another sort of talk, then I began to feel interest in the
+ same objects that interested those about me; and when, partly by mixing
+ with better educated men, and partly by the pains I took to educate
+ myself, I felt that I might now more easily rise above my uncle&rsquo;s rank of
+ life than two years ago I could have risen above a farrier&rsquo;s forge, then
+ the ambition to rise did stir in me, and grew stronger every day. Sir, I
+ don&rsquo;t think you can wake up a man&rsquo;s intellect but what you wake with it
+ emulation. And, after all, emulation is ambition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, I suppose, I have no emulation in me, for certainly I have no
+ ambition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I can&rsquo;t believe, sir; other thoughts may cover it over and keep it
+ down for a time. But sooner or later, it will force its way to the top, as
+ it has done with me. To get on in life, to be respected by those who know
+ you, more and more as you grow older, I call that a manly desire. I am
+ sure it comes as naturally to an Englishman as&mdash;as&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As the wish to knock down some other Englishman who stands in his way
+ does. I perceive now that you were always a very ambitious man, Tom; the
+ ambition has only taken another direction. Caesar might have been
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;But the first wrestler on the green.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, I suppose, you abandon the idea of travel: you will return to
+ Luscombe, cured of all regret for the loss of Jessie; you will marry the
+ young lady you mention, and rise, through progressive steps of alderman
+ and mayor, into the rank of member for Luscombe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All that may come in good time,&rdquo; answered Tom, not resenting the tone of
+ irony in which he was addressed, &ldquo;but I still intend to travel: a year so
+ spent must render me all the more fit for any station I aim at. I shall go
+ back to Luscombe to arrange my affairs, come to terms with Mr. Leland the
+ corn-merchant, against my return, and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The young lady is to wait till then.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Emily&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, that is the name? Emily! a much more elegant name than Jessie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Emily,&rdquo; continued Tom, with an unruffled placidity,&mdash;which,
+ considering the aggravating bitterness for which Kenelm had exchanged his
+ wonted dulcitudes of indifferentism, was absolutely saintlike, &ldquo;Emily
+ knows that if she were my wife I should be proud of her, and will esteem
+ me the more if she feels how resolved I am that she shall never be ashamed
+ of me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, Tom,&rdquo; said Kenelm softened, and laying his hand on his
+ friend&rsquo;s shoulder with brotherlike tenderness. &ldquo;Nature has made you a
+ thorough gentleman; and you could not think and speak more nobly if you
+ had come into the world as the head of all the Howards.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0097" id="link2HCH0097">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ TOM went away the next morning. He declined to see Jessie again, saying
+ curtly, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t wish the impression made on me the other evening to incur
+ a chance of being weakened.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm was in no mood to regret his friend&rsquo;s departure. Despite all the
+ improvement in Tom&rsquo;s manners and culture, which raised him so much nearer
+ to equality with the polite and instructed heir of the Chillinglys, Kenelm
+ would have felt more in sympathy and rapport with the old disconsolate
+ fellow-wanderer who had reclined with him on the grass, listening to the
+ minstrel&rsquo;s talk or verse, than he did with the practical, rising citizen
+ of Luscombe. To the young lover of Lily Mordaunt there was a discord, a
+ jar, in the knowledge that the human heart admits of such well-reasoned,
+ well-justified transfers of allegiance; a Jessie to-day, or an Emily
+ to-morrow; &ldquo;La reine est morte: vive la reine&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour or two after Tom had gone, Kenelm found himself almost
+ mechanically led towards Braefieldville. He had instinctively divined
+ Elsie&rsquo;s secret wish with regard to himself and Lily, however skilfully she
+ thought she had concealed it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Braefieldville he should hear talk of Lily, and in the scenes where
+ Lily had been first beheld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found Mrs. Braefield alone in the drawing-room, seated by a table
+ covered with flowers, which she was assorting and intermixing for the
+ vases to which they were destined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It struck him that her manner was more reserved than usual and somewhat
+ embarrassed; and when, after a few preliminary matters of small talk, he
+ rushed boldly <i>in medias res</i> and asked if she had seen Mrs. Cameron
+ lately, she replied briefly, &ldquo;Yes, I called there the other day,&rdquo; and
+ immediately changed the conversation to the troubled state of the
+ Continent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm was resolved not to be so put off, and presently returned to the
+ charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The other day you proposed an excursion to the site of the Roman villa,
+ and said you would ask Mrs. Cameron to be of the party. Perhaps you have
+ forgotten it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; but Mrs. Cameron declines. We can ask the Emlyns instead. He will be
+ an excellent <i>cicerone</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Excellent! Why did Mrs. Cameron decline?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elsie hesitated, and then lifted her clear brown eyes to his face, with a
+ sudden determination to bring matters to a crisis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot say why Mrs. Cameron declined, but in declining she acted very
+ wisely and very honourably. Listen to me, Mr. Chillingly. You know how
+ highly I esteem, and how cordially I like you, and judging by what I felt
+ for some weeks, perhaps longer, after we parted at Tor Hadham&mdash;&rdquo; Here
+ again she hesitated, and, with a half laugh and a slight blush, again went
+ resolutely on. &ldquo;If I were Lily&rsquo;s aunt or elder sister, I should do as Mrs.
+ Cameron does; decline to let Lily see much more of a young gentleman too
+ much above her in wealth and station for&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop,&rdquo; cried Kenelm, haughtily, &ldquo;I cannot allow that any man&rsquo;s wealth or
+ station would warrant his presumption in thinking himself above Miss
+ Mordaunt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Above her in natural grace and refinement, certainly not. But in the
+ world there are other considerations which, perhaps, Sir Peter and Lady
+ Chillingly might take into account.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You did not think of that before you last saw Mrs. Cameron.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Honestly speaking, I did not. Assured that Miss Mordaunt was a
+ gentlewoman by birth, I did not sufficiently reflect upon other
+ disparities.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know, then, that she is by birth a gentlewoman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I only know it as all here do, by the assurance of Mrs. Cameron, whom no
+ one could suppose not to be a lady. But there are different degrees of
+ lady and of gentleman, which are little heeded in the ordinary intercourse
+ of society, but become very perceptible in questions of matrimonial
+ alliance; and Mrs. Cameron herself says very plainly that she does not
+ consider her niece to belong to that station in life from which Sir Peter
+ and Lady Chillingly would naturally wish their son should select his
+ bride. Then (holding out her hand) pardon me if I have wounded or offended
+ you. I speak as a true friend to you and to Lily both. Earnestly I advise
+ you, if Miss Mordaunt be the cause of your lingering here, earnestly I
+ advise you to leave while yet in time for her peace of mind and your own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her peace of mind,&rdquo; said Kenelm, in low faltering tones, scarcely hearing
+ the rest of Mrs. Braefield&rsquo;s speech. &ldquo;Her peace of mind? Do you sincerely
+ think that she cares for me,&mdash;could care for me,&mdash;if I stayed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I could answer you decidedly. I am not in the secrets of her
+ heart. I can but conjecture that it might be dangerous for the peace of
+ any young girl to see too much of a man like yourself, to divine that he
+ loved her, and not to be aware that he could not, with the approval of his
+ family, ask her to become his wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm bent his face down, and covered it with his right hand. He did not
+ speak for some moments. Then he rose, the fresh cheek very pale, and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right. Miss Mordaunt&rsquo;s peace of mind must be the first
+ consideration. Excuse me if I quit you thus abruptly. You have given me
+ much to think of, and I can only think of it adequately when alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0098" id="link2HCH0098">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ FROM KENELM CHILLINGLY TO SIR PETER CHILLINGLY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY FATHER, MY DEAR FATHER,&mdash;This is no reply to your letters. I know
+ not if itself can be called a letter. I cannot yet decide whether it be
+ meant to reach your hands. Tired with talking to myself, I sit down to
+ talk to you. Often have I reproached myself for not seeing every fitting
+ occasion to let you distinctly know how warmly I love, how deeply I
+ reverence you; you, O friend, O father. But we Chillinglys are not a
+ demonstrative race. I don&rsquo;t remember that you, by words, ever expressed to
+ me the truth that you loved your son infinitely more than he deserves.
+ Yet, do I not know that you would send all your beloved old books to the
+ hammer rather than I should pine in vain for some untried, if sinless,
+ delight on which I had set my heart? And do you not know equally well,
+ that I would part with all my heritage, and turn day-labourer, rather than
+ you should miss the beloved old books?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That mutual knowledge is taken for granted in all that my heart yearns to
+ pour forth to your own. But, if I divine aright, a day is coming when, as
+ between you and me, there must be a sacrifice on the part of one to the
+ other. If so, I implore that the sacrifice may come from you. How is this?
+ How am I so ungenerous, so egotistical, so selfish, so ungratefully
+ unmindful of all I already owe to you, and may never repay? I can only
+ answer, &ldquo;It is fate, it is nature, it is love&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ Here I must break off. It is midnight, the moon halts opposite to the
+ window at which I sit, and on the stream that runs below there is a long
+ narrow track on which every wave trembles in her light; on either side of
+ the moonlit track all the other waves, running equally to their grave in
+ the invisible deep, seem motionless and dark. I can write no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ .........
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (Dated two days later.)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ They say she is beneath us in wealth and station. Are we, my father&mdash;we,
+ two well-born gentlemen&mdash;coveters of gold or lackeys of the great?
+ When I was at college, if there were any there more heartily despised than
+ another it was the parasite and the tuft-hunter; the man who chose his
+ friends according as their money or their rank might be of use to him. If
+ so mean where the choice is so little important to the happiness and
+ career of a man who has something of manhood in him, how much more mean to
+ be the parasite and tuft-hunter in deciding what woman to love, what woman
+ to select as the sweetener and ennobler of one&rsquo;s everyday life! Could she
+ be to my life that sweetener, that ennobler? I firmly believe it. Already
+ life itself has gained a charm that I never even guessed in it before;
+ already I begin, though as yet but faintly and vaguely, to recognize that
+ interest in the objects and aspirations of my fellow-men which is
+ strongest in those whom posterity ranks among its ennoblers. In this quiet
+ village it is true that I might find examples enough to prove that man is
+ not meant to meditate upon life, but to take active part in it, and in
+ that action to find his uses. But I doubt if I should have profited by
+ such examples; if I should not have looked on this small stage of the
+ world as I have looked on the large one, with the indifferent eyes of a
+ spectator on a trite familiar play carried on by ordinary actors, had not
+ my whole being suddenly leaped out of philosophy into passion, and, at
+ once made warmly human, sympathized with humanity wherever it burned and
+ glowed. Ah, is there to be any doubt of what station, as mortal bride, is
+ due to her,&mdash;her, my princess, my fairy? If so, how contented you
+ shall be, my father, with the worldly career of your son! how
+ perseveringly he will strive (and when did perseverance fail?) to supply
+ all his deficiencies of intellect, genius, knowledge, by the energy
+ concentrated on a single object which&mdash;more than intellect, genius,
+ knowledge, unless they attain to equal energy equally concentrated&mdash;commands
+ what the world calls honours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, with her, with her as the bearer of my name, with her to whom I,
+ whatever I might do of good or of great, could say, &ldquo;It is thy work,&rdquo; I
+ promise that you shall bless the day when you took to your arms a
+ daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ .........
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art in contact with the beloved in all that thou feelest elevated
+ above thee.&rdquo; So it is written by one of those weird Germans who search in
+ our bosoms for the seeds of buried truths, and conjure them into flowers
+ before we ourselves were even aware of the seeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every thought that associates itself with my beloved seems to me born with
+ wings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ .........
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have just seen her, just parted from her. Since I had been told&mdash;kindly,
+ wisely told&mdash;that I had no right to hazard her peace of mind unless I
+ were privileged to woo and to win her, I promised myself that I would shun
+ her presence until I had bared my heart to you, as I am doing now, and
+ received that privilege from yourself; for even had I never made the
+ promise that binds my honour, your consent and blessing must hallow my
+ choice. I do not feel as if I could dare to ask one so innocent and fair
+ to wed an ungrateful, disobedient son. But this evening I met her,
+ unexpectedly, at the vicar&rsquo;s, an excellent man, from whom I have learned
+ much; whose precepts, whose example, whose delight in his home, and his
+ life at once active and serene, are in harmony with my own dreams when I
+ dream of her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will tell you the name of the beloved; hold it as yet a profound secret
+ between you and me. But oh for the day when I may hear you call her by
+ that name, and print on her forehead the only kiss by man of which I
+ should not be jealous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is Sunday, and after the evening service it is my friend&rsquo;s custom to
+ gather his children round him, and, without any formal sermon or
+ discourse, engage their interests in subjects harmonious to associations
+ with the sanctity of the day; often not directly bearing upon religion;
+ more often, indeed, playfully starting from some little incident or some
+ slight story-book which had amused the children in the course of the past
+ week, and then gradually winding into reference to some sweet moral
+ precept or illustration from some divine example. It is a maxim with him
+ that, while much that children must learn they can only learn well through
+ conscious labour, and as positive task-work, yet Religion should be
+ connected in their minds not with labour and task-work, but should become
+ insensibly infused into their habits of thought, blending itself with
+ memories and images of peace and love; with the indulgent tenderness of
+ the earliest teachers, the sinless mirthfulness of the earliest home; with
+ consolation in after sorrows, support through after trials, and never
+ parting company with its twin sister, Hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I entered the vicar&rsquo;s room this evening just as the group had collected
+ round him. By the side of his wife sat a lady in whom I feel a keen
+ interest. Her face wears that kind of calm which speaks of the lassitude
+ bequeathed by sorrow. She is the aunt of my beloved one. Lily had nestled
+ herself on a low ottoman, at the good pastor&rsquo;s feet, with one of his
+ little girls, round whose shoulder she had wound her arm. She is much more
+ fond of the companionship of children than that of girls of her own age.
+ The vicar&rsquo;s wife, a very clever woman, once, in my hearing, took her to
+ task for this preference, asking her why she persisted in grouping herself
+ with mere infants who could teach her nothing? Ah! could you have seen the
+ innocent, angel-like expression of her face when she answered simply, &ldquo;I
+ suppose because with them I feel safer, I mean nearer to God.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Emlyn&mdash;that is the name of the vicar&mdash;deduced his homily
+ this evening from a pretty fairy tale which Lily had been telling to his
+ children the day before, and which he drew her on to repeat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Take, in brief, the substance of the story:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Once on a time, a king and queen made themselves very unhappy because
+ they had no heir to their throne; and they prayed for one; and lo, on some
+ bright summer morning, the queen, waking from sleep, saw a cradle beside
+ her bed, and in the cradle a beautiful sleeping babe. Great day throughout
+ the kingdom! But as the infant grew up, it became very wayward and
+ fretful: it lost its beauty; it would not learn its lessons; it was as
+ naughty as a child could be. The parents were very sorrowful; the heir, so
+ longed for, promised to be a great plague to themselves and their
+ subjects. At last one day, to add to their trouble, two little bumps
+ appeared on the prince&rsquo;s shoulders. All the doctors were consulted as to
+ the cause and the cure of this deformity. Of course they tried the effect
+ of back-bands and steel machines, which gave the poor little prince great
+ pain, and made him more unamiable than ever. The bumps, nevertheless, grew
+ larger, and as they increased, so the prince sickened and pined away. At
+ last a skilful surgeon proposed, as the only chance of saving the prince&rsquo;s
+ life, that the bumps should be cut out; and the next morning was fixed for
+ that operation. But at night the queen saw, or dreamed she saw, a
+ beautiful shape standing by her bedside. And it said to her reproachfully,
+ &lsquo;Ungrateful woman! How wouldst thou repay me for the precious boon that my
+ favour bestowed on thee! In me behold the Queen of the Fairies. For the
+ heir to thy kingdom, I consigned to thy charge an infant from Fairyland,
+ to become a blessing to thee and to thy people; and thou wouldst inflict
+ upon it a death of torture by the surgeon&rsquo;s knife.&rsquo; And the queen
+ answered, &lsquo;Precious indeed thou mayest call the boon,&mdash;a miserable,
+ sickly, feverish changeling.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Art thou so dull,&rsquo; said the beautiful visitant, &lsquo;as not to comprehend
+ that the earliest instincts of the fairy child would be those of
+ discontent, at the exile from its native home? and in that discontent it
+ would have pined itself to death, or grown up, soured and malignant, a
+ fairy still in its power but a fairy of wrath and evil, had not the
+ strength of its inborn nature sufficed to develop the growth of its wings.
+ That which thy blindness condemns as the deformity of the human-born, is
+ to the fairy-born the crowning perfection of its beauty. Woe to thee, if
+ thou suffer not the wings of the fairy child to grow.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the next morning the queen sent away the surgeon when he came with
+ his horrible knife, and removed the back-board and the steel machines from
+ the prince&rsquo;s shoulders, though all the doctors predicted that the child
+ would die. And from that moment the royal heir began to recover bloom and
+ health. And when at last, out of those deforming bumps, budded delicately
+ forth the plumage of snow-white wings, the wayward peevishness of the
+ prince gave place to sweet temper. Instead of scratching his teachers, he
+ became the quickest and most docile of pupils, grew up to be the joy of
+ his parents and the pride of their people; and people said, &lsquo;In him we
+ shall have hereafter such a king as we have never yet known.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here ended Lily&rsquo;s tale. I cannot convey to you a notion of the pretty,
+ playful manner in which it was told. Then she said, with a grave shake of
+ the head, &ldquo;But you do not seem to know what happened afterwards. Do you
+ suppose that the prince never made use of his wings? Listen to me. It was
+ discovered by the courtiers who attended on His Royal Highness that on
+ certain nights, every week, he disappeared. In fact, on these nights,
+ obedient to the instinct of the wings, he flew from palace halls into
+ Fairyland; coming back thence all the more lovingly disposed towards the
+ human home from which he had escaped for a while.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, my children,&rdquo; interposed the preacher earnestly, &ldquo;the wings would be
+ given to us in vain if we did not obey the instinct which allures us to
+ soar; vain, no less, would be the soaring, were it not towards the home
+ whence we came, bearing back from its native airs a stronger health, and a
+ serener joy; more reconciled to the duties of earth by every new flight
+ into heaven.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he thus completed the moral of Lily&rsquo;s fairy tale, the girl rose from
+ her low seat, took his hand, kissed it reverently, and walked away towards
+ the window. I could see that she was affected even to tears, which she
+ sought to conceal. Later in the evening, when we were dispersed on the
+ lawn, for a few minutes before the party broke up, Lily came to my side
+ timidly and said, in a low whisper,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you angry with me? what have I done to displease you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Angry with you; displeased? How can you think of me so unjustly?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is so many days since you have called, since I have seen you,&rdquo; she
+ said so artlessly, looking up at me with eyes in which tears still seemed
+ to tremble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before I could trust myself to reply, her aunt approached, and noticing me
+ with a cold and distant &ldquo;Good-night,&rdquo; led away her niece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had calculated on walking back to their home with them, as I generally
+ have done when we met at another house. But the aunt had probably
+ conjectured I might be at the vicarage that evening, and in order to
+ frustrate my intention had engaged a carriage for their return. No doubt
+ she has been warned against permitting further intimacy with her niece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father, I must come to you at once, discharge my promise, and receive
+ from your own lips your consent to my choice; for you will consent, will
+ you not? But I wish you to be prepared beforehand, and I shall therefore
+ put up these disjointed fragments of my commune with my own heart and with
+ yours, and post them to-morrow. Expect me to follow them after leaving you
+ a day free to consider them alone,&mdash;alone, my dear father: they are
+ meant for no eye but yours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ K. C. <a name="link2HCH0099" id="link2HCH0099">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE next day Kenelm walked into the town, posted his voluminous letter to
+ Sir Peter, and then looked in at the shop of Will Somers, meaning to make
+ some purchases of basket-work or trifling fancy goods in Jessie&rsquo;s pretty
+ store of such articles, that might please the taste of his mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On entering the shop his heart beat quicker. He saw two young forms
+ bending over the counter, examining the contents of a glass case. One of
+ these customers was Clemmy; in the other there was no mistaking the slight
+ graceful shape of Lily Mordaunt. Clemmy was exclaiming, &ldquo;Oh, it is so
+ pretty, Mrs. Somers! but,&rdquo; turning her eyes from the counter to a silk
+ purse in her hand, she added sorrowfully, &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t buy it. I have not got
+ enough, not by a great deal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what is it, Miss Clemmy?&rdquo; asked Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two girls turned round at his voice, and Clemmy&rsquo;s face brightened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;is it not too lovely?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The object thus admired and coveted was a little gold locket, enriched by
+ a cross composed of small pearls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I assure you, miss,&rdquo; said Jessie, who had acquired all the coaxing arts
+ of her trade, &ldquo;it is really a great bargain. Miss Mary Burrows, who was
+ here just before you came, bought one not nearly so pretty and gave ten
+ shillings more for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Mary Burrows was the same age as Miss Clementina Emlyn, and there was
+ a rivalry as to smartness between those youthful beauties. &ldquo;Miss Burrows!&rdquo;
+ sighed Clemmy, very scornfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Kenelm&rsquo;s attention was distracted from Clemmy&rsquo;s locket to a little
+ ring which Lily had been persuaded by Mrs. Somers to try on, and which she
+ now drew off and returned with a shake of the head. Mrs. Somers, who saw
+ that she had small chance of selling the locket to Clemmy, was now
+ addressing herself to the elder girl more likely to have sufficient
+ pocket-money, and whom, at all events, it was quite safe to trust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The ring fits you so nicely, Miss Mordaunt, and every young lady of your
+ age wears at least one ring; allow me to put it up.&rdquo; She added in a lower
+ voice, &ldquo;Though we only sell the articles in this case on commission, it is
+ all the same to us whether we are paid now or at Christmas.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis no use tempting me, Mrs. Somers,&rdquo; said Lily, laughing, and then with
+ a grave air, &ldquo;I promised Lion, I mean my guardian, never to run into debt,
+ and I never will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily turned resolutely from the perilous counter, taking up a paper that
+ contained a new ribbon she had bought for Blanche, and Clemmy reluctantly
+ followed her out of the shop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm lingered behind and selected very hastily a few trifles, to be sent
+ to him that evening with some specimens of basket-work left to Will&rsquo;s
+ tasteful discretion; then purchased the locket on which Clemmy had set her
+ heart; but all the while his thoughts were fixed on the ring which Lily
+ had tried on. It was no sin against etiquette to give the locket to a
+ child like Clemmy, but would it not be a cruel impertinence to offer a
+ gift to Lily?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie spoke: &ldquo;Miss Mordaunt took a great fancy to this ring, Mr.
+ Chillingly. I am sure her aunt would like her to have it. I have a great
+ mind to put it by on the chance of Mrs. Cameron&rsquo;s calling here. It would
+ be a pity if it were bought by some one else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think,&rdquo; said Kenelm, &ldquo;that I will take the liberty of showing it to
+ Mrs. Cameron. No doubt she will buy it for her niece. Add the price of it
+ to my bill.&rdquo; He seized the ring and carried it off; a very poor little
+ simple ring, with a single stone shaped as a heart, not half the price of
+ the locket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm rejoined the young ladies just where the path split into two, the
+ one leading direct to Grasmere, the other through the churchyard to the
+ vicarage. He presented the locket to Clemmy with brief kindly words which
+ easily removed any scruple she might have had in accepting it; and,
+ delighted with her acquisition, she bounded off to the vicarage, impatient
+ to show the prize to her mamma and sisters, and more especially to Miss
+ Mary Burrows, who was coming to lunch with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm walked on slowly by Lily&rsquo;s side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have a good heart, Mr. Chillingly,&rdquo; said she, somewhat abruptly. &ldquo;How
+ it must please you to give such pleasure! Dear little Clemmy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This artless praise, and the perfect absence of envy or thought of self
+ evinced by her joy that her friend&rsquo;s wish was gratified, though her own
+ was not, enchanted Kenelm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it pleases to give pleasure,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;it is your turn to be pleased
+ now; you can confer such pleasure upon me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How?&rdquo; she asked, falteringly, and with quick change of colour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By conceding to me the same right your little friend has allowed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he drew forth the ring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily reared her head with a first impulse of haughtiness. But when her
+ eyes met his the head drooped down again, and a slight shiver ran through
+ her frame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Mordaunt,&rdquo; resumed Kenelm, mastering his passionate longing to fall
+ at her feet and say, &ldquo;But, oh! in this ring it is my love that I offer,&mdash;it
+ is my troth that I pledge!&rdquo; &ldquo;Miss Mordaunt, spare me the misery of
+ thinking that I have offended you; least of all would I do so on this day,
+ for it may be some little while before I see you again. I am going home
+ for a few days upon a matter which may affect the happiness of my life,
+ and on which I should be a bad son and an unworthy gentleman if I did not
+ consult him who, in all that concerns my affections, has trained me to
+ turn to him, the father; in all that concerns my honour to him, the
+ gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A speech more unlike that which any delineator of manners and morals in
+ the present day would put into the mouth of a lover, no critic in &ldquo;The
+ Londoner&rdquo; could ridicule. But, somehow or other, this poor little tamer of
+ butterflies and teller of fairy tales comprehended on the instant all that
+ this most eccentric of human beings thus frigidly left untold. Into her
+ innermost heart it sank more deeply than would the most ardent declaration
+ put into the lips of the boobies or the scamps in whom delineators of
+ manners in the present day too often debase the magnificent chivalry
+ embodied in the name of &ldquo;lover.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where these two had, while speaking, halted on the path along the
+ brook-side, there was a bench, on which it so happened that they had
+ seated themselves weeks before. A few moments later on that bench they
+ were seated again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the trumpery little ring with its turquoise heart was on Lily&rsquo;s
+ finger, and there they continued to sit for nearly half an hour; not
+ talking much, but wondrously happy; not a single vow of troth
+ interchanged. No, not even a word that could be construed into &ldquo;I love.&rdquo;
+ And yet when they rose from the bench, and went silently along the
+ brook-side, each knew that the other was beloved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they reached the gate that admitted into the garden of Grasmere,
+ Kenelm made a slight start. Mrs. Cameron was leaning over the gate.
+ Whatever alarm at the appearance Kenelm might have felt was certainly not
+ shared by Lily; she advanced lightly before him, kissed her aunt on the
+ cheek, and passed on across the lawn with a bound in her step and the
+ carol of a song upon her lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm remained by the gate, face to face with Mrs. Cameron. She opened
+ the gate, put her arm in his, and led him back along the brook-side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure, Mr. Chillingly,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that you will not impute to my
+ words any meaning more grave than that which I wish them to convey, when I
+ remind you that there is no place too obscure to escape from the
+ ill-nature of gossip, and you must own that my niece incurs the chance of
+ its notice if she be seen walking alone in these by-paths with a man of
+ your age and position, and whose sojourn in the neighbourhood, without any
+ ostensible object or motive, has already begun to excite conjecture. I do
+ not for a moment assume that you regard my niece in any other light than
+ that of an artless child, whose originality of tastes or fancy may serve
+ to amuse you; and still less do I suppose that she is in danger of
+ misrepresenting any attentions on your part. But for her sake I am bound
+ to consider what others may say. Excuse me, then, if I add that I think
+ you are also bound in honour and in good feeling to do the same. Mr.
+ Chillingly, it would give me a great sense of relief if it suited your
+ plans to move from the neighbourhood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Mrs. Cameron,&rdquo; answered Kenelm, who had listened to this speech
+ with imperturbable calm of visage, &ldquo;I thank you much for your candour, and
+ I am glad to have this opportunity of informing you that I am about to
+ move from this neighbourhood, with the hope of returning to it in a very
+ few days and rectifying your mistake as to the point of view in which I
+ regard your niece. In a word,&rdquo; here the expression of his countenance and
+ the tone of his voice underwent a sudden change, &ldquo;it is the dearest wish
+ of my heart to be empowered by my parents to assure you of the warmth with
+ which they will welcome your niece as their daughter, should she deign to
+ listen to my suit and intrust me with the charge of her happiness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cameron stopped short, gazing into his face with a look of
+ inexpressible dismay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! Mr. Chillingly,&rdquo; she exclaimed, &ldquo;this must not be,&mdash;cannot be.
+ Put out of your mind an idea so wild. A young man&rsquo;s senseless romance.
+ Your parents cannot consent to your union with my niece; I tell you
+ beforehand they cannot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But why?&rdquo; asked Kenelm, with a slight smile, and not much impressed by
+ the vehemence of Mrs. Cameron&rsquo;s adjuration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; she repeated passionately; and then recovering something of her
+ habitual weariness of quiet. &ldquo;The why is easily explained. Mr. Kenelm
+ Chillingly is the heir of a very ancient house and, I am told, of
+ considerable estates. Lily Mordaunt is a nobody, an orphan, without
+ fortune, without connection, the ward of a humbly born artist, to whom she
+ owes the roof that shelters her; she is without the ordinary education of
+ a gentlewoman; she has seen nothing of the world in which you move. Your
+ parents have not the right to allow a son so young as yourself to throw
+ himself out of his proper sphere by a rash and imprudent alliance. And,
+ never would I consent, never would Walter Melville consent, to her
+ entering into any family reluctant to receive her. There,&mdash;that is
+ enough. Dismiss the notion so lightly entertained. And farewell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; answered Kenelm very earnestly, &ldquo;believe me, that had I not
+ entertained the hope approaching to conviction that the reasons you urge
+ against my presumption will not have the weight with my parents which you
+ ascribe to them, I should not have spoken to you thus frankly. Young
+ though I be, still I might fairly claim the right to choose for myself in
+ marriage. But I gave to my father a very binding promise that I would not
+ formally propose to any one till I had acquainted him with my desire to do
+ so, and obtained his approval of my choice; and he is the last man in the
+ world who would withhold that approval where my heart is set on it as it
+ is now. I want no fortune with a wife, and should I ever care to advance
+ my position in the world, no connection would help me like the approving
+ smile of the woman I love. There is but one qualification which my parents
+ would deem they had the right to exact from my choice of one who is to
+ bear our name. I mean that she should have the appearance, the manners,
+ the principles, and&mdash;my mother at least might add&mdash;the birth of
+ a gentlewoman. Well, as to appearance and manners, I have seen much of
+ fine society from my boyhood, and found no one among the highest born who
+ can excel the exquisite refinement of every look, and the inborn delicacy
+ of every thought, in her of whom, if mine, I shall be as proud as I shall
+ be fond. As to defects in the frippery and tinsel of a boarding-school
+ education, they are very soon remedied. Remains only the last
+ consideration,&mdash;birth. Mrs. Braefield informs me that you have
+ assured her that, though circumstances into which as yet I have no right
+ to inquire, have made her the ward of a man of humble origin, Miss
+ Mordaunt is of gentle birth. Do you deny that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mrs. Cameron, hesitating, but with a flash of pride in her eyes
+ as she went on. &ldquo;No. I cannot deny that my niece is descended from those
+ who, in point of birth, were not unequal to your own ancestors. But what
+ of that?&rdquo; she added, with a bitter despondency of tone. &ldquo;Equality of birth
+ ceases when one falls into poverty, obscurity, neglect, nothingness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Really this is a morbid habit on your part. But, since we have thus
+ spoken so confidentially, will you not empower me to answer the question
+ which will probably be put to me, and the answer to which will, I doubt
+ not, remove every obstacle in the way of my happiness? Whatever the
+ reasons which might very sufficiently induce you to preserve, whilst
+ living so quietly in this place, a discreet silence as to the parentage of
+ Miss Mordaunt and your own,&mdash;and I am well aware that those whom
+ altered circumstances of fortune have compelled to altered modes of life
+ may disdain to parade to strangers the pretensions to a higher station
+ than that to which they reconcile their habits,&mdash;whatever, I say,
+ such reasons for silence to strangers, should they preclude you from
+ confiding to me, an aspirant to your niece&rsquo;s hand, a secret which, after
+ all, cannot be concealed from her future husband?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From her future husband? of course not,&rdquo; answered Mrs. Cameron. &ldquo;But I
+ decline to be questioned by one whom I may never see again, and of whom I
+ know so little. I decline, indeed, to assist in removing any obstacle to a
+ union with my niece, which I hold to be in every way unsuited to either
+ party. I have no cause even to believe that my niece would accept you if
+ you were free to propose to her. You have not, I presume, spoken to her as
+ an aspirant to her hand. You have not addressed to her any declaration of
+ your attachment, or sought to extract from her inexperience any words that
+ warrant you in thinking that her heart will break if she never sees you
+ again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not merit such cruel and taunting questions,&rdquo; said Kenelm,
+ indignantly. &ldquo;But I will say no more now. When we again meet let me hope
+ you will treat me less unkindly. Adieu!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, sir. A word or two more. You persist in asking your father and Lady
+ Chillingly to consent to your proposal to Miss Mordaunt?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you will promise me, on your word as a gentleman, to state fairly all
+ the causes which might fairly operate against their consent,&mdash;the
+ poverty, the humble rearing, the imperfect education of my niece,&mdash;so
+ that they might not hereafter say you had entrapped their consent, and
+ avenge themselves for your deceit by contempt for her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, madam, madam, you really try my patience too far. But take my
+ promise, if you can hold that of value from one whom you can suspect of
+ deliberate deceit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg your pardon, Mr. Chillingly. Bear with my rudeness. I have been so
+ taken by surprise, I scarcely know what I am saying. But let us understand
+ each other completely before we part. If your parents withhold their
+ consent you will communicate it to me; me only, not to Lily. I repeat I
+ know nothing of the state of her affections. But it might embitter any
+ girl&rsquo;s life to be led on to love one whom she could not marry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It shall be as you say. But if they do consent?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you will speak to me before you seek an interview with Lily, for
+ then comes another question: Will her guardian consent?&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No matter. I rely on your honour in this request, as in all else.
+ Good-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned back with hurried footsteps, muttering to herself, &ldquo;But they
+ will not consent. Heaven grant that they will not consent, or if they do,
+ what&mdash;what is to be said or done? Oh, that Walter Melville were here,
+ or that I knew where to write to him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his way back to Cromwell Lodge, Kenelm was overtaken by the vicar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was coming to you, my dear Mr. Chillingly, first to thank you for the
+ very pretty present with which you have gladdened the heart of my little
+ Clemmy, and next to ask you to come with me quietly to-day to meet Mr.
+ &mdash;&mdash;-, the celebrated antiquarian, who came to Moleswich this
+ morning at my request to examine that old Gothic tomb in our churchyard.
+ Only think, though he cannot read the inscription any better than we can,
+ he knows all about its history. It seems that a young knight renowned for
+ feats of valour in the reign of Henry IV. married a daughter of one of
+ those great Earls of Montfichet who were then the most powerful family in
+ these parts. He was slain in defending the church from an assault by some
+ disorderly rioters of the Lollard faction; he fell on the very spot where
+ the tomb is now placed. That accounts for its situation in the churchyard,
+ not within the fabric. Mr. &mdash;&mdash;- discovered this fact in an old
+ memoir of the ancient and once famous family to which the young knight
+ Albert belonged, and which came, alas! to so shameful an end, the
+ Fletwodes, Barons of Fletwode and Malpas. What a triumph over pretty Lily
+ Mordaunt, who always chose to imagine that the tomb must be that of some
+ heroine of her own romantic invention! Do come to dinner; Mr. &mdash;&mdash;-
+ is a most agreeable man, and full of interesting anecdotes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am so sorry I cannot. I am obliged to return home at once for a few
+ days. That old family of Fletwode! I think I see before me, while we
+ speak, the gray tower in which they once held sway; and the last of the
+ race following Mammon along the Progress of the Age,&mdash;a convicted
+ felon! What a terrible satire on the pride of birth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm left Cromwell Lodge that evening, but he still kept on his
+ apartments there, saying he might be back unexpectedly any day in the
+ course of the next week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He remained two days in London, wishing all that he had communicated to
+ Sir Peter in writing to sink into his father&rsquo;s heart before a personal
+ appeal to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The more he revolved the ungracious manner in which Mrs. Cameron had
+ received his confidence, the less importance he attached to it. An
+ exaggerated sense of disparities of fortune in a person who appeared to
+ him to have the pride so common to those who have known better days,
+ coupled with a nervous apprehension lest his family should ascribe to her
+ any attempt to ensnare a very young man of considerable worldly
+ pretensions into a marriage with a penniless niece, seemed to account for
+ much that had at first perplexed and angered him. And if, as he
+ conjectured, Mrs. Cameron had once held a much higher position in the
+ world than she did now,&mdash;a conjecture warranted by a certain peculiar
+ conventional undeniable elegance which characterized her habitual manner,&mdash;and
+ was now, as she implied, actually a dependant on the bounty of a painter
+ who had only just acquired some professional distinction, she might well
+ shrink from the mortification of becoming an object of compassion to her
+ richer neighbours; nor, when he came to think of it, had he any more right
+ than those neighbours to any confidence as to her own or Lily&rsquo;s parentage,
+ so long as he was not formally entitled to claim admission into her
+ privity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ London seemed to him intolerably dull and wearisome. He called nowhere
+ except at Lady Glenalvon&rsquo;s; he was glad to hear from the servants that she
+ was still at Exmundham. He relied much on the influence of the queen of
+ the fashion with his mother, whom he knew would be more difficult to
+ persuade than Sir Peter, nor did he doubt that he should win to his side
+ that sympathizing and warm-hearted queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0100" id="link2HCH0100">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT is somewhere about three weeks since the party invited by Sir Peter and
+ Lady Chillingly assembled at Exmundham, and they are still there, though
+ people invited to a country house have seldom compassion enough for the
+ dulness of its owner to stay more than three days. Mr. Chillingly Mivers,
+ indeed, had not exceeded that orthodox limit. Quietly observant, during
+ his stay, of young Gordon&rsquo;s manner towards Cecilia, and hers towards him,
+ he had satisfied himself that there was no cause to alarm Sir Peter, or
+ induce the worthy baronet to regret the invitation he had given to that
+ clever kinsman. For all the visitors remaining Exmundham had a charm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Lady Glenalvon, because in the hostess she met her most familiar friend
+ when both were young girls, and because it pleased her to note the
+ interest which Cecilia Travers took in the place so associated with
+ memories of the man to whom it was Lady Glenalvon&rsquo;s hope to see her
+ united. To Chillingly Gordon, because no opportunity could be so
+ favourable for his own well-concealed designs on the hand and heart of the
+ heiress. To the heiress herself the charm needs no explanation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Leopold Travers the attractions of Exmundham were unquestionably less
+ fascinating. Still even he was well pleased to prolong his stay. His
+ active mind found amusement in wandering over an estate the acreage of
+ which would have warranted a much larger rental, and lecturing Sir Peter
+ on the old-fashioned system of husbandry which that good-natured easy
+ proprietor permitted his tenants to adopt, as well as on the number of
+ superfluous hands that were employed on the pleasure-grounds and in the
+ general management of the estate, such as carpenters, sawyers, woodmen,
+ bricklayers, and smiths.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Squire said, &ldquo;You could do just as well with a third of those
+ costly dependants,&rdquo; Sir Peter, unconsciously plagiarizing the answer of
+ the old French grand seigneur, replied, &ldquo;Very likely. But the question is,
+ could the rest do just as well without me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Exmundham, indeed, was a very expensive place to keep up. The house, built
+ by some ambitious Chillingly three centuries ago, would have been large
+ for an owner of thrice the revenues; and though the flower-garden was
+ smaller than that at Braefieldville, there were paths and drives through
+ miles of young plantations and old woodlands that furnished lazy
+ occupation to an army of labourers. No wonder that, despite his nominal
+ ten thousand a year, Sir Peter was far from being a rich man. Exmundham
+ devoured at least half the rental. The active mind of Leopold Travers also
+ found ample occupation in the stores of his host&rsquo;s extensive library.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Travers, never much of a reader, was by no means a despiser of learning,
+ and he soon took to historical and archaeological researches with the
+ ardour of a man who must always throw energy into any pursuit that
+ occasion presents as an escape from indolence. Indolent Leopold Travers
+ never could be. But, more than either of these resources of occupation,
+ the companionship of Chillingly Gordon excited his interest and quickened
+ the current of his thoughts. Always fond of renewing his own youth in the
+ society of the young, and of the sympathizing temperament which belongs to
+ cordial natures, he had, as we have seen, entered very heartily into the
+ ambition of George Belvoir, and reconciled himself very pliably to the
+ humours of Kenelm Chillingly. But the first of these two was a little too
+ commonplace, the second a little too eccentric, to enlist the complete
+ good-fellowship which, being alike very clever and very practical, Leopold
+ Travers established with that very clever and very practical
+ representative of the rising generation, Chillingly Gordon. Between them
+ there was this meeting-ground, political and worldly, a great contempt for
+ innocuous old-fashioned notions; added to which, in the mind of Leopold
+ Travers, was a contempt&mdash;which would have been complete, but that the
+ contempt admitted dread&mdash;of harmful new-fashioned notions which,
+ interpreted by his thoughts, threatened ruin to his country and downfall
+ to the follies of existent society, and which, interpreted by his
+ language, tamed itself into the man of the world&rsquo;s phrase, &ldquo;Going too far
+ for me.&rdquo; Notions which, by the much more cultivated intellect and the
+ immeasurably more soaring ambition of Chillingly Gordon, might be viewed
+ and criticised thus: &ldquo;Could I accept these doctrines? I don&rsquo;t see my way
+ to being Prime Minister of a country in which religion and capital are
+ still powers to be consulted. And, putting aside religion and capital, I
+ don&rsquo;t see how, if these doctrines passed into law, with a good coat on my
+ back I should not be a sufferer. Either I, as having a good coat, should
+ have it torn off my back as a capitalist, or, if I remonstrated in the
+ name of moral honesty, be put to death as a religionist.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore when Leopold Travers said, &ldquo;Of course we must go on,&rdquo; Chillingly
+ Gordon smiled and answered, &ldquo;Certainly, go on.&rdquo; And when Leopold Travers
+ added, &ldquo;But we may go too far,&rdquo; Chillingly Gordon shook his dead, and
+ replied, &ldquo;How true that is! Certainly too far.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apart from the congeniality of political sentiment, there were other
+ points of friendly contact between the older and younger man. Each was an
+ exceedingly pleasant man of the world; and, though Leopold Travers could
+ not have plumbed certain deeps in Chillingly Gordon&rsquo;s nature,&mdash;and in
+ every man&rsquo;s nature there are deeps which his ablest observer cannot
+ fathom,&mdash;yet he was not wrong when he said to himself, &ldquo;Gordon is a
+ gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Utterly would my readers misconceive that very clever young man, if they
+ held him to be a hypocrite like Blifil or Joseph Surface. Chillingly
+ Gordon, in every private sense of the word, was a gentleman. If he had
+ staked his whole fortune on a rubber at whist, and an undetected glance at
+ his adversary&rsquo;s hand would have made the difference between loss and gain,
+ he would have turned away his head and said, &ldquo;Hold up your cards.&rdquo;
+ Neither, as I have had occasion to explain before, was he actuated by any
+ motive in common with the vulgar fortune-hunter in his secret resolve to
+ win the hand of the heiress. He recognized no inequality of worldly gifts
+ between them. He said to himself, &ldquo;Whatever she may give me in money, I
+ shall amply repay in worldly position if I succeed, and succeed I
+ certainly shall. If I were as rich as Lord Westminster, and still cared
+ about being Prime Minister, I should select her as the most fitting woman
+ I have seen for a Prime Minister&rsquo;s wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be acknowledged that this sort of self-commune, if not that of a
+ very ardent lover, is very much that of a sensible man setting high value
+ on himself, bent on achieving the prizes of a public career, and desirous
+ of securing in his wife a woman who would adorn the station to which he
+ confidently aspired. In fact, no one so able as Chillingly Gordon would
+ ever have conceived the ambition of being Minister of England if in all
+ that in private life constitutes the English gentleman he could be fairly
+ subject to reproach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was but in public life what many a gentleman honest in private life has
+ been before him, an ambitious, resolute egotist, by no means without
+ personal affections, but holding them all subordinate to the objects of
+ personal ambition, and with no more of other principle than that of
+ expediency in reference to his own career than would cover a silver penny.
+ But expediency in itself he deemed the statesman&rsquo;s only rational
+ principle. And to the consideration of expediency he brought a very
+ unprejudiced intellect, quite fitted to decide whether the public opinion
+ of a free and enlightened people was for turning St. Paul&rsquo;s Cathedral into
+ an Agapemone or not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the summer weeks he had thus vouchsafed to the turfs and groves of
+ Exmundham, Leopold Travers was not the only person whose good opinion
+ Chillingly Gordon had ingratiated. He had won the warmest approbation from
+ Mrs. Campion. His conversation reminded her of that which she had enjoyed
+ in the house of her departed spouse. In talking with Cecilia she was fond
+ of contrasting him to Kenelm, not to the favour of the latter, whose
+ humours she utterly failed to understand, and whom she pertinaciously
+ described as &ldquo;so affected.&rdquo; &ldquo;A most superior young man Mr. Gordon, so well
+ informed, so sensible,&mdash;above all, so natural.&rdquo; Such was her judgment
+ upon the unavowed candidate to Cecilia&rsquo;s hand; and Mrs. Campion required
+ no avowal to divine the candidature. Even Lady Glenalvon had begun to take
+ friendly interest in the fortunes of this promising young man. Most women
+ can sympathize with youthful ambition. He impressed her with a deep
+ conviction of his abilities, and still more with respect for their
+ concentration upon practical objects of power and renown. She too, like
+ Mrs. Campion, began to draw comparisons unfavourable to Kenelm between the
+ two cousins: the one seemed so slothfully determined to hide his candle
+ under a bushel, the other so honestly disposed to set his light before
+ men. She felt also annoyed and angry that Kenelm was thus absenting
+ himself from the paternal home at the very time of her first visit to it,
+ and when he had so felicitous an opportunity of seeing more of the girl in
+ whom he knew that Lady Glenalvon deemed he might win, if he would properly
+ woo, the wife that would best suit him. So that when one day Mrs. Campion,
+ walking through the gardens alone with Lady Glenalvon while from the
+ gardens into the park went Chillingly Gordon, arm-in-arm with Leopold
+ Travers, abruptly asked, &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you think that Mr. Gordon is smitten with
+ Cecilia, though he, with his moderate fortune, does not dare to say so?
+ And don&rsquo;t you think that any girl, if she were as rich as Cecilia will be,
+ would be more proud of such a husband as Chillingly Gordon than of some
+ silly earl?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Glenalvon answered curtly, but somewhat sorrowfully, &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a pause she added, &ldquo;There is a man with whom I did once think she
+ would have been happier than with any other. One man who ought to be
+ dearer to me than Mr. Gordon, for he saved the life of my son, and who,
+ though perhaps less clever than Mr. Gordon, still has a great deal of
+ talent within him, which might come forth and make him&mdash;what shall I
+ say?&mdash;a useful and distinguished member of society, if married to a
+ girl so sure of raising any man she marries as Cecilia Travers. But if I
+ am to renounce that hope, and look through the range of young men brought
+ under my notice, I don&rsquo;t know one, putting aside consideration of rank and
+ fortune, I should prefer for a clever daughter who went heart and soul
+ with the ambition of a clever man. But, Mrs. Campion, I have not yet quite
+ renounced my hope; and, unless I do, I yet think there is one man to whom
+ I would rather give Cecilia, if she were my daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therewith Lady Glenalvon so decidedly broke off the subject of
+ conversation that Mrs. Campion could not have renewed it without such a
+ breach of the female etiquette of good breeding as Mrs. Campion was the
+ last person to adventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Chillingly could not help being pleased with Gordon. He was light in
+ hand, served to amuse her guests, and made up a rubber of whist in case of
+ need.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were two persons, however, with whom Gordon made no ground; namely,
+ Parson John and Sir Peter. When Travers praised him one day for the
+ solidity of his parts and the soundness of his judgment, the Parson
+ replied snappishly, &ldquo;Yes, solid and sound as one of those tables you buy
+ at a broker&rsquo;s; the thickness of the varnish hides the defects in the
+ joints: the whole framework is rickety.&rdquo; But when the Parson was
+ indignantly urged to state the reason by which he arrived at so harsh a
+ conclusion, he could only reply by an assertion which seemed to his
+ questioner a declamatory burst of parsonic intolerance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because,&rdquo; said Parson John, &ldquo;he has no love for man, and no reverence for
+ God. And no character is sound and solid which enlarges its surface at the
+ expense of its supports.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, the favour with which Sir Peter had at first regarded
+ Gordon gradually vanished, in proportion as, acting on the hint Mivers had
+ originally thrown out but did not deem it necessary to repeat, he watched
+ the pains which the young man took to insinuate himself into the good
+ graces of Mr. Travers and Mrs. Campion, and the artful and half-suppressed
+ gallantry of his manner to the heiress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps Gordon had not ventured thus &ldquo;to feel his way&rdquo; till after Mivers
+ had departed; or perhaps Sir Peter&rsquo;s parental anxiety rendered him, in
+ this instance, a shrewder observer than was the man of the world, whose
+ natural acuteness was, in matters of affection, not unfrequently rendered
+ languid by his acquired philosophy of indifferentism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More and more every day, every hour, of her sojourn beneath his roof, did
+ Cecilia become dearer to Sir Peter, and stronger and stronger became his
+ wish to secure her for his daughter-in-law. He was inexpressibly flattered
+ by her preference for his company: ever at hand to share his customary
+ walks, his kindly visits to the cottages of peasants or the homesteads of
+ petty tenants; wherein both were sure to hear many a simple anecdote of
+ Master Kenelm in his childhood, anecdotes of whim or good-nature, of
+ considerate pity or reckless courage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout all these varieties of thought or feeling in the social circle
+ around her, Lady Chillingly preserved the unmoved calm of her dignified
+ position. A very good woman certainly, and very ladylike. No one could
+ detect a flaw in her character, or a fold awry in her flounce. She was
+ only, like the gods of Epicurus, too good to trouble her serene existence
+ with the cares of us simple mortals. Not that she was without a placid
+ satisfaction in the tribute which the world laid upon her altars; nor was
+ she so supremely goddess-like as to soar above the household affections
+ which humanity entails on the dwellers and denizens of earth. She liked
+ her husband as much as most elderly wives like their elderly husbands. She
+ bestowed upon Kenelm a liking somewhat more warm, and mingled with
+ compassion. His eccentricities would have puzzled her, if she had allowed
+ herself to be puzzled: it troubled her less to pity them. She did not
+ share her husband&rsquo;s desire for his union with Cecilia. She thought that
+ her son would have a higher place in the county if he married Lady Jane,
+ the Duke of Clanville&rsquo;s daughter; and &ldquo;that is what he ought to do,&rdquo; said
+ Lady Chillingly to herself. She entertained none of the fear that had
+ induced Sir Peter to extract from Kenelm the promise not to pledge his
+ hand before he had received his father&rsquo;s consent. That the son of Lady
+ Chillingly should make a <i>mesalliance</i>, however crotchety he might be
+ in other respects, was a thought that it would have so disturbed her to
+ admit that she did not admit it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the condition of things at Exmundham when the lengthy
+ communication of Kenelm reached Sir Peter&rsquo;s hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0108" id="link2H_4_0108">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOOK VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0101" id="link2HCH0101">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ NEVER in his whole life had the mind of Sir Peter been so agitated as it
+ was during and after the perusal of Kenelm&rsquo;s flighty composition. He had
+ received it at the breakfast-table, and, opening it eagerly, ran his eye
+ hastily over the contents, till he very soon arrived at sentences which
+ appalled him. Lady Chillingly, who was fortunately busied at the tea-urn,
+ did not observe the dismay on his countenance. It was visible only to
+ Cecilia and to Gordon. Neither guessed who that letter was from.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No bad news, I hope,&rdquo; said Cecilia, softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bad news,&rdquo; echoed Sir Peter. &ldquo;No, my dear, no; a letter on business. It
+ seems terribly long,&rdquo; and he thrust the packet into his pocket, muttering,
+ &ldquo;see to it by and by.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That slovenly farmer of yours, Mr. Nostock, has failed, I suppose,&rdquo; said
+ Mr. Travers, looking up and observing a quiver on his host&rsquo;s lip. &ldquo;I told
+ you he would,&mdash;a fine farm too. Let me choose you another tenant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Peter shook his head with a wan smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nostock will not fail. There have been six generations of Nostocks on the
+ farm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So I should guess,&rdquo; said Travers, dryly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And&mdash;and,&rdquo; faltered Sir Peter, &ldquo;if the last of the race fails, he
+ must lean upon me, and&mdash;if one of the two break down&mdash;it shall
+ not be&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shall not be that cross-cropping blockhead, my dear Sir Peter. This is
+ carrying benevolence too far.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the tact and <i>savoir vivre</i> of Chillingly Gordon came to the
+ rescue of the host. Possessing himself of the &ldquo;Times&rdquo; newspaper, he
+ uttered an exclamation of surprise, genuine or simulated, and read aloud
+ an extract from the leading article, announcing an impending change in the
+ Cabinet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he could quit the breakfast-table, Sir Peter hurried into his
+ library and there gave himself up to the study of Kenelm&rsquo;s unwelcome
+ communication. The task took him long, for he stopped at intervals,
+ overcome by the struggle of his heart, now melted into sympathy with the
+ passionate eloquence of a son hitherto so free from amorous romance, and
+ now sorrowing for the ruin of his own cherished hopes. This uneducated
+ country girl would never be such a helpmate to a man like Kenelm as would
+ have been Cecilia Travers. At length, having finished the letter, he
+ buried his head between his clasped hands, and tried hard to realize the
+ situation that placed the father and son into such direct antagonism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; he murmured, &ldquo;after all it is the boy&rsquo;s happiness that must be
+ consulted. If he will not be happy in my way, what right have I to say
+ that he shall not be happy in his?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then Cecilia came softly into the room. She had acquired the
+ privilege of entering his library at will; sometimes to choose a book of
+ his recommendation, sometimes to direct and seal his letters,&mdash;Sir
+ Peter was grateful to any one who saved him an extra trouble,&mdash;and
+ sometimes, especially at this hour, to decoy him forth into his wonted
+ constitutional walk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lifted his face at the sound of her approaching tread and her winning
+ voice, and the face was so sad that the tears rushed to her eyes on seeing
+ it. She laid her hand on his shoulder, and said pleadingly, &ldquo;Dear Sir
+ Peter, what is it,&mdash;what is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah&mdash;ah, my dear,&rdquo; said Sir Peter, gathering up the scattered sheets
+ of Kenelm&rsquo;s effusion with hurried, trembling hands. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t ask,&mdash;don&rsquo;t
+ talk of it; &lsquo;tis but one of the disappointments that all of us must
+ undergo, when we invest our hopes in the uncertain will of others.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, observing that the tears were trickling down the girl&rsquo;s fair, pale
+ cheeks, he took her hand in both his, kissed her forehead, and said,
+ whisperingly, &ldquo;Pretty one, how good you have been to me! Heaven bless you.
+ What a wife you will be to some man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus saying, he shambled out of the room through the open casement. She
+ followed him impulsively, wonderingly; but before she reached his side he
+ turned round, waved his hand with a gently repelling gesture, and went his
+ way alone through dense fir-groves which had been planted in honour of
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0102" id="link2HCH0102">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM arrived at Exmundham just in time to dress for dinner. His arrival
+ was not unexpected, for the morning after his father had received his
+ communication, Sir Peter had said to Lady Chillingly&mdash;&ldquo;that he had
+ heard from Kenelm to the effect that he might be down any day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite time he should come,&rdquo; said Lady Chillingly. &ldquo;Have you his letter
+ about you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, my dear Caroline. Of course he sends you his kindest love, poor
+ fellow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why poor fellow? Has he been ill?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; but there seems to be something on his mind. If so we must do what we
+ can to relieve it. He is the best of sons, Caroline.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure I have nothing to say against him, except,&rdquo; added her Ladyship,
+ reflectively, &ldquo;that I do wish he were a little more like other young men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hum&mdash;like Chillingly Gordon, for instance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, yes; Mr. Gordon is a remarkably well-bred, sensible young man. How
+ different from that disagreeable, bearish father of his, who went to law
+ with you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very different indeed, but with just as much of the Chillingly blood in
+ him. How the Chillinglys ever gave birth to a Kenelm is a question much
+ more puzzling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, my dear Sir Peter, don&rsquo;t be metaphysical. You know how I hate
+ puzzles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet, Caroline, I have to thank you for a puzzle which I can never
+ interpret by my brain. There are a great many puzzles in human nature
+ which can only be interpreted by the heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very true,&rdquo; said Lady Chillingly. &ldquo;I suppose Kenelm is to have his old
+ room, just opposite to Mr. Gordon&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay&mdash;ay, just opposite. Opposite they will be all their lives. Only
+ think, Caroline, I have made a discovery!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear me! I hope not. Your discoveries are generally very expensive, and
+ bring us in contact with such very odd people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This discovery shall not cost us a penny, and I don&rsquo;t know any people so
+ odd as not to comprehend it. Briefly it is this: To genius the first
+ requisite is heart; it is no requisite at all to talent. My dear Caroline,
+ Gordon has as much talent as any young man I know, but he wants the first
+ requisite of genius. I am not by any means sure that Kenelm has genius,
+ but there is no doubt that he has the first requisite of genius,&mdash;heart.
+ Heart is a very perplexing, wayward, irrational thing; and that perhaps
+ accounts for the general incapacity to comprehend genius, while any fool
+ can comprehend talent. My dear Caroline, you know that it is very seldom,
+ not more than once in three years, that I presume to have a will of my own
+ against a will of yours; but should there come a question in which our
+ son&rsquo;s heart is concerned, then (speaking between ourselves) my will must
+ govern yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Peter is growing more odd every day,&rdquo; said Lady Chillingly to herself
+ when left alone. &ldquo;But he does not mean ill, and there are worse husbands
+ in the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therewith she rang for her maid, gave requisite orders for the preparing
+ of Kenelm&rsquo;s room, which had not been slept in for many months, and then
+ consulted that functionary as to the adaptation of some dress of hers, too
+ costly to be laid aside, to the style of some dress less costly which Lady
+ Glenalvon had imported from Paris as <i>la derniere mode</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the very day on which Kenelm arrived at Exmundham, Chillingly Gordon
+ had received this letter from Mr. Gerald Danvers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DEAR GORDON,&mdash;In the ministerial changes announced as rumour in the
+ public papers, and which you may accept as certain, that sweet little
+ cherub&mdash;is to be sent to sit up aloft and pray there for the life of
+ poor Jack; namely, of the government he leaves below. In accepting the
+ peerage, which I persuaded him to do,&mdash;creates a vacancy for the
+ borough of &mdash;&mdash;-, just the place for you, far better in every
+ way than Saxborough. &mdash;&mdash;- promises to recommend you to his
+ committee. Come to town at once. Yours, etc.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ G. DANVERS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Gordon showed this letter to Mr. Travers, and, on receiving the hearty
+ good-wishes of that gentleman, said, with emotion partly genuine, partly
+ assumed, &ldquo;You cannot guess all that the realization of your good-wishes
+ would be. Once in the House of Commons, and my motives for action are so
+ strong that&mdash;do not think me very conceited if I count upon
+ Parliamentary success.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My clear Gordon, I am as certain of your success as I am of my own
+ existence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Should I succeed,&mdash;should the great prizes of public life be within
+ my reach,&mdash;should I lift myself into a position that would warrant my
+ presumption, do you think I could come to you and say, &lsquo;There is an object
+ of ambition dearer to me than power and office,&mdash;the hope of
+ attaining which was the strongest of all my motives of action? And in that
+ hope shall I also have the good-wishes of the father of Cecilia Travers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear fellow, give me your hand; you speak manfully and candidly as a
+ gentleman should speak. I answer in the same spirit. I don&rsquo;t pretend to
+ say that I have not entertained views for Cecilia which included
+ hereditary rank and established fortune in a suitor to her hand, though I
+ never should have made them imperative conditions. I am neither potentate
+ nor <i>parvenu</i> enough for that; and I can never forget&rdquo; (here every
+ muscle in the man&rsquo;s face twitched) &ldquo;that I myself married for love, and
+ was so happy. How happy Heaven only knows! Still, if you had thus spoken a
+ few weeks ago, I should not have replied very favourably to your question.
+ But now that I have seen so much of you, my answer is this: If you lose
+ your election,&mdash;if you don&rsquo;t come into Parliament at all, you have my
+ good-wishes all the same. If you win my daughter&rsquo;s heart, there is no man
+ on whom I would more willingly bestow her hand. There she is, by herself
+ too, in the garden. Go and talk to her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gordon hesitated. He knew too well that he had not won her heart, though
+ he had no suspicion that it was given to another. And he was much too
+ clever not to know also how much he hazards who, in affairs of courtship,
+ is premature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I cannot express my gratitude for words so generous,
+ encouragement so cheering. But I have never yet dared to utter to Miss
+ Travers a word that would prepare her even to harbour a thought of me as a
+ suitor. And I scarcely think I should have the courage to go through this
+ election with the grief of her rejection on my heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, go in and win the election first; meanwhile, at all events, take
+ leave of Cecilia.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gordon left his friend, and joined Miss Travers, resolved not indeed to
+ risk a formal declaration, but to sound his way to his chances of
+ acceptance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interview was very brief. He did sound his way skilfully, and felt it
+ very unsafe for his footsteps. The advantage of having gained the approval
+ of the father was too great to be lost altogether, by one of those decided
+ answers on the part of the daughter which allow of no appeal, especially
+ to a poor gentleman who wooes an heiress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He returned to Travers, and said simply, &ldquo;I bear with me her good-wishes
+ as well as yours. That is all. I leave myself in your kind hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he hurried away to take leave of his host and hostess, say a few
+ significant words to the ally he had already gained in Mrs. Campion, and
+ within an hour was on his road to London, passing on his way the train
+ that bore Kenelm to Exmundham. Gordon was in high spirits. At least he
+ felt as certain of winning Cecilia as he did of winning his election.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have never yet failed in what I desired,&rdquo; said he to himself, &ldquo;because
+ I have ever taken pains not to fail.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cause of Gordon&rsquo;s sudden departure created a great excitement in that
+ quiet circle, shared by all except Cecilia and Sir Peter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0103" id="link2HCH0103">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM did not see either father or mother till he appeared at dinner.
+ Then he was seated next to Cecilia. There was but little conversation
+ between the two; in fact, the prevalent subject of talk was general and
+ engrossing, the interest in Chillingly Gordon&rsquo;s election; predictions of
+ his success, of what he would do in Parliament. &ldquo;Where,&rdquo; said Lady
+ Glenalvon, &ldquo;there is such a dearth of rising young men, that if he were
+ only half as clever as he is he would be a gain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A gain to what?&rdquo; asked Sir Peter, testily. &ldquo;To his country? about which I
+ don&rsquo;t believe he cares a brass button.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this assertion Leopold Travers replied warmly, and was not less warmly
+ backed by Mrs. Campion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For my part,&rdquo; said Lady Glenalvon, in conciliatory accents, &ldquo;I think
+ every able man in Parliament is a gain to the country; and he may not
+ serve his country less effectively because he does not boast of his love
+ for it. The politicians I dread most are those so rampant in France
+ nowadays, the bawling patriots. When Sir Robert Walpole said, &lsquo;All those
+ men have their price,&rsquo; he pointed to the men who called themselves
+ &lsquo;patriots.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bravo!&rdquo; cried Travers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Robert Walpole showed his love for his country by corrupting it.
+ There are many ways besides bribing for corrupting a country,&rdquo; said
+ Kenelm, mildly, and that was Kenelm&rsquo;s sole contribution to the general
+ conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not till the rest of the party had retired to rest that the
+ conference, longed for by Kenelm, dreaded by Sir Peter, took place in the
+ library. It lasted deep into the night; both parted with lightened hearts
+ and a fonder affection for each other. Kenelm had drawn so charming a
+ picture of the Fairy, and so thoroughly convinced Sir Peter that his own
+ feelings towards her were those of no passing youthful fancy, but of that
+ love which has its roots in the innermost heart, that though it was still
+ with a sigh, a deep sigh, that he dismissed the thought of Cecilia, Sir
+ Peter did dismiss it; and, taking comfort at last from the positive
+ assurance that Lily was of gentle birth, and the fact that her name of
+ Mordaunt was that of ancient and illustrious houses, said, with half a
+ smile, &ldquo;It might have been worse, my dear boy. I began to be afraid that,
+ in spite of the teachings of Mivers and Welby, it was &lsquo;The Miller&rsquo;s
+ Daughter,&rsquo; after all. But we still have a difficult task to persuade your
+ poor mother. In covering your first flight from our roof I unluckily put
+ into her head the notion of Lady Jane, a duke&rsquo;s daughter, and the notion
+ has never got out of it. That comes of fibbing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I count on Lady Glenalvon&rsquo;s influence on my mother in support of your
+ own,&rdquo; said Kenelm. &ldquo;If so accepted an oracle in the great world pronounce
+ in my favour, and promise to present my wife at Court and bring her into
+ fashion, I think that my mother will consent to allow us to reset the old
+ family diamonds for her next reappearance in London. And then, too, you
+ can tell her that I will stand for the county. I will go into Parliament,
+ and if I meet there our clever cousin, and find that he does not care a
+ brass button for the country, take my word for it, I will lick him more
+ easily than I licked Tom Bowles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tom Bowles! who is he?&mdash;ah! I remember some letter of yours in which
+ you spoke of a Bowles, whose favourite study was mankind, a moral
+ philosopher.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Moral philosophers,&rdquo; answered Kenelm, &ldquo;have so muddled their brains with
+ the alcohol of new ideas that their moral legs have become shaky, and the
+ humane would rather help them to bed than give them a licking. My Tom
+ Bowles is a muscular Christian, who became no less muscular, but much more
+ Christian, after he was licked.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in this pleasant manner these two oddities settled their conference,
+ and went up to bed with arms wrapped round each other&rsquo;s shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0104" id="link2HCH0104">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM found it a much harder matter to win Lady Glenalvon to his side
+ than he had anticipated. With the strong interest she had taken in
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s future, she could not but revolt from the idea of his union with
+ an obscure portionless girl whom he had only known a few weeks, and of
+ whose very parentage he seemed to know nothing, save an assurance that she
+ was his equal in birth. And, with the desire, which she had cherished
+ almost as fondly as Sir Peter, that Kenelm might win a bride in every way
+ so worthy of his choice as Cecilia Travers, she felt not less indignant
+ than regretful at the overthrow of her plans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first, indeed, she was so provoked that she would not listen to his
+ pleadings. She broke away from him with a rudeness she had never exhibited
+ to any one before, refused to grant him another interview in order to
+ re-discuss the matter, and said that, so far from using her influence in
+ favour of his romantic folly, she would remonstrate well with Lady
+ Chillingly and Sir Peter against yielding their assent to his &ldquo;thus
+ throwing himself away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not till the third day after his arrival that, touched by the grave
+ but haughty mournfulness of his countenance, she yielded to the arguments
+ of Sir Peter in the course of a private conversation with that worthy
+ baronet. Still it was reluctantly (she did not fulfil her threat of
+ remonstrance with Lady Chillingly) that she conceded the point, that a son
+ who, succeeding to the absolute fee-simple of an estate, had volunteered
+ the resettlement of it on terms singularly generous to both his parents,
+ was entitled to some sacrifice of their inclinations on a question in
+ which he deemed his happiness vitally concerned; and that he was of age to
+ choose for himself independently of their consent, but for a previous
+ promise extracted from him by his father, a promise which, rigidly
+ construed, was not extended to Lady Chillingly, but confined to Sir Peter
+ as the head of the family and master of the household. The father&rsquo;s
+ consent was already given, and, if in his reverence for both parents
+ Kenelm could not dispense with his mother&rsquo;s approval, surely it was the
+ part of a true friend to remove every scruple from his conscience, and
+ smooth away every obstacle to a love not to be condemned because it was
+ disinterested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this conversation, Lady Glenalvon sought Kenelm, found him gloomily
+ musing on the banks of the trout-stream, took his arm, led him into the
+ sombre glades of the fir-grove, and listened patiently to all he had to
+ say. Even then her woman&rsquo;s heart was not won to his reasonings, until he
+ said pathetically, &ldquo;You thanked me once for saving your son&rsquo;s life: you
+ said then that you could never repay me; you can repay me tenfold. Could
+ your son, who is now, we trust, in heaven, look down and judge between us,
+ do you think he would approve you if you refuse?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Lady Glenalvon wept, and took his hand, kissed his forehead as a
+ mother might kiss it, and said, &ldquo;You triumph; I will go to Lady Chillingly
+ at once. Marry her whom you so love, on one condition: marry her from my
+ house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Glenalvon was not one of those women who serve a friend by halves.
+ She knew well how to propitiate and reason down the apathetic temperament
+ of Lady Chillingly; she did not cease till that lady herself came into
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s room, and said very quietly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you are going to propose to Miss Mordaunt, the Warwickshire Mordaunts
+ I suppose? Lady Glenalvon says she is a very lovely girl, and will stay
+ with her before the wedding. And as the young lady is an orphan Lady
+ Glenalvon&rsquo;s uncle the Duke, who is connected with the eldest branch of the
+ Mordaunts, will give her away. It will be a very brilliant affair. I am
+ sure I wish you happy; it is time you should have sown your wild oats.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days after the consent thus formally given, Kenelm quitted Exmundham.
+ Sir Peter would have accompanied him to pay his respects to the intended,
+ but the agitation he had gone through brought on a sharp twinge of the
+ gout, which consigned his feet to flannels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Kenelm had gone, Lady Glenalvon went into Cecilia&rsquo;s room. Cecilia
+ was seated very desolately by the open window. She had detected that
+ something of an anxious and painful nature had been weighing upon the
+ minds of father and son, and had connected it with the letter which had so
+ disturbed the even mind of Sir Peter; but she did not divine what the
+ something was, and if mortified by a certain reserve, more distant than
+ heretofore, which had characterized Kenelm&rsquo;s manner towards herself, the
+ mortification was less sensibly felt than a tender sympathy for the
+ sadness she had observed on his face and yearned to soothe. His reserve
+ had, however, made her own manner more reserved than of old, for which she
+ was now rather chiding herself than reproaching him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Glenalvon put her arms round Cecilia&rsquo;s neck and kissed her,
+ whispering, &ldquo;That man has so disappointed me: he is so unworthy of the
+ happiness I had once hoped for him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whom do you speak of?&rdquo; murmured Cecilia, turning very pale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kenelm Chillingly. It seems that he has conceived a fancy for some
+ penniless girl whom he has met in his wanderings, has come here to get the
+ consent of his parents to propose to her, has obtained their consent, and
+ is gone to propose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia remained silent for a moment with her eyes closed, then she said,
+ &ldquo;He is worthy of all happiness, and he would never make an unworthy
+ choice. Heaven bless him&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;&rdquo; She would have added,
+ &ldquo;his bride,&rdquo; but her lips refused to utter the word bride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cousin Gordon is worth ten of him,&rdquo; cried Lady Glenalvon, indignantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had served Kenelm, but she had not forgiven him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0105" id="link2HCH0105">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM slept in London that night, and, the next day, being singularly
+ fine for an English summer, he resolved to go to Moleswich on foot. He had
+ no need this time to encumber himself with a knapsack; he had left
+ sufficient change of dress in his lodgings at Cromwell Lodge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was towards the evening when he found himself in one of the prettiest
+ rural villages by which
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Wanders the hoary Thames along
+ His silver-winding way.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ It was not in the direct road from London to Moleswich, but it was a
+ pleasanter way for a pedestrian. And when, quitting the long street of the
+ sultry village, he came to the shelving margin of the river, he was glad
+ to rest a while, enjoy the cool of the rippling waters, and listen to
+ their placid murmurs amid the rushes in the bordering shallows. He had
+ ample time before him. His rambles while at Cromwell Lodge had made him
+ familiar with the district for miles round Moleswich, and he knew that a
+ footpath through the fields at the right would lead him, in less than an
+ hour, to the side of the tributary brook on which Cromwell Lodge was
+ placed, opposite the wooden bridge which conducted to Grasmere and
+ Moleswich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To one who loves the romance of history, English history, the whole course
+ of the Thames is full of charm. Ah! could I go back to the days in which
+ younger generations than that of Kenelm Chillingly were unborn, when every
+ wave of the Rhine spoke of history and romance to me, what fairies should
+ meet on thy banks, O thou our own Father Thames! Perhaps some day a German
+ pilgrim may repay tenfold to thee the tribute rendered by the English
+ kinsman to the Father Rhine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Listening to the whispers of the reeds, Kenelm Chillingly felt the
+ haunting influence of the legendary stream. Many a poetic incident or
+ tradition in antique chronicle, many a votive rhyme in song, dear to
+ forefathers whose very names have become a poetry to us, thronged dimly
+ and confusedly back to his memory, which had little cared to retain such
+ graceful trinkets in the treasure-house of love. But everything that, from
+ childhood upward, connects itself with romance, revives with yet fresher
+ bloom in the memories of him who loves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And to this man, through the first perilous season of youth, so abnormally
+ safe from youth&rsquo;s most wonted peril,&mdash;to this would-be pupil of
+ realism, this learned adept in the schools of a Welby or a Mivers,&mdash;to
+ this man, love came at last as with the fatal powers of the fabled
+ Cytherea; and with that love all the realisms of life became ideals, all
+ the stern lines of our commonplace destinies undulated into curves of
+ beauty, all the trite sounds of our every-day life attuned into delicacies
+ of song. How full of sanguine yet dreamy bliss was his heart&mdash;and
+ seemed his future&mdash;in the gentle breeze and the softened glow of that
+ summer eve! He should see Lily the next morn, and his lips were now free
+ to say all that they had as yet suppressed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly he was roused from the half-awake, half-asleep happiness that
+ belongs to the moments in which we transport ourselves into Elysium, by
+ the carol of a voice more loudly joyous than that of his own heart&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Singing, singing,
+ Lustily singing,
+ Down the road, with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Nierestein.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm turned his head so quickly that he frightened Max, who had for the
+ last minute been standing behind him inquisitively with one paw raised,
+ and sniffing, in some doubt whether he recognized an old acquaintance; but
+ at Kenelm&rsquo;s quick movement the animal broke into a nervous bark, and ran
+ back to his master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel, little heeding the figure reclined on the bank, would have
+ passed on with his light tread and his cheery carol, but Kenelm rose to
+ his feet, and holding out his hand, said, &ldquo;I hope you don&rsquo;t share Max&rsquo;s
+ alarm at meeting me again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, my young philosopher, is it indeed you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I am to be designated a philosopher it is certainly not I. And,
+ honestly speaking, I am not the same. I, who spent that pleasant day with
+ you among the fields round Luscombe two years ago&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or who advised me at Tor Hadham to string my lyre to the praise of a
+ beefsteak. I, too, am not quite the same,&mdash;I, whose dog presented you
+ with the begging-tray.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet you still go through the world singing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even that vagrant singing time is pretty well over. But I disturbed you
+ from your repose; I would rather share it. You are probably not going my
+ way, and as I am in no hurry, I should not like to lose the opportunity
+ chance has so happily given me of renewing acquaintance with one who has
+ often been present to my thoughts since we last met.&rdquo; Thus saying, the
+ minstrel stretched himself at ease on the bank, and Kenelm followed his
+ example.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There certainly was a change in the owner of the dog with the
+ begging-tray, a change in costume, in countenance, in that indescribable
+ self-evidence which we call &ldquo;manner.&rdquo; The costume was not that Bohemian
+ attire in which Kenelm had first encountered the wandering minstrel, nor
+ the studied, more graceful garb, which so well became his shapely form
+ during his visit to Luscombe. It was now neatly simple, the cool and quiet
+ summer dress any English gentleman might adopt in a long rural walk. And
+ as he uncovered his head to court the cooling breeze, there was a graver
+ dignity in the man&rsquo;s handsome Rubens-like face, a line of more
+ concentrated thought in the spacious forehead, a thread or two of gray
+ shimmering here and there through the thick auburn curls of hair and
+ beard. And in his manner, though still very frank, there was just
+ perceptible a sort of self-assertion, not offensive, but manly; such as
+ does not misbecome one of maturer years, and of some established position,
+ addressing another man much younger than himself, who in all probability
+ has achieved no position at all beyond that which the accident of birth
+ might assign to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the minstrel, with a half-suppressed sigh, &ldquo;the last year of
+ my vagrant holidays has come to its close. I recollect that the first day
+ we met by the road-side fountain, I advised you to do like me, seek
+ amusement and adventure as a foot-traveller. Now, seeing you, evidently a
+ gentleman by education and birth, still a foot-traveller, I feel as if I
+ ought to say, &lsquo;You have had enough of such experience: vagabond life has
+ its perils as well as charms; cease it, and settle down.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think of doing so,&rdquo; replied Kenelm, laconically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In a profession?&mdash;army, law, medicine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, in marriage then. Right; give me your hand on that. So a petticoat
+ indeed has at last found its charm for you in the actual world as well as
+ on the canvas of a picture?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I conclude,&rdquo; said Kenelm, evading any direct notice of that playful
+ taunt, &ldquo;I conclude from your remark that it is in marriage <i>you</i> are
+ about to settle down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, could I have done so before I should have been saved from many
+ errors, and been many years nearer to the goal which dazzled my sight
+ through the haze of my boyish dreams.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is that goal,&mdash;the grave?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The grave! That which allows of no grave,&mdash;fame.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see&mdash;despite of what you just now said&mdash;you still mean to go
+ through the world seeking a poet&rsquo;s fame.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! I resign that fancy,&rdquo; said the minstrel, with another half-sigh.
+ &ldquo;It was not indeed wholly, but in great part the hope of the poet&rsquo;s fame
+ that made me a truant in the way to that which destiny, and such few gifts
+ as Nature conceded to me, marked out for my proper and only goal. But what
+ a strange, delusive Will-o&rsquo;-the-Wisp the love of verse-making is! How
+ rarely a man of good sense deceives himself as to other things for which
+ he is fitted, in which he can succeed; but let him once drink into his
+ being the charm of verse-making, how the glamour of the charm bewitches
+ his understanding! how long it is before he can believe that the world
+ will not take his word for it, when he cries out to sun, moon, and stars,
+ &lsquo;I, too, am a poet.&rsquo; And with what agonies, as if at the wrench of soul
+ from life, he resigns himself at last to the conviction that whether he or
+ the world be right, it comes to the same thing. Who can plead his cause
+ before a court that will not give him a hearing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was with an emotion so passionately strong, and so intensely painful,
+ that the owner of the dog with the begging-tray thus spoke, that Kenelm
+ felt, through sympathy, as if he himself were torn asunder by the wrench
+ of life from soul. But then Kenelm was a mortal so eccentric that, if a
+ single acute suffering endured by a fellow mortal could be brought before
+ the evidence of his senses, I doubt whether he would not have suffered as
+ much as that fellow-mortal. So that, though if there were a thing in the
+ world which Kenelm Chillingly would care not to do, it was verse-making,
+ his mind involuntarily hastened to the arguments by which he could best
+ mitigate the pang of the verse-maker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;According to my very scanty reading, you share the love of
+ verse-making with men the most illustrious in careers which have achieved
+ the goal of fame. It must, then, be a very noble love: Augustus, Pollio,
+ Varius, Maecenas,&mdash;the greatest statesmen of their day,&mdash;they
+ were verse-makers. Cardinal Richelieu was a verse-maker; Walter Raleigh
+ and Philip Sidney, Fox, Burke, Sheridan, Warren Hastings, Canning, even
+ the grave William Pitt,&mdash;all were verse-makers. Verse-making did not
+ retard&mdash;no doubt the qualities essential to verse-making accelerated&mdash;their
+ race to the goal of fame. What great painters have been verse-makers!
+ Michael Angelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Salvator Rosa&rdquo;&mdash;and Heaven knows
+ how may other great names Kenelm Chillingly might have proceeded to add to
+ his list, if the minstrel had not here interposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! all those mighty painters were verse-makers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verse-makers so good, especially Michael Angelo,&mdash;the greatest
+ painter of all,&mdash;that they would have had the fame of poets, if,
+ unfortunately for that goal of fame, their glory in the sister art of
+ painting did not outshine it. But when you give to your gift of song the
+ modest title of verse-making, permit me to observe that your gift is
+ perfectly distinct from that of the verse-maker. Your gift, whatever it
+ may be, could not exist without some sympathy with the non verse-making
+ human heart. No doubt in your foot travels, you have acquired not only
+ observant intimacy with external Nature in the shifting hues at each hour
+ of a distant mountain, in the lengthening shadows which yon sunset casts
+ on the waters at our feet, in the habits of the thrush dropped fearlessly
+ close beside me, in that turf moistened by its neighbourhood to those
+ dripping rushes, all of which I could describe no less accurately than
+ you,&mdash;as a Peter Bell might describe them no less accurately than a
+ William Wordsworth. But in such songs of yours as you have permitted me to
+ hear, you seem to have escaped out of that elementary accidence of the
+ poet&rsquo;s art, and to touch, no matter how slightly, on the only lasting
+ interest which the universal heart of man can have in the song of the
+ poet; namely, in the sound which the poet&rsquo;s individual sympathy draws
+ forth from the latent chords in that universal heart. As for what you call
+ &lsquo;the world,&rsquo; what is it more than the fashion of the present day? How far
+ the judgment of that is worth a poet&rsquo;s pain I can&rsquo;t pretend to say. But of
+ one thing I am sure, that while I could as easily square the circle as
+ compose a simple couplet addressed to the heart of a simple audience with
+ sufficient felicity to decoy their praises into Max&rsquo;s begging-tray, I
+ could spin out by the yard the sort of verse-making which characterizes
+ the fashion of the present day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much flattered, and not a little amused, the wandering minstrel turned his
+ bright countenance, no longer dimmed by a cloud, towards that of his
+ lazily reclined consoler, and answered gayly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You say that you could spin out by the yard verses in the fashion of the
+ present day. I wish you would give me a specimen of your skill in that
+ handiwork.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well; on one condition, that you will repay my trouble by a specimen
+ of your own verses, not in the fashion of the present day,&mdash;something
+ which I can construe. I defy you to construe mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Agreed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, let us take it for granted that this is the Augustan age of
+ English poetry, and that the English language is dead, like the Latin.
+ Suppose I am writing for a prize-medal in English, as I wrote at college
+ for a prize-medal in Latin: of course, I shall be successful in proportion
+ as I introduce the verbal elegances peculiar to our Augustan age, and also
+ catch the prevailing poetic characteristic of that classical epoch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I think that every observant critic will admit that the striking
+ distinctions of the poetry most in the fashion of the present day, namely,
+ of the Augustan age, are,&mdash;first, a selection of such verbal
+ elegances as would have been most repulsive to the barbaric taste of the
+ preceding century; and, secondly, a very lofty disdain of all prosaic
+ condescensions to common-sense, and an elaborate cultivation of that
+ element of the sublime which Mr. Burke defines under the head of
+ obscurity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These premises conceded, I will only ask you to choose the metre. Blank
+ verse is very much in fashion just now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh! blank verse indeed! I am not going so to free your experiment from
+ the difficulties of rhyme.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is all one to me,&rdquo; said Kenelm, yawning; &ldquo;rhyme be it: heroic or
+ lyrical?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heroics are old-fashioned; but the Chaucer couplet, as brought to
+ perfection by our modern poets, I think the best adapted to dainty leaves
+ and uncrackable nuts. I accept the modern Chaucerian. The subject?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, never trouble yourself about that. By whatever title your Augustan
+ verse-maker labels his poem, his genius, like Pindar&rsquo;s, disdains to be
+ cramped by the subject. Listen, and don&rsquo;t suffer Max to howl, if he can
+ help it. Here goes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in an affected but emphatic sing-song Kenelm began:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;In Attica the gentle Pythias dwelt.
+ Youthful he was, and passing rich: he felt
+ As if nor youth nor riches could suffice
+ For bliss. Dark-eyed Sophronia was a nice
+ Girl: and one summer day, when Neptune drove
+ His sea-car slowly, and the olive grove
+ That skirts Ilissus, to thy shell, Harmonia,
+ Rippled, he said &lsquo;I love thee&rsquo; to Sophronia.
+ Crocus and iris, when they heard him, wagged
+ Their pretty heads in glee: the honey-bagged
+ Bees became altars: and the forest dove
+ Her plumage smoothed. Such is the charm of love.
+ Of this sweet story do ye long for more?
+ Wait till I publish it in volumes four;
+ Which certain critics, my good friends, will cry
+ Up beyond Chaucer. Take their word for &lsquo;t. I
+ Say &lsquo;Trust them, but not read,&mdash;or you&rsquo;ll not buy.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have certainly kept your word,&rdquo; said the minstrel, laughing; &ldquo;and if
+ this be the Augustan age, and the English were a dead language, you
+ deserve to win the prize-medal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You flatter me,&rdquo; said Kenelm, modestly. &ldquo;But if I, who never before
+ strung two rhymes together, can improvise so readily in the style of the
+ present day, why should not a practical rhymester like yourself dash off
+ at a sitting a volume or so in the same style; disguising completely the
+ verbal elegances borrowed, adding to the delicacies of the rhyme by the
+ frequent introduction of a line that will not scan, and towering yet more
+ into the sublime by becoming yet more unintelligible? Do that, and I
+ promise you the most glowing panegyric in &lsquo;The Londoner,&rsquo; for I will write
+ it myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;The Londoner&rsquo;!&rdquo; exclaimed the minstrel, with an angry flush on his cheek
+ and brow, &ldquo;my bitter, relentless enemy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fear, then, you have as little studied the critical press of the
+ Augustan age as you have imbued your muse with the classical spirit of its
+ verse. For the art of writing a man must cultivate himself. The art of
+ being reviewed consists in cultivating the acquaintance of reviewers. In
+ the Augustan age criticism is cliquism. Belong to a clique and you are
+ Horace or Tibullus. Belong to no clique and, of course, you are Bavius or
+ Maevius. &lsquo;The Londoner&rsquo; is the enemy of no man: it holds all men in equal
+ contempt. But as, in order to amuse, it must abuse, it compensates the
+ praise it is compelled to bestow upon the members of its clique by heaping
+ additional scorn upon all who are cliqueless. Hit him hard: he has no
+ friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the minstrel, &ldquo;I believe that there is much truth in what you
+ say. I never had a friend among the cliques. And Heaven knows with what
+ pertinacity those from whom I, in utter ignorance of the rules which
+ govern so-called organs of opinion, had hoped, in my time of struggle, for
+ a little sympathy, a kindly encouragement, have combined to crush me down.
+ They succeeded long. But at last I venture to hope that I am beating them.
+ Happily, Nature endowed me with a sanguine, joyous, elastic temperament.
+ He who never despairs seldom completely fails.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This speech rather perplexed Kenelm, for had not the minstrel declared
+ that his singing days were over, that he had decided on the renunciation
+ of verse-making? What other path to fame, from which the critics had not
+ been able to exclude his steps, was he, then, now pursuing,&mdash;he whom
+ Kenelm had assumed to belong to some commercial moneymaking firm? No doubt
+ some less difficult prose-track, probably a novel. Everybody writes novels
+ nowadays, and as the public will read novels without being told to do so,
+ and will not read poetry unless they are told that they ought, possibly
+ novels are not quite so much at the mercy of cliques as are the poems of
+ our Augustan age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, Kenelm did not think of seeking for further confidence on that
+ score. His mind at that moment, not unnaturally, wandered from books and
+ critics to love and wedlock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our talk,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;has digressed into fretful courses; permit me to
+ return to the starting-point. You are going to settle down into the peace
+ of home. A peaceful home is like a good conscience. The rains without do
+ not pierce its roof, the winds without do not shake its walls. If not an
+ impertinent question, is it long since you have known your intended
+ bride?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, very long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And always loved her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Always, from her infancy. Out of all womankind, she was designed to be my
+ life&rsquo;s playmate and my soul&rsquo;s purifier. I know not what might have become
+ of me, if the thought of her had not walked beside me as my guardian
+ angel. For, like many vagrants from the beaten high roads of the world,
+ there is in my nature something of that lawlessness which belongs to high
+ animal spirits, to the zest of adventure, and the warm blood that runs
+ into song, chiefly because song is the voice of a joy. And no doubt, when
+ I look back on the past years I must own that I have too often been led
+ astray from the objects set before my reason, and cherished at my heart,
+ by erring impulse or wanton fancy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Petticoat interest, I presume,&rdquo; interposed Kenelm, dryly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish I could honestly answer &lsquo;No,&rsquo;&rdquo; said the minstrel, colouring high.
+ &ldquo;But from the worst, from all that would have permanently blasted the
+ career to which I intrust my fortunes, all that would have rendered me
+ unworthy of the pure love that now, I trust, awaits and crowns my dreams
+ of happiness, I have been saved by the haunting smile in a sinless
+ infantine face. Only once was I in great peril,&mdash;that hour of peril I
+ recall with a shudder. It was at Luscombe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At Luscombe!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the temptation of a terrible crime I thought I heard a voice say,
+ &lsquo;Mischief! Remember the little child.&rsquo; In that supervention which is so
+ readily accepted as a divine warning, when the imagination is morbidly
+ excited, and when the conscience, though lulled asleep for a moment, is
+ still asleep so lightly that the sigh of a breeze, the fall of a leaf, can
+ awake it with a start of terror, I took the voice for that of my guardian
+ angel. Thinking it over later, and coupling the voice with the moral of
+ those weird lines you repeated to me so appositely the next day, I
+ conclude that I am not mistaken when I say it was from your lips that the
+ voice which preserved me came.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I confess the impertinence: you pardon it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel seized Kenelm&rsquo;s hand and pressed it earnestly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon it! Oh, could you but guess what cause I have to be grateful,
+ everlastingly grateful! That sudden cry, the remorse and horror of my own
+ self that it struck into me,&mdash;deepened by those rugged lines which
+ the next day made me shrink in dismay from &lsquo;the face of my darling sin&rsquo;!
+ Then came the turning-point of my life. From that day, the lawless
+ vagabond within me was killed. I mean not, indeed, the love of Nature and
+ of song which had first allured the vagabond, but the hatred of steadfast
+ habits and of serious work,&mdash;<i>that</i> was killed. I no longer
+ trifled with my calling: I took to it as a serious duty. And when I saw
+ her, whom fate has reserved and reared for my bride, her face was no
+ longer in my eyes that of the playful child; the soul of the woman was
+ dawning into it. It is but two years since that day, to me so eventful.
+ Yet my fortunes are now secured. And if fame be not established, I am at
+ last in a position which warrants my saying to her I love, &lsquo;The time has
+ come when, without fear for thy future, I can ask thee to be mine.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man spoke with so fervent a passion that Kenelm silently left him to
+ recover his wonted self-possession,&mdash;not unwilling to be silent,&mdash;not
+ unwilling, in the softness of the hour, passing from roseate sunset into
+ starry twilight, to murmur to himself, &ldquo;And the time, too, has come for
+ me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a few moments the minstrel resumed lightly and cheerily,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, your turn: pray have you long known&mdash;judging by our former
+ conversation you cannot have long loved&mdash;the lady whom you have wooed
+ and won?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Kenelm had neither as yet wooed nor won the lady in question, and did
+ not deem it necessary to enter into any details on the subject of love
+ particular to himself, he replied by a general observation,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems to me that the coming of love is like the coming of spring: the
+ date is not to be reckoned by the calendar. It may be slow and gradual; it
+ may be quick and sudden. But in the morning, when we wake and recognize a
+ change in the world without, verdure on the trees, blossoms on the sward,
+ warmth in the sunshine, music in the air, then we say Spring has come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I like your illustration. And if it be an idle question to ask a lover
+ how long he has known the beloved one, so it is almost as idle to ask if
+ she be not beautiful. He cannot but see in her face the beauty she has
+ given to the world without.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True; and that thought is poetic enough to make me remind you that I
+ favoured you with the maiden specimen of my verse-making on condition that
+ you repaid me by a specimen of your own practical skill in the art. And I
+ claim the right to suggest the theme. Let it be&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of a beefsteak?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tush, you have worn out that tasteless joke at my expense. The theme must
+ be of love, and if you could improvise a stanza or two expressive of the
+ idea you just uttered I shall listen with yet more pleased attention.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! I am no <i>improvisatore</i>. Yet I will avenge myself on your
+ former neglect of my craft by chanting to you a trifle somewhat in unison
+ with the thought you ask me to versify, but which you would not stay to
+ hear at Tor Hadham (though you did drop a shilling into Max&rsquo;s tray); it
+ was one of the songs I sang that evening, and it was not ill-received by
+ my humble audience.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;THE BEAUTY OF THE MISTRESS IS IN THE LOVER&rsquo;S EYE.
+
+ &ldquo;Is she not pretty, my Mabel May?
+ Nobody ever yet called her so.
+ Are not her lineaments faultless, say?
+ If I must answer you plainly, No.
+
+ &ldquo;Joy to believe that the maid I love
+ None but myself as she is can see;
+ Joy that she steals from her heaven above,
+ And is only revealed on this earth to me!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he had finished this very artless ditty, the minstrel rose and
+ said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now I must bid you good-by. My way lies through those meadows, and yours
+ no doubt along the high road.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so. Permit me to accompany you. I have a lodging not far from hence,
+ to which the path through the fields is the shortest way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel turned a somewhat surprised and somewhat inquisitive look
+ towards Kenelm. But feeling, perhaps, that having withheld from his
+ fellow-traveller all confidence as to his own name and attributes, he had
+ no right to ask any confidence from that gentleman not voluntarily made to
+ him, he courteously said &ldquo;that he wished the way were longer, since it
+ would be so pleasantly halved,&rdquo; and strode forth at a brisk pace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The twilight was now closing into the brightness of a starry summer night,
+ and the solitude of the fields was unbroken. Both these men, walking side
+ by side, felt supremely happy. But happiness is like wine; its effect
+ differing with the differing temperaments on which it acts. In this case
+ garrulous and somewhat vaunting with the one man, warm-coloured, sensuous,
+ impressionable to the influences of external Nature, as an Aeolian harp to
+ the rise or fall of a passing wind; and, with the other man, taciturn and
+ somewhat modestly expressed, saturnine, meditative, not indeed dull to the
+ influences of external Nature, but deeming them of no value, save where
+ they passed out of the domain of the sensuous into that of the
+ intellectual, and the soul of man dictated to the soulless Nature its own
+ questions and its own replies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minstrel took the talk on himself, and the talk charmed his listener.
+ It became so really eloquent in the tones of its utterance, in the frank
+ play of its delivery, that I could no more adequately describe it than a
+ reporter, however faithful to every word a true orator may say, can
+ describe that which, apart from all words, belongs to the presence of the
+ orator himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not, then, venturing to report the language of this singular itinerant, I
+ content myself with saying that the substance of it was of the nature on
+ which it is said most men can be eloquent: it was personal to himself. He
+ spoke of aspirations towards the achievement of a name, dating back to the
+ dawn of memory; of early obstacles in lowly birth, stinted fortunes; of a
+ sudden opening to his ambition while yet in boyhood, through the generous
+ favour of a rich man, who said, &ldquo;The child has genius: I will give it the
+ discipline of culture; one day it shall repay to the world what it owes to
+ me;&rdquo; of studies passionately begun, earnestly pursued, and mournfully
+ suspended in early youth. He did not say how or wherefore: he rushed on to
+ dwell upon the struggles for a livelihood for himself and those dependent
+ on him; how in such struggles he was compelled to divert toil and energy
+ from the systematic pursuit of the object he had once set before him; the
+ necessities for money were too urgent to be postponed to the visions of
+ fame. &ldquo;But even,&rdquo; he exclaimed, passionately, &ldquo;even in such hasty and
+ crude manifestations of what is within me, as circumstances limited my
+ powers, I know that I ought to have found from those who profess to be
+ authoritative judges the encouragement of praise. How much better, then, I
+ should have done if I had found it! How a little praise warms out of a man
+ the good that is in him, and the sneer of a contempt which he feels to be
+ unjust chills the ardour to excel! However, I forced my way, so far as was
+ then most essential to me, the sufficing breadmaker for those I loved; and
+ in my holidays of song and ramble I found a delight that atoned for all
+ the rest. But still the desire of fame, once conceived in childhood, once
+ nourished through youth, never dies but in our grave. Foot and hoof may
+ tread it down, bud, leaf, stalk; its root is too deep below the surface
+ for them to reach, and year after year stalk and leaf and bud re-emerge.
+ Love may depart from our mortal life: we console ourselves; the beloved
+ will be reunited to us in the life to come. But if he who sets his heart
+ on fame loses it in this life, what can console him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you not say a little while ago that fame allowed of no grave?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True; but if we do not achieve it before we ourselves are in the grave,
+ what comfort can it give to us? Love ascends to heaven, to which we hope
+ ourselves to ascend; but fame remains on the earth, which we shall never
+ again revisit. And it is because fame is earth-born that the desire for it
+ is the most lasting, the regret for the want of it the most bitter, to the
+ child of earth. But I shall achieve it now; it is already in my grasp.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the travellers had arrived at the brook, facing the wooden
+ bridge beside Cromwell Lodge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the minstrel halted; and Kenelm with a certain tremble in his voice,
+ said, &ldquo;Is it not time that we should make ourselves known to each other by
+ name? I have no longer any cause to conceal mine, indeed I never had any
+ cause stronger than whim,&mdash;Kenelm Chillingly, the only son of Sir
+ Peter, of Exmundham, &mdash;&mdash;-shire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish your father joy of so clever a son,&rdquo; said the minstrel with his
+ wonted urbanity. &ldquo;You already know enough of me to be aware that I am of
+ much humbler birth and station than you; but if you chance to have visited
+ the exhibition of the Royal Academy this year&mdash;ah! I understand that
+ start&mdash;you might have recognized a picture of which you have seen the
+ rudimentary sketch, &lsquo;The Girl with the Flower-ball,&rsquo; one of three pictures
+ very severely handled by &lsquo;The Londoner,&rsquo; but, in spite of that potent
+ enemy, insuring fortune and promising fame to the wandering minstrel,
+ whose name, if the sight of the pictures had induced you to inquire into
+ that, you would have found to be Walter Melville. Next January I hope,
+ thanks to that picture, to add, &lsquo;Associate of the Royal Academy.&rsquo; The
+ public will not let them keep me out of it, in spite of &lsquo;The Londoner.&rsquo;
+ You are probably an expected guest at one of the more imposing villas from
+ which we see the distant lights. I am going to a very humble cottage, in
+ which henceforth I hope to find my established home. I am there now only
+ for a few days, but pray let me welcome you there before I leave. The
+ cottage is called Grasmere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0106" id="link2HCH0106">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE minstrel gave a cordial parting shake of the hand to the
+ fellow-traveller whom he had advised to settle down, not noticing how very
+ cold had become the hand in his own genial grasp. Lightly he passed over
+ the wooden bridge, preceded by Max, and merrily, when he had gained the
+ other side of the bridge, came upon Kenelm&rsquo;s ear, through the hush of the
+ luminous night, the verse of the uncompleted love-song,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Singing, singing,
+ Lustily singing,
+ Down the road, with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Nierestein.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Love-song, uncompleted; why uncompleted? It was not given to Kenelm to
+ divine the why. It was a love-song versifying one of the prettiest fairy
+ tales in the world, which was a great favourite with Lily, and which Lion
+ had promised Lily to versify, but only to complete it in her presence and
+ to her perfect satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0107" id="link2HCH0107">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IF I could not venture to place upon paper the exact words of an eloquent
+ coveter of fame, the earth-born, still less can I dare to place upon paper
+ all that passed through the voiceless heart of a coveter of love, the
+ heaven-born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the hour in which Kenelm Chillingly had parted from Walter Melville
+ until somewhere between sunrise and noon the next day, the summer
+ joyousness of that external Nature which does now and then, though, for
+ the most part, deceitfully, address to the soul of man questions and
+ answers all her soulless own, laughed away the gloom of his misgivings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No doubt this Walter Melville was the beloved guardian of Lily; no doubt
+ it was Lily whom he designated as reserved and reared to become his bride.
+ But on that question Lily herself had the sovereign voice. It remained yet
+ to be seen whether Kenelm had deceived himself in the belief that had made
+ the world so beautiful to him since the hour of their last parting. At all
+ events it was due to her, due even to his rival, to assert his own claim
+ to her choice. And the more he recalled all that Lily had ever said to him
+ of her guardian, so openly, so frankly, proclaiming affection, admiration,
+ gratitude, the more convincingly his reasonings allayed his fears,
+ whispering, &ldquo;So might a child speak of a parent: not so does the maiden
+ speak of the man she loves; she can scarcely trust herself to praise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fine, it was not in despondent mood, nor with dejected looks, that, a
+ little before noon, Kenelm crossed the bridge and re-entered the enchanted
+ land of Grasmere. In answer to his inquiries, the servant who opened the
+ door said that neither Mr. Melville nor Miss Mordaunt were at home; they
+ had but just gone out together for a walk. He was about to turn back, when
+ Mrs. Cameron came into the hall, and, rather by gesture than words,
+ invited him to enter. Kenelm followed her into the drawing-room, taking
+ his seat beside her. He was about to speak, when she interrupted him in a
+ tone of voice so unlike its usual languor, so keen, so sharp, that it
+ sounded like a cry of distress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was just about to come to you. Happily, however, you find me alone, and
+ what may pass between us will be soon over. But first tell me: you have
+ seen your parents; you have asked their consent to wed a girl such as I
+ described; tell me, oh tell me that that consent is refused!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the contrary, I am here with their full permission to ask the hand of
+ your niece.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cameron sank back in her chair, rocking herself to and fro in the
+ posture of a person in great pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I feared that. Walter said he had met you last evening; that you, like
+ himself, entertained the thought of marriage. You, of course when you
+ learned his name, must have known with whom his thought was connected.
+ Happily, he could not divine what was the choice to which your youthful
+ fancy had been so blindly led.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Mrs. Cameron,&rdquo; said Kenelm, very mildly, but very firmly, &ldquo;you
+ were aware of the purpose for which I left Moleswich a few days ago, and
+ it seems to me that you might have forestalled my intention, the intention
+ which brings me; thus early to your house. I come to say to Miss
+ Mordaunt&rsquo;s guardian, &lsquo;I ask the hand of your ward. If you also woo her, I
+ have a very noble rival. With both of us no consideration for our own
+ happiness can be comparable to the duty of consulting hers. Let her choose
+ between the two.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Impossible!&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Cameron; &ldquo;impossible. You know not what you
+ say; know not, guess not, how sacred are the claims of Walter Melville to
+ all that the orphan whom he has protected from her very birth can give him
+ in return. She has no right to a preference for another: her heart is too
+ grateful to admit of one. If the choice were given to her between him and
+ you, it is he whom she would choose. Solemnly I assure you of this. Do
+ not, then, subject her to the pain of such a choice. Suppose, if you will,
+ that you had attracted her fancy, and that now you proclaimed your love
+ and urged your suit, she would not, must not, the less reject your hand,
+ but you might cloud her happiness in accepting Melville&rsquo;s. Be generous.
+ Conquer your own fancy; it can be but a passing one. Speak not to her, nor
+ to Mr. Melville, of a wish which can never be realized. Go hence,
+ silently, and at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words and the manner of the pale imploring woman struck a vague awe
+ into the heart of her listener. But he did not the less resolutely answer,
+ &ldquo;I cannot obey you. It seems to me that my honour commands me to prove to
+ your niece that, if I mistook the nature of her feelings towards me, I did
+ not, by word or look, lead her to believe mine towards herself were less
+ in earnest than they are; and it seems scarcely less honourable towards my
+ worthy rival to endanger his own future happiness, should he discover
+ later that his bride would have been happier with another. Why be so
+ mysteriously apprehensive? If, as you say, with such apparent conviction,
+ there is no doubt of your niece&rsquo;s preference for another, at a word from
+ her own lips I depart, and you will see me no more. But that word must be
+ said by her; and if you will not permit me to ask for it in your own
+ house, I will take my chance of finding her now, on her walk with Mr.
+ Melville; and, could he deny me the right to speak to her alone, that
+ which I would say can be said in his presence. Ah! madam, have you no
+ mercy for the heart that you so needlessly torture? If I must bear the
+ worst, let me learn it, and at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Learn it, then, from my lips,&rdquo; said Mrs. Cameron, speaking with voice
+ unnaturally calm, and features rigidly set into stern composure. &ldquo;And I
+ place the secret you wring from me under the seal of that honour which you
+ so vauntingly make your excuse for imperilling the peace of the home I
+ ought never to have suffered you to enter. An honest couple, of humble
+ station and narrow means, had an only son, who evinced in early childhood
+ talents so remarkable that they attracted the notice of the father&rsquo;s
+ employer, a rich man of very benevolent heart and very cultivated taste.
+ He sent the child, at his expense, to a first-rate commercial school,
+ meaning to provide for him later in his own firm. The rich man was the
+ head partner of an eminent bank; but very infirm health, and tastes much
+ estranged from business, had induced him to retire from all active share
+ in the firm, the management of which was confined to a son whom he
+ idolized. But the talents of the protege he had sent to school took there
+ so passionate a direction towards art and estranged from trade, and his
+ designs in drawing when shown to connoisseurs were deemed so promising of
+ future excellence, that the patron changed his original intention, entered
+ him as a pupil in the studio of a distinguished French painter, and
+ afterwards bade him perfect his taste by the study of Italian and Flemish
+ masterpieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was still abroad, when&mdash;&rdquo; here Mrs. Cameron stopped, with visible
+ effort, suppressed a sob, and went on, whisperingly, through teeth
+ clenched together&mdash;&ldquo;when a thunderbolt fell on the house of the
+ patron, shattering his fortunes, blasting his name. The son, unknown to
+ the father, had been decoyed into speculations which proved unfortunate:
+ the loss might have been easily retrieved in the first instance; unhappily
+ he took the wrong course to retrieve it, and launched into new hazards. I
+ must be brief. One day the world was startled by the news that a firm,
+ famed for its supposed wealth and solidity, was bankrupt. Dishonesty was
+ alleged, was proved, not against the father,&mdash;he went forth from the
+ trial, censured indeed for neglect, not condemned for fraud, but a
+ penniless pauper. The&mdash;son, the son, the idolized son, was removed
+ from the prisoner&rsquo;s dock, a convicted felon, sentenced to penal servitude;
+ escaped that sentence by&mdash;by&mdash;you guess&mdash;you guess. How
+ could he escape except through death?&mdash;death by his own guilty deed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost as much overpowered by emotion as Mrs. Cameron herself, Kenelm
+ covered his bended face with one hand, stretching out the other blindly to
+ clasp her own, but she would not take it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A dreary foreboding. Again before his eyes rose the old gray tower,&mdash;again
+ in his ears thrilled the tragic tale of the Fletwodes. What was yet left
+ untold held the young man in spell-bound silence. Mrs. Cameron resumed,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I said the father was a penniless pauper; he died lingeringly bedridden.
+ But one faithful friend did not desert that bed,&mdash;the youth to whose
+ genius his wealth had ministered. He had come from abroad with some modest
+ savings from the sale of copies or sketches made in Florence. These
+ savings kept a roof over the heads of the old man and the two helpless,
+ broken-hearted women,&mdash;paupers like himself,&mdash;his own daughter
+ and his son&rsquo;s widow. When the savings were gone, the young man stooped
+ from his destined calling, found employment somehow, no matter how alien
+ to his tastes, and these three whom his toil supported never wanted a home
+ or food. Well, a few weeks after her husband&rsquo;s terrible death, his young
+ widow (they had not been a year married) gave birth to a child,&mdash;a
+ girl. She did not survive the exhaustion of her confinement many days. The
+ shock of her death snapped the feeble thread of the poor father&rsquo;s life.
+ Both were borne to the grave on the same day. Before they died, both made
+ the same prayer to their sole two mourners, the felon&rsquo;s sister, the old
+ man&rsquo;s young benefactor. The prayer was this, that the new-born infant
+ should be reared, however humbly, in ignorance of her birth, of a father&rsquo;s
+ guilt and shame. She was not to pass a suppliant for charity to rich and
+ high-born kinsfolk, who had vouchsafed no word even of pity to the felon&rsquo;s
+ guiltless father and as guiltless wife. That promise has been kept till
+ now. I am that daughter. The name I bear, and the name which I gave to my
+ niece, are not ours, save as we may indirectly claim them through
+ alliances centuries ago. I have never married. I was to have been a bride,
+ bringing to the representative of no ignoble house what was to have been a
+ princely dower; the wedding day was fixed, when the bolt fell. I have
+ never again seen my betrothed. He went abroad and died there. I think he
+ loved me; he knew I loved him. Who can blame him for deserting me? Who
+ could marry the felon&rsquo;s sister? Who would marry the felon&rsquo;s child? Who but
+ one? The man who knows her secret, and will guard it; the man who, caring
+ little for other education, has helped to instil into her spotless
+ childhood so steadfast a love of truth, so exquisite a pride of honour,
+ that did she know such ignominy rested on her birth she would pine herself
+ away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there only one man on earth,&rdquo; cried Kenelm, suddenly, rearing his
+ face,&mdash;till then concealed and downcast,&mdash;and with a loftiness
+ of pride on its aspect, new to its wonted mildness, &ldquo;is there only one man
+ who would deem the virgin at whose feet he desires to kneel and say,
+ &lsquo;Deign to be the queen of my life,&rsquo; not far too noble in herself to be
+ debased by the sins of others before she was even born; is there only one
+ man who does not think that the love of truth and the pride of honour are
+ most royal attributes of woman or of man, no matter whether the fathers of
+ the woman or the man were pirates as lawless as the fathers of Norman
+ kings, or liars as unscrupulous, where their own interests were concerned,
+ as have been the crowned representatives of lines as deservedly famous as
+ Caesars and Bourbons, Tudors and Stuarts? Nobility, like genius, is
+ inborn. One man alone guard <i>her</i> secret!&mdash;guard a secret that
+ if made known could trouble a heart that recoils from shame! Ah, madam, we
+ Chillinglys are a very obscure, undistinguished race, but for more than a
+ thousand years we have been English gentlemen. Guard her secret rather
+ than risk the chance of discovery that could give her a pang! I would pass
+ my whole life by her side in Kamtchatka, and even there I would not snatch
+ a glimpse of the secret itself with mine own eyes: it should be so closely
+ muffled and wrapped round by the folds of reverence and worship.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This burst of passion seemed to Mrs. Cameron the senseless declamation of
+ an inexperienced, hot-headed young man; and putting it aside, much as a
+ great lawyer dismisses as balderdash the florid rhetoric of some junior
+ counsel, rhetoric in which the great lawyer had once indulged, or as a
+ woman for whom romance is over dismisses as idle verbiage some romantic
+ sentiment that befools her young daughter, Mrs. Cameron simply replied,
+ &ldquo;All this is hollow talk, Mr. Chillingly; let us come to the point. After
+ all I have said, do you mean to persist in your suit to my niece?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I persist.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; she cried, this time indignantly, and with generous indignation;
+ &ldquo;what, even were it possible that you could win your parents&rsquo; consent to
+ marry the child of a man condemned to penal servitude, or, consistently
+ with the duties a son owes to parents, conceal that fact from them, could
+ you, born to a station on which every gossip will ask, &lsquo;Who and what is
+ the name of the future Lady Chillingly?&rsquo; believe that the who and the what
+ will never be discovered! Have you, a mere stranger, unknown to us a few
+ weeks ago, a right to say to Walter Melville, &lsquo;Resign to me that which is
+ your sole reward for the sublime sacrifices, for the loyal devotion, for
+ the watchful tenderness of patient years&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely, madam,&rdquo; cried Kenelm, more startled, more shaken in soul by this
+ appeal, than by the previous revelations, &ldquo;surely, when we last parted,
+ when I confided to you my love for your niece, when you consented to my
+ proposal to return home and obtain my father&rsquo;s approval of my suit,&mdash;surely
+ then was the time to say, &lsquo;No; a suitor with claims paramount and
+ irresistible has come before you.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not then know, Heaven is my witness, I did not then even suspect,
+ that Walter Melville ever dreamed of seeking a wife in the child who had
+ grown up under his eyes. You must own, indeed, how much I discouraged your
+ suit; I could not discourage it more without revealing the secret of her
+ birth, only to be revealed as an extreme necessity. But my persuasion was
+ that your father would not consent to your alliance with one so far
+ beneath the expectations he was entitled to form, and the refusal of that
+ consent would terminate all further acquaintance between you and Lily,
+ leaving her secret undisclosed. It was not till you had left, only indeed
+ two days ago, that I received a letter from Walter Melville,&mdash;a
+ letter which told me what I had never before conjectured. Here is the
+ letter, read it, and then say if you have the heart to force yourself into
+ rivalry, with&mdash;with&mdash;&rdquo; She broke off, choked by her exertion,
+ thrust the letter into his hands, and with keen, eager, hungry stare
+ watched his countenance while he read.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;- STREET, BLOOMSBURY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR FRIEND,&mdash;Joy and triumph! My picture is completed, the
+ picture on which for so many months I have worked night and day in this
+ den of a studio, without a glimpse of the green fields, concealing my
+ address from every one, even from you, lest I might be tempted to suspend
+ my labours. The picture is completed: it is sold; guess the price! Fifteen
+ hundred guineas, and to a dealer,&mdash;a dealer! Think of that! It is to
+ be carried about the country exhibited by itself. You remember those three
+ little landscapes of mine which two years ago I would gladly have sold for
+ ten pounds, only neither Lily nor you would let me. My good friend and
+ earliest patron, the German merchant at Luscombe, who called on me
+ yesterday, offered to cover them with guineas thrice piled over the
+ canvas. Imagine how happy I felt when I forced him to accept them as a
+ present. What a leap in a man&rsquo;s life it is when he can afford to say, &ldquo;I
+ give!&rdquo; Now then, at last, at last I am in a position which justifies the
+ utterance of the hope which has for eighteen years been my solace, my
+ support; been the sunbeam that ever shone through the gloom when my fate
+ was at the darkest; been the melody that buoyed me aloft as in the song of
+ the skylark, when in the voices of men I heard but the laugh of scorn. Do
+ you remember the night on which Lily&rsquo;s mother besought us to bring up her
+ child in ignorance of her parentage, not even to communicate to unkind and
+ disdainful relatives that such a child was born? Do you remember how
+ plaintively, and yet how proudly, she, so nobly born, so luxuriously
+ nurtured, clasping my hand when I ventured to remonstrate, and say that
+ her own family could not condemn her child because of the father&rsquo;s guilt,&mdash;she,
+ the proudest woman I ever knew, she whose smile I can at rare moments
+ detect in Lily, raised her head from her pillow, and gasped forth,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am dying: the last words of the dying are commands. I command you to
+ see that my child&rsquo;s lot is not that of a felon&rsquo;s daughter transported to
+ the hearth of nobles. To be happy, her lot must be humble: no roof too
+ humble to shelter, no husband too humble to wed, the felon&rsquo;s daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that hour I formed a resolve that I would keep hand and heart free,
+ that when the grandchild of my princely benefactor grew up into womanhood
+ I might say to her, &ldquo;I am humbly born, but thy mother would have given
+ thee to me.&rdquo; The newborn, consigned to our charge, has now ripened into
+ woman, and I have now so assured my fortune that it is no longer poverty
+ and struggle that I should ask her to share. I am conscious that, were her
+ fate not so exceptional, this hope of mine would be a vain presumption,&mdash;conscious
+ that I am but the creature of her grandsire&rsquo;s bounty, and that from it
+ springs all I ever can be,&mdash;conscious of the disparity in
+ years,-conscious of many a past error and present fault. But, as fate so
+ ordains, such considerations are trivial; I am her rightful choice. What
+ other choice, compatible with these necessities which weigh, dear and
+ honoured friend, immeasurably more on your sense of honour than they do
+ upon mine? and yet mine is not dull. Granting, then, that you, her nearest
+ and most responsible relative, do not contemn me for presumption, all else
+ seems to me clear. Lily&rsquo;s childlike affection for me is too deep and too
+ fond not to warm into a wife&rsquo;s love. Happily, too, she has not been reared
+ in the stereotyped boarding-school shallowness of knowledge and
+ vulgarities of gentility; but educated, like myself, by the free
+ influences of Nature, longing for no halls and palaces save those that we
+ build as we list, in fairyland; educated to comprehend and share the
+ fancies which are more than booklore to the worshipper of art and song. In
+ a day or two, perhaps the day after you receive this, I shall be able to
+ escape from London, and most likely shall come on foot as usual. How I
+ long to see once more the woodbine on the hedgerows, the green blades of
+ the cornfields, the sunny lapse of the river, and dearer still the tiny
+ falls of our own little noisy rill! Meanwhile I entreat you, dearest,
+ gentlest, most honored of such few friends as my life has hitherto won to
+ itself, to consider well the direct purport of this letter. If you, born
+ in a grade so much higher than mine, feel that it is unwarrantable
+ insolence in me to aspire to the hand of my patron&rsquo;s grandchild, say so
+ plainly; and I remain not less grateful for your friendship than I was to
+ your goodness when dining for the first time at your father&rsquo;s palace. Shy
+ and sensitive and young, I felt that his grand guests wondered why I was
+ invited to the same board as themselves. You, then courted, admired, you
+ had sympathetic compassion on the raw, sullen boy; left those, who then
+ seemed to me like the gods and goddesses of a heathen Pantheon, to come
+ and sit beside your father&rsquo;s protege and cheeringly whisper to him such
+ words as make a low-born ambitious lad go home light-hearted, saying to
+ himself, &ldquo;Some day or other.&rdquo; And what it is to an ambitious lad, fancying
+ himself lifted by the gods and goddesses of a Pantheon, to go home
+ light-hearted muttering to himself, &ldquo;Some day or other,&rdquo; I doubt if even
+ you can divine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But should you be as kind to the presumptuous man as you were to the
+ bashful boy, and say, &ldquo;Realized be the dream, fulfilled be the object of
+ your life! take from me as her next of kin, the last descendant of your
+ benefactor,&rdquo; then I venture to address to you this request. You are in the
+ place of mother to your sister&rsquo;s child, act for her as a keeper now, to
+ prepare her mind and heart for the coming change in the relations between
+ her and me. When I last saw her, six months ago, she was still so
+ playfully infantine that it half seems to me I should be sinning against
+ the reverence due to a child, if I said too abruptly, &ldquo;You are woman, and
+ I love you not as child but as woman.&rdquo; And yet, time is not allowed to me
+ for long, cautious, and gradual slide from the relationship of friend into
+ that of lover. I now understand what the great master of my art once said
+ to me, &ldquo;A career is a destiny.&rdquo; By one of those merchant princes who now
+ at Manchester, as they did once at Genoa or Venice, reign alike over those
+ two civilizers of the world which to dull eyes seem antagonistic, Art and
+ Commerce, an offer is made to me for a picture on a subject which strikes
+ his fancy: an offer so magnificently liberal that his commerce must
+ command my art; and the nature of the subject compels me to seek the banks
+ of the Rhine as soon as may be. I must have all the hues of the foliage in
+ the meridian glories of summer. I can but stay at Grasmere a very few
+ days; but before I leave I must know this, am I going to work for Lily or
+ am I not? On the answer to that question depends all. If not to work for
+ her, there would be no glory in the summer, no triumph in art to me: I
+ refuse the offer. If she says, &ldquo;Yes; it is for me you work,&rdquo; then she
+ becomes my destiny. She assures my career. Here I speak as an artist:
+ nobody who is not an artist can guess how sovereign over even his moral
+ being, at a certain critical epoch in his career of artist or his life of
+ man, is the success or the failure of a single work. But I go on to speak
+ as man. My love for Lily is such for the last six months that, though if
+ she rejected me I should still serve art, still yearn for fame, it would
+ be as an old man might do either. The youth of my life would be gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As man I say, all my thoughts, all my dreams of happiness, distinct from
+ Art and fame, are summed up in the one question, &ldquo;Is Lily to be my wife or
+ not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Yours affectionately,
+
+ W. M.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm returned the letter without a word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Enraged by his silence, Mrs. Cameron exclaimed, &ldquo;Now, sir, what say you?
+ You have scarcely known Lily five weeks. What is the feverish fancy of
+ five weeks&rsquo; growth to the lifelong devotion of a man like this? Do you now
+ dare to say, &lsquo;I persist&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm waved his hand very quietly, as if to dismiss all conception of
+ taunt and insult and said with his soft melancholy eyes fixed upon the
+ working features of Lily&rsquo;s aunt, &ldquo;This man is more worthy of her than I.
+ He prays you, in his letter, to prepare your niece for that change of
+ relationship which he dreads too abruptly to break to her himself. Have
+ you done so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have; the night I got the letter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And&mdash;you hesitate; speak truthfully, I implore. And she&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She,&rdquo; answered Mrs. Cameron, feeling herself involuntarily compelled to
+ obey the voice of that prayer&mdash;&ldquo;she seemed stunned at first,
+ muttering, &lsquo;This is a dream: it cannot be true,&mdash;cannot! I Lion&rsquo;s
+ wife&mdash;I&mdash;I! I, his destiny! In me his happiness!&rsquo; And then she
+ laughed her pretty child&rsquo;s laugh, and put her arms round my neck, and
+ said, &lsquo;You are jesting, aunty. He could not write thus!&rsquo; So I put that
+ part of his letter under her eyes; and when she had convinced herself, her
+ face became very grave, more like a woman&rsquo;s face than I ever saw it; and
+ after a pause she cried out passionately, &lsquo;Can you think me&mdash;can I
+ think myself&mdash;so bad, so ungrateful, as to doubt what I should
+ answer, if Lion asked me whether I would willingly say or do anything that
+ made him unhappy? If there be such a doubt in my heart, I would tear it
+ out by the roots, heart and all!&rsquo; Oh, Mr. Chillingly! There would be no
+ happiness for her with another, knowing that she had blighted the life of
+ him to whom she owes so much, though she never will learn how much more
+ she owes.&rdquo; Kenelm not replying to this remark, Mrs. Cameron resumed, &ldquo;I
+ will be perfectly frank with you, Mr. Chillingly. I was not quite
+ satisfied with Lily&rsquo;s manner and looks the next morning, that is,
+ yesterday. I did fear there might be some struggle in her mind in which
+ there entered a thought of yourself. And when Walter, on his arrival here
+ in the evening, spoke of you as one he had met before in his rural
+ excursions, but whose name he only learned on parting at the bridge by
+ Cromwell Lodge, I saw that Lily turned pale, and shortly afterwards went
+ to her own room for the night. Fearing that any interview with you, though
+ it would not alter her resolve, might lessen her happiness on the only
+ choice she can and ought to adopt, I resolved to visit you this morning,
+ and make that appeal to your reason and your heart which I have done now,&mdash;not,
+ I am sure, in vain. Hush! I hear his voice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Melville entered the room, Lily leaning on his arm. The artist&rsquo;s comely
+ face was radiant with ineffable joyousness. Leaving Lily, he reached
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s side as with a single bound, shook him heartily by the hand,
+ saying, &ldquo;I find that you have already been a welcomed visitor in this
+ house. Long may you be so, so say I, so (I answer for her) says my fair
+ betrothed, to whom I need not present you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily advanced, and held out her hand very timidly. Kenelm touched rather
+ than clasped it. His own strong hand trembled like a leaf. He ventured but
+ one glance at her face. All the bloom had died out of it, but the
+ expression seemed to him wondrously, cruelly tranquil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your betrothed! your future bride!&rdquo; he said to the artist, with a mastery
+ over his emotion rendered less difficult by the single glance at that
+ tranquil face. &ldquo;I wish you joy. All happiness to you, Miss Mordaunt. You
+ have made a noble choice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked round for his hat; it lay at his feet, but he did not see it;
+ his eyes wandering away with uncertain vision, like those of a
+ sleep-walker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cameron picked up the hat and gave it to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; he said meekly; then with a smile half sweet, half bitter, &ldquo;I
+ have so much to thank you for, Mrs. Cameron.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you are not going already,&mdash;just as I enter too. Hold! Mrs.
+ Cameron tells me you are lodging with my old friend Jones. Come and stop a
+ couple of days with us: we can find you a room; the room over your
+ butterfly cage, eh, Fairy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you too. Thank you all. No; I must be in London by the first
+ train.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Speaking thus, he had found his way to the door, bowed with the quiet
+ grace that characterized all his movements, and was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon his abruptness, Lily; he too loves; he too is impatient to find a
+ betrothed,&rdquo; said the artist gayly: &ldquo;but now he knows my dearest secret, I
+ think I have a right to know his; and I will try.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had scarcely uttered the words before he too had quitted the room and
+ overtaken Kenelm just at the threshold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you are going back to Cromwell Lodge,&mdash;to pack up, I suppose,&mdash;let
+ me walk with you as far as the bridge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm inclined his head assentingly and tacitly as they passed through
+ the garden-gate, winding backwards through the lane which skirted the
+ garden pales; when, at the very spot in which the day after their first
+ and only quarrel Lily&rsquo;s face had been seen brightening through the
+ evergreen, that day on which the old woman, quitting her, said, &ldquo;God bless
+ you!&rdquo; and on which the vicar, walking with Kenelm, spoke of her fairy
+ charms; well, just in that spot Lily&rsquo;s face appeared again, not this time
+ brightening through the evergreens, unless the palest gleam of the palest
+ moon can be said to brighten. Kenelm saw, started, halted. His companion,
+ then in the rush of a gladsome talk, of which Kenelm had not heard a word,
+ neither saw nor halted; he walked on mechanically, gladsome, and talking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lily stretched forth her hand through the evergreens. Kenelm took it
+ reverentially. This time it was not his hand that trembled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good-by,&rdquo; she said in a whisper, &ldquo;good-by forever in this world. You
+ understand,&mdash;you do understand me. Say that you do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand. Noble child! noble choice! God bless you! God comfort me!&rdquo;
+ murmured Kenelm. Their eyes met. Oh, the sadness; and, alas! oh the love
+ in the eyes of both!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm passed on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All said in an instant. How many Alls are said in an instant! Melville was
+ in the midst of some glowing sentence, begun when Kenelm dropped from his
+ side, and the end of the sentence was this:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Words cannot say how fair seems life; how easy seems conquest of fame,
+ dating from this day&mdash;this day&rdquo;&mdash;and in his turn he halted,
+ looked round on the sunlit landscape, and breathed deep, as if to drink
+ into his soul all of the earth&rsquo;s joy and beauty which his gaze could
+ compass and the arch of the horizon bound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They who knew her even the best,&rdquo; resumed the artist, striding on, &ldquo;even
+ her aunt, never could guess how serious and earnest, under all her
+ infantine prettiness of fancy, is that girl&rsquo;s real nature. We were walking
+ along the brook-side, when I began to tell how solitary the world would be
+ to me if I could not win her to my side; while I spoke she had turned
+ aside from the path we had taken, and it was not till we were under the
+ shadow of the church in which we shall be married that she uttered the
+ word that gives to every cloud in my fate the silver lining; implying thus
+ how solemnly connected in her mind was the thought of love with the
+ sanctity of religion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm shuddered,&mdash;the church, the burial-ground, the old Gothic
+ tomb, the flowers round the infant&rsquo;s grave!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I am talking a great deal too much about myself,&rdquo; resumed the artist.
+ &ldquo;Lovers are the most consummate of all egotists, and the most garrulous of
+ all gossips. You have wished me joy on my destined nuptials, when shall I
+ wish you joy on yours? Since we have begun to confide in each other, you
+ are in my debt as to a confidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had now gained the bridge. Kenelm turned round abruptly, &ldquo;Good-day;
+ let us part here. I have nothing to confide to you that might not seem to
+ your ears a mockery when I wish you joy.&rdquo; So saying, so obeying in spite
+ of himself the anguish of his heart, Kenelm wrung his companion&rsquo;s hand
+ with the force of an uncontrollable agony, and speeded over the bridge
+ before Melville recovered his surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The artist would have small claim to the essential attribute of genius&mdash;namely,
+ the intuitive sympathy of passion with passion&mdash;if that secret of
+ Kenelm&rsquo;s which he had so lightly said &ldquo;he had acquired the right to
+ learn,&rdquo; was not revealed to him as by an electric flash. &ldquo;Poor fellow!&rdquo; he
+ said to himself pityingly; &ldquo;how natural that he should fall in love with
+ Fairy! but happily he is so young, and such a philosopher, that it is but
+ one of those trials through which, at least ten times a year, I have gone
+ with wounds that leave not a scar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus soliloquizing, the warm-blooded worshipper of Nature returned
+ homeward, too blest in the triumph of his own love to feel more than a
+ kindly compassion for the wounded heart, consigned with no doubt of the
+ healing result to the fickleness of youth and the consolations of
+ philosophy. Not for a moment did the happier rival suspect that Kenelm&rsquo;s
+ love was returned; that an atom in the heart of the girl who had promised
+ to be his bride could take its light or shadow from any love but his own.
+ Yet, more from delicacy of respect to the rival so suddenly self-betrayed
+ than from any more prudential motive, he did not speak even to Mrs.
+ Cameron of Kenelm&rsquo;s secret and sorrow; and certainly neither she nor Lily
+ was disposed to ask any question that concerned the departed visitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact the name of Kenelm Chillingly was scarcely, if at all, mentioned
+ in that household during the few days which elapsed before Walter Melville
+ quitted Grasmere for the banks of the Rhine, not to return till the
+ autumn, when his marriage with Lily was to take place. During those days
+ Lily was calm and seemingly cheerful; her manner towards her betrothed, if
+ more subdued, not less affectionate than of old. Mrs. Cameron
+ congratulated herself on having so successfully got rid of Kenelm
+ Chillingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0108" id="link2HCH0108">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ SO, then, but for that officious warning, uttered under the balcony at
+ Luscombe, Kenelm Chillingly might never have had a rival in Walter
+ Melville. But ill would any reader construe the character of Kenelm, did
+ he think that such a thought increased the bitterness of his sorrow. No
+ sorrow in the thought that a noble nature had been saved from the
+ temptation to a great sin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good man does good merely by living. And the good he does may often
+ mar the plans he formed for his own happiness. But he cannot regret that
+ Heaven has permitted him to do good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What Kenelm did feel is perhaps best explained in the letter to Sir Peter,
+ which is here subjoined:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;MY DEAREST FATHER,&mdash;Never till my dying day shall I forget that
+ tender desire for my happiness with which, overcoming all worldly
+ considerations, no matter at what disappointment to your own cherished
+ plans or ambition for the heir to your name and race, you sent me away
+ from your roof, these words ringing in my ear like the sound of joy-bells,
+ &lsquo;Choose as you will, with my blessing on your choice. I open my heart to
+ admit another child: your wife shall be my daughter.&rsquo; It is such an
+ unspeakable comfort to me to recall those words now. Of all human
+ affections gratitude is surely the holiest; and it blends itself with the
+ sweetness of religion when it is gratitude to a father. And, therefore, do
+ not grieve too much for me, when I tell you that the hopes which enchanted
+ me when we parted are not to be fulfilled. Her hand is pledged to another,&mdash;another
+ with claims upon her preference to which mine cannot be compared; and he
+ is himself, putting aside the accidents of birth and fortune, immeasurably
+ my superior. In that thought&mdash;I mean the thought that the man she
+ selects deserves her more than I do, and that in his happiness she will
+ blend her own&mdash;I shall find comfort, so soon as I can fairly reason
+ down the first all-engrossing selfishness that follows the sense of
+ unexpected and irremediable loss. Meanwhile you will think it not
+ unnatural that I resort to such aids for change of heart as are afforded
+ by change of scene. I start for the Continent to-night, and shall not rest
+ till I reach Venice, which I have not yet seen. I feel irresistibly
+ attracted towards still canals and gliding gondolas. I will write to you
+ and to my dear mother the day I arrive. And I trust to write cheerfully,
+ with full accounts of all I see and encounter. Do not, dearest father, in
+ your letters to me, revert or allude to that grief which even the
+ tenderest word from your own tender self might but chafe into pain more
+ sensitive. After all, a disappointed love is a very common lot. And we
+ meet every day, men&mdash;ay, and women too&mdash;who have known it, and
+ are thoroughly cured. The manliest of our modern lyrical poets has said
+ very nobly, and, no doubt, very justly,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;To bear is to conquer our fate.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Ever your loving son,
+
+ &ldquo;K. C.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0109" id="link2HCH0109">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ NEARLY a year and a half has elapsed since the date of my last chapter.
+ Two Englishmen were&mdash;the one seated, the other reclined at length&mdash;on
+ one of the mounds that furrow the ascent of Posilippo. Before them spread
+ the noiseless sea, basking in the sunshine, without visible ripple; to the
+ left there was a distant glimpse through gaps of brushwood of the public
+ gardens and white water of the Chiaja. They were friends who had chanced
+ to meet abroad unexpectedly, joined company, and travelled together for
+ many months, chiefly in the East. They had been but a few days in Naples.
+ The elder of the two had important affairs in England which ought to have
+ summoned him back long since. But he did not let his friend know this; his
+ affairs seemed to him less important than the duties he owed to one for
+ whom he entertained that deep and noble love which is something stronger
+ than brotherly, for with brotherly affection it combines gratitude and
+ reverence. He knew, too, that his friend was oppressed by a haunting
+ sorrow, of which the cause was divined by one, not revealed by the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To leave him, so beloved, alone with that sorrow in strange lands, was a
+ thought not to be cherished by a friend so tender; for in the friendship
+ of this man there was that sort of tenderness which completes a nature,
+ thoroughly manlike, by giving it a touch of the woman&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a day which in our northern climates is that of winter: in the
+ southern clime of Naples it was mild as an English summer day, lingering
+ on the brink of autumn; the sun sloping towards the west, and already
+ gathering around it roseate and purple fleeces; elsewhere the deep blue
+ sky was without a cloudlet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both had been for some minutes silent; at length the man reclining on the
+ grass&mdash;it was the younger man&mdash;said suddenly, and with no
+ previous hint of the subject introduced, &ldquo;Lay your hand on your heart,
+ Tom, and answer me truly. Are your thoughts as clear from regrets as the
+ heavens above us are from a cloud? Man takes regret from tears that have
+ ceased to flow, as the heavens take clouds from the rains that have ceased
+ to fall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Regrets? Ah, I understand, for the loss of the girl I once loved to
+ distraction! No; surely I made that clear to you many, many, many months
+ ago, when I was your guest at Moleswich.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, but I have never, since then, spoken to you on that subject. I did
+ not dare. It seems to me so natural that a man, in the earlier struggle
+ between love and reason, should say, &lsquo;Reason shall conquer, and has
+ conquered;&rsquo; and yet&mdash;and yet&mdash;as time glides on, feel that the
+ conquerors who cannot put down rebellion have a very uneasy reign. Answer
+ me not as at Moleswich, during the first struggle, but now, in the
+ after-day, when reaction from struggle comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my honour,&rdquo; answered the friend, &ldquo;I have had no reaction at all. I
+ was cured entirely, when I had once seen Jessie again, another man&rsquo;s wife,
+ mother to his child, happy in her marriage; and, whether she was changed
+ or not,&mdash;very different from the sort of wife I should like to marry,
+ now that I am no longer a village farrier.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, I remember, you spoke of some other girl whom it would suit you to
+ marry. You have been long abroad from her. Do you ever think of her,&mdash;think
+ of her still as your future wife? Can you love her? Can you, who have once
+ loved so faithfully, love again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure of that. I love Emily better than I did when I left England. We
+ correspond. She writes such nice letters.&rdquo; Tom hesitated, blushed, and
+ continued timidly, &ldquo;I should like to show you one of her letters.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom drew forth the last of such letters from his breast-pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm raised himself from the grass, took the letter, and read slowly,
+ carefully, while Tom watched in vain for some approving smile to brighten
+ up the dark beauty of that melancholy face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly it was the letter a man in love might show with pride to a
+ friend: the letter of a lady, well educated, well brought up, evincing
+ affection modestly, intelligence modestly too; the sort of letter in which
+ a mother who loved her daughter, and approved the daughter&rsquo;s choice, could
+ not have suggested a correction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Kenelm gave back the letter, his eyes met his friend&rsquo;s. Those were
+ eager eyes,&mdash;eyes hungering for praise. Kenelm&rsquo;s heart smote him for
+ that worst of sins in friendship,&mdash;want of sympathy; and that uneasy
+ heart forced to his lips congratulations, not perhaps quite sincere, but
+ which amply satisfied the lover. In uttering them, Kenelm rose to his
+ feet, threw his arm round his friend&rsquo;s shoulder, and said, &ldquo;Are you not
+ tired of this place, Tom? I am. Let us go back to England to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ Tom&rsquo;s honest face brightened vividly. &ldquo;How selfish and egotistical I have
+ been!&rdquo; continued Kenelm; &ldquo;I ought to have thought more of you, your
+ career, your marriage,&mdash;pardon me&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon you,&mdash;pardon! Don&rsquo;t I owe to you all,&mdash;owe to you Emily
+ herself? If you had never come to Graveleigh, never said, &lsquo;Be my friend,&rsquo;
+ what should I have been now? what&mdash;what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day the two friends quitted Naples <i>en route</i> for England,
+ not exchanging many words by the way. The old loquacious crotchety humour
+ of Kenelm had deserted him. A duller companion than he was you could not
+ have conceived. He might have been the hero of a young lady&rsquo;s novel. It
+ was only when they parted in London, that Kenelm evinced more secret
+ purpose, more external emotion than one of his heraldic Daces shifting
+ from the bed to the surface of a waveless pond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I have rightly understood you, Tom, all this change in you, all this
+ cure of torturing regret, was wrought, wrought lastingly,&mdash;wrought so
+ as to leave you heart-free for the world&rsquo;s actions and a home&rsquo;s peace, on
+ that eve when you saw her whose face till then had haunted you, another
+ man&rsquo;s happy wife, and in so seeing her, either her face was changed or
+ your heart became so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite true. I might express it otherwise, but the fact remains the same.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God bless you, Tom; bless you in your career without, in your home
+ within,&rdquo; said Kenelm, wringing his friend&rsquo;s hand at the door of the
+ carriage that was to whirl to love and wealth and station the whilom bully
+ of a village, along the iron groove of that contrivance which, though now
+ the tritest of prosaic realities, seemed once too poetical for a poet&rsquo;s
+ wildest visions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0110" id="link2HCH0110">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A WINTER&rsquo;S evening at Moleswich. Very different from a winter sunset at
+ Naples. It is intensely cold. There has been a slight fall of snow,
+ accompanied with severe, bright, clean frost, a thin sprinkling of white
+ on the pavements. Kenelm Chillingly entered the town on foot, no longer a
+ knapsack on his back. Passing through the main street, he paused a moment
+ at the door of Will Somers. The shop was closed. No, he would not stay
+ there to ask in a roundabout way for news. He would go in
+ straightforwardly and manfully to Grasmere. He would take the inmates
+ there by surprise. The sooner he could bring Tom&rsquo;s experience home to
+ himself, the better. He had schooled his heart to rely on that experience,
+ and it brought him back the old elasticity of his stride. In his lofty
+ carriage and buoyant face were again visible the old haughtiness of the
+ indifferentism that keeps itself aloof from the turbulent emotions and
+ conventional frivolities of those whom its philosophy pities and scorns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! ha!&rdquo; laughed he who like Swift never laughed aloud, and often laughed
+ inaudibly. &ldquo;Ha! ha! I shall exorcise the ghost of my grief. I shall never
+ be haunted again. If that stormy creature whom love might have maddened
+ into crime, if he were cured of love at once by a single visit to the home
+ of her whose face was changed to him,&mdash;for the smiles and the tears
+ of it had become the property of another man,&mdash;how much more should I
+ be left without a scar! I, the heir of the Chillinglys! I, the kinsman of
+ a Mivers! I, the pupil of a Welby! I&mdash;I, Kenelm Chillingly, to be
+ thus&mdash;thus&mdash;&rdquo; Here, in the midst of his boastful soliloquy, the
+ well-remembered brook rushed suddenly upon eye and ear, gleaming and
+ moaning under the wintry moon. Kenelm Chillingly stopped, covered his face
+ with his hands, and burst into a passion of tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Recovering himself slowly, he went on along the path, every step of which
+ was haunted by the form of Lily. He reached the garden gate of Grasmere,
+ lifted the latch, and entered. As he did so, a man, touching his hat,
+ rushed beside, and advanced before him,&mdash;the village postman. Kenelm
+ drew back, allowing the man to pass to the door, and as he thus drew back,
+ he caught a side view of lighted windows looking on the lawn,&mdash;the
+ windows of the pleasant drawing-room in which he had first heard Lily
+ speak of her guardian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The postman left his letters, and regained the garden gate, while Kenelm
+ still stood wistfully gazing on those lighted windows. He had, meanwhile,
+ advanced along the whitened sward to the light, saying to himself, &ldquo;Let me
+ just see her and her happiness, and then I will knock boldly at the door,
+ and say, &lsquo;Good-evening, Mrs. Melville.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Kenelm stole across the lawn, and, stationing himself at the angle of
+ the wall, looked into the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Melville, in dressing-robe and slippers, was seated alone by the fireside.
+ His dog was lazily stretched on the hearth rug. One by one the features of
+ the room, as the scene of his vanished happiness, grew out from its
+ stillness; the delicately tinted walls, the dwarf bookcase, with its
+ feminine ornaments on the upper shelf; the piano standing in the same
+ place. Lily&rsquo;s own small low chair; that was not in its old place, but
+ thrust into a remote angle, as if it had passed into disuse. Melville was
+ reading a letter, no doubt one of those which the postman had left. Surely
+ the contents were pleasant, for his fair face, always frankly expressive
+ of emotion, brightened wonderfully as he read on. Then he rose with a
+ quick, brisk movement, and pulled the bell hastily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A neat maid-servant entered,&mdash;a strange face to Kenelm. Melville gave
+ her some brief message. &ldquo;He has had joyous news,&rdquo; thought Kenelm. &ldquo;He has
+ sent for his wife that she may share his joy.&rdquo; Presently the door opened,
+ and entered not Lily, but Mrs. Cameron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked changed. Her natural quietude of mien and movement the same,
+ indeed, but with more languor in it. Her hair had become gray. Melville
+ was standing by the table as she approached him. He put the letter into
+ her hands with a gay, proud smile, and looked over her shoulder while she
+ read it, pointing with his finger as to some lines that should more
+ emphatically claim her attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she had finished her face reflected his smile. They exchanged a
+ hearty shake of the hand, as if in congratulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; thought Kenelm, &ldquo;the letter is from Lily. She is abroad. Perhaps the
+ birth of a first-born.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then Blanche, who had not been visible before, emerged from under the
+ table, and as Melville reseated himself by the fireside, sprang into his
+ lap, rubbing herself against his breast. The expression of his face
+ changed; he uttered some low exclamation. Mrs. Cameron took the creature
+ from his lap, stroking it quietly, carried it across the room, and put it
+ outside the door. Then she seated herself beside the artist, placing her
+ hand in his, and they conversed in low tones, till Melville&rsquo;s face again
+ grew bright, and again he took up the letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes later the maid-servant entered with the tea-things, and
+ after arranging them on the table approached the window. Kenelm retreated
+ into the shade, the servant closed the shutters and drew the curtains;
+ that scene of quiet home comfort vanished from the eyes of the looker-on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm felt strangely perplexed. What had become of Lily? was she indeed
+ absent from her home? Had he conjectured rightly that the letter which had
+ evidently so gladdened Melville was from her, or was it possible&mdash;here
+ a thought of joy seized his heart and held him breathless&mdash;was it
+ possible that, after all, she had not married her guardian; had found a
+ home elsewhere,&mdash;was free? He moved on farther down the lawn, towards
+ the water, that he might better bring before his sight that part of the
+ irregular building in which Lily formerly had her sleeping-chamber, and
+ her &ldquo;own-own room.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All was dark there; the shutters inexorably closed. The place with which
+ the childlike girl had associated her most childlike fancies, taming and
+ tending the honey-drinkers destined to pass into fairies, that fragile
+ tenement was not closed against the winds and snows; its doors were
+ drearily open; gaps in the delicate wire-work; of its dainty draperies a
+ few tattered shreds hanging here and there; and on the depopulated floor
+ the moonbeams resting cold and ghostly. No spray from the tiny fountain;
+ its basin chipped and mouldering; the scanty waters therein frozen. Of all
+ the pretty wild ones that Lily fancied she could tame, not one. Ah! yes,
+ there was one, probably not of the old familiar number; a stranger that
+ might have crept in for shelter from the first blasts of winter, and now
+ clung to an angle in the farther wall, its wings folded,&mdash;asleep, not
+ dead. But Kenelm saw it not; he noticed only the general desolation of the
+ spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Natural enough,&rdquo; thought he. &ldquo;She has outgrown all such pretty silliness.
+ A wife cannot remain a child. Still, if she had belonged to me&mdash;&rdquo; The
+ thought choked even his inward, unspoken utterance. He turned away, paused
+ a moment under the leafless boughs of the great willow still dipping into
+ the brook, and then with impatient steps strode back towards the garden
+ gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&mdash;no,&mdash;no. I cannot now enter that house and ask for Mrs.
+ Melville. Trial enough for one night to stand on the old ground. I will
+ return to the town. I will call at Jessie&rsquo;s, and there I can learn if she
+ indeed be happy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he went on by the path along the brook-side, the night momently colder
+ and colder, and momently clearer and clearer, while the moon noiselessly
+ glided into loftier heights. Wrapped in his abstracted thoughts, when he
+ came to the spot in which the path split in twain, he did not take that
+ which led more directly to the town. His steps, naturally enough following
+ the train of his thoughts, led him along the path with which the object of
+ his thoughts was associated. He found himself on the burial-ground, and in
+ front of the old ruined tomb with the effaced inscription.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! child! child!&rdquo; he murmured almost audibly, &ldquo;what depths of woman
+ tenderness lay concealed in thee! In what loving sympathy with the past&mdash;sympathy
+ only vouchsafed to the tenderest women and the highest poets&mdash;didst
+ thou lay thy flowers on the tomb, to which thou didst give a poet&rsquo;s
+ history interpreted by a woman&rsquo;s heart, little dreaming that beneath the
+ stone slept a hero of thine own fallen race.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He passed beneath the shadow of the yews, whose leaves no winter wind can
+ strew, and paused at the ruined tomb,&mdash;no flower now on its stone,
+ only a sprinkling of snow at the foot of it,&mdash;sprinklings of snow at
+ the foot of each humbler grave-mound. Motionless in the frosty air rested
+ the pointed church-spire, and through the frosty air, higher and higher up
+ the arch of heaven, soared the unpausing moon. Around and below and above
+ her, the stars which no science can number; yet not less difficult to
+ number are the thoughts, desires, aspirations which, in a space of time
+ briefer than a winter&rsquo;s night, can pass through the infinite deeps of a
+ human soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From his stand by the Gothic tomb, Kenelm looked along the churchyard for
+ the infant&rsquo;s grave which Lily&rsquo;s pious care had bordered with votive
+ flowers. Yes, in that direction there was still a gleam of colour; could
+ it be of flowers in that biting winter time?&mdash;the moon is so
+ deceptive, it silvers into the hue of the jessamines the green of the
+ everlastings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He passed towards the white grave-mound. His sight had duped him; no pale
+ flower, no green &ldquo;everlasting&rdquo; on its neglected border,&mdash;only brown
+ mould, withered stalks, streaks of snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; he said sadly, &ldquo;she told me she had never broken a promise; and
+ she had given a promise to the dying child. Ah! she is too happy now to
+ think of the dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So murmuring, he was about to turn towards the town, when close by that
+ child&rsquo;s grave he saw another. Round that other there were pale
+ &ldquo;everlastings,&rdquo; dwarfed blossoms of the laurestinus; at the four angles
+ the drooping bud of a Christmas rose; at the head of the grave was a white
+ stone, its sharp edges cutting into the starlit air; and on the head, in
+ fresh letters, were inscribed these words:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ To the Memory of
+ L. M.
+ Aged 17,
+ Died October 29, A. D. 18&mdash;,
+ This stone, above the grave to which her mortal
+ remains are consigned, beside that of an infant not
+ more sinless, is consecrated by those who
+ most mourn and miss her,
+ ISABEL CAMERON,
+ WALTER MELVILLE.
+ &ldquo;Suffer the little children to come unto me.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0111" id="link2HCH0111">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE next morning Mr. Emlyn, passing from his garden to the town of
+ Moleswich, descried a human form stretched on the burial-ground, stirring
+ restlessly but very slightly, as if with an involuntary shiver, and
+ uttering broken sounds, very faintly heard, like the moans that a man in
+ pain strives to suppress and cannot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rector hastened to the spot. The man was lying, his face downward, on
+ a grave-mound, not dead, not asleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor fellow overtaken by drink, I fear,&rdquo; thought the gentle pastor; and
+ as it was the habit of his mind to compassionate error even more than
+ grief, he accosted the supposed sinner in very soothing tones&mdash;trying
+ to raise him from the ground&mdash;and with very kindly words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the man lifted his face from its pillow on the grave-mound, looked
+ round him dreamily into the gray, blank air of the cheerless morn, and
+ rose to his feet quietly and slowly. The vicar was startled; he recognized
+ the face of him he had last seen in the magnificent affluence of health
+ and strength. But the character of the face was changed,&mdash;so changed!
+ its old serenity of expression, at once grave and sweet, succeeded by a
+ wild trouble in the heavy eyelids and trembling lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Chillingly,&mdash;you! Is it possible?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Varus, Varus,&rdquo; exclaimed Kenelm, passionately, &ldquo;what hast thou done with
+ my legions?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that quotation of the well-known greeting of Augustus to his
+ unfortunate general, the scholar recoiled. Had his young friend&rsquo;s mind
+ deserted him,&mdash;dazed, perhaps, by over-study?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was soon reassured; Kenelm&rsquo;s face settled back into calm, though a
+ dreary calm, like that of the wintry day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg pardon, Mr. Emlyn; I had not quite shaken off the hold of a strange
+ dream. I dreamed that I was worse off than Augustus: he did not lose the
+ world when the legions he had trusted to another vanished into a grave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Kenelm linked his arm in that of the rector,&mdash;on which he leaned
+ rather heavily,&mdash;and drew him on from the burial-ground into the open
+ space where the two paths met.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how long have you returned to Moleswich?&rdquo; asked Emlyn; &ldquo;and how came
+ you to choose so damp a bed for your morning slumbers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The wintry cold crept into my veins when I stood in the burial-ground,
+ and I was very weary; I had no sleep at night. Do not let me take you out
+ of your way; I am going on to Grasmere. So I see, by the record on a
+ gravestone, that it is more than a year ago since Mr. Melville lost his
+ wife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wife? He never married.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; cried Kenelm. &ldquo;Whose, then, is that gravestone,&mdash;&lsquo;L. M.&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! it is our poor Lily&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And she died unmarried?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Kenelm said this he looked up, and the sun broke out from the gloomy
+ haze of the morning. &ldquo;I may claim thee, then,&rdquo; he thought within himself,
+ &ldquo;claim thee as mine when we meet again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unmarried,&mdash;yes,&rdquo; resumed the vicar. &ldquo;She was indeed betrothed to
+ her guardian; they were to have been married in the autumn, on his return
+ from the Rhine. He went there to paint on the spot itself his great
+ picture, which is now so famous,&mdash;&lsquo;Roland, the Hermit Knight, looking
+ towards the convent lattice for a sight of the Holy Nun.&rsquo; Melville had
+ scarcely gone before the symptoms of the disease which proved fatal to
+ poor Lily betrayed themselves; they baffled all medical skill,&mdash;rapid
+ decline. She was always very delicate, but no one detected in her the
+ seeds of consumption. Melville only returned a day or two before her
+ death. Dear childlike Lily! how we all mourned for her!&mdash;not least
+ the poor, who believed in her fairy charms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And least of all, it appears, the man she was to have married.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He?&mdash;Melville? How can you wrong him so? His grief was intense&mdash;overpowering&mdash;for
+ the time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the time! what time?&rdquo; muttered Kenelm, in tones too low for the
+ pastor&rsquo;s ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They moved on silently. Mr. Emlyn resumed,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You noticed the text on Lily&rsquo;s gravestone&mdash;&lsquo;Suffer the little
+ children to come unto me&rsquo;? She dictated it herself the day before she
+ died. I was with her then, so I was at the last.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Were you&mdash;were you&mdash;at the last&mdash;the last? Good-day, Mr.
+ Emlyn; we are just in sight of the garden gate. And&mdash;excuse me&mdash;I
+ wish to see Mr. Melville alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, good-day; but if you are making any stay in the
+ neighbourhood, will you not be our guest? We have a room at your service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank you gratefully; but I return to London in an hour or so. Hold, a
+ moment. You were with her at the last? She was resigned to die?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Resigned! that is scarcely the word. The smile left upon her lips was not
+ that of human resignation: it was the smile of a divine joy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0112" id="link2HCH0112">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ &ldquo;YES, sir, Mr. Melville is at home in his studio.&rdquo;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm followed the maid across the hall into a room not built at the date
+ of Kenelm&rsquo;s former visits to the house: the artist, making Grasmere his
+ chief residence after Lily&rsquo;s death, had added it at the back of the
+ neglected place wherein Lily had encaged &ldquo;the souls of infants
+ unbaptized.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A lofty room, with a casement partially darkened, to the bleak north;
+ various sketches on the walls; gaunt specimens of antique furniture, and
+ of gorgeous Italian silks, scattered about in confused disorder; one large
+ picture on its easel curtained; another as large, and half finished,
+ before which stood the painter. He turned quickly, as Kenelm entered the
+ room unannounced, let fall brush and palette, came up to him eagerly,
+ grasped his hand, drooped his head on Kenelm&rsquo;s shoulder, and said, in a
+ voice struggling with evident and strong emotion,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since we parted, such grief! such a loss!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know it; I have seen her grave. Let us not speak of it. Why so
+ needlessly revive your sorrow? So&mdash;so&mdash;your sanguine hopes are
+ fulfilled: the world at last has done you justice? Emlyn tells me that you
+ have painted a very famous picture.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm had seated himself as he thus spoke. The painter still stood with
+ dejected attitude on the middle of the floor, and brushed his hand over
+ his moistened eyes once or twice before he answered, &ldquo;Yes, wait a moment,
+ don&rsquo;t talk of fame yet. Bear with me. The sudden sight of you unnerved
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The artist here seated himself also on an old worm-eaten Gothic chest,
+ rumpling and chafing the golden or tinselled threads of the embroidered
+ silk, so rare and so time-worn, flung over the Gothic chest, so rare also,
+ and so worm-eaten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm looked through half-closed lids at the artist, and his lips, before
+ slightly curved with a secret scorn, became gravely compressed. In
+ Melville&rsquo;s struggle to conceal emotion the strong man recognized a strong
+ man,&mdash;recognized, and yet only wondered; wondered how such a man, to
+ whom Lily had pledged her hand, could so soon after the loss of Lily go on
+ painting pictures, and care for any praise bestowed on a yard of canvas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a very few minutes Melville recommenced conversation,&mdash;no more
+ reference to Lily than if she had never existed. &ldquo;Yes, my last picture has
+ been indeed a success,&mdash;a reward complete, if tardy, for all the
+ bitterness of former struggles made in vain, for the galling sense of
+ injustice, the anguish of which only an artist knows, when unworthy rivals
+ are ranked before him.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Foes quick to blame, and friends afraid to praise.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True that I have still much to encounter; the cliques still seek to
+ disparage me, but between me and the cliques there stands at last the
+ giant form of the public, and at last critics of graver weight than the
+ cliques have deigned to accord to me a higher rank than even the public
+ yet acknowledge. Ah, Mr. Chillingly, you do not profess to be a judge of
+ paintings, but, excuse me, just look at this letter. I received it only
+ last night from the greatest connoisseur of my art, certainly in England,
+ perhaps in Europe.&rdquo; Here Melville drew, from the side-pocket of his
+ picturesque <i>moyen age</i> surtout, a letter signed by a name
+ authoritative to all who, being painters themselves, acknowledge authority
+ in one who could no more paint a picture himself than Addison, the ablest
+ critic of the greatest poem modern Europe has produced, could have written
+ ten lines of the &ldquo;Paradise Lost,&rdquo; and thrust the letter into Kenelm&rsquo;s
+ hand. Kenelm read it listlessly, with an increased contempt for an artist
+ who could so find in gratified vanity consolation for the life gone from
+ earth. But, listlessly as he read the letter, the sincere and fervent
+ enthusiasm of the laudatory contents impressed him, and the preeminent
+ authority of the signature could not be denied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter was written on the occasion of Melville&rsquo;s recent election to
+ the dignity of R. A., successor to a very great artist whose death had
+ created a vacancy in the Academy. He returned the letter to Melville,
+ saying, &ldquo;This is the letter I saw you reading last night as I looked in at
+ your window. Indeed, for a man who cares for the opinion of other men,
+ this letter is very flattering; and for the painter who cares for money,
+ it must be very pleasant to know by how many guineas every inch of his
+ canvas may be covered.&rdquo; Unable longer to control his passions of rage, of
+ scorn, of agonizing grief, Kenelm then burst forth: &ldquo;Man, man, whom I once
+ accepted as a teacher on human life,&mdash;a teacher to warm, to brighten,
+ to exalt mine own indifferent, dreamy, slow-pulsed self! has not the one
+ woman whom thou didst select out of this overcrowded world to be bone of
+ thy bone, flesh of thy flesh, vanished evermore from the earth,&mdash;little
+ more than a year since her voice was silenced, her heart ceased to beat?
+ But how slight is such loss to thy life compared to the worth of a
+ compliment that flatters thy vanity!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The artist rose to his feet with an indignant impulse. But the angry flush
+ faded from his cheek as he looked on the countenance of his rebuker. He
+ walked up to him, and attempted to take his hand, but Kenelm snatched it
+ scornfully from his grasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor friend,&rdquo; said Melville, sadly and soothingly, &ldquo;I did not think you
+ loved her thus deeply. Pardon me.&rdquo; He drew a chair close to Kenelm&rsquo;s, and
+ after a brief pause went on thus, in very earnest tones, &ldquo;I am not so
+ heartless, not so forgetful of my loss as you suppose. But reflect, you
+ have but just learned of her death, you are under the first shock of
+ grief. More than a year has been given to me for gradual submission to the
+ decree of Heaven. Now listen to me, and try to listen calmly. I am many
+ years older than you: I ought to know better the conditions on which man
+ holds the tenure of life. Life is composite, many-sided: nature does not
+ permit it to be lastingly monopolized by a single passion, or while yet in
+ the prime of its strength to be lastingly blighted by a single sorrow.
+ Survey the great mass of our common race, engaged in the various callings,
+ some the humblest, some the loftiest, by which the business of the world
+ is carried on,&mdash;can you justly despise as heartless the poor trader,
+ or the great statesman, when it may be but a few days after the loss of
+ some one nearest and dearest to his heart, the trader reopens his shop,
+ the statesman reappears in his office? But in me, the votary of art, in me
+ you behold but the weakness of gratified vanity; if I feel joy in the hope
+ that my art may triumph, and my country may add my name to the list of
+ those who contribute to her renown, where and when ever lived an artist
+ not sustained by that hope, in privation, in sickness, in the sorrows he
+ must share with his kind? Nor is this hope that of a feminine vanity, a
+ sicklier craving for applause; it identifies itself with glorious services
+ to our land, to our race, to the children of all after time. Our art
+ cannot triumph, our name cannot live, unless we achieve a something that
+ tends to beautify or ennoble the world in which we accept the common
+ heritage of toil and of sorrow, in order therefrom to work out for
+ successive multitudes a recreation and a joy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the artist thus spoke Kenelm lifted towards his face eyes charged
+ with suppressed tears. And the face, kindling as the artist vindicated
+ himself from the young man&rsquo;s bitter charge, became touchingly sweet in its
+ grave expression at the close of the not ignoble defence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enough,&rdquo; said Kenelm, rising. &ldquo;There is a ring of truth in what you say.
+ I can conceive the artist&rsquo;s, the poet&rsquo;s escape from this world, when all
+ therein is death and winter, into the world he creates and colours at his
+ will with the hues of summer. So, too, I can conceive how the man whose
+ life is sternly fitted into the grooves of a trader&rsquo;s calling, or a
+ statesman&rsquo;s duties, is borne on by the force of custom, afar from such
+ brief halting-spot as a grave. But I am no poet, no artist, no trader, no
+ statesman; I have no calling, my life is fixed into no grooves. Adieu.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold a moment. Not now, but somewhat later, ask yourself whether any life
+ can be permitted to wander in space, a monad detached from the lives of
+ others. Into some groove or other, sooner or later, it must settle, and be
+ borne on obedient to the laws of Nature and the responsibility to God.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0113" id="link2HCH0113">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ KENELM went back alone, and with downcast looks, through the desolate,
+ flowerless garden, when at the other side of the gate a light touch was
+ laid on his arm. He looked up, and recognized Mrs. Cameron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I saw you,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;from my window coming to the house, and I have
+ been waiting for you here. I wished to speak to you alone. Allow me to
+ walk beside you.&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm inclined his head assentingly, but made no answer. They were nearly
+ midway between the cottage and the burial-ground when Mrs. Cameron
+ resumed, her tones quick and agitated, contrasting her habitual languid
+ quietude,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have a great weight on my mind; it ought not to be remorse. I acted as
+ I thought in my conscience for the best. But oh, Mr. Chillingly, if I
+ erred,&mdash;if I judged wrongly, do say you at least forgive me.&rdquo; She
+ seized his hand, pressing it convulsively. Kenelm muttered inaudibly: a
+ sort of dreary stupor had succeeded to the intense excitement of grief.
+ Mrs. Cameron went on,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You could not have married Lily; you know you could not. The secret of
+ her birth could not, in honour, have been concealed from your parents.
+ They could not have consented to your marriage; and even if you had
+ persisted, without that consent and in spite of that secret, to press for
+ it,&mdash;even had she been yours&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Might she not be living now?&rdquo; cried Kenelm, fiercely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&mdash;no; the secret must have come out. The cruel world would have
+ discovered it; it would have reached her ears. The shame of it would have
+ killed her. How bitter then would have been her short interval of life! As
+ it is, she passed away,&mdash;resigned and happy. But I own that I did
+ not, could not, understand her, could not believe her feeling for you to
+ be so deep. I did think that when she knew her own heart she would find
+ that love for her guardian was its strongest affection. She assented,
+ apparently without a pang, to become his wife; and she seemed always so
+ fond of him, and what girl would not be? But I was mistaken, deceived.
+ From the day you saw her last, she began to fade away; but then Walter
+ left a few days after, and I thought that it was his absence she mourned.
+ She never owned to me that it was yours,&mdash;never till too late,&mdash;too
+ late,&mdash;just when my sad letter had summoned him back, only three days
+ before she died. Had I known earlier, while yet there was hope of
+ recovery, I must have written to you, even though the obstacles to your
+ union with her remained the same. Oh, again I implore you, say that if I
+ erred you forgive me. She did, kissing me so tenderly. She did forgive me.
+ Will not you? It would have been her wish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her wish? Do you think I could disobey it? I know not if I have anything
+ to forgive. If I have, now could I not forgive one who loved her? God
+ comfort us both.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bent down and kissed Mrs. Cameron&rsquo;s forehead. The poor woman threw her
+ arm gratefully, lovingly round him, and burst into tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she had recovered her emotion, she said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, it is with so much lighter a heart that I can fulfil her
+ commission to you. But, before I place this in your hands, can you make me
+ one promise? Never tell Melville how she loved you. She was so careful he
+ should never guess that. And if he knew it was the thought of union with
+ him which had killed her, he would never smile again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would not ask such a promise if you could guess how sacred from all
+ the world I hold the secret that you confide to me. By that secret the
+ grave is changed into an altar. Our bridals now are only a while
+ deferred.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Cameron placed a letter in Kenelm&rsquo;s hand, and murmuring in accents
+ broken by a sob, &ldquo;She gave it to me the day before her last,&rdquo; left him,
+ and with quick vacillating steps hurried back towards the cottage. She now
+ understood him, at last, too well not to feel that on opening that letter
+ he must be alone with the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is strange that we need have so little practical household knowledge of
+ each other to be in love. Never till then had Kenelm&rsquo;s eyes rested upon
+ Lily&rsquo;s handwriting. And he now gazed at the formal address on the envelope
+ with a sort of awe. Unknown handwriting coming to him from an unknown
+ world,&mdash;delicate, tremulous handwriting,&mdash;handwriting not of one
+ grown up, yet not of a child who had long to live.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned the envelope over and over,&mdash;not impatiently, as does the
+ lover whose heart beats at the sound of the approaching footstep, but
+ lingeringly, timidly. He would not break the seal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was now so near the burial-ground. Where should the first letter ever
+ received from her&mdash;the sole letter he ever could receive&mdash;be so
+ reverentially, lovingly read, as at her grave?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He walked on to the burial-ground, sat down by the grave, broke the
+ envelope; a poor little ring, with a poor little single turquoise, rolled
+ out and rested at his feet. The letter contained only these words,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ring comes back to you. I could not live to marry another. I never
+ knew how I loved you&mdash;till, till I began to pray that you might not
+ love me too much. Darling! darling! good-by, darling!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ LILY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Don&rsquo;t let Lion ever see this, or ever know what it says to you. He is so
+ good, and deserves to be so happy. Do you remember the day of the ring?
+ Darling! darling!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0114" id="link2HCH0114">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ SOMEWHAT more than another year has rolled away. It is early spring in
+ London. The trees in the park and squares are budding into leaf and
+ blossom. Leopold Travers has had a brief but serious conversation with his
+ daughter, and now gone forth on horseback. Handsome and graceful still,
+ Leopold Travers when in London is pleased to find himself scarcely less
+ the fashion with the young than he was when himself in youth. He is now
+ riding along the banks of the Serpentine, no one better mounted, better
+ dressed, better looking, or talking with greater fluency on the topics
+ which interest his companions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia is in the smaller drawing-room, which is exclusively appropriated
+ to her use, alone with Lady Glenalvon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LADY GLENALVON.&mdash;&ldquo;I own, my dear, dear Cecilia, that I arrange myself
+ at last on the side of your father. How earnestly at one time I had hoped
+ that Kenelm Chillingly might woo and win the bride that seemed to me most
+ fitted to adorn and to cheer his life, I need not say. But when at
+ Exmundham he asked me to befriend his choice of another, to reconcile his
+ mother to that choice,&mdash;evidently not a suitable one,&mdash;I gave
+ him up. And though that affair is at an end, he seems little likely ever
+ to settle down to practical duties and domestic habits, an idle wanderer
+ over the face of the earth, only heard of in remote places and with
+ strange companions. Perhaps he may never return to England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CECILIA.&mdash;&ldquo;He is in England now, and in London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LADY GLENALVON.&mdash;&ldquo;You amaze me! Who told you so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CECILIA.&mdash;&ldquo;His father, who is with him. Sir Peter called yesterday,
+ and spoke to me so kindly.&rdquo; Cecilia here turned aside her face to conceal
+ the tears that had started to her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LADY GLENALVON.&mdash;&ldquo;Did Mr. Travers see Sir Peter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CECILIA.&mdash;&ldquo;Yes; and I think it was something that passed between them
+ which made my father speak to me&mdash;for the first time&mdash;almost
+ sternly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LADY GLENALVON.&mdash;&ldquo;In urging Chillingly Gordon&rsquo;s suit?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CECILIA.&mdash;&ldquo;Commanding me to reconsider my rejection of it. He has
+ contrived to fascinate my father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LADY GLENALVON.&mdash;&ldquo;So he has me. Of course you might choose among
+ other candidates for your hand one of much higher worldly rank, of much
+ larger fortune; yet, as you have already rejected them, Gordon&rsquo;s merits
+ become still more entitled to a fair hearing. He has already leaped into a
+ position that mere rank and mere wealth cannot attain. Men of all parties
+ speak highly of his parliamentary abilities. He is already marked in
+ public opinion as a coming man,&mdash;a future minister of the highest
+ grade. He has youth and good looks; his moral character is without a
+ blemish: yet his manners are so free from affected austerity, so frank, so
+ genial. Any woman might be pleased with his companionship; and you, with
+ your intellect, your culture,&mdash;you, so born for high station,&mdash;you
+ of all women might be proud to partake the anxieties of his career and the
+ rewards of his ambition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CECILIA (clasping her hands tightly together).&mdash;&ldquo;I cannot, I cannot.
+ He may be all you say,&mdash;I know nothing against Mr. Chillingly Gordon,&mdash;but
+ my whole nature is antagonistic to his, and even were it not so&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stopped abruptly, a deep blush warming up her fair face, and
+ retreating to leave it coldly pale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LADY GLENALVON (tenderly kissing her).&mdash;&ldquo;You have not, then, even yet
+ conquered the first maiden fancy; the ungrateful one is still remembered?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecilia bowed her head on her friend&rsquo;s breast, and murmured imploringly,
+ &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t speak against him; he has been so unhappy. How much he must have
+ loved!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it is not you whom he loved.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something here, something at my heart, tells me that he will love me yet;
+ and, if not, I am contented to be his friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0115" id="link2HCH0115">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WHILE the conversation just related took place between Cecilia and Lady
+ Glenalvon, Chillingly Gordon was seated alone with Mivers in the
+ comfortable apartment of the cynical old bachelor. Gordon had breakfasted
+ with his kinsman, but that meal was long over; the two men having found
+ much to talk about on matters very interesting to the younger, nor without
+ interest to the elder one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true that Chillingly Gordon had, within the very short space of time
+ that had elapsed since his entrance into the House of Commons, achieved
+ one of those reputations which mark out a man for early admission into the
+ progressive career of office,&mdash;not a very showy reputation, but a
+ very solid one. He had none of the gifts of the genuine orator, no
+ enthusiasm, no imagination, no imprudent bursts of fiery words from a
+ passionate heart. But he had all the gifts of an exceedingly telling
+ speaker,&mdash;a clear metallic voice; well-bred, appropriate action, not
+ less dignified for being somewhat too quiet; readiness for extempore
+ replies; industry and method for prepared expositions of principle or
+ fact. But his principal merit with the chiefs of the assembly was in the
+ strong good sense and worldly tact which made him a safe speaker. For this
+ merit he was largely indebted to his frequent conferences with Chillingly
+ Mivers. That gentleman, whether owing to his social qualities or to the
+ influence of &ldquo;The Londoner&rdquo; on public opinion, enjoyed an intimate
+ acquaintance with the chiefs of all parties, and was up to his ears in the
+ wisdom of the world. &ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; he would say, &ldquo;hurts a young Parliamentary
+ speaker like violence in opinion, one way or the other. Shun it. Always
+ allow that much may be said on both sides. When the chiefs of your own
+ side suddenly adopt a violence, you can go with them or against them,
+ according as best suits your own book.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So,&rdquo; said Mivers, reclined on his sofa, and approaching the end of his
+ second Trabuco (he never allowed himself more than two), &ldquo;so I think we
+ have pretty well settled the tone you must take in your speech to-night.
+ It is a great occasion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True. It is the first time in which the debate has been arranged so that
+ I may speak at ten o&rsquo;clock or later. That in itself is a great leap; and
+ it is a Cabinet minister whom I am to answer,&mdash;luckily, he is a very
+ dull fellow. Do you think I might hazard a joke,&mdash;at least a
+ witticism?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At his expense? Decidedly not. Though his office compels him to introduce
+ this measure, he was by no means in its favour when it was discussed in
+ the Cabinet; and though, as you say, he is dull, it is precisely that sort
+ of dulness which is essential to the formation of every respectable
+ Cabinet. Joke at him, indeed! Learn that gentle dulness never loves a joke&mdash;at
+ its own expense. Vain man! seize the occasion which your blame of his
+ measure affords you to secure his praise of yourself; compliment him.
+ Enough of politics. It never does to think too much over what one has
+ already decided to say. Brooding over it, one may become too much in
+ earnest, and commit an indiscretion. So Kenelm has come back?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. I heard that news last night, at White&rsquo;s, from Travers. Sir Peter
+ had called on Travers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Travers still favours your suit to the heiress?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More, I think, than ever. Success in Parliament has great effect on a man
+ who has success in fashion and respects the opinion of clubs. But last
+ night he was unusually cordial. Between you and me, I think he is a little
+ afraid that Kenelm may yet be my rival. I gathered that from a hint he let
+ fall of the unwelcome nature of Sir Peter&rsquo;s talk to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why has Travers conceived a dislike to poor Kenelm? He seemed partial
+ enough to him once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, but not as a son-in-law, even before I had a chance of becoming so.
+ And when, after Kenelm appeared at Exmundham, while Travers was staying
+ there, Travers learned, I suppose from Lady Chillingly, that Kenelm had
+ fallen in love with and wanted to marry some other girl, who it seems
+ rejected him; and still more when he heard that Kenelm had been
+ subsequently travelling on the Continent in company with a low-lived
+ fellow, the drunken, riotous son of a farrier, you may well conceive how
+ so polished and sensible a man as Leopold Travers would dislike the idea
+ of giving his daughter to one so little likely to make an agreeable
+ son-in-law. Bah! I have no fear of Kenelm. By the way, did Sir Peter say
+ if Kenelm had quite recovered his health? He was at death&rsquo;s door some
+ eighteen months ago, when Sir Peter and Lady Chillingly were summoned to
+ town by the doctors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear Gordon, I fear there is no chance of your succession to
+ Exmundham. Sir Peter says that his wandering Hercules is as stalwart as
+ ever, and more equable in temperament, more taciturn and grave,&mdash;in
+ short, less odd. But when you say you have no fear of Kenelm&rsquo;s rivalry, do
+ you mean only as to Cecilia Travers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Neither as to that nor as to anything in life; and as to the succession
+ to Exmundham, it is his to leave as he pleases, and I have cause to think
+ he would never leave it to me. More likely to Parson John or the parson&rsquo;s
+ son,&mdash;or why not to yourself? I often think that for the prizes
+ immediately set before my ambition I am better off without land: land is a
+ great obfuscator.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Humph, there is some truth in that. Yet the fear of land and obfuscation
+ does not seem to operate against your suit to Cecilia Travers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her father is likely enough to live till I maybe contented to &lsquo;rest and
+ be thankful&rsquo; in the Upper House; and I should not like to be a landless
+ peer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right there; but I should tell you that, now Kenelm has come
+ back, Sir Peter has set his heart on his son&rsquo;s being your rival.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For Cecilia?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps; but certainly for Parliamentary reputation. The senior member
+ for the county means to retire, and Sir Peter has been urged to allow his
+ son to be brought forward,&mdash;from what I hear, with the certainty of
+ success.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! in spite of that wonderful speech of his on coming of age?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh! that is now understood to have been but a bad joke on the new
+ ideas, and their organs, including &lsquo;The Londoner.&rsquo; But if Kenelm does come
+ into the House, it will not be on your side of the question; and unless I
+ greatly overrate his abilities&mdash;which very likely I do&mdash;he will
+ not be a rival to despise. Except, indeed, that he may have one fault
+ which in the present day would be enough to unfit him for public life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what is that fault?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Treason to the blood of the Chillinglys. This is the age, in England,
+ when one cannot be too much of a Chillingly. I fear that if Kenelm does
+ become bewildered by a political abstraction,&mdash;call it, no matter
+ what, say, &lsquo;love of his country,&rsquo; or some such old-fashioned crotchet,&mdash;I
+ fear, I greatly fear, that he may be&mdash;in earnest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0116" id="link2HCH0116">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER THE LAST.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT was a field night in the House of Commons,&mdash;an adjourned debate,
+ opened by George Belvoir, who had been, the last two years, very slowly
+ creeping on in the favour, or rather the indulgence of the House, and more
+ than justifying Kenelm&rsquo;s prediction of his career. Heir to a noble name
+ and vast estates, extremely hard-working, very well informed, it was
+ impossible that he should not creep on. That night he spoke sensibly
+ enough, assisting his memory by frequent references to his notes; listened
+ to courteously, and greeted with a faint &ldquo;Hear, hear!&rdquo; of relief when he
+ had done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the House gradually thinned till nine o&rsquo;clock, at which hour it
+ became very rapidly crowded. A Cabinet minister had solemnly risen,
+ deposited on the table before him a formidable array of printed papers,
+ including a corpulent blue-book. Leaning his arm on the red box, he
+ commenced with this awe-compelling sentence,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir, I join issue with the right honourable gentleman opposite. He says
+ this is not raised as a party question. I deny it. Her Majesty&rsquo;s
+ Government are put upon their trial.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here there were cheers, so loudly, and so rarely greeting a speech from
+ that Cabinet minister, that he was put out, and had much to &ldquo;hum&rdquo; and to
+ &ldquo;ha,&rdquo; before he could recover the thread of his speech. Then he went on,
+ with unbroken but lethargic fluency; read long extracts from the public
+ papers, inflicted a whole page from the blue-book, wound up with a
+ peroration of respectable platitudes, glanced at the clock, saw that he
+ had completed the hour which a Cabinet minister who does not profess to be
+ oratorical is expected to speak, but not to exceed; and sat down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up rose a crowd of eager faces, from which the Speaker, as previously
+ arranged with the party whips, selected one,&mdash;a young face, hardy,
+ intelligent, emotionless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I need not say that it was the face of Chillingly Gordon. His position
+ that night was one that required dexterous management and delicate tact.
+ He habitually supported the Government; his speeches had been hitherto in
+ their favour. On this occasion he differed from the Government. The
+ difference was known to the chiefs of the Opposition, and hence the
+ arrangement of the whips, that he should speak for the first time after
+ ten o&rsquo;clock, and for the first time in reply to a Cabinet minister. It is
+ a position in which a young party man makes or mars his future. Chillingly
+ Gordon spoke from the third row behind the Government; he had been duly
+ cautioned by Mivers not to affect a conceited independence, or an adhesion
+ to &ldquo;violence&rdquo; in ultra-liberal opinions, by seating himself below the
+ gangway. Speaking thus, amid the rank and file of the Ministerial
+ supporters, any opinion at variance with the mouthpieces of the Treasury
+ Bench would be sure to produce a more effective sensation than if
+ delivered from the ranks of the mutinous Bashi Bazouks divided by the
+ gangway from better disciplined forces. His first brief sentences
+ enthralled the House, conciliated the Ministerial side, kept the
+ Opposition side in suspense. The whole speech was, indeed, felicitously
+ adroit, and especially in this, that, while in opposition to the
+ Government as a whole, it expressed the opinions of a powerful section of
+ the Cabinet, which, though at present a minority, yet being the most
+ enamoured of a New Idea, the progress of the age would probably render a
+ safe investment for the confidence which honest Gordon reposed in its
+ chance of beating its colleagues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not, however, till Gordon had concluded that the cheers of his
+ audience&mdash;impulsive and hearty as are the cheers of that assembly
+ when the evidence of intellect is unmistakable&mdash;made manifest to the
+ gallery and the reporters the full effect of the speech he had delivered.
+ The chief of the Opposition whispered to his next neighbour, &ldquo;I wish we
+ could get that man.&rdquo; The Cabinet minister whom Gordon had answered&mdash;more
+ pleased with a personal compliment to himself than displeased with an
+ attack on the measure his office compelled him to advocate&mdash;whispered
+ to his chief, &ldquo;That is a man we must not lose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two gentlemen in the Speaker&rsquo;s gallery, who had sat there from the opening
+ of the debate, now quitted their places. Coming into the lobby, they found
+ themselves commingled with a crowd of members who had also quitted their
+ seats, after Gordon&rsquo;s speech, in order to discuss its merits, as they
+ gathered round the refreshment table for oranges or soda-water. Among them
+ was George Belvoir, who, on sight of the younger of the two gentlemen
+ issuing from the Speaker&rsquo;s gallery, accosted him with friendly greeting,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! Chillingly, how are you? Did not know you were in town. Been here all
+ the evening? Yes; very good debate. How did you like Gordon&rsquo;s speech?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I liked yours much better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mine!&rdquo; cried George, very much flattered and very much surprised. &ldquo;Oh,
+ mine was a mere humdrum affair, a plain statement of the reasons for the
+ vote I should give. And Gordon&rsquo;s was anything but that. You did not like
+ his opinions?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what his opinions are. But I did not like his ideas.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t quite understand you. What ideas?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The new ones; by which it is shown how rapidly a great state can be made
+ small.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Mr. Belvoir was taken aside by a brother member, on an important
+ matter to be brought before the committee on salmon fisheries, on which
+ they both served; and Kenelm, with his companion, Sir Peter, threaded his
+ way through the crowded lobby and disappeared. Emerging into the broad
+ space, with its lofty clock-tower, Sir Peter halted, and pointing towards
+ the old Abbey, half in shadow, half in light, under the tranquil
+ moonbeams, said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It tells much for the duration of a people when it accords with the
+ instinct of immortality in a man; when an honoured tomb is deemed
+ recompense for the toils and dangers of a noble life. How much of the
+ history of England Nelson summed up in the simple words,&mdash;&lsquo;Victory or
+ Westminster Abbey.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Admirably expressed, my dear father,&rdquo; said Kenelm, briefly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I agree with your remark, which I overheard, on Gordon&rsquo;s speech,&rdquo; resumed
+ Sir Peter. &ldquo;It was wonderfully clever; yet I should have been sorry to
+ hear you speak it. It is not by such sentiments that Nelsons become great.
+ If such sentiments should ever be national, the cry will not be &lsquo;Victory
+ or Westminster Abbey!&rsquo; but &lsquo;Defeat and the Three per Cents!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pleased with his own unwonted animation, and with the sympathizing
+ half-smile on his son&rsquo;s taciturn lips, Sir Peter then proceeded more
+ immediately to the subjects which pressed upon his heart. Gordon&rsquo;s success
+ in Parliament, Gordon&rsquo;s suit to Cecilia Travers, favoured, as Sir Peter
+ had learned, by her father, rejected as yet by herself, were somehow
+ inseparably mixed up in Sir Peter&rsquo;s mind and his words, as he sought to
+ kindle his son&rsquo;s emulation. He dwelt on the obligations which a country
+ imposed on its citizens, especially on the young and vigorous generation
+ to which the destinies of those to follow were intrusted; and with these
+ stern obligations he combined all the cheering and tender associations
+ which an English public man connects with an English home: the wife with a
+ smile to soothe the cares, and a mind to share the aspirations, of a life
+ that must go through labour to achieve renown; thus, in all he said,
+ binding together, as if they could not be disparted, Ambition and Cecilia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His son did not interrupt him by a word, Sir Peter in his eagerness not
+ noticing that Kenelm had drawn him aside from the direct thoroughfare, and
+ had now made halt in the middle of Westminster bridge, bending over the
+ massive parapet and gazing abstractedly upon the waves of the starlit
+ river. On the right the stately length of the people&rsquo;s legislative palace,
+ so new in its date, so elaborately in each detail ancient in its form,
+ stretching on towards the lowly and jagged roofs of penury and crime. Well
+ might these be so near to the halls of a people&rsquo;s legislative palace: near
+ to the heart of every legislator for a people must be the mighty problem
+ how to increase a people&rsquo;s splendour and its virtue, and how to diminish
+ its penury and its crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How strange it is,&rdquo; said Kenelm, still bending over the parapet, &ldquo;that
+ throughout all my desultory wanderings I have ever been attracted towards
+ the sight and the sound of running waters, even those of the humblest
+ rill! Of what thoughts, of what dreams, of what memories, colouring the
+ history of my past, the waves of the humblest rill could speak, were the
+ waves themselves not such supreme philosophers,&mdash;roused indeed on
+ their surface, vexed by a check to their own course, but so indifferent to
+ all that makes gloom or death to the mortals who think and dream and feel
+ beside their banks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bless me,&rdquo; said Peter to himself, &ldquo;the boy has got back to his old vein
+ of humours and melancholies. He has not heard a word I have been saying.
+ Travers is right. He will never do anything in life. Why did I christen
+ him Kenelm? he might as well have been christened Peter.&rdquo; Still, loth to
+ own that his eloquence had been expended in vain and that the wish of his
+ heart was doomed to expire disappointed, Sir Peter said aloud, &ldquo;You have
+ not listened to what I said; Kenelm, you grieve me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Grieve you! you! do not say that, Father, dear Father. Listen to you!
+ Every word you have said has sunk into the deepest deep of my heart.
+ Pardon my foolish, purposeless snatch of talk to myself: it is but my way,
+ only my way, dear Father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Boy, boy,&rdquo; cried Sir Peter, with tears in his voice, &ldquo;if you could get
+ out of those odd ways of yours I should be so thankful. But if you cannot,
+ nothing you can do shall grieve me. Only, let me say this; running waters
+ have had a great charm for you. With a humble rill you associate thoughts,
+ dreams, memories in your past. But now you halt by the stream of the
+ mighty river: before you the senate of an empire wider than Alexander&rsquo;s;
+ behind you the market of a commerce to which that of Tyre was a pitiful
+ trade. Look farther down, those squalid hovels, how much there to redeem
+ or to remedy; and out of sight, but not very distant, the nation&rsquo;s
+ Walhalla, &lsquo;Victory or Westminster Abbey!&rsquo; The humble rill has witnessed
+ your past. Has the mighty river no effect on your future? The rill keeps
+ no record of your past: shall the river keep no record of your future? Ah,
+ boy, boy, I see you are dreaming still,&mdash;no use talking. Let us go
+ home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was not dreaming, I was telling myself that the time had come to
+ replace the old Kenelm with the new ideas, by a new Kenelm with the Ideas
+ of Old. Ah! perhaps we must,&mdash;at whatever cost to ourselves,&mdash;we
+ must go through the romance of life before we clearly detect what is grand
+ in its realities. I can no longer lament that I stand estranged from the
+ objects and pursuits of my race. I have learned how much I have with them
+ in common. I have known love; I have known sorrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kenelm paused a moment, only a moment, then lifted the head which, during
+ that pause, had drooped, and stood erect at the full height of his
+ stature, startling his father by the change that had passed over his face;
+ lip, eye, his whole aspect, eloquent with a resolute enthusiasm, too grave
+ to be the flash of a passing moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Victory or Westminster Abbey! The world is a
+ battle-field in which the worst wounded are the deserters, stricken as
+ they seek to fly, and hushing the groans that would betray the secret of
+ their inglorious hiding-place. The pain of wounds received in the thick of
+ the fight is scarcely felt in the joy of service to some honoured cause,
+ and is amply atoned by the reverence for noble scars. My choice is made.
+ Not that of deserter, that of soldier in the ranks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will not be long before you rise from the ranks, my boy, if you hold
+ fast to the Idea of Old, symbolized in the English battle-cry, &lsquo;Victory or
+ Westminster Abbey.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, Sir Peter took his son&rsquo;s arm, leaning on it proudly; and so,
+ into the crowded thoroughfares, from the halting-place on the modern
+ bridge that spans the legendary river, passes the Man of the Young
+ Generation to fates beyond the verge of the horizon to which the eyes of
+ my generation must limit their wistful gaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE END. <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Kenelm Chillingly, Complete, by
+Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KENELM CHILLINGLY, COMPLETE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 7658-h.htm or 7658-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/7/6/5/7658/
+
+Produced by David Widger and Dagny
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &ldquo;Project
+Gutenberg&rdquo;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&ldquo;the Foundation&rdquo;
+ or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; appears, or with which the phrase &ldquo;Project
+Gutenberg&rdquo; is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase &ldquo;Project Gutenberg&rdquo; associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+&ldquo;Plain Vanilla ASCII&rdquo; or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original &ldquo;Plain Vanilla ASCII&rdquo; or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, &ldquo;Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.&rdquo;
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+&ldquo;Defects,&rdquo; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &ldquo;Right
+of Replacement or Refund&rdquo; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &lsquo;AS-IS&rsquo; WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm&rsquo;s
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation&rsquo;s EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state&rsquo;s laws.
+
+The Foundation&rsquo;s principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation&rsquo;s web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
diff --git a/7658.txt b/7658.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c706dbf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/7658.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,21310 @@
+Project Gutenberg's Kenelm Chillingly, Complete, by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Kenelm Chillingly, Complete
+
+Author: Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+Release Date: March 16, 2009 [EBook #7658]
+Last Updated: July 19, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KENELM CHILLINGLY, COMPLETE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger and Dagny
+
+
+
+
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY
+
+HIS ADVENTURES AND OPINIONS
+
+
+By Edward Bulwer Lytton
+
+(LORD LYTTON)
+
+
+
+
+BOOK I.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, of Exmundham, Baronet, F.R.S. and F.A.S., was the
+representative of an ancient family, and a landed proprietor of some
+importance. He had married young; not from any ardent inclination for
+the connubial state, but in compliance with the request of his parents.
+They took the pains to select his bride; and if they might have chosen
+better, they might have chosen worse, which is more than can be said for
+many men who choose wives for themselves. Miss Caroline Brotherton was
+in all respects a suitable connection. She had a pretty fortune, which
+was of much use in buying a couple of farms, long desiderated by the
+Chillinglys as necessary for the rounding of their property into a
+ring-fence. She was highly connected, and brought into the county that
+experience of fashionable life acquired by a young lady who has attended
+a course of balls for three seasons, and gone out in matrimonial
+honours, with credit to herself and her chaperon. She was handsome
+enough to satisfy a husband's pride, but not so handsome as to keep
+perpetually on the _qui vive_ a husband's jealousy. She was considered
+highly accomplished; that is, she played upon the pianoforte so that any
+musician would say she "was very well taught;" but no musician would
+go out of his way to hear her a second time. She painted in
+water-colours--well enough to amuse herself. She knew French and Italian
+with an elegance so lady-like that, without having read more than
+selected extracts from authors in those languages, she spoke them both
+with an accent more correct than we have any reason to attribute to
+Rousseau or Ariosto. What else a young lady may acquire in order to be
+styled highly accomplished I do not pretend to know; but I am sure that
+the young lady in question fulfilled that requirement in the opinion
+of the best masters. It was not only an eligible match for Sir
+Peter Chillingly,--it was a brilliant match. It was also a very
+unexceptionable match for Miss Caroline Brotherton. This excellent
+couple got on together as most excellent couples do. A short time after
+marriage, Sir Peter, by the death of his parents--who, having married
+their heir, had nothing left in life worth the trouble of living
+for--succeeded to the hereditary estates; he lived for nine months of
+the year at Exmundham, going to town for the other three months. Lady
+Chillingly and himself were both very glad to go to town, being bored at
+Exmundham; and very glad to go back to Exmundham, being bored in town.
+With one exception it was an exceedingly happy marriage, as marriages
+go. Lady Chillingly had her way in small things; Sir Peter his way in
+great. Small things happen every day; great things once in three years.
+Once in three years Lady Chillingly gave way to Sir Peter; households so
+managed go on regularly. The exception to their connubial happiness was,
+after all, but of a negative description. Their affection was such
+that they sighed for a pledge of it; fourteen years had he and Lady
+Chillingly remained unvisited by the little stranger.
+
+Now, in default of male issue, Sir Peter's estates passed to a distant
+cousin as heir-at-law; and during the last four years this heir-at-law
+had evinced his belief that practically speaking he was already
+heir-apparent; and (though Sir Peter was a much younger man than
+himself, and as healthy as any man well can be) had made his
+expectations of a speedy succession unpleasantly conspicuous. He had
+refused his consent to a small exchange of lands with a neighbouring
+squire, by which Sir Peter would have obtained some good arable land,
+for an outlying unprofitable wood that produced nothing but fagots and
+rabbits, with the blunt declaration that he, the heir-at-law, was fond
+of rabbit-shooting, and that the wood would be convenient to him next
+season if he came into the property by that time, which he very possibly
+might. He disputed Sir Peter's right to make his customary fall of
+timber, and had even threatened him with a bill in Chancery on that
+subject. In short, this heir-at-law was exactly one of those persons
+to spite whom a landed proprietor would, if single, marry at the age of
+eighty in the hope of a family.
+
+Nor was it only on account of his very natural wish to frustrate the
+expectations of this unamiable relation that Sir Peter Chillingly
+lamented the absence of the little stranger. Although belonging to that
+class of country gentlemen to whom certain political reasoners deny the
+intelligence vouchsafed to other members of the community, Sir Peter was
+not without a considerable degree of book-learning and a great taste
+for speculative philosophy. He sighed for a legitimate inheritor to the
+stores of his erudition, and, being a very benevolent man, for a more
+active and useful dispenser of those benefits to the human race which
+philosophers confer by striking hard against each other; just as, how
+full soever of sparks a flint may be, they might lurk concealed in the
+flint till doomsday, if the flint were not hit by the steel. Sir Peter,
+in short, longed for a son amply endowed with the combative quality, in
+which he himself was deficient, but which is the first essential to all
+seekers after renown, and especially to benevolent philosophers.
+
+Under these circumstances one may well conceive the joy that filled
+the household of Exmundham and extended to all the tenantry on that
+venerable estate, by whom the present possessor was much beloved and
+the prospect of an heir-at-law with a special eye to the preservation
+of rabbits much detested, when the medical attendant of the Chillinglys
+declared that 'her ladyship was in an interesting way;' and to what
+height that joy culminated when, in due course of time, a male baby was
+safely enthroned in his cradle. To that cradle Sir Peter was summoned.
+He entered the room with a lively bound and a radiant countenance: he
+quitted it with a musing step and an overclouded brow.
+
+Yet the baby was no monster. It did not come into the world with two
+heads, as some babies are said to have done; it was formed as babies are
+in general; was on the whole a thriving baby, a fine baby. Nevertheless,
+its aspect awed the father as already it had awed the nurse. The
+creature looked so unutterably solemn. It fixed its eyes upon Sir Peter
+with a melancholy reproachful stare; its lips were compressed and drawn
+downward as if discontentedly meditating its future destinies. The nurse
+declared in a frightened whisper that it had uttered no cry on facing
+the light. It had taken possession of its cradle in all the dignity of
+silent sorrow. A more saddened and a more thoughtful countenance a human
+being could not exhibit if he were leaving the world instead of entering
+it.
+
+"Hem!" said Sir Peter to himself on regaining the solitude of his
+library; "a philosopher who contributes a new inhabitant to this vale of
+tears takes upon himself very anxious responsibilities--"
+
+At that moment the joy-bells rang out from the neighbouring church
+tower, the summer sun shone into the windows, the bees hummed among the
+flowers on the lawn. Sir Peter roused himself and looked forth, "After
+all," said he, cheerily, "the vale of tears is not without a smile."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+A FAMILY council was held at Exmundham Hall to deliberate on the name
+by which this remarkable infant should be admitted into the Christian
+community. The junior branches of that ancient house consisted, first,
+of the obnoxious heir-at-law--a Scotch branch named Chillingly Gordon.
+He was the widowed father of one son, now of the age of three, and
+happily unconscious of the injury inflicted on his future prospects by
+the advent of the new-born, which could not be truthfully said of his
+Caledonian father. Mr. Chillingly Gordon was one of those men who get on
+in the world with out our being able to discover why. His parents died
+in his infancy and left him nothing; but the family interest procured
+him an admission into the Charterhouse School, at which illustrious
+academy he obtained no remarkable distinction. Nevertheless, as soon as
+he left it the State took him under its special care, and appointed him
+to a clerkship in a public office. From that moment he continued to get
+on in the world, and was now a Commissioner of Customs, with a salary of
+L1500 a year. As soon as he had been thus enabled to maintain a wife,
+he selected a wife who assisted to maintain himself. She was an Irish
+peer's widow, with a jointure of L2000 a year.
+
+A few months after his marriage, Chillingly Gordon effected insurances
+on his wife's life, so as to secure himself an annuity of L1000 a year
+in case of her decease. As she appeared to be a fine healthy woman, some
+years younger than her husband, the deduction from his income effected
+by the annual payments for the insurance seemed an over-sacrifice of
+present enjoyment to future contingencies. The result bore witness to
+his reputation for sagacity, as the lady died in the second year of
+their wedding, a few months after the birth of her only child, and of a
+heart-disease which had been latent to the doctors, but which, no doubt,
+Gordon had affectionately discovered before he had insured a life too
+valuable not to need some compensation for its loss. He was now, then,
+in the possession of L2500 a year, and was therefore very well off,
+in the pecuniary sense of the phrase. He had, moreover, acquired a
+reputation which gave him a social rank beyond that accorded to him by
+a discerning State. He was considered a man of solid judgment, and
+his opinion upon all matters, private and public, carried weight. The
+opinion itself, critically examined, was not worth much, but the way he
+announced it was imposing. Mr. Fox said that 'No one ever was so wise as
+Lord Thurlow looked.' Lord Thurlow could not have looked wiser than Mr.
+Chillingly Gordon. He had a square jaw and large red bushy eyebrows,
+which he lowered down with great effect when he delivered judgment.
+He had another advantage for acquiring grave reputation. He was a very
+unpleasant man. He could be rude if you contradicted him; and as few
+persons wish to provoke rudeness, so he was seldom contradicted.
+
+Mr. Chillingly Mivers, another cadet of the house, was also
+distinguished, but in a different way. He was a bachelor, now about the
+age of thirty-five. He was eminent for a supreme well-bred contempt for
+everybody and everything. He was the originator and chief proprietor of
+a public journal called "The Londoner," which had lately been set up on
+that principle of contempt, and we need not say, was exceedingly popular
+with those leading members of the community who admire nobody and
+believe in nothing. Mr. Chillingly Mivers was regarded by himself and
+by others as a man who might have achieved the highest success in any
+branch of literature, if he had deigned to exhibit his talents therein.
+But he did not so deign, and therefore he had full right to imply that,
+if he had written an epic, a drama, a novel, a history, a metaphysical
+treatise, Milton, Shakspeare, Cervantes, Hume, Berkeley would have been
+nowhere. He held greatly to the dignity of the anonymous; and even in
+the journal which he originated nobody could ever ascertain what he
+wrote. But, at all events, Mr. Chillingly Mivers was what Mr. Chillingly
+Gordon was not; namely, a very clever man, and by no means an unpleasant
+one in general society.
+
+The Rev. John Stalworth Chillingly was a decided adherent to the creed
+of what is called "muscular Christianity," and a very fine specimen
+of it too. A tall stout man with broad shoulders, and that division of
+lower limb which intervenes between the knee and the ankle powerfully
+developed. He would have knocked down a deist as soon as looked at
+him. It is told by the Sieur de Joinville, in his Memoir of Louis, the
+sainted king, that an assembly of divines and theologians convened the
+Jews of an Oriental city for the purpose of arguing with them on the
+truths of Christianity, and a certain knight, who was at that time
+crippled, and supporting himself on crutches, asked and obtained
+permission to be present at the debate. The Jews flocked to the summons,
+when a prelate, selecting a learned rabbi, mildly put to him the leading
+question whether he owned the divine conception of our Lord. "Certainly
+not," replied the rabbi; whereon the pious knight, shocked by such
+blasphemy, uplifted his crutch and felled the rabbi, and then flung
+himself among the other misbelievers, whom he soon dispersed in
+ignominious flight and in a very belaboured condition. The conduct of
+the knight was reported to the sainted king, with a request that it
+should be properly reprimanded; but the sainted king delivered himself
+of this wise judgment:--
+
+"If a pious knight is a very learned clerk, and can meet in fair
+argument the doctrines of the misbeliever, by all means let him argue
+fairly; but if a pious knight is not a learned clerk, and the argument
+goes against him, then let the pious knight cut the discussion short by
+the edge of his good sword."
+
+The Rev. John Stalworth Chillingly was of the same opinion as Saint
+Louis; otherwise, he was a mild and amiable man. He encouraged cricket
+and other manly sports among his rural parishioners. He was a skilful
+and bold rider, but he did not hunt; a convivial man--and took his
+bottle freely. But his tastes in literature were of a refined and
+peaceful character, contrasting therein the tendencies some might have
+expected from his muscular development of Christianity. He was a great
+reader of poetry, but he disliked Scott and Byron, whom he considered
+flashy and noisy; he maintained that Pope was only a versifier, and that
+the greatest poet in the language was Wordsworth; he did not care much
+for the ancient classics; he refused all merit to the French poets; he
+knew nothing of the Italian, but he dabbled in German, and was inclined
+to bore one about the "Hermann and Dorothea" of Goethe. He was married
+to a homely little wife, who revered him in silence, and thought there
+would be no schism in the Church if he were in his right place as
+Archbishop of Canterbury; in this opinion he entirely agreed with his
+wife.
+
+Besides these three male specimens of the Chillingly race, the fairer
+sex was represented, in the absence of her ladyship, who still kept her
+room, by three female Chillinglys, sisters of Sir Peter, and all three
+spinsters. Perhaps one reason why they had remained single was, that
+externally they were so like each other that a suitor must have been
+puzzled which to choose, and may have been afraid that if he did choose
+one, he should be caught next day kissing another one in mistake. They
+were all tall, all thin, with long throats--and beneath the throats a
+fine development of bone. They had all pale hair, pale eyelids, pale
+eyes, and pale complexions. They all dressed exactly alike, and their
+favourite colour was a vivid green: they were so dressed on this
+occasion.
+
+As there was such similitude in their persons, so, to an ordinary
+observer, they were exactly the same in character and mind. Very
+well behaved, with proper notions of female decorum: very distant and
+reserved in manner to strangers; very affectionate to each other and
+their relations or favourites; very good to the poor, whom they looked
+upon as a different order of creation, and treated with that sort of
+benevolence which humane people bestow upon dumb animals. Their minds
+had been nourished on the same books--what one read the others had read.
+The books were mainly divided into two classes,--novels, and what they
+called "good books." They had a habit of taking a specimen of each
+alternately; one day a novel, then a good book, then a novel again, and
+so on. Thus if the imagination was overwarmed on Monday, on Tuesday it
+was cooled down to a proper temperature; and if frost-bitten on Tuesday,
+it took a tepid bath on Wednesday. The novels they chose were indeed
+rarely of a nature to raise the intellectual thermometer into blood
+heat: the heroes and heroines were models of correct conduct. Mr.
+James's novels were then in vogue, and they united in saying that those
+"were novels a father might allow his daughters to read." But though an
+ordinary observer might have failed to recognize any distinction between
+these three ladies, and, finding them habitually dressed in green, would
+have said they were as much alike as one pea is to another, they had
+their idiosyncratic differences, when duly examined. Miss Margaret, the
+eldest, was the commanding one of the three; it was she who regulated
+their household (they all lived together), kept the joint purse, and
+decided every doubtful point that arose: whether they should or should
+not ask Mrs. So-and-so to tea; whether Mary should or should not be
+discharged; whether or not they should go to Broadstairs or to Sandgate
+for the month of October. In fact, Miss Margaret was the WILL of the
+body corporate.
+
+Miss Sibyl was of milder nature and more melancholy temperament; she had
+a poetic turn of mind, and occasionally wrote verses. Some of these
+had been printed on satin paper, and sold for objects of beneficence
+at charity bazaars. The county newspapers said that the verses "were
+characterized by all the elegance of a cultured and feminine mind." The
+other two sisters agreed that Sibyl was the genius of the household,
+but, like all geniuses, not sufficiently practical for the world.
+Miss Sarah Chillingly, the youngest of the three, and now just in her
+forty-fourth year, was looked upon by the others as "a dear thing,
+inclined to be naughty, but such a darling that nobody could have the
+heart to scold her." Miss Margaret said "she was a giddy creature." Miss
+Sibyl wrote a poem on her, entitled, "Warning to a young Lady against
+the Pleasures of the World." They all called her Sally; the other
+two sisters had no diminutive synonyms. Sally is a name indicative of
+fastness. But this Sally would not have been thought fast in another
+household, and she was now little likely to sally out of the one she
+belonged to. These sisters, who were all many years older than Sir
+Peter, lived in a handsome, old-fashioned, red-brick house, with a large
+garden at the back, in the principal street of the capital of their
+native county. They had each L10,000 for portion; and if he could have
+married all three, the heir-at-law would have married them, and settled
+the aggregate L30,000 on himself. But we have not yet come to recognize
+Mormonism as legal, though if our social progress continues to slide in
+the same grooves as at present, Heaven only knows what triumphs over
+the prejudices of our ancestors may not be achieved by the wisdom of our
+descendants!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SIR PETER stood on his hearthstone, surveyed the guests seated in
+semicircle, and said: "Friends,--in Parliament, before anything
+affecting the fate of a Bill is discussed, it is, I believe, necessary
+to introduce the Bill." He paused a moment, rang the bell, and said to
+the servant who entered, "Tell Nurse to bring in the Baby."
+
+Mr. CHILLINGLY GORDON.--"I don't see the necessity for that, Sir Peter.
+We may take the existence of the Baby for granted."
+
+Mr. MIVERS.--"It is an advantage to the reputation of Sir Peter's work
+to preserve the incognito. _Omne ignotum pro magnifico_."
+
+THE REV. JOHN STALWORTH CHILLINGLY.--"I don't approve the cynical
+levity of such remarks. Of course we must all be anxious to see, in the
+earliest stage of being, the future representative of our name and race.
+Who would not wish to contemplate the source, however small, of the
+Tigris or the Nile!--"
+
+MISS SALLY (tittering).--"He! he!"
+
+MISS MARGARET.--"For shame, you giddy thing!"
+
+The Baby enters in the nurse's arms. All rise and gather round the Baby
+with one exception,--Mr. Gordon, who has ceased to be heir-at-law.
+
+The Baby returned the gaze of its relations with the most contemptuous
+indifference. Miss Sibyl was the first to pronounce an opinion on the
+Baby's attributes. Said she, in a solemn whisper, "What a heavenly
+mournful expression! it seems so grieved to have left the angels!"
+
+THE REV. JOHN.--"That is prettily said, Cousin Sibyl; but the infant
+must pluck up its courage and fight its way among mortals with a good
+heart, if it wants to get back to the angels again. And I think it will;
+a fine child." He took it from the nurse, and moving it deliberately up
+and down, as if to weigh it, said cheerfully, "Monstrous heavy! by the
+time it is twenty it will be a match for a prize-fighter of fifteen
+stone!"
+
+Therewith he strode to Gordon, who as if to show that he now considered
+himself wholly apart from all interest in the affairs of a family who
+had so ill-treated him in the birth of that Baby, had taken up the
+"Times" newspaper and concealed his countenance beneath the ample sheet.
+The Parson abruptly snatched away the "Times" with one hand, and,
+with the other substituting to the indignant eyes of the _ci-devant_
+heir-at-law the spectacle of the Baby, said, "Kiss it."
+
+"Kiss it!" echoed Chillingly Gordon, pushing back his chair--"kiss
+it! pooh, sir, stand off! I never kissed my own baby: I shall not kiss
+another man's. Take the thing away, sir: it is ugly; it has black eyes."
+
+Sir Peter, who was near-sighted, put on his spectacles and examined
+the face of the new-born. "True," said he, "it has black eyes,--very
+extraordinary: portentous: the first Chillingly that ever had black
+eyes."
+
+"Its mamma has black eyes," said Miss Margaret: "it takes after its
+mamma; it has not the fair beauty of the Chillinglys, but it is not
+ugly."
+
+"Sweet infant!" sighed Sibyl; "and so good; does not cry."
+
+"It has neither cried nor crowed since it was born," said the nurse;
+"bless its little heart."
+
+She took the Baby from the Parson's arms, and smoothed back the frill of
+its cap, which had got ruffled.
+
+"You may go now, Nurse," said Sir Peter.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+"I AGREE with Mr. Shandy," said Sir Peter, resuming his stand on the
+hearthstone, "that among the responsibilities of a parent the choice of
+the name which his child is to bear for life is one of the gravest. And
+this is especially so with those who belong to the order of baronets.
+In the case of a peer his Christian name, fused into his titular
+designation, disappears. In the case of a Mister, if his baptismal
+be cacophonous or provocative of ridicule, he need not ostentatiously
+parade it: he may drop it altogether on his visiting cards, and may be
+imprinted as Mr. Jones instead of Mr. Ebenezer Jones. In his signature,
+save where the forms of the law demand Ebenezer in full, he may only
+use an initial and be your obedient servant E. Jones, leaving it to be
+conjectured that E. stands for Edward or Ernest,--names inoffensive, and
+not suggestive of a Dissenting Chapel, like Ebenezer. If a man called
+Edward or Ernest be detected in some youthful indiscretion, there is
+no indelible stain on his moral character: but if an Ebenezer be so
+detected he is set down as a hypocrite; it produces that shock on the
+public mind which is felt when a professed saint is proved to be a
+bit of a sinner. But a baronet never can escape from his baptismal: it
+cannot lie _perdu_; it cannot shrink into an initial, it stands forth
+glaringly in the light of day; christen him Ebenezer, and he is Sir
+Ebenezer in full, with all its perilous consequences if he ever succumb
+to those temptations to which even baronets are exposed. But, my
+friends, it is not only the effect that the sound of a name has upon
+others which is to be thoughtfully considered: the effect that his name
+produces on the man himself is perhaps still more important. Some names
+stimulate and encourage the owner; others deject and paralyze him: I
+am a melancholy instance of that truth. Peter has been for many
+generations, as you are aware, the baptismal to which the eldest-born
+of our family has been devoted. On the altar of that name I have been
+sacrificed. Never has there been a Sir Peter Chillingly who has, in any
+way, distinguished himself above his fellows. That name has been a dead
+weight on my intellectual energies. In the catalogue of illustrious
+Englishmen there is, I think, no immortal Sir Peter, except Sir Peter
+Teazle, and he only exists on the comic stage."
+
+MISS SIBYL.--"Sir Peter Lely?"
+
+SIR PETER CHILLINGLY.--"That painter was not an Englishman. He was born
+in Westphalia, famous for hams. I confine my remarks to the children of
+our native land. I am aware that in foreign countries the name is not an
+extinguisher to the genius of its owner. But why? In other countries its
+sound is modified. Pierre Corneille was a great man; but I put it to
+you whether, had he been an Englishman, he could have been the father of
+European tragedy as Peter Crow?"
+
+MISS SIBYL.--"Impossible!"
+
+MISS SALLY.--"He! he!"
+
+MISS MARGARET.--"There is nothing to laugh at, you giddy child!"
+
+SIR PETER.--"My son shall not be petrified into Peter."
+
+MR. CHILLINGLY GORDON.--"If a man is such a fool--and I don't say your
+son will not be a fool, Cousin Peter--as to be influenced by the sound
+of his own name, and you want the booby to turn the world topsy-turvy,
+you had better call him Julius Caesar or Hannibal or Attila or
+Charlemagne."
+
+SIR PETER, (who excels mankind in imperturbability of temper).--"On the
+contrary, if you inflict upon a man the burden of one of those names,
+the glory of which he cannot reasonably expect to eclipse or even to
+equal, you crush him beneath the weight. If a poet were called John
+Milton or William Shakspeare, he could not dare to publish even a
+sonnet. No: the choice of a name lies between the two extremes of
+ludicrous insignificance and oppressive renown. For this reason I have
+ordered the family pedigree to be suspended on yonder wall. Let us
+examine it with care, and see whether, among the Chillinglys themselves
+or their alliances, we can discover a name that can be borne with
+becoming dignity by the destined head of our house--a name neither too
+light nor too heavy."
+
+Sir Peter here led the way to the family tree--a goodly roll of
+parchment, with the arms of the family emblazoned at the top. Those arms
+were simple, as ancient heraldic coats are,--three fishes _argent_ on
+a field _azure_; the crest a mermaid's head. All flocked to inspect the
+pedigree except Mr. Gordon, who resumed the "Times" newspaper.
+
+"I never could quite make out what kind of fishes these are," said
+the Rev. John Stalworth. "They are certainly not pike which formed the
+emblematic blazon of the Hotofts, and are still grim enough to frighten
+future Shakspeares on the scutcheon of the Warwickshire Lucys."
+
+"I believe they are tenches," said Mr. Mivers. "The tench is a fish that
+knows how to keep itself safe by a philosophical taste for an obscure
+existence in deep holes and slush."
+
+SIR PETER.--"No, Mivers; the fishes are dace, a fish that, once
+introduced into any pond, never can be got out again. You may drag
+the water; you may let off the water; you may say, 'Those dace are
+extirpated,'--vain thought!--the dace reappear as before; and in this
+respect the arms are really emblematic of the family. All the disorders
+and revolutions that have occurred in England since the Heptarchy have
+left the Chillinglys the same race in the same place. Somehow or other
+the Norman Conquest did not despoil them; they held fiefs under Eudo
+Dapifer as peacefully as they had held them under King Harold; they took
+no part in the Crusades, nor the Wars of the Roses, nor the Civil Wars
+between Charles the First and the Parliament. As the dace sticks to the
+water and the water sticks by the dace, so the Chillinglys stuck to the
+land and the land stuck by the Chillinglys. Perhaps I am wrong to wish
+that the new Chillingly may be a little less like a dace."
+
+"Oh!" cried Miss Margaret, who, mounted on a chair, had been inspecting
+the pedigree through an eye-glass, "I don't see a fine Christian name
+from the beginning, except Oliver."
+
+SIR PETER.--"That Chillingly was born in Oliver Cromwell's Protectorate,
+and named Oliver in compliment to him, as his father, born in the reign
+of James I., was christened James. The three fishes always swam with
+the stream. Oliver!--Oliver not a bad name, but significant of radical
+doctrines."
+
+Mr. MIVERS.--"I don't think so. Oliver Cromwell made short work of
+radicals and their doctrines; but perhaps we can find a name less awful
+and revolutionary."
+
+"I have it! I have it!" cried the Parson. "Here is a descent from Sir
+Kenelm Digby and Venetia Stanley. Sir Kenelm Digby! No finer specimen of
+muscular Christianity. He fought as well as he wrote; eccentric, it is
+true, but always a gentleman. Call the boy Kenelm!"
+
+"A sweet name," said Miss Sibyl: "it breathes of romance."
+
+"Sir Kenelm Chillingly! It sounds well,--imposing!" said Miss Margaret.
+
+"And," remarked Mr. Mivers, "it has this advantage--that while it has
+sufficient association with honourable distinction to affect the mind of
+the namesake and rouse his emulation, it is not that of so stupendous
+a personage as to defy rivalry. Sir Kenelm Digby was certainly an
+accomplished and gallant gentleman; but what with his silly superstition
+about sympathetic powders, etc., any man nowadays might be clever in
+comparison without being a prodigy. Yes, let us decide on Kenelm."
+
+Sir Peter meditated. "Certainly," said he, after a pause, "certainly
+the name of Kenelm carries with it very crotchety associations; and I am
+afraid that Sir Kenelm Digby did not make a prudent choice in marriage.
+The fair Venetia was no better than she should be; and I should wish
+my heir not to be led away by beauty but wed a woman of respectable
+character and decorous conduct."
+
+Miss MARGARET.--"A British matron, of course!"
+
+THREE SISTERS (in chorus).--"Of course! of course!"
+
+"But," resumed Sir Peter, "I am crotchety myself, and crotchets are
+innocent things enough; and as for marriage the Baby cannot marry
+to-morrow, so that we have ample time to consider that matter. Kenelm
+Digby was a man any family might be proud of; and, as you say, sister
+Margaret, Kenelm Chillingly does not sound amiss: Kenelm Chillingly it
+shall be!"
+
+The Baby was accordingly christened Kenelm, after which ceremony its
+face grew longer than before.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+BEFORE his relations dispersed, Sir Peter summoned Mr. Gordon into his
+library.
+
+"Cousin," said he, kindly, "I do not blame you for the want of family
+affection, or even of humane interest, which you exhibit towards the
+New-born."
+
+"Blame me, Cousin Peter! I should think not. I exhibit as much
+family affection and humane interest as could be expected from
+me,--circumstances considered."
+
+"I own," said Sir Peter, with all his wonted mildness, "that after
+remaining childless for fourteen years of wedded life, the advent of
+this little stranger must have occasioned you a disagreeable surprise.
+But, after all, as I am many years younger than you, and in the course
+of nature shall outlive you, the loss is less to yourself than to your
+son, and upon that I wish to say a few words. You know too well the
+conditions on which I hold my estate not to be aware that I have
+not legally the power to saddle it with any bequest to your boy. The
+New-born succeeds to the fee-simple as last in tail. But I intend,
+from this moment, to lay by something every year for your son out of my
+income; and, fond as I am of London for a part of the year, I shall now
+give up my town-house. If I live to the years the Psalmist allots to
+man, I shall thus accumulate something handsome for your son, which may
+be taken in the way of compensation."
+
+Mr. Gordon was by no means softened by this generous speech. However,
+he answered more politely than was his wont, "My son will be very much
+obliged to you, should he ever need your intended bequest." Pausing a
+moment, he added with a cheerful smile, "A large percentage of infants
+die before attaining the age of twenty-one."
+
+"Nay, but I am told your son is an uncommonly fine healthy child."
+
+"My son, Cousin Peter! I was not thinking of my son, but of yours. Yours
+has a big head. I should not wonder if he had water in it. I don't wish
+to alarm you, but he may go off any day, and in that case it is not
+likely that Lady Chillingly will condescend to replace him. So you will
+excuse me if I still keep a watchful eye on my rights; and, however
+painful to my feelings, I must still dispute your right to cut a stick
+of the field timber."
+
+"That is nonsense, Gordon. I am tenant for life without impeachment of
+waste, and can cut down all timber not ornamental."
+
+"I advise you not, Cousin Peter. I have told you before that I shall try
+the question at law, should you provoke it, amicably, of course. Rights
+are rights; and if I am driven to maintain mine, I trust that you are of
+a mind too liberal to allow your family affection for me and mine to be
+influenced by a decree of the Court of Chancery. But my fly is waiting.
+I must not miss the train."
+
+"Well, good-by, Gordon. Shake hands."
+
+"Shake hands!--of course, of course. By the by, as I came through the
+lodge, it seemed to me sadly out of repair. I believe you are liable for
+dilapidations. Good-by."
+
+"The man is a hog in armour," soliloquized Sir Peter, when his cousin
+was gone; "and if it be hard to drive a common pig in the way he don't
+choose to go, a hog in armour is indeed undrivable. But his boy ought
+not to suffer for his father's hoggishness; and I shall begin at once to
+see what I can lay by for him. After all, it is hard upon Gordon. Poor
+Gordon; poor fellow! poor fellow! Still I hope he will not go to law
+with me. I hate law. And a worm will turn, especially a worm that is put
+into Chancery."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+DESPITE the sinister semi-predictions of the _ci-devant_ heir-at-law,
+the youthful Chillingly passed with safety, and indeed with dignity,
+through the infant stages of existence. He took his measles and
+whooping-cough with philosophical equanimity. He gradually acquired
+the use of speech, but he did not too lavishly exercise that special
+attribute of humanity. During the earlier years of childhood he spoke
+as little as if he had been prematurely trained in the school of
+Pythagoras. But he evidently spoke the less in order to reflect the
+more. He observed closely and pondered deeply over what he observed. At
+the age of eight he began to converse more freely, and it was in that
+year that he startled his mother with the question, "Mamma, are you not
+sometimes overpowered by the sense of your own identity?"
+
+Lady Chillingly,--I was about to say rushed, but Lady Chillingly never
+rushed,--Lady Chillingly glided less sedately than her wont to Sir
+Peter, and repeating her son's question, said, "The boy is growing
+troublesome, too wise for any woman: he must go to school."
+
+Sir Peter was of the same opinion. But where on earth did the child get
+hold of so long a word as "identity," and how did so extraordinary and
+puzzling a metaphysical question come into his head? Sir Peter summoned
+Kenelm, and ascertained that the boy, having free access to the library,
+had fastened upon Locke on the Human Understanding, and was prepared to
+dispute with that philosopher upon the doctrine of innate ideas. Quoth
+Kenelm, gravely, "A want is an idea; and if, as soon as I was born, I
+felt the want of food and knew at once where to turn for it, without
+being taught, surely I came into the world with an 'innate idea.'"
+
+Sir Peter, though he dabbled in metaphysics, was posed, and scratched
+his head without getting out a proper answer as to the distinction
+between ideas and instincts. "My child," he said at last, "you don't
+know what you are talking about: go and take a good gallop on your black
+pony; and I forbid you to read any books that are not given to you by
+myself or your mamma. Stick to 'Puss in Boots.'"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+SIR PETER ordered his carriage and drove to the house of the stout
+parson. That doughty ecclesiastic held a family living a few miles
+distant from the Hall, and was the only one of the cousins with whom Sir
+Peter habitually communed on his domestic affairs.
+
+He found the Parson in his study, which exhibited tastes other
+than clerical. Over the chimney-piece were ranged fencing-foils,
+boxing-gloves, and staffs for the athletic exercise of single-stick;
+cricket-bats and fishing-rods filled up the angles. There were
+sundry prints on the walls: one of Mr. Wordsworth, flanked by two of
+distinguished race-horses; one of a Leicestershire short-horn, with
+which the Parson, who farmed his own glebe and bred cattle in its rich
+pastures, had won a prize at the county show; and on either side of that
+animal were the portraits of Hooker and Jeremy Taylor. There were dwarf
+book-cases containing miscellaneous works very handsomely bound; at
+the open window, a stand of flower-pots, the flowers in full bloom. The
+Parson's flowers were famous.
+
+The appearance of the whole room was that of a man who is tidy and neat
+in his habits.
+
+"Cousin," said Sir Peter, "I have come to consult you." And therewith he
+related the marvellous precocity of Kenelm Chillingly. "You see the name
+begins to work on him rather too much. He must go to school; and now
+what school shall it be? Private or public?"
+
+THE REV. JOHN STALWORTH.--"There is a great deal to be said for or
+against either. At a public school the chances are that Kenelm will
+no longer be overpowered by a sense of his own identity; he will more
+probably lose identity altogether. The worst of a public school is that
+a sort of common character is substituted for individual character.
+The master, of course, can't attend to the separate development of each
+boy's idiosyncrasy. All minds are thrown into one great mould, and come
+out of it more or less in the same form. An Etonian may be clever or
+stupid, but, as either, he remains emphatically Etonian. A public school
+ripens talent, but its tendency is to stifle genius. Then, too, a public
+school for an only son, heir to a good estate, which will be entirely at
+his own disposal, is apt to encourage reckless and extravagant habits;
+and your estate requires careful management, and leaves no margin for an
+heir's notes-of-hand and post-obits. On the whole, I am against a public
+school for Kenelm."
+
+"Well then, we will decide on a private one."
+
+"Hold!" said the Parson: "a private school has its drawbacks. You can
+seldom produce large fishes in small ponds. In private schools the
+competition is narrowed, the energies stinted. The schoolmaster's wife
+interferes, and generally coddles the boys. There is not manliness
+enough in those academies; no fagging, and very little fighting. A
+clever boy turns out a prig; a boy of feebler intellect turns out a
+well-behaved young lady in trousers. Nothing muscular in the system.
+Decidedly the namesake and descendant of Kenelm Digby should not go to a
+private seminary."
+
+"So far as I gather from your reasoning," said Sir Peter, with
+characteristic placidity, "Kenelm Chillingly is not to go to school at
+all."
+
+"It does look like it," said the Parson, candidly; "but, on
+consideration, there is a medium. There are schools which unite the best
+qualities of public and private schools, large enough to stimulate and
+develop energies mental and physical, yet not so framed as to melt all
+character in one crucible. For instance, there is a school which has
+at this moment one of the first scholars in Europe for head-master,--a
+school which has turned out some of the most remarkable men of the
+rising generation. The master sees at a glance if a boy be clever, and
+takes pains with him accordingly. He is not a mere teacher of hexameters
+and sapphics. His learning embraces all literature, ancient and modern.
+He is a good writer and a fine critic; admires Wordsworth. He winks at
+fighting: his boys know how to use their fists; and they are not in the
+habit of signing post-obits before they are fifteen. Merton School is
+the place for Kenelm."
+
+"Thank you," said Sir Peter. "It is a great comfort in life to find
+somebody who can decide for one. I am an irresolute man myself, and in
+ordinary matters willingly let Lady Chillingly govern me."
+
+"I should like to see a wife govern _me_," said the stout Parson.
+
+"But you are not married to Lady Chillingly. And now let us go into the
+garden and look at your dahlias."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE youthful confuter of Locke was despatched to Merton School, and
+ranked, according to his merits, as lag of the penultimate form. When he
+came home for the Christmas holidays he was more saturnine than ever;
+in fact, his countenance bore the impression of some absorbing grief.
+He said, however, that he liked school very well, and eluded all other
+questions. But early the next morning he mounted his black pony and
+rode to the Parson's rectory. The reverend gentleman was in his farmyard
+examining his bullocks when Kenelm accosted him thus briefly,--
+
+"Sir, I am disgraced, and I shall die of it if you cannot help to set me
+right in my own eyes."
+
+"My dear boy, don't talk in that way. Come into my study."
+
+As soon as they entered that room, and the Parson had carefully closed
+the door, he took the boy's arm, turned him round to the light, and saw
+at once that there was something very grave on his mind. Chucking him
+under the chin, the Parson said cheerily, "Hold up your head, Kenelm. I
+am sure you have done nothing unworthy of a gentleman."
+
+"I don't know that. I fought a boy very little bigger than myself, and
+I have been licked. I did not give in, though; but the other boys picked
+me up, for I could not stand any longer; and the fellow is a great
+bully; and his name is Butt; and he's the son of a lawyer; and he got my
+head into chancery; and I have challenged him to fight again next
+half; and unless you can help me to lick him, I shall never be good for
+anything in the world,--never. It will break my heart."
+
+"I am very glad to hear you have had the pluck to challenge him. Just
+let me see how you double your fist. Well, that's not amiss. Now, put
+yourself into a fighting attitude, and hit out at me,--hard! harder!
+Pooh! that will never do. You should make your blows as straight as
+an arrow. And that's not the way to stand. Stop,--so: well on your
+haunches; weight on the left leg; good! Now, put on these gloves, and
+I'll give you a lesson in boxing."
+
+Five minutes afterwards Mrs. John Chillingly, entering the room to
+summon her husband to breakfast, stood astounded to see him with his
+coat off, and parrying the blows of Kenelm, who flew at him like a young
+tiger. The good pastor at that moment might certainly have appeared a
+fine type of muscular Christianity, but not of that kind of Christianity
+out of which one makes Archbishops of Canterbury.
+
+"Good gracious me!" faltered Mrs. John Chillingly; and then, wife-like,
+flying to the protection of her husband, she seized Kenelm by the
+shoulders, and gave him a good shaking. The Parson, who was sadly out
+of breath, was not displeased at the interruption, but took that
+opportunity to put on his coat, and said, "We'll begin again to-morrow.
+Now, come to breakfast." But during breakfast Kenelm's face still
+betrayed dejection, and he talked little and ate less.
+
+As soon as the meal was over, he drew the Parson into the garden and
+said, "I have been thinking, sir, that perhaps it is not fair to Butt
+that I should be taking these lessons; and if it is not fair, I'd rather
+not--"
+
+"Give me your hand, my boy!" cried the Parson, transported. "The name
+of Kenelm is not thrown away upon you. The natural desire of man in
+his attribute of fighting animal (an attribute in which, I believe, he
+excels all other animated beings, except a quail and a gamecock) is to
+beat his adversary. But the natural desire of that culmination of man
+which we call gentleman is to beat his adversary fairly. A gentleman
+would rather be beaten fairly than beat unfairly. Is not that your
+thought?"
+
+"Yes," replied Kenelm, firmly; and then, beginning to philosophize, he
+added, "And it stands to reason; because if I beat a fellow unfairly, I
+don't really beat him at all."
+
+"Excellent! But suppose that you and another boy go into examination
+upon Caesar's Commentaries or the multiplication table, and the other
+boy is cleverer than you, but you have taken the trouble to learn the
+subject and he has not: should you say you beat him unfairly?"
+
+Kenelm meditated a moment, and then said decidedly, "No."
+
+"That which applies to the use of your brains applies equally to the use
+of your fists. Do you comprehend me?"
+
+"Yes, sir; I do now."
+
+"In the time of your namesake, Sir Kenelm Digby, gentlemen wore swords,
+and they learned how to use them, because, in case of quarrel, they had
+to fight with them. Nobody, at least in England, fights with swords
+now. It is a democratic age, and if you fight at all, you are reduced to
+fists; and if Kenelm Digby learned to fence, so Kenelm Chillingly must
+learn to box; and if a gentleman thrashes a drayman twice his size, who
+has not learned to box, it is not unfair; it is but an exemplification
+of the truth that knowledge is power. Come and take another lesson on
+boxing to-morrow."
+
+Kenelm remounted his pony and returned home. He found his father
+sauntering in the garden with a book in his hand. "Papa," said Kenelm,
+"how does one gentleman write to another with whom he has a quarrel,
+and he don't want to make it up, but he has something to say about the
+quarrel which it is fair the other gentleman should know?"
+
+"I don't understand what you mean."
+
+"Well, just before I went to school I remember hearing you say that you
+had a quarrel with Lord Hautfort, and that he was an ass, and you would
+write and tell him so. When you wrote did you say, 'You are an ass'? Is
+that the way one gentleman writes to another?"
+
+"Upon my honour, Kenelm, you ask very odd questions. But you cannot
+learn too early this fact, that irony is to the high-bred what
+Billingsgate is to the vulgar; and when one gentleman thinks another
+gentleman an ass, he does not say it point-blank: he implies it in the
+politest terms he can invent. Lord Hautfort denies my right of free
+warren over a trout-stream that runs through his lands. I don't care a
+rush about the trout-stream, but there is no doubt of my right to fish
+in it. He was an ass to raise the question; for, if he had not, I
+should not have exercised the right. As he did raise the question, I was
+obliged to catch his trout."
+
+"And you wrote a letter to him?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How did you write, Papa? What did you say?"
+
+"Something like this. 'Sir Peter Chillingly presents his compliments
+to Lord Hautfort, and thinks it fair to his lordship to say that he has
+taken the best legal advice with regard to his rights of free warren;
+and trusts to be forgiven if he presumes to suggest that Lord Hautfort
+might do well to consult his own lawyer before he decides on disputing
+them.'"
+
+"Thank you, Papa. I see."
+
+That evening Kenelm wrote the following letter:--
+
+
+Mr. Chillingly presents his compliments to Mr. Butt, and thinks it fair
+to Mr. Butt to say that he is taking lessons in boxing; and trusts to be
+forgiven if he presumes to suggest that Mr. Butt might do well to take
+lessons himself before fighting with Mr. Chillingly next half.
+
+
+"Papa," said Kenelm the next morning, "I want to write to a schoolfellow
+whose name is Butt; he is the son of a lawyer who is called a serjeant.
+I don't know where to direct to him."
+
+"That is easily ascertained," said Sir Peter. "Serjeant Butt is an
+eminent man, and his address will be in the Court Guide."
+
+The address was found,--Bloomsbury Square; and Kenelm directed his
+letter accordingly. In due course he received this answer,--
+
+
+You are an insolent little fool, and I'll thrash you within an inch of
+your life.
+
+ROBERT BUTT.
+
+
+After the receipt of that polite epistle, Kenelm Chillingly's scruples
+vanished, and he took daily lessons in muscular Christianity.
+
+Kenelm returned to school with a brow cleared from care, and three days
+after his return he wrote to the Reverend John,--
+
+
+DEAR SIR,--I have licked Butt. Knowledge is power.
+
+Your affectionate KENELM.
+
+P. S.--Now that I have licked Butt, I have made it up with him.
+
+
+From that time Kenelm prospered. Eulogistic letters from the illustrious
+head-master showered in upon Sir Peter. At the age of sixteen Kenelm
+Chillingly was the head of the school, and, quitting it finally,
+brought home the following letter from his Orbilius to Sir Peter, marked
+"confidential":--
+
+
+DEAR SIR PETER CHILLINGLY,--I have never felt more anxious for the
+future career of any of my pupils than I do for that of your son. He is
+so clever that, with ease to himself, he may become a great man. He is
+so peculiar that it is quite as likely that he may only make himself
+known to the world as a great oddity. That distinguished teacher Dr.
+Arnold said that the difference between one boy and another was not so
+much talent as energy. Your son has talent, has energy: yet he wants
+something for success in life; he wants the faculty of amalgamation. He
+is of a melancholic and therefore unsocial temperament. He will not act
+in concert with others. He is lovable enough: the other boys like him,
+especially the smaller ones, with whom he is a sort of hero; but he
+has not one intimate friend. So far as school learning is concerned,
+he might go to college at once, and with the certainty of distinction
+provided he chose to exert himself. But if I may venture to offer an
+advice, I should say employ the next two years in letting him see
+a little more of real life and acquire a due sense of its practical
+objects. Send him to a private tutor who is not a pedant, but a man
+of letters or a man of the world, and if in the metropolis so much the
+better. In a word, my young friend is unlike other people; and, with
+qualities that might do anything in life, I fear, unless you can get
+him to be like other people, that he will do nothing. Excuse the freedom
+with which I write, and ascribe it to the singular interest with which
+your son has inspired me. I have the honour to be, dear Sir Peter,
+
+Yours truly, WILLIAM HORTON.
+
+
+Upon the strength of this letter Sir Peter did not indeed summon another
+family council; for he did not consider that his three maiden sisters
+could offer any practical advice on the matter. And as to Mr. Gordon,
+that gentleman having gone to law on the great timber question, and
+having been signally beaten thereon, had informed Sir Peter that he
+disowned him as a cousin and despised him as a man; not exactly in those
+words,--more covertly, and therefore more stingingly. But Sir Peter
+invited Mr. Mivers for a week's shooting, and requested the Reverend
+John to meet him.
+
+Mr. Mivers arrived. The sixteen years that had elapsed since he was
+first introduced to the reader had made no perceptible change in his
+appearance. It was one of his maxims that in youth a man of the world
+should appear older than he is; and in middle age, and thence to his
+dying day, younger. And he announced one secret for attaining that art
+in these words: "Begin your wig early, thus you never become gray."
+
+Unlike most philosophers, Mivers made his practice conform to his
+precepts; and while in the prime of youth inaugurated a wig in a
+fashion that defied the flight of time, not curly and hyacinthine, but
+straight-haired and unassuming. He looked five-and-thirty from the day
+he put on that wig at the age of twenty-five. He looked five-and-thirty
+now at the age of fifty-one.
+
+"I mean," said he, "to remain thirty-five all my life. No better age to
+stick at. People may choose to say I am more, but I shall not own it. No
+one is bound to criminate himself."
+
+Mr. Mivers had some other aphorisms on this important subject. One
+was, "Refuse to be ill. Never tell people you are ill; never own it to
+yourself. Illness is one of those things which a man should resist on
+principle at the onset. It should never be allowed to get in the thin
+end of the wedge. But take care of your constitution, and, having
+ascertained the best habits for it, keep to them like clockwork." Mr.
+Mivers would not have missed his constitutional walk in the Park before
+breakfast if, by going in a cab to St. Giles's, he could have saved the
+city of London from conflagration.
+
+Another aphorism of his was, "If you want to keep young, live in a
+metropolis; never stay above a few weeks at a time in the country. Take
+two men of similar constitution at the age of twenty-five; let one live
+in London and enjoy a regular sort of club life; send the other to some
+rural district, preposterously called 'salubrious.' Look at these men
+when they have both reached the age of forty-five. The London man has
+preserved his figure: the rural man has a paunch. The London man has
+an interesting delicacy of complexion: the face of the rural man is
+coarse-grained and perhaps jowly."
+
+A third axiom was, "Don't be a family man; nothing ages one like
+matrimonial felicity and paternal ties. Never multiply cares, and pack
+up your life in the briefest compass you can. Why add to your carpet-bag
+of troubles the contents of a lady's imperials and bonnet-boxes, and the
+travelling _fourgon_ required by the nursery? Shun ambition: it is so
+gouty. It takes a great deal out of a man's life, and gives him nothing
+worth having till he has ceased to enjoy it." Another of his aphorisms
+was this, "A fresh mind keeps the body fresh. Take in the ideas of the
+day, drain off those of yesterday. As to the morrow, time enough to
+consider it when it becomes to-day."
+
+Preserving himself by attention to these rules, Mr. Mivers appeared at
+Exmundham _totus, teres_, but not _rotundus_,--a man of middle height,
+slender, upright, with well-cut, small, slight features, thin lips,
+enclosing an excellent set of teeth, even, white, and not indebted
+to the dentist. For the sake of those teeth he shunned acid wines,
+especially hock in all its varieties, culinary sweets, and hot drinks.
+He drank even his tea cold.
+
+"There are," he said, "two things in life that a sage must preserve at
+every sacrifice, the coats of his stomach and the enamel of his teeth.
+Some evils admit of consolations: there are no comforters for dyspepsia
+and toothache." A man of letters, but a man of the world, he had so
+cultivated his mind as both that he was feared as the one and liked as
+the other. As a man of letters he despised the world; as a man of the
+world he despised letters. As the representative of both he revered
+himself.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ON the evening of the third day from the arrival of Mr. Mivers, he, the
+Parson, and Sir Peter were seated in the host's parlour, the Parson in
+an armchair by the ingle, smoking a short cutty-pipe; Mivers at length
+on the couch, slowly inhaling the perfumes of one of his own choice
+_trabucos_. Sir Peter never smoked. There were spirits and hot water and
+lemons on the table. The Parson was famed for skill in the composition
+of toddy. From time to time the Parson sipped his glass, and Sir Peter
+less frequently did the same. It is needless to say that Mr. Mivers
+eschewed toddy; but beside him, on a chair, was a tumbler and a large
+carafe of iced water.
+
+SIR PETER.--"Cousin Mivers, you have now had time to study Kenelm,
+and to compare his character with that assigned to him in the Doctor's
+letter."
+
+MIVERS (languidly).--"Ay."
+
+SIR PETER.--"I ask you, as a man of the world, what you think I had
+best do with the boy. Shall I send him to such a tutor as the Doctor
+suggests? Cousin John is not of the same mind as the Doctor, and thinks
+that Kenelm's oddities are fine things in their way, and should not be
+prematurely ground out of him by contact with worldly tutors and London
+pavements."
+
+"Ay," repeated Mr. Mivers more languidly than before. After a pause he
+added, "Parson John, let us hear you."
+
+The Parson laid aside his cutty-pipe and emptied his fourth tumbler of
+toddy; then, throwing back his head in the dreamy fashion of the great
+Coleridge when he indulged in a monologue, he thus began, speaking
+somewhat through his nose,--
+
+"At the morning of life--"
+
+Here Mivers shrugged his shoulders, turned round on his couch, and
+closed his eyes with the sigh of a man resigning himself to a homily.
+
+"At the morning of life, when the dews--"
+
+"I knew the dews were coming," said Mivers. "Dry them, if you please;
+nothing so unwholesome. We anticipate what you mean to say, which is
+plainly this, When a fellow is sixteen he is very fresh: so he is; pass
+on; what then?"
+
+"If you mean to interrupt me with your habitual cynicism," said the
+Parson, "why did you ask to hear me?"
+
+"That was a mistake I grant; but who on earth could conceive that you
+were going to commence in that florid style? Morning of life indeed!
+bosh!"
+
+"Cousin Mivers," said Sir Peter, "you are not reviewing John's style in
+'The Londoner;' and I will beg you to remember that my son's morning of
+life is a serious thing to his father, and not to be nipped in its bud
+by a cousin. Proceed, John!"
+
+Quoth the Parson, good-humouredly, "I will adapt my style to the taste
+of my critic. When a fellow is at the age of sixteen, and very fresh
+to life, the question is whether he should begin thus prematurely to
+exchange the ideas that belong to youth for the ideas that properly
+belong to middle age,--whether he should begin to acquire that knowledge
+of the world which middle-aged men have acquired and can teach. I think
+not. I would rather have him yet a while in the company of the poets;
+in the indulgence of glorious hopes and beautiful dreams, forming to
+himself some type of the Heroic, which he will keep before his eyes as
+a standard when he goes into the world as man. There are two schools of
+thought for the formation of character,--the Real and the Ideal. I would
+form the character in the Ideal school, in order to make it bolder and
+grander and lovelier when it takes its place in that every-day life
+which is called Real. And therefore I am not for placing the descendant
+of Sir Kenelm Digby, in the interval between school and college, with a
+man of the world, probably as cynical as Cousin Mivers and living in the
+stony thoroughfares of London."
+
+MR. MIVERS (rousing himself).--"Before we plunge into that Serbonian
+bog--the controversy between the Realistic and the Idealistic
+academicians--I think the first thing to decide is what you want Kenelm
+to be hereafter. When I order a pair of shoes, I decide beforehand what
+kind of shoes they are to be,--court pumps or strong walking shoes;
+and I don't ask the shoemaker to give me a preliminary lecture upon the
+different purposes of locomotion to which leather can be applied. If,
+Sir Peter, you want Kenelm to scribble lackadaisical poems, listen to
+Parson John; if you want to fill his head with pastoral rubbish about
+innocent love, which may end in marrying the miller's daughter, listen
+to Parson John; if you want him to enter life a soft-headed greenhorn,
+who will sign any bill carrying 50 per cent to which a young scamp asks
+him to be security, listen to Parson John; in fine, if you wish a clever
+lad to become either a pigeon or a ring-dove, a credulous booby or a
+sentimental milksop, Parson John is the best adviser you can have."
+
+"But I don't want my son to ripen into either of those imbecile
+developments of species."
+
+"Then don't listen to Parson John; and there's an end of the
+discussion."
+
+"No, there is not. I have not heard your advice what to do if John's
+advice is not to be taken."
+
+Mr. Mivers hesitated. He seemed puzzled.
+
+"The fact is," said the Parson, "that Mivers got up 'The Londoner'
+upon a principle that regulates his own mind,--find fault with the way
+everything is done, but never commit yourself by saying how anything can
+be done better."
+
+"That is true," said Mivers, candidly. "The destructive order of mind is
+seldom allied to the constructive. I and 'The Londoner' are destructive
+by nature and by policy. We can reduce a building into rubbish, but we
+don't profess to turn rubbish into a building. We are critics, and, as
+you say, not such fools as to commit ourselves to the proposition of
+amendments that can be criticised by others. Nevertheless, for your
+sake, Cousin Peter, and on the condition that if I give my advice you
+will never say that I gave it, and if you take it that you will never
+reproach me if it turns out, as most advice does, very ill,--I will
+depart from my custom and hazard my opinion."
+
+"I accept the conditions."
+
+"Well then, with every new generation there springs up a new order of
+ideas. The earlier the age at which a man seizes the ideas that will
+influence his own generation, the more he has a start in the race with
+his contemporaries. If Kenelm comprehends at sixteen those intellectual
+signs of the time which, when he goes up to college, he will find young
+men of eighteen or twenty only just _prepared_ to comprehend, he
+will produce a deep impression of his powers for reasoning and their
+adaptation to actual life, which will be of great service to him later.
+Now the ideas that influence the mass of the rising generation never
+have their well-head in the generation itself. They have their source in
+the generation before them, generally in a small minority, neglected or
+contemned by the great majority which adopt them later. Therefore a lad
+at the age of sixteen, if he wants to get at such ideas, must come
+into close contact with some superior mind in which they were conceived
+twenty or thirty years before. I am consequently for placing Kenelm with
+a person from whom the new ideas can be learned. I am also for his being
+placed in the metropolis during the process of this initiation. With
+such introductions as are at our command, he may come in contact not
+only with new ideas, but with eminent men in all vocations. It is a
+great thing to mix betimes with clever people. One picks their brains
+unconsciously. There is another advantage, and not a small one, in
+this early entrance into good society. A youth learns manners,
+self-possession, readiness of resource; and he is much less likely to
+get into scrapes and contract tastes for low vices and mean dissipation,
+when he comes into life wholly his own master, after having acquired
+a predilection for refined companionship under the guidance of those
+competent to select it. There, I have talked myself out of breath. And
+you had better decide at once in favour of my advice; for as I am of a
+contradictory temperament, myself of to-morrow may probably contradict
+myself of to-day."
+
+Sir Peter was greatly impressed with his cousin's argumentative
+eloquence.
+
+The Parson smoked his cutty-pipe in silence until appealed to by Sir
+Peter, and he then said, "In this programme of education for a Christian
+gentleman, the part of Christian seems to me left out."
+
+"The tendency of the age," observed Mr. Mivers, calmly, "is towards that
+omission. Secular education is the necessary reaction from the special
+theological training which arose in the dislike of one set of Christians
+to the teaching of another set; and as these antagonists will not agree
+how religion is to be taught, either there must be no teaching at all,
+or religion must be eliminated from the tuition."
+
+"That may do very well for some huge system of national education," said
+Sir Peter, "but it does not apply to Kenelm, as one of a family all of
+whose members belong to the Established Church. He may be taught the
+creed of his forefathers without offending a Dissenter."
+
+"Which Established Church is he to belong to?" asked Mr. Mivers,--"High
+Church, Low Church, Broad Church, Puseyite Church, Ritualistic Church,
+or any other Established Church that may be coming into fashion?"
+
+"Pshaw!" said the Parson. "That sneer is out of place. You know very
+well that one merit of our Church is the spirit of toleration, which
+does not magnify every variety of opinion into a heresy or a schism.
+But if Sir Peter sends his son at the age of sixteen to a tutor who
+eliminates the religion of Christianity from his teaching, he deserves
+to be thrashed within an inch of his life; and," continued the Parson,
+eying Sir Peter sternly, and mechanically turning up his cuffs, "I
+should _like_ to thrash him."
+
+"Gently, John," said Sir Peter, recoiling; "gently, my dear kinsman. My
+heir shall not be educated as a heathen, and Mivers is only bantering
+us. Come, Mivers, do you happen to know among your London friends some
+man who, though a scholar and a man of the world, is still a Christian?"
+
+"A Christian as by law established?"
+
+"Well--yes."
+
+"And who will receive Kenelm as a pupil?"
+
+"Of course I am not putting such questions to you out of idle
+curiosity."
+
+"I know exactly the man. He was originally intended for orders, and is
+a very learned theologian. He relinquished the thought of the clerical
+profession on succeeding to a small landed estate by the sudden death of
+an elder brother. He then came to London and bought experience: that
+is, he was naturally generous; he became easily taken in; got into
+difficulties; the estate was transferred to trustees for the benefit of
+creditors, and on the payment of L400 a year to himself. By this time
+he was married and had two children. He found the necessity of employing
+his pen in order to add to his income, and is one of the ablest
+contributors to the periodical press. He is an elegant scholar, an
+effective writer, much courted by public men, a thorough gentleman, has
+a pleasant house, and receives the best society. Having been once taken
+in, he defies any one to take him in again. His experience was not
+bought too dearly. No more acute and accomplished man of the world. The
+three hundred a year or so that you would pay for Kenelm would suit him
+very well. His name is Welby, and he lives in Chester Square."
+
+"No doubt he is a contributor to 'The Londoner,'" said the Parson,
+sarcastically.
+
+"True. He writes our classical, theological, and metaphysical articles.
+Suppose I invite him to come here for a day or two, and you can see him
+and judge for yourself, Sir Peter?"
+
+"Do."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MR. WELBY arrived, and pleased everybody. A man of the happiest manners,
+easy and courteous. There was no pedantry in him, yet you could soon see
+that his reading covered an extensive surface, and here and there
+had dived deeply. He enchanted the Parson by his comments on Saint
+Chrysostom; he dazzled Sir Peter with his lore in the antiquities of
+ancient Britain; he captivated Kenelm by his readiness to enter into
+that most disputatious of sciences called metaphysics; while for Lady
+Chillingly, and the three sisters who were invited to meet him, he was
+more entertaining, but not less instructive. Equally at home in novels
+and in good books, he gave to the spinsters a list of innocent works
+in either; while for Lady Chillingly he sparkled with anecdotes of
+fashionable life, the newest _bons mots_, the latest scandals. In fact,
+Mr. Welby was one of those brilliant persons who adorn any society
+amidst which they are thrown. If at heart he was a disappointed man,
+the disappointment was concealed by an even serenity of spirits; he
+had entertained high and justifiable hopes of a brilliant career and a
+lasting reputation as a theologian and a preacher; the succession to
+his estate at the age of twenty-three had changed the nature of his
+ambition. The charm of his manner was such that he sprang at once into
+the fashion, and became beguiled by his own genial temperament into that
+lesser but pleasanter kind of ambition which contents itself with social
+successes and enjoys the present hour. When his circumstances compelled
+him to eke out his income by literary profits, he slid into the grooves
+of periodical composition, and resigned all thoughts of the labour
+required for any complete work, which might take much time and be
+attended with scanty profits. He still remained very popular in society,
+and perhaps his general reputation for ability made him fearful to
+hazard it by any great undertaking. He was not, like Mivers, a despiser
+of all men and all things; but he regarded men and things as an
+indifferent though good-natured spectator regards the thronging streets
+from a drawing-room window. He could not be called _blase_, but he was
+thoroughly _desillusionne_. Once over-romantic, his character now was so
+entirely imbued with the neutral tints of life that romance offended his
+taste as an obtrusion of violent colour into a sober woof. He was become
+a thorough Realist in his code of criticism, and in his worldly mode
+of action and thought. But Parson John did not perceive this, for
+Welby listened to that gentleman's eulogies on the Ideal school without
+troubling himself to contradict them. He had grown too indolent to be
+combative in conversation, and only as a critic betrayed such pugnacity
+as remained to him by the polished cruelty of sarcasm.
+
+He came off with flying colours through an examination into his Church
+orthodoxy instituted by the Parson and Sir Peter. Amid a cloud of
+ecclesiastical erudition, his own opinions vanished in those of the
+Fathers. In truth, he was a Realist, in religion as in everything else.
+He regarded Christianity as a type of existent civilization, which
+ought to be reverenced, as one might recognize the other types of that
+civilization; such as the liberty of the press, the representative
+system, white neckcloths and black coats of an evening, etc. He
+belonged, therefore, to what he himself called the school of Eclectical
+Christiology; and accommodated the reasonings of Deism to the doctrines
+of the Church, if not as a creed, at least as an institution. Finally,
+he united all the Chillingly votes in his favour; and when he departed
+from the Hall carried off Kenelm for his initiation into the new ideas
+that were to govern his generation.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+KENELM remained a year and a half with this distinguished preceptor.
+During that time he learned much in book-lore; he saw much, too, of the
+eminent men of the day, in literature, the law, and the senate. He saw,
+also, a good deal of the fashionable world. Fine ladies, who had been
+friends of his mother in her youth, took him up, counselled and petted
+him,--one in especial, the Marchioness of Glenalvon, to whom he was
+endeared by grateful association, for her youngest son had been a
+fellow-pupil of Kenelm at Merton School, and Kenelm had saved his life
+from drowning. The poor boy died of consumption later, and her grief for
+his loss made her affection for Kenelm yet more tender. Lady Glenalvon
+was one of the queens of the London world. Though in the fiftieth
+year she was still very handsome: she was also very accomplished, very
+clever, and very kind-hearted, as some of such queens are; just one
+of those women invaluable in forming the manners and elevating the
+character of young men destined to make a figure in after-life. But she
+was very angry with herself in thinking that she failed to arouse any
+such ambition in the heir of the Chillinglys.
+
+It may here be said that Kenelm was not without great advantages of form
+and countenance. He was tall, and the youthful grace of his proportions
+concealed his physical strength, which was extraordinary rather from the
+iron texture than the bulk of his thews and sinews. His face, though it
+certainly lacked the roundness of youth, had a grave, sombre, haunting
+sort of beauty, not artistically regular, but picturesque, peculiar,
+with large dark expressive eyes, and a certain indescribable combination
+of sweetness and melancholy in his quiet smile. He never laughed
+audibly, but he had a quick sense of the comic, and his eye would laugh
+when his lips were silent. He would say queer, droll, unexpected things
+which passed for humour; but, save for that gleam in the eye, he could
+not have said them with more seeming innocence of intentional joke if he
+had been a monk of La Trappe looking up from the grave he was digging in
+order to utter "memento mori."
+
+That face of his was a great "take in." Women thought it full of
+romantic sentiment; the face of one easily moved to love, and whose love
+would be replete alike with poetry and passion. But he remained as proof
+as the youthful Hippolytus to all female attraction. He delighted the
+Parson by keeping up his practice in athletic pursuits; and obtained a
+reputation at the pugilistic school, which he attended regularly, as the
+best gentleman boxer about town.
+
+He made many acquaintances, but still formed no friendships. Yet every
+one who saw him much conceived affection for him. If he did not return
+that affection, he did not repel it. He was exceedingly gentle in voice
+and manner, and had all his father's placidity of temper: children and
+dogs took to him as by instinct.
+
+On leaving Mr. Welby's, Kenelm carried to Cambridge a mind largely
+stocked with the new ideas that were budding into leaf. He certainly
+astonished the other freshmen, and occasionally puzzled the mighty
+Fellows of Trinity and St. John's. But he gradually withdrew himself
+much from general society. In fact, he was too old in mind for his
+years; and after having mixed in the choicest circles of a metropolis,
+college suppers and wine parties had little charm for him. He maintained
+his pugilistic renown; and on certain occasions, when some delicate
+undergraduate had been bullied by some gigantic bargeman, his muscular
+Christianity nobly developed itself. He did not do as much as he might
+have done in the more intellectual ways of academical distinction.
+Still, he was always among the first in the college examinations; he won
+two university prizes, and took a very creditable degree, after which
+he returned home, more odd, more saturnine--in short, less like other
+people--than when he had left Merton School. He had woven a solitude
+round him out of his own heart, and in that solitude he sat still and
+watchful as a spider sits in his web.
+
+Whether from natural temperament or from his educational training under
+such teachers as Mr. Mivers, who carried out the new ideas of reform by
+revering nothing in the past, and Mr. Welby, who accepted the routine of
+the present as realistic, and pooh-poohed all visions of the future as
+idealistic, Kenelm's chief mental characteristic was a kind of tranquil
+indifferentism. It was difficult to detect in him either of those
+ordinary incentives to action,--vanity or ambition, the yearning for
+applause or the desire of power. To all female fascinations he had been
+hitherto star-proof. He had never experienced love, but he had read
+a good deal about it; and that passion seemed to him an unaccountable
+aberration of human reason, and an ignominious surrender of the
+equanimity of thought which it should be the object of masculine natures
+to maintain undisturbed. A very eloquent book in praise of celibacy, and
+entitled "The Approach to the Angels," written by that eminent Oxford
+scholar, Decimus Roach, had produced so remarkable an effect upon his
+youthful mind that, had he been a Roman Catholic, he might have become
+a monk. Where he most evinced ardour it was a logician's ardour for
+abstract truth; that is, for what he considered truth: and, as what
+seems truth to one man is sure to seem falsehood to some other man, this
+predilection of his was not without its inconveniences and dangers, as
+may probably be seen in the following chapter.
+
+Meanwhile, rightly to appreciate his conduct therein, I entreat thee, O
+candid reader (not that any reader ever is candid), to remember that he
+is brimful of new ideas, which, met by a deep and hostile undercurrent
+of old ideas, become more provocatively billowy and surging.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THERE had been great festivities at Exmundham, in celebration of the
+honour bestowed upon the world by the fact that Kenelm Chillingly had
+lived twenty-one years in it.
+
+The young heir had made a speech to the assembled tenants and other
+admitted revellers, which had by no means added to the exhilaration of
+the proceedings. He spoke with a fluency and self-possession which were
+surprising in a youth addressing a multitude for the first time. But his
+speech was not cheerful.
+
+The principal tenant on the estate, in proposing his health, had
+naturally referred to the long line of his ancestors. His father's
+merits as man and landlord had been enthusiastically commemorated; and
+many happy auguries for his own future career had been drawn, partly
+from the excellences of his parentage, partly from his own youthful
+promise in the honours achieved at the University.
+
+Kenelm Chillingly in reply largely availed himself of those new ideas
+which were to influence the rising generation, and with which he had
+been rendered familiar by the journal of Mr. Mivers and the conversation
+of Mr. Welby.
+
+He briefly disposed of the ancestral part of the question. He observed
+that it was singular to note how long any given family or dynasty could
+continue to flourish in any given nook of matter in creation, without
+any exhibition of intellectual powers beyond those displayed by a
+succession of vegetable crops. "It is certainly true," he said, "that
+the Chillinglys have lived in this place from father to son for about a
+fourth part of the history of the world, since the date which Sir Isaac
+Newton assigns to the Deluge. But, so far as can be judged by existent
+records, the world has not been in any way wiser or better for their
+existence. They were born to eat as long as they could eat, and when
+they could eat no longer they died. Not that in this respect they were
+a whit less insignificant than the generality of their fellow-creatures.
+Most of us now present," continued the youthful orator, "are only born
+in order to die; and the chief consolation of our wounded pride in
+admitting this fact is in the probability that our posterity will not
+be of more consequence to the scheme of Nature than we ourselves are."
+Passing from that philosophical view of his own ancestors in particular,
+and of the human race in general, Kenelm Chillingly then touched with
+serene analysis on the eulogies lavished on his father as man and
+landlord.
+
+"As man," he said, "my father no doubt deserves all that can be said
+by man in favour of man. But what, at the best, is man? A crude,
+struggling, undeveloped embryo, of whom it is the highest attribute that
+he feels a vague consciousness that he is only an embryo, and cannot
+complete himself till he ceases to be a man; that is, until he becomes
+another being in another form of existence. We can praise a dog as
+a dog, because a dog is a completed _ens_, and not an embryo. But to
+praise a man as man, forgetting that he is only a germ out of which a
+form wholly different is ultimately to spring, is equally opposed
+to Scriptural belief in his present crudity and imperfection, and to
+psychological or metaphysical examination of a mental construction
+evidently designed for purposes that he can never fulfil as man. That my
+father is an embryo not more incomplete than any present is quite true;
+but that, you will see on reflection, is saying very little on his
+behalf. Even in the boasted physical formation of us men, you are
+aware that the best-shaped amongst us, according to the last scientific
+discoveries, is only a development of some hideous hairy animal, such
+as a gorilla; and the ancestral gorilla itself had its own aboriginal
+forefather in a small marine animal shaped like a two-necked bottle. The
+probability is that, some day or other, we shall be exterminated by a
+new development of species.
+
+"As for the merits assigned to my father as landlord, I must
+respectfully dissent from the panegyrics so rashly bestowed on him. For
+all sound reasoners must concur in this, that the first duty of an owner
+of land is not to the occupiers to whom he leases it, but to the nation
+at large. It is his duty to see that the land yields to the community
+the utmost it can yield. In order to effect this object, a landlord
+should put up his farms to competition, exacting the highest rent he can
+possibly get from responsible competitors. Competitive examination is
+the enlightened order of the day, even in professions in which the best
+men would have qualities that defy examination. In agriculture, happily,
+the principle of competitive examination is not so hostile to the choice
+of the best man as it must be, for instance, in diplomacy, where a
+Talleyrand would be excluded for knowing no language but his own; and
+still more in the army, where promotion would be denied to an officer
+who, like Marlborough, could not spell. But in agriculture a landlord
+has only to inquire who can give the highest rent, having the largest
+capital, subject by the strictest penalties of law to the conditions of
+a lease dictated by the most scientific agriculturists under penalties
+fixed by the most cautious conveyancers. By this mode of procedure,
+recommended by the most liberal economists of our age,--barring those
+still more liberal who deny that property in land is any property at
+all,--by this mode of procedure, I say, a landlord does his duty to his
+country. He secures tenants who can produce the most to the community by
+their capital, tested through competitive examination in their bankers'
+accounts and the security they can give, and through the rigidity of
+covenants suggested by a Liebig and reduced into law by a Chitty. But on
+my father's land I see a great many tenants with little skill and less
+capital, ignorant of a Liebig and revolting from a Chitty, and no
+filial enthusiasm can induce me honestly to say that my father is a good
+landlord. He has preferred his affection for individuals to his duties
+to the community. It is not, my friends, a question whether a handful of
+farmers like yourselves go to the workhouse or not. It is a consumer's
+question. Do you produce the maximum of corn to the consumer?
+
+"With respect to myself," continued the orator, warming as the cold
+he had engendered in his audience became more freezingly felt,--"with
+respect to myself, I do not deny that, owing to the accident of training
+for a very faulty and contracted course of education, I have obtained
+what are called 'honours' at the University of Cambridge; but you must
+not regard that fact as a promise of any worth in my future passage
+through life. Some of the most useless persons--especially narrow-minded
+and bigoted--have acquired far higher honours at the University than
+have fallen to my lot.
+
+"I thank you no less for the civil things you have said of me and of my
+family; but I shall endeavour to walk to that grave to which we are all
+bound with a tranquil indifference as to what people may say of me in
+so short a journey. And the sooner, my friends, we get to our journey's
+end, the better our chance of escaping a great many pains, troubles,
+sins, and diseases. So that when I drink to your good healths, you must
+feel that in reality I wish you an early deliverance from the ills to
+which flesh is exposed, and which so generally increase with our years
+that good health is scarcely compatible with the decaying faculties of
+old age. Gentlemen, your good healths!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE morning after these birthday rejoicings, Sir Peter and Lady
+Chillingly held a long consultation on the peculiarities of their heir,
+and the best mode of instilling into his mind the expediency either
+of entertaining more pleasing views, or at least of professing less
+unpopular sentiments; compatibly of course, though they did not say it,
+with the new ideas that were to govern his century. Having come to an
+agreement on this delicate subject, they went forth, arm in arm, in
+search of their heir. Kenelm seldom met them at breakfast. He was an
+early riser, and accustomed to solitary rambles before his parents were
+out of bed.
+
+The worthy pair found Kenelm seated on the banks of a trout-stream that
+meandered through Chillingly Park, dipping his line into the water, and
+yawning, with apparent relief in that operation.
+
+"Does fishing amuse you, my boy?" said Sir Peter, heartily.
+
+"Not in the least, sir," answered Kenelm.
+
+"Then why do you do it?" asked Lady Chillingly.
+
+"Because I know nothing else that amuses me more."
+
+"Ah! that is it," said Sir Peter: "the whole secret of Kenelm's oddities
+is to be found in these words, my dear; he needs amusement. Voltaire
+says truly, 'Amusement is one of the wants of man.' And if Kenelm could
+be amused like other people, he would be like other people."
+
+"In that case," said Kenelm, gravely, and extracting from the water
+a small but lively trout, which settled itself in Lady Chillingly's
+lap,--"in that case I would rather not be amused. I have no interest
+in the absurdities of other people. The instinct of self-preservation
+compels me to have some interest in my own."
+
+"Kenelm, sir," exclaimed Lady Chillingly, with an animation into which
+her tranquil ladyship was very rarely betrayed, "take away that horrid
+damp thing! Put down your rod and attend to what your father says. Your
+strange conduct gives us cause of serious anxiety."
+
+Kenelm unhooked the trout, deposited the fish in his basket, and raising
+his large eyes to his father's face, said, "What is there in my conduct
+that occasions you displeasure?"
+
+"Not displeasure, Kenelm," said Sir Peter, kindly, "but anxiety; your
+mother has hit upon the right word. You see, my dear son, that it is
+my wish that you should distinguish yourself in the world. You might
+represent this county, as your ancestors have done before. I have looked
+forward to the proceedings of yesterday as an admirable occasion for
+your introduction to your future constituents. Oratory is the talent
+most appreciated in a free country, and why should you not be an orator?
+Demosthenes says that delivery, delivery, delivery, is the art of
+oratory; and your delivery is excellent, graceful, self-possessed,
+classical."
+
+"Pardon me, my dear father, Demosthenes does not say delivery,
+nor action, as the word is commonly rendered; he says, 'acting, or
+stage-play,'--the art by which a man delivers a speech in a feigned
+character, whence we get the word hypocrisy. Hypocrisy, hypocrisy,
+hypocrisy! is, according to Demosthenes, the triple art of the orator.
+Do you wish me to become triply a hypocrite?"
+
+"Kenelm, I am ashamed of you. You know as well as I do that it is only
+by metaphor that you can twist the word ascribed to the great Athenian
+into the sense of hypocrisy. But assuming it, as you say, to mean not
+delivery, but acting, I understand why your debut as an orator was
+not successful. Your delivery was excellent, your acting defective.
+An orator should please, conciliate, persuade, prepossess. You did the
+reverse of all this; and though you produced a great effect, the effect
+was so decidedly to your disadvantage that it would have lost you an
+election on any hustings in England."
+
+"Am I to understand, my dear father," said Kenelm, in the mournful and
+compassionate tones with which a pious minister of the Church reproves
+some abandoned and hoary sinner,--"am I to understand that you would
+commend to your son the adoption of deliberate falsehood for the gain of
+a selfish advantage?"
+
+"Deliberate falsehood! you impertinent puppy!"
+
+"Puppy!" repeated Kenelm, not indignantly but musingly,--"puppy! a
+well-bred puppy takes after its parents."
+
+Sir Peter burst out laughing.
+
+Lady Chillingly rose with dignity, shook her gown, unfolded her parasol,
+and stalked away speechless.
+
+"Now, look you, Kenelm," said Sir Peter, as soon as he had composed
+himself. "These quips and humours of yours are amusing enough to an
+eccentric man like myself, but they will not do for the world; and
+how at your age, and with the rare advantages you have had in an early
+introduction to the best intellectual society, under the guidance of a
+tutor acquainted with the new ideas which are to influence the
+conduct of statesmen, you could have made so silly a speech as you did
+yesterday, I cannot understand."
+
+"My dear father, allow me to assure you that the ideas I expressed are
+the new ideas most in vogue,--ideas expressed in still plainer, or, if
+you prefer the epithet, still sillier terms than I employed. You will
+find them instilled into the public mind by 'The Londoner' and by most
+intellectual journals of a liberal character."
+
+"Kenelm, Kenelm, such ideas would turn the world topsy-turvy."
+
+"New ideas always do tend to turn old ideas topsy-turvy. And the world,
+after all, is only an idea, which is turned topsy-turvy with every
+successive century."
+
+"You make me sick of the word 'ideas.' Leave off your metaphysics and
+study real life."
+
+"It is real life which I did study under Mr. Welby. He is the
+Archimandrite of Realism. It is sham life which you wish me to study. To
+oblige you I am willing to commence it. I dare say it is very pleasant.
+Real life is not; on the contrary--dull," and Kenelm yawned again.
+
+"Have you no young friends among your fellow-collegians?"
+
+"Friends! certainly not, sir. But I believe I have some enemies, who
+answer the same purpose as friends, only they don't hurt one so much."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you lived alone at Cambridge?"
+
+"No, I lived a good deal with Aristophanes, and a little with Conic
+Sections and Hydrostatics."
+
+"Books. Dry company."
+
+"More innocent, at least, than moist company. Did you ever get drunk,
+sir?"
+
+"Drunk!"
+
+"I tried to do so once with the young companions whom you would commend
+to me as friends. I don't think I succeeded, but I woke with a headache.
+Real life at college abounds with headache."
+
+"Kenelm, my boy, one thing is clear: you must travel."
+
+"As you please, sir. Marcus Antoninus says that it is all one to a stone
+whether it be thrown upwards or downwards. When shall I start?"
+
+"Very soon. Of course there are preparations to make; you should have a
+travelling companion. I don't mean a tutor,--you are too clever and
+too steady to need one,--but a pleasant, sensible, well-mannered young
+person of your own age."
+
+"My own age,--male or female?"
+
+Sir Peter tried hard to frown. The utmost he could do was to reply
+gravely, "FEMALE! If I said you were too steady to need a tutor, it was
+because you have hitherto seemed little likely to be led out of your
+way by female allurements. Among your other studies may I inquire if you
+have included that which no man has ever yet thoroughly mastered,--the
+study of women?"
+
+"Certainly. Do you object to my catching another trout?"
+
+"Trout be--blessed, or the reverse. So you have studied woman. I should
+never have thought it. Where and when did you commence that department
+of science?"
+
+"When? ever since I was ten years old. Where? first in your own house,
+then at college. Hush!--a bite," and another trout left its native
+element and alighted on Sir Peter's nose, whence it was solemnly
+transferred to the basket.
+
+"At ten years old, and in my own house! That flaunting hussy Jane, the
+under-housemaid--"
+
+"Jane! No, sir. Pamela, Miss Byron, Clarissa,--females in Richardson,
+who, according to Dr. Johnson, 'taught the passions to move at the
+command of virtue.' I trust for your sake that Dr. Johnson did not err
+in that assertion, for I found all these females at night in your own
+private apartments."
+
+"Oh!" said Sir Peter, "that's all?"
+
+"All I remember at ten years old," replied Kenelm.
+
+"And at Mr. Welby's or at college," proceeded Sir Peter, timorously,
+"was your acquaintance with females of the same kind?"
+
+Kenelm shook his head. "Much worse: they were very naughty indeed at
+college."
+
+"I should think so, with such a lot of young fellows running after
+them."
+
+"Very few fellows run after the females. I mean--rather avoid them."
+
+"So much the better."
+
+"No, my father, so much the worse; without an intimate knowledge of
+those females there is little use going to college at all."
+
+"Explain yourself."
+
+"Every one who receives a classical education is introduced into their
+society,--Pyrrha and Lydia, Glycera and Corinna, and many more of the
+same sort; and then the females in Aristophanes, what do you say to
+them, sir?"
+
+"Is it only females who lived two thousand or three thousand years ago,
+or more probably never lived at all, whose intimacy you have cultivated?
+Have you never admired any real women?"
+
+"Real women! I never met one. Never met a woman who was not a sham,
+a sham from the moment she is told to be pretty-behaved, conceal her
+sentiments, and look fibs when she does not speak them. But if I am to
+learn sham life, I suppose I must put up with sham women."
+
+"Have you been crossed in love that you speak so bitterly of the sex?"
+
+"I don't speak bitterly of the sex. Examine any woman on her oath, and
+she'll own she is a sham, always has been, and always will be, and is
+proud of it."
+
+"I am glad your mother is not by to hear you. You will think differently
+one of these days. Meanwhile, to turn to the other sex, is there no
+young man of your own rank with whom you would like to travel?"
+
+"Certainly not. I hate quarrelling."
+
+"As you please. But you cannot go quite alone: I will find you a good
+travelling-servant. I must write to town to-day about your preparations,
+and in another week or so I hope all will be ready. Your allowance will
+be whatever you like to fix it at; you have never been extravagant,
+and--boy--I love you. Amuse yourself, enjoy yourself, and come back
+cured of your oddities, but preserving your honour."
+
+Sir Peter bent down and kissed his son's brow. Kenelm was moved; he
+rose, put his arm round his father's shoulder, and lovingly said, in
+an undertone, "If ever I am tempted to do a base thing, may I remember
+whose son I am: I shall be safe then." He withdrew his arm as he said
+this, and took his solitary way along the banks of the stream, forgetful
+of rod and line.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE young man continued to skirt the side of the stream until he reached
+the boundary pale of the park. Here, placed on a rough grass mound,
+some former proprietor, of a social temperament, had built a kind of
+belvidere, so as to command a cheerful view of the high road below.
+Mechanically the heir of the Chillinglys ascended the mound, seated
+himself within the belvidere, and leaned his chin on his hand in a
+thoughtful attitude. It was rarely that the building was honoured by a
+human visitor: its habitual occupants were spiders. Of those industrious
+insects it was a well-populated colony. Their webs, darkened with
+dust and ornamented with the wings and legs and skeletons of many an
+unfortunate traveller, clung thick to angle and window-sill, festooned
+the rickety table on which the young man leaned his elbow, and described
+geometrical circles and rhomboids between the gaping rails that formed
+the backs of venerable chairs. One large black spider--who was probably
+the oldest inhabitant, and held possession of the best place by the
+window, ready to offer perfidious welcome to every winged itinerant
+who might be tempted to turn aside from the high road for the sake of
+a little cool and repose--rushed from its innermost penetralia at the
+entrance of Kenelm, and remained motionless in the centre of its meshes,
+staring at him. It did not seem quite sure whether the stranger was too
+big or not.
+
+"It is a wonderful proof of the wisdom of Providence," said Kenelm,
+"that whenever any large number of its creatures forms a community
+or class, a secret element of disunion enters into the hearts of the
+individuals forming the congregation, and prevents their co-operating
+heartily and effectually for their common interest. 'The fleas would
+have dragged me out of bed if they had been unanimous,' said the great
+Mr. Curran; and there can be no doubt that if all the spiders in this
+commonwealth would unite to attack me in a body, I should fall a victim
+to their combined nippers. But spiders, though inhabiting the same
+region, constituting the same race, animated by the same instincts,
+do not combine even against a butterfly: each seeks his own special
+advantage, and not that of the community at large. And how completely
+the life of each thing resembles a circle in this respect, that it can
+never touch another circle at more than one point. Nay, I doubt if it
+quite touches it even there,--there is a space between every atom; self
+is always selfish: and yet there are eminent masters in the Academe of
+New Ideas who wish to make us believe that all the working classes of a
+civilized world could merge every difference of race, creed, intellect,
+individual propensities and interests into the construction of a single
+web, stocked as a larder in common!" Here the soliloquist came to a dead
+stop, and, leaning out of the window, contemplated the high road. It was
+a very fine high road, straight and level, kept in excellent order by
+turn pikes at every eight miles. A pleasant greensward bordered it on
+either side, and under the belvidere the benevolence of some mediaeval
+Chillingly had placed a little drinking-fountain for the refreshment of
+wayfarers. Close to the fountain stood a rude stone bench, overshadowed
+by a large willow, and commanding from the high table-ground on which
+it was placed a wide view of cornfields, meadows, and distant hills,
+suffused in the mellow light of the summer sun. Along that road there
+came successively a wagon filled with passengers seated on straw,--an
+old woman, a pretty girl, two children; then a stout farmer going to
+market in his dog-cart; then three flies carrying fares to the nearest
+railway station; then a handsome young man on horseback, a handsome
+young lady by his side, a groom behind. It was easy to see that the
+young man and young lady were lovers. See it in his ardent looks and
+serious lips parted but for whispers only to be heard by her; see it
+in her downcast eyes and heightened colour. "'Alas! regardless of
+their doom,'" muttered Kenelm, "what trouble those 'little victims'
+are preparing for themselves and their progeny! Would I could lend them
+Decimus Roach's 'Approach to the Angels'!" The road now for some minutes
+became solitary and still, when there was heard to the right a sprightly
+sort of carol, half sung, half recited, in musical voice, with a
+singularly clear enunciation, so that the words reached Kenelm's ear
+distinctly. They ran thus:--
+
+
+ "Black Karl looked forth from his cottage door,
+ He looked on the forest green;
+ And down the path, with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Neirestein:
+ Singing, singing, lustily singing,
+ Down the path with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Neirestein."
+
+
+At a voice so English, attuned to a strain so Germanic, Kenelm pricked
+up attentive ears, and, turning his eye down the road, beheld, emerging
+from the shade of beeches that overhung the park pales, a figure that
+did not altogether harmonize with the idea of a Ritter of Neirestein. It
+was, nevertheless, a picturesque figure enough. The man was attired in a
+somewhat threadbare suit of Lincoln green, with a high-crowned Tyrolese
+hat; a knapsack was slung behind his shoulders, and he was attended by a
+white Pomeranian dog, evidently foot-sore, but doing his best to appear
+proficient in the chase by limping some yards in advance of his master,
+and sniffing into the hedges for rats and mice, and such small deer.
+
+By the time the pedestrian had reached to the close of his refrain he
+had gained the fountain, and greeted it with an exclamation of pleasure.
+Slipping the knapsack from his shoulder, he filled the iron ladle
+attached to the basin. He then called the dog by the name of Max, and
+held the ladle for him to drink. Not till the animal had satisfied his
+thirst did the master assuage his own. Then, lifting his hat and bathing
+his temples and face, the pedestrian seated himself on the bench,
+and the dog nestled on the turf at his feet. After a little pause the
+wayfarer began again, though in a lower and slower tone, to chant his
+refrain, and proceeded, with abrupt snatches, to link the verse on
+to another stanza. It was evident that he was either endeavouring to
+remember or to invent, and it seemed rather like the latter and more
+laborious operation of mind.
+
+
+ "'Why on foot, why on foot, Ritter Karl,' quoth he,
+ 'And not on thy palfrey gray?'
+
+
+Palfrey gray--hum--gray.
+
+
+ "'The run of ill-luck was too strong for me,
+ 'And has galloped my steed away.'
+
+
+That will do: good!"
+
+"Good indeed! He is easily satisfied," muttered Kenelm. "But such
+pedestrians don't pass the road every day. Let us talk to him." So
+saying he slipped quietly out of the window, descended the mound,
+and letting himself into the road by a screened wicket-gate, took his
+noiseless stand behind the wayfarer and beneath the bowery willow.
+
+The man had now sunk into silence. Perhaps he had tired himself of
+rhymes; or perhaps the mechanism of verse-making had been replaced by
+that kind of sentiment, or that kind of revery, which is common to the
+temperaments of those who indulge in verse-making. But the loveliness
+of the scene before him had caught his eye, and fixed it into an intent
+gaze upon wooded landscapes stretching farther and farther to the range
+of hills on which the heaven seemed to rest.
+
+"I should like to hear the rest of that German ballad," said a voice,
+abruptly.
+
+The wayfarer started, and, turning round, presented to Kenelm's view
+a countenance in the ripest noon of manhood, with locks and beard of a
+deep rich auburn, bright blue eyes, and a wonderful nameless charm both
+of feature and expression, very cheerful, very frank, and not without a
+certain nobleness of character which seemed to exact respect.
+
+"I beg your pardon for my interruption," said Kenelm, lifting his hat:
+"but I overheard you reciting; and though I suppose your verses are a
+translation from the German, I don't remember anything like them in such
+popular German poets as I happen to have read."
+
+"It is not a translation, sir," replied the itinerant. "I was only
+trying to string together some ideas that came into my head this fine
+morning."
+
+"You are a poet, then?" said Kenelm, seating himself on the bench.
+
+"I dare not say poet. I am a verse-maker."
+
+"Sir, I know there is a distinction. Many poets of the present day,
+considered very good, are uncommonly bad verse-makers. For my part, I
+could more readily imagine them to be good poets if they did not make
+verses at all. But can I not hear the rest of the ballad?"
+
+"Alas! the rest of the ballad is not yet made. It is rather a long
+subject, and my flights are very brief."
+
+"That is much in their favour, and very unlike the poetry in fashion.
+You do not belong, I think, to this neighbourhood. Are you and your dog
+travelling far?"
+
+"It is my holiday time, and I ramble on through the summer. I am
+travelling far, for I travel till September. Life amid summer fields is
+a very joyous thing."
+
+"Is it indeed?" said Kenelm, with much _naivete_. "I should have thought
+that long before September you would have got very much bored with the
+fields and the dog and yourself altogether. But, to be sure, you
+have the resource of verse-making, and that seems a very pleasant and
+absorbing occupation to those who practise it,--from our old friend
+Horace, kneading laboured Alcaics into honey in his summer rambles among
+the watered woodlands of Tibur, to Cardinal Richelieu, employing himself
+on French rhymes in the intervals between chopping off noblemen's heads.
+It does not seem to signify much whether the verses be good or bad,
+so far as the pleasure of the verse-maker himself is concerned; for
+Richelieu was as much charmed with his occupation as Horace was, and his
+verses were certainly not Horatian."
+
+"Surely at your age, sir, and with your evident education--"
+
+"Say culture; that's the word in fashion nowadays."
+
+"Well, your evident culture, you must have made verses."
+
+"Latin verses, yes; and occasionally Greek. I was obliged to do so at
+school. It did not amuse me."
+
+"Try English."
+
+Kenelm shook his head. "Not I. Every cobbler should stick to his last."
+
+"Well, put aside the verse-making: don't you find a sensible
+enjoyment in those solitary summer walks, when you have Nature all to
+yourself,--enjoyment in marking all the mobile evanescent changes in her
+face,--her laugh, her smile, her tears, her very frown!"
+
+"Assuming that by Nature you mean a mechanical series of external
+phenomena, I object to your speaking of a machinery as if it were a
+person of the feminine gender,--_her_ laugh, _her_ smile, etc. As
+well talk of the laugh and smile of a steam-engine. But to descend to
+common-sense. I grant there is some pleasure in solitary rambles in fine
+weather and amid varying scenery. You say that it is a holiday excursion
+that you are enjoying. I presume, therefore, that you have some
+practical occupation which consumes the time that you do not devote to a
+holiday?"
+
+"Yes; I am not altogether an idler. I work sometimes, though not so hard
+as I ought. 'Life is earnest,' as the poet says. But I and my dog are
+rested now, and as I have still a long walk before me I must wish you
+good-day."
+
+"I fear," said Kenelm, with a grave and sweet politeness of tone and
+manner, which he could command at times, and which, in its difference
+from merely conventional urbanity, was not without fascination,--"I
+fear that I have offended you by a question that must have seemed to you
+inquisitive, perhaps impertinent; accept my excuse: it is very rarely
+that I meet any one who interests me; and you do." As he spoke he
+offered his hand, which the wayfarer shook very cordially.
+
+"I should be a churl indeed if your question could have given me
+offence. It is rather perhaps I who am guilty of impertinence, if I
+take advantage of my seniority in years and tender you a counsel. Do not
+despise Nature or regard her as a steam-engine; you will find in her
+a very agreeable and conversable friend if you will cultivate her
+intimacy. And I don't know a better mode of doing so at your age, and
+with your strong limbs, than putting a knapsack on your shoulders and
+turning foot-traveller like myself."
+
+"Sir, I thank you for your counsel; and I trust we may meet again
+and interchange ideas as to the thing you call Nature,--a thing which
+science and art never appear to see with the same eyes. If to an artist
+Nature has a soul, why, so has a steam-engine. Art gifts with soul all
+matter that it contemplates: science turns all that is already gifted
+with soul into matter. Good-day, sir."
+
+Here Kenelm turned back abruptly, and the traveller went his way,
+silently and thoughtfully.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+KENELM retraced his steps homeward under the shade of his "old
+hereditary trees." One might have thought his path along the
+greenswards, and by the side of the babbling rivulet, was pleasanter and
+more conducive to peaceful thoughts than the broad, dusty thoroughfare
+along which plodded the wanderer he had quitted. But the man addicted to
+revery forms his own landscapes and colours his own skies.
+
+"It is," soliloquized Kenelm Chillingly, "a strange yearning I have
+long felt,--to get out of myself, to get, as it were, into another man's
+skin, and have a little variety of thought and emotion. One's self is
+always the same self; and that is why I yawn so often. But if I can't
+get into another man's skin, the next best thing is to get as unlike
+myself as I possibly can do. Let me see what is myself. Myself is
+Kenelm Chillingly, son and heir to a rich gentleman. But a fellow with
+a knapsack on his back, sleeping at wayside inns, is not at all like
+Kenelm Chillingly; especially if he is very short of money and may come
+to want a dinner. Perhaps that sort of fellow may take a livelier view
+of things: he can't take a duller one. Courage, Myself: you and I can
+but try."
+
+For the next two days Kenelm was observed to be unusually pleasant. He
+yawned much less frequently, walked with his father, played piquet
+with his mother, was more like other people. Sir Peter was charmed:
+he ascribed this happy change to the preparations he was making
+for Kenelm's travelling in style. The proud father was in active
+correspondence with his great London friends, seeking letters of
+introduction for Kenelm to all the courts of Europe. Portmanteaus, with
+every modern convenience, were ordered; an experienced courier, who
+could talk all languages and cook French dishes if required, was
+invited to name his terms. In short, every arrangement worthy a young
+patrician's entrance into the great world was in rapid progress, when
+suddenly Kenelm Chillingly disappeared, leaving behind him on Sir
+Peter's library table the following letter:--
+
+
+MY VERY DEAR FATHER,--Obedient to your desire, I depart in search of
+real life and real persons, or of the best imitations of them. Forgive
+me, I beseech you, if I commence that search in my own way. I have seen
+enough of ladies and gentlemen for the present: they must be all very
+much alike in every part of the world. You desired me to be amused. I
+go to try if that be possible. Ladies and gentlemen are not amusing; the
+more ladylike or gentlemanlike they are, the more insipid I find them.
+My dear father, I go in quest of adventure like Amadis of Gaul, like Don
+Quixote, like Gil Blas, like Roderick Random; like, in short, the only
+people seeking real life, the people who never existed except in books.
+I go on foot; I go alone. I have provided myself with a larger amount of
+money than I ought to spend, because every man must buy experience,
+and the first fees are heavy. In fact, I have put fifty pounds into my
+pocket-book and into my purse five sovereigns and seventeen shillings.
+This sum ought to last me a year; but I dare say inexperience will do
+me out of it in a month, so we will count it as nothing. Since you have
+asked me to fix my own allowance, I will beg you kindly to commence it
+this day in advance, by an order to your banker to cash my checks to the
+amount of five pounds, and to the same amount monthly; namely, at the
+rate of sixty pounds a year. With that sum I can't starve, and if I
+want more it may be amusing to work for it. Pray don't send after me,
+or institute inquiries, or disturb the household and set all the
+neighbourhood talking, by any mention either of my project or of your
+surprise at it. I will not fail to write to you from time to time.
+You will judge best what to say to my dear mother. If you tell her the
+truth, which of course I should do did I tell her anything, my request
+is virtually frustrated, and I shall be the talk of the county. You,
+I know, don't think telling fibs is immoral when it happens to be
+convenient, as it would be in this case.
+
+I expect to be absent a year or eighteen months; if I prolong my travels
+it shall be in the way you proposed. I will then take my place in polite
+society, call upon you to pay all expenses, and fib on my own account
+to any extent required by that world of fiction which is peopled by
+illusions and governed by shams.
+
+Heaven bless you, my dear Father, and be quite sure that if I get into
+any trouble requiring a friend, it is to you I shall turn. As yet I have
+no other friend on earth, and with prudence and good luck I may escape
+the infliction of any other friend.
+
+ Yours ever affectionately,
+
+ KENELM.
+
+P. S.--Dear Father, I open my letter in your library to say again "Bless
+you," and to tell you how fondly I kissed your old beaver gloves, which
+I found on the table.
+
+
+When Sir Peter came to that postscript he took off his spectacles and
+wiped them: they were very moist.
+
+Then he fell into a profound meditation. Sir Peter was, as I have said,
+a learned man; he was also in some things a sensible man, and he had a
+strong sympathy with the humorous side of his son's crotchety character.
+What was to be said to Lady Chillingly? That matron was quite guiltless
+of any crime which should deprive her of a husband's confidence in
+a matter relating to her only son. She was a virtuous matron; morals
+irreproachable, manners dignified, and _she-baronety_. Any one seeing
+her for the first time would intuitively say, "Your ladyship." Was
+this a matron to be suppressed in any well-ordered domestic circle? Sir
+Peter's conscience loudly answered, "No;" but when, putting conscience
+into his pocket, he regarded the question at issue as a man of the
+world, Sir Peter felt that to communicate the contents of his son's
+letter to Lady Chillingly would be the foolishest thing he could
+possibly do. Did she know that Kenelm had absconded with the family
+dignity invested in his very name, no marital authority short of such
+abuses of power as constitute the offence of cruelty in a wife's
+action for divorce from social board and nuptial bed could prevent Lady
+Chillingly from summoning all the grooms, sending them in all directions
+with strict orders to bring back the runaway dead or alive; the walls
+would be placarded with hand-bills, "Strayed from his home," etc.; the
+police would be telegraphing private instructions from town to town;
+the scandal would stick to Kenelm Chillingly for life, accompanied with
+vague hints of criminal propensities and insane hallucinations; he would
+be ever afterwards pointed out as "THE MAN WHO HAD DISAPPEARED." And to
+disappear and to turn up again, instead of being murdered, is the most
+hateful thing a man can do: all the newspapers bark at him, "Tray,
+Blanche, Sweetheart, and all;" strict explanations of the unseemly fact
+of his safe existence are demanded in the name of public decorum, and no
+explanations are accepted; it is life saved, character lost.
+
+Sir Peter seized his hat and walked forth, not to deliberate whether to
+fib or not to fib to the wife of his bosom, but to consider what kind of
+fib would the most quickly sink into the bosom of his wife.
+
+A few turns to and fro on the terrace sufficed for the conception and
+maturing of the fib selected; a proof that Sir Peter was a practised
+fibber. He re-entered the house, passed into her ladyship's habitual
+sitting-room, and said with careless gayety, "My old friend the Duke of
+Clareville is just setting off on a tour to Switzerland with his family.
+His youngest daughter, Lady Jane, is a pretty girl, and would not be a
+bad match for Kenelm."
+
+"Lady Jane, the youngest daughter with fair hair, whom I saw last as
+a very charming child, nursing a lovely doll presented to her by the
+Empress Eugenie,--a good match indeed for Kenelm."
+
+"I am glad you agree with me. Would it not be a favourable step towards
+that alliance, and an excellent thing for Kenelm generally, if he were
+to visit the Continent as one of the Duke's travelling party?"
+
+"Of course it would."
+
+"Then you approve what I have done; the Duke starts the day after
+to-morrow, and I have packed Kenelm off to town, with a letter to my old
+friend. You will excuse all leave taking. You know that though the best
+of sons he is an odd fellow; and seeing that I had talked him into it,
+I struck while the iron was hot, and sent him off by the express at nine
+o'clock this morning, for fear that if I allowed any delay he would talk
+himself out of it."
+
+"Do you mean to say Kenelm is actually gone? Good gracious."
+
+Sir Peter stole softly from the room, and summoning his valet, said, "I
+have sent Mr. Chillingly to London. Pack up the clothes he is likely
+to want, so that he can have them sent at once, whenever he writes for
+them."
+
+And thus, by a judicious violation of truth on the part of his father,
+that exemplary truth-teller Kenelm Chillingly saved the honour of
+his house and his own reputation from the breath of scandal and the
+inquisition of the police. He was not "THE MAN WHO HAD DISAPPEARED."
+
+
+
+
+BOOK II.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY had quitted the paternal home at daybreak before any
+of the household was astir. "Unquestionably," said he, as he walked
+along the solitary lanes,--"unquestionably I begin the world as poets
+begin poetry, an imitator and a plagiarist. I am imitating an itinerant
+verse-maker, as, no doubt, he began by imitating some other maker
+of verse. But if there be anything in me, it will work itself out in
+original form. And, after all, the verse-maker is not the inventor of
+ideas. Adventure on foot is a notion that remounts to the age of fable.
+Hercules, for instance; that was the way in which he got to heaven, as
+a foot-traveller. How solitary the world is at this hour! Is it not for
+that reason that this is of all hours the most beautiful?"
+
+Here he paused, and looked around and above. It was the very height of
+summer. The sun was just rising over gentle sloping uplands. All the
+dews on the hedgerows sparkled. There was not a cloud in the heavens. Up
+rose from the green blades of corn a solitary skylark. His voice woke up
+the other birds. A few minutes more and the joyous concert began.
+Kenelm reverently doffed his hat, and bowed his head in mute homage and
+thanksgiving.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ABOUT nine o'clock Kenelm entered a town some twelve miles distant from
+his father's house, and towards which he had designedly made his way,
+because in that town he was scarcely if at all known by sight, and he
+might there make the purchases he required without attracting any
+marked observation. He had selected for his travelling costume a
+shooting-dress, as the simplest and least likely to belong to his
+rank as a gentleman. But still in its very cut there was an air of
+distinction, and every labourer he had met on the way had touched his
+hat to him. Besides, who wears a shooting-dress in the middle of June,
+or a shooting-dress at all, unless he be either a game-keeper or a
+gentleman licensed to shoot?
+
+Kenelm entered a large store-shop for ready-made clothes and purchased
+a suit such as might be worn on Sundays by a small country yeoman or
+tenant-farmer of a petty holding,--a stout coarse broadcloth upper
+garment, half coat, half jacket, with waistcoat to match, strong
+corduroy trousers, a smart Belcher neckcloth, with a small stock of
+linen and woollen socks in harmony with the other raiment. He bought
+also a leathern knapsack, just big enough to contain this wardrobe, and
+a couple of books, which with his combs and brushes he had brought away
+in his pockets; for among all his trunks at home there was no knapsack.
+
+These purchases made and paid for, he passed quickly through the town,
+and stopped at a humble inn at the outskirt, to which he was attracted
+by the notice, "Refreshment for man and beast." He entered a little
+sanded parlour, which at that hour he had all to himself, called for
+breakfast, and devoured the best part of a fourpenny loaf with a couple
+of hard eggs.
+
+Thus recruited, he again sallied forth, and deviating into a thick wood
+by the roadside, he exchanged the habiliments with which he had left
+home for those he had purchased, and by the help of one or two big
+stones sunk the relinquished garments into a small but deep pool which
+he was lucky enough to find in a bush-grown dell much haunted by snipes
+in the winter.
+
+"Now," said Kenelm, "I really begin to think I have got out of myself.
+I am in another man's skin; for what, after all, is a skin but a soul's
+clothing, and what is clothing but a decenter skin? Of its own natural
+skin every civilized soul is ashamed. It is the height of impropriety
+for any one but the lowest kind of savage to show it. If the purest
+soul now existent upon earth, the Pope of Rome's or the Archbishop of
+Canterbury's, were to pass down the Strand with the skin which Nature
+gave to it bare to the eye, it would be brought up before a magistrate,
+prosecuted by the Society for the Suppression of Vice, and committed to
+jail as a public nuisance.
+
+"Decidedly I am now in another man's skin. Kenelm Chillingly, I no
+longer
+
+ "Remain
+
+ "Yours faithfully;
+
+"But am,
+
+ "With profound consideration,
+
+ "Your obedient humble servant."
+
+With light step and elated crest, the wanderer, thus transformed, sprang
+from the wood into the dusty thoroughfare. He had travelled on for about
+an hour, meeting but few other passengers, when he heard to the right a
+loud shrill young voice, "Help! help! I will not go; I tell you, I will
+not!" Just before him stood, by a high five-barred gate, a pensive gray
+cob attached to a neat-looking gig. The bridle was loose on the cob's
+neck. The animal was evidently accustomed to stand quietly when ordered
+to do so, and glad of the opportunity.
+
+The cries, "Help, help!" were renewed, mingled with louder tones in a
+rougher voice, tones of wrath and menace. Evidently these sounds did
+not come from the cob. Kenelm looked over the gate, and saw a few yards
+distant in a grass field a well-dressed boy struggling violently against
+a stout middle-aged man who was rudely hauling him along by the arm.
+
+The chivalry natural to a namesake of the valiant Sir Kenelm Digby
+was instantly aroused. He vaulted over the gate, seized the man by the
+collar, and exclaimed, "For shame! what are you doing to that poor boy?
+let him go!"
+
+"Why the devil do you interfere?" cried the stout man, his eyes glaring
+and his lips foaming with rage. "Ah, are you the villain? yes, no doubt
+of it. I'll give it to you, jackanapes," and still grasping the boy with
+one hand, with the other the stout man darted a blow at Kenelm, from
+which nothing less than the practised pugilistic skill and natural
+alertness of the youth thus suddenly assaulted could have saved his eyes
+and nose. As it was, the stout man had the worst of it: the blow was
+parried, returned with a dexterous manoeuvre of Kenelm's right foot in
+Cornish fashion, and _procumbit humi bos_; the stout man lay sprawling
+on his back. The boy, thus released, seized hold of Kenelm by the arm,
+and hurrying him along up the field, cried, "Come, come before he gets
+up! save me! save me!" Ere he had recovered his own surprise, the boy
+had dragged Kenelm to the gate, and jumped into the gig, sobbing forth,
+"Get in, get in, I can't drive; get in, and drive--you. Quick! Quick!"
+
+"But--" began Kenelm.
+
+"Get in, or I shall go mad." Kenelm obeyed; the boy gave him the reins,
+and seizing the whip himself, applied it lustily to the cob. On sprang
+the cob. "Stop, stop, stop, thief! villain! Holloa! thieves! thieves!
+thieves! stop!" cried a voice behind. Kenelm involuntarily turned his
+head and beheld the stout man perched upon the gate and gesticulating
+furiously. It was but a glimpse; again the whip was plied, the cob
+frantically broke into a gallop, the gig jolted and bumped and swerved,
+and it was not till they had put a good mile between themselves and the
+stout man that Kenelm succeeded in obtaining possession of the whip and
+calming the cob into a rational trot.
+
+"Young gentleman," then said Kenelm, "perhaps you will have the goodness
+to explain."
+
+"By and by; get on, that's a good fellow; you shall be well paid for it,
+well and handsomely."
+
+Quoth Kenelm, gravely, "I know that in real life payment and service
+naturally go together. But we will put aside the payment till you tell
+me what is to be the service. And first, whither am I to drive you? We
+are coming to a place where three roads meet; which of the three shall I
+take?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know; there is a finger-post. I want to get to,--but it is
+a secret; you'll not betray me? Promise,--swear."
+
+"I don't swear except when I am in a passion, which, I am sorry to say,
+is very seldom; and I don't promise till I know what I promise; neither
+do I go on driving runaway boys in other men's gigs unless I know that I
+am taking them to a safe place, where their papas and mammas can get at
+them."
+
+"I have no papa, no mamma," said the boy, dolefully and with quivering
+lips.
+
+"Poor boy! I suppose that burly brute is your schoolmaster, and you are
+running away home for fear of a flogging."
+
+The boy burst out laughing; a pretty, silvery, merry laugh: it thrilled
+through Kenelm Chillingly. "No, he would not flog me: he is not a
+schoolmaster; he is worse than that."
+
+"Is it possible? What is he?"
+
+"An uncle."
+
+"Hum! uncles are proverbial for cruelty; were so in the classical days,
+and Richard III. was the only scholar in his family."
+
+"Eh! classical and Richard III.!" said the boy, startled, and looking
+attentively at the pensive driver. "Who are you? you talk like a
+gentleman."
+
+"I beg pardon. I'll not do so again if I can help it."--"Decidedly,"
+thought Kenelm, "I am beginning to be amused. What a blessing it is to
+get into another man's skin, and another man's gig too!" Aloud, "Here
+we are at the fingerpost. If you are running away from your uncle, it is
+time to inform me where you are running to."
+
+Here the boy leaned over the gig and examined the fingerpost. Then he
+clapped his hands joyfully.
+
+"All right! I thought so, 'To Tor-Hadham, eighteen miles.' That's the
+road to Tor-Hadham."
+
+"Do you mean to say I am to drive you all that way,--eighteen miles?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And to whom are you going?"
+
+"I will tell you by and by. Do go on; do, pray. I can't drive--never
+drove in my life--or I would not ask you. Pray, pray, don't desert me!
+If you are a gentleman you will not; and if you are not a gentleman,
+I have got L10 in my purse, which you shall have when I am safe at
+Tor-Hadham. Don't hesitate: my whole life is at stake!" And the boy
+began once more to sob.
+
+Kenelm directed the pony's head towards Tor-Hadham, and the boy ceased
+to sob.
+
+"You are a good, dear fellow," said the boy, wiping his eyes. "I am
+afraid I am taking you very much out of your road."
+
+"I have no road in particular, and would as soon go to Tor-Hadham, which
+I have never seen, as anywhere else. I am but a wanderer on the face of
+the earth."
+
+"Have you lost your papa and mamma too? Why, you are not much older than
+I am."
+
+"Little gentleman," said Kenelm, gravely, "I am just of age, and you, I
+suppose, are about fourteen."
+
+"What fun!" cried the boy, abruptly. "Isn't it fun?"
+
+"It will not be fun if I am sentenced to penal servitude for stealing
+your uncle's gig, and robbing his little nephew of L10. By the by, that
+choleric relation of yours meant to knock down somebody else when he
+struck at me. He asked, 'Are you the villain?' Pray who is the villain?
+he is evidently in your confidence."
+
+"Villain! he is the most honourable, high-minded--But no matter now:
+I'll introduce you to him when we reach Tor-Hadham. Whip that pony: he
+is crawling."
+
+"It is up hill: a good man spares his beast."
+
+No art and no eloquence could extort from his young companion any
+further explanation than Kenelm had yet received; and indeed, as the
+journey advanced, and they approached their destination, both parties
+sank into silence. Kenelm was seriously considering that his first day's
+experience of real life in the skin of another had placed in some peril
+his own. He had knocked down a man evidently respectable and well to do,
+had carried off that man's nephew, and made free with that man's goods
+and chattels; namely, his gig and horse. All this might be explained
+satisfactorily to a justice of the peace, but how? By returning to his
+former skin; by avowing himself to be Kenelm Chillingly, a distinguished
+university medalist, heir to no ignoble name and some L10,000 a year.
+But then what a scandal! he who abhorred scandal; in vulgar parlance,
+what a "row!" he who denied that the very word "row" was sanctioned
+by any classic authorities in the English language. He would have to
+explain how he came to be found disguised, carefully disguised, in
+garments such as no baronet's eldest son--even though that baronet be
+the least ancestral man of mark whom it suits the convenience of a First
+Minister to recommend to the Sovereign for exaltation over the rank
+of Mister--was ever beheld in, unless he had taken flight to the
+gold-diggings. Was this a position in which the heir of the Chillinglys,
+a distinguished family, whose coat-of-arms dated from the earliest
+authenticated period of English heraldry under Edward III. as Three
+Fishes _azure_, could be placed without grievous slur on the cold and
+ancient blood of the Three Fishes?
+
+And then individually to himself, Kenelm, irrespectively of the Three
+Fishes,--what a humiliation! He had put aside his respected father's
+deliberate preparations for his entrance into real life; he had
+perversely chosen his own walk on his own responsibility; and here,
+before half the first day was over, what an infernal scrape he had
+walked himself into! and what was his excuse? A wretched little boy,
+sobbing and chuckling by turns, and yet who was clever enough to twist
+Kenelm Chillingly round his finger; twist _him_, a man who thought
+himself so much wiser than his parents,--a man who had gained honours at
+the University,--a man of the gravest temperament,--a man of so nicely
+critical a turn of mind that there was not a law of art or nature in
+which he did not detect a flaw; that he should get himself into this
+mess was, to say the least of it, an uncomfortable reflection.
+
+The boy himself, as Kenelm glanced at him from time to time, became
+impish and Will-of-the-Wisp-ish. Sometimes he laughed to himself loudly,
+sometimes he wept to himself quietly; sometimes, neither laughing nor
+weeping, he seemed absorbed in reflection. Twice as they came nearer to
+the town of Tor-Hadham, Kenelm nudged the boy, and said, "My boy, I must
+talk with you;" and twice the boy, withdrawing his arm from the nudge,
+had answered dreamily, "Hush! I am thinking."
+
+And so they entered the town of Tor-Hadham, the cob very much done up.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+"NOW, young sir," said Kenelm, in a tone calm, but peremptory,--"now we
+are in the town, where am I to take you? and wherever it be, there to
+say good-by."
+
+"No, not good-by. Stay with me a little bit. I begin to feel frightened,
+and I am so friendless;" and the boy, who had before resented the
+slightest nudge on the part of Kenelm, now wound his arm into Kenelm's,
+and clung to him caressingly.
+
+I don't know what my readers have hitherto thought of Kenelm Chillingly:
+but, amid all the curves and windings of his whimsical humour, there was
+one way that went straight to his heart; you had only to be weaker than
+himself and ask his protection.
+
+He turned round abruptly; he forgot all the strangeness of his position,
+and replied: "Little brute that you are, I'll be shot if I forsake you
+if in trouble. But some compassion is also due to the cob: for his sake
+say where we are to stop."
+
+"I am sure I can't say: I never was here before. Let us go to a nice
+quiet inn. Drive slowly: we'll look out for one."
+
+Tor-Hadham was a large town, not nominally the capital of the county,
+but, in point of trade and bustle and life, virtually the capital. The
+straight street, through which the cob went as slowly as if he had
+been drawing a Triumphal Car up the Sacred Hill, presented an animated
+appearance. The shops had handsome facades and plate-glass windows;
+the pavements exhibited a lively concourse, evidently not merely of
+business, but of pleasure, for a large proportion of the passers-by was
+composed of the fair sex, smartly dressed, many of them young and some
+pretty. In fact a regiment of her Majesty's -----th Hussars had been
+sent into the town two days before; and, between the officers of that
+fortunate regiment and the fair sex in that hospitable town, there was
+a natural emulation which should make the greater number of slain and
+wounded. The advent of these heroes, professional subtracters from
+hostile and multipliers of friendly populations, gave a stimulus to
+the caterers for those amusements which bring young folks
+together,--archery-meetings, rifle-shootings, concerts, balls, announced
+in bills attached to boards and walls and exposed at shop-windows.
+
+The boy looked eagerly forth from the gig, scanning especially these
+advertisements, till at length he uttered an excited exclamation, "Ah, I
+was right: there it is!"
+
+"There what is?" asked Kenelm,--"the inn?" His companion did not answer,
+but Kenelm following the boy's eye perceived an immense hand-bill.
+
+
+ "TO-MORROW NIGHT THEATRE OPENS.
+
+ "RICHARD III. Mr. COMPTON."
+
+
+"Do just ask where the theatre is," said the boy, in a whisper, turning
+away his head.
+
+Kenelm stopped the cob, made the inquiry, and was directed to take the
+next turning to the right. In a few minutes the compo portico of an ugly
+dilapidated building, dedicated to the Dramatic Muses, presented itself
+at the angle of a dreary, deserted lane. The walls were placarded with
+play-bills, in which the name of Compton stood forth as gigantic as
+capitals could make it. The boy drew a sigh. "Now," said he, "let us
+look out for an inn near here,--the nearest."
+
+No inn, however, beyond the rank of a small and questionable looking
+public-house was apparent, until at a distance somewhat remote from the
+theatre, and in a quaint, old-fashioned, deserted square, a neat,
+newly whitewashed house displayed upon its frontispiece, in large black
+letters of funereal aspect, "Temperance Hotel."
+
+"Stop," said the boy; "don't you think that would suit us? it looks
+quiet."
+
+"Could not look more quiet if it were a tombstone," replied Kenelm.
+
+The boy put his hand upon the reins and stopped the cob. The cob was in
+that condition that the slightest touch sufficed to stop him, though he
+turned his head somewhat ruefully as if in doubt whether hay and corn
+would be within the regulations of a Temperance Hotel. Kenelm descended
+and entered the house. A tidy woman emerged from a sort of glass
+cupboard which constituted the bar, minus the comforting drinks
+associated with the _beau ideal_ of a bar, but which displayed instead
+two large decanters of cold water with tumblers _a discretion_, and
+sundry plates of thin biscuits and sponge-cakes. This tidy woman
+politely inquired what was his "pleasure."
+
+"Pleasure," answered Kenelm, with his usual gravity, "is not the word I
+should myself have chosen. But could you oblige my horse--I mean _that_
+horse--with a stall and a feed of oats, and that young gentleman and
+myself with a private room and a dinner?"
+
+"Dinner!" echoed the hostess,--"dinner!"
+
+"A thousand pardons, ma'am. But if the word 'dinner' shock you I retract
+it, and would say instead something to eat and drink.'"
+
+"Drink! This is strictly a Temperance Hotel, sir."
+
+"Oh, if you don't eat and drink here," exclaimed Kenelm, fiercely, for
+he was famished, "I wish you good morning."
+
+"Stay a bit, sir. We do eat and drink here. But we are very simple
+folks. We allow no fermented liquors."
+
+"Not even a glass of beer?"
+
+"Only ginger-beer. Alcohols are strictly forbidden. We have tea and
+coffee and milk. But most of our customers prefer the pure liquid. As
+for eating, sir,--anything you order, in reason."
+
+Kenelm shook his head and was retreating, when the boy, who had sprung
+from the gig and overheard the conversation, cried petulantly, "What
+does it signify? Who wants fermented liquors? Water will do very well.
+And as for dinner,--anything convenient. Please, ma'am, show us into a
+private room: I am so tired." The last words were said in a caressing
+manner, and so prettily, that the hostess at once changed her tone,
+and muttering, "Poor boy!" and, in a still more subdued mutter, "What
+a pretty face he has!" nodded, and led the way up a very clean
+old-fashioned staircase.
+
+"But the horse and gig, where are they to go?" said Kenelm, with a pang
+of conscience on reflecting how ill treated hitherto had been both horse
+and owner.
+
+"Oh, as for the horse and gig, sir, you will find Jukes's livery-stables
+a few yards farther down. We don't take in horses ourselves; our
+customers seldom keep them: but you will find the best of accommodation
+at Jukes's."
+
+Kenelm conducted the cob to the livery-stables thus indicated, and
+waited to see him walked about to cool, well rubbed down, and made
+comfortable over half a peck of oats,--for Kenelm Chillingly was a
+humane man to the brute creation,--and then, in a state of ravenous
+appetite, returned to the Temperance Hotel, and was ushered into a small
+drawing-room, with a small bit of carpet in the centre, six small chairs
+with cane seats, prints on the walls descriptive of the various
+effects of intoxicating liquors upon sundry specimens of mankind,--some
+resembling ghosts, others fiends, and all with a general aspect of
+beggary and perdition; contrasted by Happy-Family pictures,--smiling
+wives, portly husbands, rosy infants, emblematic of the beatified
+condition of members of the Temperance Society.
+
+A table with a spotless cloth, and knives and forks for two, chiefly,
+however, attracted Kenelm's attention.
+
+The boy was standing by the window, seemingly gazing on a small aquarium
+which was there placed, and contained the usual variety of small fishes,
+reptiles, and insects, enjoying the pleasures of Temperance in its
+native element, including, of course, an occasional meal upon each
+other.
+
+"What are they going to give us to eat?" inquired Kenelm. "It must be
+ready by this time I should think."
+
+Here he gave a brisk tug at the bell-pull. The boy advanced from
+the window, and as he did so Kenelm was struck with the grace of his
+bearing, and the improvement in his looks, now that he was without his
+hat, and rest and ablution had refreshed from heat and dust the delicate
+bloom of his complexion. There was no doubt about it that he was an
+exceedingly pretty boy, and if he lived to be a man would make many a
+lady's heart ache. It was with a certain air of gracious superiority
+such as is seldom warranted by superior rank if it be less than royal,
+and chiefly becomes a marked seniority in years, that this young
+gentleman, approaching the solemn heir of the Chillinglys, held out his
+hand and said,--
+
+"Sir, you have behaved extremely well, and I thank you very much."
+
+"Your Royal Highness is condescending to say so," replied Kenelm
+Chillingly, bowing low, "but have you ordered dinner? and what are
+they going to give us? No one seems to answer the bell here. As it is a
+Temperance Hotel, probably all the servants are drunk."
+
+"Why should they be drunk at a Temperance Hotel?"
+
+"Why! because, as a general rule, people who flagrantly pretend to
+anything are the reverse of that which they pretend to. A man who sets
+up for a saint is sure to be a sinner, and a man who boasts that he is a
+sinner is sure to have some feeble, maudlin, snivelling bit of saintship
+about him which is enough to make him a humbug. Masculine honesty,
+whether it be saint-like or sinner-like, does not label itself either
+saint or sinner. Fancy Saint Augustine labelling himself saint, or
+Robert Burns sinner; and therefore, though, little boy, you have
+probably not read the poems of Robert Burns, and have certainly not read
+the 'Confessions' of Saint Augustine, take my word for it, that both
+those personages were very good fellows; and with a little difference of
+training and experience, Burns might have written the 'Confessions' and
+Augustine the poems. Powers above! I am starving. What did you order for
+dinner, and when is it to appear?"
+
+The boy, who had opened to an enormous width a naturally large pair of
+hazel eyes, while his tall companion in fustian trousers and Belcher
+neckcloth spoke thus patronizingly of Robert Burns and Saint Augustine,
+now replied, with rather a deprecatory and shamefaced aspect, "I am
+sorry I was not thinking of dinner. I was not so mindful of you as I
+ought to have been. The landlady asked me what we would have. I said,
+'What you like;' and the landlady muttered something about--" here the
+boy hesitated.
+
+"Yes. About what? Mutton-chops?"
+
+"No. Cauliflowers and rice-pudding."
+
+Kenelm Chillingly never swore, never raged. Where ruder beings of
+human mould swore or raged, he vented displeasure in an expression of
+countenance so pathetically melancholic and lugubrious that it would
+have melted the heart of an Hyrcanian tiger. He turned his countenance
+now on the boy, and murmuring "Cauliflower!--Starvation!" sank into
+one of the cane-bottomed chairs, and added quietly, "so much for human
+gratitude."
+
+The boy was evidently smitten to the heart by the bitter sweetness
+of this reproach. There were almost tears in his voice, as he said
+falteringly, "Pray forgive me, I _was_ ungrateful. I'll run down and see
+what there is;" and, suiting the action to the word, he disappeared.
+
+Kenelm remained motionless; in fact he was plunged into one of those
+reveries, or rather absorptions of inward and spiritual being, into
+which it is said that the consciousness of the Indian dervish can be by
+prolonged fasting preternaturally resolved. The appetite of all men
+of powerful muscular development is of a nature far exceeding the
+properties of any reasonable number of cauliflowers and rice-puddings
+to satisfy. Witness Hercules himself, whose cravings for substantial
+nourishment were the standing joke of the classic poets. I don't know
+that Kenelm Chillingly would have beaten the Theban Hercules either in
+fighting or in eating; but, when he wanted to fight or when he wanted
+to eat, Hercules would have had to put forth all his strength not to be
+beaten.
+
+After ten minutes' absence, the boy came back radiant. He tapped Kenelm
+on the shoulder, and said playfully, "I made them cut a whole loin into
+chops, besides the cauliflower; and such a big rice-pudding, and eggs
+and bacon too! Cheer up! it will be served in a minute."
+
+"A-h!" said Kenelm.
+
+"They are good people; they did not mean to stint you: but most of their
+customers, it seems, live upon vegetables and farinaceous food. There
+is a society here formed upon that principle; the landlady says they are
+philosophers!"
+
+At the word "philosophers" Kenelm's crest rose as that of a practised
+hunter at the cry of "Yoiks! Tally-ho!" "Philosophers!" said he,
+"philosophers indeed! O ignoramuses, who do not even know the structure
+of the human tooth! Look you, little boy, if nothing were left on this
+earth of the present race of man, as we are assured upon great authority
+will be the case one of these days,--and a mighty good riddance it will
+be,--if nothing, I say, of man were left except fossils of his teeth and
+his thumbs, a philosopher of that superior race which will succeed to
+man would at once see in those relics all his characteristics and all
+his history; would say, comparing his thumb with the talons of an eagle,
+the claws of a tiger, the hoof of a horse, the owner of that thumb must
+have been lord over creatures with talons and claws and hoofs. You may
+say the monkey tribe has thumbs. True; but compare an ape's thumb with
+a man's: could the biggest ape's thumb have built Westminster Abbey? But
+even thumbs are trivial evidence of man as compared with his teeth.
+Look at his teeth!"--here Kenelm expanded his jaws from ear to ear
+and displayed semicircles of ivory, so perfect for the purposes of
+mastication that the most artistic dentist might have despaired of
+his power to imitate them,--"look, I say, at his teeth!" The
+boy involuntarily recoiled. "Are the teeth those of a miserable
+cauliflower-eater? or is it purely by farinaceous food that the
+proprietor of teeth like man's obtains the rank of the sovereign
+destroyer of creation? No, little boy, no," continued Kenelm, closing
+his jaws, but advancing upon the infant, who at each stride receded
+towards the aquarium,--"no; man is the master of the world, because
+of all created beings he devours the greatest variety and the greatest
+number of created things. His teeth evince that man can live upon every
+soil from the torrid to the frozen zone, because man can eat everything
+that other creatures cannot eat. And the formation of his teeth proves
+it. A tiger can eat a deer; so can man: but a tiger can't eat an eel;
+man can. An elephant can eat cauliflowers and rice-pudding; so can man!
+but an elephant can't eat a beefsteak; man can. In sum, man can
+live everywhere, because he can eat anything, thanks to his dental
+formation!" concluded Kenelm, making a prodigious stride towards the
+boy. "Man, when everything else fails him, eats his own species."
+
+"Don't; you frighten me," said the boy. "Aha!" clapping his hands with a
+sensation of gleeful relief, "here come the mutton-chops!"
+
+A wonderfully clean, well-washed, indeed well-washed-out, middle-aged
+parlour-maid now appeared, dish in hand. Putting the dish on the table
+and taking off the cover, the handmaiden said civilly, though frigidly,
+like one who lived upon salad and cold water, "Mistress is sorry to have
+kept you waiting, but she thought you were Vegetarians."
+
+After helping his young friend to a mutton-chop, Kenelm helped himself,
+and replied gravely, "Tell your mistress that if she had only given
+us vegetables, I should have eaten you. Tell her that though man is
+partially graminivorous, he is principally carnivorous. Tell her that
+though a swine eats cabbages and such like, yet where a swine can get
+a baby, it eats the baby. Tell her," continued Kenelm (now at his third
+chop), "that there is no animal that in digestive organs more resembles
+man than a swine. Ask her if there is any baby in the house; if so, it
+would be safe for the baby to send up some more chops."
+
+As the acutest observer could rarely be quite sure when Kenelm
+Chillingly was in jest or in earnest, the parlour-maid paused a moment
+and attempted a pale smile. Kenelm lifted his dark eyes, unspeakably sad
+and profound, and said mournfully, "I should be so sorry for the baby.
+Bring the chops!" The parlour-maid vanished. The boy laid down his
+knife and fork, and looked fixedly and inquisitively on Kenelm. Kenelm,
+unheeding the look, placed the last chop on the boy's plate.
+
+"No more," cried the boy, impulsively, and returned the chop to the
+dish. "I have dined: I have had enough."
+
+"Little boy, you lie," said Kenelm; "you have not had enough to keep
+body and soul together. Eat that chop or I shall thrash you: whatever I
+say I do."
+
+Somehow or other the boy felt quelled; he ate the chop in silence, again
+looked at Kenelm's face, and said to himself, "I am afraid."
+
+The parlour-maid here entered with a fresh supply of chops and a dish of
+bacon and eggs, soon followed by a rice-pudding baked in a tin dish, and
+of size sufficient to have nourished a charity school. When the repast
+was finished, Kenelm seemed to forget the dangerous properties of the
+carnivorous animal; and stretching himself indolently out, appeared
+to be as innocently ruminative as the most domestic of animals
+graminivorous.
+
+Then said the boy, rather timidly, "May I ask you another favour?"
+
+"Is it to knock down another uncle, or to steal another gig and cob?"
+
+"No, it is very simple: it is merely to find out the address of a friend
+here; and when found to give him a note from me."
+
+"Does the commission press? 'After dinner, rest a while,' saith the
+proverb; and proverbs are so wise that no one can guess the author
+of them. They are supposed to be fragments of the philosophy of the
+antediluvians: came to us packed up in the ark."
+
+"Really, indeed," said the boy, seriously. "How interesting! No, my
+commission does not press for an hour or so. Do you think, sir, they had
+any drama before the Deluge?"
+
+"Drama! not a doubt of it. Men who lived one or two thousand years had
+time to invent and improve everything; and a play could have had its
+natural length then. It would not have been necessary to crowd the
+whole history of Macbeth, from his youth to his old age, into an absurd
+epitome of three hours. One cannot trace a touch of real human nature in
+any actor's delineation of that very interesting Scotchman, because
+the actor always comes on the stage as if he were the same age when he
+murdered Duncan, and when, in his sear and yellow leaf, he was lopped
+off by Macduff."
+
+"Do you think Macbeth was young when he murdered Duncan?"
+
+"Certainly. No man ever commits a first crime of violent nature, such as
+murder, after thirty; if he begins before, he may go on up to any age.
+But youth is the season for commencing those wrong calculations which
+belong to irrational hope and the sense of physical power. You thus
+read in the newspapers that the persons who murder their sweethearts are
+generally from two to six and twenty; and persons who murder from other
+motives than love--that is, from revenge, avarice, or ambition--are
+generally about twenty-eight,--Iago's age. Twenty-eight is the usual
+close of the active season for getting rid of one's fellow-creatures; a
+prize-fighter falls off after that age. I take it that Macbeth was about
+twenty-eight when he murdered Duncan, and from about fifty-four to sixty
+when he began to whine about missing the comforts of old age. But
+can any audience understand that difference of years in seeing a
+three-hours' play? or does any actor ever pretend to impress it on the
+audience, and appear as twenty-eight in the first act and a sexagenarian
+in the fifth?"
+
+"I never thought of that," said the boy, evidently interested. "But I
+never saw 'Macbeth.' I have seen 'Richard III.:' is not that nice? Don't
+you dote on the play? I do. What a glorious life an actor's must be!"
+
+Kenelm, who had been hitherto rather talking to himself than to his
+youthful companion, here roused his attention, looked on the boy
+intently, and said,--
+
+"I see you are stage-stricken. You have run away from home in order to
+turn player, and I should not wonder if this note you want me to give is
+for the manager of the theatre or one of his company."
+
+The young face that encountered Kenelm's dark eye became very flushed,
+but set and defiant in its expression.
+
+"And what if it were? would not you give it?"
+
+"What! help a child of your age run away from his home, to go upon the
+stage against the consent of his relations? Certainly not."
+
+"I am not a child; but that has nothing to do with it. I don't want to
+go on the stage, at all events without the consent of the person who
+has a right to dictate my actions. My note is not to the manager of
+the theatre, nor to one of his company; but it is to a gentleman who
+condescends to act here for a few nights; a thorough gentleman,--a great
+actor,--my friend, the only friend I have in the world. I say frankly I
+have run away from home so that he may have that note, and if you will
+not give it some one else will!"
+
+The boy had risen while he spoke, and he stood erect beside the
+recumbent Kenelm, his lips quivering, his eyes suffused with suppressed
+tears, but his whole aspect resolute and determined. Evidently, if he
+did not get his own way in this world, it would not be for want of will.
+
+"I will take your note," said Kenelm.
+
+"There it is; give it into the hands of the person it is addressed
+to,--Mr. Herbert Compton."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+KENELM took his way to the theatre, and inquired of the door-keeper for
+Mr. Herbert Compton. That functionary replied, "Mr. Compton does not act
+to-night, and is not in the house."
+
+"Where does he lodge?"
+
+The door-keeper pointed to a grocer's shop on the other side of the way,
+and said tersely, "There, private door; knock and ring."
+
+Kenelm did as he was directed. A slatternly maid-servant opened the
+door, and, in answer to his interrogatory, said that Mr. Compton was at
+home, but at supper.
+
+"I am sorry to disturb him," said Kenelm, raising his voice, for he
+heard a clatter of knives and plates within a room hard by at his left,
+"but my business requires to see him forthwith;" and, pushing the maid
+aside, he entered at once the adjoining banquet-hall.
+
+Before a savoury stew smelling strongly of onions sat a man very much at
+his ease, without coat or neckcloth,--a decidedly handsome man, his hair
+cut short and his face closely shaven, as befits an actor who has wigs
+and beards of all hues and forms at his command. The man was not alone;
+opposite to him sat a lady, who might be a few years younger, of a
+somewhat faded complexion, but still pretty, with good stage features
+and a profusion of blond ringlets.
+
+"Mr. Compton, I presume," said Kenelm, with a solemn bow.
+
+"My name is Compton: any message from the theatre? or what do you want
+with me?"
+
+"I--nothing!" replied Kenelm; and then deepening his naturally mournful
+voice into tones ominous and tragic, continued, "By whom you are wanted
+let this explain;" therewith he placed in Mr. Compton's hand the letter
+with which he was charged, and stretching his arms and interlacing his
+fingers in the _pose_ of Talma as Julius Caesar, added, "'Qu'en dis-tu,
+Brute?'"
+
+Whether it was from the sombre aspect and awe-inspiring delivery of
+the messenger, or the sight of the handwriting on the address of the
+missive, Mr. Compton's countenance suddenly fell, and his hand rested
+irresolute, as if not daring to open the letter.
+
+"Never mind me, dear," said the lady with blond ringlets, in a tone of
+stinging affability: "read your _billet-doux_; don't keep the young man
+waiting, love!"
+
+"Nonsense, Matilda, nonsense! _billet-doux_ indeed! more likely a bill
+from Duke the tailor. Excuse me for a moment, my dear. Follow me, sir,"
+and rising, still with shirtsleeves uncovered, he quitted the room,
+closing the door after him, motioned Kenelm into a small parlour on the
+opposite side of the passage, and by the light of a suspended gas-lamp
+ran his eye hastily over the letter, which, though it seemed very short,
+drew from him sundry exclamations. "Good heavens, how very absurd!
+what's to be done?" Then, thrusting the letter into his trousers-pocket,
+he fixed upon Kenelm a very brilliant pair of dark eyes, which soon
+dropped before the steadfast look of that saturnine adventurer.
+
+"Are you in the confidence of the writer of this letter?" asked Mr.
+Compton, rather confusedly.
+
+"I am not the confidant of the writer," answered Kenelm, "but for the
+time being I am the protector!"
+
+"Protector!"
+
+"Protector."
+
+Mr. Compton again eyed the messenger, and this time fully realizing the
+gladiatorial development of that dark stranger's physical form, he grew
+many shades paler, and involuntarily retreated towards the bell-pull.
+
+After a short pause, he said, "I am requested to call on the writer. If
+I do so, may I understand that the interview will be strictly private?"
+
+"So far as I am concerned, yes: on the condition that no attempt be made
+to withdraw the writer from the house."
+
+"Certainly not, certainly not; quite the contrary," exclaimed Mr.
+Compton, with genuine animation. "Say I will call in half an hour."
+
+"I will give your message," said Kenelm, with a polite inclination of
+his head; "and pray pardon me if I remind you that I styled myself the
+protector of your correspondent, and if the slightest advantage be
+taken of that correspondent's youth and inexperience or the smallest
+encouragement be given to plans of abduction from home and friends, the
+stage will lose an ornament and Herbert Compton vanish from the scene."
+With these words Kenelm left the player standing aghast. Gaining the
+street-door, a lad with a band-box ran against him and was nearly upset.
+
+"Stupid," cried the lad, "can't you see where you are going? Give this
+to Mrs. Compton."
+
+"I should deserve the title you give if I did for nothing the business
+for which you are paid," replied Kenelm, sententiously, and striding on.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+"I HAVE fulfilled my mission," said Kenelm, on rejoining his travelling
+companion. "Mr. Compton said he would be here in half an hour."
+
+"You saw him?"
+
+"Of course: I promised to give your letter into his own hands."
+
+"Was he alone?"
+
+"No; at supper with his wife."
+
+"His wife! what do you mean, sir?--wife! he has no wife."
+
+"Appearances are deceitful. At least he was with a lady who called him
+'dear' and 'love' in as spiteful a tone of voice as if she had been his
+wife; and as I was coming out of his street-door a lad who ran against
+me asked me to give a band-box to Mrs. Compton."
+
+The boy turned as white as death, staggered back a few steps, and
+dropped into a chair.
+
+A suspicion which during his absence had suggested itself to Kenelm's
+inquiring mind now took strong confirmation. He approached softly, drew
+a chair close to the companion whom fate had forced upon him, and said
+in a gentle whisper,--
+
+"This is no boy's agitation. If you have been deceived or misled, and
+I can in any way advise or aid you, count on me as women under the
+circumstances count on men and gentlemen."
+
+The boy started to his feet, and paced the room with disordered steps,
+and a countenance working with passions which he attempted vainly to
+suppress. Suddenly arresting his steps, he seized Kenelm's hand, pressed
+it convulsively, and said, in a voice struggling against a sob,--
+
+"I thank you,--I bless you. Leave me now: I would be alone. Alone, too,
+I must face this man. There may be some mistake yet; go."
+
+"You will promise not to leave the house till I return?"
+
+"Yes, I promise that."
+
+"And if it be as I fear, you will then let me counsel with and advise
+you?"
+
+"Heaven help me, if so! Whom else should I trust to? Go, go!"
+
+Kenelm once more found himself in the streets, beneath the mingled light
+of gas-lamps and the midsummer moon. He walked on mechanically till he
+reached the extremity of the town. There he halted, and seating himself
+on a milestone, indulged in these meditations:--
+
+"Kenelm, my friend, you are in a still worse scrape than I thought you
+were an hour ago. You have evidently now got a woman on your hands. What
+on earth are you to do with her? A runaway woman, who, meaning to run
+off with somebody else--such are the crosses and contradictions in human
+destiny--has run off with you instead. What mortal can hope to be safe?
+The last thing I thought could befall me when I got up this morning was
+that I should have any trouble about the other sex before the day was
+over. If I were of an amatory temperament, the Fates might have some
+justification for leading me into this snare, but, as it is, those
+meddling old maids have none. Kenelm, my friend, do you think you ever
+can be in love? and, if you were in love, do you think you could be a
+greater fool than you are now?"
+
+Kenelm had not decided this knotty question in the conference held with
+himself, when a light and soft strain of music came upon his ear. It was
+but from a stringed instrument, and might have sounded thin and tinkling
+but for the stillness of the night, and that peculiar addition of
+fulness which music acquires when it is borne along a tranquil air.
+Presently a voice in song was heard from the distance accompanying
+the instrument. It was a man's voice, a mellow and a rich voice, but
+Kenelm's ear could not catch the words. Mechanically he moved on towards
+the quarter from which the sounds came, for Kenelm Chillingly had music
+in his soul, though he was not quite aware of it himself. He saw before
+him a patch of greensward, on which grew a solitary elm with a seat
+for wayfarers beneath it. From this sward the ground receded in a wide
+semicircle bordered partly by shops, partly by the tea-gardens of a
+pretty cottage-like tavern. Round the tables scattered throughout the
+gardens were grouped quiet customers, evidently belonging to the class
+of small tradespeople or superior artisans. They had an appearance of
+decorous respectability, and were listening intently to the music. So
+were many persons at the shop-doors and at the windows of upper rooms.
+On the sward, a little in advance of the tree, but beneath its shadow,
+stood the musician, and in that musician Kenelm recognized the wanderer
+from whose talk he had conceived the idea of the pedestrian excursion
+which had already brought him into a very awkward position. The
+instrument on which the singer accompanied himself was a guitar, and his
+song was evidently a love-song, though, as it was now drawing near to
+its close, Kenelm could but imperfectly guess at its general meaning.
+He heard enough to perceive that its words were at least free from the
+vulgarity which generally characterizes street ballads, and were yet
+simple enough to please a very homely audience.
+
+When the singer ended there was no applause; but there was evident
+sensation among the audience,--a feeling as if something that had given
+a common enjoyment had ceased. Presently the white Pomeranian dog, who
+had hitherto kept himself out of sight under the seat of the elm-tree,
+advanced, with a small metal tray between his teeth, and, after looking
+round him deliberately, as if to select whom of the audience should
+be honoured with the commencement of a general subscription, gravely
+approached Kenelm, stood on his hind legs, stared at him, and presented
+the tray.
+
+Kenelm dropped a shilling into that depository, and the dog, looking
+gratified, took his way towards the tea-gardens. Lifting his hat, for he
+was, in his way, a very polite man, Kenelm approached the singer, and,
+trusting to the alteration in his dress for not being recognized by a
+stranger who had only once before encountered him he said,--
+
+"Judging by the little I heard, you sing very well, sir. May I ask who
+composed the words?"
+
+"They are mine," replied the singer.
+
+"And the air?"
+
+"Mine too."
+
+"Accept my compliments. I hope you find these manifestations of genius
+lucrative?"
+
+The singer, who had not hitherto vouchsafed more than a careless glance
+at the rustic garb of the questioner, now fixed his eyes full upon
+Kenelm, and said, with a smile, "Your voice betrays you, sir. We have
+met before."
+
+"True; but I did not then notice your guitar, nor, though acquainted
+with your poetical gifts, suppose that you selected this primitive
+method of making them publicly known."
+
+"Nor did I anticipate the pleasure of meeting you again in the character
+of Hobnail. Hist! let us keep each other's secret. I am known hereabouts
+by no other designation than that of the 'Wandering Minstrel.'"
+
+"It is in the capacity of minstrel that I address you. If it be not an
+impertinent question, do you know any songs which take the other side of
+the case?"
+
+"What case? I don't understand you, sir."
+
+"The song I heard seemed in praise of that sham called love. Don't you
+think you could say something more new and more true, treating that
+aberration from reason with the contempt it deserves?"
+
+"Not if I am to get my travelling expenses paid."
+
+"What! the folly is so popular?"
+
+"Does not your own heart tell you so?"
+
+"Not a bit of it,--rather the contrary. Your audience at present
+seem folks who live by work, and can have little time for such idle
+phantasies; for, as it is well observed by Ovid, a poet who wrote much
+on that subject, and professed the most intimate acquaintance with it,
+'Idleness is the parent of love.' Can't you sing something in praise of
+a good dinner? Everybody who works hard has an appetite for food."
+
+The singer again fixed on Kenelm his inquiring eye, but not detecting a
+vestige of humour in the grave face he contemplated, was rather puzzled
+how to reply, and therefore remained silent.
+
+"I perceive," resumed Kenelm, "that my observations surprise you: the
+surprise will vanish on reflection. It has been said by another poet,
+more reflective than Ovid, that 'the world is governed by love and
+hunger.' But hunger certainly has the lion's share of the government;
+and if a poet is really to do what he pretends to do,--namely, represent
+nature,--the greater part of his lays should be addressed to the
+stomach." Here, warming with his subject, Kenelm familiarly laid his
+hand on the musician's shoulder, and his voice took a tone bordering on
+enthusiasm. "You will allow that a man in the normal condition of health
+does not fall in love every day. But in the normal condition of health
+he is hungry every day. Nay, in those early years when you poets say he
+is most prone to love, he is so especially disposed to hunger that
+less than three meals a day can scarcely satisfy his appetite. You may
+imprison a man for months, for years, nay, for his whole life,--from
+infancy to any age which Sir Cornewall Lewis may allow him to
+attain,--without letting him be in love at all. But if you shut him up
+for a week without putting something into his stomach, you will find him
+at the end of it as dead as a door-nail."
+
+Here the singer, who had gradually retreated before the energetic
+advance of the orator, sank into the seat by the elm-tree and said
+pathetically, "Sir, you have fairly argued me down. Will you please to
+come to the conclusion which you deduce from your premises?"
+
+"Simply this, that where you find one human being who cares about love,
+you will find a thousand susceptible to the charms of a dinner; and if
+you wish to be the popular minne-singer or troubadour of the age, appeal
+to nature, sir,--appeal to nature; drop all hackneyed rhapsodies about a
+rosy cheek, and strike your lyre to the theme of a beefsteak."
+
+The dog had for some minutes regained his master's side, standing on
+his hind legs, with the tray, tolerably well filled with copper coins,
+between his teeth; and now, justly aggrieved by the inattention which
+detained him in that artificial attitude, dropped the tray and growled
+at Kenelm.
+
+At the same time there came an impatient sound from the audience in the
+tea-garden. They wanted another song for their money.
+
+The singer rose, obedient to the summons. "Excuse me, sir; but I am
+called upon to--"
+
+"To sing again?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And on the subject I suggest?"
+
+"No, indeed."
+
+"What! love, again?"
+
+"I am afraid so."
+
+"I wish you good evening then. You seem a well-educated man,--more shame
+to you. Perhaps we may meet once more in our rambles, when the question
+can be properly argued out."
+
+Kenelm lifted his hat, and turned on his heel. Before he reached the
+street, the sweet voice of the singer again smote his ears; but the only
+word distinguishable in the distance, ringing out at the close of the
+refrain, was "love."
+
+"Fiddle-de-dee," said Kenelm.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+AS Kenelm regained the street dignified by the edifice of the Temperance
+Hotel, a figure, dressed picturesquely in a Spanish cloak, brushed
+hurriedly by him, but not so fast as to be unrecognized as the
+tragedian. "Hem!" muttered Kenelm, "I don't think there is much triumph
+in that face. I suspect he has been scolded."
+
+The boy--if Kenelm's travelling companion is still to be so
+designated--was leaning against the mantelpiece as Kenelm re-entered
+the dining-room. There was an air of profound dejection about the boy's
+listless attitude and in the drooping tearless eyes.
+
+"My dear child," said Kenelm, in the softest tones of his plaintive
+voice, "do not honour me with any confidence that may be painful. But
+let me hope that you have dismissed forever all thoughts of going on the
+stage."
+
+"Yes," was the scarce audible answer.
+
+"And now only remains the question, 'What is to be done?'"
+
+"I am sure I don't know, and I don't care."
+
+"Then you leave it to me to know and to care; and assuming for the
+moment as a fact that which is one of the greatest lies in this
+mendacious world--namely, that all men are brothers--you will consider
+me as an elder brother, who will counsel and control you as he would
+an imprudent young--sister. I see very well how it is. Somehow or other
+you, having first admired Mr. Compton as Romeo or Richard III., made his
+acquaintance as Mr. Compton. He allowed you to believe him a single
+man. In a romantic moment you escaped from your home, with the design of
+adopting the profession of the stage and of becoming Mrs. Compton."
+
+"Oh," broke out the girl, since her sex must now be declared, "oh," she
+exclaimed, with a passionate sob, "what a fool I have been! Only do not
+think worse of me than I deserve. The man did deceive me; he did not
+think I should take him at his word, and follow him here, or his wife
+would not have appeared. I should not have known he had one and--and--"
+here her voice was choked under her passion.
+
+"But now you have discovered the truth, let us thank Heaven that you are
+saved from shame and misery. I must despatch a telegram to your uncle:
+give me his address."
+
+"No, no."
+
+"There is not a 'No' possible in this case, my child. Your reputation
+and your future must be saved. Leave me to explain all to your uncle.
+He is your guardian. I must send for him; nay, nay, there is no option.
+Hate me now for enforcing your will: you will thank me hereafter. And
+listen, young lady; if it does pain you to see your uncle, and encounter
+his reproaches, every fault must undergo its punishment. A brave nature
+undergoes it cheerfully, as a part of atonement. You are brave. Submit,
+and in submitting rejoice!"
+
+There was something in Kenelm's voice and manner at once so kindly and
+so commanding that the wayward nature he addressed fairly succumbed.
+She gave him her uncle's address, "John Bovill, Esq., Oakdale, near
+Westmere." And after giving it, she fixed her eyes mournfully upon her
+young adviser, and said with a simple, dreary pathos, "Now, will you
+esteem me more, or rather despise me less?"
+
+She looked so young, nay, so childlike, as she thus spoke, that Kenelm
+felt a parental inclination to draw her on his lap and kiss away
+her tears. But he prudently conquered that impulse, and said, with a
+melancholy half-smile,--
+
+"If human beings despise each other for being young and foolish, the
+sooner we are exterminated by that superior race which is to succeed us
+on earth the better it will be. Adieu, till your uncle comes."
+
+"What! you leave me here--alone?"
+
+"Nay, if your uncle found me under the same roof, now that I know you
+are his niece, don't you think he would have a right to throw me out
+of the window? Allow me to practise for myself the prudence I preach
+to you. Send for the landlady to show you your room, shut yourself in
+there, go to bed, and don't cry more than you can help."
+
+Kenelm shouldered the knapsack he had deposited in a corner of the room,
+inquired for the telegraph-office, despatched a telegram to Mr. Bovill,
+obtained a bedroom at the Commercial Hotel, and fell asleep, muttering
+these sensible words,--
+
+"Rouchefoucauld was perfectly right when he said, 'Very few people would
+fall in love if they had not heard it so much talked about.'"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY rose with the sun, according to his usual custom, and
+took his way to the Temperance Hotel. All in that sober building seemed
+still in the arms of Morpheus. He turned towards the stables in which he
+had left the gray cob, and had the pleasure to see that ill-used animal
+in the healthful process of rubbing down.
+
+"That's right," said he to the hostler. "I am glad to see you are so
+early a riser."
+
+"Why," quoth the hostler, "the gentleman as owns the pony knocked me
+up at two o'clock in the morning, and pleased enough he was to see the
+creature again lying down in the clean straw."
+
+"Oh, he has arrived at the hotel, I presume?--a stout gentleman?"
+
+"Yes, stout enough; and a passionate gentleman too. Came in a yellow and
+two posters, knocked up the Temperance and then knocked up me to see
+for the pony, and was much put out as he could not get any grog at the
+Temperance."
+
+"I dare say he was. I wish he had got his grog: it might have put him in
+better humour. Poor little thing!" muttered Kenelm, turning away; "I am
+afraid she is in for a regular vituperation. My turn next, I suppose.
+But he must be a good fellow to have come at once for his niece in the
+dead of the night."
+
+About nine o'clock Kenelm presented himself again at the Temperance
+Hotel, inquired for Mr. Bovill, and was shown by the prim maid-servant
+into the drawing-room, where he found Mr. Bovill seated amicably at
+breakfast with his niece, who of course was still in boy's clothing,
+having no other costume at hand. To Kenelm's great relief, Mr. Bovill
+rose from the table with a beaming countenance, and extending his hand
+to Kenelm, said,--
+
+"Sir, you are a gentleman; sit down, sit down and take breakfast."
+
+Then, as soon as the maid was out of the room, the uncle continued,--
+
+"I have heard all your good conduct from this young simpleton. Things
+might have been worse, sir."
+
+Kenelm bowed his head, and drew the loaf towards him in silence. Then,
+considering that some apology was due to his entertainer, he said,--
+
+"I hope you forgive me for that unfortunate mistake, when--"
+
+"You knocked me down, or rather tripped me up. All right now. Elsie,
+give the gentleman a cup of tea. Pretty little rogue, is she not? and a
+good girl, in spite of her nonsense. It was all my fault letting her go
+to the play and be intimate with Miss Lockit, a stage-stricken, foolish
+old maid, who ought to have known better than to lead her into all this
+trouble."
+
+"No, uncle," cried the girl, resolutely; "don't blame her, nor any one
+but me."
+
+Kenelm turned his dark eyes approvingly towards the girl, and saw that
+her lips were firmly set; there was an expression, not of grief nor
+shame, but compressed resolution in her countenance. But when her eyes
+met his they fell softly, and a blush mantled over her cheeks up to her
+very forehead.
+
+"Ah!" said the uncle, "just like you, Elsie; always ready to take
+everybody's fault on your own shoulders. Well, well, say no more about
+that. Now, my young friend, what brings you across the country tramping
+it on foot, eh? a young man's whim?" As he spoke, he eyed Kenelm very
+closely, and his look was that of an intelligent man not unaccustomed to
+observe the faces of those he conversed with. In fact a more shrewd man
+of business than Mr. Bovill is seldom met with on 'Change or in market.
+
+"I travel on foot to please myself, sir," answered Kenelm, curtly, and
+unconsciously set on his guard.
+
+"Of course you do," cried Mr. Bovill, with a jovial laugh. "But it seems
+you don't object to a chaise and pony whenever you can get them for
+nothing,--ha, ha!--excuse me,--a joke."
+
+Herewith Mr. Bovill, still in excellent good-humour, abruptly changed
+the conversation to general matters,--agricultural prospects, chance of
+a good harvest, corn trade, money market in general, politics, state of
+the nation. Kenelm felt there was an attempt to draw him out, to sound,
+to pump him, and replied only by monosyllables, generally significant
+of ignorance on the questions broached; and at the close, if the
+philosophical heir of the Chillinglys was in the habit of allowing
+himself to be surprised he would certainly have been startled when Mr.
+Bovill rose, slapped him on the shoulder, and said in a tone of great
+satisfaction, "Just as I thought, sir; you know nothing of these
+matters: you are a gentleman born and bred; your clothes can't disguise
+you, sir. Elsie was right. My dear, just leave us for a few minutes: I
+have something to say to our young friend. You can get ready meanwhile
+to go with me." Elsie left the table and walked obediently towards the
+doorway. There she halted a moment, turned round, and looked timidly
+towards Kenelm. He had naturally risen from his seat as she rose, and
+advanced some paces as if to open the door for her. Thus their looks
+encountered. He could not interpret that shy gaze of hers: it was
+tender, it was deprecating, it was humble, it was pleading; a man
+accustomed to female conquests might have thought it was something more,
+something in which was the key to all. But that something more was an
+unknown tongue to Kenelm Chillingly.
+
+When the two men were alone, Mr. Bovill reseated himself and motioned to
+Kenelm to do the same. "Now, young sir," said the former, "you and I can
+talk at our ease. That adventure of yours yesterday may be the luckiest
+thing that could happen to you."
+
+"It is sufficiently lucky if I have been of any service to your niece.
+But her own good sense would have been her safeguard if she had been
+alone, and discovered, as she would have done, that Mr. Compton had,
+knowingly or not, misled her to believe that he was a single man."
+
+"Hang Mr. Compton! we have done with him. I am a plain man, and I come
+to the point. It is you who have carried off my niece; it is with you
+that she came to this hotel. Now when Elsie told me how well you
+had behaved, and that your language and manners were those of a real
+gentleman, my mind was made up. I guess pretty well what you are; you
+are a gentleman's son; probably a college youth; not overburdened with
+cash; had a quarrel with your governor, and he keeps you short. Don't
+interrupt me. Well, Elsie is a good girl and a pretty girl, and will
+make a good wife, as wives go; and, hark ye, she has L20,000. So just
+confide in me; and if you don't like your parents to know about it till
+the thing's done and they be only got to forgive and bless you, why, you
+shall marry Elsie before you can say Jack Robinson."
+
+For the first time in his life Kenelm Chillingly was seized with
+terror,--terror and consternation. His jaw dropped; his tongue was
+palsied. If hair ever stands on end, his hair did. At last, with
+superhuman effort, he gasped out the word, "Marry!"
+
+"Yes; marry. If you are a gentleman you are bound to it. You have
+compromised my niece,--a respectable, virtuous girl, sir; an orphan, but
+not unprotected. I repeat, it is you who have plucked her from my very
+arms, and with violence and assault eloped with her; and what would the
+world say if it knew? Would it believe in your prudent conduct?--conduct
+only to be explained by the respect you felt due to your future wife.
+And where will you find a better? Where will you find an uncle who will
+part with his ward and L20,000 without asking if you have a sixpence?
+and the girl has taken a fancy to you; I see it: would she have given up
+that player so easily if you had not stolen her heart? Would you break
+that heart? No, young man: you are not a villain. Shake hands on it!"
+
+"Mr. Bovill," said Kenelm, recovering his wonted equanimity, "I am
+inexpressibly flattered by the honour you propose to me, and I do not
+deny that Miss Elsie is worthy of a much better man than myself. But
+I have inconceivable prejudices against the connubial state. If it be
+permitted to a member of the Established Church to cavil at any sentence
+written by Saint Paul,--and I think that liberty may be permitted to a
+simple layman, since eminent members of the clergy criticise the whole
+Bible as freely as if it were the history of Queen Elizabeth by Mr.
+Froude,--I should demur at the doctrine that it is better to marry than
+to burn: I myself should prefer burning. With these sentiments it would
+ill become any one entitled to that distinction of 'gentleman' which you
+confer on me to lead a fellow-victim to the sacrificial altar. As for
+any reproach attached to Miss Elsie, since in my telegram I directed you
+to ask for a young gentleman at this hotel, her very sex is not known in
+this place unless you divulge it. And--"
+
+Here Kenelm was interrupted by a violent explosion of rage from the
+uncle. He stamped his feet; he almost foamed at the mouth; he doubled
+his fist, and shook it in Kenelm's face.
+
+"Sir, you are mocking me: John Bovill is not a man to be jeered in this
+way. You _shall_ marry the girl. I'll not have her thrust back upon me
+to be the plague of my life with her whims and tantrums. You have taken
+her, and you shall keep her, or I'll break every bone in your skin."
+
+"Break them," said Kenelm, resignedly, but at the same time falling back
+into a formidable attitude of defence, which cooled the pugnacity of his
+accuser. Mr. Bovill sank into his chair, and wiped his forehead. Kenelm
+craftily pursued the advantage he had gained, and in mild accents
+proceeded to reason,--
+
+"When you recover your habitual serenity of humour, Mr. Bovill, you
+will see how much your very excusable desire to secure your niece's
+happiness, and, I may add, to reward what you allow to have been
+forbearing and well-bred conduct on my part, has hurried you into an
+error of judgment. You know nothing of me. I may be, for what you know,
+an impostor or swindler; I may have every bad quality, and yet you are
+to be contented with my assurance, or rather your own assumption, that
+I am born a gentleman, in order to give me your niece and her L20,000.
+This is temporary insanity on your part. Allow me to leave you to
+recover from your excitement."
+
+"Stop, sir," said Mr. Bovill, in a changed and sullen tone; "I am not
+quite the madman you think me. But I dare say I have been too hasty and
+too rough. Nevertheless the facts are as I have stated them, and I do
+not see how, as a man of honour, you can get off marrying my niece. The
+mistake you made in running away with her was, no doubt, innocent on
+your part: but still there it is; and supposing the case came before a
+jury, it would be an ugly one for you and your family. Marriage alone
+could mend it. Come, come, I own I was too business-like in rushing to
+the point at once, and I no longer say, 'Marry my niece off-hand.' You
+have only seen her disguised and in a false position. Pay me a visit at
+Oakdale; stay with me a month; and if at the end of that time you do not
+like her well enough to propose, I'll let you off and say no more about
+it."
+
+While Mr. Bovill thus spoke, and Kenelm listened, neither saw that the
+door had been noiselessly opened and that Elsie stood at the threshold.
+Now, before Kenelm could reply, she advanced into the middle of the
+room, and, her small figure drawn up to its fullest height, her cheeks
+glowing, her lips quivering, exclaimed,--
+
+"Uncle, for shame!" Then addressing Kenelm in a sharp tone of anguish,
+"Oh, do not believe I knew anything of this!" she covered her face with
+both hands and stood mute.
+
+All of chivalry that Kenelm had received with his baptismal appellation
+was aroused. He sprang up, and, bending his knee as he drew one of her
+hands into his own, he said,--
+
+"I am as convinced that your uncle's words are abhorrent to you as I am
+that you are a pure-hearted and high-spirited woman, of whose friendship
+I shall be proud. We meet again." Then releasing her hand, he addressed
+Mr. Bovill: "Sir, you are unworthy the charge of your niece. Had you not
+been so, she would have committed no imprudence. If she have any female
+relation, to that relation transfer your charge."
+
+"I have! I have!" cried Elsie; "my lost mother's sister: let me go to
+her."
+
+"The woman who keeps a school!" said Mr. Bovill sneeringly.
+
+"Why not?" asked Kenelm.
+
+"She never would go there. I proposed it to her a year ago. The minx
+would not go into a school."
+
+"I will now, Uncle."
+
+"Well, then, you shall at once; and I hope you'll be put on bread and
+water. Fool! fool! you have spoilt your own game. Mr. Chillingly, now
+that Miss Elsie has turned her back on herself, I can convince you that
+I am not the mad man you thought me. I was at the festive meeting held
+when you came of age: my brother is one of your father's tenants. I did
+not recognize your face immediately in the excitement of our encounter
+and in your change of dress; but in walking home it struck me that I had
+seen it before, and I knew it at once when you entered the room to-day.
+It has been a tussle between us which should beat the other. You have
+beat me; and thanks to that idiot! If she had not put her spoke into my
+wheel, she would have lived to be 'my lady.' Now good-day, sir."
+
+"Mr. Bovill, you offered to shake hands: shake hands now, and promise
+me, with the good grace of one honourable combatant to another, that
+Miss Elsie shall go to her aunt the schoolmistress at once if she wishes
+it. Hark ye, my friend" (this in Mr. Bovill's ear): "a man can never
+manage a woman. Till a woman marries, a prudent man leaves her to women;
+when she does marry, she manages her husband, and there's an end of it."
+
+Kenelm was gone.
+
+"Oh, wise young man!" murmured the uncle. "Elsie, dear, how can you go
+to your aunt's while you are in that dress?"
+
+Elsie started as from a trance, her eyes directed towards the
+doorway through which Kenelm had vanished. "This dress," she said
+contemptuously, "this dress; is not that easily altered with shops in
+the town?"
+
+"Gad!" muttered Mr. Bovill, "that youngster is a second Solomon; and if
+I can't manage Elsie, she'll manage a husband--whenever she gets one."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+"BY the powers that guard innocence and celibacy," soliloquized Kenelm
+Chillingly, "but I have had a narrow escape! and had that amphibious
+creature been in girl's clothes instead of boy's, when she intervened
+like the deity of the ancient drama, I might have plunged my armorial
+Fishes into hot water. Though, indeed, it is hard to suppose that a
+young lady head-over-ears in love with Mr. Compton yesterday could have
+consigned her affections to me to-day. Still she looked as if she could,
+which proves either that one is never to trust a woman's heart or never
+to trust a woman's looks. Decimus Roach is right. Man must never relax
+his flight from the women, if he strives to achieve an 'Approach to the
+Angels.'"
+
+These reflections were made by Kenelm Chillingly as, having turned his
+back upon the town in which such temptations and trials had befallen
+him, he took his solitary way along a footpath that wound through meads
+and cornfields, and shortened by three miles the distance to a cathedral
+town at which he proposed to rest for the night.
+
+He had travelled for some hours, and the sun was beginning to slope
+towards a range of blue hills in the west, when he came to the margin
+of a fresh rivulet, overshadowed by feathery willows and the quivering
+leaves of silvery Italian poplars. Tempted by the quiet and cool of
+this pleasant spot, he flung himself down on the banks, drew from his
+knapsack some crusts of bread with which he had wisely provided himself,
+and, dipping them into the pure lymph as it rippled over its pebbly bed,
+enjoyed one of those luxurious repasts for which epicures would exchange
+their banquet in return for the appetite of youth. Then, reclining along
+the bank, and crushing the wild thyme that grows best and sweetest in
+wooded coverts, provided they be neighboured by water, no matter whether
+in pool or rill, he resigned himself to that intermediate state between
+thought and dream-land which we call "revery." At a little distance he
+heard the low still sound of the mower's scythe, and the air came to his
+brow sweet with the fragrance of new-mown hay.
+
+He was roused by a gentle tap on the shoulder, and turning lazily round,
+saw a good-humoured jovial face upon a pair of massive shoulders, and
+heard a hearty and winning voice say,--
+
+"Young man, if you are not too tired, will you lend a hand to get in
+my hay? We are very short of hands, and I am afraid we shall have rain
+pretty soon."
+
+Kenelm rose and shook himself, gravely contemplated the stranger, and
+replied in his customary sententious fashion, "Man is born to help his
+fellow-man,--especially to get in hay while the sun shines. I am at your
+service."
+
+"That's a good fellow, and I'm greatly obliged to you. You see I had
+counted on a gang of roving haymakers, but they were bought up
+by another farmer. This way;" and leading on through a gap in the
+brushwood, he emerged, followed by Kenelm, into a large meadow,
+one-third of which was still under the scythe, the rest being occupied
+with persons of both sexes, tossing and spreading the cut grass. Among
+the latter, Kenelm, stripped to his shirt-sleeves, soon found himself
+tossing and spreading like the rest, with his usual melancholy
+resignation of mien and aspect. Though a little awkward at first in
+the use of his unfamiliar implements, his practice in all athletic
+accomplishments bestowed on him that invaluable quality which is termed
+"handiness," and he soon distinguished himself by the superior activity
+and neatness with which he performed his work. Something--it might be in
+his countenance or in the charm of his being a stranger--attracted the
+attention of the feminine section of haymakers, and one very pretty girl
+who was nearer to him than the rest attempted to commence conversation.
+
+"This is new to you," she said smiling.
+
+"Nothing is new to me," answered Kenelm, mournfully. "But allow me to
+observe that to do things well you should only do one thing at a time. I
+am here to make hay and not conversation."
+
+"My!" said the girl, in amazed ejaculation, and turned off with a toss
+of her pretty head.
+
+"I wonder if that jade has got an uncle," thought Kenelm. The farmer,
+who took his share of work with the men, halting now and then to look
+round, noticed Kenelm's vigorous application with much approval, and at
+the close of the day's work shook him heartily by the hand, leaving a
+two-shilling piece in his palm. The heir of the Chillinglys gazed on
+that honorarium, and turned it over with the finger and thumb of the
+left hand.
+
+"Be n't it eno'?" said the farmer, nettled.
+
+"Pardon me," answered Kenelm. "But, to tell you the truth, it is the
+first money I ever earned by my own bodily labour; and I regard it with
+equal curiosity and respect. But if it would not offend you, I would
+rather that, instead of the money, you had offered me some supper; for I
+have tasted nothing but bread and water since the morning."
+
+"You shall have the money and supper both, my lad," said the farmer,
+cheerily. "And if you will stay and help till I have got in the hay, I
+dare say my good woman can find you a better bed than you'll get in the
+village inn; if, indeed, you can get one there at all."
+
+"You are very kind. But before I accept your hospitality excuse one
+question: have you any nieces about you?"
+
+"Nieces!" echoed the farmer, mechanically thrusting his hands into his
+breeches-pockets as if in search of something there, "nieces about me!
+what do you mean? Be that a newfangled word for coppers?"
+
+"Not for coppers, though perhaps for brass. But I spoke without
+metaphor. I object to nieces upon abstract principle, confirmed by the
+test of experience."
+
+The farmer stared, and thought his new friend not quite so sound in his
+mental as he evidently was in his physical conformation, but replied,
+with a laugh, "Make yourself easy, then. I have only one niece, and she
+is married to an iron-monger and lives in Exeter."
+
+On entering the farmhouse, Kenelm's host conducted him straight into the
+kitchen, and cried out, in a hearty voice, to a comely middle-aged dame,
+who, with a stout girl, was intent on culinary operations, "Hulloa! old
+woman, I have brought you a guest who has well earned his supper, for he
+has done the work of two, and I have promised him a bed."
+
+The farmer's wife turned sharply round. "He is heartily welcome to
+supper. As to a bed," she said doubtfully, "I don't know." But here her
+eyes settled on Kenelm; and there was something in his aspect so
+unlike what she expected to see in an itinerant haymaker, that she
+involuntarily dropped a courtesy, and resumed, with a change of tone,
+"The gentleman shall have the guest-room: but it will take a little time
+to get ready; you know, John, all the furniture is covered up."
+
+"Well, wife, there will be leisure eno' for that. He don't want to go to
+roost till he has supped."
+
+"Certainly not," said Kenelm, sniffing a very agreeable odour.
+
+"Where are the girls?" asked the farmer.
+
+"They have been in these five minutes, and gone upstairs to tidy
+themselves."
+
+"What girls?" faltered Kenelm, retreating towards the door. "I thought
+you said you had no nieces."
+
+"But I did not say I had no daughters. Why, you are not afraid of them,
+are you?"
+
+"Sir," replied Kenelm, with a polite and politic evasion of that
+question, "if your daughters are like their mother, you can't say that
+they are not dangerous."
+
+"Come," cried the farmer, looking very much pleased, while his dame
+smiled and blushed, "come, that's as nicely said as if you were
+canvassing the county. 'Tis not among haymakers that you learned
+manners, I guess; and perhaps I have been making too free with my
+betters."
+
+"What!" quoth the courteous Kenelm, "do you mean to imply that you were
+too free with your shillings? Apologize for that, if you like, but I
+don't think you'll get back the shillings. I have not seen so much of
+this life as you have, but, according to my experience, when a man once
+parts with his money, whether to his betters or his worsers, the chances
+are that he'll never see it again."
+
+At this aphorism the farmer laughed ready to kill himself, his wife
+chuckled, and even the maid-of-all-work grinned. Kenelm, preserving his
+unalterable gravity, said to himself,--
+
+"Wit consists in the epigrammatic expression of a commonplace truth, and
+the dullest remark on the worth of money is almost as sure of successful
+appreciation as the dullest remark on the worthlessness of women.
+Certainly I am a wit without knowing it."
+
+Here the farmer touched him on the shoulder--touched it, did not slap
+it, as he would have done ten minutes before--and said,--
+
+"We must not disturb the Missis or we shall get no supper. I'll just go
+and give a look into the cow-sheds. Do you know much about cows?"
+
+"Yes, cows produce cream and butter. The best cows are those which
+produce at the least cost the best cream and butter. But how the best
+cream and butter can be produced at a price which will place them free
+of expense on a poor man's breakfast-table is a question to be settled
+by a Reformed Parliament and a Liberal Administration. In the meanwhile
+let us not delay the supper."
+
+The farmer and his guest quitted the kitchen and entered the farmyard.
+
+"You are quite a stranger in these parts?"
+
+"Quite."
+
+"You don't even know my name?"
+
+"No, except that I heard your wife call you John."
+
+"My name is John Saunderson."
+
+"Ah! you come from the North, then? That's why you are so sensible and
+shrewd. Names that end in 'son' are chiefly borne by the descendants of
+the Danes, to whom King Alfred, Heaven bless him! peacefully assigned
+no less than sixteen English counties. And when a Dane was called
+somebody's son, it is a sign that he was the son of a somebody."
+
+"By gosh! I never heard that before."
+
+"If I thought you had I should not have said it."
+
+"Now I have told you my name, what is yours?"
+
+"A wise man asks questions and a fool answers them. Suppose for a moment
+that I am not a fool."
+
+Farmer Saunderson scratched his head, and looked more puzzled than
+became the descendant of a Dane settled by King Alfred in the north of
+England.
+
+"Dash it," said he at last, "but I think you are Yorkshire too."
+
+"Man, who is the most conceited of all animals, says that he alone has
+the prerogative of thought, and condemns the other animals to the meaner
+mechanical operation which he calls instinct. But as instincts are
+unerring and thoughts generally go wrong, man has not much to boast of
+according to his own definition. When you say you think, and take it
+for granted, that I am Yorkshire, you err. I am not Yorkshire. Confining
+yourself to instinct, can you divine when we shall sup? The cows you are
+about to visit divine to a moment when they shall be fed."
+
+Said the farmer, recovering his sense of superiority to the guest whom
+he obliged with a supper, "In ten minutes." Then, after a pause, and
+in a tone of deprecation, as if he feared he might be thought fine, he
+continued, "We don't sup in the kitchen. My father did, and so did I
+till I married; but my Bess, though she's as good a farmer's wife as
+ever wore shoe-leather, was a tradesman's daughter, and had been brought
+up different. You see she was not without a good bit of money: but even
+if she had been, I should not have liked her folks to say I had lowered
+her; so we sup in the parlour."
+
+Quoth Kenelm, "The first consideration is to sup at all. Supper
+conceded, every man is more likely to get on in life who would rather
+sup in his parlour than his kitchen. Meanwhile, I see a pump; while you
+go to the cows I will stay here and wash my hands of them."
+
+"Hold! you seem a sharp fellow, and certainly no fool. I have a son,
+a good smart chap, but stuck up; crows it over us all; thinks no small
+beer of himself. You'd do me a service, and him too, if you'd let him
+down a peg or two."
+
+Kenelm, who was now hard at work at the pump-handle, only replied by a
+gracious nod. But as he seldom lost an opportunity for reflection, he
+said to himself, while he laved his face in the stream from the spout,
+"One can't wonder why every small man thinks it so pleasant to let down
+a big one, when a father asks a stranger to let down his own son for
+even fancying that he is not small beer. It is upon that principle in
+human nature that criticism wisely relinquishes its pretensions as an
+analytical science, and becomes a lucrative profession. It relies on the
+pleasure its readers find in letting a man down."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+IT was a pretty, quaint farmhouse, such as might well go with two or
+three hundred acres of tolerably good land, tolerably well farmed by an
+active old-fashioned tenant, who, though he did not use mowing-machines
+nor steam-ploughs nor dabble in chemical experiments, still brought
+an adequate capital to his land and made the capital yield a very fair
+return of interest. The supper was laid out in a good-sized though
+low-pitched parlour with a glazed door, now wide open, as were all the
+latticed windows, looking into a small garden, rich in those straggling
+old English flowers which are nowadays banished from gardens more
+pretentious and; infinitely less fragrant. At one corner was an arbour
+covered with honeysuckle, and opposite to it a row of beehives. The room
+itself had an air of comfort, and that sort of elegance which indicates
+the presiding genius of feminine taste. There were shelves suspended
+to the wall by blue ribbons, and filled with small books neatly bound;
+there were flower-pots in all the window-sills; there was a small
+cottage piano; the walls were graced partly with engraved portraits of
+county magnates and prize oxen; partly with samplers in worsted-work,
+comprising verses of moral character and the names and birthdays of
+the farmer's grandmother, mother, wife, and daughters. Over the
+chimney-piece was a small mirror, and above that the trophy of a fox's
+brush; while niched into an angle in the room was a glazed cupboard,
+rich with specimens of old china, Indian and English.
+
+The party consisted of the farmer, his wife, three buxom daughters, and
+a pale-faced slender lad of about twenty, the only son, who did not take
+willingly to farming: he had been educated at a superior grammar school,
+and had high notions about the March of Intellect and the Progress of
+the Age.
+
+Kenelm, though among the gravest of mortals, was one of the least shy.
+In fact shyness is the usual symptom of a keen _amour propre_; and of
+that quality the youthful Chillingly scarcely possessed more than did
+the three Fishes of his hereditary scutcheon. He felt himself perfectly
+at home with his entertainers; taking care, however, that his attentions
+were so equally divided between the three daughters as to prevent all
+suspicion of a particular preference. "There is safety in numbers,"
+thought he, "especially in odd numbers. The three Graces never married,
+neither did the nine Muses."
+
+"I presume, young ladies, that you are fond of music," said Kenelm,
+glancing at the piano.
+
+"Yes, I love it dearly," said the eldest girl, speaking for the others.
+
+Quoth the farmer, as he heaped the stranger's plate with boiled beef and
+carrots, "Things are not what they were when I was a boy; then it was
+only great tenant-farmers who had their girls taught the piano, and
+sent their boys to a good school. Now we small folks are for helping our
+children a step or two higher than our own place on the ladder."
+
+"The schoolmaster is abroad," said the son, with the emphasis of a sage
+adding an original aphorism to the stores of philosophy.
+
+"There is, no doubt, a greater equality of culture than there was in
+the last generation," said Kenelm. "People of all ranks utter the same
+commonplace ideas in very much the same arrangements of syntax. And in
+proportion as the democracy of intelligence extends--a friend of mine,
+who is a doctor, tells me that complaints formerly reserved to what is
+called aristocracy (though what that word means in plain English I don't
+know) are equally shared by the commonalty--_tic-douloureux_ and other
+neuralgic maladies abound. And the human race, in England at least, is
+becoming more slight and delicate. There is a fable of a man who, when
+he became exceedingly old, was turned into a grasshopper. England
+is very old, and is evidently approaching the grasshopper state of
+development. Perhaps we don't eat as much beef as our forefathers did.
+May I ask you for another slice?"
+
+Kenelm's remarks were somewhat over the heads of his audience. But
+the son, taking them as a slur upon the enlightened spirit of the age,
+coloured up and said, with a knitted brow, "I hope, sir, that you are
+not an enemy to progress."
+
+"That depends: for instance, I prefer staying here, where I am well off,
+to going farther and faring worse."
+
+"Well said!" cried the farmer.
+
+Not deigning to notice that interruption, the son took up Kenelm's reply
+with a sneer, "I suppose you mean that it is to fare worse, if you march
+with the time."
+
+"I am afraid we have no option but to march with the time; but when we
+reach that stage when to march any farther is to march into old age, we
+should not be sorry if time would be kind enough to stand still; and all
+good doctors concur in advising us to do nothing to hurry him."
+
+"There is no sign of old age in this country, sir; and thank Heaven we
+are not standing still!"
+
+"Grasshoppers never do; they are always hopping and jumping, and making
+what they think 'progress,' till (unless they hop into the water and are
+swallowed up prematurely by a carp or a frog) they die of the exhaustion
+which hops and jumps unremitting naturally produce. May I ask you, Mrs.
+Saunderson, for some of that rice-pudding?"
+
+The farmer, who, though he did not quite comprehend Kenelm's
+metaphorical mode of arguing, saw delightedly that his wise son looked
+more posed than himself, cried with great glee, "Bob, my boy,--Bob, our
+visitor is a little too much for you!"
+
+"Oh, no," said Kenelm, modestly. "But I honestly think Mr. Bob would be
+a wiser man, and a weightier man, and more removed from the grasshopper
+state, if he would think less and eat more pudding."
+
+When the supper was over the farmer offered Kenelm a clay pipe filled
+with shag, which that adventurer accepted with his habitual resignation
+to the ills of life; and the whole party, excepting Mrs. Saunderson,
+strolled into the garden. Kenelm and Mr. Saunderson seated themselves
+in the honeysuckle arbour: the girls and the advocate of progress stood
+without among the garden flowers. It was a still and lovely night, the
+moon at her full. The farmer, seated facing his hayfields, smoked on
+placidly. Kenelm, at the third whiff, laid aside his pipe, and glanced
+furtively at the three Graces. They formed a pretty group, all clustered
+together near the silenced beehives, the two younger seated on the
+grass strip that bordered the flower-beds, their arms over each other's
+shoulders, the elder one standing behind them, with the moonlight
+shining soft on her auburn hair.
+
+Young Saunderson walked restlessly by himself to and fro the path of
+gravel.
+
+"It is a strange thing," ruminated Kenelm, "that girls are not
+unpleasant to look at if you take them collectively,--two or three bound
+up together; but if you detach any one of them from the bunch, the odds
+are that she is as plain as a pikestaff. I wonder whether that bucolical
+grasshopper, who is so enamoured of the hop and jump that he calls
+'progress,' classes the society of the Mormons among the evidences of
+civilized advancement? There is a good deal to be said in favour of
+taking a whole lot of wives as one may buy a whole lot of cheap razors.
+For it is not impossible that out of a dozen a good one may be found.
+And then, too, a whole nosegay of variegated blooms, with a faded
+leaf here and there, must be more agreeable to the eye than the same
+monotonous solitary lady's smock. But I fear these reflections are
+naughty; let us change them. Farmer," he said aloud, "I suppose your
+handsome daughters are too fine to assist you much. I did not see them
+among the haymakers."
+
+"Oh, they were there, but by themselves, in the back part of the
+field. I did not want them to mix with all the girls, many of whom are
+strangers from other places. I don't know anything against them; but as
+I don't know anything for them, I thought it as well to keep my lasses
+apart."
+
+"But I should have supposed it wiser to keep your son apart from them. I
+saw him in the thick of those nymphs."
+
+"Well," said the farmer, musingly, and withdrawing his pipe from his
+lips, "I don't think lasses not quite well brought up, poor things!
+do as much harm to the lads as they can do to proper-behaved lasses;
+leastways my wife does not think so. 'Keep good girls from bad girls,'
+says she, 'and good girls will never go wrong.' And you will find there
+is something in that when you have girls of your own to take care of."
+
+"Without waiting for that time, which I trust may never occur, I can
+recognize the wisdom of your excellent wife's observation. My own
+opinion is, that a woman can more easily do mischief to her own sex than
+to ours; since, of course, she cannot exist without doing mischief to
+somebody or other."
+
+"And good, too," said the jovial farmer, thumping his fist on the table.
+"What should we be without women?"
+
+"Very much better, I take it, sir. Adam was as good as gold, and never
+had a qualm of conscience or stomach till Eve seduced him into eating
+raw apples."
+
+"Young man, thou'st been crossed in love. I see it now. That's why thou
+look'st so sorrowful."
+
+"Sorrowful! Did you ever know a man crossed in love who looked less
+sorrowful when he came across a pudding?"
+
+"Hey! but thou canst ply a good knife and fork, that I will say for
+thee." Here the farmer turned round, and gazed on Kenelm with deliberate
+scrutiny. That scrutiny accomplished, his voice took a somewhat
+more respectful tone, as he resumed, "Do you know that you puzzle me
+somewhat?"
+
+"Very likely. I am sure that I puzzle myself. Say on."
+
+"Looking at your dress and--and--"
+
+"The two shillings you gave me? Yes--"
+
+"I took you for the son of some small farmer like myself. But now I
+judge from your talk that you are a college chap,--anyhow, a gentleman.
+Be n't it so?"
+
+"My dear Mr. Saunderson, I set out on my travels, which is not long
+ago, with a strong dislike to telling lies. But I doubt if a man can get
+along through this world without finding that the faculty of lying was
+bestowed on him by Nature as a necessary means of self-preservation.
+If you are going to ask me any questions about myself, I am sure that
+I shall tell you lies. Perhaps, therefore, it may be best for both if
+I decline the bed you proffered me, and take my night's rest under a
+hedge."
+
+"Pooh! I don't want to know more of a man's affairs than he thinks fit
+to tell me. Stay and finish the haymaking. And I say, lad, I'm glad you
+don't seem to care for the girls; for I saw a very pretty one trying to
+flirt with you, and if you don't mind she'll bring you into trouble."
+
+"How? Does she want to run away from her uncle?"
+
+"Uncle! Bless you, she don't live with him! She lives with her
+father; and I never knew that she wants to run away. In fact, Jessie
+Wiles--that's her name--is, I believe, a very good girl, and everybody
+likes her,--perhaps a little too much; but then she knows she's a
+beauty, and does not object to admiration."
+
+"No woman ever does, whether she's a beauty or not. But I don't yet
+understand why Jessie Wiles should bring me into trouble."
+
+"Because there is a big hulking fellow who has gone half out of his wits
+for her; and when he fancies he sees any other chap too sweet on her he
+thrashes him into a jelly. So, youngster, you just keep your skin out of
+that trap."
+
+"Hem! And what does the girl say to those proofs of affection? Does she
+like the man the better for thrashing other admirers into jelly?"
+
+"Poor child! No; she hates the very sight of him. But he swears she
+shall marry nobody else if he hangs for it. And, to tell you the truth,
+I suspect that if Jessie does seem to trifle with others a little too
+lightly, it is to draw away this bully's suspicion from the only man I
+think she does care for,--a poor sickly young fellow who was crippled by
+an accident, and whom Tom Bowles could brain with his little finger."
+
+"This is really interesting," cried Kenelm, showing something like
+excitement. "I should like to know this terrible suitor."
+
+"That's easy eno'," said the farmer, dryly. "You have only to take
+a stroll with Jessie Wiles after sunset, and you'll know more of Tom
+Bowles than you are likely to forget in a month."
+
+"Thank you very much for your information," said Kenelm, in a soft tone,
+grateful but pensive. "I hope to profit by it."
+
+"Do. I should be sorry if any harm came to thee; and Tom Bowles in one
+of his furies is as bad to cross as a mad bull. So now, as we must be up
+early, I'll just take a look round the stables, and then off to bed; and
+I advise you to do the same."
+
+"Thank you for the hint. I see the young ladies have already gone in.
+Good-night."
+
+Passing through the garden, Kenelm encountered the junior Saunderson.
+
+"I fear," said the Votary of Progress, "that you have found the governor
+awful slow. What have you been talking about?"
+
+"Girls," said Kenelm, "a subject always awful, but not necessarily
+slow."
+
+"Girls,--the governor been talking about girls? You joke."
+
+"I wish I did joke, but that is a thing I could never do since I came
+upon earth. Even in the cradle, I felt that life was a very serious
+matter, and did not allow of jokes. I remember too well my first dose
+of castor-oil. You too, Mr. Bob, have doubtless imbibed that initiatory
+preparation to the sweets of existence. The corners of your mouth have
+not recovered from the downward curves into which it so rigidly dragged
+them. Like myself, you are of grave temperament, and not easily moved
+to jocularity,--nay, an enthusiast for Progress is of necessity a man
+eminently dissatisfied with the present state of affairs. And chronic
+dissatisfaction resents the momentary relief of a joke."
+
+"Give off chaffing, if you please," said Bob, lowering the didascular
+intonations of his voice, "and just tell me plainly, did not my father
+say anything particular about me?"
+
+"Not a word: the only person of the male sex of whom he said anything
+particular was Tom Bowles."
+
+"What, fighting Tom! the terror of the whole neighbourhood! Ah, I guess
+the old gentleman is afraid lest Tom may fall foul upon me. But Jessie
+Wiles is not worth a quarrel with that brute. It is a crying shame in
+the Government--"
+
+"What! has the Government failed to appreciate the heroism of Tom
+Bowles, or rather to restrain the excesses of its ardour?"
+
+"Stuff! it is a shame in the Government not to have compelled his father
+to put him to school. If education were universal--"
+
+"You think there would be no brutes in particular. It may be so; but
+education is universal in China, and so is the bastinado. I thought,
+however, that you said the schoolmaster was abroad, and that the age of
+enlightenment was in full progress."
+
+"Yes, in the towns, but not in these obsolete rural districts; and that
+brings me to the point. I feel lost, thrown away here. I have something
+in me, sir, and it can only come out by collision with equal minds. So
+do me a favour, will you?"
+
+"With the greatest pleasure."
+
+"Give the governor a hint that he can't expect me, after the education
+I have had, to follow the plough and fatten pigs; and that Manchester is
+the place for ME."
+
+"Why Manchester?"
+
+"Because I have a relation in business there who will give me a
+clerkship if the governor will consent. And Manchester rules England."
+
+"Mr. Bob Saunderson, I will do my best to promote your wishes. This is
+a land of liberty, and every man should choose his own walk in it, so
+that, at the last, if he goes to the dogs, he goes to them without that
+disturbance of temper which is naturally occasioned by the sense of
+being driven to their jaws by another man against his own will. He has
+then no one to blame but himself. And that, Mr. Bob, is a great comfort.
+When, having got into a scrape, we blame others, we unconsciously
+become unjust, spiteful, uncharitable, malignant, perhaps revengeful.
+We indulge in feelings which tend to demoralize the whole character.
+But when we only blame ourselves, we become modest and penitent. We make
+allowances for others. And indeed self-blame is a salutary exercise of
+conscience, which a really good man performs every day of his life. And
+now, will you show me the room in which I am to sleep, and forget for a
+few hours that I am alive at all: the best thing that can happen to us
+in this world, my dear Mr. Bob! There's never much amiss with our days,
+so long as we can forget about them the moment we lay our heads on the
+pillow."
+
+The two young men entered the house amicably, arm in arm. The girls had
+already retired, but Mrs. Saunderson was still up to conduct her
+visitor to the guest's chamber,--a pretty room which had been furnished
+twenty-two years ago on the occasion of the farmer's marriage, at the
+expense of Mrs. Saunderson's mother, for her own occupation when she
+paid them a visit, and with its dimity curtains and trellised paper it
+still looked as fresh and new as if decorated and furnished yesterday.
+
+Left alone, Kenelm undressed, and before he got into bed, bared
+his right arm, and doubling it, gravely contemplated its muscular
+development, passing his left hand over that prominence in the upper
+part which is vulgarly called the ball. Satisfied apparently with the
+size and the firmness of that pugilistic protuberance, he gently sighed
+forth, "I fear I shall have to lick Thomas Bowles." In five minutes more
+he was asleep.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE next day the hay-mowing was completed, and a large portion of the
+hay already made carted away to be stacked. Kenelm acquitted himself
+with a credit not less praiseworthy than had previously won Mr.
+Saunderson's approbation. But instead of rejecting as before the
+acquaintance of Miss Jessie Wiles, he contrived towards noon to place
+himself near to that dangerous beauty, and commenced conversation. "I am
+afraid I was rather rude to you yesterday, and I want to beg pardon."
+
+"Oh," answered the girl, in that simple intelligible English which
+is more frequent among our village folks nowadays than many popular
+novelists would lead us into supposing, "oh, I ought to ask pardon for
+taking a liberty in speaking to you. But I thought you'd feel strange,
+and I intended it kindly."
+
+"I'm sure you did," returned Kenelm, chivalrously raking her portion of
+hay as well as his own, while he spoke. "And I want to be good friends
+with you. It is very near the time when we shall leave off for
+dinner, and Mrs. Saunderson has filled my pockets with some excellent
+beef-sandwiches, which I shall be happy to share with you, if you do not
+object to dine with me here, instead of going home for your dinner."
+
+The girl hesitated, and then shook her head in dissent from the
+proposition.
+
+"Are you afraid that your neighbours will think it wrong?"
+
+Jessie curled up her lips with a pretty scorn, and said, "I don't much
+care what other folks say, but is n't it wrong?"
+
+"Not in the least. Let me make your mind easy. I am here but for a day
+or two: we are not likely ever to meet again; but, before I go, I should
+be glad if I could do you some little service." As he spoke he had
+paused from his work, and, leaning on his rake, fixed his eyes, for the
+first time attentively, on the fair haymaker.
+
+Yes, she was decidedly pretty,--pretty to a rare degree: luxuriant brown
+hair neatly tied up, under a straw hat doubtless of her own plaiting;
+for, as a general rule, nothing more educates the village maid for the
+destinies of flirt than the accomplishment of straw-plaiting. She had
+large, soft blue eyes, delicate small features, and a complexion more
+clear in its healthful bloom than rural beauties generally retain
+against the influences of wind and sun. She smiled and slightly coloured
+as he gazed on her, and, lifting her eyes, gave him one gentle, trustful
+glance, which might have bewitched a philosopher and deceived a _roue_.
+And yet Kenelm by that intuitive knowledge of character which is often
+truthfulest where it is least disturbed by the doubts and cavils of
+acquired knowledge, felt at once that in that girl's mind coquetry,
+perhaps unconscious, was conjoined with an innocence of anything
+worse than coquetry as complete as a child's. He bowed his head, in
+withdrawing his gaze, and took her into his heart as tenderly as if she
+had been a child appealing to it for protection.
+
+"Certainly," he said inly, "certainly I must lick Tom Bowles; yet stay,
+perhaps after all she likes him."
+
+"But," he continued aloud, "you do not see how I can be of any service
+to you. Before I explain, let me ask which of the men in the field is
+Tom Bowles?"
+
+"Tom Bowles?" exclaimed Jessie, in a tone of surprise and alarm, and
+turning pale as she looked hastily round; "you frightened me, sir: but
+he is not here; he does not work in the fields. But how came you to hear
+of Tom Bowles?"
+
+"Dine with me and I'll tell you. Look, there is a quiet place in yon
+corner under the thorn-trees by that piece of water. See, they are
+leaving off work: I will go for a can of beer, and then, pray, let me
+join you there."
+
+Jessie paused for a moment as if doubtful still; then again glancing at
+Kenelm, and assured by the grave kindness of his countenance, uttered a
+scarce audible assent and moved away towards the thorn-trees.
+
+As the sun now stood perpendicularly over their heads, and the hand
+of the clock in the village church tower, soaring over the hedgerows,
+reached the first hour after noon, all work ceased in a sudden silence:
+some of the girls went back to their homes; those who stayed grouped
+together, apart from the men, who took their way to the shadows of a
+large oak-tree in the hedgerow, where beer kegs and cans awaited them.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+"AND now," said Kenelm, as the two young persons, having finished their
+simple repast, sat under the thorn-trees and by the side of the water,
+fringed at that part with tall reeds through which the light summer
+breeze stirred with a pleasant murmur, "now I will talk to you about Tom
+Bowles. Is it true that you don't like that brave young fellow? I say
+young, as I take his youth for granted."
+
+"Like him! I hate the sight of him."
+
+"Did you always hate the sight of him? You must surely at one time have
+allowed him to think that you did not?"
+
+The girl winced, and made no answer, but plucked a daffodil from the
+soil, and tore it ruthlessly to pieces.
+
+"I am afraid you like to serve your admirers as you do that ill-fated
+flower," said Kenelm, with some severity of tone. "But concealed in
+the flower you may sometimes find the sting of a bee. I see by your
+countenance that you did not tell Tom Bowles that you hated him till it
+was too late to prevent his losing his wits for you."
+
+"No; I was n't so bad as that," said Jessie, looking, nevertheless,
+rather ashamed of herself; "but I was silly and giddy-like, I own; and,
+when he first took notice of me, I was pleased, without thinking much of
+it, because, you see, Mr. Bowles (emphasis on _Mr._) is higher up than
+a poor girl like me. He is a tradesman, and I am only a shepherd's
+daughter; though, indeed, Father is more like Mr. Saunderson's foreman
+than a mere shepherd. But I never thought anything serious of it, and
+did not suppose he did; that is, at first."
+
+"So Tom Bowles is a tradesman. What trade?"
+
+"A farrier, sir."
+
+"And, I am told, a very fine young man."
+
+"I don't know as to that: he is very big."
+
+"And what made you hate him?"
+
+"The first thing that made me hate him was that he insulted Father, who
+is a very quiet, timid man, and threatened I don't know what if Father
+did not make me keep company with him. Make me indeed! But Mr. Bowles is
+a dangerous, bad-hearted, violent man, and--don't laugh at me, sir, but
+I dreamed one night he was murdering me. And I think he will too, if he
+stays here: and so does his poor mother, who is a very nice woman, and
+wants him to go away; but he will not."
+
+"Jessie," said Kenelm, softly, "I said I wanted to make friends with
+you. Do you think you can make a friend of me? I can never be more than
+friend. But I should like to be that. Can you trust me as one?"
+
+"Yes," answered the girl, firmly, and, as she lifted her eyes to him,
+their look was pure from all vestige of coquetry,--guileless, frank,
+grateful.
+
+"Is there not another young man who courts you more civilly than Tom
+Bowles does, and whom you really could find it in your heart to like?"
+
+Jessie looked round for another daffodil, and not finding one, contented
+herself with a bluebell, which she did not tear to pieces, but caressed
+with a tender hand. Kenelm bent his eyes down on her charming face
+with something in their gaze rarely seen there,--something of that
+unreasoning, inexpressible human fondness, for which philosophers of
+his school have no excuse. Had ordinary mortals, like you or myself, for
+instance, peered through the leaves of the thorn-trees, we should have
+sighed or frowned, according to our several temperaments; but we should
+all have said, whether spitefully or envyingly, "Happy young lovers!"
+and should all have blundered lamentably in so saying.
+
+Still, there is no denying the fact that a pretty face has a very unfair
+advantage over a plain one. And, much to the discredit of Kenelm's
+philanthropy, it may be reasonably doubted whether, had Jessie Wiles
+been endowed by nature with a snub nose and a squint, Kenelm would have
+volunteered his friendly services, or meditated battle with Tom Bowles
+on her behalf.
+
+But there was no touch of envy or jealousy in the tone with which he
+said,--
+
+"I see there is some one you would like well enough to marry, and
+that you make a great difference in the way you treat a daffodil and a
+bluebell. Who and what is the young man whom the bluebell represents?
+Come, confide."
+
+"We were much brought up together," said Jessie, still looking down,
+and still smoothing the leaves of the bluebell. "His mother lived in the
+next cottage; and my mother was very fond of him, and so was Father
+too; and, before I was ten years old, they used to laugh when poor Will
+called me his little wife." Here the tears which had started to Jessie's
+eyes began to fall over the flower. "But now Father would not hear of
+it; and it can't be. And I've tried to care for some one else, and I
+can't, and that's the truth."
+
+"But why? Has he turned out ill?--taken to poaching or drink?"
+
+"No, no, no; he's as steady and good a lad as ever lived. But--but--"
+
+"Yes; but--"
+
+"He is a cripple now; and I love him all the better for it." Here Jessie
+fairly sobbed.
+
+Kenelm was greatly moved, and prudently held his peace till she had a
+little recovered herself; then, in answer to his gentle questionings, he
+learned that Will Somers--till then a healthy and strong lad--had fallen
+from the height of a scaffolding, at the age of sixteen, and been so
+seriously injured that he was moved at once to the hospital. When he
+came out of it--what with the fall, and what with the long illness which
+had followed the effects of the accident--he was not only crippled for
+life, but of health so delicate and weakly that he was no longer fit for
+outdoor labour and the hard life of a peasant. He was an only son of a
+widowed mother, and his sole mode of assisting her was a very precarious
+one. He had taught himself basket-making; and though, Jessie said, his
+work was very ingenious and clever, still there were but few customers
+for it in that neighbourhood. And, alas! even if Jessie's father would
+consent to give his daughter to the poor cripple, how could the poor
+cripple earn enough to maintain a wife?
+
+"And," said Jessie, "still I was happy, walking out with him on Sunday
+evenings, or going to sit with him and his mother; for we are both
+young, and can wait. But I dare n't do it any more now: for Tom Bowles
+has sworn that if I do he will beat him before my eyes; and Will has a
+high spirit, and I should break my heart if any harm happened to him on
+my account."
+
+"As for Mr. Bowles, we'll not think of him at present. But if Will could
+maintain himself and you, your father would not object nor you either to
+a marriage with the poor cripple?"
+
+"Father would not; and as for me, if it weren't for disobeying Father,
+I'd marry him to-morrow. _I_ can work."
+
+"They are going back to the hay now; but after that task is over, let me
+walk home with you, and show me Will's cottage and Mr. Bowles's shop or
+forge."
+
+"But you'll not say anything to Mr. Bowles. He would n't mind your being
+a gentleman, as I now see you are, sir; and he's dangerous,--oh, so
+dangerous!--and so strong."
+
+"Never fear," answered Kenelm, with the nearest approach to a laugh he
+had ever made since childhood; "but when we are relieved, wait for me a
+few minutes at yon gate."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+KENELM spoke no more to his new friend in the hayfields; but when the
+day's work was over he looked round for the farmer to make an excuse
+for not immediately joining the family supper. However, he did not see
+either Mr. Saunderson or his son. Both were busied in the stackyard.
+Well pleased to escape excuse and the questions it might provoke, Kenelm
+therefore put on the coat he had laid aside and joined Jessie, who
+had waited for him at the gate. They entered the lane side by side,
+following the stream of villagers who were slowly wending their homeward
+way. It was a primitive English village, not adorned on the one hand
+with fancy or model cottages, nor on the other hand indicating penury
+and squalor. The church rose before them gray and Gothic, backed by the
+red clouds in which the sun had set, and bordered by the glebe-land
+of the half-seen parsonage. Then came the village green, with a
+pretty schoolhouse; and to this succeeded a long street of scattered
+whitewashed cottages, in the midst of their own little gardens.
+
+As they walked the moon rose in full splendour, silvering the road
+before them.
+
+"Who is the Squire here?" asked Kenelm. "I should guess him to be a good
+sort of man, and well off."
+
+"Yes, Squire Travers; he is a great gentleman, and they say very rich.
+But his place is a good way from this village. You can see it if you
+stay, for he gives a harvest-home supper on Saturday, and Mr. Saunderson
+and all his tenants are going. It is a beautiful park, and Miss Travers
+is a sight to look at. Oh, she is lovely!" continued Jessie, with an
+unaffected burst of admiration; for women are more sensible of the charm
+of each other's beauty than men give them credit for.
+
+"As pretty as yourself?"
+
+"Oh, pretty is not the word. She is a thousand times handsomer!"
+
+"Humph!" said Kenelm, incredulously.
+
+There was a pause, broken by a quick sigh from Jessie.
+
+"What are you sighing for?--tell me."
+
+"I was thinking that a very little can make folks happy, but that
+somehow or other that very little is as hard to get as if one set one's
+heart on a great deal."
+
+"That's very wisely said. Everybody covets a little something for which,
+perhaps, nobody else would give a straw. But what's the very little
+thing for which you are sighing?"
+
+"Mrs. Bawtrey wants to sell that shop of hers. She is getting old, and
+has had fits; and she can get nobody to buy; and if Will had that shop
+and I could keep it,--but 'tis no use thinking of that."
+
+"What shop do you mean?"
+
+"There!"
+
+"Where? I see no shop."
+
+"But it is _the_ shop of the village,--the only one,--where the
+post-office is."
+
+"Ah! I see something at the windows like a red cloak. What do they
+sell?"
+
+"Everything,--tea and sugar and candles and shawls and gowns and cloaks
+and mouse-traps and letter-paper; and Mrs. Bawtrey buys poor Will's
+baskets, and sells them for a good deal more than she pays."
+
+"It seems a nice cottage, with a field and orchard at the back."
+
+"Yes. Mrs. Bawtrey pays L8 a year for it; but the shop can well afford
+it."
+
+Kenelm made no reply. They both walked on in silence, and had now
+reached the centre of the village street when Jessie, looking up,
+uttered an abrupt exclamation, gave an affrighted start, and then came
+to a dead stop.
+
+Kenelm's eye followed the direction of hers, and saw, a few yards
+distant, at the other side of the way, a small red brick house, with
+thatched sheds adjoining it, the whole standing in a wide yard, over
+the gate of which leaned a man smoking a small cutty-pipe. "It is Tom
+Bowles," whispered Jessie, and instinctively she twined her arm into
+Kenelm's; then, as if on second thoughts, withdrew it, and said, still
+in a whisper, "Go back now, sir; do."
+
+"Not I. It is Tom Bowles whom I want to know. Hush!"
+
+For here Tom Bowles had thrown down his pipe and was coming slowly
+across the road towards them.
+
+Kenelm eyed him with attention. A singularly powerful man, not so tall
+as Kenelm by some inches, but still above the middle height, herculean
+shoulders and chest, the lower limbs not in equal proportion,--a sort
+of slouching, shambling gait. As he advanced the moonlight fell on his
+face; it was a handsome one. He wore no hat, and his hair, of a
+light brown, curled close. His face was fresh-coloured, with aquiline
+features; his age apparently about six or seven and twenty. Coming
+nearer and nearer, whatever favourable impression the first glance
+at his physiognomy might have made on Kenelm was dispelled, for the
+expression of his face changed and became fierce and lowering.
+
+Kenelm was still walking on, Jessie by his side, when Bowles rudely
+thrust himself between them, and seizing the girl's arm with one hand,
+he turned his face full on Kenelm, with a menacing wave of the other
+hand, and said in a deep burly voice,
+
+"Who be you?"
+
+"Let go that young woman before I tell you."
+
+"If you weren't a stranger," answered Bowles, seeming as if he tried to
+suppress a rising fit of wrath, "you'd be in the kennel for those words.
+But I s'pose you don't know that I'm Tom Bowles, and I don't choose the
+girl as I'm after to keep company with any other man. So you be off."
+
+"And I don't choose any other man to lay violent hands on any girl
+walking by my side without telling him that he's a brute; and that I
+only wait till he has both his hands at liberty to let him know that he
+has not a poor cripple to deal with."
+
+Tom Bowles could scarcely believe his ears. Amaze swallowed up for
+the moment every other sentiment. Mechanically he loosened his hold of
+Jessie, who fled off like a bird released. But evidently she thought
+of her new friend's danger more than her own escape; for instead of
+sheltering herself in her father's cottage, she ran towards a group
+of labourers who, near at hand, had stopped loitering before the
+public-house, and returned with those allies towards the spot in which
+she had left the two men. She was very popular with the villagers, who,
+strong in the sense of numbers, overcame their awe of Tom Bowles, and
+arrived at the place half running, half striding, in time, they hoped,
+to interpose between his terrible arm and the bones of the unoffending
+stranger.
+
+Meanwhile Bowles, having recovered his first astonishment, and scarcely
+noticing Jessie's escape, still left his right arm extended towards the
+place she had vacated, and with a quick back-stroke of the left levelled
+at Kenelm's face, growled contemptuously, "Thou'lt find one hand enough
+for thee."
+
+But quick as was his aim, Kenelm caught the lifted arm just above the
+elbow, causing the blow to waste itself on air, and with a simultaneous
+advance of his right knee and foot dexterously tripped up his bulky
+antagonist, and laid him sprawling on his back. The movement was
+so sudden, and the stun it occasioned so utter, morally as well as
+physically, that a minute or more elapsed before Tom Bowles picked
+himself up. And he then stood another minute glowering at his
+antagonist, with a vague sentiment of awe almost like a superstitious
+panic. For it is noticeable that, however fierce and fearless a man or
+even a wild beast may be, yet if either has hitherto been only familiar
+with victory and triumph, never yet having met with a foe that could
+cope with its force, the first effect of a defeat, especially from
+a despised adversary, unhinges and half paralyzes the whole nervous
+system. But as fighting Tom gradually recovered to the consciousness of
+his own strength, and the recollection that it had been only foiled by
+the skilful trick of a wrestler, and not the hand-to-hand might of a
+pugilist, the panic vanished, and Tom Bowles was himself again. "Oh,
+that's your sort, is it? We don't fight with our heels hereabouts, like
+Cornishers and donkeys: we fight with our fists, youngster; and since
+you _will_ have a bout at that, why, you must."
+
+"Providence," answered Kenelm, solemnly, "sent me to this village
+for the express purpose of licking Tom Bowles. It is a signal mercy
+vouchsafed to yourself, as you will one day acknowledge."
+
+Again a thrill of awe, something like that which the demagogue in
+Aristophanes might have felt when braved by the sausage-maker, shot
+through the valiant heart of Tom Bowles. He did not like those ominous
+words, and still less the lugubrious tone of voice in which they
+were uttered, But resolved, at least, to proceed to battle with
+more preparation than he had at first designed, he now deliberately
+disencumbered himself of his heavy fustian jacket and vest, rolled up
+his shirt-sleeves, and then slowly advanced towards the foe.
+
+Kenelm had also, with still greater deliberation, taken off his
+coat--which he folded up with care, as being both a new and an only one,
+and deposited by the hedge-side--and bared arms, lean indeed and almost
+slight, as compared with the vast muscle of his adversary, but firm in
+sinew as the hind leg of a stag.
+
+By this time the labourers, led by Jessie, had arrived at the spot, and
+were about to crowd in between the combatants, when Kenelm waved them
+back and said in a calm and impressive voice,--
+
+"Stand round, my good friends, make a ring, and see that it is fair play
+on my side. I am sure it will be fair on Mr. Bowles's. He is big enough
+to scorn what is little. And now, Mr. Bowles, just a word with you in
+the presence of your neighbours. I am not going to say anything uncivil.
+If you are rather rough and hasty, a man is not always master of
+himself--at least so I am told--when he thinks more than he ought to
+do about a pretty girl. But I can't look at your face even by this
+moonlight, and though its expression at this moment is rather cross,
+without being sure that you are a fine fellow at bottom, and that if you
+give a promise as man to man you will keep it. Is that so?"
+
+One or two of the bystanders murmured assent; the others pressed round
+in silent wonder.
+
+"What's all that soft-sawder about?" said Tom Bowles, somewhat
+falteringly.
+
+"Simply this: if in the fight between us I beat you, I ask you to
+promise before your neighbours that you will not by word or deed molest
+or interfere again with Miss Jessie Wiles."
+
+"Eh!" roared Tom. "Is it that you are after her?"
+
+"Suppose I am, if that pleases you; and on my side, I promise that if
+you beat me, I quit this place as soon as you leave me well enough to do
+so, and will never visit it again. What! do you hesitate to promise? Are
+you really afraid I shall lick you?"
+
+"You! I'd smash a dozen of you to powder."
+
+"In that case, you are safe to promise. Come, 'tis a fair bargain. Is
+n't it, neighbours?"
+
+Won over by Kenelm's easy show of good temper, and by the sense of
+justice, the bystanders joined in a common exclamation of assent.
+
+"Come, Tom," said an old fellow, "the gentleman can't speak fairer; and
+we shall all think you be afeard if you hold back."
+
+Tom's face worked: but at last he growled, "Well, I promise; that is, if
+he beats me."
+
+"All right," said Kenelm. "You hear, neighbours; and Tom Bowles could
+not show that handsome face of his among you if he broke his word. Shake
+hands on it."
+
+Fighting Tom sulkily shook hands.
+
+"Well now, that's what I call English," said Kenelm, "all pluck and no
+malice. Fall back, friends, and leave a clear space for us."
+
+The men all receded; and as Kenelm took his ground, there was a supple
+ease in his posture which at once brought out into clearer evidence the
+nervous strength of his build, and, contrasted with Tom's bulk of chest,
+made the latter look clumsy and topheavy.
+
+The two men faced each other a minute, the eyes of both vigilant and
+steadfast. Tom's blood began to fire up as he gazed; nor, with all his
+outward calm; was Kenelm insensible of that proud beat of the heart
+which is aroused by the fierce joy of combat. Tom struck out first and
+a blow was parried, but not returned; another and another blow,--still
+parried, still unreturned. Kenelm, acting evidently on the defensive,
+took all the advantages for that strategy which he derived from superior
+length of arm and lighter agility of frame. Perhaps he wished to
+ascertain the extent of his adversary's skill, or to try the endurance
+of his wind, before he ventured on the hazards of attack. Tom, galled to
+the quick that blows which might have felled an ox were thus warded
+off from their mark, and dimly aware that he was encountering some
+mysterious skill which turned his brute strength into waste force and
+might overmaster him in the long run, came to a rapid conclusion that
+the sooner he brought that brute strength to bear the better it would be
+for him. Accordingly, after three rounds, in which without once breaking
+the guard of his antagonist he had received a few playful taps on
+the nose and mouth, he drew back and made a bull-like rush at his
+foe,--bull-like, for it butted full at him with the powerful down-bent
+head, and the two fists doing duty as horns. The rush spent, he found
+himself in the position of a man milled. I take it for granted that
+every Englishman who can call himself a man--that is, every man who
+has been an English boy, and, as such, been compelled to the use of
+his fists--knows what a "mill" is. But I sing not only "pueris," but
+"virginibus." Ladies, "a mill,"--using with reluctance and contempt for
+myself that slang in which ladywriters indulge, and Girls of the Period
+know much better than they do their Murray,--"a mill,"--speaking not to
+ladywriters, not to Girls of the Period, but to innocent damsels, and in
+explanation to those foreigners who only understand the English language
+as taught by Addison and Macaulay,--a "mill" periphrastically means
+this: your adversary, in the noble encounter between fist and fist, has
+so plunged his head that it gets caught, as in a vice, between the side
+and doubled left arm of the adversary, exposing that head, unprotected
+and helpless, to be pounded out of recognizable shape by the right fist
+of the opponent. It is a situation in which raw superiority of force
+sometimes finds itself, and is seldom spared by disciplined superiority
+of skill. Kenelm, his right fist raised, paused for a moment, then,
+loosening the left arm, releasing the prisoner, and giving him a
+friendly slap on the shoulder, he turned round to the spectators and
+said apologetically, "He has a handsome face: it would be a shame to
+spoil it."
+
+Tom's position of peril was so obvious to all, and that good-humoured
+abnegation of the advantage which the position gave to the adversary
+seemed so generous, that the labourers actually hurrahed. Tom, himself
+felt as if treated like a child; and alas, and alas for him! in wheeling
+round, and regathering himself up, his eye rested on Jessie's face. Her
+lips were apart with breathless terror: he fancied they were apart with
+a smile of contempt. And now he became formidable. He fought as fights
+the bull in the presence of the heifer, who, as he knows too well, will
+go with the conqueror.
+
+If Tom had never yet fought with a man taught by a prizefighter, so
+never yet had Kenelm encountered a strength which, but for the lack of
+that teaching, would have conquered his own. He could act no longer on
+the defensive; he could no longer play, like a dexterous fencer, with
+the sledge-hammers of those mighty arms. They broke through his guard;
+they sounded on his chest as on an anvil. He felt that did they alight
+on his head he was a lost man. He felt also that the blows spent on the
+chest of his adversary were idle as the stroke of a cane on the hide
+of a rhinoceros. But now his nostrils dilated; his eyes flashed fire:
+Kenelm Chillingly had ceased to be a philosopher. Crash came his
+blow--how unlike the swinging roundabout hits of Tom Bowles!--straight
+to its aim as the rifle-ball of a Tyrolese or a British marksman
+at Aldershot,--all the strength of nerve, sinew, purpose, and mind
+concentred in its vigour,--crash just at that part of the front where
+the eyes meet, and followed up with the rapidity of lightning, flash
+upon flash, by a more restrained but more disabling blow with the left
+hand just where the left ear meets throat and jaw-bone.
+
+At the first blow Tom Bowles had reeled and staggered, at the second he
+threw up his hands, made a jump in the air as if shot through the heart,
+and then heavily fell forwards, an inert mass.
+
+The spectators pressed round him in terror. They thought he was dead.
+Kenelm knelt, passed quickly his hand over Tom's lips, pulse, and heart,
+and then rising, said, humbly and with an air of apology,--
+
+"If he had been a less magnificent creature, I assure you on my honour
+that I should never have ventured that second blow. The first would have
+done for any man less splendidly endowed by nature. Lift him gently;
+take him home. Tell his mother, with my kind regards, that I'll call and
+see her and him to-morrow. And, stop, does he ever drink too much beer?"
+
+"Well," said one of the villagers, "Tom _can_ drink."
+
+"I thought so. Too much flesh for that muscle. Go for the nearest
+doctor. You, my lad? good; off with you; quick. No danger, but perhaps
+it may be a case for the lancet."
+
+Tom Bowles was lifted tenderly by four of the stoutest men present and
+borne into his home, evincing no sign of consciousness; but his face,
+where not clouted with blood, was very pale, very calm, with a slight
+froth at the lips.
+
+Kenelm pulled down his shirt-sleeves, put on his coat, and turned to
+Jessie,--
+
+"Now, my young friend, show me Will's cottage."
+
+The girl came to him, white and trembling. She did not dare to speak.
+The stranger had become a new man in her eyes. Perhaps he frightened her
+as much as Tom Bowles had done. But she quickened her pace, leaving the
+public-house behind till she came to the farther end of the village.
+Kenelm walked beside her, muttering to himself: and though Jessie caught
+his words, happily she did not understand; for they repeated one of
+those bitter reproaches on her sex as the main cause of all strife,
+bloodshed, and mischief in general, with which the classic authors
+abound. His spleen soothed by that recourse to the lessons of the
+ancients, Kenelm turned at last to his silent companion, and said kindly
+but gravely,--
+
+"Mr. Bowles has given me his promise, and it is fair that I should now
+ask a promise from you. It is this: just consider how easily a girl so
+pretty as you can be the cause of a man's death. Had Bowles struck me
+where I struck him I should have been past the help of a surgeon."
+
+"Oh!" groaned Jessie, shuddering, and covering her face with both hands.
+
+"And, putting aside that danger, consider that a man may be hit mortally
+on the heart as well as on the head, and that a woman has much to answer
+for who, no matter what her excuse, forgets what misery and what guilt
+can be inflicted by a word from her lip and a glance from her eye.
+Consider this, and promise that, whether you marry Will Somers or not,
+you will never again give a man fair cause to think you can like him
+unless your own heart tells you that you can. Will you promise that?"
+
+"I will, indeed,--indeed." Poor Jessie's voice died in sobs.
+
+"There, my child, I don't ask you not to cry, because I know how much
+women like crying; and in this instance it does you a great deal
+of good. But we are just at the end of the village; which is Will's
+cottage?"
+
+Jessie lifted her head, and pointed to a solitary, small thatched
+cottage.
+
+"I would ask you to come in and introduce me; but that might look too
+much like crowing over poor Tom Bowles. So good-night to you, Jessie,
+and forgive me for preaching."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+KENELM knocked at the cottage door; a voice said faintly, "Come in."
+
+He stooped his head, and stepped over the threshold.
+
+Since his encounter with Tom Bowles his sympathies had gone with that
+unfortunate lover: it is natural to like a man after you have beaten
+him; and he was by no means predisposed to favour Jessie's preference
+for a sickly cripple.
+
+Yet, when two bright, soft, dark eyes, and a pale intellectual
+countenance, with that nameless aspect of refinement which delicate
+health so often gives, especially to the young, greeted his quiet gaze,
+his heart was at once won over to the side of the rival. Will Somers was
+seated by the hearth, on which a few live embers despite the warmth of
+the summer evening still burned; a rude little table was by his side,
+on which were laid osier twigs and white peeled chips, together with an
+open book. His hands, pale and slender, were at work on a small basket
+half finished. His mother was just clearing away the tea-things from
+another table that stood by the window. Will rose, with the good
+breeding that belongs to the rural peasant, as the stranger entered; the
+widow looked round with surprise, and dropped her simple courtesy,--a
+little thin woman, with a mild, patient face.
+
+The cottage was very tidily kept, as it is in most village homes where
+the woman has it her own way. The deal dresser opposite the door had
+its display of humble crockery. The whitewashed walls were relieved with
+coloured prints, chiefly Scriptural subjects from the New Testament,
+such as the Return of the Prodigal Son, in a blue coat and yellow
+inexpressibles, with his stockings about his heels.
+
+At one corner there were piled up baskets of various sizes, and at
+another corner was an open cupboard containing books,--an article of
+decorative furniture found in cottages much more rarely than coloured
+prints and gleaming crockery.
+
+All this, of course, Kenelm could not at a glance comprehend in detail.
+But as the mind of a man accustomed to generalization is marvellously
+quick in forming a sound judgment, whereas a mind accustomed to dwell
+only on detail is wonderfully slow at arriving at any judgment at all,
+and when it does, the probability is that it will arrive at a wrong one,
+Kenelm judged correctly when he came to this conclusion: "I am among
+simple English peasants; but, for some reason or other, not to be
+explained by the relative amount of wages, it is a favourable specimen
+of that class."
+
+"I beg your pardon for intruding at this hour, Mrs. Somers," said
+Kenelm, who had been too familiar with peasants from his earliest
+childhood not to know how quickly, when in the presence of their
+household gods, they appreciate respect, and how acutely they feel the
+want of it. "But my stay in the village is very short, and I should not
+like to leave without seeing your son's basket-work, of which I have
+heard much."
+
+"You are very good, sir," said Will, with a pleased smile that
+wonderfully brightened up his face. "It is only just a few common things
+that I keep by me. Any finer sort of work I mostly do by order."
+
+"You see, sir," said Mrs. Somers, "it takes so much more time for pretty
+work-baskets, and such like; and unless done to order, it might be
+a chance if he could get it sold. But pray be seated, sir," and Mrs.
+Somers placed a chair for her visitor, "while I just run up stairs for
+the work-basket which my son has made for Miss Travers. It is to go home
+to-morrow, and I put it away for fear of accidents."
+
+Kenelm seated himself, and, drawing his chair near to Will's, took up
+the half-finished basket which the young man had laid down on the table.
+
+"This seems to me very nice and delicate workmanship," said Kenelm; "and
+the shape, when you have finished it, will be elegant enough to please
+the taste of a lady."
+
+"It is for Mrs. Lethbridge," said Will: "she wanted something to hold
+cards and letters; and I took the shape from a book of drawings which
+Mr. Lethbridge kindly lent me. You know Mr. Lethbridge, sir? He is a
+very good gentleman."
+
+"No, I don't know him. Who is he?"
+
+"Our clergyman, sir. This is the book."
+
+To Kenelm's surprise, it was a work on Pompeii, and contained woodcuts
+of the implements and ornaments, mosaics and frescos, found in that
+memorable little city.
+
+"I see this is your model," said Kenelm; "what they call a _patera_,
+and rather a famous one. You are copying it much more truthfully than I
+should have supposed it possible to do in substituting basket-work for
+bronze. But you observe that much of the beauty of this shallow bowl
+depends on the two doves perched on the brim. You can't manage that
+ornamental addition."
+
+"Mrs. Lethbridge thought of putting there two little stuffed
+canary-birds."
+
+"Did she? Good heavens!" exclaimed Kenelm.
+
+"But somehow," continued Will, "I did not like that, and I made bold to
+say so."
+
+"Why did not you do it?"
+
+"Well, I don't know; but I did not think it would be the right thing."
+
+"It would have been very bad taste, and spoiled the effect of your
+basket-work; and I'll endeavour to explain why. You see here, in the
+next page, a drawing of a very beautiful statue. Of course this statue
+is intended to be a representation of nature, but nature idealized. You
+don't know the meaning of that hard word, idealized, and very few people
+do. But it means the performance of a something in art according to the
+idea which a man's mind forms to itself out of a something in nature.
+That something in nature must, of course, have been carefully studied
+before the man can work out anything in art by which it is faithfully
+represented. The artist, for instance, who made that statue, must have
+known the proportions of the human frame. He must have made studies
+of various parts of it,--heads and hands, and arms and legs, and so
+forth,--and having done so, he then puts together all his various
+studies of details, so as to form a new whole, which is intended to
+personate an idea formed in his own mind. Do you go with me?"
+
+"Partly, sir; but I am puzzled a little still."
+
+"Of course you are; but you'll puzzle yourself right if you think over
+what I say. Now if, in order to make this statue, which is composed of
+metal or stone, more natural, I stuck on it a wig of real hair, would
+not you feel at once that I had spoilt the work; that as you clearly
+express it, 'it would not be the right thing'? and instead of making the
+work of art more natural, I should have made it laughably unnatural, by
+forcing insensibly upon the mind of him who looked at it the contrast
+between the real life, represented by a wig of actual hair, and the
+artistic life, represented by an idea embodied in stone or metal. The
+higher the work of art (that is, the higher the idea it represents as a
+new combination of details taken from nature), the more it is degraded
+or spoilt by an attempt to give it a kind of reality which is out
+of keeping with the materials employed. But the same rule applies to
+everything in art, however humble. And a couple of stuffed canary-birds
+at the brim of a basket-work imitation of a Greek drinking-cup would be
+as bad taste as a wig from the barber's on the head of a marble statue
+of Apollo."
+
+"I see," said Will, his head downcast, like a man pondering,--"at least
+I think I see; and I'm very much obliged to you, sir."
+
+Mrs. Somers had long since returned with the work-basket, but stood with
+it in her hands, not daring to interrupt the gentleman, and listening to
+his discourse with as much patience and as little comprehension as if it
+had been one of the controversial sermons upon Ritualism with which on
+great occasions Mr. Lethbridge favoured his congregation.
+
+Kenelm having now exhausted his critical lecture--from which certain
+poets and novelists who contrive to caricature the ideal by their
+attempt to put wigs of real hair upon the heads of stone statues might
+borrow a useful hint or two if they would condescend to do so, which
+is not likely--perceived Mrs. Somers standing by him, took from her
+the basket, which was really very pretty and elegant, subdivided
+into various compartments for the implements in use among ladies, and
+bestowed on it a well-merited eulogium.
+
+"The young lady means to finish it herself with ribbons, and line it
+with satin," said Mrs. Somers, proudly.
+
+"The ribbons will not be amiss, sir?" said Will, interrogatively.
+
+"Not at all. Your natural sense of the fitness of things tells you
+that ribbons go well with straw and light straw-like work such as this;
+though you would not put ribbons on those rude hampers and game-baskets
+in the corner. Like to like; a stout cord goes suitably with them: just
+as a poet who understands his art employs pretty expressions for poems
+intended to be pretty and suit a fashionable drawing-room, and carefully
+shuns them to substitute a simple cord for poems intended to be strong
+and travel far, despite of rough usage by the way. But you really
+ought to make much more money by this fancy-work than you could as a
+day-labourer."
+
+Will sighed. "Not in this neighbourhood, sir; I might in a town."
+
+"Why not move to a town, then?"
+
+The young man coloured, and shook his head.
+
+Kenelm turned appealingly to Mrs. Somers. "I'll be willing to go
+wherever it would be best for my boy, sir. But--" and here she checked
+herself, and a tear trickled silently down her cheeks.
+
+Will resumed, in a more cheerful tone, "I am getting a little known
+now, and work will come if one waits for it." Kenelm did not deem it
+courteous or discreet to intrude further on Will's confidence in the
+first interview; and he began to feel, more than he had done at first,
+not only the dull pain of the bruises he had received in the recent
+combat, but also somewhat more than the weariness which follows long
+summer-day's work in the open air. He therefore, rather abruptly, now
+took his leave, saying that he should be very glad of a few specimens of
+Will's ingenuity and skill, and would call or write to give directions
+about them.
+
+Just as he came in sight of Tom Bowles's house on his way back to Mr.
+Saunderson's, Kenelm saw a man mounting a pony that stood tied up at the
+gate, and exchanging a few words with a respectable-looking woman
+before he rode on. He was passing by Kenelm without notice, when that
+philosophical vagrant stopped him, saying, "If I am not mistaken, sir,
+you are the doctor. There is not much the matter with Mr. Bowles?"
+
+The doctor shook his head. "I can't say yet. He has had a very ugly blow
+somewhere."
+
+"It was just under the left ear. I did not aim at that exact spot:
+but Bowles unluckily swerved a little aside at the moment, perhaps in
+surprise at a tap between his eyes immediately preceding it: and so, as
+you say, it was an ugly blow that he received. But if it cures him of
+the habit of giving ugly blows to other people who can bear them less
+safely, perhaps it may be all for his good, as, no doubt, sir, your
+schoolmaster said when he flogged you."
+
+"Bless my soul! are you the man who fought with him,--you? I can't
+believe it."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Why not! So far as I can judge by this light, though you are a tall
+fellow, Tom Bowles must be a much heavier weight than you are."
+
+"Tom Spring was the champion of England; and according to the records of
+his weight, which history has preserved in her archives, Tom Spring was
+a lighter weight than I am."
+
+"But are you a prize-fighter?"
+
+"I am as much that as I am anything else. But to return to Mr. Bowles,
+was it necessary to bleed him?"
+
+"Yes; he was unconscious, or nearly so, when I came. I took away a few
+ounces; and I am happy to say he is now sensible, but must be kept very
+quiet."
+
+"No doubt; but I hope he will be well enough to see me to-morrow."
+
+"I hope so too; but I can't say yet. Quarrel about a girl,--eh?"
+
+"It was not about money. And I suppose if there were no money and no
+women in the world, there would be no quarrels and very few doctors.
+Good-night, Sir."
+
+"It is a strange thing to me," said Kenelm, as he now opened the
+garden-gate of Mr. Saunderson's homestead, "that though I've had nothing
+to eat all day, except a few pitiful sandwiches, I don't feel the least
+hungry. Such arrest of the lawful duties of the digestive organs never
+happened to me before. There must be something weird and ominous in it."
+
+On entering the parlour, the family party, though they had long since
+finished supper, were still seated round the table. They all rose at
+the sight of Kenelm. The fame of his achievements had preceded him. He
+checked the congratulations, the compliments, and the questions
+which the hearty farmer rapidly heaped upon him, with a melancholic
+exclamation, "But I have lost my appetite! No honours can compensate for
+that. Let me go to bed peaceably, and perhaps in the magic land of sleep
+Nature may restore me by a dream of supper."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+KENELM rose betimes the next morning somewhat stiff and uneasy, but
+sufficiently recovered to feel ravenous. Fortunately, one of the
+young ladies, who attended specially to the dairy, was already up, and
+supplied the starving hero with a vast bowl of bread and milk. He then
+strolled into the hayfield, in which there was now very little left
+to do, and but few hands besides his own were employed. Jessie was not
+there. Kenelm was glad of that. By nine o'clock his work was over, and
+the farmer and his men were in the yard completing the ricks. Kenelm
+stole away unobserved, bent on a round of visits. He called first at the
+village shop kept by Mrs. Bawtrey, which Jessie had pointed out to
+him, on pretence of buying a gaudy neckerchief; and soon, thanks to his
+habitual civility, made familiar acquaintance with the shopwoman. She
+was a little sickly old lady, her head shaking, as with palsy, somewhat
+deaf, but still shrewd and sharp, rendered mechanically so by long
+habits of shrewdness and sharpness. She became very communicative, spoke
+freely of her desire to give up the shop, and pass the rest of her days
+with a sister, widowed like herself, in a neighbouring town. Since she
+had lost her husband, the field and orchard attached to the shop had
+ceased to be profitable, and become a great care and trouble; and the
+attention the shop required was wearisome. But she had twelve years
+unexpired of the lease granted for twenty-one years to her husband on
+low terms, and she wanted a premium for its transfer, and a purchaser
+for the stock of the shop. Kenelm soon drew from her the amount of the
+sum she required for all,--L45.
+
+"You be n't thinking of it for yourself?" she asked, putting on her
+spectacles, and examining him with care.
+
+"Perhaps so, if one could get a decent living out of it. Do you keep a
+book of your losses and your gains?"
+
+"In course, sir," she said proudly. "I kept the books in my goodman's
+time, and he was one who could find out if there was a farthing wrong,
+for he had been in a lawyer's office when a lad."
+
+"Why did he leave a lawyer's office to keep a little shop?"
+
+"Well, he was born a farmer's son in this neighbourhood, and he always
+had a hankering after the country, and--and besides that--"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I'll tell you the truth; he had got into a way of drinking speerrits,
+and he was a good young man, and wanted to break himself of it, and he
+took the temperance oath; but it was too hard on him, for he could not
+break himself of the company that led him into liquor. And so, one time
+when he came into the neighbourhood to see his parents for the Christmas
+holiday, he took a bit of liking to me; and my father, who was Squire
+Travers's bailiff, had just died, and left me a little money. And so,
+somehow or other, we came together, and got this house and the land
+from the Squire on lease very reasonable; and my goodman being well
+eddyeated, and much thought of, and never being tempted to drink, now
+that he had a missis to keep him in order, had a many little things put
+into his way. He could help to measure timber, and knew about draining,
+and he got some bookkeeping from the farmers about; and we kept cows
+and pigs and poultry, and so we did very well, specially as the Lord was
+merciful and sent us no children."
+
+"And what does the shop bring in a year since your husband died?"
+
+"You had best judge for yourself. Will you look at the book, and take
+a peep at the land and apple-trees? But they's been neglected since my
+goodman died."
+
+In another minute the heir of the Chillinglys was seated in a neat
+little back parlour, with a pretty though confined view of the orchard
+and grass slope behind it, and bending over Mrs. Bawtrey's ledger.
+
+Some customers for cheese and bacon coming now into the shop, the old
+woman left him to his studies. Though they were not of a nature familiar
+to him, he brought to them, at least, that general clearness of head and
+quick seizure of important points which are common to most men who have
+gone through some disciplined training of intellect, and been accustomed
+to extract the pith and marrow out of many books on many subjects. The
+result of his examination was satisfactory; there appeared to him a
+clear balance of gain from the shop alone of somewhat over L40 a year,
+taking the average of the last three years. Closing the book, he then
+let himself out of the window into the orchard, and thence into the
+neighbouring grass field. Both were, indeed, much neglected; the trees
+wanted pruning, the field manure. But the soil was evidently of rich
+loam, and the fruit-trees were abundant and of ripe age, generally
+looking healthy in spite of neglect. With the quick intuition of a man
+born and bred in the country, and picking up scraps of rural knowledge
+unconsciously, Kenelm convinced himself that the land, properly managed,
+would far more than cover the rent, rates, tithes, and all incidental
+outgoings, leaving the profits of the shop as the clear income of the
+occupiers. And no doubt with clever young people to manage the shop, its
+profits might be increased.
+
+Not thinking it necessary to return at present to Mrs. Bawtrey's, Kenelm
+now bent his way to Tom Bowles's.
+
+The house-door was closed. At the summons of his knock it was quickly
+opened by a tall, stout, remarkably fine-looking woman, who might have
+told fifty years, and carried them off lightly on her ample shoulders.
+She was dressed very respectably in black, her brown hair braided simply
+under a neat tight-fitting cap. Her features were aquiline and
+very regular: altogether there was something about her majestic and
+Cornelia-like. She might have sat for the model of that Roman matron,
+except for the fairness of her Anglo-Saxon complexion.
+
+"What's your pleasure?" she asked, in a cold and somewhat stern voice.
+
+"Ma'am," answered Kenelm, uncovering, "I have called to see Mr. Bowles,
+and I sincerely hope he is well enough to let me do so."
+
+"No, sir, he is not well enough for that; he is lying down in his own
+room, and must be kept quiet."
+
+"May I then ask you the favour to let me in? I would say a few words to
+you, who are his mother if I mistake not." Mrs. Bowles paused a moment
+as if in doubt; but she was at no loss to detect in Kenelm's manner
+something superior to the fashion of his dress, and supposing the visit
+might refer to her son's professional business, she opened the door
+wider, drew aside to let him pass first, and when he stood midway in
+the parlour, requested him to take a seat, and, to set him the example,
+seated herself.
+
+"Ma'am," said Kenelm, "do not regret to have admitted me, and do not
+think hardly of me when I inform you that I am the unfortunate cause of
+your son's accident."
+
+Mrs. Bowles rose with a start. "You're the man who beat my boy?"
+
+"No, ma'am, do not say I beat him. He is not beaten. He is so brave
+and so strong that he would easily have beaten me if I had not, by good
+luck, knocked him down before he had time to do so. Pray, ma'am, retain
+your seat and listen to me patiently for a few moments."
+
+Mrs. Bowles, with an indignant heave of her Juno-like bosom, and with
+a superbly haughty expression of countenance which suited well with its
+aquiline formation, tacitly obeyed.
+
+"You will allow, ma'am," recommenced Kenelm, "that this is not the first
+time by many that Mr. Bowles has come to blows with another man. Am I
+not right in that assumption?"
+
+"My son is of hasty temper," replied Mrs. Bowles, reluctantly, "and
+people should not aggravate him."
+
+"You grant the fact, then?" said Kenelm, imperturbably, but with a
+polite inclination of head. "Mr. Bowles has often been engaged in these
+encounters, and in all of them it is quite clear that he provoked the
+battle; for you must be aware that he is not the sort of man to whom any
+other would be disposed to give the first blow. Yet, after these little
+incidents had occurred, and Mr. Bowles had, say, half killed the person
+who aggravated him, you did not feel any resentment against that person,
+did you? Nay, if he had wanted nursing, you would have gone and nursed
+him."
+
+"I don't know as to nursing," said Mrs. Bowles, beginning to lose her
+dignity of mien; "but certainly I should have been very sorry for him.
+And as for Tom,--though I say it who should not say,--he has no more
+malice than a baby: he'd go and make it up with any man, however badly
+he had beaten him."
+
+"Just as I supposed; and if the man had sulked and would not make it up,
+Tom would have called him a bad fellow, and felt inclined to beat him
+again."
+
+Mrs. Bowles's face relaxed into a stately smile.
+
+"Well, then," pursued Kenelm, "I do but humbly imitate Mr. Bowles, and I
+come to make it up and shake hands with him."
+
+"No, sir,--no," exclaimed Mrs. Bowles, though in a low voice, and
+turning pale. "Don't think of it. 'Tis not the blows; he'll get over
+those fast enough: 'tis his pride that's hurt; and if he saw you there
+might be mischief. But you're a stranger, and going away: do go soon; do
+keep out of his way; do!" And the mother clasped her hands.
+
+"Mrs. Bowles," said Kenelm, with a change of voice and aspect,--a
+voice and aspect so earnest and impressive that they stilled and awed
+her,--"will you not help me to save your son from the dangers into which
+that hasty temper and that mischievous pride may at any moment hurry
+him? Does it never occur to you that these are the causes of terrible
+crime, bringing terrible punishment; and that against brute force,
+impelled by savage passions, society protects itself by the hulks and
+the gallows?"
+
+"Sir; how dare you--"
+
+"Hush! If one man kill another in a moment of ungovernable wrath, that
+is a crime which, though heavily punished by the conscience, is gently
+dealt with by the law, which calls it only manslaughter; but if a motive
+to the violence, such as jealousy or revenge, can be assigned, and there
+should be no witness by to prove that the violence was not premeditated,
+then the law does not call it manslaughter, but murder. Was it not that
+thought which made you so imploringly exclaim, 'Go soon; keep out of his
+way'?"
+
+The woman made no answer, but, sinking back in her chair, gasped for
+breath.
+
+"Nay, madam," resumed Kenelm, mildly; "banish your fears. If you will
+help me I feel sure that I can save your son from such perils, and I
+only ask you to let me save him. I am convinced that he has a good and
+a noble nature, and he is worth saving." And as he thus said he took her
+hand. She resigned it to him and returned the pressure, all her pride
+softening as she began to weep.
+
+At length, when she recovered voice, she said,--
+
+"It is all along of that girl. He was not so till she crossed him, and
+made him half mad. He is not the same man since then,--my poor Tom!"
+
+"Do you know that he has given me his word, and before his
+fellow-villagers, that if he had the worst of the fight he would never
+molest Jessie Wiles again?"
+
+"Yes, he told me so himself; and it is that which weighs on him now. He
+broods and broods and mutters, and will not be comforted; and--and I do
+fear that he means revenge. And again, I implore you to keep out of his
+way."
+
+"It is not revenge on me that he thinks of. Suppose I go and am seen no
+more, do you think in your own heart that that girl's life is safe?"
+
+"What! My Tom kill a woman!"
+
+"Do you never read in your newspaper of a man who kills his sweetheart,
+or the girl who refuses to be his sweetheart? At all events, you
+yourself do not approve this frantic suit of his. If I have heard
+rightly, you have wished to get Tom out of the village for some time,
+till Jessie Wiles is--we'll say, married, or gone elsewhere for good."
+
+"Yes, indeed, I have wished and prayed for it many's the time, both for
+her sake and for his. And I am sure I don't know what we shall do if
+he stays, for he has been losing custom fast. The Squire has taken away
+his, and so have many of the farmers; and such a trade as it was in his
+good father's time! And if he would go, his uncle, the veterinary at
+Luscombe, would take him into partnership; for he has no son of his own,
+and he knows how clever Tom is: there be n't a man who knows more about
+horses; and cows, too, for the matter of that."
+
+"And if Luscombe is a large place, the business there must be more
+profitable than it can be here, even if Tom got back his custom?"
+
+"Oh yes! five times as good,--if he would but go; but he'll not hear of
+it."
+
+"Mrs. Bowles, I am very much obliged to you for your confidence, and I
+feel sure that all will end happily now we have had this talk. I'll not
+press further on you at present. Tom will not stir out, I suppose, till
+the evening."
+
+"Ah, sir, he seems as if he had no heart to stir out again, unless for
+something dreadful."
+
+"Courage! I will call again in the evening, and then you just take me
+up to Tom's room, and leave me there to make friends with him, as I have
+with you. Don't say a word about me in the meanwhile."
+
+"But--"
+
+"'But,' Mrs. Bowles, is a word that cools many a warm impulse, stifles
+many a kindly thought, puts a dead stop to many a brotherly deed. Nobody
+would ever love his neighbour as himself if he listened to all the Buts
+that could be said on the other side of the question."
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+KENELM now bent his way towards the parsonage, but just as he neared
+its glebe-lands he met a gentleman whose dress was so evidently clerical
+that he stopped and said,--
+
+"Have I the honour to address Mr. Lethbridge?"
+
+"That is my name," said the clergyman, smiling pleasantly. "Anything I
+can do for you?"
+
+"Yes, a great deal, if you will let me talk to you about a few of your
+parishioners."
+
+"My parishioners! I beg your pardon, but you are quite a stranger to me,
+and, I should think, to the parish."
+
+"To the parish,--no, I am quite at home in it; and I honestly believe
+that it has never known a more officious busybody, thrusting himself
+into its most private affairs."
+
+Mr. Lethbridge stared, and, after a short pause, said, "I have heard of
+a young man who has been staying at Mr. Saunderson's, and is indeed at
+this moment the talk of the village. You are--"
+
+"That young man. Alas! yes."
+
+"Nay," said Mr. Lethbridge, kindly, "I cannot myself, as a minister
+of the Gospel, approve of your profession, and, if I might take the
+liberty, I would try and dissuade you from it; but still, as for the
+one act of freeing a poor girl from the most scandalous persecution, and
+administering, though in a rough way, a lesson to a savage brute who
+has long been the disgrace and terror of the neighbourhood, I cannot
+honestly say that it has my condemnation. The moral sense of a community
+is generally a right one: you have won the praise of the village. Under
+all the circumstances, I do not withhold mine. You woke this morning and
+found yourself famous. Do not sigh 'Alas.'"
+
+"Lord Byron woke one morning and found himself famous, and the result
+was that he sighed 'Alas' for the rest of his life. If there be two
+things which a wise man should avoid, they are fame and love. Heaven
+defend me from both!"
+
+Again the parson stared; but being of compassionate nature, and inclined
+to take mild views of everything that belongs to humanity, he said, with
+a slight inclination of his head,--
+
+"I have always heard that the Americans in general enjoy the advantage
+of a better education than we do in England, and their reading public
+is infinitely larger than ours; still, when I hear one of a calling
+not highly considered in this country for intellectual cultivation or
+ethical philosophy cite Lord Byron, and utter a sentiment at variance
+with the impetuosity of inexperienced youth, but which has much to
+commend it in the eyes of a reflective Christian impressed with the
+nothingness of the objects mostly coveted by the human heart, I am
+surprised, and--oh, my dear young friend, surely your education might
+fit you for something better!"
+
+It was among the maxims of Kenelm Chillingly's creed that a sensible man
+should never allow himself to be surprised; but here he was, to use
+a popular idiom, "taken aback," and lowered himself to the rank of
+ordinary minds by saying, simply, "I don't understand."
+
+"I see," resumed the clergyman, shaking his head gently, "as I always
+suspected, that in the vaunted education bestowed on Americans, the
+elementary principles of Christian right and wrong are more neglected
+than they are among our own humble classes. Yes, my young friend, you
+may quote poets, you may startle me by remarks on the nothingness of
+human fame and human love, derived from the precepts of heathen poets,
+and yet not understand with what compassion, and, in the judgment
+of most sober-minded persons, with what contempt, a human being who
+practises your vocation is regarded."
+
+"Have I a vocation?" said Kenelm. "I am very glad to hear it. What is my
+vocation? And why must I be an American?"
+
+"Why, surely I am not misinformed? You are the American--I forget his
+name--who has come over to contest the belt of prize-fighting with
+the champion of England. You are silent; you hang your head. By your
+appearance, your length of limb, your gravity of countenance, your
+evident education, you confirm the impression of your birth. Your
+prowess has proved your profession."
+
+"Reverend sir," said Kenelm, with his unutterable seriousness of aspect,
+"I am on my travels in search of truth and in flight from shams, but
+so great a take-in as myself I have not yet encountered. Remember me in
+your prayers. I am not an American; I am not a prize-fighter. I
+honour the first as the citizen of a grand republic trying his best to
+accomplish an experiment in government in which he will find the
+very prosperity he tends to create will sooner or later destroy his
+experiment. I honour the last because strength, courage, and sobriety
+are essential to the prize-fighter, and are among the chiefest ornaments
+of kings and heroes. But I am neither one nor the other. And all I
+can say for myself is, that I belong to that very vague class commonly
+called English gentlemen, and that, by birth and education, I have a
+right to ask you to shake hands with me as such."
+
+Mr. Lethbridge stared again, raised his hat, bowed, and shook hands.
+
+"You will allow me now to speak to you about your parishioners. You take
+an interest in Will Somers; so do I. He is clever and ingenious. But it
+seems there is not sufficient demand here for his baskets, and he would,
+no doubt, do better in some neighbouring town. Why does he object to
+move?"
+
+"I fear that poor Will would pine away to death if he lost sight of that
+pretty girl for whom you did such chivalrous battle with Tom Bowles."
+
+"The unhappy man, then, is really in love with Jessie Wiles? And do you
+think she no less really cares for him?"
+
+"I am sure of it."
+
+"And would make him a good wife; that is, as wives go?"
+
+"A good daughter generally makes a good wife. And there is not a father
+in the place who has a better child than Jessie is to hers. She really
+is a girl of a superior nature. She was the cleverest pupil at our
+school, and my wife is much attached to her. But she has something
+better than mere cleverness: she has an excellent heart."
+
+"What you say confirms my own impressions. And the girl's father has no
+other objection to Will Somers than his fear that Will could not support
+a wife and family comfortably.
+
+"He can have no other objection save that which would apply equally to
+all suitors. I mean his fear lest Tom Bowles might do her some mischief,
+if he knew she was about to marry any one else."
+
+"You think, then, that Mr. Bowles is a thoroughly bad and dangerous
+person?"
+
+"Thoroughly bad and dangerous, and worse since he has taken to
+drinking."
+
+"I suppose he did not take to drinking till he lost his wits for Jessie
+Wiles?"
+
+"No, I don't think he did."
+
+"But, Mr. Lethbridge, have you never used your influence over this
+dangerous man?"
+
+"Of course, I did try, but I only got insulted. He is a godless animal,
+and has not been inside a church for years. He seems to have got
+a smattering of such vile learning as may be found in infidel
+publications, and I doubt if he has any religion at all."
+
+"Poor Polyphemus! no wonder his Galatea shuns him."
+
+"Old Wiles is terribly frightened, and asked my wife to find Jessie a
+place as servant at a distance. But Jessie can't bear the thoughts of
+leaving."
+
+"For the same reason which attaches Will Somers to the native soil?"
+
+"My wife thinks so."
+
+"Do you believe that if Tom Bowles were out of the way, and Jessie
+and Will were man and wife, they could earn a sufficient livelihood as
+successors to Mrs. Bawtrey, Will adding the profits of his basket-work
+to those of the shop and land?"
+
+"A sufficient livelihood! of course. They would be quite rich. I know
+the shop used to turn a great deal of money. The old woman, to be sure,
+is no longer up to the business, but still she retains a good custom."
+
+"Will Somers seems in delicate health. Perhaps if he had a less weary
+struggle for a livelihood, and no fear of losing Jessie, his health
+would improve."
+
+"His life would be saved, sir."
+
+"Then," said Kenelm, with a heavy sigh and a face as long as an
+undertaker's, "though I myself entertain a profound compassion for that
+disturbance to our mental equilibrium which goes by the name of 'love,'
+and I am the last person who ought to add to the cares and sorrows which
+marriage entails upon its victims,--I say nothing of the woes
+destined to those whom marriage usually adds to a population already
+overcrowded,--I fear that I must be the means of bringing these two
+love-birds into the same cage. I am ready to purchase the shop and its
+appurtenances on their behalf, on the condition that you will kindly
+obtain the consent of Jessie's father to their union. As for my brave
+friend Tom Bowles, I undertake to deliver them and the village from that
+exuberant nature, which requires a larger field for its energies. Pardon
+me for not letting you interrupt me. I have not yet finished what I have
+to say. Allow me to ask if Mrs. Grundy resides in this village."
+
+"Mrs. Grundy! Oh, I understand. Of course; wherever a woman has a
+tongue, there Mrs. Grundy has a home."
+
+"And seeing that Jessie is very pretty, and that in walking with her I
+encountered Mr. Bowles, might not Mrs. Grundy say, with a toss of her
+head, 'that it was not out of pure charity that the stranger had been so
+liberal to Jessie Wiles'? But if the money for the shop be paid through
+you to Mrs. Bawtrey, and you kindly undertake all the contingent
+arrangements, Mrs. Grundy will have nothing to say against any one."
+
+Mr. Lethbridge gazed with amaze at the solemn countenance before him.
+
+"Sir," he said, after a long pause, "I scarcely know how to express my
+admiration of a generosity so noble, so thoughtful, and accompanied with
+a delicacy, and, indeed, with a wisdom, which--which--"
+
+"Pray, my dear sir, do not make me still more ashamed of myself than I
+am at present for an interference in love matters quite alien to my own
+convictions as to the best mode of making an 'Approach to the Angels.'
+To conclude this business, I think it better to deposit in your hands
+the sum of L45, for which Mrs. Bawtrey has agreed to sell the remainder
+of her lease and stock-in-hand; but, of course, you will not make
+anything public till I am gone, and Tom Bowles too. I hope I may get
+him away to-morrow; but I shall know to-night when I can depend on his
+departure, and till he goes I must stay."
+
+As he spoke, Kenelm transferred from his pocket-book to Mr. Lethbridge's
+hand bank-notes to the amount specified.
+
+"May I at least ask the name of the gentleman who honours me with his
+confidence, and has bestowed so much happiness on members of my flock?"
+
+"There is no great reason why I should not tell you my name, but I see
+no reason why I should. You remember Talleyrand's advice, 'If you are
+in doubt whether to write a letter or not, don't.' The advice applies to
+many doubts in life besides that of letter-writing. Farewell, sir!"
+
+"A most extraordinary young man," muttered the parson, gazing at the
+receding form of the tall stranger; then gently shaking his head, he
+added, "Quite an original." He was contented with that solution of the
+difficulties which had puzzled him. May the reader be the same.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+AFTER the family dinner, at which the farmer's guest displayed more
+than his usual powers of appetite, Kenelm followed his host towards the
+stackyard, and said,--
+
+"My dear Mr. Saunderson, though you have no longer any work for me to
+do, and I ought not to trespass further on your hospitality, yet if I
+might stay with you another day or so, I should be very grateful."
+
+"My dear lad," cried the farmer, in whose estimation Kenelm had risen
+prodigiously since the victory over Tom Bowles, "you are welcome to stay
+as long as you like, and we shall be all sorry when you go. Indeed, at
+all events, you must stay over Saturday, for you shall go with us to
+the squire's harvest-supper. It will be a pretty sight, and my girls are
+already counting on you for a dance."
+
+"Saturday,--the day after to-morrow. You are very kind; but merrymakings
+are not much in my way, and I think I shall be on my road before you set
+off to the Squire's supper."
+
+"Pooh! you shall stay; and, I say, young 'un, if you want more to do, I
+have a job for you quite in your line."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"Thrash my ploughman. He has been insolent this morning, and he is the
+biggest fellow in the county, next to Tom Bowles."
+
+Here the farmer laughed heartily, enjoying his own joke.
+
+"Thank you for nothing," said Kenelm, rubbing his bruises. "A burnt
+child dreads the fire."
+
+The young man wandered alone into the fields. The day was becoming
+overcast, and the clouds threatened rain. The air was exceedingly still;
+the landscape, missing the sunshine, wore an aspect of gloomy solitude.
+Kenelm came to the banks of the rivulet not far from the spot on which
+the farmer had first found him. There he sat down, and leaned his cheek
+on his hand, with eyes fixed on the still and darkened stream lapsing
+mournfully away: sorrow entered into his heart and tinged its musings.
+
+"Is it then true," said he, soliloquizing, "that I am born to pass
+through life utterly alone; asking, indeed, for no sister-half of
+myself, disbelieving its possibility, shrinking from the thought
+of it,--half scorning, half pitying those who sigh for it?--thing
+unattainable,--better sigh for the moon!
+
+"Yet if other men sigh for it, why do I stand apart from them? If the
+world be a stage, and all the men and women in it merely players, am I
+to be the solitary spectator, with no part in the drama and no interest
+in the vicissitudes of its plot? Many there are, no doubt, who covet as
+little as I do the part of 'Lover,' 'with a woful ballad, made to his
+mistress's eyebrow;' but then they covet some other part in the drama,
+such as that of Soldier 'bearded as a pard,' or that of Justice 'in fair
+round belly with fat capon lined.' But me no ambition fires: I have no
+longing either to rise or to shine. I don't desire to be a colonel, nor
+an admiral, nor a member of Parliament, nor an alderman; I do not yearn
+for the fame of a wit, or a poet, or a philosopher, or a diner-out, or
+a crack shot at a rifle-match or a _battue_. Decidedly, I am the one
+looker-on, the one bystander, and have no more concern with the active
+world than a stone has. It is a horrible phantasmal crotchet of Goethe,
+that originally we were all monads, little segregated atoms adrift in
+the atmosphere, and carried hither and thither by forces over which we
+had no control, especially by the attraction of other monads, so
+that one monad, compelled by porcine monads, crystallizes into a pig;
+another, hurried along by heroic monads, becomes a lion or an Alexander.
+Now it is quite clear," continued Kenelm, shifting his position and
+crossing the right leg over the left, "that a monad intended or
+fitted for some other planet may, on its way to that destination, be
+encountered by a current of other monads blowing earthward, and be
+caught up in the stream and whirled on, till, to the marring of
+its whole proper purpose and scene of action, it settles
+here,--conglomerated into a baby. Probably that lot has befallen me: my
+monad, meant for another region in space, has been dropped into this,
+where it can never be at home, never amalgamate with other monads nor
+comprehend why they are in such a perpetual fidget. I declare I know
+no more why the minds of human beings should be so restlessly agitated
+about things which, as most of them own, give more pain than pleasure,
+than I understand why that swarm of gnats, which has such a very short
+time to live, does not give itself a moment's repose, but goes up and
+down, rising and falling as if it were on a seesaw, and making as much
+noise about its insignificant alternations of ascent and descent as if
+it were the hum of men. And yet, perhaps, in another planet my monad
+would have frisked and jumped and danced and seesawed with congenial
+monads, as contentedly and as sillily as do the monads of men and gnats
+in this alien Vale of Tears."
+
+Kenelm had just arrived at that conjectural solution of his perplexities
+when a voice was heard singing, or rather modulated to that kind of
+chant between recitative and song, which is so pleasingly effective
+where the intonations are pure and musical. They were so in this
+instance, and Kenelm's ear caught every word in the following song:--
+
+
+ CONTENT.
+
+ "There are times when the troubles of life are still;
+ The bees wandered lost in the depths of June,
+ And I paused where the chime of a silver rill
+ Sang the linnet and lark to their rest at noon.
+
+ "Said my soul, 'See how calmly the wavelets glide,
+ Though so narrow their way to their ocean vent;
+ And the world that I traverse is wide, is wide,
+ And yet is too narrow to hold content'
+
+ "O my son, never say that the world is wide;
+ The rill in its banks is less closely pent:
+ It is thou who art shoreless on every side,
+ And thy width will not let thee enclose content."
+
+
+As the voice ceased Kenelm lifted his head. But the banks of the brook
+were so curving and so clothed with brushwood that for some minutes the
+singer was invisible. At last the boughs before him were put aside, and
+within a few paces of himself paused the man to whom he had commended
+the praises of a beefsteak, instead of those which minstrelsy in its
+immemorial error dedicates to love.
+
+"Sir," said Kenelm, half rising, "well met once more. Have you ever
+listened to the cuckoo?"
+
+"Sir," answered the minstrel, "have you ever felt the presence of the
+summer?"
+
+"Permit me to shake hands with you. I admire the question by which you
+have countermet and rebuked my own. If you are not in a hurry, will you
+sit down and let us talk?"
+
+The minstrel inclined his head and seated himself. His dog--now emerged
+from the brushwood--gravely approached Kenelm, who with greater gravity
+regarded him; then, wagging his tail, reposed on his haunches,
+intent with ear erect on a stir in the neighbouring reeds, evidently
+considering whether it was caused by a fish or a water-rat.
+
+"I asked you, sir, if you had ever listened to the cuckoo from no
+irrelevant curiosity; for often on summer days, when one is talking with
+one's self,--and, of course, puzzling one's self,--a voice breaks out,
+as it were from the heart of Nature, so far is it and yet so near; and
+it says something very quieting, very musical, so that one is tempted
+inconsiderately and foolishly to exclaim, 'Nature replies to me.' The
+cuckoo has served me that trick pretty often. Your song is a better
+answer to a man's self-questionings than he can ever get from a cuckoo."
+
+"I doubt that," said the minstrel. "Song, at the best, is but the echo
+of some voice from the heart of Nature. And if the cuckoo's note seemed
+to you such a voice, it was an answer to your questionings perhaps more
+simply truthful than man can utter, if you had rightly construed the
+language."
+
+"My good friend," answered Kenelm, "what you say sounds very prettily;
+and it contains a sentiment which has been amplified by certain critics
+into that measureless domain of dunderheads which is vulgarly called
+BOSH. But though Nature is never silent, though she abuses the privilege
+of her age in being tediously gossiping and garrulous, Nature never
+replies to our questions: she can't understand an argument; she has
+never read Mr. Mill's work on Logic. In fact, as it is truly said by a
+great philosopher, 'Nature has no mind.' Every man who addresses her is
+compelled to force upon her for a moment the loan of his own mind. And
+if she answers a question which his own mind puts to her, it is only
+by such a reply as his own mind teaches to her parrot-like lips. And as
+every man has a different mind, so every man gets a different answer.
+Nature is a lying old humbug."
+
+The minstrel laughed merrily; and his laugh was as sweet as his chant.
+
+"Poets would have a great deal to unlearn if they are to look upon
+Nature in that light."
+
+"Bad poets would, and so much the better for them and their readers."
+
+"Are not good poets students of Nature?"
+
+"Students of Nature, certainly, as surgeons study anatomy by dissecting
+a dead body. But the good poet, like the good surgeon, is the man who
+considers that study merely as the necessary A B C, and not as the
+all-in-all essential to skill in his practice. I do not give the fame
+of a good surgeon to a man who fills a book with details, more or less
+accurate, of fibres and nerves and muscles; and I don't give the fame of
+a good poet to a man who makes an inventory of the Rhine or the Vale of
+Gloucester. The good surgeon and the good poet are they who understand
+the living man. What is that poetry of drama which Aristotle justly
+ranks as the highest? Is it not a poetry in which description of
+inanimate Nature must of necessity be very brief and general; in which
+even the external form of man is so indifferent a consideration that it
+will vary with each actor who performs the part? A Hamlet may be fair
+or dark. A Macbeth may be short or tall. The merit of dramatic poetry
+consists in the substituting for what is commonly called Nature (namely,
+external and material Nature) creatures intellectual, emotional, but
+so purely immaterial that they may be said to be all mind and soul,
+accepting the temporary loans of any such bodies at hand as actors may
+offer, in order to be made palpable and visible to the audience, but
+needing no such bodies to be palpable and visible to readers. The
+highest kind of poetry is therefore that which has least to do with
+external Nature. But every grade has its merit more or less genuinely
+great, according as it instils into Nature that which is not there,--the
+reason and the soul of man."
+
+"I am not much disposed," said the minstrel, "to acknowledge any one
+form of poetry to be practically higher than another; that is, so far as
+to elevate the poet who cultivates what you call the highest with some
+success above the rank of the poet who cultivates what you call a very
+inferior school with a success much more triumphant. In theory, dramatic
+poetry may be higher than lyric, and 'Venice Preserved' is a very
+successful drama; but I think Burns a greater poet than Otway."
+
+"Possibly he may be; but I know of no lyrical poet, at least among the
+moderns, who treats less of Nature as the mere outward form of things,
+or more passionately animates her framework with his own human heart,
+than does Robert Burns. Do you suppose when a Greek, in some perplexity
+of reason or conscience, addressed a question to the oracular oak-leaves
+of Dodona that the oak-leaves answered him? Don't you rather believe
+that the question suggested by his mind was answered by the mind of
+his fellow-man, the priest, who made the oak-leaves the mere vehicle
+of communication, as you and I might make such vehicle in a sheet of
+writing-paper? Is not the history of superstition a chronicle of the
+follies of man in attempting to get answers from external Nature?"
+
+"But," said the minstrel, "have I not somewhere heard or read that the
+experiments of Science are the answers made by Nature to the questions
+put to her by man?"
+
+"They are the answers which his own mind suggests to her,--nothing more.
+His mind studies the laws of matter, and in that study makes experiments
+on matter; out of those experiments his mind, according to its previous
+knowledge or natural acuteness, arrives at its own deductions, and
+hence arise the sciences of mechanics and chemistry, etc. But the matter
+itself gives no answer: the answer varies according to the mind that
+puts the question; and the progress of science consists in the perpetual
+correction of the errors and falsehoods which preceding minds conceived
+to be the correct answers they received from Nature. It is the
+supernatural within us,--namely, Mind,--which can alone guess at the
+mechanism of the natural, namely, Matter. A stone cannot question a
+stone."
+
+The minstrel made no reply. And there was a long silence, broken but by
+the hum of the insects, the ripple of onward waves, and the sigh of the
+wind through reeds.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+SAID Kenelm, at last breaking silence--
+
+
+ "'Rapiamus, amici,
+ Occasionem de die, dumque virent genua,
+ Et decet, obducta solvatur fronte senectus!'"
+
+
+"Is not that quotation from Horace?" asked the minstrel.
+
+"Yes; and I made it insidiously, in order to see if you had not acquired
+what is called a classical education."
+
+"I might have received such education, if my tastes and my destinies
+had not withdrawn me in boyhood from studies of which I did not then
+comprehend the full value. But I did pick up a smattering of Latin at
+school; and from time to time since I left school I have endeavoured to
+gain some little knowledge of the most popular Latin poets; chiefly, I
+own to my shame, by the help of literal English translations."
+
+"As a poet yourself, I am not sure that it would be an advantage to know
+a dead language so well that its forms and modes of thought ran,
+though perhaps unconsciously, into those of the living one in which you
+compose. Horace might have been a still better poet if he had not known
+Greek better than you know Latin."
+
+"It is at least courteous in you to say so," answered the singer, with a
+pleased smile.
+
+"You would be still more courteous," said Kenelm, "if you would pardon
+an impertinent question, and tell me whether it is for a wager that you
+wander through the land, Homer-like, as a wandering minstrel, and allow
+that intelligent quadruped your companion to carry a tray in his mouth
+for the reception of pennies?"
+
+"No, it is not for a wager; it is a whim of mine, which I fancy from
+the tone of your conversation you could understand, being apparently
+somewhat whimsical yourself."
+
+"So far as whim goes, be assured of my sympathy."
+
+"Well, then, though I follow a calling by the exercise of which I secure
+a modest income, my passion is verse. If the seasons were always summer,
+and life were always youth, I should like to pass through the world
+singing. But I have never ventured to publish any verses of mine. If
+they fell still-born it would give me more pain than such wounds to
+vanity ought to give to a bearded man; and if they were assailed or
+ridiculed it might seriously injure me in my practical vocation. That
+last consideration, were I quite alone in the world, might not much
+weigh on me; but there are others for whose sake I should like to make
+fortune and preserve station. Many years ago--it was in Germany--I fell
+in with a German student who was very poor, and who did make money by
+wandering about the country with lute and song. He has since become a
+poet of no mean popularity, and he has told me that he is sure he found
+the secret of that popularity in habitually consulting popular tastes
+during his roving apprenticeship to song. His example strongly impressed
+me. So I began this experiment; and for several years my summers have
+been all partly spent in this way. I am only known, as I think I told
+you before, in the rounds I take as 'The Wandering Minstrel;' I receive
+the trifling moneys that are bestowed on me as proofs of a certain
+merit. I should not be paid by poor people if I did not please; and the
+songs which please them best are generally those I love best myself.
+For the rest, my time is not thrown away,--not only as regards bodily
+health, but healthfulness of mind: all the current of one's ideas
+becomes so freshened by months of playful exercise and varied
+adventure."
+
+"Yes, the adventure is varied enough," said Kenelm, somewhat ruefully;
+for he felt, in shifting his posture, a sharp twinge of his bruised
+muscles. "But don't you find those mischief-makers, the women, always
+mix themselves up with adventure?"
+
+"Bless them! of course," said the minstrel, with a ringing laugh. "In
+life, as on the stage, the petticoat interest is always the strongest."
+
+"I don't agree with you there," said Kenelm, dryly. "And you seem to
+me to utter a claptrap beneath the rank of your understanding. However,
+this warm weather indisposes one to disputation; and I own that a
+petticoat, provided it be red, is not without the interest of colour in
+a picture."
+
+"Well, young gentleman," said the minstrel, rising, "the day is wearing
+on, and I must wish you good-by; probably, if you were to ramble about
+the country as I do, you would see too many pretty girls not to teach
+you the strength of petticoat interest,--not in pictures alone; and
+should I meet you again I may find you writing love-verses yourself."
+
+"After a conjecture so unwarrantable, I part company with you less
+reluctantly than I otherwise might do. But I hope we shall meet again."
+
+"Your wish flatters me much; but, if we do, pray respect the confidence
+I have placed in you, and regard my wandering minstrelsy and my dog's
+tray as sacred secrets. Should we not so meet, it is but a prudent
+reserve on my part if I do not give you my right name and address."
+
+"There you show the cautious common-sense which belongs rarely to lovers
+of verse and petticoat interest. What have you done with your guitar?"
+
+"I do not pace the roads with that instrument: it is forwarded to me
+from town to town under a borrowed name, together with other raiment
+that this, should I have cause to drop my character of wandering
+minstrel."
+
+The two men here exchanged a cordial shake of the hand. And as the
+minstrel went his way along the river-side, his voice in chanting seemed
+to lend to the wavelets a livelier murmur, to the reeds a less plaintive
+sigh.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+IN his room, solitary and brooding, sat the defeated hero of a hundred
+fights. It was now twilight; but the shutters had been partially closed
+all day, in order to exclude the sun, which had never before been
+unwelcome to Tom Bowles, and they still remained so, making the twilight
+doubly twilight, till the harvest moon, rising early, shot its ray
+through the crevice, and forced a silvery track amid the shadows of the
+floor.
+
+The man's head drooped on his breast; his strong hands rested
+listlessly on his knees: his attitude was that of utter despondency and
+prostration. But in the expression of his face there were the signs of
+some dangerous and restless thought which belied not the gloom but the
+stillness of the posture. His brow, which was habitually open and
+frank, in its defying aggressive boldness, was now contracted into deep
+furrows, and lowered darkly over his downcast, half-closed eyes. His
+lips were so tightly compressed that the face lost its roundness, and
+the massive bone of the jaw stood out hard and salient. Now and then,
+indeed, the lips opened, giving vent to a deep, impatient sigh, but they
+reclosed as quickly as they had parted. It was one of those crises in
+life which find all the elements that make up a man's former self in
+lawless anarchy; in which the Evil One seems to enter and direct the
+storm; in which a rude untutored mind, never before harbouring a thought
+of crime, sees the crime start up from an abyss, feels it to be an
+enemy, yet yields to it as a fate. So that when, at the last, some
+wretch, sentenced to the gibbet, shudderingly looks back to the moment
+"that trembled between two worlds,"--the world of the man guiltless,
+the world of the man guilty,--he says to the holy, highly educated,
+rational, passionless priest who confesses him and calls him "brother,"
+"The devil put it into my head."
+
+At that moment the door opened; at its threshold there stood the man's
+mother--whom he had never allowed to influence his conduct, though he
+loved her well in his rough way--and the hated fellow-man whom he longed
+to see dead at his feet. The door reclosed: the mother was gone, without
+a word, for her tears choked her; the fellow-man was alone with him. Tom
+Bowles looked up, recognized his visitor, cleared his brow, and rubbed
+his mighty hands.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY drew a chair close to his antagonist's, and silently
+laid a hand on his.
+
+Tom Bowles took up the hand in both his own, turned it curiously towards
+the moonlight, gazed at it, poised it, then with a sound between groan
+and laugh tossed it away as a thing hostile but trivial, rose and locked
+the door, came back to his seat and said bluffly,--
+
+"What do you want with me now?"
+
+"I want to ask you a favour."
+
+"Favour?"
+
+"The greatest which man can ask from man,--friendship. You see, my dear
+Tom," continued Kenelm, making himself quite at home, throwing his arm
+over the back of Tom's chair, and stretching his legs comfortably as
+one does by one's own fireside; "you see, my dear Tom, that men like
+us--young, single, not on the whole bad-looking as men go--can
+find sweethearts in plenty. If one does not like us, another will;
+sweethearts are sown everywhere like nettles and thistles. But the
+rarest thing in life is a friend. Now, tell me frankly, in the course
+of your wanderings did you ever come into a village where you could not
+have got a sweetheart if you had asked for one; and if, having got
+a sweetheart, you had lost her, do you think you would have had any
+difficulty in finding another? But have you such a thing in the world,
+beyond the pale of your own family, as a true friend,--a man friend; and
+supposing that you had such a friend,--a friend who would stand by you
+through thick and thin; who would tell you your faults to your face, and
+praise you for your good qualities behind your back; who would do all
+he could to save you from a danger, and all he could to get you out of
+one,--supposing you had such a friend and lost him, do you believe that
+if you lived to the age of Methuselah you could find another? You don't
+answer me; you are silent. Well, Tom, I ask you to be such a friend to
+me, and I will be such a friend to you."
+
+Tom was so thoroughly "taken aback" by this address that he remained
+dumfounded. But he felt as if the clouds in his soul were breaking, and
+a ray of sunlight were forcing its way through the sullen darkness.
+At length, however, the receding rage within him returned, though with
+vacillating step, and he growled between his teeth,--
+
+"A pretty friend indeed, robbing me of my girl! Go along with you!"
+
+"She was not your girl any more than she was or ever can be mine."
+
+"What, you be n't after her?"
+
+"Certainly not; I am going to Luscombe, and I ask you to come with me.
+Do you think I am going to leave you here?"
+
+"What is it to you?"
+
+"Everything. Providence has permitted me to save you from the most
+lifelong of all sorrows. For--think! Can any sorrow be more lasting
+than had been yours if you had attained your wish; if you had forced or
+frightened a woman to be your partner till death do part,--you loving
+her, she loathing you; you conscious, night and day, that your very love
+had insured her misery, and that misery haunting you like a ghost!--that
+sorrow I have saved you. May Providence permit me to complete my work,
+and save you also from the most irredeemable of all crimes! Look into
+your soul, then recall the thoughts which all day long, and not least at
+the moment I crossed this threshold, were rising up, making reason dumb
+and conscience blind, and then lay your hand on your heart and say, 'I
+am guiltless of a dream of murder.'"
+
+The wretched man sprang up erect, menacing, and, meeting Kenelm's calm,
+steadfast, pitying gaze, dropped no less suddenly,--dropped on the
+floor, covered his face with his hands, and a great cry came forth
+between sob and howl.
+
+"Brother," said Kenelm, kneeling beside him, and twining his arm round
+the man's heaving breast, "it is over now; with that cry the demon that
+maddened you has fled forever."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+WHEN, some time after, Kenelm quitted the room and joined Mrs. Bowles
+below, he said cheerily, "All right; Tom and I are sworn friends. We are
+going together to Luscombe the day after to-morrow,--Sunday; just write
+a line to his uncle to prepare him for Tom's visit, and send thither
+his clothes, as we shall walk, and steal forth unobserved betimes in
+the morning. Now go up and talk to him; he wants a mother's soothing and
+petting. He is a noble fellow at heart, and we shall be all proud of him
+some day or other."
+
+As he walked towards the farmhouse, Kenelm encountered Mr. Lethbridge,
+who said, "I have come from Mr. Saunderson's, where I went in search of
+you. There is an unexpected hitch in the negotiation for Mrs. Bawtrey's
+shop. After seeing you this morning I fell in with Mr. Travers's
+bailiff, and he tells me that her lease does not give her the power
+to sublet without the Squire's consent; and that as the premises were
+originally let on very low terms to a favoured and responsible tenant,
+Mr. Travers cannot be expected to sanction the transfer of the lease
+to a poor basket-marker: in fact, though he will accept Mrs. Bawtrey's
+resignation, it must be in favour of an applicant whom he desires to
+oblige. On hearing this, I rode over to the Park and saw Mr. Travers
+himself. But he was obdurate to my pleadings. All I could get him to say
+was, 'Let the stranger who interests himself in the matter come and talk
+to me. I should like to see the man who thrashed that brute Tom Bowles:
+if he got the better of him perhaps he may get the better of me. Bring
+him with you to my harvest-supper to-morrow evening.' Now, will you
+come?"
+
+"Nay," said Kenelm, reluctantly; "but if he only asks me in order to
+gratify a very vulgar curiosity, I don't think I have much chance of
+serving Will Somers. What do you say?"
+
+"The Squire is a good man of business, and, though no one can call him
+unjust or grasping, still he is very little touched by sentiment; and
+we must own that a sickly cripple like poor Will is not a very eligible
+tenant. If, therefore, it depended only on your chance with the Squire,
+I should not be very sanguine. But we have an ally in his daughter. She
+is very fond of Jessie Wiles, and she has shown great kindness to Will.
+In fact, a sweeter, more benevolent, sympathizing nature than that of
+Cecilia Travers does not exist. She has great influence with her father,
+and through her you may win him."
+
+"I particularly dislike having anything to do with women," said Kenelm,
+churlishly. "Parsons are accustomed to get round them. Surely, my dear
+sir, you are more fit for that work than I am."
+
+"Permit me humbly to doubt that proposition; one does n't get very
+quickly round the women when one carries the weight of years on one's
+back. But whenever you want the aid of a parson to bring your own wooing
+to a happy conclusion, I shall be happy, in my special capacity of
+parson, to perform the ceremony required."
+
+"_Dii meliora_!" said Kenelm, gravely. "Some ills are too serious to be
+approached even in joke. As for Miss Travers, the moment you call her
+benevolent you inspire me with horror. I know too well what a benevolent
+girl is,--officious, restless, fidgety, with a snub nose, and her pocket
+full of tracts. I will not go to the harvest-supper."
+
+"Hist!" said the Parson, softly. They were now passing the cottage of
+Mrs. Somers; and while Kenelm was haranguing against benevolent girls,
+Mr. Lethbridge had paused before it, and was furtively looking in at the
+window. "Hist! and come here,--gently."
+
+Kenelm obeyed, and looked in through the window. Will was seated; Jessie
+Wiles had nestled herself at his feet, and was holding his hand in both
+hers, looking up into his face. Her profile alone was seen, but its
+expression was unutterably soft and tender. His face, bent downwards
+towards her, wore a mournful expression; nay, the tears were rolling
+silently down his cheeks. Kenelm listened and heard her say, "Don't talk
+so, Will, you break my heart; it is I who am not worthy of you."
+
+"Parson," said Kenelm, as they walked on, "I must go to that confounded
+harvest-supper. I begin to think there is something true in the
+venerable platitude about love in a cottage. And Will Somers must be
+married in haste, in order to repent at leisure."
+
+"I don't see why a man should repent having married a good girl whom he
+loves."
+
+"You don't? Answer me candidly. Did you ever meet a man who repented
+having married?"
+
+"Of course I have; very often."
+
+"Well, think again, and answer as candidly. Did you ever meet a man who
+repented not having married?"
+
+The Parson mused, and was silent.
+
+"Sir," said Kenelm, "your reticence proves your honesty, and I respect
+it." So saying, he bounded off, and left the Parson crying out wildly,
+"But--but--"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+MR. SAUNDERSON and Kenelm sat in the arbour: the former sipping his grog
+and smoking his pipe; the latter looking forth into the summer night
+skies with an earnest yet abstracted gaze, as if he were trying to count
+the stars in the Milky Way.
+
+"Ha!" said Mr. Saunderson, who was concluding an argument; "you see it
+now, don't you?"
+
+"I? not a bit of it. You tell me that your grandfather was a farmer,
+and your father was a farmer, and that you have been a farmer for thirty
+years; and from these premises you deduce the illogical and irrational
+conclusion that therefore your son must be a farmer."
+
+"Young man, you may think yourself very knowing 'cause you have been at
+the 'Varsity, and swept away a headful of book-learning."
+
+"Stop," quoth Kenelm. "You grant that a university is learned."
+
+"Well, I suppose so."
+
+"But how could it be learned if those who quitted it brought the
+learning away? We leave it all behind us in the care of the tutors. But
+I know what you were going to say,--that it is not because I had read
+more books than you have that I was to give myself airs and pretend to
+have more knowledge of life than a man of your years and experience.
+Agreed, as a general rule. But does not every doctor, however wise and
+skilful, prefer taking another doctor's opinion about himself, even
+though that other doctor has just started in practice? And seeing that
+doctors, taking them as a body, are monstrous clever fellows, is not
+the example they set us worth following? Does it not prove that no man,
+however wise, is a good judge of his own case? Now, your son's case
+is really your case: you see it through the medium of your likings and
+dislikings; and insist upon forcing a square peg into a round hole,
+because in a round hole you, being a round peg, feel tight and
+comfortable. Now I call that irrational."
+
+"I don't see why my son has any right to fancy himself a square peg,"
+said the farmer, doggedly, "when his father and his grandfather and his
+great-grandfather have been round pegs; and it is agin' nature for
+any creature not to take after its own kind. A dog is a pointer or
+a sheep-dog according as its forebears were pointers or sheep-dogs.
+There," cried the farmer, triumphantly, shaking the ashes out of his
+pipe. "I think I have posed you, young master!"
+
+"No; for you have taken it for granted that the breeds have not been
+crossed. But suppose that a sheep-dog has married a pointer, are you
+sure that his son will not be more of a pointer than a sheep-dog?"
+
+Mr. Saunderson arrested himself in the task of refilling his pipe, and
+scratched his head.
+
+"You see," continued Kenelm, "that you have crossed the breed. You
+married a tradesman's daughter, and I dare say her grandfather and
+great-grandfather were tradesmen too. Now, most sons take after their
+mothers, and therefore Mr. Saunderson junior takes after his kind on the
+distaff side, and comes into the world a square peg, which can only be
+tight and comfortable in a square hole. It is no use arguing, Farmer:
+your boy must go to his uncle; and there's an end of the matter."
+
+"By goles!" said the farmer, "you seem to think you can talk me out of
+my senses."
+
+"No; but I think if you had your own way you would talk your son into
+the workhouse."
+
+"What! by sticking to the land like his father before him? Let a man
+stick by the land, and the land will stick by him."
+
+"Let a man stick in the mud, and the mud will stick to him. You put
+your heart in your farm, and your son would only put his foot into it.
+Courage! Don't you see that Time is a whirligig, and all things come
+round? Every day somebody leaves the land and goes off into trade. By
+and by he grows rich, and then his great desire is to get back to
+the land again. He left it the son of a farmer: he returns to it as a
+squire. Your son, when he gets to be fifty, will invest his savings in
+acres, and have tenants of his own. Lord, how he will lay down the law
+to them! I would not advise you to take a farm under him."
+
+"Catch me at it!" said the farmer. "He would turn all the contents of
+the 'pothecary's shop into my fallows, and call it 'progress.'"
+
+"Let him physic the fallows when he has farms of his own: keep yours out
+of his chemical clutches. Come, I shall tell him to pack up and be off
+to his uncle's next week?"
+
+"Well, well," said the farmer, in a resigned tone: "a wilful man must
+e'en have his way."
+
+"And the best thing a sensible man can do is not to cross it. Mr.
+Saunderson, give me your honest hand. You are one of those men who put
+the sons of good fathers in mind of their own; and I think of mine when
+I say 'God bless you!'"
+
+Quitting the farmer, Kenelm re-entered the house, and sought Mr.
+Saunderson junior in his own room. He found that young gentleman still
+up, and reading an eloquent tract on the Emancipation of the Human Race
+from all Tyrannical Control,--Political, Social, Ecclesiastical, and
+Domestic.
+
+The lad looked up sulkily, and said, on encountering Kenelm's
+melancholic visage, "Ah! I see you have talked with the old governor,
+and he'll not hear of it."
+
+"In the first place," answered Kenelm, "since you value yourself on
+a superior education, allow me to advise you to study the English
+language, as the forms of it are maintained by the elder authors, whom,
+in spite of an Age of Progress, men of superior education esteem. No one
+who has gone through that study; no one, indeed, who has studied the Ten
+Commandments in the vernacular,--commits the mistake of supposing that
+'the old governor' is a synonymous expression for 'father.' In the
+second place, since you pretend to the superior enlightenment which
+results from a superior education, learn to know better your own self
+before you set up as a teacher of mankind. Excuse the liberty I take,
+as your sincere well-wisher, when I tell you that you are at present
+a conceited fool,--in short, that which makes one boy call another an
+'ass.' But when one has a poor head he may redeem the average balance of
+humanity by increasing the wealth of the heart. Try and increase yours.
+Your father consents to your choice of your lot at the sacrifice of
+all his own inclinations. This is a sore trial to a father's pride, a
+father's affection; and few fathers make such sacrifices with a good
+grace. I have thus kept my promise to you, and enforced your wishes on
+Mr. Saunderson's judgment, because I am sure you would have been a very
+bad farmer. It now remains for you to show that you can be a very good
+tradesman. You are bound in honour to me and to your father to try your
+best to be so; and meanwhile leave the task of upsetting the world
+to those who have no shop in it, which would go crash in the general
+tumble. And so good-night to you."
+
+To these admonitory words, _sacro digna silentio_, Saunderson junior
+listened with a dropping jaw and fascinated staring eyes. He felt like
+an infant to whom the nurse has given a hasty shake, and who is too
+stupefied by that operation to know whether he is hurt or not.
+
+A minute after Kenelm had quitted the room he reappeared at the door,
+and said in a conciliatory whisper, "Don't take it to heart that I
+called you a conceited fool and an ass. These terms are no doubt just as
+applicable to myself. But there is a more conceited fool and a greater
+ass than either of us; and that is the Age in which we have the
+misfortune to be born,--an Age of Progress, Mr. Saunderson, junior!--an
+Age of Prigs."
+
+
+
+
+BOOK III.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IF there were a woman in the world who might be formed and fitted
+to reconcile Kenelm Chillingly to the sweet troubles of love and the
+pleasant bickerings of wedded life, one might reasonably suppose that
+that woman could be found in Cecilia Travers. An only daughter and
+losing her mother in childhood, she had been raised to the mistress-ship
+of a household at an age in which most girls are still putting their
+dolls to bed; and thus had early acquired that sense of responsibility,
+accompanied with the habits of self-reliance, which seldom fails to give
+a certain nobility to character; though almost as often, in the case of
+women, it steals away the tender gentleness which constitutes the charm
+of their sex.
+
+It had not done so in the instance of Cecilia Travers, because she was
+so womanlike that even the exercise of power could not make her manlike.
+There was in the depth of her nature such an instinct of sweetness that
+wherever her mind toiled and wandered it gathered and hoarded honey.
+
+She had one advantage over most girls in the same rank of life,--she
+had not been taught to fritter away such capacities for culture as
+Providence gave her in the sterile nothingnesses which are called
+feminine accomplishments. She did not paint figures out of drawing
+in meagre water-colours; she had not devoted years of her life to the
+inflicting on polite audiences the boredom of Italian bravuras, which
+they could hear better sung by a third-rate professional singer in
+a metropolitan music-hall. I am afraid she had no other female
+accomplishments than those by which the sempstress or embroideress earns
+her daily bread. That sort of work she loved, and she did it deftly.
+
+But if she had not been profitlessly plagued by masters, Cecilia Travers
+had been singularly favoured by her father's choice of a teacher: no
+great merit in him either. He had a prejudice against professional
+governesses, and it chanced that among his own family connections was a
+certain Mrs. Campion, a lady of some literary distinction, whose husband
+had held a high situation in one of our public offices, and living, much
+to his satisfaction, up to a very handsome income, had died, much to the
+astonishment of others, without leaving a farthing behind him.
+
+Fortunately, there were no children to provide for. A small government
+pension was allotted to the widow; and as her husband's house had been
+made by her one of the pleasantest in London, she was popular enough to
+be invited by numerous friends to their country seats; among others, by
+Mr. Travers. She came intending to stay a fortnight. At the end of that
+time she had grown so attached to Cecilia, and Cecilia to her, and her
+presence had become so pleasant and so useful to her host, that
+the Squire entreated her to stay and undertake the education of his
+daughter. Mrs. Campion, after some hesitation, gratefully consented; and
+thus Cecilia, from the age of eight to her present age of nineteen, had
+the inestimable advantage of living in constant companionship with a
+woman of richly cultivated mind, accustomed to hear the best criticisms
+on the best books, and adding to no small accomplishment in literature
+the refinement of manners and that sort of prudent judgment which result
+from habitual intercourse with an intellectual and gracefully world-wise
+circle of society: so that Cecilia herself, without being at all blue or
+pedantic, became one of those rare young women with whom a well-educated
+man can converse on equal terms; from whom he gains as much as he can
+impart to her; while a man who, not caring much about books, is still
+gentleman enough to value good breeding, felt a relief in exchanging the
+forms of his native language without the shock of hearing that a bishop
+was "a swell" or a croquet-party "awfully jolly."
+
+In a word, Cecilia was one of those women whom Heaven forms for man's
+helpmate; who, if he were born to rank and wealth, would, as his
+partner, reflect on them a new dignity, and add to their enjoyment by
+bringing forth their duties; who, not less if the husband she chose were
+poor and struggling, would encourage, sustain, and soothe him, take her
+own share of his burdens, and temper the bitterness of life with the
+all-recompensing sweetness of her smile.
+
+Little, indeed, as yet had she ever thought of love or of lovers. She
+had not even formed to herself any of those ideals which float before
+the eyes of most girls when they enter their teens. But of two things
+she felt inly convinced: first, that she could never wed where she did
+not love; and secondly, that where she did love it would be for life.
+
+And now I close this sketch with a picture of the girl herself. She has
+just come into her room from inspecting the preparations for the evening
+entertainment which her father is to give to his tenants and rural
+neighbours.
+
+She has thrown aside her straw hat, and put down the large basket which
+she has emptied of flowers. She pauses before the glass, smoothing back
+the ruffled bands of her hair,--hair of a dark, soft chestnut, silky
+and luxuriant,--never polluted, and never, so long as she lives, to be
+polluted by auricomous cosmetics, far from that delicate darkness, every
+tint of the colours traditionally dedicated to the locks of Judas.
+
+Her complexion, usually of that soft bloom which inclines to paleness,
+is now heightened into glow by exercise and sunlight. The features are
+small and feminine; the eyes dark with long lashes; the mouth singularly
+beautiful, with a dimple on either side, and parted now in a half-smile
+at some pleasant recollection, giving a glimpse of small teeth
+glistening as pearls. But the peculiar charm of her face is in an
+expression of serene happiness, that sort of happiness which seems as if
+it had never been interrupted by a sorrow, had never been troubled by a
+sin,--that holy kind of happiness which belongs to innocence, the light
+reflected from a heart and conscience alike at peace.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+IT was a lovely summer evening for the Squire's rural entertainment. Mr.
+Travers had some guests staying with him: they had dined early for
+the occasion, and were now grouped with their host a little before six
+o'clock on the lawn. The house was of irregular architecture, altered
+or added to at various periods from the reign of Elizabeth to that of
+Victoria: at one end, the oldest part, a gable with mullion windows;
+at the other, the newest part, a flat-roofed wing, with modern sashes
+opening to the ground, the intermediate part much hidden by a veranda
+covered with creepers in full bloom. The lawn was a spacious table-land
+facing the west, and backed by a green and gentle hill, crowned with
+the ruins of an ancient priory. On one side of the lawn stretched a
+flower-garden and pleasure-ground, originally planned by Repton; on the
+opposite angles of the sward were placed two large marquees,--one for
+dancing, the other for supper. Towards the south the view was left open,
+and commanded the prospect of an old English park, not of the stateliest
+character; not intersected with ancient avenues, nor clothed
+with profitless fern as lairs for deer: but the park of a careful
+agriculturist, uniting profit with show, the sward duly drained and
+nourished, fit to fatten bullocks in an incredibly short time, and
+somewhat spoilt to the eye by subdivisions of wire fence. Mr. Travers
+was renowned for skilful husbandry, and the general management of
+land to the best advantage. He had come into the estate while still in
+childhood, and thus enjoyed the accumulations of a long minority. He had
+entered the Guards at the age of eighteen, and having more command of
+money than most of his contemporaries, though they might be of higher
+rank and the sons of richer men, he had been much courted and much
+plundered. At the age of twenty-five he found himself one of the leaders
+of fashion, renowned chiefly for reckless daring where-ever honour could
+be plucked out of the nettle danger: a steeple-chaser, whose exploits
+made a quiet man's hair stand on end; a rider across country, taking
+leaps which a more cautious huntsman carefully avoided. Known at Paris
+as well as in London, he had been admired by ladies whose smiles had
+cost him duels, the marks of which still remained in glorious scars
+on his person. No man ever seemed more likely to come to direst
+grief before attaining the age of thirty, for at twenty-seven all the
+accumulations of his minority were gone; and his estate, which, when he
+came of age, was scarcely three thousand a year, but entirely at his own
+disposal, was mortgaged up to its eyes.
+
+His friends began to shake their heads and call him "poor fellow;" but,
+with all his wild faults, Leopold Travers had been wholly pure from the
+two vices out of which a man does not often redeem himself. He had never
+drunk and he had never gambled. His nerves were not broken, his brain
+was not besotted. There was plenty of health in him yet, mind and body.
+At the critical period of his life he married for love, and his choice
+was a most felicitous one. The lady had no fortune; but though handsome
+and high-born, she had no taste for extravagance, and no desire for
+other society than that of the man she loved. So when he said, "Let us
+settle in the country and try our best to live on a few hundreds, lay
+by, and keep the old place out of the market," she consented with a
+joyful heart: and marvel it was to all how this wild Leopold Travers
+did settle down; did take to cultivating his home farm with his men from
+sunrise to sunset like a common tenant-farmer; did contrive to pay the
+interest on the mortgages, and keep his head above water. After some
+years of pupilage in this school of thrift, during which his habits
+became formed and his whole character braced, Leopold Travers suddenly
+found himself again rich, through the wife whom he had so prudently
+married without other dower than her love and her virtues. Her only
+brother, Lord Eagleton, a Scotch peer, had been engaged in marriage to a
+young lady, considered to be a rare prize in the lottery of wedlock.
+The marriage was broken off under very disastrous circumstances; but the
+young lord, good-looking and agreeable, was naturally expected to seek
+speedy consolation in some other alliance. Nevertheless he did not
+do so: he became a confirmed invalid, and died single, leaving to his
+sister all in his power to save from the distant kinsman who succeeded
+to his lands and title,--a goodly sum, which not only sufficed to pay
+off the mortgages on Neesdale Park but bestowed on its owner a surplus
+which the practical knowledge of country life that he had acquired
+enabled him to devote with extraordinary profit to the general
+improvement of his estate. He replaced tumble-down old farm buildings
+with new constructions on the most approved principles; bought or
+pensioned off certain slovenly incompetent tenants; threw sundry petty
+holdings into large farms suited to the buildings he constructed;
+purchased here and there small bits of land, commodious to the farms
+they adjoined, and completing the integrity of his ring-fence; stubbed
+up profitless woods which diminished the value of neighbouring arables
+by obstructing sun and air and harbouring legions of rabbits; and
+then, seeking tenants of enterprise and capital, more than doubled his
+original yearly rental, and perhaps more than tripled the market value
+of his property. Simultaneously with this acquisition of fortune, he
+emerged from the inhospitable and unsocial obscurity which his previous
+poverty had compelled, took an active part in county business, proved
+himself an excellent speaker at public meetings, subscribed liberally to
+the hunt, and occasionally joined in it,--a less bold but a wiser rider
+than of yore. In short, as Themistocles boasted that he could make a
+small state great, so Leopold Travers might boast with equal truth,
+that, by his energies, his judgment, and the weight of his personal
+character, he had made the owner of a property which had been at
+his accession to it of third-rate rank in the county a personage so
+considerable that no knight of the shire against whom he declared could
+have been elected, and if he had determined to stand himself he would
+have been chosen free of expense.
+
+But he said, on being solicited to become a candidate, "When a man once
+gives himself up to the care and improvement of a landed estate, he
+has no time and no heart for anything else. An estate is an income or
+a kingdom, according as the owner chooses to take it. I take it as a
+kingdom, and I cannot be _roi faineant_, with a steward for _maire du
+palais_. A king does not go into the House of Commons."
+
+Three years after this rise in the social ladder, Mrs. Travers was
+seized with congestion of the lungs followed by pleurisy, and died after
+less than a week's illness. Leopold never wholly recovered her loss.
+Though still young and always handsome, the idea of another wife, the
+love of another woman, were notions which he dismissed from his, mind
+with a quiet scorn. He was too masculine a creature to parade grief.
+For some weeks, indeed, he shut himself up in his own room, so rigidly
+secluded that he would not see even his daughter. But one morning he
+appeared in his fields as usual, and from that day resumed his old
+habits, and gradually renewed that cordial interchange of hospitalities
+which had popularly distinguished him since his accession to wealth.
+Still people felt that the man was changed; he was more taciturn,
+more grave: if always just in his dealings, he took the harder side of
+justice, where in his wife's time he had taken the gentler. Perhaps, to
+a man of strong will, the habitual intercourse with an amiable woman is
+essential for those occasions in which Will best proves the fineness of
+its temper by the facility with which it can be bent.
+
+It may be said that Leopold Travers might have found such intercourse in
+the intimate companionship of his own daughter. But she was a mere child
+when his wife died, and she grew up to womanhood too insensibly for
+him to note the change. Besides, where a man has found a wife his
+all-in-all, a daughter can never supply her place. The very reverence
+due to children precludes unrestrained confidence; and there is not
+that sense of permanent fellowship in a daughter which a man has in a
+wife,--any day a stranger may appear and carry her off from him. At all
+events Leopold did not own in Cecilia the softening influence to
+which he had yielded in her mother. He was fond of her, proud of her,
+indulgent to her; but the indulgence had its set limits. Whatever she
+asked solely for herself he granted; whatever she wished for matters
+under feminine control--the domestic household, the parish school, the
+alms-receiving poor--obtained his gentlest consideration. But when she
+had been solicited by some offending out-of-door dependant or some petty
+defaulting tenant to use her good offices in favour of the culprit, Mr.
+Travers checked her interference by a firm "No," though uttered in a
+mild accent, and accompanied with a masculine aphorism to the effect
+that "there would be no such things as strict justice and disciplined
+order in the world if a man yielded to a woman's pleadings in any matter
+of business between man and man." From this it will be seen that
+Mr. Lethbridge had overrated the value of Cecilia's alliance in the
+negotiation respecting Mrs. Bawtrey's premium and shop.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+IF, having just perused what has thus been written on the biographical
+antecedents and mental characteristics of Leopold Travers, you, my dear
+reader, were to be personally presented to that gentleman as he now
+stands, the central figure of the group gathered round him, on his
+terrace, you would probably be surprised,--nay, I have no doubt you
+would say to yourself, "Not at all the sort of man I expected." In that
+slender form, somewhat below the middle height; in that fair countenance
+which still, at the age of forty-eight, retains a delicacy of feature
+and of colouring which is of almost womanlike beauty, and, from the
+quiet placidity of its expression, conveys at first glance the notion of
+almost womanlike mildness,--it would be difficult to recognize a man who
+in youth had been renowned for reckless daring, in maturer years more
+honourably distinguished for steadfast prudence and determined purpose,
+and who, alike in faults or in merits, was as emphatically masculine as
+a biped in trousers can possibly be.
+
+Mr. Travers is listening to a young man of about two and twenty, the
+eldest son of the richest nobleman of the county, and who intends to
+start for the representation of the shire at the next general election,
+which is close at hand. The Hon. George Belvoir is tall, inclined to be
+stout, and will look well on the hustings. He has had those pains taken
+with his education which an English peer generally does take with the
+son intended to succeed to the representation of an honourable name and
+the responsibilities of high station. If eldest sons do not often make
+as great a figure in the world as their younger brothers, it is not
+because their minds are less cultivated, but because they have less
+motive power for action. George Belvoir was well read, especially
+in that sort of reading which befits a future senator,--history,
+statistics, political economy, so far as that dismal science is
+compatible with the agricultural interest. He was also well-principled,
+had a strong sense of discipline and duty, was prepared in politics
+firmly to uphold as right whatever was proposed by his own party, and
+to reject as wrong whatever was proposed by the other. At present he was
+rather loud and noisy in the assertion of his opinions,--young men fresh
+from the University generally are. It was the secret wish of Mr. Travers
+that George Belvoir should become his son-in-law; less because of his
+rank and wealth (though such advantages were not of a nature to be
+despised by a practical man like Leopold Travers) than on account of
+those qualities in his personal character which were likely to render
+him an excellent husband.
+
+Seated on wire benches, just without the veranda, but shaded by its
+fragrant festoons, were Mrs. Campion and three ladies, the wives of
+neighbouring squires. Cecilia stood a little apart from them, bending
+over a long-backed Skye terrier, whom she was teaching to stand on his
+hind legs.
+
+But see, the company are arriving! How suddenly that green space, ten
+minutes ago so solitary, has become animated and populous!
+
+Indeed the park now presented a very lively appearance: vans, carts, and
+farmers' chaises were seen in crowded procession along the winding road;
+foot-passengers were swarming towards the house in all directions. The
+herds and flocks in the various enclosures stopped grazing to stare at
+the unwonted invaders of their pasture: yet the orderly nature of their
+host imparted a respect for order to his ruder visitors; not even a
+turbulent boy attempted to scale the fences, or creep through their
+wires; all threaded the narrow turnstiles which gave egress from one
+subdivision of the sward to another.
+
+Mr. Travers turned to George Belvoir: "I see old farmer Steen's
+yellow gig. Mind how you talk to him, George. He is full of whims and
+crotchets, and if you once brush his feathers the wrong way he will be
+as vindictive as a parrot. But he is the man who must second you at
+the nomination. No other tenant-farmer carries the same weight with his
+class."
+
+"I suppose," said George, "that if Mr. Steen is the best man to second
+me at the hustings, he is a good speaker?"
+
+"A good speaker? in one sense he is. He never says a word too much. The
+last time he seconded the nomination of the man you are to succeed, this
+was his speech: 'Brother Electors, for twenty years I have been one of
+the judges at our county cattle-show. I know one animal from another.
+Looking at the specimens before us to-day none of them are as good
+of their kind as I've seen elsewhere. But if you choose Sir John Hogg
+you'll not get the wrong sow by the ear!'"
+
+"At least," said George, after a laugh at this sample of eloquence
+unadorned, "Mr. Steen does not err on the side of flattery in his
+commendations of a candidate. But what makes him such an authority with
+the farmers? Is he a first-rate agriculturist?"
+
+"In thrift, yes!--in spirit, no! He says that all expensive experiments
+should be left to gentlemen farmers. He is an authority with other
+tenants: firstly, because he is a very keen censor of their landlords;
+secondly, because he holds himself thoroughly independent of his own;
+thirdly, because he is supposed to have studied the political bearings
+of questions that affect the landed interest, and has more than once
+been summoned to give his opinion on such subjects to Committees of both
+Houses of Parliament. Here he comes. Observe, when I leave you to talk
+to him: firstly, that you confess utter ignorance of practical farming;
+nothing enrages him like the presumption of a gentleman farmer like
+myself: secondly, that you ask his opinion on the publication of
+Agricultural Statistics, just modestly intimating that you, as at
+present advised, think that inquisitorial researches into a man's
+business involve principles opposed to the British Constitution. And on
+all that he may say as to the shortcomings of landlords in general, and
+of your father in particular, make no reply, but listen with an air of
+melancholy conviction. How do you do, Mr. Steen, and how's the mistress?
+Why have you not brought her with you?"
+
+"My good woman is in the straw again, Squire. Who is that youngster?"
+
+"Hist! let me introduce Mr. Belvoir."
+
+Mr. Belvoir offers his hand.
+
+"No, sir!" vociferates Steen, putting both his own hands behind him. "No
+offence, young gentleman. But I don't give my hand at first sight to
+a man who wants to shake a vote out of it. Not that I know anything
+against you. But, if you be a farmer's friend rabbits are not, and my
+lord your father is a great one for rabbits."
+
+"Indeed you are mistaken there!" cries George, with vehement
+earnestness. Mr. Travers gave him a nudge, as much as to say, "Hold your
+tongue." George understood the hint, and is carried off meekly by Mr.
+Steen down the solitude of the plantations.
+
+The guests now arrived fast and thick. They consisted chiefly not only
+of Mr. Travers's tenants, but of farmers and their families within
+the range of eight or ten miles from the Park, with a few of the
+neighbouring gentry and clergy.
+
+It was not a supper intended to include the labouring class; for Mr.
+Travers had an especial dislike to the custom of exhibiting peasants
+at feeding-time, as if they were so many tamed animals of an inferior
+species. When he entertained work-people, he made them comfortable in
+their own way; and peasants feel more comfortable when not invited to be
+stared out of countenance.
+
+"Well, Lethbridge," said Mr. Travers, "where is the young gladiator you
+promised to bring?"
+
+"I did bring him, and he was by my side not a minute ago. He has
+suddenly given me the slip: 'abiit, evasit, erupit.' I was looking round
+for him in vain when you accosted me."
+
+"I hope he has not seen some guest of mine whom he wants to fight."
+
+"I hope not," answered the Parson, doubtfully. "He's a strange fellow.
+But I think you will be pleased with him; that is, if he can be found.
+Oh, Mr. Saunderson, how do you do? Have you seen your visitor?"
+
+"No, sir, I have just come. My mistress, Squire, and my three girls; and
+this is my son."
+
+"A hearty welcome to all," said the graceful Squire; (turning to
+Saunderson junior), "I suppose you are fond of dancing. Get yourself a
+partner. We may as well open the ball."
+
+"Thank you, sir, but I never dance," said Saunderson junior, with an air
+of austere superiority to an amusement which the March of Intellect had
+left behind.
+
+"Then you'll have less to regret when you are grown old. But the band
+is striking up; we must adjourn to the marquee. George" (Mr. Belvoir,
+escaped from Mr. Steen, had just made his appearance), "will you give
+your arm to Cecilia, to whom I think you are engaged for the first
+quadrille?"
+
+"I hope," said George to Cecilia, as they walked towards the marquee,
+"that Mr. Steen is not an average specimen of the electors I shall have
+to canvass. Whether he has been brought up to honour his own father and
+mother I can't pretend to say, but he seems bent upon teaching me not
+to honour mine. Having taken away my father's moral character upon the
+unfounded allegation that he loved rabbits better than mankind, he then
+assailed my innocent mother on the score of religion, and inquired when
+she was going over to the Church of Rome, basing that inquiry on the
+assertion that she had taken away her custom from a Protestant grocer
+and conferred it on a Papist."
+
+"Those are favourable signs, Mr. Belvoir. Mr. Steen always prefaces a
+kindness by a great deal of incivility. I asked him once to lend me a
+pony, my own being suddenly taken lame, and he seized that opportunity
+to tell me that my father was an impostor in pretending to be a judge of
+cattle; that he was a tyrant, screwing his tenants in order to indulge
+extravagant habits of hospitality; and implied that it would be a
+great mercy if we did not live to apply to him, not for a pony, but for
+parochial relief. I went away indignant. But he sent me the pony. I am
+sure he will give you his vote."
+
+"Meanwhile," said George, with a timid attempt at gallantry, as they now
+commenced the quadrille, "I take encouragement from the belief that I
+have the good wishes of Miss Travers. If ladies had votes, as Mr. Mill
+recommends, why, then--"
+
+"Why, then, I should vote as Papa does," said Miss Travers, simply. "And
+if women had votes, I suspect there would be very little peace in any
+household where they did not vote as the man at the head of it wished
+them."
+
+"But I believe, after all," said the aspirant to Parliament, seriously,
+"that the advocates for female suffrage would limit it to women
+independent of masculine control, widows and spinsters voting in right
+of their own independent tenements."
+
+"In that case," said Cecilia, "I suppose they would still generally go
+by the opinion of some man they relied on, or make a very silly choice
+if they did not."
+
+"You underrate the good sense of your sex."
+
+"I hope not. Do you underrate the good sense of yours, if, in far more
+than half the things appertaining to daily life, the wisest men say,
+'Better leave _them_ to the _women_'? But you're forgetting the figure,
+_cavalier seul_."
+
+"By the way," said George, in another interval of the dance, "do
+you know a Mr. Chillingly, the son of Sir Peter, of Exmundham, in
+Westshire?"
+
+"No; why do you ask?"
+
+"Because I thought I caught a glimpse of his face: it was just as Mr.
+Steen was bearing me away down that plantation. From what you say, I
+must suppose I was mistaken."
+
+"Chillingly! But surely some persons were talking yesterday at dinner
+about a young gentleman of that name as being likely to stand for
+Westshire at the next election, but who had made a very unpopular and
+eccentric speech on the occasion of his coming of age."
+
+"The same man: I was at college with him,--a very singular character. He
+was thought clever; won a prize or two; took a good degree: but it was
+generally said that he would have deserved a much higher one if some of
+his papers had not contained covert jests either on the subject or the
+examiners. It is a dangerous thing to set up as a humourist in practical
+life,--especially public life. They say Mr. Pitt had naturally a great
+deal of wit and humour, but he wisely suppressed any evidence of those
+qualities in his Parliamentary speeches. Just like Chillingly, to turn
+into ridicule the important event of festivities in honour of his coming
+of age,--an occasion that can never occur again in the whole course of
+his life."
+
+"It was bad taste," said Cecilia, "if intentional. But perhaps he was
+misunderstood, or taken by surprise."
+
+"Misunderstood,--possibly; but taken by surprise,--no. The coolest
+fellow I ever met. Not that I have met him very often. Latterly, indeed,
+at Cambridge he lived much alone. It was said that he read hard. I doubt
+that; for my rooms were just over his, and I know that he was much
+more frequently out of doors than in. He rambled a good deal about the
+country on foot. I have seen him in by-lanes a dozen miles distant from
+the town when I have been riding back from the hunt. He was fond of the
+water, and pulled a mighty strong oar, but declined to belong to our
+University crew; yet if ever there was a fight between undergraduates
+and bargemen, he was sure to be in the midst of it. Yes, a very great
+oddity indeed, full of contradictions, for a milder, quieter fellow in
+general intercourse you could not see; and as for the jests of which
+he was accused in his examination papers, his very face should
+have acquitted him of the charge before any impartial jury of his
+countrymen."
+
+"You sketch quite an interesting picture of him," said Cecilia. "I wish
+we did know him: he would be worth seeing."
+
+"And, once seen, you would not easily forget him,--a dark, handsome
+face, with large melancholy eyes, and with one of those spare slender
+figures which enable a man to disguise his strength, as a fraudulent
+billiard-player disguises his play."
+
+The dance had ceased during this conversation, and the speakers were now
+walking slowly to and fro the lawn amid the general crowd.
+
+"How well your father plays the part of host to these rural folks!" said
+George, with a secret envy. "Do observe how quietly he puts that shy
+young farmer at his ease, and now how kindly he deposits that lame old
+lady on the bench, and places the stool under her feet. What a canvasser
+he would be! and how young he still looks, and how monstrous handsome!"
+
+This last compliment was uttered as Travers, having made the old
+lady comfortable, had joined the three Miss Saundersons, dividing his
+pleasant smile equally between them; and seemingly unconscious of the
+admiring glances which many another rural beauty directed towards him
+as he passed along. About the man there was a certain indescribable
+elegance, a natural suavity free from all that affectation, whether
+of forced heartiness or condescending civility, which too often
+characterizes the well-meant efforts of provincial magnates to
+accommodate themselves to persons of inferior station and breeding. It
+is a great advantage to a man to have passed his early youth in that
+most equal and most polished of all democracies,--the best society of
+large capitals. And to such acquired advantage Leopold Travers added the
+inborn qualities that please.
+
+Later in the evening Travers, again accosting Mr. Lethbridge, said, "I
+have been talking much to the Saundersons about that young man who did
+us the inestimable service of punishing your ferocious parishioner,
+Tom Bowles; and all I hear so confirms the interest your own
+account inspired me with that I should really like much to make his
+acquaintance. Has not he turned up yet?"
+
+"No; I fear he must have gone. But in that case I hope you will take
+his generous desire to serve my poor basket-maker into benevolent
+consideration."
+
+"Do not press me; I feel so reluctant to refuse any request of yours.
+But I have my own theory as to the management of an estate, and my
+system does not allow of favour. I should wish to explain that to the
+young stranger himself; for I hold courage in such honour that I do not
+like a brave man to leave these parts with an impression that Leopold
+Travers is an ungracious churl. However, he may not have gone. I will
+go and look for him myself. Just tell Cecilia that she has danced enough
+with the gentry, and that I have told Farmer Turby's son, a fine young
+fellow and a capital rider across country, that I expect him to show my
+daughter that he can dance as well as he rides."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+QUITTING Mr. Lethbridge, Travers turned with quick step towards the more
+solitary part of the grounds. He did not find the object of his search
+in the walks of the plantation; and, on taking the circuit of his
+demesne, wound his way back towards the lawn through a sequestered rocky
+hollow in the rear of the marquee, which had been devoted to a fernery.
+Here he came to a sudden pause; for, seated a few yards before him on
+a gray crag, and the moonlight full on his face, he saw a solitary man,
+looking upwards with a still and mournful gaze, evidently absorbed in
+abstract contemplation.
+
+Recalling the description of the stranger which he had heard from Mr.
+Lethbridge and the Saundersons, Mr. Travers felt sure that he had come
+on him at last. He approached gently; and, being much concealed by the
+tall ferns, Kenelm (for that itinerant it was) did not see him advance,
+until he felt a hand on his shoulder, and, turning round, beheld a
+winning smile and heard a pleasant voice.
+
+"I think I am not mistaken," said Leopold Travers, "in assuming you to
+be the gentleman whom Mr. Lethbridge promised to introduce to me, and
+who is staying with my tenant, Mr. Saunderson?"
+
+Kenelm rose and bowed. Travers saw at once that it was the bow of a man
+in his own world, and not in keeping with the Sunday costume of a petty
+farmer. "Nay," said he, "let us talk seated;" and placing himself on the
+crag, he made room for Kenelm beside him.
+
+"In the first place," resumed Travers, "I must thank you for having
+done a public service in putting down the brute force which has long
+tyrannized over the neighbourhood. Often in my young days I have felt
+the disadvantage of height and sinews, whenever it would have been a
+great convenience to terminate dispute or chastise insolence by a
+resort to man's primitive weapons; but I never more lamented my physical
+inferiority than on certain occasions when I would have given my ears to
+be able to thrash Tom Bowles myself. It has been as great a disgrace to
+my estate that that bully should so long have infested it as it is
+to the King of Italy not to be able with all his armies to put down a
+brigand in Calabria."
+
+"Pardon me, Mr. Travers, but I am one of those rare persons who do not
+like to hear ill of their friends. Mr. Thomas Bowles is a particular
+friend of mine."
+
+"Eh!" cried Travers, aghast. "'Friend!' you are joking.
+
+"You would not accuse me of joking if you knew me better. But surely you
+have felt that there are few friends one likes more cordially, and ought
+to respect more heedfully, than the enemy with whom one has just made it
+up."
+
+"You say well, and I accept the rebuke," said Travers, more and more
+surprised. "And I certainly have less right to abuse Mr. Bowles than
+you have, since I had not the courage to fight him. To turn to another
+subject less provocative. Mr. Lethbridge has told me of your amiable
+desire to serve two of his young parishioners, Will Somers and Jessie
+Wiles, and of your generous offer to pay the money Mrs. Bawtrey demands
+for the transfer of her lease. To that negotiation my consent is
+necessary, and that consent I cannot give. Shall I tell you why?"
+
+"Pray do. Your reasons may admit of argument."
+
+"Every reason admits of argument," said Mr. Travers, amused at the calm
+assurance of a youthful stranger in anticipating argument with a skilful
+proprietor on the management of his own property. "I do not, however,
+tell you my reasons for the sake of argument, but in vindication of my
+seeming want of courtesy towards yourself. I have had a very hard and a
+very difficult task to perform in bringing the rental of my estate up
+to its proper value. In doing so, I have been compelled to adopt one
+uniform system, equally applied to my largest and my pettiest holdings.
+That system consists in securing the best and safest tenants I can,
+at the rents computed by a valuer in whom I have confidence. To this
+system, universally adopted on my estate, though it incurred much
+unpopularity at first, I have at length succeeded in reconciling the
+public opinion of my neighbourhood. People began by saying I was
+hard; they now acknowledge I am just. If I once give way to favour or
+sentiment, I unhinge my whole system. Every day I am subjected to moving
+solicitations. Lord Twostars, a keen politician, begs me to give a
+vacant farm to a tenant because he is an excellent canvasser, and has
+always voted straight with the party. Mrs. Fourstars, a most benevolent
+woman, entreats me not to dismiss another tenant, because he is in
+distressed circumstances and has a large family; very good reasons
+perhaps for my excusing him an arrear, or allowing him a retiring
+pension, but the worst reasons in the world for letting him continue to
+ruin himself and my land. Now, Mrs. Bawtrey has a small holding on lease
+at the inadequate rent of L8 a year. She asks L45 for its transfer, but
+she can't transfer the lease without my consent; and I can get L12 a
+year as a moderate rental from a large choice of competent tenants. It
+will better answer me to pay her the L45 myself, which I have no doubt
+the incoming tenant would pay me back, at least in part; and if he did
+not, the additional rent would be good interest for my expenditure.
+Now, you happen to take a sentimental interest, as you pass through the
+village, in the loves of a needy cripple whose utmost industry has but
+served to save himself from parish relief, and a giddy girl without a
+sixpence, and you ask me to accept these very equivocal tenants instead
+of substantial ones, and at a rent one-third less than the market value.
+Suppose that I yielded to your request, what becomes of my reputation
+for practical, business-like justice? I shall have made an inroad into
+the system by which my whole estate is managed, and have invited all
+manner of solicitations on the part of friends and neighbours, which I
+could no longer consistently refuse, having shown how easily I can be
+persuaded into compliance by a stranger whom I may never see again. And
+are you sure, after all, that, if you did prevail on me, you would do
+the individual good you aim at? It is, no doubt, very pleasant to think
+one has made a young couple happy. But if that young couple fail in
+keeping the little shop to which you would transplant them (and
+nothing more likely: peasants seldom become good shopkeepers), and find
+themselves, with a family of children, dependent solely, not on the arm
+of a strong labourer, but the ten fingers of a sickly cripple, who makes
+clever baskets, for which there is but slight and precarious demand in
+the neighbourhood, may you not have insured the misery of the couple you
+wished to render happy?"
+
+"I withdraw all argument," said Kenelm, with an aspect so humiliated and
+dejected, that it would have softened a Greenland bear, or a Counsel for
+the Prosecution. "I am more and more convinced that of all the shams in
+the world that of benevolence is the greatest. It seems so easy to
+do good, and it is so difficult to do it. Everywhere, in this hateful
+civilized life, one runs one's head against a system. A system, Mr.
+Travers, is man's servile imitation of the blind tyranny of what in our
+ignorance we call 'Natural Laws,' a mechanical something through which
+the world is ruled by the cruelty of General Principles, to the utter
+disregard of individual welfare. By Natural Laws creatures prey on each
+other, and big fishes eat little ones upon system. It is, nevertheless,
+a hard thing for the little fish. Every nation, every town, every
+hamlet, every occupation, has a system, by which, somehow or other, the
+pond swarms with fishes, of which a great many inferiors contribute to
+increase the size of a superior. It is an idle benevolence to keep
+one solitary gudgeon out of the jaws of a pike. Here am I doing what I
+thought the simplest thing in the world, asking a gentleman, evidently
+as good-natured as myself, to allow an old woman to let her premises to
+a deserving young couple, and paying what she asks for it out of my own
+money. And I find that I am running against a system, and invading all
+the laws by which a rental is increased and an estate improved. Mr.
+Travers, you have no cause for regret in not having beaten Tom Bowles.
+You have beaten his victor, and I now give up all dream of further
+interference with the Natural Laws that govern the village which I
+have visited in vain. I had meant to remove Tom Bowles from that quiet
+community. I shall now leave him to return to his former habits,--to
+marry Jessie Wiles, which he certainly will do, and--"
+
+"Hold!" cried Mr. Travers. "Do you mean to say that you can induce Tom
+Bowles to leave the village?"
+
+"I had induced him to do it, provided Jessie Wiles married the
+basket-maker; but, as that is out of the question, I am bound to tell
+him so, and he will stay."
+
+"But if he left, what would become of his business? His mother could
+not keep it on; his little place is a freehold; the only house in the
+village that does not belong to me, or I should have ejected him long
+ago. Would he sell the premises to me?"
+
+"Not if he stays and marries Jessie Wiles. But if he goes with me to
+Luscombe and settles in that town as a partner to his uncle, I suppose
+he would be too glad to sell a house of which he can have no pleasant
+recollections. But what then? You cannot violate your system for the
+sake of a miserable forge."
+
+"It would not violate my system if, instead of yielding to a sentiment,
+I gained an advantage; and, to say truth, I should be very glad to buy
+that forge and the fields that go with it."
+
+"'Tis your affair now, not mine, Mr. Travers. I no longer presume to
+interfere. I leave the neighbourhood to-morrow: see if you can negotiate
+with Mr. Bowles. I have the honour to wish you a good evening."
+
+"Nay, young gentleman, I cannot allow you to quit me thus. You have
+declined apparently to join the dancers, but you will at least join the
+supper. Come!"
+
+"Thank you sincerely, no. I came here merely on the business which your
+system has settled."
+
+"But I am not sure that it is settled." Here Mr. Travers wound his arm
+within Kenelm's, and looking him full in the face, said, "I know that
+I am speaking to a gentleman at least equal in rank to myself, but as
+I enjoy the melancholy privilege of being the older man, do not think
+I take an unwarrantable liberty in asking if you object to tell me your
+name. I should like to introduce you to my daughter, who is very partial
+to Jessie Wiles and to Will Somers. But I can't venture to inflame her
+imagination by designating you as a prince in disguise."
+
+"Mr. Travers, you express yourself with exquisite delicacy. But I
+am just starting in life, and I shrink from mortifying my father by
+associating my name with a signal failure. Suppose I were an anonymous
+contributor, say, to 'The Londoner,' and I had just brought that
+highly intellectual journal into discredit by a feeble attempt at
+a good-natured criticism or a generous sentiment, would that be the
+fitting occasion to throw off the mask, and parade myself to a mocking
+world as the imbecile violator of an established system? Should I not,
+in a moment so untoward, more than ever desire to merge my insignificant
+unit in the mysterious importance which the smallest Singular obtains
+when he makes himself a Plural, and speaks not as 'I,' but as 'We'?
+_We_ are insensible to the charm of young ladies; _We_ are not bribed
+by suppers; _We_, like the witches of 'Macbeth,' have no name on earth;
+_We_ are the greatest wisdom of the greatest number; _We_ are so upon
+system; _We_ salute you, Mr. Travers, and depart unassailable."
+
+Here Kenelm rose, doffed and replaced his hat in majestic salutation,
+turned towards the entrance of the fernery, and found himself suddenly
+face to face with George Belvoir, behind whom followed, with a throng
+of guests, the fair form of Cecilia. George Belvoir caught Kenelm by the
+hand, and exclaimed, "Chillingly! I thought I could not be mistaken."
+
+"Chillingly!" echoed Leopold Travers from behind. "Are you the son of my
+old friend Sir Peter?"
+
+Thus discovered and environed, Kenelm did not lose his wonted presence
+of mind; he turned round to Leopold Travers, who was now close in his
+rear, and whispered, "If my father was your friend, do not disgrace his
+son. Do not say I am a failure. Deviate from your system, and let Will
+Somers succeed Mrs. Bawtrey." Then reverting his face to Mr. Belvoir, he
+said tranquilly, "Yes; we have met before."
+
+"Cecilia," said Travers, now interposing, "I am happy to introduce to
+you as Mr. Chillingly, not only the son of an old friend of mine,
+not only the knight-errant of whose gallant conduct on behalf of your
+protegee Jessie Wiles we have heard so much, but the eloquent arguer who
+has conquered my better judgment in a matter on which I thought myself
+infallible. Tell Mr. Lethbridge that I accept Will Somers as a tenant
+for Mrs. Bawtrey's premises."
+
+Kenelm grasped the Squire's hand cordially. "May it be in my power to do
+a kind thing to you, in spite of any system to the contrary!"
+
+"Mr. Chillingly, give your arm to my daughter. You will not now object
+to join the dancers?"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+CECILIA stole a shy glance at Kenelm as the two emerged from the fernery
+into the open space of the lawn. His countenance pleased her. She
+thought she discovered much latent gentleness under the cold and
+mournful gravity of its expression; and, attributing the silence he
+maintained to some painful sense of an awkward position in the abrupt
+betrayal of his incognito, sought with womanly tact to dispel his
+supposed embarrassment.
+
+"You have chosen a delightful mode of seeing the country this lovely
+summer weather, Mr. Chillingly. I believe such pedestrian exercises are
+very common with university students during the long vacation."
+
+"Very common, though they generally wander in packs like wild dogs or
+Australian dingoes. It is only a tame dog that one finds on the road
+travelling by himself; and then, unless he behaves very quietly, it is
+ten to one that he is stoned as a mad dog."
+
+"But I am afraid, from what I hear, that you have not been travelling
+very quietly."
+
+"You are quite right, Miss Travers, and I am a sad dog if not a mad one.
+But pardon me: we are nearing the marquee; the band is striking up, and,
+alas! I am not a dancing dog."
+
+He released Cecilia's arm, and bowed.
+
+"Let us sit here a while, then," said she, motioning to a garden-bench.
+"I have no engagement for the next dance, and, as I am a little tired, I
+shall be glad of a reprieve."
+
+Kenelm sighed, and, with the air of a martyr stretching himself on the
+rack, took his place beside the fairest girl in the county.
+
+"You were at college with Mr. Belvoir?"
+
+"I was."
+
+"He was thought clever there?"
+
+"I have not a doubt of it."
+
+"You know he is canvassing our county for the next election. My father
+takes a warm interest in his success, and thinks he will be a useful
+member of Parliament."
+
+"Of that I am certain. For the first five years he will be called
+pushing, noisy, and conceited, much sneered at by men of his own age,
+and coughed down on great occasions; for the five following years he
+will be considered a sensible man in committees, and a necessary feature
+in debate; at the end of those years he will be an under-secretary; in
+five years more he will be a Cabinet Minister, and the representative of
+an important section of opinions; he will be an irreproachable private
+character, and his wife will be seen wearing the family diamonds at all
+the great parties. She will take an interest in politics and theology;
+and if she die before him, her husband will show his sense of wedded
+happiness by choosing another lady, equally fitted to wear the family
+diamonds and to maintain the family consequences."
+
+In spite of her laughter, Cecilia felt a certain awe at the solemnity of
+voice and manner with which Kenelm delivered these oracular sentences,
+and the whole prediction seemed strangely in unison with her own
+impressions of the character whose fate was thus shadowed out.
+
+"Are you a fortune-teller, Mr. Chillingly?" she asked, falteringly, and
+after a pause.
+
+"As good a one as any whose hand you could cross with a shilling."
+
+"Will you tell me my fortune?"
+
+"No; I never tell the fortunes of ladies, because your sex is credulous,
+and a lady might believe what I tell her. And when we believe such and
+such is to be our fate, we are too apt to work out our life into the
+verification of the belief. If Lady Macbeth had disbelieved in the
+witches, she would never have persuaded her lord to murder Duncan."
+
+"But can you not predict me a more cheerful fortune than that tragical
+illustration of yours seems to threaten?"
+
+"The future is never cheerful to those who look on the dark side of
+the question. Mr. Gray is too good a poet for people to read nowadays,
+otherwise I should refer you to his lines in the 'Ode to Eton
+College,'--
+
+
+ "'See how all around us wait
+ The ministers of human fate,
+ And black Misfortune's baleful train.'
+
+
+"Meanwhile it is something to enjoy the present. We are young; we
+are listening to music; there is no cloud over the summer stars; our
+conscience is clear; our hearts untroubled: why look forward in search
+of happiness? shall we ever be happier than we are at this moment?"
+
+Here Mr. Travers came up. "We are going to supper in a few minutes,"
+said he; "and before we lose sight of each other, Mr. Chillingly, I wish
+to impress on you the moral fact that one good turn deserves another. I
+have yielded to your wish, and now you must yield to mine. Come and stay
+a few days with me, and see your benevolent intentions carried out."
+
+Kenelm paused. Now that he was discovered, why should he not pass a few
+days among his equals? Realities or shams might be studied with squires
+no less than with farmers; besides, he had taken a liking to Travers.
+That graceful _ci-devant_ Wildair, with the slight form and the delicate
+face, was unlike rural squires in general. Kenelm paused, and then said
+frankly,--
+
+"I accept your invitation. Would the middle of next week suit you?"
+
+"The sooner the better. Why not to-morrow?"
+
+"To-morrow I am pre-engaged to an excursion with Mr. Bowles. That may
+occupy two or three days, and meanwhile I must write home for other
+garments than those in which I am a sham."
+
+"Come any day you like."
+
+"Agreed."
+
+"Agreed; and, hark! the supper-bell."
+
+"Supper," said Kenelm, offering his arm to Miss Travers,--"supper is a
+word truly interesting, truly poetical. It associates itself with the
+entertainments of the ancients, with the Augustan age, with Horace and
+Maecenas; with the only elegant but too fleeting period of the modern
+world; with the nobles and wits of Paris, when Paris had wits and
+nobles; with Moliere and the warm-hearted Duke who is said to have been
+the original of Moliere's Misanthrope; with Madame de Sevigne and the
+Racine whom that inimitable letter-writer denied to be a poet; with
+Swift and Bolingbroke; with Johnson, Goldsmith, and Garrick. Epochs are
+signalized by their eatings. I honour him who revives the Golden Age of
+suppers." So saying, his face brightened.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY, ESQ., TO SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, BART., ETC.
+
+MY DEAR FATHER,--I am alive and unmarried. Providence has watched over
+me in these respects; but I have had narrow escapes. Hitherto I have not
+acquired much worldly wisdom in my travels. It is true that I have been
+paid two shillings as a day labourer, and, in fact, have fairly earned
+at least six shillings more; but against that additional claim I
+generously set off, as an equivalent, my board and lodging. On the other
+hand, I have spent forty-five pounds out of the fifty which I devoted
+to the purchase of experience. But I hope you will be a gainer by
+that investment. Send an order to Mr. William Somers, basket-maker,
+Graveleigh, -----shire, for the hampers and game-baskets you require,
+and I undertake to say that you will save twenty per cent on that
+article (all expenses of carriage deducted) and do a good action into
+the bargain. You know, from long habit, what a good action is worth
+better than I do. I dare say you will be more pleased to learn than I
+am to record the fact that I have been again decoyed into the society of
+ladies and gentlemen, and have accepted an invitation to pass a few days
+at Neesdale Park with Mr. Travers,--christened Leopold, who calls you
+"his old friend,"--a term which I take for granted belongs to that class
+of poetic exaggeration in which the "dears" and "darlings" of conjugal
+intercourse may be categorized. Having for that visit no suitable
+garments in my knapsack, kindly tell Jenkes to forward me a portmanteau
+full of those which I habitually wore as Kenelm Chillingly, directed
+to me at "Neesdale Park, near Beaverston." Let me find it there on
+Wednesday.
+
+I leave this place to-morrow morning in company with a friend of the
+name of Bowles: no relation to the reverend gentleman of that name who
+held the doctrine that a poet should bore us to death with fiddle-faddle
+minutia of natural objects in preference to that study of the
+insignificant creature Man, in his relations to his species, to which
+Mr. Pope limited the range of his inferior muse; and who, practising as
+he preached, wrote some very nice verses, to which the Lake school and
+its successors are largely indebted. My Mr. Bowles has exercised his
+faculty upon Man, and has a powerful inborn gift in that line which
+only requires cultivation to render him a match for any one. His more
+masculine nature is at present much obscured by that passing cloud
+which, in conventional language, is called "a hopeless attachment." But
+I trust, in the course of our excursion, which is to be taken on foot,
+that this vapour may consolidate by motion, as some old-fashioned
+astronomers held that the nebula does consolidate into a matter-of-fact
+world. Is it Rochefoucauld who says that a man is never more likely to
+form a hopeful attachment for one than when his heart is softened by a
+hopeless attachment to another? May it be long, my dear father, before
+you condole with me on the first or congratulate me on the second.
+
+ Your affectionate son,
+
+ KENELM.
+
+Direct to me at Mr. Travers's. Kindest love to my mother.
+
+
+The answer to this letter is here subjoined as the most convenient place
+for its insertion, though of course it was not received till some days
+after the date of my next chapter.
+
+
+SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, BART., TO KENELM CHILLINGLY, ESQ.
+
+MY DEAR Boy,--With this I despatch the portmanteau you require to the
+address that you give. I remember well Leopold Travers when he was in
+the Guards,--a very handsome and a very wild young fellow. But he
+had much more sense than people gave him credit for, and frequented
+intellectual society; at least I met him very often at my friend
+Campion's, whose house was then the favourite rendezvous of
+distinguished persons. He had very winning manners, and one could not
+help taking an interest in him. I was very glad when I heard he had
+married and reformed. Here I beg to observe that a man who contracts a
+taste for low company may indeed often marry, but he seldom reforms when
+he does so. And, on the whole, I should be much pleased to hear that the
+experience which has cost you forty-five pounds had convinced you that
+you might be better employed than earning two, or even six shillings as
+a day-labourer.
+
+I have not given your love to your mother, as you requested. In fact,
+you have placed me in a very false position towards that other author of
+your eccentric being. I could only guard you from the inquisition of the
+police and the notoriety of descriptive hand-bills by allowing my lady
+to suppose that you had gone abroad with the Duke of Clairville and his
+family. It is easy to tell a fib, but it is very difficult to untell
+it. However, as soon as you have made up your mind to resume your normal
+position among ladies and gentlemen, I should be greatly obliged if
+you would apprise me. I don't wish to keep a fib on my conscience a
+day longer than may be necessary to prevent the necessity of telling
+another.
+
+From what you say of Mr. Bowles's study of Man, and his inborn talent
+for that scientific investigation, I suppose that he is a professed
+Metaphysician, and I should be glad of his candid opinion upon the
+Primary Basis of Morals, a subject upon which I have for three years
+meditated the consideration of a critical paper. But having lately read
+a controversy thereon between two eminent philosophers, in which each
+accuses the other of not understanding him, I have resolved for the
+present to leave the Basis in its unsettled condition.
+
+You rather alarm me when you say you have had a narrow escape from
+marriage. Should you, in order to increase the experience you set out
+to acquire, decide on trying the effect of a Mrs. Chillingly upon your
+nervous system, it would be well to let me know a little beforehand, so
+that I might prepare your mother's mind for that event. Such household
+trifles are within her special province; and she would be much put out
+if a Mrs. Chillingly dropped on her unawares.
+
+This subject, however, is too serious to admit of a jest even between
+two persons who understand, so well as you and I do, the secret cipher
+by which each other's outward style of jest is to be gravely interpreted
+into the irony which says one thing and means another. My dear boy, you
+are very young; you are wandering about in a very strange manner, and
+may, no doubt, meet with many a pretty face by the way, with which you
+may fancy that you fall in love. You cannot think me a barbarous, tyrant
+if I ask you to promise me, on your honour, that you will not propose
+to any young lady before you come first to me and submit the case to my
+examination and approval. You know me too well to suppose that I should
+unreasonably withhold my consent if convinced that your happiness was
+at stake. But while what a young man may fancy to be love is often a
+trivial incident in his life, marriage is the greatest event in it;
+if on one side it may involve his happiness, on the other side it
+may insure his misery. Dearest, best, and oddest of sons, give me the
+promise I ask, and you will free my breast from a terribly anxious
+thought which now sits on it like a nightmare.
+
+Your recommendation of a basket-maker comes opportunely. All such
+matters go through the bailiff's hands, and it was but the other day
+that Green was complaining of the high prices of the man he employed for
+hampers and game-baskets. Green shall write to your protege.
+
+Keep me informed of your proceedings as much as your anomalous character
+will permit; so that nothing may diminish my confidence that the man who
+had the honour to be christened Kenelm will not disgrace his name, but
+acquire the distinction denied to a Peter.
+
+Your affectionate father.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+VILLAGERS lie abed on Sundays later than on workdays, and no shutter was
+unclosed in a window of the rural street through which Kenelm Chillingly
+and Tom Bowles went, side by side, in the still soft air of the Sabbath
+morn. Side by side they went on, crossing the pastoral glebe-lands,
+where the kine still drowsily reclined under the bowery shade of
+glinting chestnut leaves; and diving thence into a narrow lane or
+by-road, winding deep between lofty banks all tangled with convolvulus
+and wild-rose and honeysuckle.
+
+They walked in silence, for Kenelm, after one or two vain attempts at
+conversation, had the tact to discover that his companion was in no mood
+for talk; and being himself one of those creatures whose minds glide
+easily into the dreamy monologue of revery, he was not displeased to
+muse on undisturbed, drinking quietly into his heart the subdued joy of
+the summer morn, with the freshness of its sparkling dews, the wayward
+carol of its earliest birds, the serene quietude of its limpid breezy
+air. Only when they came to fresh turnings in the road that led towards
+the town to which they were bound, Tom Bowles stepped before his
+companion, indicating the way by a monosyllable or a gesture. Thus they
+journeyed for hours, till the sun attained power, and a little wayside
+inn near a hamlet invited Kenelm to the thought of rest and food.
+
+"Tom," said he then, rousing from his revery, "what do you say to
+breakfast?"
+
+Answered Tom sullenly, "I am not hungry; but as you like."
+
+"Thank you, then we will stop here a while. I find it difficult to
+believe that you are not hungry, for you are very strong, and there are
+two things which generally accompany great physical strength: the one is
+a keen appetite; the other is--though you may not suppose it, and it is
+not commonly known--a melancholic temperament."
+
+"Eh!--a what?"
+
+"A tendency to melancholy. Of course you have heard of Hercules: you
+know the saying 'as strong as Hercules'?"
+
+"Yes, of course."
+
+"Well, I was first led to the connection between strength, appetite, and
+melancholy, by reading in an old author named Plutarch that Hercules
+was among the most notable instances of melancholy temperament which the
+author was enabled to quote. That must have been the traditional notion
+of the Herculean constitution; and as for appetite, the appetite of
+Hercules was a standard joke of the comic writers. When I read that
+observation it set me thinking, being myself melancholic and having
+an exceedingly good appetite. Sure enough, when I began to collect
+evidence, I found that the strongest men with whom I made acquaintance,
+including prize-fighters and Irish draymen, were disposed to look upon
+life more on the shady than the sunny side of the way; in short, they
+were melancholic. But the kindness of Providence allowed them to enjoy
+their meals, as you and I are about to do." In the utterance of this
+extraordinary crotchet Kenelm had halted his steps; but now striding
+briskly forward he entered the little inn, and after a glance at its
+larder, ordered the whole contents to be brought out and placed within a
+honeysuckle arbour which he spied in the angle of a bowling-green at the
+rear of the house.
+
+In addition to the ordinary condiments of loaf and butter and eggs and
+milk and tea, the board soon groaned beneath the weight of pigeon-pie,
+cold ribs of beef, and shoulder of mutton, remains of a feast which the
+members of a monthly rustic club had held there the day before. Tom ate
+little at first; but example is contagious, and gradually he vied with
+his companion in the diminution of the solid viands before him. Then he
+called for brandy.
+
+"No," said Kenelm. "No, Tom; you have promised me friendship, and that
+is not compatible with brandy. Brandy is the worst enemy a man like
+you can have; and would make you quarrel even with me. If you want a
+stimulus I allow you a pipe. I don't smoke myself, as a rule, but there
+have been times in my life when I required soothing, and then I have
+felt that a whiff of tobacco stills and softens one like the kiss of a
+little child. Bring this gentleman a pipe."
+
+Tom grunted, but took to the pipe kindly, and in a few minutes, during
+which Kenelm left him in silence, a lowering furrow between his brows
+smoothed itself away.
+
+Gradually he felt the sweetening influences of the day and the place, of
+the merry sunbeams at play amid the leaves of the arbour, of the frank
+perfume of the honeysuckle, of the warble of the birds before they sank
+into the taciturn repose of a summer noon.
+
+It was with a reluctant sigh that he rose at last, when Kenelm said, "We
+have yet far to go: we must push on."
+
+The landlady, indeed, had already given them a hint that she and
+the family wanted to go to church, and to shut up the house in their
+absence. Kenelm drew out his purse, but Tom did the same with a return
+of cloud on his brow, and Kenelm saw that he would be mortally offended
+if suffered to be treated as an inferior; so each paid his due share,
+and the two men resumed their wandering. This time it was along a
+by-path amid fields, which was a shorter cut than the lane they had
+previously followed, to the main road to Luscombe. They walked
+slowly till they came to a rustic foot-bridge which spanned a gloomy
+trout-stream, not noisy, but with a low, sweet murmur, doubtless the
+same stream beside which, many miles away, Kenelm had conversed with the
+minstrel. Just as they came to this bridge there floated to their ears
+the distant sound of the hamlet church-bell.
+
+"Now let us sit here a while and listen," said Kenelm, seating himself
+on the baluster of the bridge. "I see that you brought away your pipe
+from the inn, and provided yourself with tobacco: refill the pipe and
+listen."
+
+Tom half smiled and obeyed.
+
+"O friend," said Kenelm, earnestly, and after a long pause of thought,
+"do you not feel what a blessed thing it is in this mortal life to be
+ever and anon reminded that you have a soul?"
+
+Tom, startled, withdrew the pipe from his lips, and muttered,--
+
+"Eh!"
+
+Kenelm continued,--
+
+"You and I, Tom, are not so good as we ought to be: of that there is no
+doubt; and good people would say justly that we should now be within
+yon church itself rather than listening to its bell. Granted, my friend,
+granted; but still it is something to hear that bell, and to feel by the
+train of thought which began in our innocent childhood, when we said
+our prayers at the knees of a mother, that we were lifted beyond this
+visible Nature, beyond these fields and woods and waters, in which, fair
+though they be, you and I miss something; in which neither you nor I are
+as happy as the kine in the fields, as the birds on the bough, as the
+fishes in the water: lifted to a consciousness of a sense vouchsafed to
+you and to me, not vouchsafed to the kine, to the bird, and the fish,--a
+sense to comprehend that Nature has a God, and Man has a life hereafter.
+The bell says that to you and to me. Were that bell a thousand times
+more musical it could not say that to beast, bird, and fish. Do you
+understand me, Tom?"
+
+Tom remains silent for a minute, and then replies, "I never thought of
+it before; but, as you put it, I understand."
+
+"Nature never gives to a living thing capacities not practically meant
+for its benefit and use. If Nature gives to us capacities to believe
+that we have a Creator whom we never saw, of whom we have no direct
+proof, who is kind and good and tender beyond all that we know of kind
+and good and tender on earth, it is because the endowment of capacities
+to conceive such a Being must be for our benefit and use: it would not
+be for our benefit and use if it were a lie. Again, if Nature has given
+to us a capacity to receive the notion that we live again, no matter
+whether some of us refuse so to believe, and argue against it,--why, the
+very capacity to receive the idea (for unless we receive it we could
+not argue against it) proves that it is for our benefit and use; and if
+there were no such life hereafter, we should be governed and influenced,
+arrange our modes of life, and mature our civilization, by obedience
+to a lie, which Nature falsified herself in giving us the capacity to
+believe. You still understand me?"
+
+"Yes; it bothers me a little, for you see I am not a parson's man; but I
+do understand."
+
+"Then, my friend, study to apply,--for it requires constant
+study,--study to apply that which you understand to your own case. You
+are something more than Tom Bowles, the smith and doctor of horses;
+something more than the magnificent animal who rages for his mate and
+fights every rival: the bull does that. You are a soul endowed with the
+capacity to receive the idea of a Creator so divinely wise and great
+and good that, though acting by the agency of general laws, He can
+accommodate them to all individual cases, so that--taking into account
+the life hereafter, which He grants to you the capacity to believe--all
+that troubles you now will be proved to you wise and great and good
+either in this life or the other. Lay that truth to your heart, friend,
+now--before the bell stops ringing; recall it every time you hear the
+church-bell ring again. And oh, Tom, you have such a noble nature!--"
+
+"I--I! don't jeer me,--don't."
+
+"Such a noble nature; for you can love so passionately, you can war so
+fiercely, and yet, when convinced that your love would be misery to
+her you love, can resign it; and yet, when beaten in your war, can so
+forgive your victor that you are walking in this solitude with him as a
+friend, knowing that you have but to drop a foot behind him in order to
+take his life in an unguarded moment; and rather than take his life, you
+would defend it against an army. Do you think I am so dull as not to see
+all that? and is not all that a noble nature?"
+
+Tom Bowles covered his face with his hands, and his broad breast heaved.
+
+"Well, then, to that noble nature I now trust. I myself have done little
+good in life. I may never do much; but let me think that I have not
+crossed your life in vain for you and for those whom your life can
+colour for good or for bad. As you are strong, be gentle; as you
+can love one, be kind to all; as you have so much that is grand as
+Man,--that is, the highest of God's works on earth,--let all your acts
+attach your manhood to the idea of Him, to whom the voice of the bell
+appeals. Ah! the bell is hushed; but not your heart, Tom,--that speaks
+still."
+
+Tom was weeping like a child.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+NOW when our two travellers resumed their journey, the relationship
+between them had undergone a change; nay, you might have said that their
+characters were also changed. For Tom found himself pouring out his
+turbulent heart to Kenelm, confiding to this philosophical scoffer at
+love all the passionate humanities of love,--its hope, its anguish, its
+jealousy, its wrath,--the all that links the gentlest of emotions to
+tragedy and terror. And Kenelm, listening tenderly, with softened eyes,
+uttered not one cynic word,--nay, not one playful jest. He, felt that
+the gravity of all he heard was too solemn for mockery, too deep even
+for comfort. True love of this sort was a thing he had never known,
+never wished to know, never thought he could know, but he sympathized
+in it not the less. Strange, indeed, how much we do sympathize, on
+the stage, for instance, or in a book, with passions that have never
+agitated ourselves! Had Kenelm jested or reasoned or preached, Tom would
+have shrunk at once into dreary silence; but Kenelm said nothing, save
+now and then, as he rested his arm, brother-like, on the strong man's
+shoulder, he murmured, "Poor fellow!" So, then, when Tom had finished
+his confessions, he felt wondrously relieved and comforted. He had
+cleansed his bosom of the perilous stuff that weighed upon the heart.
+
+Was this good result effected by Kenelm's artful diplomacy, or by that
+insight into human passions vouchsafed unconsciously to himself, by
+gleams or in flashes, to this strange man who surveyed the objects and
+pursuits of his fellows with a yearning desire to share them, murmuring
+to himself, "I cannot, I do not stand in this world; like a ghost I
+glide beside it, and look on "?
+
+Thus the two men continued their way slowly, amid soft pastures and
+yellowing cornfields, out at length into the dusty thoroughfares of
+the main road. That gained, their talk insensibly changed its tone: it
+became more commonplace; and Kenelm permitted himself the license of
+those crotchets by which he extracted a sort of quaint pleasantry out of
+commonplace itself; so that from time to time Tom was startled into the
+mirth of laughter. This big fellow had one very agreeable gift, which
+is only granted, I think, to men of genuine character and affectionate
+dispositions,--a spontaneous and sweet laugh, manly and frank, but not
+boisterous, as you might have supposed it would be. But that sort of
+laugh had not before come from his lips, since the day on which his love
+for Jessie Wiles had made him at war with himself and the world.
+
+The sun was setting when from the brow of a hill they beheld the spires
+of Luscombe, imbedded amid the level meadows that stretched below,
+watered by the same stream that had wound along their more rural
+pathway, but which now expanded into stately width, and needed, to span
+it, a mighty bridge fit for the convenience of civilized traffic. The
+town seemed near, but it was full two miles off by road.
+
+"There is a short cut across the fields beyond that stile, which leads
+straight to my uncle's house," said Tom; "and I dare say, sir, that you
+will be glad to escape the dirty suburb by which the road passes before
+we get into the town."
+
+"A good thought, Tom. It is very odd that fine towns always are
+approached by dirty suburbs; a covert symbolical satire, perhaps, on the
+ways to success in fine towns. Avarice or ambition go through very mean
+little streets before they gain the place which they jostle the crowd to
+win,--in the Townhall or on 'Change. Happy the man who, like you, Tom,
+finds that there is a shorter and a cleaner and a pleasanter way to goal
+or to resting-place than that through the dirty suburbs!"
+
+They met but few passengers on their path through the fields,--a
+respectable, staid, elderly couple, who had the air of a Dissenting
+minister and his wife; a girl of fourteen leading a little boy seven
+years younger by the hand; a pair of lovers, evidently lovers at
+least to the eye of Tom Bowles; for, on regarding them as they passed
+unheeding him, he winced, and his face changed. Even after they had
+passed, Kenelm saw on the face that pain lingered there: the lips were
+tightly compressed, and their corners gloomily drawn down.
+
+Just at this moment a dog rushed towards them with a short quick
+bark,--a Pomeranian dog with pointed nose and pricked ears. It hushed
+its bark as it neared Kenelm, sniffed his trousers, and wagged its tail.
+
+"By the sacred Nine," cried Kenelm, "thou art the dog with the tin tray!
+where is thy master?"
+
+The dog seemed to understand the question, for it turned its head
+significantly; and Kenelm saw, seated under a lime-tree, at a good
+distance from the path, a man, with book in hand, evidently employed in
+sketching.
+
+"Come this way," he said to Tom: "I recognize an acquaintance. You
+will like him." Tom desired no new acquaintance at that moment, but he
+followed Kenelm submissively.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+"YOU see we are fated to meet again," said Kenelm, stretching himself
+at his ease beside the Wandering Minstrel, and motioning Tom to do the
+same. "But you seem to add the accomplishment of drawing to that of
+verse-making! You sketch from what you call Nature?"
+
+"From what I call Nature! yes, sometimes."
+
+"And do you not find in drawing, as in verse-making, the truth that I
+have before sought to din into your reluctant ears; namely, that Nature
+has no voice except that which man breathes into her out of his mind?
+I would lay a wager that the sketch you are now taking is rather an
+attempt to make her embody some thought of your own, than to present her
+outlines as they appear to any other observer. Permit me to judge for
+myself." And he bent over the sketch-book. It is often difficult for
+one who is not himself an artist nor a connoisseur to judge whether the
+pencilled jottings in an impromptu sketch are by the hand of a professed
+master or a mere amateur. Kenelm was neither artist nor connoisseur, but
+the mere pencil-work seemed to him much what might be expected from any
+man with an accurate eye who had taken a certain number of lessons from
+a good drawing-master. It was enough for him, however, that it furnished
+an illustration of his own theory. "I was right," he cried triumphantly.
+"From this height there is a beautiful view, as it presents itself to
+me; a beautiful view of the town, its meadows, its river, harmonized by
+the sunset; for sunset, like gilding, unites conflicting colours, and
+softens them in uniting. But I see nothing of that view in your sketch.
+What I do see is to me mysterious."
+
+"The view you suggest," said the minstrel, "is no doubt very fine, but
+it is for a Turner or a Claude to treat it. My grasp is not wide enough
+for such a landscape."
+
+"I see indeed in your sketch but one figure, a child."
+
+"Hist! there she stands. Hist! while I put in this last touch."
+
+Kenelm strained his sight, and saw far off a solitary little girl, who
+was tossing something in the air (he could not distinguish what), and
+catching it as it fell. She seemed standing on the very verge of the
+upland, backed by rose-clouds gathered round the setting sun; below lay
+in confused outlines the great town. In the sketch those outlines seemed
+infinitely more confused, being only indicated by a few bold strokes;
+but the figure and face of the child were distinct and lovely. There
+was an ineffable sentiment in her solitude; there was a depth of quiet
+enjoyment in her mirthful play, and in her upturned eyes.
+
+"But at that distance," asked Kenelm, when the wanderer had finished his
+last touch, and, after contemplating it, silently closed his book, and
+turned round with a genial smile, "but at that distance, how can you
+distinguish the girl's face? How can you discover that the dim object
+she has just thrown up and recaught is a ball made of flowers? Do you
+know the child?"
+
+"I never saw her before this evening; but as I was seated here she was
+straying around me alone, weaving into chains some wild-flowers which
+she had gathered by the hedgerows yonder, next the high road; and as she
+strung them she was chanting to herself some pretty nursery rhymes.
+You can well understand that when I heard her thus chanting I became
+interested, and as she came near me I spoke to her, and we soon made
+friends. She told me she was an orphan, and brought up by a very old man
+distantly related to her, who had been in some small trade and now lived
+in a crowded lane in the heart of the town. He was very kind to her, and
+being confined himself to the house by age or ailment he sent her out to
+play in the fields on summer Sundays. She had no companions of her own
+age. She said she did not like the other little girls in the lane; and
+the only little girl she liked at school had a grander station in life,
+and was not allowed to play with her, and so she came out to play alone;
+and as long as the sun shines and the flowers bloom, she says she never
+wants other society."
+
+"Tom, do you hear that? As you will be residing in Luscombe, find out
+this strange little girl, and be kind to her, Tom, for my sake."
+
+Tom put his large hand upon Kenelm's, making no other answer; but he
+looked hard at the minstrel, recognized the genial charm of his voice
+and face, and slid along the grass nearer to him.
+
+The minstrel continued: "While the child was talking to me I
+mechanically took the flower-chains from her hands, and not thinking
+what I was about, gathered them up into a ball. Suddenly she saw what
+I had done, and instead of scolding me for spoiling her pretty chains,
+which I richly deserved, was delighted to find I had twisted them into a
+new plaything. She ran off with the ball, tossing it about till, excited
+with her own joy, she got to the brow of the hill, and I began my
+sketch."
+
+"Is that charming face you have drawn like hers?"
+
+"No; only in part. I was thinking of another face while I sketched, but
+it is not like that either; in fact, it is one of those patchworks which
+we call 'fancy heads,' and I meant it to be another version of a thought
+that I had just put into rhyme when the child came across me."
+
+"May we hear the rhyme?"
+
+"I fear that if it did not bore yourself it would bore your friend."
+
+"I am sure not. Tom, do you sing?"
+
+"Well, I _have_ sung," said Tom, hanging his head sheepishly, "and I
+should like to hear this gentleman."
+
+"But I do not know these verses, just made, well enough to sing them; it
+is enough if I can recall them well enough to recite." Here the minstrel
+paused a minute or so as if for recollection, and then, in the sweet
+clear tones and the rare purity of enunciation which characterized his
+utterance, whether in recital or song, gave to the following verses a
+touching and a varied expression which no one could discover in merely
+reading them.
+
+
+ THE FLOWER-GIRL BY THE CROSSING.
+
+ "By the muddy crossing in the crowded streets
+ Stands a little maid with her basket full of posies,
+ Proffering all who pass her choice of knitted sweets,
+ Tempting Age with heart's-ease, courting Youth with roses.
+
+ "Age disdains the heart's-ease,
+ Love rejects the roses;
+ London life is busy,--
+ Who can stop for posies?
+
+ "One man is too grave, another is too gay;
+ This man has his hothouse, that man not a penny:
+ Flowerets too are common in the month of May,
+ And the things most common least attract the many.
+
+ "Ill, on London crossings,
+ Fares the sale of posies;
+ Age disdains the heart's-ease,
+ Youth rejects the roses."
+
+
+When the verse-maker had done, he did not pause for approbation, nor
+look modestly down, as do most people who recite their own verses, but
+unaffectedly thinking much more of his art than his audience, hurried on
+somewhat disconsolately,--
+
+"I see with great grief that I am better at sketching than rhyming. Can
+you" (appealing to Kenelm) "even comprehend what I mean by the verses?"
+
+KENELM.--"Do you comprehend, Tom?"
+
+TOM (in a whisper).--"No."
+
+KENELM.--"I presume that by his flower-girl our friend means to
+represent not only poetry, but a poetry like his own, which is not at
+all the sort of poetry now in fashion. I, however, expand his meaning,
+and by his flower-girl I understand any image of natural truth or beauty
+for which, when we are living the artificial life of crowded streets, we
+are too busy to give a penny."
+
+"Take it as you please," said the minstrel, smiling and sighing at the
+same time; "but I have not expressed in words that which I did mean half
+so well as I have expressed it in my sketch-book."
+
+"Ah! and how?" asked Kenelm.
+
+"The image of my thought in the sketch, be it poetry or whatever you
+prefer to call it, does not stand forlorn in the crowded streets: the
+child stands on the brow of the green hill, with the city stretched in
+confused fragments below, and, thoughtless of pennies and passers-by,
+she is playing with the flowers she has gathered; but in play casting
+them heavenward, and following them with heavenward eyes."
+
+"Good!" muttered Kenelm, "good!" and then, after a long pause, he added,
+in a still lower mutter, "Pardon me that remark of mine the other day
+about a beefsteak. But own that I am right: what you call a sketch from
+Nature is but a sketch of your own thought."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE child with the flower-ball had vanished from the brow of the hill;
+sinking down amid the streets below, the rose-clouds had faded from the
+horizon; and night was closing round, as the three men entered the
+thick of the town. Tom pressed Kenelm to accompany him to his uncle's,
+promising him a hearty welcome and bed and board, but Kenelm declined.
+He entertained a strong persuasion that it would be better for the
+desired effect on Tom's mind that he should be left alone with his
+relations that night, but proposed that they should spend the next day
+together, and agreed to call at the veterinary surgeon's in the morning.
+
+When Tom quitted them at his uncle's door, Kenelm said to the minstrel,
+"I suppose you are going to some inn; may I accompany you? We can sup
+together, and I should like to hear you talk upon poetry and Nature."
+
+"You flatter me much; but I have friends in the town, with whom I lodge,
+and they are expecting me. Do you not observe that I have changed my
+dress? I am not known here as the 'Wandering Minstrel.'"
+
+Kenelm glanced at the man's attire, and for the first time observed
+the change. It was still picturesque in its way, but it was such as
+gentlemen of the highest rank frequently wear in the country,--the
+knickerbocker costume,--very neat, very new, and complete, to the
+square-toed shoes with their latchets and buckles.
+
+"I fear," said Kenelm, gravely, "that your change of dress betokens
+the neighbourhood of those pretty girls of whom you spoke in an earlier
+meeting. According to the Darwinian doctrine of selection, fine plumage
+goes far in deciding the preference of Jenny Wren and her sex, only we
+are told that fine-feathered birds are very seldom songsters as well. It
+is rather unfair to rivals when you unite both attractions."
+
+The minstrel laughed. "There is but one girl in my friend's house,--his
+niece; she is very plain, and only thirteen. But to me the society of
+women, whether ugly or pretty, is an absolute necessity; and I have been
+trudging without it for so many days that I can scarcely tell you how
+my thoughts seemed to shake off the dust of travel when I found myself
+again in the presence of--"
+
+"Petticoat interest," interrupted Kenelm. "Take care of yourself. My
+poor friend with whom you found me is a grave warning against petticoat
+interest, from which I hope to profit. He is passing through a great
+sorrow; it might have been worse than sorrow. My friend is going to stay
+in this town. If you are staying here too, pray let him see something
+of you. It will do him a wondrous good if you can beguile him from this
+real life into the gardens of poetland; but do not sing or talk of love
+to him."
+
+"I honour all lovers," said the minstrel, with real tenderness in his
+tone, "and would willingly serve to cheer or comfort your friend, if I
+could; but I am bound elsewhere, and must leave Luscombe, which I visit
+on business--money business--the day after to-morrow."
+
+"So, too, must I. At least give us both some hours of your time
+to-morrow."
+
+"Certainly; from twelve to sunset I shall be roving about,--a mere
+idler. If you will both come with me, it will be a great pleasure to
+myself. Agreed! Well, then, I will call at your inn to-morrow at twelve;
+and I recommend for your inn the one facing us,--The Golden Lamb. I have
+heard it recommended for the attributes of civil people and good fare."
+
+Kenelm felt that he here received his _conge_, and well comprehended the
+fact that the minstrel, desiring to preserve the secret of his name, did
+not give the address of the family with whom he was a guest.
+
+"But one word more," said Kenelm. "Your host or hostess, if resident
+here, can, no doubt, from your description of the little girl and the
+old man her protector, learn the child's address. If so, I should like
+my companion to make friends with her. Petticoat interest there at least
+will be innocent and safe. And I know nothing so likely to keep a big,
+passionate heart like Tom's, now aching with a horrible void,
+occupied and softened, and turned to directions pure and gentle, as an
+affectionate interest in a little child."
+
+The minstrel changed colour: he even started. "Sir, are you a wizard
+that you say that to me?"
+
+"I am not a wizard, but I guess from your question that you have a
+little child of your own. So much the better: the child may keep you out
+of much mischief. Remember the little child. Good evening."
+
+Kenelm crossed the threshold of The Golden Lamb, engaged his room, made
+his ablutions, ordered, and, with his usual zest, partook of his evening
+meal; and then, feeling the pressure of that melancholic temperament
+which he so strangely associated with Herculean constitutions, roused
+himself up, and, seeking a distraction from thought, sauntered forth
+into the gaslit streets.
+
+It was a large handsome town,--handsomer than Tor-Hadham, on account of
+its site in a valley surrounded by wooded hills, and watered by the fair
+stream whose windings we have seen as a brook,--handsomer, also, because
+it boasted a fair cathedral, well cleared to the sight, and surrounded
+by venerable old houses, the residences of the clergy or of the quiet
+lay gentry with mediaeval tastes. The main street was thronged with
+passengers,--some soberly returning home from the evening service; some,
+the younger, lingering in pleasant promenade with their sweethearts or
+families, or arm in arm with each other, and having the air of
+bachelors or maidens unattached. Through this street Kenelm passed with
+inattentive eye. A turn to the right took him towards the cathedral and
+its surroundings. There all was solitary. The solitude pleased him,
+and he lingered long, gazing on the noble church lifting its spires and
+turrets into the deep blue starry air.
+
+Musingly, then, he strayed on, entering a labyrinth of gloomy lanes, in
+which, though the shops were closed, many a door stood open, with men
+of the working class lolling against the threshold, idly smoking their
+pipes, or women seated on the doorsteps gossiping, while noisy children
+were playing or quarrelling in the kennel. The whole did not present the
+indolent side of an English Sabbath in the pleasantest and rosiest point
+of view. Somewhat quickening his steps, he entered a broader street,
+attracted to it involuntarily by a bright light in the centre. On
+nearing the light he found that it shone forth from a gin-palace, of
+which the mahogany doors opened and shut momently as customers went in
+and out. It was the handsomest building he had seen in his walk, next to
+that of the cathedral. "The new civilization versus the old," murmured
+Kenelm. As he so murmured, a hand was laid on his arm with a sort
+of timid impudence. He looked down and saw a young face, but it had
+survived the look of youth; it was worn and hard, and the bloom on it
+was not that of Nature's giving. "Are you kind to-night?" asked a husky
+voice.
+
+"Kind!" said Kenelm, with mournful tones and softened eyes, "kind! Alas,
+my poor sister mortal! if pity be kindness, who can see you and not be
+kind?"
+
+The girl released his arm, and he walked on. She stood some moments
+gazing after him till out of sight, then she drew her hand suddenly
+across her eyes, and retracing her steps, was, in her turn, caught hold
+of by a rougher hand than hers, as she passed the gin-palace. She shook
+off the grasp with a passionate scorn, and went straight home. Home! is
+that the right word? Poor sister mortal!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+AND now Kenelm found himself at the extremity of the town, and on the
+banks of the river. Small squalid houses still lined the bank for some
+way, till, nearing the bridge, they abruptly ceased, and he passed
+through a broad square again into the main street. On the other side
+of the street there was a row of villa-like mansions, with gardens
+stretching towards the river.
+
+All around in the thoroughfare was silent and deserted. By this time
+the passengers had gone home. The scent of night-flowers from the
+villa-gardens came sweet on the starlit air. Kenelm paused to inhale it,
+and then lifting his eyes, hitherto downcast, as are the eyes of men
+in meditative moods, he beheld, on the balcony of the nearest villa,
+a group of well-dressed persons. The balcony was unusually wide and
+spacious. On it was a small round table, on which were placed wine and
+fruits. Three ladies were seated round the table on wire-work chairs,
+and on the side nearest to Kenelm, one man. In that man, now slightly
+turning his profile, as if to look towards the river, Kenelm recognized
+the minstrel. He was still in his picturesque knickerbocker dress,
+and his clear-cut features, with the clustering curls of hair, and
+Rubens-like hue and shape of beard, had more than their usual beauty,
+softened in the light of skies, to which the moon, just risen, added
+deeper and fuller radiance. The ladies were in evening dress, but Kenelm
+could not distinguish their faces hidden behind the minstrel. He moved
+softly across the street, and took his stand behind a buttress in
+the low wall of the garden, from which he could have full view of the
+balcony, unseen himself. In this watch he had no other object than
+that of a vague pleasure. The whole grouping had in it a kind of scenic
+romance, and he stopped as one stops before a picture.
+
+He then saw that of the three ladies one was old; another was a
+slight girl of the age of twelve or thirteen; the third appeared to be
+somewhere about seven or eight and twenty. She was dressed with more
+elegance than the others. On her neck, only partially veiled by a thin
+scarf, there was the glitter of jewels; and, as she now turned her
+full face towards the moon, Kenelm saw that she was very handsome,--a
+striking kind of beauty, calculated to fascinate a poet or an
+artist,--not unlike Raphael's Fornarina, dark, with warm tints.
+
+Now there appeared at the open window a stout, burly, middle-aged
+gentleman, looking every inch of him a family man, a moneyed man, sleek
+and prosperous. He was bald, fresh-coloured, and with light whiskers.
+
+"Holloa," he said, in an accent very slightly foreign, and with a loud
+clear voice, which Kenelm heard distinctly, "is it not time for you to
+come in?"
+
+"Don't be so tiresome, Fritz," said the handsome lady, half petulantly,
+half playfully, in the way ladies address the tiresome spouses they lord
+it over. "Your friend has been sulking the whole evening, and is only
+just beginning to be pleasant as the moon rises."
+
+"The moon has a good effect on poets and other mad folks, I dare say,"
+said the bald man, with a good-humoured laugh. "But I can't have my
+little niece laid up again just as she is on the mend: Annie, come in."
+
+The girl obeyed reluctantly. The old lady rose too.
+
+"Ah, Mother, you are wise," said the bald man; "and a game at euchre is
+safer than poetizing in night air." He wound his arm round the old lady
+with a careful fondness, for she moved with some difficulty as if rather
+lame. "As for you two sentimentalists and moon-gazers, I give you ten
+minutes' time,--not more, mind."
+
+"Tyrant!" said the minstrel.
+
+The balcony now held only two forms,--the minstrel and the handsome
+lady. The window was closed, and partially veiled by muslin draperies,
+but Kenelm caught glimpses of the room within. He could see that the
+room, lit by a lamp on the centre table and candles elsewhere, was
+decorated and fitted up with cost and in a taste not English. He could
+see, for instance, that the ceiling was painted, and the walls were not
+papered, but painted in panels between arabesque pilasters.
+
+"They are foreigners," thought Kenelm, "though the man does speak
+English so well. That accounts for playing euchre of a Sunday evening,
+as if there were no harm in it. Euchre is an American game. The man
+is called Fritz. Ah! I guess--Germans who have lived a good deal in
+America; and the verse-maker said he was at Luscombe on pecuniary
+business. Doubtless his host is a merchant, and the verse-maker in some
+commercial firm. That accounts for his concealment of name, and fear of
+its being known that he was addicted in his holiday to tastes and habits
+so opposed to his calling."
+
+While he was thus thinking, the lady had drawn her chair close to the
+minstrel, and was speaking to him with evident earnestness, but in tones
+too low for Kenelm to hear. Still it seemed to him, by her manner and by
+the man's look, as if she were speaking in some sort of reproach,
+which he sought to deprecate. Then he spoke, also in a whisper, and
+she averted her face for a moment; then she held out her hand, and the
+minstrel kissed it. Certainly, thus seen, the two might well be taken
+for lovers; and the soft night, the fragrance of the flowers, silence
+and solitude, stars and moon light, all girt them as with an atmosphere
+of love. Presently the man rose and leaned over the balcony, propping
+his cheek on his hand, and gazing on the river. The lady rose too,
+and also leaned over the balustrade, her dark hair almost touching the
+auburn locks of her companion.
+
+Kenelm sighed. Was it from envy, from pity, from fear? I know not; but
+he sighed.
+
+After a brief pause, the lady said, still in low tones, but not too low
+this time to escape Kenelm's fine sense of hearing,--
+
+"Tell me those verses again. I must remember every word of them when you
+are gone."
+
+The man shook his head gently, and answered, but inaudibly.
+
+"Do," said the lady; "set them to music later; and the next time you
+come I will sing them. I have thought of a title for them."
+
+"What?" asked the minstrel.
+
+"Love's quarrel."
+
+The minstrel turned his head, and their eyes met, and, in meeting,
+lingered long. Then he moved away, and with face turned from her
+and towards the river, gave the melody of his wondrous voice to the
+following lines:--
+
+
+ LOVE'S QUARREL.
+
+ "Standing by the river, gazing on the river,
+ See it paved with starbeams,--heaven is at our feet;
+ Now the wave is troubled, now the rushes quiver;
+ Vanished is the starlight: it was a deceit.
+
+ "Comes a little cloudlet 'twixt ourselves and heaven,
+ And from all the river fades the silver track;
+ Put thine arms around me, whisper low, 'Forgiven!'
+ See how on the river starlight settles back."
+
+
+When he had finished, still with face turned aside, the lady did not,
+indeed, whisper "Forgiven," nor put her arms around him; but, as if by
+irresistible impulse, she laid her hand lightly on his shoulder.
+
+The minstrel started.
+
+There came to his ear,--he knew not from whence, from whom,--
+
+"Mischief! mischief! Remember the little child!"
+
+"Hush!" he said, staring round. "Did you not hear a voice?"
+
+"Only yours," said the lady.
+
+"It was our guardian angel's, Amalie. It came in time. We will go
+within."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE next morning betimes Kenelm visited Tom at his uncle's home. A
+comfortable and respectable home it was, like that of an owner in easy
+circumstances. The veterinary surgeon himself was intelligent, and
+apparently educated beyond the range of his calling; a childless
+widower, between sixty and seventy, living with a sister, an old maid.
+They were evidently much attached to Tom, and delighted by the hope of
+keeping him with them. Tom himself looked rather sad, but not sullen,
+and his face brightened wonderfully at first sight of Kenelm. That
+oddity made himself as pleasant and as much like other people as he
+could in conversing with the old widower and the old maid, and took
+leave, engaging Tom to be at his inn at half past twelve, and spend the
+day with him and the minstrel. He then returned to the Golden Lamb, and
+waited there for his first visitant; the minstrel. That votary of the
+muse arrived punctually at twelve o'clock. His countenance was less
+cheerful and sunny than usual. Kenelm made no allusion to the scene
+he had witnessed, nor did his visitor seem to suspect that Kenelm had
+witnessed it or been the utterer of that warning voice.
+
+KENELM.--"I have asked my friend Tom Bowles to come a little later,
+because I wished you to be of use to him, and, in order to be so, I
+should suggest how."
+
+THE MINSTREL.--"Pray do."
+
+KENELM.--"You know that I am not a poet, and I do not have much
+reverence for verse-making merely as a craft."
+
+THE MINSTREL.--"Neither have I."
+
+KENELM.--"But I have a great reverence for poetry as a priesthood. I
+felt that reverence for you when you sketched and talked priesthood
+last evening, and placed in my heart--I hope forever while it beats--the
+image of the child on the sunlit hill, high above the abodes of men,
+tossing her flower-ball heavenward and with heavenward eyes."
+
+The singer's cheek coloured high, and his lip quivered: he was very
+sensitive to praise; most singers are.
+
+Kenelm resumed, "I have been educated in the Realistic school, and with
+realism I am discontented, because in realism as a school there is no
+truth. It contains but a bit of truth, and that the coldest and hardest
+bit of it, and he who utters a bit of truth and suppresses the rest of
+it tells a lie."
+
+THE MINSTREL (slyly).--"Does the critic who says to me, 'Sing of
+beefsteak, because the appetite for food is a real want of daily life,
+and don't sing of art and glory and love, because in daily life a man
+may do without such ideas,'--tell a lie?"
+
+KENELM.--"Thank you for that rebuke. I submit to it. No doubt I did tell
+a lie,--that is, if I were quite in earnest in my recommendation, and if
+not in earnest, why--"
+
+THE MINSTREL.--"You belied yourself."
+
+KENELM.--"Very likely. I set out on my travels to escape from shams, and
+begin to discover that I am a sham _par excellence_. But I suddenly
+come across you, as a boy dulled by his syntax and his vulgar fractions
+suddenly comes across a pleasant poem or a picture-book, and feels his
+wits brighten up. I owe you much: you have done me a world of good."
+
+"I cannot guess how."
+
+"Possibly not, but you have shown me how the realism of Nature herself
+takes colour and life and soul when seen on the ideal or poetic side
+of it. It is not exactly the words that you say or sing that do me the
+good, but they awaken within me new trains of thought, which I seek
+to follow out. The best teacher is the one who suggests rather than
+dogmatizes, and inspires his listener with the wish to teach himself.
+Therefore, O singer! whatever be the worth in critical eyes of your
+songs, I am glad to remember that you would like to go through the world
+always singing."
+
+"Pardon me: you forget that I added, 'if life were always young, and the
+seasons were always summer.'"
+
+"I do not forget. But if youth and summer fade for you, you leave youth
+and summer behind you as you pass along,--behind in hearts which mere
+realism would make always old, and counting their slothful beats under
+the gray of a sky without sun or stars; wherefore I pray you to consider
+how magnificent a mission the singer's is,--to harmonize your life with
+your song, and toss your flowers, as your child does, heavenward, with
+heavenward eyes. Think only of this when you talk with my sorrowing
+friend, and you will do him good, as you have done me, without being
+able to guess how a seeker after the Beautiful, such as you, carries us
+along with him on his way; so that we, too, look out for beauty, and see
+it in the wild-flowers to which we had been blind before."
+
+Here Tom entered the little sanded parlour where this dialogue had been
+held, and the three men sallied forth, taking the shortest cut from the
+town into the fields and woodlands.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+WHETHER or not his spirits were raised by Kenelm's praise and
+exhortations, the minstrel that day talked with a charm that spellbound
+Tom, and Kenelm was satisfied with brief remarks on his side tending to
+draw out the principal performer.
+
+The talk was drawn from outward things, from natural objects,--objects
+that interest children, and men who, like Tom Bowles, have been
+accustomed to view surroundings more with the heart's eye than the
+mind's eye. This rover about the country knew much of the habits of
+birds and beasts and insects, and told anecdotes of them with a mixture
+of humour and pathos, which fascinated Tom's attention, made him laugh
+heartily, and sometimes brought tears into his big blue eyes.
+
+They dined at an inn by the wayside, and the dinner was mirthful; then
+they wended their way slowly back. By the declining daylight their talk
+grew somewhat graver, and Kenelm took more part in it. Tom listened
+mute,--still fascinated. At length, as the town came in sight, they
+agreed to halt a while, in a bosky nook soft with mosses and sweet with
+wild thyme.
+
+There, as they lay stretched at their ease, the birds hymning vesper
+songs amid the boughs above, or dropping, noiseless and fearless, for
+their evening food on the swards around them, the wanderer said to
+Kenelm, "You tell me that you are no poet, yet I am sure you have a
+poet's perception: you must have written poetry?"
+
+"Not I; as I before told you, only school verses in dead languages: but
+I found in my knapsack this morning a copy of some rhymes, made by a
+fellow-collegian, which I put into my pocket meaning to read them to
+you both. They are not verses like yours, which evidently burst from you
+spontaneously, and are not imitated from any other poets. These verses
+were written by a Scotchman, and smack of imitation from the old ballad
+style. There is little to admire in the words themselves, but there
+is something in the idea which struck me as original, and impressed me
+sufficiently to keep a copy, and somehow or other it got into the leaves
+of one of the two books I carried with me from home."
+
+"What are those books? Books of poetry both, I will venture to wager--"
+
+"Wrong! Both metaphysical, and dry as a bone. Tom, light your pipe, and
+you, sir, lean more at ease on your elbow; I should warn you that the
+ballad is long. Patience!"
+
+"Attention!" said the minstrel.
+
+"Fire!" added Tom.
+
+Kenelm began to read,--and he read well.
+
+
+ LORD RONALD'S BRIDE.
+
+ PART I.
+
+ "WHY gathers the crowd in the market-place
+ Ere the stars have yet left the sky?"
+ "For a holiday show and an act of grace,--
+ At the sunrise a witch shall die."
+
+ "What deed has she done to deserve that doom?
+ Has she blighted the standing corn,
+ Or rifled for philters a dead man's tomb,
+ Or rid mothers of babes new-born?"
+
+ "Her pact with the fiend was not thus revealed,
+ She taught sinners the Word to hear;
+ The hungry she fed, and the sick she healed,
+ And was held as a Saint last year.
+
+ "But a holy man, who at Rome had been,
+ Had discovered, by book and bell,
+ That the marvels she wrought were through arts unclean,
+ And the lies of the Prince of Hell.
+
+ "And our Mother the Church, for the dame was rich,
+ And her husband was Lord of Clyde,
+ Would fain have been mild to this saint-like witch
+ If her sins she had not denied.
+
+ "But hush, and come nearer to see the sight,
+ Sheriff, halberds, and torchmen,--look!
+ That's the witch standing mute in her garb of white,
+ By the priest with his bell and book."
+
+ So the witch was consumed on the sacred pyre,
+ And the priest grew in power and pride,
+ And the witch left a son to succeed his sire
+ In the halls and the lands of Clyde.
+
+ And the infant waxed comely and strong and brave,
+ But his manhood had scarce begun,
+ When his vessel was launched on the northern wave
+ To the shores which are near the sun.
+
+ PART II.
+
+ Lord Ronald has come to his halls in Clyde
+ With a bride of some unknown race;
+ Compared with the man who would kiss that bride
+ Wallace wight were a coward base.
+
+ Her eyes had the glare of the mountain-cat
+ When it springs on the hunter's spear,
+ At the head of the board when that lady sate
+ Hungry men could not eat for fear.
+
+ And the tones of her voice had that deadly growl
+ Of the bloodhound that scents its prey;
+ No storm was so dark as that lady's scowl
+ Under tresses of wintry gray.
+
+ "Lord Ronald! men marry for love or gold,
+ Mickle rich must have been thy bride!"
+ "Man's heart may be bought, woman's hand be sold,
+ On the banks of our northern Clyde.
+
+ "My bride is, in sooth, mickle rich to me
+ Though she brought not a groat in dower,
+ For her face, couldst thou see it as I do see,
+ Is the fairest in hall or bower!"
+
+ Quoth the bishop one day to our lord the king,
+ "Satan reigns on the Clyde alway,
+ And the taint in the blood of the witch doth cling
+ To the child that she brought to day.
+
+ "Lord Ronald hath come from the Paynim land
+ With a bride that appals the sight;
+ Like his dam she hath moles on her dread right hand,
+ And she turns to a snake at night.
+
+ "It is plain that a Scot who can blindly dote
+ On the face of an Eastern ghoul,
+ And a ghoul who was worth not a silver groat,
+ Is a Scot who has lost his soul.
+
+ "It were wise to have done with this demon tree
+ Which has teemed with such caukered fruit;
+ Add the soil where it stands to my holy See,
+ And consign to the flames its root."
+
+ "Holy man!" quoth King James, and he laughed, "we know
+ That thy tongue never wags in vain,
+ But the Church cist is full, and the king's is low,
+ And the Clyde is a fair domain.
+
+ "Yet a knight that's bewitched by a laidly fere
+ Needs not much to dissolve the spell;
+ We will summon the bride and the bridegroom here
+ Be at hand with thy book and bell."
+
+ PART III.
+
+ Lord Ronald stood up in King James's court,
+ And his dame by his dauntless side;
+ The barons who came in the hopes of sport
+ Shook with fright when they saw the bride.
+
+ The bishop, though armed with his bell and book,
+ Grew as white as if turned to stone;
+ It was only our king who could face that look,
+ But he spoke with a trembling tone.
+
+ "Lord Ronald, the knights of thy race and mine
+ Should have mates in their own degree;
+ What parentage, say, hath that bride of thine
+ Who hath come from the far countree?
+
+ "And what was her dowry in gold or land,
+ Or what was the charm, I pray,
+ That a comely young gallant should woo the hand
+ Of the ladye we see to-day?"
+
+ And the lords would have laughed, but that awful dame
+ Struck them dumb with her thunder-frown:
+ "Saucy king, did I utter my father's name,
+ Thou wouldst kneel as his liegeman down.
+
+ "Though I brought to Lord Ronald nor lands nor gold,
+ Nor the bloom of a fading cheek;
+ Yet, were I a widow, both young and old
+ Would my hand and my dowry seek.
+
+ "For the wish that he covets the most below,
+ And would hide from the saints above,
+ Which he dares not to pray for in weal or woe,
+ Is the dowry I bring my love.
+
+ "Let every man look in his heart and see
+ What the wish he most lusts to win,
+ And then let him fasten his eyes on me
+ While he thinks of his darling sin."
+
+ And every man--bishop, and lord, and king
+ Thought of what he most wished to win,
+ And, fixing his eye on that grewsome thing,
+ He beheld his own darling sin.
+
+ No longer a ghoul in that face he saw;
+ It was fair as a boy's first love:
+ The voice that had curdled his veins with awe
+ Was the coo of the woodland dove.
+
+ Each heart was on flame for the peerless dame
+ At the price of the husband's life;
+ Bright claymores flash out, and loud voices shout,
+ "In thy widow shall be my wife."
+
+ Then darkness fell over the palace hall,
+ More dark and more dark it fell,
+ And a death-groan boomed hoarse underneath the pall,
+ And was drowned amid roar and yell.
+
+ When light through the lattice-pane stole once more,
+ It was gray as a wintry dawn,
+ And the bishop lay cold on the regal floor,
+ With a stain on his robes of lawn.
+
+ Lord Ronald was standing beside the dead,
+ In the scabbard he plunged his sword,
+ And with visage as wan as the corpse, he said,
+ "Lo! my ladye hath kept her word.
+
+ "Now I leave her to others to woo and win,
+ For no longer I find her fair;
+ Could I look on the face of my darling sin,
+ I should see but a dead man's there.
+
+ "And the dowry she brought me is here returned,
+ For the wish of my heart has died,
+ It is quenched in the blood of the priest who burned
+ My sweet mother, the Saint of Clyde."
+
+ Lord Ronald strode over the stony floor,
+ Not a hand was outstretched to stay;
+ Lord Ronald has passed through the gaping door,
+ Not an eye ever traced the way.
+
+ And the ladye, left widowed, was prized above
+ All the maidens in hall and bower,
+ Many bartered their lives for that ladye's love,
+ And their souls for that ladye's dower.
+
+ God grant that the wish which I dare not pray
+ Be not that which I lust to win,
+ And that ever I look with my first dismay
+ On the face of my darling sin!
+
+
+As he ceased, Kenelm's eye fell on Tom's face upturned to his own, with
+open lips, an intent stare, and paled cheeks, and a look of that higher
+sort of terror which belongs to awe. The man, then recovering himself,
+tried to speak, and attempted a sickly smile, but neither would do.
+He rose abruptly and walked away, crept under the shadow of a dark
+beech-tree, and stood there leaning against the trunk.
+
+"What say you to the ballad?" asked Kenelm of the singer.
+
+"It is not without power," answered he.
+
+"Ay, of a certain kind."
+
+The minstrel looked hard at Kenelm, and dropped his eyes, with a
+heightened glow on his cheek.
+
+"The Scotch are a thoughtful race. The Scot who wrote this thing may
+have thought of a day when he saw beauty in the face of a darling sin;
+but, if so, it is evident that his sight recovered from that glamoury.
+Shall we walk on? Come, Tom."
+
+The minstrel left them at the entrance of the town, saying, "I regret
+that I cannot see more of either of you, as I quit Luscombe at daybreak.
+Here, by the by, I forgot to give it before, is the address you wanted."
+
+KENELM.--"Of the little child. I am glad you remembered her."
+
+The minstrel again looked hard at Kenelm, this time without dropping his
+eyes. Kenelm's expression of face was so simply quiet that it might be
+almost called vacant.
+
+Kenelm and Tom continued to walk on towards the veterinary surgeon's
+house, for some minutes silently. Then Tom said in a whisper, "Did you
+not mean those rhymes to hit me here--_here_?" and he struck his breast.
+
+"The rhymes were written long before I saw you, Tom; but it is well if
+their meaning strike us all. Of you, my friend, I have no fear now. Are
+you not already a changed man?"
+
+"I feel as if I were going through a change," answered Tom, in slow,
+dreary accents. "In hearing you and that gentleman talk so much of
+things that I never thought of, I felt something in me,--you will laugh
+when I tell you,--something like a bird."
+
+"Like a bird,--good!--a bird has wings."
+
+"Just so."
+
+"And you felt wings that you were unconscious of before, fluttering and
+beating themselves as against the wires of a cage. You were true to
+your instincts then, my dear fellow-man,--instincts of space and Heaven.
+Courage!--the cage-door will open soon. And now, practically speaking,
+I give you this advice in parting: You have a quick and sensitive mind
+which you have allowed that strong body of yours to incarcerate and
+suppress. Give that mind fair play. Attend to the business of your
+calling diligently; the craving for regular work is the healthful
+appetite of mind: but in your spare hours cultivate the new ideas which
+your talk with men who have been accustomed to cultivate the mind more
+than the body has sown within you. Belong to a book-club, and interest
+yourself in books. A wise man has said, 'Books widen the present by
+adding to it the past and the future.' Seek the company of educated men
+and educated women too; and when you are angry with another, reason
+with him: don't knock him down; and don't be knocked down yourself by an
+enemy much stronger than yourself,--Drink. Do all this, and when I see
+you again you will be--"
+
+"Stop, sir,--you will see me again?"
+
+"Yes, if we both live, I promise it."
+
+"When?"
+
+"You see, Tom, we have both of us something in our old selves which we
+must work off. You will work off your something by repose, and I must
+work off mine, if I can, by moving about. So I am on my travels. May
+we both have new selves better than the old selves, when we again shake
+hands! For your part try your best, dear Tom, and Heaven prosper you."
+
+"And Heaven bless you!" cried Tom, fervently, with tears rolling
+unheeded from his bold blue eyes.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THOUGH Kenelm left Luscombe on Tuesday morning, he did not appear at
+Neesdale Park till the Wednesday, a little before the dressing-bell for
+dinner. His adventures in the interim are not worth repeating. He had
+hoped he might fall in again with the minstrel, but he did not.
+
+His portmanteau had arrived, and he heaved a sigh as he cased himself in
+a gentleman's evening dress. "Alas! I have soon got back again into my
+own skin."
+
+There were several other guests in the house, though not a
+large party,--they had been asked with an eye to the approaching
+election,--consisting of squires and clergy from remoter parts of the
+county. Chief among the guests in rank and importance, and rendered by
+the occasion the central object of interest, was George Belvoir.
+
+Kenelm bore his part in this society with a resignation that partook of
+repentance.
+
+The first day he spoke very little, and was considered a very dull young
+man by the lady he took in to dinner. Mr. Travers in vain tried to draw
+him out. He had anticipated much amusement from the eccentricities of
+his guest, who had talked volubly enough in the fernery, and was sadly
+disappointed. "I feel," he whispered to Mrs. Campion, "like poor Lord
+Pomfret, who, charmed with Punch's lively conversation, bought him, and
+was greatly surprised that, when he had once brought him home, Punch
+would not talk."
+
+"But your Punch listens," said Mrs. Campion, "and he observes."
+
+George Belvoir, on the other hand, was universally declared to be very
+agreeable. Though not naturally jovial, he forced himself to appear
+so,--laughing loud with the squires, and entering heartily with
+their wives and daughters into such topics as county-balls and
+croquet-parties; and when after dinner he had, Cato-like, 'warmed his
+virtue with wine,' the virtue came out very lustily in praise of good
+men,--namely, men of his own party,--and anathemas on bad men,--namely,
+men of the other party.
+
+Now and then he appealed to Kenelm, and Kenelm always returned the same
+answer, "There is much in what you say."
+
+The first evening closed in the usual way in country houses. There was
+some lounging under moonlight on the terrace before the house; then
+there was some singing by young lady amateurs, and a rubber of whist for
+the elders; then wine-and-water, hand-candlesticks, a smoking-room for
+those who smoked, and bed for those who did not.
+
+In the course of the evening, Cecilia, partly in obedience to the duties
+of hostess and partly from that compassion for shyness which kindly and
+high-bred persons entertain, had gone a little out of her way to allure
+Kenelm forth from the estranged solitude he had contrived to weave
+around him. In vain for the daughter as for the father. He replied to
+her with the quiet self-possession which should have convinced her that
+no man on earth was less entitled to indulgence for the gentlemanlike
+infirmity of shyness, and no man less needed the duties of any hostess
+for the augmentation of his comforts, or rather for his diminished sense
+of discomfort; but his replies were in monosyllables, and made with the
+air of a man who says in his heart, "If this creature would but leave me
+alone!"
+
+Cecilia, for the first time in her life, was piqued, and, strange to
+say, began to feel more interest about this indifferent stranger than
+about the popular, animated, pleasant George Belvoir, who she knew by
+womanly instinct was as much in love with her as he could be.
+
+Cecilia Travers that night on retiring to rest told her maid, smilingly,
+that she was too tired to have her hair done; and yet, when the maid
+was dismissed, she looked at herself in the glass more gravely and more
+discontentedly than she had ever looked there before; and, tired though
+she was, stood at the window gazing into the moonlit night for a good
+hour after the maid left her.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY has now been several days a guest at Neesdale Park.
+He has recovered speech; the other guests have gone, including George
+Belvoir. Leopold Travers has taken a great fancy to Kenelm. Leopold
+was one of those men, not uncommon perhaps in England, who, with great
+mental energies, have little book-knowledge, and when they come
+in contact with a book-reader who is not a pedant feel a pleasant
+excitement in his society, a source of interest in comparing notes with
+him, a constant surprise in finding by what venerable authorities the
+deductions which their own mother-wit has drawn from life are supported,
+or by what cogent arguments derived from books those deductions are
+contravened or upset. Leopold Travers had in him that sense of humour
+which generally accompanies a strong practical understanding (no man,
+for instance, has more practical understanding than a Scot, and no man
+has a keener susceptibility to humour), and not only enjoyed Kenelm's
+odd way of expressing himself, but very often mistook Kenelm's irony for
+opinion spoken in earnest.
+
+Since his early removal from the capital and his devotion to
+agricultural pursuits, it was so seldom that Leopold Travers met a man
+by whose conversation his mind was diverted to other subjects than those
+which were incidental to the commonplace routine of his life that he
+found in Kenelm's views of men and things a source of novel amusement,
+and a stirring appeal to such metaphysical creeds of his own as had been
+formed unconsciously, and had long reposed unexamined in the recesses of
+an intellect shrewd and strong, but more accustomed to dictate than to
+argue. Kenelm, on his side, saw much in his host to like and to admire;
+but, reversing their relative positions in point of years, he conversed
+with Travers as with a mind younger than his own. Indeed, it was one
+of his crotchety theories that each generation is in substance mentally
+older than the generation preceding it, especially in all that relates
+to science; and, as he would say, "The study of life is a science, and
+not an art."
+
+But Cecilia,--what impression did she create upon the young visitor?
+Was he alive to the charm of her rare beauty, to the grace of a mind
+sufficiently stored for commune with those who love to think and to
+imagine, and yet sufficiently feminine and playful to seize the sportive
+side of realities, and allow their proper place to the trifles which
+make the sum of human things? An impression she did make, and that
+impression was new to him and pleasing. Nay, sometimes in her presence
+and sometimes when alone, he fell into abstracted consultations with
+himself, saying, "Kenelm Chillingly, now that thou hast got back into
+thy proper skin, dost thou not think that thou hadst better remain
+there? Couldst thou not be contented with thy lot as erring descendant
+of Adam, if thou couldst win for thy mate so faultless a descendant of
+Eve as now flits before thee?" But he could not abstract from himself
+any satisfactory answer to the question he had addressed to himself.
+
+Once he said abruptly to Travers, as, on their return from their
+rambles, they caught a glimpse of Cecilia's light form bending over the
+flower-beds on the lawn, "Do you admire Virgil?"
+
+"To say truth I have not read Virgil since I was a boy; and, between you
+and me, I then thought him rather monotonous."
+
+"Perhaps because his verse is so smooth in its beauty?"
+
+"Probably. When one is very young one's taste is faulty; and if a poet
+is not faulty, we are apt to think he wants vivacity and fire."
+
+"Thank you for your lucid explanation," answered Kenelm, adding musingly
+to himself, "I am afraid I should yawn very often if I were married to a
+Miss Virgil."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE house of Mr. Travers contained a considerable collection of family
+portraits, few of them well painted, but the Squire was evidently proud
+of such evidences of ancestry. They not only occupied a considerable
+space on the walls of the reception rooms, but swarmed into the
+principal sleeping-chambers, and smiled or frowned on the beholder from
+dark passages and remote lobbies. One morning, Cecilia, on her way
+to the china closet, found Kenelm gazing very intently upon a female
+portrait consigned to one of those obscure receptacles by which through
+a back staircase he gained the only approach from the hall to his
+chamber.
+
+"I don't pretend to be a good judge of paintings," said Kenelm, as
+Cecilia paused beside him; "but it strikes me that this picture is very
+much better than most of those to which places of honour are assigned in
+your collection. And the face itself is so lovely that it would add an
+embellishment to the princeliest galleries."
+
+"Yes," said Cecilia, with a half-sigh. "The face is lovely, and the
+portrait is considered one of Lely's rarest masterpieces. It used to
+hang over the chimney-piece in the drawing-room. My father had it placed
+here many years ago."
+
+"Perhaps because he discovered it was not a family portrait?"
+
+"On the contrary,--because it grieves him to think it is a family
+portrait. Hush! I hear his footstep: don't speak of it to him; don't let
+him see you looking at it. The subject is very painful to him."
+
+Here Cecilia vanished into the china closet and Kenelm turned off to his
+own room.
+
+What sin committed by the original in the time of Charles II. but only
+discovered in the reign of Victoria could have justified Leopold Travers
+in removing the most pleasing portrait in the house from the honoured
+place it had occupied, and banishing it to so obscure a recess? Kenelm
+said no more on the subject, and indeed an hour afterwards had dismissed
+it from his thoughts. The next day he rode out with Travers and
+Cecilia. Their way passed through quiet shady lanes without any purposed
+direction, when suddenly, at the spot where three of those lanes met on
+an angle of common ground, a lonely gray tower, in the midst of a wide
+space of grass-land which looked as if it had once been a park, with
+huge boles of pollarded oak dotting the space here and there, rose
+before them.
+
+"Cissy!" cried Travers, angrily reining in his horse and stopping short
+in a political discussion which he had forced upon Kenelm, "Cissy!
+How comes this? We have taken the wrong turn! No matter, I see there,"
+pointing to the right, "the chimney-pots of old Mondell's homestead. He
+has not yet promised his vote to George Belvoir. I'll go and have a talk
+with him. Turn back, you and Mr. Chillingly,--meet me at Terner's Green,
+and wait for me there till I come. I need not excuse myself to you,
+Chillingly. A vote is a vote." So saying, the Squire, whose ordinary
+riding-horse was an old hunter, halted, turned, and, no gate being
+visible, put the horse over a stiff fence and vanished in the direction
+of old Mondell's chimney-pots. Kenelm, scarcely hearing his host's
+instructions to Cecilia and excuses to himself, remained still and
+gazing on the old tower thus abruptly obtruded on his view.
+
+Though no learned antiquarian like his father, Kenelm had a strange
+fascinating interest in all relics of the past; and old gray towers,
+where they are not church towers, are very rarely to be seen in England.
+All around the old gray tower spoke with an unutterable mournfulness
+of a past in ruins: you could see remains of some large Gothic building
+once attached to it, rising here and there in fragments of deeply
+buttressed walls; you could see in a dry ditch, between high ridges,
+where there had been a fortified moat: nay, you could even see where
+once had been the bailey hill from which a baron of old had dispensed
+justice. Seldom indeed does the most acute of antiquarians discover
+that remnant of Norman times on lands still held by the oldest of
+Anglo-Norman families. Then, the wild nature of the demesne around;
+those ranges of sward, with those old giant oak-trunks, hollowed within
+and pollarded at top,--all spoke, in unison with the gray tower, of a
+past as remote from the reign of Victoria as the Pyramids are from the
+sway of the Viceroy of Egypt.
+
+"Let us turn back," said Miss Travers; "my father would not like me to
+stay here."
+
+"Pardon me a moment. I wish my father were here; he would stay till
+sunset. But what is the history of that old tower? a history it must
+have."
+
+"Every home has a history, even a peasant's hut," said Cecilia. "But do
+pardon me if I ask you to comply with my father's request. I at least
+must turn back."
+
+Thus commanded, Kenelm reluctantly withdrew his gaze from the ruin and
+regained Cecilia, who was already some paces in return down the lane.
+
+"I am far from a very inquisitive man by temperament," said Kenelm, "so
+far as the affairs of the living are concerned. But I should not care to
+open a book if I had no interest in the past. Pray indulge my curiosity
+to learn something about that old tower. It could not look more
+melancholy and solitary if I had built it myself."
+
+"Its most melancholy associations are with a very recent past," answered
+Cecilia. "The tower, in remote times, formed the keep of a castle
+belonging to the most ancient and once the most powerful family in these
+parts. The owners were barons who took active share in the Wars of the
+Roses. The last of them sided with Richard III., and after the battle
+of Bosworth the title was attainted, and the larger portion of the lands
+was confiscated. Loyalty to a Plantagenet was of course treason to
+a Tudor. But the regeneration of the family rested with their direct
+descendants, who had saved from the general wreck of their fortunes what
+may be called a good squire's estate,--about, perhaps, the same rental
+as my father's, but of much larger acreage. These squires, however,
+were more looked up to in the county than the wealthiest peer. They
+were still by far the oldest family in the county; and traced in their
+pedigree alliances with the most illustrious houses in English history.
+In themselves too for many generations they were a high-spirited,
+hospitable, popular race, living unostentatiously on their income, and
+contented with their rank of squires. The castle, ruined by time and
+siege, they did not attempt to restore. They dwelt in a house near to
+it, built about Elizabeth's time, which you could not see, for it lies
+in a hollow behind the tower,--a moderate-sized, picturesque, country
+gentleman's house. Our family intermarried with them,--the portrait you
+saw was a daughter of their house,--and very proud was any squire in the
+county of intermarriage with the Fletwodes."
+
+"Fletwode,--that was their name? I have a vague recollection of having
+heard the name connected with some disastrous--oh, but it can't be the
+same family: pray go on."
+
+"I fear it is the same family. But I will finish the story as I have
+heard it. The property descended at last to one Bertram Fletwode, who,
+unfortunately, obtained the reputation of being a very clever man of
+business. There was some mining company in which, with other gentlemen
+in the county, he took great interest; invested largely in shares;
+became the head of the direction--"
+
+"I see; and was of course ruined."
+
+"No; worse than that: he became very rich; and, unhappily, became
+desirous of being richer still. I have heard that there was a great
+mania for speculations just about that time. He embarked in these, and
+prospered, till at last he was induced to invest a large share of the
+fortune thus acquired in the partnership of a bank which enjoyed a high
+character. Up to that time he had retained popularity and esteem in
+the county; but the squires who shared in the adventures of the mining
+company, and knew little or nothing about other speculations in which
+his name did not appear, professed to be shocked at the idea of a
+Fletwode of Fletwode being ostensibly joined in partnership with a Jones
+of Clapham in a London bank."
+
+"Slow folks, those country squires,--behind the progress of the age.
+Well?"
+
+"I have heard that Bertram Fletwode was himself very reluctant to take
+this step, but was persuaded to do so by his son. This son, Alfred, was
+said to have still greater talents for business than the father, and
+had been not only associated with but consulted by him in all the later
+speculations which had proved so fortunate. Mrs. Campion knew Alfred
+Fletwode very well. She describes him as handsome, with quick, eager
+eyes; showy and imposing in his talk; immensely ambitious, more
+ambitious than avaricious,--collecting money less for its own sake than
+for that which it could give,--rank and power. According to her it was
+the dearest wish of his heart to claim the old barony, but not before
+there could go with the barony a fortune adequate to the lustre of a
+title so ancient, and equal to the wealth of modern peers with higher
+nominal rank."
+
+"A poor ambition at the best; of the two I should prefer that of a poet
+in a garret. But I am no judge. Thank Heaven I have no ambition.
+Still, all ambition, all desire to rise, is interesting to him who is
+ignominiously contented if he does not fall. So the son had his way,
+and Fletwode joined company with Jones on the road to wealth and the
+peerage; meanwhile did the son marry? if so, of course the daughter of
+a duke or a millionnaire. Tuft-hunting, or money-making, at the risk of
+degradation and the workhouse. Progress of the age!"
+
+"No," replied Cecilia, smiling at this outburst, but smiling sadly,
+"Fletwode did not marry the daughter of a duke or a millionnaire; but
+still his wife belonged to a noble family,--very poor, but very proud.
+Perhaps he married from motives of ambition, though not of gain. Her
+father was of much political influence that might perhaps assist his
+claim to the barony. The mother, a woman of the world, enjoying a high
+social position, and nearly related to a connection of ours,--Lady
+Glenalvon."
+
+"Lady Glenalvon, the dearest of my lady friends! You are connected with
+her?"
+
+"Yes; Lord Glenalvon was my mother's uncle. But I wish to finish my
+story before my father joins us. Alfred Fletwode did not marry till long
+after the partnership in the bank. His father, at his desire, had bought
+up the whole business, Mr. Jones having died. The bank was carried on
+in the names of Fletwode and Son. But the father had become merely a
+nominal or what I believe is called a 'sleeping' partner. He had long
+ceased to reside in the county. The old house was not grand enough for
+him. He had purchased a palatial residence in one of the home counties;
+lived there in great splendour; was a munificent patron of science
+and art; and in spite of his earlier addictions to business-like
+speculations he appears to have been a singularly accomplished,
+high-bred gentleman. Some years before his son's marriage, Mr. Fletwode
+had been afflicted with partial paralysis, and his medical attendant
+enjoined rigid abstention from business. From that time he never
+interfered with his son's management of the bank. He had an only
+daughter, much younger than Alfred. Lord Eagleton, my mother's brother,
+was engaged to be married to her. The wedding-day was fixed,--when the
+world was startled by the news that the great firm of Fletwode and Son
+had stopped payment; is that the right phrase?"
+
+"I believe so."
+
+"A great many people were ruined in that failure. The public indignation
+was very great. Of course all the Fletwode property went to the
+creditors. Old Mr. Fletwode was legally acquitted of all other offence
+than that of overconfidence in his son. Alfred was convicted of
+fraud,--of forgery. I don't, of course, know the particulars, they are
+very complicated. He was sentenced to a long term of servitude, but
+died the day he was condemned; apparently by poison, which he had long
+secreted about his person. Now you can understand why my father, who
+is almost gratuitously sensitive on the point of honour, removed into a
+dark corner the portrait of Arabella Fletwode,--his own ancestress, but
+also the ancestress of a convicted felon: you can understand why the
+whole subject is so painful to him. His wife's brother was to have
+married the felon's sister; and though, of course, that marriage was
+tacitly broken off by the terrible disgrace that had befallen the
+Fletwodes, yet I don't think my poor uncle ever recovered the blow to
+his hopes. He went abroad, and died in Madeira of a slow decline."
+
+"And the felon's sister, did she die too?"
+
+"No; not that I know of. Mrs. Campion says that she saw in a newspaper
+the announcement of old Mr. Fletwode's death, and a paragraph to the
+effect that after that event Miss Fletwode had sailed from Liverpool to
+New York."
+
+"Alfred Fletwode's wife went back, of course, to her family?"
+
+"Alas! no,--poor thing! She had not been many months married when the
+bank broke; and among his friends her wretched husband appears to have
+forged the names of the trustees to her marriage settlement, and sold
+out the sums which would otherwise have served her as a competence.
+Her father, too, was a great sufferer by the bankruptcy, having by
+his son-in-law's advice placed a considerable portion of his moderate
+fortune in Alfred's hands for investment, all of which was involved in
+the general wreck. I am afraid he was a very hard-hearted man: at all
+events his poor daughter never returned to him. She died, I think, even
+before the death of Bertram Fletwode. The whole story is very dismal."
+
+"Dismal indeed, but pregnant with salutary warnings to those who live
+in an age of progress. Here you see a family of fair fortune, living
+hospitably, beloved, revered, more looked up to by their neighbours than
+the wealthiest nobles; no family not proud to boast alliance with it.
+All at once, in the tranquil record of this happy race, appears that
+darling of the age, that hero of progress,--a clever man of business. He
+be contented to live as his fathers! He be contented with such trifles
+as competence, respect, and love! Much too clever for that. The age is
+money-making,--go with the age! He goes with the age. Born a gentleman
+only, he exalts himself into a trader. But at least he, it seems, if
+greedy, was not dishonest. He was born a gentleman, but his son was
+born a trader. The son is a still cleverer man of business; the son is
+consulted and trusted. Aha! He too goes with the age; to greed he
+links ambition. The trader's son wishes to return--what? to the rank of
+gentleman?--gentleman! nonsense! everybody is a gentleman nowadays,--to
+the title of Lord. How ends it all! Could I sit but for twelve hours in
+the innermost heart of that Alfred Fletwode; could I see how, step by
+step from his childhood, the dishonest son was avariciously led on by
+the honest father to depart from the old _vestigia_ of Fletwodes of
+Fletwode,--scorning The Enough to covet The More, gaining The More to
+sigh, 'It is not The Enough,'--I think I might show that the age lives
+in a house of glass, and had better not for its own sake throw stones on
+the felon!"
+
+"Ah, but, Mr. Chillingly, surely this is a very rare exception in the
+general--"
+
+"Rare!" interrupted Kenelm, who was excited to a warmth of passion which
+would have startled his most intimate friend,-if indeed an intimate
+friend had ever been vouchsafed to him,--"rare! nay, how common--I don't
+say to the extent of forgery and fraud, but to the extent of degradation
+and ruin--is the greed of a Little More to those who have The Enough! is
+the discontent with competence, respect, and love, when catching sight
+of a money-bag! How many well-descended county families, cursed with
+an heir who is called a clever man of business, have vanished from the
+soil! A company starts, the clever man joins it one bright day. Pouf!
+the old estates and the old name are powder. Ascend higher. Take nobles
+whose ancestral titles ought to be to English ears like the sound of
+clarions, awakening the most slothful to the scorn of money-bags and
+the passion for renown. Lo! in that mocking dance of death called
+the Progress of the Age, one who did not find Enough in a sovereign's
+revenue, and seeks The Little More as a gambler on the turf by the
+advice of blacklegs! Lo! another, with lands wider than his greatest
+ancestors ever possessed, must still go in for The Little More, adding
+acre to acre, heaping debt upon debt! Lo! a third, whose name, borne by
+his ancestors, was once the terror of England's foes,--the landlord of
+a hotel! A fourth,--but why go on through the list? Another and another
+still succeeds; each on the Road to Ruin, each in the Age of Progress.
+Ah, Miss Travers! in the old time it was through the Temple of Honour
+that one passed to the Temple of Fortune. In this wise age the process
+is reversed. But here comes your father."
+
+"A thousand pardons!" said Leopold Travers. "That numskull Mondell kept
+me so long with his old-fashioned Tory doubts whether liberal politics
+are favourable to agricultural prospects. But as he owes a round sum to
+a Whig lawyer I had to talk with his wife, a prudent woman; convinced
+her that his own agricultural prospects were safest on the Whig side of
+the question; and, after kissing his baby and shaking his hand, booked
+his vote for George Belvoir,--a plumper."
+
+"I suppose," said Kenelm to himself, and with that candour which
+characterized him whenever he talked to himself, "that Travers has taken
+the right road to the Temple, not of Honour, but of honours, in every
+country, ancient or modern, which has adopted the system of popular
+suffrage."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+THE next day Mrs. Campion and Cecilia were seated under the veranda.
+They were both ostensibly employed on two several pieces of embroidery,
+one intended for a screen, the other for a sofa-cushion; but the mind of
+neither was on her work.
+
+MRS. CAMPION.--"Has Mr. Chillingly said when he means to take leave?"
+
+CECILIA.--"Not to me. How much my dear father enjoys his conversation!"
+
+MRS. CAMPION.--"Cynicism and mockery were not so much the fashion among
+young men in your father's day as I suppose they are now, and therefore
+they seem new to Mr. Travers. To me they are not new, because I saw
+more of the old than the young when I lived in London, and cynicism and
+mockery are more natural to men who are leaving the world than to those
+who are entering it."
+
+CECILIA.--"Dear Mrs. Campion, how bitter you are, and how unjust!
+You take much too literally the jesting way in which Mr. Chillingly
+expresses himself. There can be no cynicism in one who goes out of his
+way to make others happy."
+
+MRS. CAMPION.--"You mean in the whim of making an ill-assorted marriage
+between a pretty village flirt and a sickly cripple, and settling a
+couple of peasants in a business for which they are wholly unfitted."
+
+CECILIA.--"Jessie Wiles is not a flirt, and I am convinced that she will
+make Will Somers a very good wife, and that the shop will be a great
+success."
+
+MRS. CAMPION.--"We shall see. Still, if Mr. Chillingly's talk belies his
+actions, he may be a good man, but he is a very affected one."
+
+CECILIA.--"Have I not heard you say that there are persons so natural
+that they seem affected to those who do not understand them?"
+
+Mrs. Campion raised her eyes to Cecilia's face, dropped them again over
+her work, and said, in grave undertones,--"Take care, Cecilia."
+
+"Take care of what?"
+
+"My dearest child, forgive me; but I do not like the warmth with which
+you defend Mr. Chillingly."
+
+"Would not my father defend him still more warmly if he had heard you?"
+
+"Men judge of men in their relations to men. I am a woman, and judge of
+men in their relations to women. I should tremble for the happiness of
+any woman who joined her fate with that of Kenelm Chillingly."
+
+"My dear friend, I do not understand you to-day."
+
+"Nay; I did not mean to be so solemn, my love. After all, it is nothing
+to us whom Mr. Chillingly may or may not marry. He is but a passing
+visitor, and, once gone, the chances are that we may not see him again
+for years."
+
+Thus speaking, Mrs. Campion again raised her eyes from her work,
+stealing a sidelong glance at Cecilia; and her mother-like heart sank
+within her, on noticing how suddenly pale the girl had become, and how
+her lips quivered. Mrs. Campion had enough knowledge of life to feel
+aware that she had committed a grievous blunder. In that earliest stage
+of virgin affection, when a girl is unconscious of more than a certain
+vague interest in one man which distinguishes him from others in her
+thoughts,--if she hears him unjustly disparaged, if some warning against
+him is implied, if the probability that he will never be more to her
+than a passing acquaintance is forcibly obtruded on her,--suddenly that
+vague interest, which might otherwise have faded away with many another
+girlish fancy, becomes arrested, consolidated; the quick pang it
+occasions makes her involuntarily, and for the first time, question
+herself, and ask, "Do I love?" But when a girl of a nature so delicate
+as that of Cecilia Travers can ask herself the question, "Do I love?"
+her very modesty, her very shrinking from acknowledging that any power
+over her thoughts for weal or for woe can be acquired by a man, except
+through the sanction of that love which only becomes divine in her eyes
+when it is earnest and pure and self-devoted, makes her prematurely
+disposed to answer "yes." And when a girl of such a nature in her own
+heart answers "yes" to such a question, even if she deceive herself at
+the moment, she begins to cherish the deceit till the belief in her love
+becomes a reality. She has adopted a religion, false or true, and she
+would despise herself if she could be easily converted.
+
+Mrs. Campion had so contrived that she had forced that question upon
+Cecilia, and she feared, by the girl's change of countenance, that the
+girl's heart had answered "yes."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+WHILE the conversation just narrated took place, Kenelm had walked forth
+to pay a visit to Will Somers. All obstacles to Will's marriage were now
+cleared away; the transfer of lease for the shop had been signed, and
+the banns were to be published for the first time on the following
+Sunday. We need not say that Will was very happy. Kenelm then paid a
+visit to Mrs. Bowles, with whom he stayed an hour. On reentering the
+Park, he saw Travers, walking slowly, with downcast eyes and his hands
+clasped behind him (his habit when in thought). He did not observe
+Kenelm's approach till within a few feet of him, and he then greeted his
+guest in listless accents, unlike his usual cheerful tones.
+
+"I have been visiting the man you have made so happy," said Kenelm.
+
+"Who can that be?"
+
+"Will Somers. Do you make so many people happy that your reminiscence of
+them is lost in their number?"
+
+Travers smiled faintly, and shook his head.
+
+Kenelm went on. "I have also seen Mrs. Bowles, and you will be pleased
+to hear that Tom is satisfied with his change of abode: there is no
+chance of his returning to Graveleigh; and Mrs. Bowles took very kindly
+to my suggestion that the little property you wish for should be sold
+to you, and, in that case, she would remove to Luscombe to be near her
+son."
+
+"I thank you much for your thought of me," said Travers, "and the affair
+shall be seen to at once, though the purchase is no longer important to
+me. I ought to have told you three days ago, but it slipped my memory,
+that a neighbouring squire, a young fellow just come into his property,
+has offered to exchange a capital farm, much nearer to my residence,
+for the lands I hold in Graveleigh, including Saunderson's farm and the
+cottages: they are quite at the outskirts of my estate, but run into
+his, and the exchange will be advantageous to both. Still I am glad that
+the neighbourhood should be thoroughly rid of a brute like Tom Bowles."
+
+"You would not call him brute if you knew him; but I am sorry to hear
+that Will Somers will be under another landlord."
+
+"It does not matter, since his tenure is secured for fourteen years."
+
+"What sort of man is the new landlord?"
+
+"I don't know much of him. He was in the army till his father died,
+and has only just made his appearance in the county. He has, however,
+already earned the character of being too fond of the other sex: it is
+well that pretty Jessie is to be safely married."
+
+Travers then relapsed into a moody silence from which Kenelm found it
+difficult to rouse him. At length the latter said kindly,--
+
+"My dear Mr. Travers, do not think I take a liberty if I venture to
+guess that something has happened this morning which troubles or vexes
+you. When that is the case, it is often a relief to say what it is, even
+to a confidant so unable to advise or to comfort as myself."
+
+"You are a good fellow, Chillingly, and I know not, at least in these
+parts, a man to whom I would unburden myself more freely. I am put out,
+I confess; disappointed unreasonably, in a cherished wish, and," he
+added, with a slight laugh, "it always annoys me when I don't have my
+own way."
+
+"So it does me."
+
+"Don't you think that George Belvoir is a very fine young man?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"_I_ call him handsome; he is steadier, too, than most men of his
+age, and of his command of money; and yet he does not want spirit nor
+knowledge of life. To every advantage of rank and fortune he adds the
+industry and the ambition which attain distinction in public life."
+
+"Quite true. Is he going to withdraw from the election after all?"
+
+"Good heavens, no!"
+
+"Then how does he not let you have your own way?"
+
+"It is not he," said Travers, peevishly; "it is Cecilia. Don't you
+understand that George is precisely the husband I would choose for her;
+and this morning came a very well written manly letter from him, asking
+my permission to pay his addresses to her."
+
+"But that is your own way so far."
+
+"Yes, and here comes the balk. Of course I had to refer it to Cecilia,
+and she positively declines, and has no reasons to give; does not deny
+that George is good-looking and sensible, that he is a man of whose
+preference any girl might be proud; but she chooses to say she cannot
+love him, and when I ask why she cannot love him, has no other answer
+than that 'she cannot say.' It is too provoking."
+
+"It is provoking," answered Kenelm; "but then Love is the most
+dunderheaded of all the passions; it never will listen to reason. The
+very rudiments of logic are unknown to it. 'Love has no wherefore,' says
+one of those Latin poets who wrote love-verses called elegies,--a name
+which we moderns appropriate to funeral dirges. For my own part, I can't
+understand how any one can be expected voluntarily to make up his mind
+to go out of his mind. And if Miss Travers cannot go out of her mind
+because George Belvoir does, you could not argue her into doing so if
+you talked till doomsday."
+
+Travers smiled in spite of himself, but he answered gravely, "Certainly,
+I would not wish Cissy to marry any man she disliked, but she does not
+dislike George; no girl could: and where that is the case, a girl so
+sensible, so affectionate, so well brought up, is sure to love, after
+marriage, a thoroughly kind and estimable man, especially when she has
+no previous attachment,--which, of course, Cissy never had. In fact,
+though I do not wish to force my daughter's will, I am not yet disposed
+to give up my own. Do you understand?"
+
+"Perfectly."
+
+"I am the more inclined to a marriage so desirable in every way, because
+when Cissy comes out in London, which she has not yet done, she is
+sure to collect round her face and her presumptive inheritance all the
+handsome fortune-hunters and titled _vauriens_; and if in love there
+is no wherefore, how can I be sure that she may not fall in love with a
+scamp?"
+
+"I think you may be sure of that," said Kenelm. "Miss Travers has too
+much mind."
+
+"Yes, at present; but did you not say that in love people go out of
+their mind?"
+
+"True! I forgot that."
+
+"I am not then disposed to dismiss poor George's offer with a decided
+negative, and yet it would be unfair to mislead him by encouragement. In
+fact, I'll be hanged if I know how to reply."
+
+"You think Miss Travers does not dislike George Belvoir, and if she saw
+more of him may like him better, and it would be good for her as well as
+for him not to put an end to that, chance?"
+
+"Exactly so."
+
+"Why not then write: 'My dear George,--You have my best wishes, but my
+daughter does not seem disposed to marry at present. Let me consider
+your letter not written, and continue on the same terms as we were
+before.' Perhaps, as George knows Virgil, you might find your own
+schoolboy recollections of that poet useful here, and add, _Varium et
+mutabile semper femina_; hackneyed, but true."
+
+"My dear Chillingly, your suggestion is capital. How the deuce at your
+age have you contrived to know the world so well?"
+
+Kenelm answered in the pathetic tones so natural to his voice, "By being
+only a looker-on; alas!"
+
+Leopold Travers felt much relieved after he had written his reply
+to George. He had not been quite so ingenuous in his revelation to
+Chillingly as he may have seemed. Conscious, like all proud and
+fond fathers, of his daughter's attractions, he was not without some
+apprehension that Kenelm himself might entertain an ambition at variance
+with that of George Belvoir: if so, he deemed it well to put an end to
+such ambition while yet in time: partly because his interest was already
+pledged to George; partly because, in rank and fortune, George was the
+better match; partly because George was of the same political party as
+himself,--while Sir Peter, and probably Sir Peter's heir, espoused the
+opposite side; and partly also because, with all his personal liking to
+Kenelm, Leopold Travers, as a very sensible, practical man of the world,
+was not sure that a baronet's heir who tramped the country on foot in
+the dress of a petty farmer, and indulged pugilistic propensities in
+martial encounters with stalwart farriers, was likely to make a safe
+husband and a comfortable son-in-law. Kenelm's words, and still more his
+manner, convinced Travers that any apprehensions of rivalry that he had
+previously conceived were utterly groundless.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE same evening, after dinner (during that lovely summer month they
+dined at Neesdale Park at an unfashionably early hour), Kenelm, in
+company with Travers and Cecilia, ascended a gentle eminence at the back
+of the gardens, on which there were some picturesque ivy-grown ruins of
+an ancient priory, and commanding the best view of a glorious sunset and
+a subject landscape of vale and wood, rivulet and distant hills.
+
+"Is the delight in scenery," said Kenelm, "really an acquired gift,
+as some philosophers tell us? Is it true that young children and rude
+savages do not feel it; that the eye must be educated to comprehend its
+charm, and that the eye can be only educated through the mind?"
+
+"I should think your philosophers are right," said Travers. "When I was
+a schoolboy, I thought no scenery was like the flat of a cricket ground;
+when I hunted at Melton, I thought that unpicturesque country more
+beautiful than Devonshire. It is only of late years that I feel a
+sensible pleasure in scenery for its own sake, apart from associations
+of custom or the uses to which we apply them."
+
+"And what say you, Miss Travers?"
+
+"I scarcely know what to say," answered Cecilia, musingly. "I can
+remember no time in my childhood when I did not feel delight in that
+which seemed to me beautiful in scenery, but I suspect that I vaguely
+distinguished one kind of beauty from another. A common field with
+daisies and buttercups was beautiful to me then, and I doubt if I saw
+anything more beautiful in extensive landscapes."
+
+"True," said Kenelm: "it is not in early childhood that we carry the
+sight into distance: as is the mind so is the eye; in early childhood
+the mind revels in the present, and the eye rejoices most in the things
+nearest to it. I don't think in childhood that we--
+
+ "'Watched with wistful eyes the setting sun.'"
+
+"Ah! what a world of thought in that word 'wistful'!" murmured Cecilia,
+as her gaze riveted itself on the western heavens, towards which Kenelm
+had pointed as he spoke, where the enlarging orb rested half its disk on
+the rim of the horizon.
+
+She had seated herself on a fragment of the ruin, backed by the hollows
+of a broken arch. The last rays of the sun lingered on her young face,
+and then lost themselves in the gloom of the arch behind. There was a
+silence for some minutes, during which the sun had sunk. Rosy clouds in
+thin flakes still floated, momently waning: and the eve-star stole forth
+steadfast, bright, and lonely,--nay, lonely not now; that sentinel has
+aroused a host.
+
+Said a voice, "No sign of rain yet, Squire. What will become of the
+turnips?"
+
+"Real life again! Who can escape it?" muttered Kenelm, as his eye rested
+on the burly figure of the Squire's bailiff.
+
+"Ha! North," said Travers, "what brings you here? No bad news, I hope?"
+
+"Indeed, yes, Squire. The Durham bull--"
+
+"The Durham bull! What of him? You frighten me."
+
+"Taken bad. Colic."
+
+"Excuse me, Chillingly," cried Travers; "I must be off. A most valuable
+animal, and no one I can trust to doctor him but myself."
+
+"That's true enough," said the bailiff, admiringly. "There's not a
+veterinary in the county like the Squire."
+
+Travers was already gone, and the panting bailiff had hard work to catch
+him up.
+
+Kenelm seated himself beside Cecilia on the ruined fragment.
+
+"How I envy your father!" said he.
+
+"Why just at this moment,--because he knows how to doctor the bull?"
+said Cecilia, with a sweet low laugh.
+
+"Well, that is something to envy. It is a pleasure to relieve from pain
+any of God's creatures,--even a Durham bull."
+
+"Indeed, yes. I am justly rebuked."
+
+"On the contrary you are to be justly praised. Your question suggested
+to me an amiable sentiment in place of the selfish one which was
+uppermost in my thoughts. I envied your father because he creates for
+himself so many objects of interest; because while he can appreciate the
+mere sensuous enjoyment of a landscape and a sunset, he can find mental
+excitement in turnip crops and bulls. Happy, Miss Travers, is the
+Practical Man."
+
+"When my dear father was as young as you, Mr. Chillingly, I am sure that
+he had no more interest in turnips and bulls than you have. I do not
+doubt that some day you will be as practical as he is in that respect."
+
+"Do you think so--sincerely?"
+
+Cecilia made no answer.
+
+Kenelm repeated the question.
+
+"Sincerely, then, I do not know whether you will take interest in
+precisely the same things that interest my father; but there are other
+things than turnips and cattle which belong to what you call 'practical
+life,' and in these you will take interest, as you took in the fortunes
+of Will Somers and Jessie Wiles."
+
+"That was no practical interest. I got nothing by it. But even if that
+interest were practical,--I mean productive, as cattle and turnip crops
+are,--a succession of Somerses and Wileses is not to be hoped for.
+History never repeats itself."
+
+"May I answer you, though very humbly?"
+
+"Miss Travers, the wisest man that ever existed never was wise enough
+to know woman; but I think most men ordinarily wise will agree in this,
+that woman is by no means a humble creature, and that when she says she
+'answers very humbly,' she does not mean what she says. Permit me to
+entreat you to answer very loftily."
+
+Cecilia laughed and blushed. The laugh was musical; the blush was--what?
+Let any man, seated beside a girl like Cecilia at starry twilight, find
+the right epithet for that blush. I pass it by epithetless. But she
+answered, firmly though sweetly,--
+
+"Are there not things very practical, and affecting the happiness, not
+of one or two individuals, but of innumerable thousands, in which a man
+like Mr. Chillingly cannot fail to feel interest, long before he is my
+father's age?"
+
+"Forgive me: you do not answer; you question. I imitate you, and ask
+what are those things as applicable to a man like Mr. Chillingly?"
+
+Cecilia gathered herself up, as with the desire to express a great deal
+in short substance, and then said,--
+
+"In the expression of thought, literature; in the conduct of action,
+politics."
+
+Kenelm Chillingly stared, dumfounded. I suppose the greatest enthusiast
+for woman's rights could not assert more reverentially than he did the
+cleverness of women; but among the things which the cleverness of woman
+did not achieve, he had always placed "laconics." "No woman," he was
+wont to say, "ever invented an axiom or a proverb."
+
+"Miss Travers," he said at last, "before we proceed further, vouchsafe
+to tell me if that very terse reply of yours is spontaneous and
+original; or whether you have not borrowed it from some book which I
+have not chanced to read?"
+
+Cecilia pondered honestly, and then said, "I don't think it is from any
+book; but I owe so many of my thoughts to Mrs. Campion, and she lived so
+much among clever men, that--"
+
+"I see it all, and accept your definition, no matter whence it came.
+You think I might become an author or a politician. Did you ever read an
+essay by a living author called 'Motive Power'?"
+
+"No."
+
+"That essay is designed to intimate that without motive power a man,
+whatever his talents or his culture, does nothing practical. The
+mainsprings of motive power are Want and Ambition. They are absent
+from my mechanism. By the accident of birth I do not require bread and
+cheese; by the accident of temperament and of philosophical culture
+I care nothing about praise or blame. But without want of bread and
+cheese, and with a most stolid indifference to praise and blame, do you
+honestly think that a man will do anything practical in literature or
+politics? Ask Mrs. Campion."
+
+"I will not ask her. Is the sense of duty nothing?"
+
+"Alas! we interpret duty so variously. Of mere duty, as we commonly
+understand the word, I do not think I shall fail more than other men.
+But for the fair development of all the good that is in us, do you
+believe that we should adopt some line of conduct against which our
+whole heart rebels? Can you say to the clerk, 'Be a poet'? Can you say
+to the poet, 'Be a clerk'? It is no more to the happiness of a man's
+being to order him to take to one career when his whole heart is set
+on another, than it is to order him to marry one woman when it is to
+another woman that his heart will turn."
+
+Cecilia here winced and looked away. Kenelm had more tact than most men
+of his age,--that is, a keener perception of subjects to avoid; but then
+Kenelm had a wretched habit of forgetting the person he talked to and
+talking to himself. Utterly oblivious of George Belvoir, he was talking
+to himself now. Not then observing the effect his _mal-a-propos_ dogma
+had produced on his listener, he went on, "Happiness is a word very
+lightly used. It may mean little; it may mean much. By the word
+happiness I would signify, not the momentary joy of a child who gets
+a plaything, but the lasting harmony between our inclinations and our
+objects; and without that harmony we are a discord to ourselves, we are
+incompletions, we are failures. Yet there are plenty of advisers who say
+to us, 'It is a duty to be a discord.' I deny it."
+
+Here Cecilia rose and said in a low voice, "It is getting late. We must
+go homeward."
+
+They descended the green eminence slowly, and at first in silence.
+The bats, emerging from the ivied ruins they left behind, flitted and
+skimmed before them, chasing the insects of the night. A moth, escaping
+from its pursuer, alighted on Cecilia's breast, as if for refuge.
+
+"The bats are practical," said Kenelm; "they are hungry, and their
+motive power to-night is strong. Their interest is in the insects they
+chase. They have no interest in the stars; but the stars lure the moth."
+
+Cecilia drew her slight scarf over the moth, so that it might not
+fly off and become a prey to the bats. "Yet," said she, "the moth is
+practical too."
+
+"Ay, just now, since it has found an asylum from the danger that
+threatened it in its course towards the stars."
+
+Cecilia felt the beating of her heart, upon which lay the moth
+concealed. Did she think that a deeper and more tender meaning than they
+outwardly expressed was couched in these words? If so, she erred. They
+now neared the garden gate, and Kenelm paused as he opened it. "See,"
+he said, "the moon has just risen over those dark firs, making the still
+night stiller. Is it not strange that we mortals, placed amid perpetual
+agitation and tumult and strife, as if our natural element, conceive a
+sense of holiness in the images antagonistic to our real life; I mean
+in images of repose? I feel at the moment as if I suddenly were
+made better, now that heaven and earth have suddenly become yet more
+tranquil. I am now conscious of a purer and sweeter moral than either I
+or you drew from the insect you have sheltered. I must come to the poets
+to express it,--
+
+
+ "'The desire of the moth for the star,
+ Of the night for the morrow;
+ The devotion to something afar
+ From the sphere of our sorrow.'
+
+
+"Oh, that something afar! that something afar! never to be reached on
+this earth,--never, never!"
+
+There was such a wail in that cry from the man's heart that Cecilia
+could not resist the impulse of a divine compassion. She laid her hand
+on his, and looked on the dark wildness of his upward face with eyes
+that Heaven meant to be wells of comfort to grieving man. At the light
+touch of that hand Kenelm started, looked down, and met those soothing
+eyes.
+
+"I am happy to tell you that I have saved my Durham," cried out Mr.
+Travers from the other side of the gate.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+AS Kenelm that night retired to his own room, he paused on the
+landing-place opposite to the portrait which Mr. Travers had consigned
+to that desolate exile. This daughter of a race dishonoured in its
+extinction might well have been the glory of the house she had entered
+as a bride. The countenance was singularly beautiful, and of a character
+of beauty eminently patrician; there was in its expression a gentleness
+and modesty not often found in the female portraits of Sir Peter
+Lely, and in the eyes and in the smile a wonderful aspect of innocent
+happiness.
+
+"What a speaking homily," soliloquized Kenelm, addressing the picture,
+"against the ambition thy fair descendant would awake in me, art thou,
+O lovely image! For generations thy beauty lived in this canvas, a thing
+of joy, the pride of the race it adorned. Owner after owner said
+to admiring guests, 'Yes, a fine portrait, by Lely; she was my
+ancestress,--a Fletwode of Fletwode.' Now, lest guests should remember
+that a Fletwode married a Travers thou art thrust out of sight; not even
+Lely's art can make thee of value, can redeem thine innocent self from
+disgrace. And the last of the Fletwodes, doubtless the most ambitious of
+all, the most bent on restoring and regilding the old lordly name, dies
+a felon; the infamy of one living man is so large that it can blot
+out the honour of the dead." He turned his eyes from the smile of
+the portrait, entered his own room, and, seating himself by the
+writing-table, drew blotting-book and note-paper towards him, took
+up the pen, and instead of writing fell into deep revery. There was a
+slight frown on his brow, on which frowns were rare. He was very angry
+with himself.
+
+"Kenelm," he said, entering into his customary dialogue with that self,
+"it becomes you, forsooth, to moralize about the honour of races which
+have no affinity with you. Son of Sir Peter Chillingly, look at home.
+Are you quite sure that you have not said or done or looked a something
+that may bring trouble to the hearth on which you are received as guest?
+What right had you to be moaning forth your egotisms, not remembering
+that your words fell on compassionate ears, and that such words, heard
+at moonlight by a girl whose heart they move to pity, may have dangers
+for her peace? Shame on you, Kenelm! shame! knowing too what her
+father's wish is; and knowing too that you have not the excuse of
+desiring to win that fair creature for yourself. What do you mean,
+Kenelm? I don't hear you; speak out. Oh, 'that I am a vain coxcomb to
+fancy that she could take a fancy to me:' well, perhaps I am; I hope so
+earnestly; and at all events, there has been and shall be no time for
+much mischief. We are off to-morrow, Kenelm; bestir yourself and pack
+up, write your letters, and then 'put out the light,--put out _the_
+light!'"
+
+But this converser with himself did not immediately set to work, as
+agreed upon by that twofold one. He rose and walked restlessly to and
+fro the floor, stopping ever and anon to look at the pictures on the
+walls.
+
+Several of the worst painted of the family portraits had been consigned
+to the room tenanted by Kenelm, which, though both the oldest and
+largest bed-chamber in the house, was always appropriated to a bachelor
+male guest, partly because it was without dressing-room, remote, and
+only approached by the small back-staircase, to the landing-place of
+which Arabella had been banished in disgrace; and partly because it had
+the reputation of being haunted, and ladies are more alarmed by that
+superstition than men are supposed to be. The portraits on which Kenelm
+now paused to gaze were of various dates, from the reign of Elizabeth to
+that of George III., none of them by eminent artists, and none of them
+the effigies of ancestors who had left names in history,--in short, such
+portraits as are often seen in the country houses of well-born squires.
+One family type of features or expression pervaded most of these
+portraits; features clear-cut and hardy, expression open and honest.
+And though not one of those dead men had been famous, each of them had
+contributed his unostentatious share, in his own simple way, to the
+movements of his time. That worthy in ruff and corselet had manned his
+own ship at his own cost against the Armada; never had been repaid by
+the thrifty Burleigh the expenses which had harassed him and diminished
+his patrimony; never had been even knighted. That gentleman with short
+straight hair, which overhung his forehead, leaning on his sword
+with one hand, and a book open in the other hand, had served as
+representative of his county town in the Long Parliament, fought under
+Cromwell at Marston Moor, and, resisting the Protector when he removed
+the "bauble," was one of the patriots incarcerated in "Hell hole." He,
+too, had diminished his patrimony, maintaining two troopers and two
+horses at his own charge, and "Hell hole" was all he got in return.
+A third, with a sleeker expression of countenance, and a large wig,
+flourishing in the quiet times of Charles II., had only been a justice
+of the peace, but his alert look showed that he had been a very active
+one. He had neither increased nor diminished his ancestral fortune. A
+fourth, in the costume of William III.'s reign, had somewhat added to
+the patrimony by becoming a lawyer. He must have been a successful one.
+He is inscribed "Sergeant-at-law." A fifth, a lieutenant in the army,
+was killed at Blenheim; his portrait was that of a very young and
+handsome man, taken the year before his death. His wife's portrait is
+placed in the drawing-room because it was painted by Kneller. She was
+handsome too, and married again a nobleman, whose portrait, of course,
+was not in the family collection. Here there was a gap in chronological
+arrangement, the lieutenant's heir being an infant; but in the time
+of George II. another Travers appeared as the governor of a West India
+colony. His son took part in a very different movement of the age. He is
+represented old, venerable, with white hair, and underneath his
+effigy is inscribed, "Follower of Wesley." His successor completes the
+collection. He is in naval uniform; he is in full length, and one of his
+legs is a wooden one. He is Captain, R.N., and inscribed, "Fought under
+Nelson at Trafalgar." That portrait would have found more dignified
+place in the reception-rooms if the face had not been forbiddingly ugly,
+and the picture itself a villanous daub.
+
+"I see," said Kenelm, stopping short, "why Cecilia Travers has been
+reared to talk of duty as a practical interest in life. These men of a
+former time seem to have lived to discharge a duty, and not to follow
+the progress of the age in the chase of a money-bag,--except perhaps
+one, but then to be sure he was a lawyer. Kenelm, rouse up and listen
+to me; whatever we are, whether active or indolent, is not my favourite
+maxim a just and a true one; namely, 'A good man does good by living'?
+But, for that, he must be a harmony and not a discord. Kenelm, you lazy
+dog, we must pack up."
+
+Kenelm then refilled his portmanteau, and labelled and directed it to
+Exmundham, after which he wrote these three notes:--
+
+
+NOTE I.
+
+TO THE MARCHIONESS OF GLENALVON.
+
+MY DEAR FRIEND AND MONITRESS,--I have left your last letter a month
+unanswered. I could not reply to your congratulations on the event of my
+attaining the age of twenty-one. That event is a conventional sham,
+and you know how I abhor shams and conventions. The truth is that I am
+either much younger than twenty-one or much older. As to all designs on
+my peace in standing for our county at the next election, I wished to
+defeat them, and I have done so; and now I have commenced a course of
+travel. I had intended on starting to confine it to my native country.
+Intentions are mutable. I am going abroad. You shall hear of my
+whereabout. I write this from the house of Leopold Travers, who, I
+understand from his fair daughter, is a connection of yours; a man to be
+highly esteemed and cordially liked.
+
+No, in spite of all your flattering predictions, I shall never be
+anything in this life more distinguished than what I am now. Lady
+Glenalvon allows me to sign myself her grateful friend,
+
+K. C.
+
+
+NOTE II.
+
+DEAR COUSIN MIVERS,--I am going abroad. I may want money; for, in order
+to rouse motive power within me, I mean to want money if I can. When I
+was a boy of sixteen you offered me money to write attacks upon veteran
+authors for "The Londoner." Will you give me money now for a similar
+display of that grand New Idea of our generation; namely, that the less
+a man knows of a subject the better he understands it? I am about to
+travel into countries which I have never seen, and among races I have
+never known. My arbitrary judgments on both will be invaluable to "The
+Londoner" from a Special Correspondent who shares your respect for the
+anonymous, and whose name is never to be divulged. Direct your answer by
+return to me, _poste restante_, Calais.
+
+Yours truly,
+
+K. C.
+
+
+NOTE III.
+
+MY DEAR FATHER,--I found your letter here, whence I depart to-morrow.
+Excuse haste. I go abroad, and shall write to you from Calais.
+
+I admire Leopold Travers very much. After all, how much of self-balance
+there is in a true English gentleman! Toss him up and down where you
+will, and he always alights on his feet,--a gentleman. He has one child,
+a daughter named Cecilia,--handsome enough to allure into wedlock any
+mortal whom Decimus Roach had not convinced that in celibacy lay the
+right "Approach to the Angels." Moreover, she is a girl whom one can
+talk with. Even you could talk with her. Travers wishes her to marry
+a very respectable, good-looking, promising gentleman, in every way
+"suitable," as they say. And if she does, she will rival that pink and
+perfection of polished womanhood, Lady Glenalvon. I send you back my
+portmanteau. I have pretty well exhausted my experience-money, but have
+not yet encroached on my monthly allowance. I mean still to live upon
+that, eking it out, if necessary, by the sweat of my brow or brains. But
+if any case requiring extra funds should occur,--a case in which that
+extra would do such real good to another that I feel _you_ would do
+it,--why, I must draw a check on your bankers. But understand that is
+your expense, not mine, and it is _you_ who are to be repaid in Heaven.
+Dear father, how I do love and honour you every day more and more!
+Promise you not to propose to any young lady till I come first to you
+for consent!--oh, my dear father, how could you doubt it? how doubt
+that I could not be happy with any wife whom you could not love as a
+daughter? Accept that promise as sacred. But I wish you had asked me
+something in which obedience was not much too facile to be a test of
+duty. I could not have obeyed you more cheerfully if you had asked me to
+promise never to propose to any young lady at all. Had you asked me to
+promise that I would renounce the dignity of reason for the frenzy of
+love, or the freedom of man for the servitude of husband, then I might
+have sought to achieve the impossible; but I should have died in the
+effort!--and thou wouldst have known that remorse which haunts the bed
+of the tyrant.
+
+Your affectionate son,
+
+K. C.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE next morning Kenelm surprised the party at breakfast by appearing
+in the coarse habiliments in which he had first made his host's
+acquaintance. He did not glance towards Cecilia when he announced his
+departure; but, his eye resting on Mrs. Campion, he smiled, perhaps a
+little sadly, at seeing her countenance brighten up and hearing her give
+a short sigh of relief. Travers tried hard to induce him to stay a few
+days longer, but Kenelm was firm. "The summer is wearing away," said he,
+"and I have far to go before the flowers fade and the snows fall. On the
+third night from this I shall sleep on foreign soil."
+
+"You are going abroad, then?" asked Mrs. Campion.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"A sudden resolution, Mr. Chillingly. The other day you talked of
+visiting the Scotch lakes."
+
+"True; but, on reflection, they will be crowded with holiday tourists,
+many of whom I shall probably know. Abroad I shall be free, for I shall
+be unknown."
+
+"I suppose you will be back for the hunting season," said Travers.
+
+"I think not. I do not hunt foxes."
+
+"Probably we shall at all events meet in London," said Travers. "I
+think, after long rustication, that a season or two in the bustling
+capital may be a salutary change for mind as well as for body; and it
+is time that Cecilia were presented and her court-dress specially
+commemorated in the columns of the 'Morning Post.'"
+
+Cecilia was seemingly too busied behind the tea-urn to heed this
+reference to her debut.
+
+"I shall miss you terribly," cried Travers, a few moments afterwards,
+and with a hearty emphasis. "I declare that you have quite unsettled me.
+Your quaint sayings will be ringing in my ears long after you are gone."
+
+There was a rustle as of a woman's dress in sudden change of movement
+behind the tea-urn.
+
+"Cissy," said Mrs. Campion, "are we ever to have our tea?"
+
+"I beg pardon," answered a voice behind the urn. "I hear Pompey" (the
+Skye terrier) "whining on the lawn. They have shut him out. I will be
+back presently."
+
+Cecilia rose and was gone. Mrs. Campion took her place at the tea-urn.
+
+"It is quite absurd of Cissy to be so fond of that hideous dog," said
+Travers, petulantly.
+
+"Its hideousness is its beauty," returned Mrs. Campion, laughing. "Mr.
+Belvoir selected it for her as having the longest back and the shortest
+legs of any dog he could find in Scotland."
+
+"Ah, George gave it to her; I forgot that," said Travers, laughing
+pleasantly.
+
+It was some minutes before Miss Travers returned with the Skye
+terrier, and she seemed to have recovered her spirits in regaining that
+ornamental accession to the party; talking very quickly and gayly, and
+with flushed cheeks, like a young person excited by her own overflow of
+mirth.
+
+But when, half an hour afterwards, Kenelm took leave of her and Mrs.
+Campion at the hall-door, the flush was gone, her lips were tightly
+compressed, and her parting words were not audible. Then, as his figure
+(side by side with her father, who accompanied his guest to the lodge)
+swiftly passed across the lawn and vanished amid the trees beyond, Mrs.
+Campion wound a mother-like arm around her waist and kissed her.
+Cecilia shivered and turned her face to her friend smiling; but such a
+smile,--one of those smiles that seem brimful of tears.
+
+"Thank you, dear," she said meekly; and, gliding away towards the
+flower-garden, lingered a while by the gate which Kenelm had opened
+the night before. Then she went with languid steps up the green slopes
+towards the ruined priory.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK IV.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IT is somewhat more than a year and a half since Kenelm Chillingly left
+England, and the scene now is in London, during that earlier and more
+sociable season which precedes the Easter holidays,--season in which
+the charm of intellectual companionship is not yet withered away in the
+heated atmosphere of crowded rooms,--season in which parties are small,
+and conversation extends beyond the interchange of commonplace with
+one's next neighbour at a dinner-table,--season in which you have a
+fair chance of finding your warmest friends not absorbed by the superior
+claims of their chilliest acquaintances.
+
+There was what is called a _conversazione_ at the house of one of those
+Whig noblemen who yet retain the graceful art of bringing agreeable
+people together, and collecting round them the true aristocracy, which
+combines letters and art and science with hereditary rank and political
+distinction,--that art which was the happy secret of the Lansdownes and
+Hollands of the last generation. Lord Beaumanoir was himself a genial,
+well-read man, a good judge of art, and a pleasant talker. He had a
+charming wife, devoted to him and to her children, but with enough love
+of general approbation to make herself as popular in the fashionable
+world as if she sought in its gayeties a refuge from the dulness of
+domestic life.
+
+Amongst the guests at the Beaumanoirs, this evening were two men, seated
+apart in a small room, and conversing familiarly. The one might be about
+fifty-four; he was tall, strongly built, but not corpulent, somewhat
+bald, with black eyebrows, dark eyes, bright and keen, mobile lips round
+which there played a shrewd and sometimes sarcastic smile.
+
+This gentleman, the Right Hon. Gerard Danvers, was a very influential
+member of Parliament. He had, when young for English public life,
+attained to high office; but--partly from a great distaste to the
+drudgery of administration; partly from a pride of temperament, which
+unfitted him for the subordination that a Cabinet owes to its chief;
+partly, also, from a not uncommon kind of epicurean philosophy, at once
+joyous and cynical, which sought the pleasures of life and held very
+cheap its honours--he had obstinately declined to re-enter office, and
+only spoke on rare occasions. On such occasions he carried great weight,
+and, by the brief expression of his opinions, commanded more votes than
+many an orator infinitely more eloquent. Despite his want of ambition,
+he was fond of power in his own way,--power over the people who _had_
+power; and, in the love of political intrigue, he found an amusement for
+an intellect very subtle and very active. At this moment he was bent on
+a new combination among the leaders of different sections in the same
+party, by which certain veterans were to retire, and certain younger men
+to be admitted into the Administration. It was an amiable feature in his
+character that he had a sympathy with the young, and had helped to
+bring into Parliament, as well as into office, some of the ablest of
+a generation later than his own. He gave them sensible counsel,
+was pleased when they succeeded, and encouraged them when they
+failed,--always provided that they had stuff enough in them to redeem
+the failure; if not, he gently dropped them from his intimacy, but
+maintained sufficiently familiar terms with them to be pretty sure that
+he could influence their votes whenever he so desired.
+
+The gentleman with whom he was now conversing was young, about
+five-and-twenty; not yet in Parliament, but with an intense desire to
+obtain a seat in it, and with one of those reputations which a youth
+carries away from school and college, justified, not by honours purely
+academical, but by an impression of ability and power created on the
+minds of his contemporaries and endorsed by his elders. He had done
+little at the University beyond taking a fair degree, except acquiring
+at the debating society the fame of an exceedingly ready and adroit
+speaker. On quitting college he had written one or two political
+articles in a quarterly review, which created a sensation; and though
+belonging to no profession, and having but a small yet independent
+income, society was very civil to him, as to a man who would some day or
+other attain a position in which he could damage his enemies and serve
+his friends. Something in this young man's countenance and bearing
+tended to favour the credit given to his ability and his promise. In his
+countenance there was no beauty; in his bearing no elegance. But in that
+countenance there was vigour, there was energy, there was audacity. A
+forehead wide but low, protuberant in those organs over the brow which
+indicate the qualities fitted for perception and judgment,--qualities
+for every-day life; eyes of the clear English blue, small, somewhat
+sunken, vigilant, sagacious, penetrating; a long straight upper
+lip, significant of resolute purpose; a mouth in which a student
+of physiognomy would have detected a dangerous charm. The smile
+was captivating, but it was artificial, surrounded by dimples, and
+displaying teeth white, small, strong, but divided from each other. The
+expression of that smile would have been frank and candid to all who
+failed to notice that it was not in harmony with the brooding forehead
+and the steely eye; that it seemed to stand distinct from the rest
+of the face, like a feature that had learned its part. There was that
+physical power in the back of the head which belongs to men who make
+their way in life,--combative and destructive. All gladiators have it;
+so have great debaters and great reformers,--that is, reformers who can
+destroy, but not necessarily reconstruct. So, too, in the bearing of the
+man there was a hardy self-confidence, much too simple and unaffected
+for his worst enemy to call it self-conceit. It was the bearing of one
+who knew how to maintain personal dignity without seeming to care about
+it. Never servile to the great, never arrogant to the little; so little
+over-refined that it was never vulgar,--a popular bearing.
+
+The room in which these gentlemen were seated was separated from the
+general suite of apartments by a lobby off the landing-place, and served
+for Lady Beaumanoir's boudoir. Very pretty it was, but simply furnished,
+with chintz draperies. The walls were adorned with drawings in
+water-colours, and precious specimens of china on fanciful Parian
+brackets. At one corner, by a window that looked southward and opened
+on a spacious balcony, glazed in and filled with flowers, stood one of
+those high trellised screens, first invented, I believe, in Vienna, and
+along which ivy is so trained as to form an arbour.
+
+The recess thus constructed, and which was completely out of sight from
+the rest of the room, was the hostess's favourite writing-nook. The two
+men I have described were seated near the screen, and had certainly no
+suspicion that any one could be behind it.
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Danvers, from an ottoman niched in another recess of the
+room, "I think there will be an opening at Saxboro' soon: Milroy wants a
+Colonial Government; and if we can reconstruct the Cabinet as I propose,
+he would get one. Saxboro' would thus be vacant. But, my dear fellow,
+Saxboro' is a place to be wooed through love, and only won through
+money. It demands liberalism from a candidate,--two kinds of liberalism
+seldom united; the liberalism in opinion which is natural enough to a
+very poor man, and the liberalism in expenditure which is scarcely to
+be obtained except from a very rich one. You may compute the cost of
+Saxboro' at L3000 to get in, and about L2000 more to defend your seat
+against a petition,--the defeated candidate nearly always petitions.
+L5000 is a large sum; and the worst of it is, that the extreme opinions
+to which the member for Saxboro' must pledge himself are a drawback to
+an official career. Violent politicians are not the best raw material
+out of which to manufacture fortunate placemen."
+
+"The opinions do not so much matter; the expense does. I cannot afford
+L5000, or even L3000."
+
+"Would not Sir Peter assist? He has, you say, only one son; and if
+anything happen to that son, you are the next heir."
+
+"My father quarrelled with Sir Peter, and harassed him by an imprudent
+and ungracious litigation. I scarcely think I could apply to him for
+money to obtain a seat in Parliament upon the democratic side of the
+question; for, though I know little of his politics, I take it for
+granted that a country gentleman of old family and L10,000 a year cannot
+well be a democrat."
+
+"Then I presume you would not be a democrat if, by the death of your
+cousin, you became heir to the Chillinglys."
+
+"I am not sure what I might be in that case. There are times when a
+democrat of ancient lineage and good estates could take a very high
+place amongst the aristocracy."
+
+"Humph! my dear Gordon, _vous irez loin_."
+
+"I hope to do so. Measuring myself against the men of my own day, I do
+not see many who should outstrip me."
+
+"What sort of a fellow is your cousin Kenelm? I met him once or twice
+when he was very young, and reading with Welby in London. People then
+said that he was very clever; he struck me as very odd."
+
+"I never saw him, but from all I hear, whether he be clever or whether
+he be odd, he is not likely to do anything in life,--a dreamer."
+
+"Writes poetry perhaps?"
+
+"Capable of it, I dare say."
+
+Just then some other guests came into the room, amongst them a lady
+of an appearance at once singularly distinguished and singularly
+prepossessing, rather above the common height, and with a certain
+indescribable nobility of air and presence. Lady Glenalvon was one of
+the queens of the London world, and no queen of that world was ever
+less worldly or more queen-like. Side by side with the lady was Mr.
+Chillingly Mivers. Gordon and Mivers interchanged friendly nods, and the
+former sauntered away and was soon lost amid a crowd of other young
+men, with whom, as he could converse well and lightly on things which
+interested them, he was rather a favourite, though he was not an
+intimate associate. Mr. Danvers retired into a corner of the adjoining
+lobby, where he favoured the French ambassador with his views on the
+state of Europe and the reconstruction of Cabinets in general.
+
+"But," said Lady Glenalvon to Chillingly Mivers, "are you quite sure
+that my old young friend Kenelm is here? Since you told me so, I have
+looked everywhere for him in vain. I should so much like to see him
+again."
+
+"I certainly caught a glimpse of him half an hour ago; but before I
+could escape from a geologist who was boring me about the Silurian
+system, Kenelm had vanished."
+
+"Perhaps it was his ghost!"
+
+"Well, we certainly live in the most credulous and superstitious age
+upon record; and so many people tell me that they converse with the
+dead under the table that it seems impertinent in me to say that I don't
+believe in ghosts."
+
+"Tell me some of those incomprehensible stories about table-rapping,"
+said Lady Glenalvon. "There is a charming, snug recess here behind the
+screen."
+
+Scarcely had she entered the recess when she drew back with a start and
+an exclamation of amaze. Seated at the table within the recess, his chin
+resting on his hand, and his face cast down in abstracted revery, was a
+young man. So still was his attitude, so calmly mournful the expression
+of his face, so estranged did he seem from all the motley but brilliant
+assemblage which circled around the solitude he had made for himself,
+that he might well have been deemed one of those visitants from another
+world whose secrets the intruder had wished to learn. Of that intruder's
+presence he was evidently unconscious. Recovering her surprise, she
+stole up to him, placed her hand on his shoulder, and uttered his name
+in a low gentle voice. At that sound Kenelm Chillingly looked up.
+
+"Do you not remember me?" asked Lady Glenalvon. Before he could answer,
+Mivers, who had followed the marchioness into the recess, interposed.
+
+"My dear Kenelm, how are you? When did you come to London? Why have you
+not called on me; and what on earth are you hiding yourself for?"
+
+Kenelm had now recovered the self-possession which he rarely lost long
+in the presence of others. He returned cordially his kinsman's greeting,
+and kissed with his wonted chivalrous grace the fair hand which the lady
+withdrew from his shoulder and extended to his pressure. "Remember you!"
+he said to Lady Glenalvon with the kindliest expression of his soft dark
+eyes; "I am not so far advanced towards the noon of life as to forget
+the sunshine that brightened its morning. My dear Mivers, your questions
+are easily answered. I arrived in England two weeks ago, stayed at
+Exmundham till this morning, to-day dined with Lord Thetford, whose
+acquaintance I made abroad, and was persuaded by him to come here and
+be introduced to his father and mother, the Beaumanoirs. After I had
+undergone that ceremony, the sight of so many strange faces frightened
+me into shyness. Entering this room at a moment when it was quite
+deserted, I resolved to turn hermit behind the screen."
+
+"Why, you must have seen your cousin Gordon as you came into the room."
+
+"But you forget I don't know him by sight. However, there was no one in
+the room when I entered; a little later some others came in, for I heard
+a faint buzz, like that of persons talking in a whisper. However, I was
+no eavesdropper, as a person behind a screen is on the dramatic stage."
+
+This was true. Even had Gordon and Danvers talked in a louder tone,
+Kenelm had been too absorbed in his own thoughts to have heard a word of
+their conversation.
+
+"You ought to know young Gordon; he is a very clever fellow, and has an
+ambition to enter Parliament. I hope no old family quarrel between his
+bear of a father and dear Sir Peter will make you object to meet him."
+
+"Sir Peter is the most forgiving of men, but he would scarcely forgive
+me if I declined to meet a cousin who had never offended him."
+
+"Well said. Come and meet Gordon at breakfast to-morrow,--ten o'clock. I
+am still in the old rooms."
+
+While the kinsmen thus conversed, Lady Glenalvon had seated herself on
+the couch beside Kenelm, and was quietly observing his countenance.
+Now she spoke. "My dear Mr. Mivers, you will have many opportunities of
+talking with Kenelm; do not grudge me five minutes' talk with him now."
+
+"I leave your ladyship alone in your hermitage. How all the men in this
+assembly will envy the hermit!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+"I AM glad to see you once more in the world," said Lady Glenalvon; "and
+I trust that you are now prepared to take that part in it which ought to
+be no mean one if you do justice to your talents and your nature."
+
+KENELM.--"When you go to the theatre, and see one of the pieces which
+appear now to be the fashion, which would you rather be,--an actor or a
+looker-on?"
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"My dear young friend, your question saddens me."
+(After a pause.)--"But though I used a stage metaphor when I expressed
+my hope that you would take no mean part in the world, the world is not
+really a theatre. Life admits of no lookers-on. Speak to me frankly, as
+you used to do. Your face retains its old melancholy expression. Are you
+not happy?"
+
+KENELM.--"Happy, as mortals go, I ought to be. I do not think I am
+unhappy. If my temper be melancholic, melancholy has a happiness of its
+own. Milton shows that there are as many charms in life to be found on
+the _Penseroso_ side of it as there are on the _Allegro_."
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"Kenelm, you saved the life of my poor son, and when,
+later, he was taken from me, I felt as if he had commended you to my
+care. When at the age of sixteen, with a boy's years and a man's heart,
+you came to London, did I not try to be to you almost as a mother? and
+did you not often tell me that you could confide to me the secrets of
+your heart more readily than to any other?"
+
+"You were to me," said Kenelm, with emotion, "that most precious and
+sustaining good genius which a youth can find at the threshold of
+life,--a woman gently wise, kindly sympathizing, shaming him by the
+spectacle of her own purity from all grosser errors, elevating him from
+mean tastes and objects by the exquisite, ineffable loftiness of soul
+which is only found in the noblest order of womanhood. Come, I will open
+my heart to you still. I fear it is more wayward than ever. It still
+feels estranged from the companionship and pursuits natural to my age
+and station. However, I have been seeking to brace and harden my nature,
+for the practical ends of life, by travel and adventure, chiefly among
+rougher varieties of mankind than we meet in drawing-rooms. Now, in
+compliance with the duty I owe to my dear father's wishes, I come back
+to these circles, which under your auspices I entered in boyhood, and
+which even then seemed to me so inane and artificial. Take a part in the
+world of these circles; such is your wish. My answer is brief. I have
+been doing my best to acquire a motive power, and have not succeeded. I
+see nothing that I care to strive for, nothing that I care to gain. The
+very times in which we live are to me, as to Hamlet, out of joint; and
+I am not born like Hamlet to set them right. Ah! if I could look on
+society through the spectacles with which the poor hidalgo in 'Gil Blas'
+looked on his meagre board,--spectacles by which cherries appear the
+size of peaches, and tomtits as large as turkeys! The imagination which
+is necessary to ambition is a great magnifier."
+
+"I have known more than one man, now very eminent, very active, who
+at your age felt the same estrangement from the practical pursuits of
+others."
+
+"And what reconciled those men to such pursuits?"
+
+"That diminished sense of individual personality, that unconscious
+fusion of one's own being into other existences, which belong to home
+and marriage."
+
+"I don't object to home, but I do to marriage."
+
+"Depend on it there is no home for man where there is no woman."
+
+"Prettily said. In that case I resign the home."
+
+"Do you mean seriously to tell me that you never see the woman you could
+love enough to make her your wife, and never enter any home that you do
+not quit with a touch of envy at the happiness of married life?"
+
+"Seriously, I never see such a woman; seriously, I never enter such a
+home."
+
+"Patience, then; your time will come, and I hope it is at hand. Listen
+to me. It was only yesterday that I felt an indescribable longing to
+see you again,--to know your address that I might write to you; for
+yesterday, when a certain young lady left my house after a week's visit,
+I said this girl would make a perfect wife, and, above all, the exact
+wife to suit Kenelm Chillingly."
+
+"Kenelm Chillingly is very glad to hear that this young lady has left
+your house."
+
+"But she has not left London: she is here to-night. She only stayed
+with me till her father came to town, and the house he had taken for the
+season was vacant; those events happened yesterday."
+
+"Fortunate events for me: they permit me to call on you without danger."
+
+"Have you no curiosity to know, at least, who and what is the young lady
+who appears to me so well suited to you?"
+
+"No curiosity, but a vague sensation of alarm."
+
+"Well, I cannot talk pleasantly with you while you are in this
+irritating mood, and it is time to quit the hermitage. Come, there are
+many persons here, with some of whom you should renew old acquaintance,
+and to some of whom I should like to make you known."
+
+"I am prepared to follow Lady Glenalvon wherever she deigns to lead
+me,--except to the altar with another."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE rooms were now full,--not overcrowded, but full,--and it was rarely
+even in that house that so many distinguished persons were collected
+together. A young man thus honoured by so _grande_ a dame as Lady
+Glenalvon could not but be cordially welcomed by all to whom she
+presented him, Ministers and Parliamentary leaders, ball-givers, and
+beauties in vogue,--even authors and artists; and there was something in
+Kenelm Chillingly, in his striking countenance and figure, in that calm
+ease of manner natural to his indifference to effect, which seemed to
+justify the favour shown to him by the brilliant princess of fashion and
+mark him out for general observation.
+
+That first evening of his reintroduction to the polite world was
+a success which few young men of his years achieve. He produced a
+sensation. Just as the rooms were thinning, Lady Glenalvon whispered to
+Kenelm,--
+
+"Come this way: there is one person I must reintroduce you to; thank me
+for it hereafter."
+
+Kenelm followed the marchioness, and found himself face to face with
+Cecilia Travers. She was leaning on her father's arm, looking very
+handsome, and her beauty was heightened by the blush which overspread
+her cheeks as Kenelm Chillingly approached.
+
+Travers greeted him with great cordiality; and Lady Glenalvon asking him
+to escort her to the refreshment-room, Kenelm had no option but to offer
+his arm to Cecilia.
+
+Kenelm felt somewhat embarrassed. "Have you been long in town, Miss
+Travers?"
+
+"A little more than a week, but we only settled into our house
+yesterday."
+
+"Ah, indeed! were you then the young lady who--" He stopped short, and
+his face grew gentler and graver in its expression.
+
+"The young lady who--what?" asked Cecilia with a smile.
+
+"Who has been staying with Lady Glenalvon?"
+
+"Yes; did she tell you?"
+
+"She did not mention your name, but praised that young lady so justly
+that I ought to have guessed it."
+
+Cecilia made some not very audible answer, and on entering the
+refreshment-room other young men gathered round her, and Lady Glenalvon
+and Kenelm remained silent in the midst of a general small-talk. When
+Travers, after giving his address to Kenelm, and, of course, pressing
+him to call, left the house with Cecilia, Kenelm said to Lady Glenalvon,
+musingly, "So that is the young lady in whom I was to see my fate: you
+knew that we had met before?"
+
+"Yes, she told me when and where. Besides, it is not two years since you
+wrote to me from her father's house. Do you forget?"
+
+"Ah," said Kenelm, so abstractedly that he seemed to be dreaming, "no
+man with his eyes open rushes on his fate: when he does so his sight is
+gone. Love is blind. They say the blind are very happy, yet I never met
+a blind man who would not recover his sight if he could."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Mr. CHILLINGLY MIVERS never gave a dinner at his own rooms. When he
+did give a dinner it was at Greenwich or Richmond. But he gave
+breakfast-parties pretty often, and they were considered pleasant.
+He had handsome bachelor apartments in Grosvenor Street, daintily
+furnished, with a prevalent air of exquisite neatness, a good library
+stored with books of reference, and adorned with presentation copies
+from authors of the day, very beautifully bound. Though the room served
+for the study of the professed man of letters, it had none of the untidy
+litter which generally characterizes the study of one whose vocation it
+is to deal with books and papers. Even the implements for writing
+were not apparent, except when required. They lay concealed in a vast
+cylinder bureau, French made, and French polished. Within that bureau
+were numerous pigeon-holes and secret drawers, and a profound well with
+a separate patent lock. In the well were deposited the articles intended
+for publication in "The Londoner," proof-sheets, etc.; pigeon-holes
+were devoted to ordinary correspondence; secret drawers to confidential
+notes, and outlines of biographies of eminent men now living, but
+intended to be completed for publication the day after their death.
+
+No man wrote such funeral compositions with a livelier pen than that
+of Chillingly Mivers; and the large and miscellaneous circle of
+his visiting acquaintances allowed him to ascertain, whether by
+authoritative report or by personal observation, the signs of mortal
+disease in the illustrious friends whose dinners he accepted, and whose
+failing pulses he instinctively felt in returning the pressure of their
+hands; so that he was often able to put the finishing-stroke to their
+obituary memorials days, weeks, even months, before their fate took the
+public by surprise. That cylinder bureau was in harmony with the secrecy
+in which this remarkable man shrouded the productions of his brain. In
+his literary life Mivers had no "I," there he was ever the inscrutable,
+mysterious "We." He was only "I" when you met him in the world, and
+called him Mivers.
+
+Adjoining the library on one side was a small dining or rather breakfast
+room, hung with valuable pictures,--presents from living painters.
+Many of these painters had been severely handled by Mr. Mivers in his
+existence as "We,"--not always in "The Londoner." His most pungent
+criticisms were often contributed to other intellectual journals
+conducted by members of the same intellectual clique. Painters knew not
+how contemptuously "We" had treated them when they met Mr. Mivers.
+His "I" was so complimentary that they sent him a tribute of their
+gratitude.
+
+On the other side was his drawing-room, also enriched by many gifts,
+chiefly from fair hands,--embroidered cushions and table-covers, bits
+of Sevres or old Chelsea, elegant knick-knacks of all kinds. Fashionable
+authoresses paid great court to Mr. Mivers; and in the course of his
+life as a single man, he had other female adorers besides fashionable
+authoresses.
+
+Mr. Mivers had already returned from his early constitutional walk
+in the Park, and was now seated by the cylinder _secretaire_ with a
+mild-looking man, who was one of the most merciless contributors to "The
+Londoner" and no unimportant councillor in the oligarchy of the clique
+that went by the name of the "Intellectuals."
+
+"Well," said Mivers, languidly, "I can't even get through the book;
+it is as dull as the country in November. But, as you justly say,
+the writer is an 'Intellectual,' and a clique would be anything
+but intellectual if it did not support its members. Review the book
+yourself; mind and make the dulness of it the signal proof of its merit.
+Say: 'To the ordinary class of readers this exquisite work may appear
+less brilliant than the flippant smartness of'--any other author you
+like to name; 'but to the well educated and intelligent every line is
+pregnant with,' etc. By the way, when we come by and by to review the
+exhibition at Burlington House, there is one painter whom we must try
+our best to crush. I have not seen his pictures myself, but he is a new
+man; and our friend, who has seen him, is terribly jealous of him, and
+says that if the good judges do not put him down at once, the villanous
+taste of the public will set him up as a prodigy. A low-lived fellow
+too, I hear. There is the name of the man and the subject of the
+pictures. See to it when the time comes. Meanwhile, prepare the way for
+onslaught on the pictures by occasional sneers at the painter." Here
+Mr. Mivers took out of his cylinder a confidential note from the jealous
+rival and handed it to his mild-looking _confrere_; then rising, he
+said, "I fear we must suspend our business till to-morrow; I expect two
+young cousins to breakfast."
+
+As soon as the mild-looking man was gone, Mr. Mivers sauntered to his
+drawing-room window, amiably offering a lump of sugar to a canary-bird
+sent to him as a present the day before, and who, in the gilded cage
+which made part of the present, scanned him suspiciously and refused the
+sugar.
+
+Time had remained very gentle in its dealings with Chillingly Mivers.
+He scarcely looked a day older than when he was first presented to the
+reader on the birth of his kinsman Kenelm. He was reaping the fruit of
+his own sage maxims. Free from whiskers and safe in wig, there was no
+sign of gray, no suspicion of dye. Superiority to passion, abnegation of
+sorrow, indulgence of amusement, avoidance of excess, had kept away the
+crow's-feet, preserved the elasticity of his frame and the unflushed
+clearness of his gentlemanlike complexion. The door opened, and a
+well-dressed valet, who had lived long enough with Mivers to grow very
+much like him, announced Mr. Chillingly Gordon.
+
+"Good morning," said Mivers; "I was much pleased to see you talking so
+long and so familiarly with Danvers: others, of course, observed it, and
+it added a step to your career. It does you great good to be seen in a
+drawing-room talking apart with a Somebody. But may I ask if the talk
+itself was satisfactory?"
+
+"Not at all: Danvers throws cold water on the notion of Saxboro', and
+does not even hint that his party will help me to any other opening.
+Party has few openings at its disposal nowadays for any young man. The
+schoolmaster being abroad has swept away the school for statesmen as
+he has swept away the school for actors,--an evil, and an evil of a far
+greater consequence to the destinies of the nation than any good likely
+to be got from the system that succeeded it."
+
+"But it is of no use railing against things that can't be helped. If I
+were you, I would postpone all ambition of Parliament and read for the
+bar."
+
+"The advice is sound, but too unpalatable to be taken. I am resolved to
+find a seat in the House, and where there is a will there is a way."
+
+"I am not so sure of that."
+
+"But I am."
+
+"Judging by what your contemporaries at the University tell me of your
+speeches at the Debating Society, you were not then an ultra-Radical.
+But it is only an ultra-Radical who has a chance of success at
+Saxboro'."
+
+"I am no fanatic in politics. There is much to be said on all sides:
+_coeteris paribus_, I prefer the winning side to the losing; nothing
+succeeds like success."
+
+"Ay, but in politics there is always reaction. The winning side one day
+may be the losing side another. The losing side represents a minority,
+and a minority is sure to comprise more intellect than a majority: in
+the long run intellect will force its way, get a majority and then lose
+it, because with a majority it will become stupid."
+
+"Cousin Mivers, does not the history of the world show you that a single
+individual can upset all theories as to the comparative wisdom of the
+few or the many? Take the wisest few you can find, and one man of genius
+not a tithe so wise crushes them into powder. But then that man of
+genius, though he despises the many, must make use of them. That
+done, he rules them. Don't you see how in free countries political
+destinations resolve themselves into individual impersonations? At
+a general election it is one name around which electors rally. The
+candidate may enlarge as much as he pleases on political principles, but
+all his talk will not win him votes enough for success, unless he says,
+'I go with Mr. A.,' the minister, or with Mr. Z., the chief of the
+opposition. It was not the Tories who beat the Whigs when Mr. Pitt
+dissolved Parliament. It was Mr. Pitt who beat Mr. Fox, with whom in
+general political principle--slave-trade, Roman Catholic emancipation,
+Parliamentary reform--he certainly agreed much more than he did with any
+man in his own cabinet."
+
+"Take care, my young cousin," cried Mivers, in accents of alarm; "don't
+set up for a man of genius. Genius is the worst quality a public man can
+have nowadays: nobody heeds it, and everybody is jealous of it."
+
+"Pardon me, you mistake; my remark was purely objective, and intended
+as a reply to your argument. I prefer at present to go with the many
+because it is the winning side. If we then want a man of genius to keep
+it the winning side, by subjugating its partisans to his will, he will
+be sure to come. The few will drive him to us, for the few are always
+the enemies of the one man of genius. It is they who distrust,--it is
+they who are jealous,--not the many. You have allowed your judgment,
+usually so clear, to be somewhat dimmed by your experience as a critic.
+The critics are the few. They have infinitely more culture than the
+many. But when a man of real genius appears and asserts himself, the
+critics are seldom such fair judges of him as the many are. If he be not
+one of their oligarchical clique, they either abuse, or disparage, or
+affect to ignore him; though a time at last comes when, having gained
+the many, the critics acknowledge him. But the difference between the
+man of action and the author is this, that the author rarely finds this
+acknowledgment till he is dead, and it is necessary to the man of action
+to enforce it while he is alive. But enough of this speculation: you ask
+me to meet Kenelm; is he not coming?"
+
+"Yes, but I did not ask him till ten o'clock. I asked you at half-past
+nine, because I wished to hear about Danvers and Saxboro', and also to
+prepare you somewhat for your introduction to your cousin. I must be
+brief as to the last, for it is only five minutes to the hour, and he
+is a man likely to be punctual. Kenelm is in all ways your opposite. I
+don't know whether he is cleverer or less clever; there is no scale of
+measurement between you: but he is wholly void of ambition, and might
+possibly assist yours. He can do what he likes with Sir Peter;
+and considering how your poor father--a worthy man, but
+cantankerous--harassed and persecuted Sir Peter, because Kenelm came
+between the estate and you, it is probable that Sir Peter bears you a
+grudge, though Kenelm declares him incapable of it; and it would be
+well if you could annul that grudge in the father by conciliating the
+goodwill of the son."
+
+"I should be glad so to annul it; but what is Kenelm's weak side?--the
+turf? the hunting-field? women? poetry? One can only conciliate a man by
+getting on his weak side."
+
+"Hist! I see him from the windows. Kenelm's weak side was, when I knew
+him some years ago, and I rather fancy it still is--"
+
+"Well, make haste! I hear his ring at your door-bell."
+
+"A passionate longing to find ideal truth in real life."
+
+"Ah!" said Gordon, "as I thought,--a mere dreamer"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+KENELM entered the room. The young cousins were introduced, shook hands,
+receded a step, and gazed at each other. It is scarcely possible
+to conceive a greater contrast outwardly than that between the two
+Chillingly representatives of the rising generation. Each was silently
+impressed by the sense of that contrast. Each felt that the contrast
+implied antagonism, and that if they two met in the same arena it must
+be as rival combatants; still, by some mysterious intuition, each felt a
+certain respect for the other, each divined in the other a power that
+he could not fairly estimate, but against which his own power would
+be strongly tasked to contend. So might exchange looks a thorough-bred
+deer-hound and a half-bred mastiff: the bystander could scarcely doubt
+which was the nobler animal; but he might hesitate which to bet on, if
+the two came to deadly quarrel. Meanwhile the thorough-bred deer-hound
+and the half-bred mastiff sniffed at each other in polite salutation.
+Gordon was the first to give tongue.
+
+"I have long wished to know you personally," said he, throwing into his
+voice and manner that delicate kind of deference which a well-born cadet
+owes to the destined head of his house. "I cannot conceive how I missed
+you last night at Lady Beaumanoir's, where Mivers tells me he met you;
+but I left early."
+
+Here Mivers led the way to the breakfast-room, and, there seated, the
+host became the principal talker, running with lively glibness over the
+principal topics of the day,--the last scandal, the last new book, the
+reform of the army, the reform of the turf, the critical state of Spain,
+and the debut of an Italian singer. He seemed an embodied Journal,
+including the Leading Article, the Law Reports, Foreign Intelligence,
+the Court Circular, down to the Births, Deaths, and Marriages. Gordon
+from time to time interrupted this flow of soul with brief, trenchant
+remarks, which evinced his own knowledge of the subjects treated, and
+a habit of looking on all subjects connected with the pursuits and
+business of mankind from a high ground appropriated to himself, and
+through the medium of that blue glass which conveys a wintry aspect to
+summer landscapes. Kenelm said little, but listened attentively.
+
+The conversation arrested its discursive nature, to settle upon a
+political chief, the highest in fame and station of that party to which
+Mivers professed--not to belong, he belonged to himself alone, but to
+appropinquate. Mivers spoke of this chief with the greatest distrust,
+and in a spirit of general depreciation. Gordon acquiesced in the
+distrust and the depreciation, adding, "But he is master of the
+position, and must, of course, be supported through thick and thin for
+the present."
+
+"Yes, for the present," said Mivers, "one has no option. But you will
+see some clever articles in 'The Londoner' towards the close of the
+session, which will damage him greatly, by praising him in the wrong
+place, and deepening the alarm of important followers,--an alarm now at
+work, though suppressed."
+
+Here Kenelm asked, in humble tones, why Gordon thought that a minister
+he considered so untrustworthy and dangerous must for the present be
+supported through thick and thin.
+
+"Because at present a member elected so to support him would lose his
+seat if he did not: needs must when the devil drives."
+
+KENELM.--"When the devil drives, I should have thought it better to
+resign one's seat on the coach; perhaps one might be of some use, out of
+it, in helping to put on the drag."
+
+MIVERS.--"Cleverly said, Kenelm. But, metaphor apart, Gordon is right.
+A young politician must go with his party; a veteran journalist like
+myself is more independent. So long as the journalist blames everybody,
+he will have plenty of readers."
+
+Kenelm made no reply, and Gordon changed the conversation from men
+to measures. He spoke of some Bills before Parliament with remarkable
+ability, evincing much knowledge of the subject, much critical
+acuteness, illustrating their defects, and proving the danger of their
+ultimate consequences.
+
+Kenelm was greatly struck with the vigour of this cold, clear mind, and
+owned to himself that the House of Commons was a fitting place for its
+development.
+
+"But," said Mivers, "would you not be obliged to defend these Bills if
+you were member for Saxboro'?"
+
+"Before I answer your question, answer me this: dangerous as the Bills
+are, is it not necessary that they shall pass? Have not the public so
+resolved?"
+
+"There can be no doubt of that."
+
+"Then the member for Saxboro' cannot be strong enough to go against the
+public."
+
+"Progress of the age!" said Kenelm, musingly. "Do you think the class of
+gentlemen will long last in England?"
+
+"What do you call gentlemen? The aristocracy by birth?--the
+_gentilshommes_?"
+
+"Nay, I suppose no laws can take away a man's ancestors, and a class of
+well-born men is not to be exterminated. But a mere class of well-born
+men--without duties, responsibilities, or sentiment of that which
+becomes good birth in devotion to country or individual honour--does no
+good to a nation. It is a misfortune which statesmen of democratic creed
+ought to recognize, that the class of the well-born cannot be destroyed:
+it must remain as it remained in Rome and remains in France, after all
+efforts to extirpate it, as the most dangerous class of citizens when
+you deprive it of the attributes which made it the most serviceable.
+I am not speaking of that class; I speak of that unclassified order
+peculiar to England, which, no doubt, forming itself originally from
+the ideal standard of honour and truth supposed to be maintained by the
+_gentilshommes_, or well-born, no longer requires pedigrees and acres to
+confer upon its members the designation of gentleman; and when I hear
+a 'gentleman' say that he has no option but to think one thing and say
+another, at whatever risk to his country, I feel as if in the progress
+of the age the class of gentleman was about to be superseded by some
+finer development of species."
+
+Therewith Kenelm rose, and would have taken his departure, if Gordon had
+not seized his hand and detained him.
+
+"My dear cousin, if I may so call you," he said, with the frank manner
+which was usual to him, and which suited well the bold expression of his
+face and the clear ring of his voice, "I am one of those who, from an
+over-dislike to sentimentality and cant, often make those not intimately
+acquainted with them think worse of their principles than they deserve.
+It may be quite true that a man who goes with his party dislikes the
+measures he feels bound to support, and says so openly when among
+friends and relations, yet that man is not therefore devoid of loyalty
+and honour; and I trust, when you know me better, you will not think it
+likely I should derogate from that class of gentlemen to which we both
+belong."
+
+"Pardon me if I seemed rude," answered Kenelm; "ascribe it to my
+ignorance of the necessities of public life. It struck me that where a
+politician thought a thing evil, he ought not to support it as good. But
+I dare say I am mistaken."
+
+"Entirely mistaken," said Mivers, "and for this reason: in politics
+formerly there was a direct choice between good and evil. That rarely
+exists now. Men of high education, having to choose whether to accept or
+reject a measure forced upon their option by constituent bodies of very
+low education, are called upon to weigh evil against evil,--the evil of
+accepting or the evil of rejecting; and if they resolve on the first, it
+is as the lesser evil of the two."
+
+"Your definition is perfect," said Gordon, "and I am contented to rest
+on it my excuse for what my cousin deems insincerity."
+
+"I suppose that is real life," said Kenelm, with his mournful smile.
+
+"Of course it is," said Mivers.
+
+"Every day I live," sighed Kenelm, "still more confirms my conviction
+that real life is a phantasmal sham. How absurd it is in philosophers to
+deny the existence of apparitions! what apparitions we, living men, must
+seem to the ghosts!
+
+
+ "'The spirits of the wise
+ Sit in the clouds and mock us.'"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+CHILLINGLY GORDON did not fail to confirm his acquaintance with Kenelm.
+He very often looked in upon him of a morning, sometimes joined him
+in his afternoon rides, introduced him to men of his own set who were
+mostly busy members of Parliament, rising barristers, or political
+journalists, but not without a proportion of brilliant idlers,--club
+men, sporting men, men of fashion, rank, and fortune. He did so with a
+purpose, for these persons spoke well of him,--spoke well not only
+of his talents, but of his honourable character. His general nickname
+amongst them was "HONEST GORDON." Kenelm at first thought this sobriquet
+must be ironical; not a bit of it. It was given to him on account of
+the candour and boldness with which he expressed opinions embodying that
+sort of cynicism which is vulgarly called "the absence of humbug." The
+man was certainly no hypocrite; he affected no beliefs which he did not
+entertain. And he had very few beliefs in anything, except the first
+half of the adage, "Every man for himself,--and God for us all."
+
+But whatever Chillingly Gordon's theoretical disbeliefs in things which
+make the current creed of the virtuous, there was nothing in his conduct
+which evinced predilection for vices: he was strictly upright in all
+his dealings, and in delicate matters of honour was a favourite umpire
+amongst his coevals. Though so frankly ambitious, no one could accuse
+him of attempting to climb on the shoulders of patrons. There was
+nothing servile in his nature; and, though he was perfectly prepared to
+bribe electors if necessary, no money could have bought himself. His one
+master-passion was the desire of power. He sneered at patriotism as a
+worn-out prejudice, at philanthropy as a sentimental catch-word. He did
+not want to serve his country, but to rule it. He did not want to
+raise mankind, but to rise himself. He was therefore unscrupulous,
+unprincipled, as hungerers after power for itself too often are; yet
+still if he got power he would probably use it well, from the clearness
+and strength of his mental perceptions. The impression he made on Kenelm
+may be seen in the following letter:--
+
+
+TO SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, BART., ETC.
+
+MY DEAR FATHER,--You and my dear mother will be pleased to hear that
+London continues very polite to me: that "arida nutrix leonum" enrolls
+me among the pet class of lions which ladies of fashion admit into the
+society of their lapdogs. It is somewhere about six years since I was
+allowed to gaze on this peep-show through the loopholes of Mr. Welby's
+retreat. It appears to me, perhaps erroneously, that even within that
+short space of time the tone of "society" is perceptibly changed. That
+the change is for the better is an assertion I leave to those who belong
+to the _progressista_ party.
+
+I don't think nearly so many young ladies six years ago painted their
+eyelids and dyed their hair: a few of them there might be, imitators of
+the slang invented by schoolboys and circulated through the medium of
+small novelists; they might use such expressions as "stunning," "cheek,"
+"awfully jolly," etc. But now I find a great many who have advanced to
+a slang beyond that of verbal expressions,--a slang of mind, a slang
+of sentiment, a slang in which very little seems left of the woman and
+nothing at all of the lady.
+
+Newspaper essayists assert that the young men of the day are to blame
+for this; that the young men like it; and the fair husband-anglers dress
+their flies in the colours most likely to attract a nibble. Whether this
+excuse be the true one I cannot pretend to judge; but it strikes me that
+the men about my own age who affect to be fast are a more languid race
+than the men from ten to twenty years older, whom they regard as _slow_.
+The habit of dram-drinking in the morning is a very new idea, an idea
+greatly in fashion at the moment. Adonis calls for a "pick-me-up" before
+he has strength enough to answer a _billet-doux_ from Venus. Adonis
+has not the strength to get nobly drunk, but his delicate constitution
+requires stimulants, and he is always tippling.
+
+The men of high birth or renown for social success belonging, my
+dear father, to your time, are still distinguished by an air of good
+breeding, by a style of conversation more or less polished and not
+without evidences of literary culture, from men of the same rank in
+my generation, who appear to pride themselves on respecting nobody and
+knowing nothing, not even grammar. Still we are assured that the world
+goes on steadily improving. _That_ new idea is in full vigour.
+
+Society in the concrete has become wonderfully conceited as to its
+own progressive excellences, and the individuals who form the concrete
+entertain the same complacent opinion of themselves. There are, of
+course, even in my brief and imperfect experience, many exceptions to
+what appear to me the prevalent characteristics of the rising generation
+in "society." Of these exceptions I must content myself with naming the
+most remarkable. _Place aux dames_, the first I name is Cecilia Travers.
+She and her father are now in town, and I meet them frequently. I
+can conceive no civilized era in the world which a woman like Cecilia
+Travers would not grace and adorn, because she is essentially the type
+of woman as man likes to imagine woman; namely, on the fairest side of
+the womanly character. And I say "woman" rather than "girl," because
+among "Girls of the Period" Cecilia Travers cannot be classed. You might
+call her damsel, virgin, maiden, but you could no more call her girl
+than you could call a well-born French demoiselle _fille_. She is
+handsome enough to please the eye of any man, however fastidious, but
+not that kind of beauty which dazzles all men too much to fascinate one
+man; for--speaking, thank Heaven, from mere theory--I apprehend that the
+love for woman has in it a strong sense of property; that one requires
+to individualize one's possession as being wholly one's own, and not
+a possession which all the public are invited to admire. I can readily
+understand how a rich man, who has what is called a show place, in which
+the splendid rooms and the stately gardens are open to all inspectors,
+so that he has no privacy in his own demesnes, runs away to a pretty
+cottage which he has all to himself, and of which he can say, "_This_ is
+home; _this_ is all mine."
+
+But there are some kinds of beauty which are eminently show
+places,--which the public think they have as much a right to admire as
+the owner has; and the show place itself would be dull and perhaps fall
+out of repair, if the public could be excluded from the sight of it.
+
+The beauty of Cecilia Travers is not that of a show place. There is a
+feeling of safety in her. If Desdemona had been like her, Othello would
+not have been jealous. But then Cecilia would not have deceived her
+father; nor I think have told a blackamoor that she wished "Heaven
+had made her such a man." Her mind harmonizes with her person: it is
+a companionable mind. Her talents are not showy, but, take them
+altogether, they form a pleasant whole: she has good sense enough in
+the practical affairs of life, and enough of that ineffable womanly gift
+called tact to counteract the effects of whimsical natures like mine,
+and yet enough sense of the humouristic views of life not to take too
+literally all that a whimsical man like myself may say. As to temper,
+one never knows what a woman's temper is--till one puts her out of it.
+But I imagine hers, in its normal state, to be serene, and disposed to
+be cheerful. Now, my dear father, if you were not one of the cleverest
+of men you would infer from this eulogistic mention of Cecilia Travers
+that I was in love with her. But you no doubt will detect the truth that
+a man in love with a woman does not weigh her merits with so steady a
+hand as that which guides this steel pen. I am not in love with Cecilia
+Travers. I wish I were. When Lady Glenalvon, who remains wonderfully
+kind to me, says, day after day, "Cecilia Travers would make you a
+perfect wife," I have no answer to give; but I don't feel the least
+inclined to ask Cecilia Travers if she would waste her perfection on one
+who so coldly concedes it.
+
+I find that she persisted in rejecting the man whom her father wished
+her to marry, and that he has consoled himself by marrying somebody
+else. No doubt other suitors as worthy will soon present themselves.
+
+Oh, dearest of all my friends,--sole friend whom I regard as a
+confidant,--shall I ever be in love? and if not, why not? Sometimes
+I feel as if, with love as with ambition, it is because I have some
+impossible ideal in each, that I must always remain indifferent to the
+sort of love and the sort of ambition which are within my reach. I have
+an idea that if I did love, I should love as intensely as Romeo, and
+that thought inspires me with vague forebodings of terror; and if I
+did find an object to arouse my ambition, I could be as earnest in its
+pursuit as--whom shall I name?--Caesar or Cato? I like Cato's
+ambition the better of the two. But people nowadays call ambition an
+impracticable crotchet, if it be invested on the losing side. Cato would
+have saved Rome from the mob and the dictator; but Rome could not be
+saved, and Cato falls on his own sword. Had we a Cato now, the verdict
+at a coroner's inquest would be, "suicide while in a state of unsound
+mind;" and the verdict would have been proved by his senseless
+resistance to a mob and a dictator! Talking of ambition, I come to the
+other exception to the youth of the day; I have named a _demoiselle_, I
+now name a _damoiseau_. Imagine a man of about five-and-twenty, and who
+is morally about fifty years older than a healthy man of sixty,--imagine
+him with the brain of age and the flower of youth; with a heart absorbed
+into the brain, and giving warm blood to frigid ideas: a man who sneers
+at everything I call lofty, yet would do nothing that he thinks mean; to
+whom vice and virtue are as indifferent as they were to the Aesthetics
+of Goethe; who would never jeopardize his career as a practical reasoner
+by an imprudent virtue, and never sully his reputation by a degrading
+vice. Imagine this man with an intellect keen, strong, ready,
+unscrupulous, dauntless,--all cleverness and no genius. Imagine this
+man, and then do not be astonished when I tell you he is a Chillingly.
+
+The Chillingly race culminates in him, and becomes Chillinglyest. In
+fact, it seems to me that we live in a day precisely suited to the
+Chillingly idiosyncrasies. During the ten centuries or more that our
+race has held local habitation and a name, it has been as airy nothings.
+Its representatives lived in hot-blooded times, and were compelled to
+skulk in still water with their emblematic daces. But the times now, my
+dear father, are so cold-blooded that you can't be too cold-blooded to
+prosper. What could Chillingly Mivers have been in an age when people
+cared twopence-halfpenny about their religious creeds, and their
+political parties deemed their cause was sacred and their leaders were
+heroes? Chillingly Mivers would not have found five subscribers to
+"The Londoner." But now "The Londoner" is the favourite organ of the
+intellectual public; it sneers away all the foundations of the social
+system, without an attempt at reconstruction; and every new journal set
+up, if it keep its head above water, models itself on "The Londoner."
+Chillingly Mivers is a great man, and the most potent writer of the age,
+though nobody knows what he has written. Chillingly Gordon is a still
+more notable instance of the rise of the Chillingly worth in the modern
+market.
+
+There is a general impression in the most authoritative circles that
+Chillingly Gordon will have high rank in the van of the coming men. His
+confidence in himself is so thorough that it infects all with whom he
+comes into contact,--myself included.
+
+He said to me the other day, with a _sang-froid_ worthy of the iciest
+Chillingly, "I mean to be Prime Minister of England: it is only a
+question of time." Now, if Chillingly Gordon is to be Prime Minister, it
+will be because the increasing cold of our moral and social atmosphere
+will exactly suit the development of his talents.
+
+He is the man above all others to argue down the declaimers of
+old-fashioned sentimentalities,--love of country, care for its position
+among nations, zeal for its honour, pride in its renown. (Oh, if
+you could hear him philosophically and logically sneer away the word
+"prestige"!) Such notions are fast being classified as "bosh." And
+when that classification is complete,--when England has no colonies to
+defend, no navy to pay for, no interest in the affairs of other nations,
+and has attained to the happy condition of Holland,--then Chillingly
+Gordon will be her Prime Minister.
+
+Yet while, if ever I am stung into political action, it will be by
+abnegation of the Chillingly attributes, and in opposition, however
+hopeless, to Chillingly Gordon, I feel that this man cannot be
+suppressed, and ought to have fair play; his ambition will be infinitely
+more dangerous if it become soured by delay. I propose, my dear father,
+that you should have the honour of laying this clever kinsman under
+an obligation, and enabling him to enter Parliament. In our last
+conversation at Exmundham, you told me of the frank resentment of Gordon
+_pere_, when my coming into the world shut him out from the Exmundham
+inheritance; you confided to me your intention at that time to lay
+by yearly a sum that might ultimately serve as a provision for Gordon
+_fils_, and as some compensation for the loss of his expectations when
+you realized your hope of an heir; you told me also how this generous
+intention on your part had been frustrated by a natural indignation at
+the elder Gordon's conduct in his harassing and costly litigation, and
+by the addition you had been tempted to make to the estate in a purchase
+which added to its acreage, but at a rate of interest which diminished
+your own income, and precluded the possibility of further savings. Now,
+chancing to meet your lawyer, Mr. Vining, the other day, I learned from
+him that it had been long a wish which your delicacy prevented your
+naming to me, that I, to whom the fee-simple descends, should join with
+you in cutting off the entail and resettling the estate. He showed me
+what an advantage this would be to the property, because it would leave
+your hands free for many improvements in which I heartily go with the
+progress of the age, for which, as merely tenant for life, you could not
+raise the money except upon ruinous terms; new cottages for labourers,
+new buildings for tenants, the consolidation of some old mortgages and
+charges on the rent-roll, etc. And allow me to add that I should like
+to make a large increase to the jointure of my dear mother. Vining says,
+too, that there is a part of the outlying land which, as being near a
+town, could be sold to considerable profit if the estate were resettled.
+
+Let us hasten to complete the necessary deeds, and so obtain the L20,000
+required for the realization of your noble and, let me add, your just
+desire to do something for Chillingly Gordon. In the new deeds of
+settlement we could insure the power of willing the estate as we
+pleased, and I am strongly against devising it to Chillingly Gordon.
+It may be a crotchet of mine, but one which I think you share, that the
+owner of English soil should have a son's love for the native land, and
+Gordon will never have that. I think, too, that it will be best for his
+own career, and for the establishment of a frank understanding between
+us and himself, that he should be fairly told that he would not be
+benefited in the event of our death. Twenty thousand pounds given to him
+now would be a greater boon to him than ten times the sum twenty years
+later. With that at his command, he can enter Parliament, and have an
+income, added to what he now possesses, if modest, still sufficient to
+make him independent of a minister's patronage.
+
+Pray humour me, my dearest father, in the proposition I venture to
+submit to you.
+
+ Your affectionate son, KENELM.
+
+
+FROM SIR PETER CHILLINGLY TO KENELM CHILLINGLY.
+
+MY DEAR BOY,--You are not worthy to be a Chillingly; you are decidedly
+warm-blooded: never was a load lifted off a man's mind with a gentler
+hand. Yes, I have wished to cut off the entail and resettle the
+property; but, as it was eminently to my advantage to do so, I shrank
+from asking it, though eventually it would be almost as much to your own
+advantage. What with the purchase I made of the Faircleuch lands--which
+I could only effect by money borrowed at high interest on my personal
+security, and paid off by yearly instalments, eating largely into
+income--and the old mortgages, etc., I own I have been pinched of late
+years. But what rejoices me the most is the power to make homes for our
+honest labourers more comfortable, and nearer to their work, which last
+is the chief point, for the old cottages in themselves are not bad; the
+misfortune is, when you build an extra room for the children, the silly
+people let it out to a lodger.
+
+My dear boy, I am very much touched by your wish to increase your
+mother's jointure,--a very proper wish, independently of filial feeling,
+for she brought to the estate a very pretty fortune, which, the trustees
+consented to my investing in land; and though the land completed our
+ring-fence, it does not bring in two per cent, and the conditions of
+the entail limited the right of jointure to an amount below that which a
+widowed Lady Chillingly may fairly expect.
+
+I care more about the provision on these points than I do for the
+interests of old Chillingly Gordon's son. I had meant to behave very
+handsomely to the father; and when the return for behaving handsomely
+is being put into Chancery--A Worm Will Turn. Nevertheless, I agree with
+you that a son should not be punished for his father's faults; and, if
+the sacrifice of L20,000 makes you and myself feel that we are better
+Christians and truer gentlemen, we shall buy that feeling very cheaply.
+
+
+Sir Peter then proceeded, half jestingly, half seriously, to combat
+Kenelm's declaration that he was not in love with Cecilia Travers; and,
+urging the advantages of marriage with one whom Kenelm allowed would be
+a perfect wife, astutely remarked that unless Kenelm had a son of his
+own it did not seem to him quite just to the next of kin to will the
+property from him, upon no better plea than the want of love for his
+native country. "He would love his country fast enough if he had 10,000
+acres in it."
+
+Kenelm shook his head when he came to this sentence.
+
+"Is even then love for one's country but cupboard-love after all?" said
+he; and he postponed finishing the perusal of his father's letter.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY did not exaggerate the social position he had acquired
+when he classed himself amongst the lions of the fashionable world. I
+dare not count the number of three-cornered notes showered upon him by
+the fine ladies who grow romantic upon any kind of celebrity; or the
+carefully sealed envelopes, containing letters from fair Anonymas, who
+asked if he had a heart, and would be in such a place in the Park at
+such an hour. What there was in Kenelm Chillingly that should make him
+thus favoured, especially by the fair sex, it would be difficult to say,
+unless it was the two-fold reputation of being unlike other people, and
+of being unaffectedly indifferent to the gain of any reputation at all.
+He might, had he so pleased, have easily established a proof that
+the prevalent though vague belief in his talents was not altogether
+unjustified. For the articles he had sent from abroad to "The Londoner"
+and by which his travelling expenses were defrayed, had been stamped
+by that sort of originality in tone and treatment which rarely fails to
+excite curiosity as to the author, and meets with more general praise
+than perhaps it deserves.
+
+But Mivers was true to his contract to preserve inviolable the incognito
+of the author, and Kenelm regarded with profound contempt the articles
+themselves and the readers who praised them.
+
+Just as misanthropy with some persons grows out of benevolence
+disappointed, so there are certain natures--and Kenelm Chillingly's was
+perhaps one of them--in which indifferentism grows out of earnestness
+baffled.
+
+He had promised himself pleasure in renewing acquaintance with his old
+tutor, Mr. Welby,--pleasure in refreshing his own taste for metaphysics
+and casuistry and criticism. But that accomplished professor of realism
+had retired from philosophy altogether, and was now enjoying a holiday
+for life in the business of a public office. A minister in favour of
+whom, when in opposition, Mr. Welby, in a moment of whim, wrote some
+very able articles in a leading journal, had, on acceding to power,
+presented the realist with one of those few good things still left to
+ministerial patronage,--a place worth about L1,200 a year. His mornings
+thus engaged in routine work, Mr. Welby enjoyed his evenings in a
+convivial way.
+
+"_Inveni portum_," he said to Kenelm; "I plunge into no troubled waters
+now. But come and dine with me to-morrow, tete-a-tete. My wife is at
+St. Leonard's with my youngest born for the benefit of sea-air." Kenelm
+accepted the invitation.
+
+The dinner would have contented a Brillat-Savarin: it was faultless; and
+the claret was that rare nectar, the Lafitte of 1848.
+
+"I never share this," said Welby, "with more than one friend at a time."
+
+Kenelm sought to engage his host in discussion on certain new works in
+vogue, and which were composed according to purely realistic canons of
+criticism. "The more realistic; these books pretend to be, the less
+real they are," said Kenelm. "I am half inclined to think that the whole
+school you so systematically sought to build up is a mistake, and that
+realism in art is a thing impossible."
+
+"I dare say you are right. I took up that school in earnest because I
+was in a passion with pretenders to the Idealistic school; and whatever
+one takes up in earnest is generally a mistake, especially if one is in
+a passion. I was not in earnest and I was not in a passion when I wrote
+those articles to which I am indebted for my office." Mr. Welby here
+luxuriously stretched his limbs, and lifting his glass to his lips,
+voluptuously inhaled its bouquet.
+
+"You sadden me," returned Kenelm. "It is a melancholy thing to find that
+one's mind was influenced in youth by a teacher who mocks at his own
+teachings."
+
+Welby shrugged his shoulders. "Life consists in the alternate process of
+learning and unlearning; but it is often wiser to unlearn than to learn.
+For the rest, as I have ceased to be a critic, I care little whether I
+was wrong or right when I played that part. I think I am right now as a
+placeman. Let the world go its own way, provided the world lets you live
+upon it. I drain my wine to the lees, and cut down hope to the brief
+span of life. Reject realism in art if you please, and accept realism in
+conduct. For the first time in my life I am comfortable: my mind, having
+worn out its walking-shoes, is now enjoying the luxury of slippers. Who
+can deny the realism of comfort?"
+
+"Has a man a right," Kenelm said to himself, as he entered his brougham,
+"to employ all the brilliancy of a rare wit, all the acquisitions of as
+rare a scholarship, to the scaring of the young generation out of the
+safe old roads which youth left to itself would take,--old roads skirted
+by romantic rivers and bowery trees,--directing them into new paths on
+long sandy flats, and then, when they are faint and footsore, to tell
+them that he cares not a pin whether they have worn out their shoes in
+right paths or wrong paths, for that he has attained the _summum bonum_
+of philosophy in the comfort of easy slippers?"
+
+Before he could answer the question he thus put to himself, his brougham
+stopped at the door of the minister whom Welby had contributed to bring
+into power.
+
+That night there was a crowded muster of the fashionable world at the
+great man's house. It happened to be a very critical moment for the
+minister. The fate of his cabinet depended on the result of a motion
+about to be made the following week in the House of Commons. The great
+man stood at the entrance of the apartments to receive his guests, and
+among the guests were the framers of the hostile motion and the leaders
+of the opposition. His smile was not less gracious to them than to his
+dearest friends and stanchest supporters.
+
+"I suppose this is realism," said Kenelm to himself; "but it is not
+truth, and it is not comfort." Leaning against the wall near the
+doorway, he contemplated with grave interest the striking countenance
+of his distinguished host. He detected beneath that courteous smile
+and that urbane manner the signs of care. The eye was absent, the cheek
+pinched, the brow furrowed. Kenelm turned away his looks, and glanced
+over the animated countenances of the idle loungers along commoner
+thoroughfares in life. Their eyes were not absent; their brows were
+not furrowed; their minds seemed quite at home in exchanging nothings.
+Interest many of them had in the approaching struggle, but it was
+much such an interest as betters of small sums may have on the Derby
+day,--just enough to give piquancy to the race; nothing to make gain a
+great joy, or loss a keen anguish.
+
+"Our host is looking ill," said Mivers, accosting Kenelm. "I detect
+symptoms of suppressed gout. You know my aphorism, 'nothing so gouty as
+ambition,' especially Parliamentary ambition."
+
+"You are not one of those friends who press on my choice of life that
+source of disease; allow me to thank you."
+
+"Your thanks are misplaced. I strongly advise you to devote yourself to
+a political career."
+
+"Despite the gout?"
+
+"Despite the gout. If you could take the world as I do, my advice might
+be different. But your mind is overcrowded with doubts and fantasies and
+crotchets, and you have no choice but to give them vent in active life."
+
+"You had something to do in making me what I am,--an idler; something
+to answer for as to my doubts, fantasies, and crotchets. It was by your
+recommendation that I was placed under the tuition of Mr. Welby, and at
+that critical age in which the bent of the twig forms the shape of the
+tree."
+
+"And I pride myself on that counsel. I repeat the reasons for which I
+gave it: it is an incalculable advantage for a young man to start in
+life thoroughly initiated into the New Ideas which will more or less
+influence his generation. Welby was the ablest representative of these
+ideas. It is a wondrous good fortune when the propagandist of the
+New Ideas is something more than a bookish philosopher,--when he is
+a thorough 'man of the world,' and is what we emphatically call
+'practical.' Yes, you owe me much that I secured to you such tuition,
+and saved you from twaddle and sentiment, the poetry of Wordsworth and
+the muscular Christianity of Cousin John."
+
+"What you say that you saved me from might have done me more good than
+all you conferred on me. I suspect that when education succeeds
+in placing an old head upon young shoulders the combination is not
+healthful: it clogs the blood and slackens the pulse. However, I must
+not be ungrateful; you meant kindly. Yes, I suppose Welby is practical:
+he has no belief, and he has got a place. But our host, I presume, is
+also practical; his place is a much higher one than Welby's, and yet he
+is surely not without belief?"
+
+"He was born before the new ideas came into practical force; but
+in proportion as they have done so, his beliefs have necessarily
+disappeared. I don't suppose that he believes in much now, except the
+two propositions: firstly, that if he accept the new ideas he will have
+power and keep it, and if he does not accept them power is out of the
+question; and, secondly, that if the new ideas are to prevail he is the
+best man to direct them safely,--beliefs quite enough for a minister. No
+wise minister should have more."
+
+"Does he not believe that the motion he is to resist next week is a bad
+one?"
+
+"A bad one of course, in its consequences, for if it succeed it will
+upset him; a good one in itself I am sure he must think it, for he would
+bring it on himself if he were in opposition."
+
+"I see that Pope's definition is still true, 'Party is the madness of
+the many for the gain of the few.'"
+
+"No, it is not true. Madness is a wrong word applied to the many: the
+many are sane enough; they know their own objects, and they make use of
+the intellect of the few in order to gain their objects. In each party
+it is the many that control the few who nominally lead them. A man
+becomes Prime Minister because he seems to the many of his party the
+fittest person to carry out their views. If he presume to differ from
+these views, they put him into a moral pillory, and pelt him with their
+dirtiest stones and their rottenest eggs."
+
+"Then the maxim should be reversed, and party is rather the madness of
+the few for the gain of the many?
+
+"Of the two, that is the more correct definition."
+
+"Let me keep my senses and decline to be one of the few."
+
+Kenelm moved away from his cousin's side, and entering one of the less
+crowded rooms, saw Cecilia Travers seated there in a recess with Lady
+Glenalvon. He joined them, and after a brief interchange of a few
+commonplaces, Lady Glenalvon quitted her post to accost a foreign
+ambassadress, and Kenelm sank into the chair she vacated.
+
+It was a relief to his eye to contemplate Cecilia's candid brow; to
+his ear to hearken to the soft voice that had no artificial tones, and
+uttered no cynical witticisms.
+
+"Don't you think it strange," said Kenelm, "that we English should so
+mould all our habits as to make even what we call pleasure as little
+pleasurable as possible? We are now in the beginning of June, the fresh
+outburst of summer, when every day in the country is a delight to eye
+and ear, and we say, 'The season for hot rooms is beginning.' We alone
+of civilized races spend our summer in a capital, and cling to the
+country when the trees are leafless and the brooks frozen."
+
+"Certainly that is a mistake; but I love the country in all seasons,
+even in winter."
+
+"Provided the country house is full of London people?"
+
+"No; that is rather a drawback. I never want companions in the country."
+
+"True; I should have remembered that you differ from young ladies in
+general, and make companions of books. They are always more conversable
+in the country than they are in town; or rather, we listen there to them
+with less distracted attention. Ha! do I not recognize yonder the fair
+whiskers of George Belvoir? Who is the lady leaning on his arm?"
+
+"Don't you know?--Lady Emily Belvoir, his wife."
+
+"Ah! I was told that he had married. The lady is handsome. She will
+become the family diamonds. Does she read Blue-books?"
+
+"I will ask her if you wish."
+
+"Nay, it is scarcely worth while. During my rambles abroad I saw but
+few English newspapers. I did, however, learn that George had won his
+election. Has he yet spoken in Parliament?"
+
+"Yes; he moved the answer to the Address this session, and was much
+complimented on the excellent tone and taste of his speech. He spoke
+again a few weeks afterwards, I fear not so successfully."
+
+"Coughed down?"
+
+"Something like it."
+
+"Do him good; he will recover the cough, and fulfil my prophecy of his
+success."
+
+"Have you done with poor George for the present? If so, allow me to ask
+whether you have quite forgotten Will Somers and Jessie Wiles?"
+
+"Forgotten them! no."
+
+"But you have never asked after them?"
+
+"I took it for granted that they were as happy as could be expected.
+Pray assure me that they are."
+
+"I trust so now; but they have had trouble, and have left Graveleigh."
+
+"Trouble! left Graveleigh! You make me uneasy. Pray explain."
+
+"They had not been three months married and installed in the home they
+owed to you, when poor Will was seized with a rheumatic fever. He was
+confined to his bed for many weeks; and, when at last he could move from
+it, was so weak as to be still unable to do any work. During his illness
+Jessie had no heart and little leisure to attend to the shop. Of course
+I--that is, my dear father--gave them all necessary assistance; but--"
+
+"I understand; they were reduced to objects of charity. Brute that I am,
+never to have thought of the duties I owed to the couple I had brought
+together. But pray go on."
+
+"You are aware that just before you left us my father received a
+proposal to exchange his property at Graveleigh for some lands more
+desirable to him?"
+
+"I remember. He closed with that offer."
+
+"Yes; Captain Stavers, the new landlord of Graveleigh, seems to be
+a very bad man; and though he could not turn the Somerses out of the
+cottage so long as they paid rent, which we took care they did pay,--yet
+out of a very wicked spite he set up a rival shop in one of his other
+cottages in the village, and it became impossible for these poor young
+people to get a livelihood at Graveleigh."
+
+"What excuse for spite against so harmless a young couple could Captain
+Stavers find or invent?"
+
+Cecilia looked down and coloured. "It was a revengeful feeling against
+Jessie."
+
+"Ah, I comprehend."
+
+"But they have now left the village, and are happily settled elsewhere.
+Will has recovered his health, and they are prospering much more than
+they could ever have done at Graveleigh."
+
+"In that change you were their benefactress, Miss Travers?" said Kenelm,
+in a more tender voice and with a softer eye than he had ever before
+evinced towards the heiress.
+
+"No, it is not I whom they have to thank and bless."
+
+"Who, then, is it? Your father?"
+
+"No. Do not question me. I am bound not to say. They do not themselves
+know; they rather believe that their gratitude is due to you."
+
+"To me! Am I to be forever a sham in spite of myself? My dear Miss
+Travers, it is essential to my honour that I should undeceive this
+credulous pair; where can I find them?"
+
+"I must not say; but I will ask permission of their concealed
+benefactor, and send you their address."
+
+A touch was laid on Kenelm's arm, and a voice whispered, "May I ask you
+to present me to Miss Travers?"
+
+"Miss Travers," said Kenelm, "I entreat you to add to the list of your
+acquaintances a cousin of mine,--Mr. Chillingly Gordon."
+
+While Gordon addressed to Cecilia the well-bred conventionalisms with
+which acquaintance in London drawing-rooms usually commences, Kenelm,
+obedient to a sign from Lady Glenalvon, who had just re-entered the
+room, quitted his seat, and joined the marchioness.
+
+"Is not that young man whom you left talking with Miss Travers your
+clever cousin Gordon?"
+
+"The same."
+
+"She is listening to him with great attention. How his face brightens up
+as he talks! He is positively handsome, thus animated."
+
+"Yes, I could fancy him a dangerous wooer. He has wit and liveliness and
+audacity; he could be very much in love with a great fortune, and talk
+to the owner of it with a fervour rarely exhibited by a Chillingly.
+Well, it is no affair of mine."
+
+"It ought to be."
+
+Alas and alas! that "ought to be;" what depths of sorrowful meaning lie
+within that simple phrase! How happy would be our lives, how grand our
+actions, how pure our souls, if all could be with us as it ought to be!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+WE often form cordial intimacies in the confined society of a country
+house, or a quiet watering-place, or a small Continental town, which
+fade away into remote acquaintanceship in the mighty vortex of London
+life, neither party being to blame for the estrangement. It was so with
+Leopold Travers and Kenelm Chillingly. Travers, as we have seen, had
+felt a powerful charm in the converse of the young stranger, so in
+contrast with the routine of the rural companionships to which his alert
+intellect had for many years circumscribed its range. But on reappearing
+in London the season before Kenelm again met him, he had renewed old
+friendships with men of his own standing,--officers in the regiment of
+which he had once been a popular ornament, some of them still unmarried,
+a few of them like himself widowed, others who had been his rivals
+in fashion, and were still pleasant idlers about town; and it rarely
+happens in a metropolis that we have intimate friendships with those of
+another generation, unless there be some common tie in the cultivation
+of art and letters, or the action of kindred sympathies in the party
+strife of politics. Therefore Travers and Kenelm had had little familiar
+communication with each other since they first met at the Beaumanoirs'.
+Now and then they found themselves at the same crowded assemblies, and
+interchanged nods and salutations. But their habits were different; the
+houses at which they were intimate were not the same, neither did they
+frequent the same clubs. Kenelm's chief bodily exercise was still that
+of long and early rambles into rural suburbs; Leopold's was that of
+a late ride in the Row. Of the two, Leopold was much more the man of
+pleasure. Once restored to metropolitan life, a temper constitutionally
+eager, ardent, and convivial took kindly, as in earlier youth, to its
+light range of enjoyments.
+
+Had the intercourse between the two men been as frankly familiar as it
+had been at Neesdale Park, Kenelm would probably have seen much more of
+Cecilia at her own home; and the admiration and esteem with which she
+already inspired him might have ripened into much warmer feeling, had
+he thus been brought into clearer comprehension of the soft and womanly
+heart, and its tender predisposition towards himself.
+
+He had said somewhat vaguely in his letter to Sir Peter, that "sometimes
+he felt as if his indifference to love, as to ambition, was because he
+had some impossible ideal in each." Taking that conjecture to task,
+he could not honestly persuade himself that he had formed any ideal of
+woman and wife with which the reality of Cecilia Travers was at war. On
+the contrary, the more he thought over the characteristics of Cecilia,
+the more they seemed to correspond to any ideal that had floated before
+him in the twilight of dreamy revery; and yet he knew that he was not
+in love with her, that his heart did not respond to his reason; and
+mournfully he resigned himself to the conviction that nowhere in
+this planet, from the normal pursuits of whose inhabitants he felt so
+estranged, was there waiting for him the smiling playmate, the earnest
+helpmate. As this conviction strengthened, so an increased weariness
+of the artificial life of the metropolis, and of all its objects and
+amusements, turned his thoughts with an intense yearning towards the
+Bohemian freedom and fresh excitements of his foot ramblings. He often
+thought with envy of the wandering minstrel, and wondered whether, if he
+again traversed the same range of country, he might encounter again that
+vagrant singer.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+IT is nearly a week since Kenelm had met Cecilia, and he is sitting
+in his rooms with Lord Thetford at that hour of three in the afternoon
+which is found the most difficult to dispose of by idlers about town.
+Amongst young men of his own age and class with whom Kenelm assorted in
+the fashionable world, perhaps the one whom he liked the best, and of
+whom he saw the most, was this young heir of the Beaumanoirs; and though
+Lord Thetford has nothing to do with the direct stream of my story, it
+is worth pausing a few minutes to sketch an outline of one of the
+best whom the last generation has produced for a part that, owing to
+accidents of birth and fortune, young men like Lord Thetford must play
+on that stage from which the curtain is not yet drawn up. Destined to
+be the head of a family that unites with princely possessions and a
+historical name a keen though honourable ambition for political power,
+Lord Thetford has been care fully educated, especially in the new ideas
+of his time. His father, though a man of no ordinary talents, has never
+taken a prominent part in public life. He desires his eldest son to do
+so. The Beaumanoirs have been Whigs from the time of William III. They
+have shared the good and the ill fortunes of a party which, whether we
+side with it or not, no politician who dreads extremes in the government
+of a State so pre-eminently artificial that a prevalent extreme at
+either end of the balance would be fatal to equilibrium, can desire to
+become extinct or feeble so long as a constitutional monarchy exists
+in England. From the reign of George I. to the death of George IV., the
+Beaumanoirs were in the ascendant. Visit their family portrait gallery,
+and you must admire the eminence of a house which, during that interval
+of less than a century, contributed so many men to the service of the
+State or the adornment of the Court,--so many Ministers, Ambassadors,
+Generals, Lord Chamberlains, and Masters of the Horse. When the younger
+Pitt beat the great Whig Houses, the Beaumanoirs vanish into comparative
+obscurity; they reemerge with the accession of William IV., and once
+more produce bulwarks of the State and ornaments of the Crown. The
+present Lord of Beaumanoir, _poco curante_ in politics though he be, has
+at least held high offices at Court; and, as a matter of course, he is
+Lord Lieutenant of his county, as well as Knight of the Garter. He is
+a man whom the chiefs of his party have been accustomed to consult on
+critical questions. He gives his opinions confidentially and modestly,
+and when they are rejected never takes offence. He thinks that a time
+is coming when the head of the Beaumanoirs should descend into the lists
+and fight hand-to-hand with any Hodge or Hobson in the cause of his
+country for the benefit of the Whigs. Too lazy or too old to do this
+himself, he says to his son, "You must do it: without effort of mine the
+thing may last my life. It needs effort of yours that the thing may last
+through your own."
+
+Lord Thetford cheerfully responds to the paternal admonition. He curbs
+his natural inclinations, which are neither inelegant nor unmanly; for,
+on the one side, he is very fond of music and painting, an accomplished
+amateur, and deemed a sound connoisseur in both; and, on the other side,
+he has a passion for all field sports, and especially for hunting. He
+allows no such attractions to interfere with diligent attention to the
+business of the House of Commons. He serves in Committees, he takes the
+chair at public meetings on sanitary questions or projects for social
+improvement, and acquits himself well therein. He has not yet spoken in
+debate, but he has only been two years in Parliament, and he takes his
+father's wise advice not to speak till the third. But he is not without
+weight among the well-born youth of the party, and has in him the stuff
+out of which, when it becomes seasoned, the Corinthian capitals of a
+Cabinet may be very effectively carved. In his own heart he is convinced
+that his party are going too far and too fast; but with that party he
+goes on light-heartedly, and would continue to do so if they went to
+Erebus. But he would prefer their going the other way. For the rest, a
+pleasant, bright-eyed young fellow, with vivid animal spirits; and, in
+the holiday moments of reprieve from public duty he brings sunshine into
+draggling hunting-fields, and a fresh breeze into heated ballrooms.
+
+"My dear fellow," said Lord Thetford, as he threw aside his cigar, "I
+quite understand that you bore yourself: you have nothing else to do."
+
+"What can I do?"
+
+"Work."
+
+"Work!"
+
+"Yes, you are clever enough to feel that you have a mind; and mind is a
+restless inmate of body: it craves occupation of some sort, and regular
+occupation too; it needs its daily constitutional exercise. Do you give
+your mind that?"
+
+"I am sure I don't know, but my mind is always busying itself about
+something or other."
+
+"In a desultory way,--with no fixed object."
+
+"True."
+
+"Write a book, and then it will have its constitutional."
+
+"Nay, my mind is always writing a book (though it may not publish
+one), always jotting down impressions, or inventing incidents, or
+investigating characters; and between you and me, I do not think that I
+do bore myself so much as I did formerly. Other people bore me more than
+they did."
+
+"Because you will not create an object in common with other people: come
+into Parliament, side with a party, and you have that object."
+
+"Do you mean seriously to tell me that you are not bored in the House of
+Commons?"
+
+"With the speakers very often, yes; but with the strife between the
+speakers, no. The House of Commons life has a peculiar excitement
+scarcely understood out of it; but you may conceive its charm when you
+observe that a man who has once been in the thick of it feels forlorn
+and shelved if he lose his seat, and even repines when the accident
+of birth transfers him to the serener air of the Upper House. Try that
+life, Chillingly."
+
+"I might if I were an ultra-Radical, a Republican, a Communist, a
+Socialist, and wished to upset everything existing, for then the strife
+would at least be a very earnest one."
+
+"But could not you be equally in earnest against those revolutionary
+gentlemen?"
+
+"Are you and your leaders in earnest against them? They don't appear to
+me so."
+
+Thetford was silent for a minute. "Well, if you doubt the principles of
+my side, go with the other side. For my part, I and many of our party
+would be glad to see the Conservatives stronger."
+
+"I have no doubt they would. No sensible man likes to be carried off his
+legs by the rush of the crowd behind him; and a crowd is less headlong
+when it sees a strong force arrayed against it in front. But it seems
+to me that, at present, Conservatism can but be what it now is,--a party
+that may combine for resistance, and will not combine for inventive
+construction. We are living in an age in which the process of
+unsettlement is going blindly at work, as if impelled by a Nemesis as
+blind as itself. New ideas come beating into surf and surge against
+those which former reasoners had considered as fixed banks and
+breakwaters; and the new ideas are so mutable, so fickle, that those
+which were considered novel ten years ago are deemed obsolete to-day,
+and the new ones of to-day will in their turn be obsolete to-morrow.
+And, in a sort of fatalism, you see statesmen yielding way to these
+successive mockeries of experiment,--for they are experiments against
+experience,--and saying to each other with a shrug of the shoulders,
+'Bismillah! it must be so; the country will have it, even though it
+sends the country to the dogs.' I don't feel sure that the country will
+not go there the sooner, if you can only strengthen the Conservative
+element enough to set it up in office, with the certainty of knocking
+it down again. Alas! I am too dispassionate a looker-on to be fit for a
+partisan: would I were not! Address yourself to my cousin Gordon."
+
+"Ay, Chillingly Gordon is a coming man, and has all the earnestness you
+find absent in party and in yourself."
+
+"You call him earnest?"
+
+"Thoroughly, in the pursuit of one object,--the advancement of
+Chillingly Gordon. If he get into the House of Commons, and succeed
+there, I hope he will never become my leader; for if he thought
+Christianity in the way of his promotion, he would bring in a bill for
+its abolition."
+
+"In that case would he still be your leader?"
+
+"My dear Kenelm, you don't know what is the spirit of party, and how
+easily it makes excuses for any act of its leader. Of course, if Gordon
+brought in a bill for the abolition of Christianity, it would be on the
+plea that the abolition was good for the Christians, and his followers
+would cheer that enlightened sentiment."
+
+"Ah," said Kenelm, with a sigh, "I own myself the dullest of blockheads;
+for instead of tempting me into the field of party politics, your talk
+leaves me in stolid amaze that you do not take to your heels, where
+honour can only be saved by flight."
+
+"Pooh! my dear Chillingly, we cannot run away from the age in which we
+live: we must accept its conditions and make the best of them; and if
+the House of Commons be nothing else, it is a famous debating society
+and a capital club. Think over it. I must leave you now. I am going
+to see a picture at the Exhibition which has been most truculently
+criticised in 'The Londoner,' but which I am assured, on good authority,
+is a work of remarkable merit. I can't bear to see a man snarled and
+sneered down, no doubt by jealous rivals, who have their influence in
+journals, so I shall judge of the picture for myself. If it be really
+as good as I am told, I shall talk about it to everybody I meet; and in
+matters of art I fancy my word goes for something. Study art, my dear
+Kenelm. No gentleman's education is complete if he does n't know a good
+picture from a bad one. After the Exhibition I shall just have time for
+a canter round the Park before the debate of the session, which begins
+to-night."
+
+With a light step the young man quitted the room, humming an air from
+the "Figaro" as he descended the stairs. From the window Kenelm watched
+him swinging himself with careless grace into his saddle and riding
+briskly down the street,--in form and face and bearing a very model of
+young, high-born, high-bred manhood. "The Venetians," muttered Kenelm,
+"decapitated Marino Faliero for conspiring against his own order,--the
+nobles. The Venetians loved their institutions, and had faith in them.
+Is there such love and such faith among the English?"
+
+As he thus soliloquized he heard a shrilling sort of squeak; and a
+showman stationed before his window the stage on which Punch satirizes
+the laws and moralities of the world, "kills the beadle and defies the
+devil."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+KENELM turned from the sight of Punch and Punch's friend the cur, as his
+servant, entering, said a person from the country, who would not give
+his name, asked to see him.
+
+Thinking it might be some message from his father, Kenelm ordered the
+stranger to be admitted, and in another minute there entered a young man
+of handsome countenance and powerful frame, in whom, after a surprised
+stare, Kenelm recognized Tom Bowles. Difficult indeed would have been
+that recognition to an unobservant beholder: no trace was left of the
+sullen bully or the village farrier; the expression of the face was mild
+and intelligent,--more bashful than hardy; the brute strength of the
+form had lost its former clumsiness, the simple dress was that of a
+gentleman,--to use an expressive idiom, the whole man was wonderfully
+"toned down."
+
+"I am afraid, sir, I am taking a liberty," said Tom, rather nervously,
+twiddling his hat between his fingers.
+
+"I should be a greater friend to liberty than I am if it were always
+taken in the same way," said Kenelm, with a touch of his saturnine
+humour; but then yielding at once to the warmer impulse of his nature,
+he grasped his old antagonist's hand and exclaimed, "My dear Tom, you
+are so welcome. I am so glad to see you. Sit down, man; sit down: make
+yourself at home."
+
+"I did not know you were back in England, sir, till within the last few
+days; for you did say that when you came back I should see or hear from
+you," and there was a tone of reproach in the last words.
+
+"I am to blame, forgive me," said Kenelm, remorsefully. "But how did
+you find me out? you did not then, I think, even know my name. That,
+however, it was easy enough to discover; but who gave you my address in
+this lodging?"
+
+"Well, sir, it was Miss Travers; and she bade me come to you. Otherwise,
+as you did not send for me, it was scarcely my place to call uninvited."
+
+"But, my dear Tom, I never dreamed that you were in London. One don't
+ask a man whom one supposes to be more than a hundred miles off to pay
+one an afternoon call. You are still with your uncle, I presume? and I
+need not ask if all thrives well with you: you look a prosperous man,
+every inch of you, from crown to toe."
+
+"Yes," said Tom; "thank you kindly, sir, I am doing well in the way of
+business, and my uncle is to give me up the whole concern at Christmas."
+
+While Tom thus spoke Kenelm had summoned his servant, and ordered up
+such refreshments as could be found in the larder of a bachelor in
+lodgings. "And what brings you to town, Tom?"
+
+"Miss Travers wrote to me about a little business which she was good
+enough to manage for me, and said you wished to know about it; and so,
+after turning it over in my mind for a few days, I resolved to come to
+town: indeed," added Tom, heartily, "I did wish to see your face again."
+
+"But you talk riddles. What business of yours could Miss Travers imagine
+I wished to know about?"
+
+Tom coloured high, and looked very embarrassed. Luckily, the servant
+here entering with the refreshment-tray allowed him time to recover
+himself. Kenelm helped him to a liberal slice of cold pigeon-pie,
+pressed wine on him, and did not renew the subject till he thought his
+guest's tongue was likely to be more freely set loose; then he said,
+laying a friendly hand on Tom's shoulders, "I have been thinking over
+what passed between me and Miss Travers. I wished to have the new
+address of Will Somers; she promised to write to his benefactor to ask
+permission to give it. You are that benefactor?"
+
+"Don't say benefactor, sir. I will tell how it came about if you will
+let me. You see, I sold my little place at Graveleigh to the new Squire,
+and when Mother removed to Luscombe to be near me, she told me how
+poor Jessie had been annoyed by Captain Stavers, who seems to think
+his purchase included the young women on the property along with the
+standing timber; and I was half afraid that she had given some cause for
+his persecution, for you know she has a blink of those soft eyes of
+hers that might charm a wise man out of his skin and put a fool there
+instead."
+
+"But I hope she has done with those blinks since her marriage."
+
+"Well, and I honestly think she has. It is certain she did not encourage
+Captain Stavers, for I went over to Graveleigh myself on the sly, and
+lodged concealed with one of the cottagers who owed me a kindness; and
+one day, as I was at watch, I saw the Captain peering over the stile
+which divides Holmwood from the glebe,--you remember Holmwood?"
+
+"I can't say I do."
+
+"The footway from the village to Squire Travers's goes through the
+wood, which is a few hundred yards at the back of Will Somers's orchard.
+Presently the Captain drew himself suddenly back from the stile, and
+disappeared among the trees, and then I saw Jessie coming from the
+orchard with a basket over her arm, and walking quick towards the wood.
+Then, sir, my heart sank. I felt sure she was going to meet the Captain.
+However, I crept along the hedgerow, hiding myself, and got into the
+wood almost as soon as Jessie got there, by another way. Under the cover
+of the brushwood I stole on till I saw the Captain come out from the
+copse on the other side of the path, and plant himself just before
+Jessie. Then I saw at once I had wronged her. She had not expected to
+see him, for she hastily turned back, and began to run homeward; but he
+caught her up, and seized her by the arm. I could not hear what he said,
+but I heard her voice quite sharp with fright and anger. And then he
+suddenly seized her round the waist, and she screamed, and I sprang
+forward--"
+
+"And thrashed the Captain?"
+
+"No, I did not," said Tom; "I had made a vow to myself that I never
+would be violent again if I could help it. So I took him with one hand
+by the cuff of the neck, and with the other by the waistband, and just
+pitched him on a bramble bush,--quite mildly. He soon picked himself up,
+for he is a dapper little chap, and became very blustering and abusive.
+But I kept my temper, and said civilly, 'Little gentleman, hard words
+break no bones; but if ever you molest Mrs. Somers again, I will carry
+you into her orchard, souse you into the duck-pond there, and call all
+the villagers to see you scramble out of it again; and I will do it
+now if you are not off. I dare say you have heard of my name: I am Tom
+Bowles.' Upon that his face, which was before very red, grew very white,
+and muttering something I did not hear, he walked away.
+
+"Jessie--I mean Mrs. Somers--seemed at first as much frightened at me
+as she had been at the Captain; and though I offered to walk with her to
+Miss Travers's, where she was going with a basket which the young lady
+had ordered, she refused, and went back home. I felt hurt, and returned
+to my uncle's the same evening; and it was not for months that I heard
+the Captain had been spiteful enough to set up an opposition shop, and
+that poor Will had been taken ill, and his wife was confined about the
+same time, and the talk was that they were in distress and might have to
+be sold up.
+
+"When I heard all this, I thought that after all it was my rough tongue
+that had so angered the Captain and been the cause of his spite, and so
+it was my duty to make it up to poor Will and his wife. I did not know
+how to set about mending matters, but I thought I'd go and talk to Miss
+Travers; and if ever there was a kind heart in a girl's breast, hers is
+one."
+
+"You are right there, I guess. What did Miss Travers say?"
+
+"Nay; I hardly know what she did say, but she set me thinking, and it
+struck me that Jessie--Mrs. Somers--had better move to a distance, and
+out of the Captain's reach, and that Will would do better in a less
+out-of-the-way place. And then, by good luck, I read in the newspaper
+that a stationary and a fancywork business, with a circulating library,
+was to be sold on moderate terms at Moleswich, the other side of London.
+So I took the train and went to the place, and thought the shop would
+just suit these young folks, and not be too much work for either; then I
+went to Miss Travers, and I had a lot of money lying by me from the sale
+of the old forge and premises, which I did not know what to do with; and
+so, to cut short a long story, I bought the business, and Will and his
+wife are settled at Moleswich, thriving and happy, I hope, sir."
+
+Tom's voice quivered at the last words, and he turned aside quickly,
+passing his hand over his eyes.
+
+Kenelm was greatly moved.
+
+"And they don't know what you did for them?"
+
+"To be sure not. I don't think Will would have let him self be
+beholden to me. Ah! the lad has a spirit of his own, and Jessie--Mrs.
+Somers--would have felt pained and humbled that I should even think of
+such a thing. Miss Travers managed it all. They take the money as a loan
+which is to be paid by instalments. They have sent Miss Travers more
+than one instalment already, so I know they are doing well."
+
+"A loan from Miss Travers?"
+
+"No; Miss Travers wanted to have a share in it, but I begged her not. It
+made me happy to do what I did all myself; and Miss Travers felt for me
+and did not press. They perhaps think it is Squire Travers (though he is
+not a man who would like to say it, for fear it should bring applicants
+on him), or some other gentleman who takes an interest in them."
+
+"I always said you were a grand fellow, Tom. But you are grander still
+than I thought you."
+
+"If there be any good in me, I owe it to you, sir. Think what a drunken,
+violent brute I was when I first met you. Those walks with you, and I
+may say that other gentleman's talk, and then that long kind letter I
+had from you, not signed in your name, and written from abroad,--all
+these changed me, as the child is changed at nurse."
+
+"You have evidently read a good deal since we parted."
+
+"Yes; I belong to our young men's library and institute; and when of an
+evening I get hold of a book, especially a pleasant story-book, I don't
+care for other company."
+
+"Have you never seen any other girl you could care for, and wish to
+marry?"
+
+"Ah, sir," answered Tom, "a man does not go so mad for a girl as I
+did for Jessie Wiles, and when it is all over, and he has come to his
+senses, put his heart into joint again as easily as if it were only a
+broken leg. I don't say that I may not live to love and to marry another
+woman: it is my wish to do so. But I know that I shall love Jessie to my
+dying day; but not sinfully, sir,--not sinfully. I would not wrong her
+by a thought."
+
+There was a long pause.
+
+At last Kenelm said, "You promised to be kind to that little girl with
+the flower-ball; what has become of her?"
+
+"She is quite well, thank you, sir. My aunt has taken a great fancy to
+her, and so has my mother. She comes to them very often of an evening,
+and brings her work with her. A quick, intelligent little thing, and
+full of pretty thoughts. On Sundays, if the weather is fine, we stroll
+out together in the fields."
+
+"She has been a comfort to you, Tom."
+
+"Oh, yes."
+
+"And loves you?"
+
+"I am sure she does; an affectionate, grateful child."
+
+"She will be a woman soon, Tom, and may love you as a woman then."
+
+Tom looked indignant and rather scornful at that suggestion, and
+hastened to revert to the subject more immediately at his heart.
+
+"Miss Travers said you would like to call on Will Somers and his wife;
+will you? Moleswich is not far from London, you know."
+
+"Certainly, I will call."
+
+"I do hope you will find them happy; and if so, perhaps you will kindly
+let me know; and--and--I wonder whether Jessie's child is like her? It
+is a boy; somehow or other I would rather it had been a girl."
+
+"I will write you full particulars. But why not come with me?"
+
+"No, I don't think I could do that, just at present. It unsettled me
+sadly when I did again see her sweet face at Graveleigh, and she was
+still afraid of me too! that was a sharp pang."
+
+"She ought to know what you have done for her, and will."
+
+"On no account, sir; promise me that. I should feel mean if I humbled
+them,--that way."
+
+"I understand, though I will not as yet make you any positive promise.
+Meanwhile, if you are staying in town, lodge with me; my landlady can
+find you a room."
+
+"Thank you heartily, sir; but I go back by the evening train; and, bless
+me! how late it is now! I must wish you good-by. I have some commissions
+to do for my aunt, and I must buy a new doll for Susey."
+
+"Susey is the name of the little girl with the flower-ball?"
+
+"Yes. I must run off now; I feel quite light at heart seeing you again
+and finding that you receive me still so kindly, as if we were equals."
+
+"Ah, Tom, I wish I was your equal,--nay, half as noble as Heaven has
+made you!"
+
+Tom laughed incredulously, and went his way.
+
+"This mischievous passion of love," said Kenelm to himself, "has its
+good side, it seems, after all. If it was nearly making a wild beast of
+that brave fellow,--nay, worse than wild beast, a homicide doomed to
+the gibbet,--so, on the other hand, what a refined, delicate, chivalrous
+nature of gentleman it has developed out of the stormy elements of its
+first madness! Yes, I will go and look at this new-married couple. I
+dare say they are already snarling and spitting at each other like cat
+and dog. Moleswich is within reach of a walk."
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK V.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+TWO days after the interview recorded in the last chapter of the
+previous Book, Travers, chancing to call at Kenelm's lodgings, was told
+by his servant that Mr. Chillingly had left London, alone, and had given
+no orders as to forwarding letters. The servant did not know where he
+had gone, or when he would return.
+
+Travers repeated this news incidentally to Cecilia, and she felt
+somewhat hurt that he had not written her a line respecting Tom's visit.
+She, however, guessed that he had gone to see the Somerses, and would
+return to town in a day or so. But weeks passed, the season drew to its
+close, and of Kenelm Chillingly she saw or heard nothing: he had
+wholly vanished from the London world. He had but written a line to his
+servant, ordering him to repair to Exmundham and await him there, and
+enclosing him a check to pay outstanding bills.
+
+We must now follow the devious steps of the strange being who has grown
+into the hero of this story. He had left his apartment at daybreak long
+before his servant was up, with his knapsack, and a small portmanteau,
+into which he had thrust--besides such additional articles of dress as
+he thought he might possibly require, and which his knapsack could not
+contain--a few of his favourite books. Driving with these in a hack-cab
+to the Vauxhall station, he directed the portmanteau to be forwarded
+to Moleswich, and flinging the knapsack on his shoulders, walked slowly
+along the drowsy suburbs that stretched far into the landscape, before,
+breathing more freely, he found some evidences of rural culture on
+either side of the high road. It was not, however, till he had left the
+roofs and trees of pleasant Richmond far behind him that he began to
+feel he was out of reach of the metropolitan disquieting influences.
+Finding at a little inn, where he stopped to breakfast, that there was
+a path along fields, and in sight of the river, through which he could
+gain the place of his destination, he then quitted the high road,
+and traversing one of the loveliest districts in one of our loveliest
+counties, he reached Moleswich about noon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ON entering the main street of the pretty town, the name of Somers,
+in gilt capitals, was sufficiently conspicuous over the door of a very
+imposing shop. It boasted two plate-glass windows, at one of which were
+tastefully exhibited various articles of fine stationery, embroidery
+patterns, etc.; at the other, no less tastefully, sundry specimens of
+ornamental basket-work.
+
+Kenelm crossed the threshold and recognized behind the counter--fair
+as ever, but with an expression of face more staid, and a figure more
+rounded and matron-like--his old friend Jessie. There were two or three
+customers before her, between whom she was dividing her attention. While
+a handsome young lady, seated, was saying, in a somewhat loud but cheery
+and pleasant voice, "Do not mind me, Mrs. Somers: I can wait," Jessie's
+quick eye darted towards the stranger, but too rapidly to distinguish
+his features, which, indeed, he turned away, and began to examine the
+baskets.
+
+In a minute or so the other customers were served and had departed; and
+the voice of the lady was again heard, "Now, Mrs. Somers, I want to see
+your picture-books and toys. I am giving a little children's party this
+afternoon, and I want to make them as happy as possible."
+
+"Somewhere or other, on this planet, or before my Monad was whisked
+away to it, I have heard that voice," muttered Kenelm. While Jessie was
+alertly bringing forth her toys and picture-books, she said, "I am sorry
+to keep you waiting, sir; but if it is the baskets you come about, I can
+call my husband."
+
+"Do," said Kenelm.
+
+"William, William," cried Mrs. Somers; and after a delay long enough to
+allow him to slip on his jacket, William Somers emerged from the back
+parlour.
+
+His face had lost its old trace of suffering and ill health; it was
+still somewhat pale, and retained its expression of intellectual
+refinement.
+
+"How you have improved in your art!" said Kenelm, heartily.
+
+William started, and recognized Kenelm at once. He sprang forward and
+took Kenelm's outstretched hand in both his own, and, in a voice between
+laughing and crying, exclaimed, "Jessie, Jessie, it is he!--he whom we
+pray for every night. God bless you! God bless and make you as happy as
+He permitted you to make me!"
+
+Before this little speech was faltered out, Jessie was by her husband's
+side, and she added, in a lower voice, but tremulous with deep feeling,
+"And me too!"
+
+"By your leave, Will," said Kenelm, and he saluted Jessie's white
+forehead with a kiss that could not have been kindlier or colder if it
+had been her grandfather's.
+
+Meanwhile the lady had risen noiselessly and unobserved, and stealing up
+to Kenelm, looked him full in the face.
+
+"You have another friend here, sir, who has also some cause to thank
+you--"
+
+"I thought I remembered your voice," said Kenelm, looking puzzled. "But
+pardon me if I cannot recall your features. Where have we met before?"
+
+"Give me your arm when we go out, and I will bring myself to your
+recollection. But no: I must not hurry you away now. I will call
+again in half an hour. Mrs. Somers, meanwhile put up the things I
+have selected. I will take them away with me when I come back from the
+vicarage, where I have left the pony-carriage." So, with a parting nod
+and smile to Kenelm, she turned away, and left him bewildered.
+
+"But who is that lady, Will?"
+
+"A Mrs. Braefield. She is a new comer."
+
+"She may well be that, Will," said Jessie, smiling, "for she has only
+been married six months."
+
+"And what was her name before she married?"
+
+"I am sure I don't know, sir. It is only three months since we came
+here, and she has been very kind to us and an excellent customer.
+Everybody likes her. Mr. Braefield is a city gentleman and very rich;
+and they live in the finest house in the place, and see a great deal of
+company."
+
+"Well, I am no wiser than I was before," said Kenelm. "People who ask
+questions very seldom are."
+
+"And how did you find us out, sir?" said Jessie. "Oh! I guess," she
+added, with an arch glance and smile. "Of course, you have seen Miss
+Travers, and she told you."
+
+"You are right. I first learned your change of residence from her, and
+thought I would come and see you, and be introduced to the baby,--a boy,
+I understand? Like you, Will?"
+
+"No, sir, the picture of Jessie."
+
+"Nonsense, Will; it is you all over, even to its little hands."
+
+"And your good mother, Will, how did you leave her?"
+
+"Oh, sir!" cried Jessie, reproachfully; "do you think we could have the
+heart to leave Mother,--so lone and rheumatic too? She is tending baby
+now,--always does while I am in the shop."
+
+Here Kenelm followed the young couple into the parlour, where, seated by
+the window, they found old Mrs. Somers reading the Bible and rocking the
+baby, who slept peacefully in its cradle.
+
+"Will," said Kenelm, bending his dark face over the infant, "I will
+tell you a pretty thought of a foreign poet's, which has been thus badly
+translated:
+
+
+ "'Blest babe, a boundless world this bed so narrow seems to thee;
+ Grow man, and narrower than this bed the boundless world shall
+ be.'"[1]
+
+
+ [1] Schiller.
+
+
+"I don't think that is true, sir," said Will, simply; "for a happy home
+is a world wide enough for any man."
+
+Tears started into Jessie's eyes; she bent down and kissed--not the
+baby, but the cradle. "Will made it." She added blushing, "I mean the
+cradle, sir."
+
+Time flew past while Kenelm talked with Will and the old mother, for
+Jessie was soon summoned back to the shop; and Kenelm was startled when
+he found the half-hour's grace allowed to him was over, and Jessie put
+her head in at the door and said, "Mrs. Braefield is waiting for you."
+
+"Good-by, Will; I shall come to see you again soon; and my mother gives
+me a commission to buy I don't know how many specimens of your craft."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+A SMART pony-phaeton, with a box for a driver in livery equally smart,
+stood at the shop-door.
+
+"Now, Mr. Chillingly," said Mrs. Braefield, "it is my turn to run away
+with you; get in!"
+
+"Eh!" murmured Kenelm, gazing at her with large dreamy eyes. "Is it
+possible?"
+
+"Quite possible; get in. Coachman, home! Yes, Mr. Chillingly, you meet
+again that giddy creature whom you threatened to thrash; it would have
+served her right. I ought to feel so ashamed to recall myself to your
+recollection, and yet I am not a bit ashamed. I am proud to show you
+that I have turned out a steady, respectable woman, and, my husband
+tells me, a good wife."
+
+"You have only been six months married, I hear," said Kenelm, dryly. "I
+hope your husband will say the same six years hence."
+
+"He will say the same sixty years hence, if we live as long."
+
+"How old is he now?"
+
+"Thirty-eight."
+
+"When a man wants only two years of his hundredth, he probably has
+learned to know his own mind; but then, in most cases, very little mind
+is left to him to know."
+
+"Don't be satirical, sir; and don't talk as if you were railing at
+marriage, when you have just left as happy a young couple as the sun
+ever shone upon; and owing,--for Mrs. Somers has told me all about her
+marriage,--owing their happiness to you."
+
+"Their happiness to me! not in the least. I helped them to marry, and in
+spite of marriage they helped each other to be happy."
+
+"You are still unmarried yourself?"
+
+"Yes, thank Heaven!"
+
+"And are you happy?"
+
+"No; I can't make myself happy: myself is a discontented brute."
+
+"Then why do you say 'thank Heaven'?"
+
+"Because it is a comfort to think I am not making somebody else
+unhappy."
+
+"Do you believe that if you loved a wife who loved you, you should make
+her unhappy?"
+
+"I am sure I don't know; but I have not seen a woman whom I could love
+as a wife. And we need not push our inquiries further. What has become
+of that ill-treated gray cob?"
+
+"He was quite well, thank you, when I last heard of him."
+
+"And the uncle who would have inflicted me upon you, if you had not so
+gallantly defended yourself?"
+
+"He is living where he did live, and has married his housekeeper. He
+felt a delicate scruple against taking that step till I was married
+myself and out of the way."
+
+Here Mrs. Braefield, beginning to speak very hurriedly, as women who
+seek to disguise emotion often do, informed Kenelm how unhappy she had
+felt for weeks after having found an asylum with her aunt,--how she had
+been stung by remorse and oppressed by a sense of humiliation at the
+thought of her folly and the odious recollection of Mr. Compton,--how
+she had declared to herself that she would never marry any one
+now--never! How Mr. Braefield happened to be on a visit in the
+neighbourhood, and saw her at church,--how he had sought an introduction
+to her,--and how at first she rather disliked him than not; but he was
+so good and so kind, and when at last he proposed--and she had frankly
+told him all about her girlish flight and infatuation--how generously he
+had thanked her for a candour which had placed her as high in his esteem
+as she had been before in his love. "And from that moment," said Mrs.
+Braefield, passionately, "my whole heart leaped to him. And now you know
+all; and here we are at the Lodge."
+
+The pony-phaeton went with great speed up a broad gravel-drive, bordered
+with rare evergreens, and stopped at a handsome house with a portico in
+front, and a long conservatory at the garden side,--one of those houses
+which belong to "city gentlemen," and often contain more comfort and
+exhibit more luxury than many a stately manorial mansion.
+
+Mrs. Braefield evidently felt some pride as she led Kenelm through
+the handsome hall, paved with Malvern tiles and adorned with Scagliola
+columns, and into a drawing-room furnished with much taste and opening
+on a spacious flower-garden.
+
+"But where is Mr. Braefield?" asked Kenelm.
+
+"Oh, he has taken the rail to his office; but he will be back long
+before dinner, and of course you dine with us."
+
+"You're very hospitable, but--"
+
+"No buts: I will take no excuse. Don't fear that you shall have only
+mutton-chops and a rice-pudding; and, besides, I have a children's party
+coming at two o'clock, and there will be all sorts of fun. You are fond
+of children, I am sure?"
+
+"I rather think I am not. But I have never clearly ascertained my own
+inclinations upon that subject."
+
+"Well, you shall have ample opportunity to do so to-day. And oh! I
+promise you the sight of the loveliest face that you can picture to
+yourself when you think of your future wife."
+
+"My future wife, I hope, is not yet born," said Kenelm, wearily, and
+with much effort suppressing a yawn. "But at all events, I will stay
+till after two o'clock; for two o'clock, I presume, means luncheon."
+
+Mrs. Braefield laughed. "You retain your appetite?"
+
+"Most single men do, provided they don't fall in love and become doubled
+up."
+
+At this abominable attempt at a pun, Mrs. Braefield disdained to laugh;
+but turning away from its perpetrator she took off her hat and gloves
+and passed her hands lightly over her forehead, as if to smooth back
+some vagrant tress in locks already sufficiently sheen and trim. She was
+not quite so pretty in female attire as she had appeared in boy's
+dress, nor did she look quite as young. In all other respects she was
+wonderfully improved. There was a serener, a more settled intelligence
+in her frank bright eyes, a milder expression in the play of her parted
+lips. Kenelm gazed at her with pleased admiration. And as now, turning
+from the glass, she encountered his look, a deeper colour came into the
+clear delicacy of her cheeks, and the frank eyes moistened. She came up
+to him as he sat, and took his hand in both hers, pressing it warmly.
+"Ah, Mr. Chillingly," she said, with impulsive tremulous tones, "look
+round, look round this happy, peaceful home!--the life so free from a
+care, the husband whom I so love and honour; all the blessings that I
+might have so recklessly lost forever had I not met with you, had I been
+punished as I deserved. How often I thought of your words, that 'you
+would be proud of my friendship when we met again'! What strength they
+gave me in my hours of humbled self-reproach!" Her voice here died away
+as if in the effort to suppress a sob.
+
+She released his hand, and, before he could answer, passed quickly
+through the open sash into the garden.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE children have come,--some thirty of them, pretty as English children
+generally are, happy in the joy of the summer sunshine, and the
+flower lawns, and the feast under cover of an awning suspended between
+chestnut-trees, and carpeted with sward.
+
+No doubt Kenelm held his own at the banquet, and did his best to
+increase the general gayety, for whenever he spoke the children listened
+eagerly, and when he had done they laughed mirthfully.
+
+"The fair face I promised you," whispered Mrs. Braefield, "is not here
+yet. I have a little note from the young lady to say that Mrs. Cameron
+does not feel very well this morning, but hopes to recover sufficiently
+to come later in the afternoon."
+
+"And pray who is Mrs. Cameron?"
+
+"Ah! I forgot that you are a stranger to the place. Mrs. Cameron is the
+aunt with whom Lily resides. Is it not a pretty name, Lily?"
+
+"Very! emblematic of a spinster that does not spin, with a white head
+and a thin stalk."
+
+"Then the name belies my Lily, as you will see."
+
+The children now finished their feast, and betook themselves to dancing
+in an alley smoothed for a croquet-ground, and to the sound of a violin
+played by the old grandfather of one of the party. While Mrs. Braefield
+was busying herself with forming the dance, Kenelm seized the occasion
+to escape from a young nymph of the age of twelve who had sat next him
+at the banquet, and taken so great a fancy to him that he began to fear
+she would vow never to forsake his side, and stole away undetected.
+
+There are times when the mirth of others only saddens us, especially
+the mirth of children with high spirits, that jar on our own quiet mood.
+Gliding through a dense shrubbery, in which, though the lilacs were
+faded, the laburnum still retained here and there the waning gold of its
+clusters, Kenelm came into a recess which bounded his steps and invited
+him to repose. It was a circle, so formed artificially by slight
+trellises, to which clung parasite roses heavy with leaves and flowers.
+In the midst played a tiny fountain with a silvery murmuring sound; at
+the background, dominating the place, rose the crests of stately trees,
+on which the sunlight shimmered, but which rampired out all horizon
+beyond. Even as in life do the great dominant passions--love, ambition,
+desire of power or gold or fame or knowledge--form the proud background
+to the brief-lived flowerets of our youth, lift our eyes beyond the
+smile of their bloom, catch the glint of a loftier sunbeam, and yet,
+and yet, exclude our sight from the lengths and the widths of the space
+which extends behind and beyond them.
+
+Kenelm threw himself on the turf beside the fountain. From afar came the
+whoop and the laugh of the children in their sports or their dance. At
+the distance their joy did not sadden him,--he marvelled why; and thus,
+in musing revery, thought to explain the why to himself.
+
+"The poet," so ran his lazy thinking, "has told us that 'distance lends
+enchantment to the view,' and thus compares to the charm of distance
+the illusion of hope. But the poet narrows the scope of his own
+illustration. Distance lends enchantment to the ear as well as to the
+sight; nor to these bodily senses alone. Memory no less than hope owes
+its charm to 'the far away.'
+
+"I cannot imagine myself again a child when I am in the midst of
+young noisy children. But as their noise reaches me here, subdued and
+mellowed, and knowing, thank Heaven, that the urchins are not within
+reach of me, I could readily dream myself back into childhood, and into
+sympathy with the lost playfields of school.
+
+"So surely it must be with grief: how different the terrible agony for
+a beloved one just gone from earth, to the soft regret for one who
+disappeared into Heaven years ago! So with the art of poetry: how
+imperatively, when it deals with the great emotions of tragedy, it must
+remove the actors from us, in proportion as the emotions are to elevate,
+and the tragedy is to please us by the tears it draws! Imagine our shock
+if a poet were to place on the stage some wise gentleman with whom we
+dined yesterday, and who was discovered to have killed his father and
+married his mother. But when Oedipus commits those unhappy mistakes
+nobody is shocked. Oxford in the nineteenth century is a long way off
+from Thebes three thousand or four thousand years ago.
+
+"And," continued Kenelm, plunging deeper into the maze of metaphysical
+criticism, "even where the poet deals with persons and things close upon
+our daily sight,--if he would give them poetic charm he must resort to
+a sort of moral or psychological distance; the nearer they are to us
+in external circumstance, the farther they must be in some internal
+peculiarities. Werter and Clarissa Harlowe are described as
+contemporaries of their artistic creation, and with the minutest details
+of apparent realism; yet they are at once removed from our daily lives
+by their idiosyncrasies and their fates. We know that while Werter
+and Clarissa are so near to us in much that we sympathize with them as
+friends and kinsfolk, they are yet as much remote from us in the poetic
+and idealized side of their natures as if they belonged to the age of
+Homer; and this it is that invests with charm the very pain which their
+fate inflicts on us. Thus, I suppose, it must be in love. If the love
+we feel is to have the glamour of poetry, it must be love for some
+one morally at a distance from our ordinary habitual selves; in short,
+differing from us in attributes which, however near we draw to the
+possessor, we can never approach, never blend, in attributes of our
+own; so that there is something in the loved one that always remains an
+ideal,--a mystery,--'a sun-bright summit mingling with the sky'!"
+
+Herewith the soliloquist's musings glided vaguely into mere revery. He
+closed his eyes drowsily, not asleep, nor yet quite awake; as sometimes
+in bright summer days when we recline on the grass we do close our eyes,
+and yet dimly recognize a golden light bathing the drowsy lids; and
+athwart that light images come and go like dreams, though we know that
+we are not dreaming.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+FROM this state, half comatose, half unconscious, Kenelm was roused
+slowly, reluctantly. Something struck softly on his cheek,--again a
+little less softly; he opened his eyes, they fell first upon two tiny
+rosebuds, which, on striking his face, had fallen on his breast; and
+then looking up, he saw before him, in an opening of the trellised
+circle, a female child's laughing face. Her hand was still uplifted
+charged with another rosebud, but behind the child's figure, looking
+over her shoulder and holding back the menacing arm, was a face as
+innocent but lovelier far,--the face of a girl in her first youth,
+framed round with the blossoms that festooned the trellise. How the face
+became the flowers! It seemed the fairy spirit of them.
+
+Kenelm started and rose to his feet. The child, the one whom he had so
+ungallantly escaped from ran towards him through a wicket in the circle.
+Her companion disappeared.
+
+"Is it you?" said Kenelm to the child, "you who pelted me so cruelly?
+Ungrateful creature! Did I not give you the best strawberries in the
+dish and all my own cream?"
+
+"But why did you run away and hide yourself when you ought to be dancing
+with me?" replied the young lady, evading, with the instinct of her sex,
+all answer to the reproach she had deserved.
+
+"I did not run away, and it is clear that I did not mean to hide myself,
+since you so easily found me out. But who was the young lady with you?
+I suspect she pelted me too, for she seems to have run away to hide
+herself."
+
+"No, she did not pelt you; she wanted to stop me, and you would have had
+another rosebud--oh, so much bigger!--if she had not held back my arm.
+Don't you know her,--don't you know Lily?"
+
+"No; so that is Lily? You shall introduce me to her."
+
+By this time they had passed out of the circle through the little wicket
+opposite the path by which Kenelm had entered, and opening at once on
+the lawn. Here at some distance the children were grouped, some reclined
+on the grass, some walking to and fro, in the interval of the dance.
+
+In the space between the group and the trellise Lily was walking alone
+and quickly. The child left Kenelm's side and ran after her friend, soon
+overtook, but did not succeed in arresting her steps. Lily did not pause
+till she had reached the grassy ball-room, and here all the children
+came round her and shut out her delicate form from Kenelm's sight.
+
+Before he had reached the place, Mrs. Braefield met him.
+
+"Lily is come!"
+
+"I know it: I have seen her."
+
+"Is not she beautiful?"
+
+"I must see more of her if I am to answer critically; but before you
+introduce me, may I be permitted to ask who and what is Lily?"
+
+Mrs. Braefield paused a moment before she answered, and yet the
+answer was brief enough not to need much consideration. "She is a Miss
+Mordaunt, an orphan; and, as I before told you, resides with her aunt,
+Mrs. Cameron, a widow. They have the prettiest cottage you ever saw on
+the banks of the river, or rather rivulet, about a mile from this place.
+Mrs. Cameron is a very good, simple-hearted woman. As to Lily, I can
+praise her beauty only with safe conscience, for as yet she is a mere
+child,--her mind quite unformed."
+
+"Did you ever meet any man, much less any woman, whose mind was formed?"
+muttered Kenelm. "I am sure mine is not, and never will be on this
+earth."
+
+Mrs. Braefield did not hear this low-voiced observation. She was
+looking about for Lily; and perceiving her at last as the children who
+surrounded her were dispersing to renew the dance, she took Kenelm's
+arm, led him to the young lady, and a formal introduction took place.
+
+Formal as it could be on those sunlit swards, amidst the joy of summer
+and the laugh of children. In such scene and such circumstance formality
+does not last long. I know not how it was, but in a very few minutes
+Kenelm and Lily had ceased to be strangers to each other. They found
+themselves seated apart from the rest of the merry-makers, on the bank
+shadowed by lime-trees; the man listening with downcast eyes, the girl
+with mobile shifting glances now on earth, now on heaven, and talking
+freely; gayly,--like the babble of a happy stream, with a silvery dulcet
+voice and a sparkle of rippling smiles.
+
+No doubt this is a reversal of the formalities of well-bred life, and
+conventional narrating thereof. According to them, no doubt, it is for
+the man to talk and the maid to listen; but I state the facts as they
+were, honestly. And Lily knew no more of the formalities of drawing-room
+life than a skylark fresh from its nest knows of the song-teacher and
+the cage. She was still so much of a child. Mrs. Braefield was right:
+her mind was still so unformed.
+
+What she did talk about in that first talk between them that could make
+the meditative Kenelm listen so mutely, so intently, I know not, at
+least I could not jot it down on paper. I fear it was very egotistical,
+as the talk of children generally is,--about herself and her aunt, and
+her home and her friends; all her friends seemed children like herself,
+though younger,--Clemmy the chief of them. Clemmy was the one who had
+taken a fancy to Kenelm. And amidst all this ingenuous prattle there
+came flashes of a quick intellect, a lively fancy,--nay, even a poetry
+of expression or of sentiment. It might be the talk of a child, but
+certainly not of a silly child. But as soon as the dance was over,
+the little ones again gathered round Lily. Evidently she was the prime
+favourite of them all; and as her companion had now become tired
+of dancing, new sports were proposed, and Lily was carried off to
+"Prisoner's Base."
+
+"I am very happy to make your acquaintance, Mr. Chillingly," said a
+frank, pleasant voice; and a well-dressed, good-looking man held out his
+hand to Kenelm.
+
+"My husband," said Mrs. Braefield, with a certain pride in her look.
+
+Kenelm responded cordially to the civilities of the master of the house,
+who had just returned from his city office, and left all its cares
+behind him. You had only to look at him to see that he was prosperous,
+and deserved to be so. There were in his countenance the signs of strong
+sense, of good-humour,--above all, of an active energetic temperament. A
+man of broad smooth forehead, keen hazel eyes, firm lips and jaw; with a
+happy contentment in himself, his house, the world in general, mantling
+over his genial smile, and outspoken in the metallic ring of his voice.
+
+"You will stay and dine with us, of course," said Mr. Braefield; "and,
+unless you want very much to be in town to-night, I hope you will take a
+bed here."
+
+Kenelm hesitated.
+
+"Do stay at least till to-morrow," said Mrs. Braefield. Kenelm hesitated
+still; and while hesitating his eye rested on Lily, leaning on the arm
+of a middle-aged lady, and approaching the hostess,--evidently to take
+leave.
+
+"I cannot resist so tempting an invitation," said Kenelm, and he fell
+back a little behind Lily and her companion.
+
+"Thank you much for so pleasant a day," said Mrs. Cameron to the
+hostess. "Lily has enjoyed herself extremely. I only regret we could not
+come earlier."
+
+"If you are walking home," said Mr. Braefield, "let me accompany you. I
+want to speak to your gardener about his heart's-ease: it is much finer
+than mine."
+
+"If so," said Kenelm to Lily, "may I come too? Of all flowers that grow,
+heart's-ease is the one I most prize."
+
+A few minutes afterwards Kenelm was walking by the side of Lily along
+the banks of a little stream, tributary to the Thames; Mrs. Cameron and
+Mr. Braefield in advance, for the path only held two abreast.
+
+Suddenly Lily left his side, allured by a rare butterfly--I think it is
+called the Emperor of Morocco--that was sunning its yellow wings upon
+a group of wild reeds. She succeeded in capturing this wanderer in her
+straw hat, over which she drew her sun-veil. After this notable capture
+she returned demurely to Kenelm's side.
+
+"Do you collect insects?" said that philosopher, as much surprised as it
+was his nature to be at anything.
+
+"Only butterflies," answered Lily; "they are not insects, you know; they
+are souls."
+
+"Emblems of souls you mean,--at least, so the Greeks prettily
+represented them to be."
+
+"No, real souls,--the souls of infants that die in their cradles
+unbaptized; and if they are taken care of, and not eaten by birds, and
+live a year then they pass into fairies."
+
+"It is a very poetical idea, Miss Mordaunt, and founded on evidence
+quite as rational as other assertions of the metamorphosis of one
+creature into another. Perhaps you can do what the philosophers
+cannot,--tell me how you learned a new idea to be an incontestable
+fact?"
+
+"I don't know," replied Lily, looking very much puzzled; "perhaps I
+learned it in a book, or perhaps I dreamed it."
+
+"You could not make a wiser answer if you were a philosopher. But you
+talk of taking care of butterflies; how do you do that? Do you impale
+them on pins stuck into a glass case?"
+
+"Impale them! How can you talk so cruelly? You deserve to be pinched by
+the fairies."
+
+"I am afraid," thought Kenelm, compassionately, "that my companion has
+no mind to be formed; what is euphoniously called 'an innocent.'"
+
+He shook his head and remained silent. Lily resumed,--
+
+"I will show you my collection when we get home; they seem so happy. I
+am sure there are some of them who know me: they will feed from my hand.
+I have only had one die since I began to collect them last summer."
+
+"Then you have kept them a year: they ought to have turned into
+fairies."
+
+"I suppose many of them have. Of course I let out all those that had
+been with me twelve months: they don't turn to fairies in the cage,
+you know. Now I have only those I caught this year, or last autumn; the
+prettiest don't appear till the autumn."
+
+The girl here bent her uncovered head over the straw hat, her tresses
+shadowing it, and uttered loving words to the prisoner. Then again she
+looked up and around her, and abruptly stopped, and exclaimed,--
+
+"How can people live in towns? How can people say they are ever dull in
+the country? Look," she continued, gravely and earnestly, "look at that
+tall pine-tree, with its long branch sweeping over the water; see how,
+as the breeze catches it, it changes its shadow, and how the shadow
+changes the play of the sunlight on the brook:--
+
+
+ "'Wave your tops, ye pines;
+ With every plant, in sign of worship wave.'
+
+
+"What an interchange of music there must be between Nature and a poet!"
+
+Kenelm was startled. This "an innocent"!--this a girl who had no mind to
+be formed! In that presence he could not be cynical; could not speak of
+Nature as a mechanism, a lying humbug, as he had done to the man poet.
+He replied gravely,--
+
+"The Creator has gifted the whole universe with language, but few are
+the hearts that can interpret it. Happy those to whom it is no foreign
+tongue, acquired imperfectly with care and pain, but rather a native
+language, learned unconsciously from the lips of the great mother. To
+them the butterfly's wing may well buoy into heaven a fairy's soul!"
+
+When he had thus said Lily turned, and for the first time attentively
+looked into his dark soft eyes; then instinctively she laid her light
+hand on his arm, and said in a low voice, "Talk on; talk thus: I like to
+hear you."
+
+But Kenelm did not talk on. They had now arrived at the garden-gate of
+Mrs. Cameron's cottage, and the elder persons in advance paused at the
+gate and walked with them to the house.
+
+It was a long, low, irregular cottage, without pretension to
+architectural beauty, yet exceedingly picturesque,--a flower-garden,
+large, but in proportion to the house, with parterres in which the
+colours were exquisitely assorted, sloping to the grassy margin of the
+rivulet, where the stream expanded into a lake-like basin, narrowed
+at either end by locks, from which with gentle sound flowed shallow
+waterfalls. By the banks was a rustic seat, half overshadowed by the
+drooping boughs of a vast willow.
+
+The inside of the house was in harmony with the exterior,--cottage-like,
+but with an unmistakable air of refinement about the rooms, even in the
+little entrance-hall, which was painted in Pompeian frescos.
+
+"Come and see my butterfly-cage," said Lily, whisperingly.
+
+Kenelm followed her through the window that opened on the garden; and
+at one end of a small conservatory, or rather greenhouse, was the
+habitation of these singular favourites. It was as large as a small
+room; three sides of it formed by minute wirework, with occasional
+draperies of muslin or other slight material, and covered at intervals,
+sometimes within, sometimes without, by dainty creepers; a tiny cistern
+in the centre, from which upsprang a sparkling jet. Lily cautiously
+lifted a sash-door and glided in, closing it behind her. Her entrance
+set in movement a multitude of gossamer wings, some fluttering round
+her, some more boldly settling on her hair or dress. Kenelm thought
+she had not vainly boasted when she said that some of the creatures had
+learned to know her. She released the Emperor of Morocco from her hat;
+it circled round her fearlessly, and then vanished amidst the leaves of
+the creepers. Lily opened the door and came out.
+
+"I have heard of a philosopher who tamed a wasp," said Kenelm, "but
+never before of a young lady who tamed butterflies."
+
+"No," said Lily, proudly; "I believe I am the first who attempted it.
+I don't think I should have attempted it if I had been told that others
+had succeeded before me. Not that I have succeeded quite. No matter; if
+they don't love me, I love them."
+
+They re-entered the drawing-room, and Mrs. Cameron addressed Kenelm.
+
+"Do you know much of this part of the country, Mr. Chillingly?"
+
+"It is quite new to me, and more rural than many districts farther from
+London."
+
+"That is the good fortune of most of our home counties," said Mr.
+Braefield; "they escape the smoke and din of manufacturing towns, and
+agricultural science has not demolished their leafy hedgerows. The
+walks through our green lanes are as much bordered with convolvulus and
+honeysuckle as they were when Izaak Walton sauntered through them to
+angle in that stream!"
+
+"Does tradition say that he angled in that stream? I thought his haunts
+were rather on the other side of London."
+
+"Possibly; I am not learned in Walton or in his art, but there is an old
+summer-house, on the other side of the lock yonder, on which is carved
+the name of Izaak Walton, but whether by his own hand or another's who
+shall say? Has Mr. Melville been here lately, Mrs. Cameron?"
+
+"No, not for several months."
+
+"He has had a glorious success this year. We may hope that at last his
+genius is acknowledged by the world. I meant to buy his picture, but I
+was not in time: a Manchester man was before me."
+
+"Who is Mr. Melville? any relation to you?" whispered Kenelm to Lily.
+
+"Relation,--I scarcely know. Yes, I suppose so, because he is my
+guardian. But if he were the nearest relation on earth, I could not love
+him more," said Lily, with impulsive eagerness, her cheeks flushing, her
+eyes filling with tears.
+
+"And he is an artist,--a painter?" asked Kenelm.
+
+"Oh, yes; no one paints such beautiful pictures,--no one so clever, no
+one so kind."
+
+Kenelm strove to recollect if he had ever heard the name of Melville as
+a painter, but in vain. Kenelm, however, knew but little of painters:
+they were not in his way; and he owned to himself, very humbly, that
+there might be many a living painter of eminent renown whose name and
+works would be strange to him.
+
+He glanced round the wall; Lily interpreted his look. "There are no
+pictures of his here," said she; "there is one in my own room. I will
+show it you when you come again."
+
+"And now," said Mr. Braefield, rising, "I must just have a word with
+your gardener, and then go home. We dine earlier here than in London,
+Mr. Chillingly."
+
+As the two gentlemen, after taking leave, re-entered the hall, Lily
+followed them and said to Kenelm, "What time will you come to-morrow to
+see the picture?"
+
+Kenelm averted his head, and then replied, not with his wonted courtesy,
+but briefly and brusquely,--
+
+"I fear I cannot call to-morrow. I shall be far away by sunrise."
+
+Lily made no answer, but turned back into the room.
+
+Mr. Braefield found the gardener watering a flower-border, conferred
+with him about the heart's-ease, and then joined Kenelm, who had halted
+a few yards beyond the garden-gate.
+
+"A pretty little place that," said Mr. Braefield, with a sort of lordly
+compassion, as became the owner of Braefieldville. "What I call quaint."
+
+"Yes, quaint," echoed Kenelm, abstractedly.
+
+"It is always the case with houses enlarged by degrees. I have heard my
+poor mother say that when Melville or Mrs. Cameron first bought it, it
+was little better than a mere labourer's cottage, with a field attached
+to it. And two or three years afterwards a room or so more was built,
+and a bit of the field taken in for a garden; and then by degrees the
+whole part now inhabited by the family was built, leaving only the old
+cottage as a scullery and washhouse; and the whole field was turned
+into the garden, as you see. But whether it was Melville's money or the
+aunt's that did it, I don't know. More likely the aunt's. I don't see
+what interest Melville has in the place: he does not go there often, I
+fancy; it is not his home."
+
+"Mr. Melville, it seems, is a painter, and, from what I heard you say, a
+successful one."
+
+"I fancy he had little success before this year. But surely you saw his
+pictures at the Exhibition?"
+
+"I am ashamed to say I have not been to the Exhibition."
+
+"You surprise me. However, Melville had three pictures there,--all very
+good; but the one I wished to buy made much more sensation than the
+others, and has suddenly lifted him from obscurity into fame."
+
+"He appears to be a relation of Miss Mordaunt's, but so distant a
+one that she could not even tell me what grade of cousinship he could
+claim."
+
+"Nor can I. He is her guardian, I know. The relationship, if any, must,
+as you say, be very distant; for Melville is of humble extraction, while
+any one can see that Mrs. Cameron is a thorough gentlewoman, and Lily
+Mordaunt is her sister's child. I have heard my mother say that it was
+Melville, then a very young man, who bought the cottage, perhaps with
+Mrs. Cameron's money; saying it was for a widowed lady, whose husband
+had left her with very small means. And when Mrs. Cameron arrived with
+Lily, then a mere infant, she was in deep mourning, and a very young
+woman herself,--pretty too. If Melville had been a frequent visitor
+then, of course there would have been scandal; but he very seldom came,
+and when he did, he lodged in a cottage, Cromwell Lodge, on the other
+side of the brook; now and then bringing with him a fellow-lodger,--some
+other young artist, I suppose, for the sake of angling. So there could
+be no cause for scandal, and nothing can be more blameless than poor
+Mrs. Cameron's life. My mother, who then resided at Braefieldville, took
+a great fancy to both Lily and her aunt, and when by degrees the cottage
+grew into a genteel sort of place, the few gentry in the neighbourhood
+followed my mother's example and were very kind to Mrs. Cameron, so that
+she has now her place in the society about here, and is much liked."
+
+"And Mr. Melville?--does he still very seldom come here?"
+
+"To say truth, he has not been at all since I settled at Braefieldville.
+The place was left to my mother for her life, and I was not much there
+during her occupation. In fact, I was then a junior partner in our firm,
+and conducted the branch business in New York, coming over to England
+for my holiday once a year or so. When my mother died, there was much to
+arrange before I could settle personally in England, and I did not come
+to settle at Braefieldville till I married. I did see Melville on one of
+my visits to the place some years ago; but, between ourselves, he is not
+the sort of person whose intimate acquaintance one would wish to court.
+My mother told me he was an idle, dissipated man, and I have heard from
+others that he was very unsteady. Mr. -----, the great painter, told
+me that he was a loose fish; and I suppose his habits were against his
+getting on, till this year, when, perhaps, by a lucky accident, he has
+painted a picture that raises him to the top of the tree. But is not
+Miss Lily wondrously nice to look at? What a pity her education has been
+so much neglected!"
+
+"Has it?"
+
+"Have not you discovered that already? She has not had even a
+music-master, though my wife says she has a good ear, and can sing
+prettily enough. As for reading I don't think she has read anything but
+fairy tales and poetry, and such silly stuff. However, she is very young
+yet; and now that her guardian can sell his pictures, it is to be hoped
+that he will do more justice to his ward. Painters and actors are not so
+regular in their private lives as we plain men are, and great allowance
+is to be made for them; still, every one is bound to do his duty. I am
+sure you agree with me?"
+
+"Certainly," said Kenelm, with an emphasis which startled the merchant.
+"That is an admirable maxim of yours: it seems a commonplace, yet how
+often, when it is put into our heads, it strikes as a novelty! A duty
+may be a very difficult thing, a very disagreeable thing, and, what
+is strange, it is often a very invisible thing. It is present,--close
+before us, and yet we don't see it; somebody shouts its name in our
+ears, 'Duty,' and straight it towers before us a grim giant. Pardon me
+if I leave you: I can't stay to dine. Duty summons me elsewhere. Make my
+excuses to Mrs. Braefield."
+
+Before Mr. Braefield could recover his self-possession, Kenelm had
+vaulted over a stile and was gone.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+KENELM walked into the shop kept by the Somerses, and found Jessie
+still at the counter. "Give me back my knap sack. Thank you," he said,
+flinging the knapsack across his shoulders. "Now, do me a favour. A
+portmanteau of mine ought to be at the station. Send for it, and keep it
+till I give further directions. I think of going to Oxford for a day
+or two. Mrs. Somers, one more word with you. Think, answer frankly, are
+you, as you said this morning, thoroughly happy, and yet married to the
+man you loved?"
+
+"Oh, so happy!"
+
+"And wish for nothing beyond? Do not wish Will to be other than he is?"
+
+"God forbid! You frighten me, sir."
+
+"Frighten you! Be it so. Everyone who is happy should be frightened
+lest happiness fly away. Do your best to chain it, and you will, for you
+attach Duty to Happiness; and," muttered Kenelm, as he turned from the
+shop, "Duty is sometimes not a rose-coloured tie, but a heavy iron-hued
+clog."
+
+He strode on through the street towards the sign-post with "To Oxford"
+inscribed thereon. And whether he spoke literally of the knapsack, or
+metaphorically of duty, he murmured, as he strode,--
+
+
+ "A pedlar's pack that bows the bearer down."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+
+KENELM might have reached Oxford that night, for he was a rapid and
+untirable pedestrian; but he halted a little after the moon rose, and
+laid himself down to rest beneath a new-mown haystack, not very far from
+the high road.
+
+He did not sleep. Meditatingly propped on his elbow, he said to
+himself,--
+
+"It is long since I have wondered at nothing. I wonder now: can this be
+love,--really love,--unmistakably love? Pooh! it is impossible; the
+very last person in the world to be in love with. Let us reason upon
+it,--you, myself, and I. To begin with,--face! What is face? In a few
+years the most beautiful face may be very plain. Take the Venus at
+Florence. Animate her; see her ten years after; a chignon, front teeth
+(blue or artificially white), mottled complexion, double chin,--all that
+sort of plump prettiness goes into double chin. Face, bah! What man of
+sense--what pupil of Welby, the realist--can fall in love with a face?
+and even if I were simpleton enough to do so, pretty faces are as common
+as daisies. Cecilia Travers has more regular features; Jessie Wiles a
+richer colouring. I was not in love with them,--not a bit of it. Myself,
+you have nothing to say there. Well, then, mind? Talk of mind, indeed!
+a creature whose favourite companionship is that of butterflies, and who
+tells me that butterflies are the souls of infants unbaptized. What an
+article for 'The Londoner,' on the culture of young women! What a girl
+for Miss Garrett and Miss Emily Faithfull! Put aside Mind as we have
+done Face. What rests?--the Frenchman's ideal of happy marriage?
+congenial circumstance of birth, fortune, tastes, habits. Worse still.
+Myself, answer honestly, are you not floored?"
+
+Whereon "Myself" took up the parable and answered, "O thou fool! why
+wert thou so ineffably blessed in one presence? Why, in quitting that
+presence, did Duty become so grim? Why dost thou address to me those
+inept pedantic questionings, under the light of yon moon, which has
+suddenly ceased to be to thy thoughts an astronomical body and has
+become, forever and forever, identified in thy heart's dreams with
+romance and poesy and first love? Why, instead of gazing on that
+uncomfortable orb, art thou not quickening thy steps towards a cozy inn
+and a good supper at Oxford? Kenelm, my friend, thou art in for it. No
+disguising the fact: thou art in love!"
+
+"I'll be hanged if I am," said the Second in the Dualism of Kenelm's
+mind; and therewith he shifted his knapsack into a pillow, turned his
+eyes from the moon, and still could not sleep. The face of Lily still
+haunted his eyes; the voice of Lily still rang in his ears.
+
+Oh, my reader! dost thou here ask me to tell thee what Lily was
+like?--was she dark? was she fair? was she tall? was she short? Never
+shalt thou learn these secrets from me. Imagine to thyself the being to
+which thine whole of life, body and mind and soul, moved irresistibly as
+the needle to the pole. Let her be tall or short, dark or fair, she is
+that which out of all womankind has suddenly become the one woman for
+thee. Fortunate art thou, my reader, if thou chance to have heard the
+popular song of "My Queen" sung by the one lady who alone can sing it
+with expression worthy the verse of the poetess and the music of the
+composition, by the sister of the exquisite songstress. But if thou hast
+not heard the verse thus sung, to an accompaniment thus composed, still
+the words themselves are, or ought to be, familiar to thee, if thou art,
+as I take for granted, a lover of the true lyrical muse. Recall then
+the words supposed to be uttered by him who knows himself destined to do
+homage to one he has not yet beheld:--
+
+
+ "She is standing somewhere,--she I shall honour,
+ She that I wait for, my queen, my queen;
+ Whether her hair be golden or raven,
+ Whether her eyes be hazel or blue,
+ I know not now, it will be engraven
+ Some day hence as my loveliest hue.
+ She may be humble or proud, my lady,
+ Or that sweet calm which is just between;
+ But whenever she comes, she will find me ready
+ To do her homage, my queen, my queen."
+
+
+Was it possible that the cruel boy-god "who sharpens his arrows on the
+whetstone of the human heart" had found the moment to avenge himself
+for the neglect of his altars and the scorn of his power? Must that
+redoubted knight-errant, the hero of this tale, despite the Three Fishes
+on his charmed shield, at last veil the crest and bow the knee, and
+murmur to himself, "She has come, my queen"?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE next morning Kenelm arrived at Oxford,--"Verum secretumque
+Mouseion."
+
+If there be a place in this busy island which may distract the
+passion of youth from love to scholarship, to Ritualism, to mediaeval
+associations, to that sort of poetical sentiment or poetical fanaticism
+which a Mivers and a Welby and an advocate of the Realistic School would
+hold in contempt,--certainly that place is Oxford,--home; nevertheless,
+of great thinkers and great actors in the practical world.
+
+The vacation had not yet commenced, but the commencement was near at
+hand. Kenelm thought he could recognize the leading men by their slower
+walk and more abstracted expression of countenance. Among the Fellows
+was the eminent author of that book which had so powerfully fascinated
+the earlier adolescence of Kenelm Chillingly, and who had himself been
+subject to the fascination of a yet stronger spirit. The Rev. Decimus
+Roach had been ever an intense and reverent admirer of John Henry
+Newman,--an admirer, I mean, of the pure and lofty character of the
+man, quite apart from sympathy with his doctrines. But although Roach
+remained an unconverted Protestant of orthodox, if High Church, creed,
+yet there was one tenet he did hold in common with the author of the
+"Apologia." He ranked celibacy among the virtues most dear to Heaven.
+In that eloquent treatise, "The Approach to the Angels," he not only
+maintained that the state of single blessedness was strictly incumbent
+on every member of a Christian priesthood, but to be commended to the
+adoption of every conscientious layman.
+
+It was the desire to confer with this eminent theologian that had
+induced Kenelm to direct his steps to Oxford.
+
+Mr. Roach was a friend of Welby, at whose house, when a pupil,
+Kenelm had once or twice met him, and been even more charmed by his
+conversation than by his treatise.
+
+Kenelm called on Mr. Roach, who received him very graciously, and, not
+being a tutor or examiner, placed his time at Kenelm's disposal; took
+him the round of the colleges and the Bodleian; invited him to dine in
+his college-hall; and after dinner led him into his own rooms, and gave
+him an excellent bottle of Chateau Margeaux.
+
+Mr. Roach was somewhere about fifty,--a good-looking man and evidently
+thought himself so; for he wore his hair long behind and parted in the
+middle, which is not done by men who form modest estimates of their
+personal appearance.
+
+Kenelm was not long in drawing out his host on the subject to which that
+profound thinker had devoted so much meditation.
+
+"I can scarcely convey to you," said Kenelm, "the intense admiration
+with which I have studied your noble work, 'Approach to the Angels.' It
+produced a great effect on me in the age between boyhood and youth. But
+of late some doubts on the universal application of your doctrine have
+crept into my mind."
+
+"Ay, indeed?" said Mr. Roach, with an expression of interest in his
+face.
+
+"And I come to you for their solution."
+
+Mr. Roach turned away his head, and pushed the bottle to Kenelm.
+
+"I am quite willing to concede," resumed the heir of the Chillinglys,
+"that a priesthood should stand apart from the distracting cares of a
+family, and pure from all carnal affections."
+
+"Hem, hem," grunted Mr. Roach, taking his knee on his lap and caressing
+it.
+
+"I go further," continued Kenelm, "and supposing with you that the
+Confessional has all the importance, whether in its monitory or its
+cheering effects upon repentant sinners, which is attached to it by
+the Roman Catholics, and that it ought to be no less cultivated by the
+Reformed Church, it seems to me essential that the Confessor should have
+no better half to whom it can be even suspected he may, in an unguarded
+moment, hint at the frailties of one of her female acquaintances."
+
+"I pushed that argument too far," murmured Roach.
+
+"Not a bit of it. Celibacy in the Confessor stands or falls with the
+Confessional. Your argument there is as sound as a bell. But when it
+comes to the layman, I think I detect a difference."
+
+Mr. Roach shook his head, and replied stoutly, "No; if celibacy be
+incumbent on the one, it is equally incumbent on the other. I say 'if.'"
+
+"Permit me to deny that assertion. Do not fear that I shall insult your
+understanding by the popular platitude; namely, that if celibacy were
+universal, in a very few years the human race would be extinct. As you
+have justly observed, in answer to that fallacy, 'It is the duty of each
+human soul to strive towards the highest perfection of the spiritual
+state for itself, and leave the fate of the human race to the care of
+the Creator.' If celibacy be necessary to spiritual perfection, how do
+we know but that it may be the purpose and decree of the All Wise that
+the human race, having attained to that perfection, should disappear
+from earth? Universal celibacy would thus be the euthanasia of mankind.
+On the other hand, if the Creator decided that the human race, having
+culminated to this crowning but barren flower of perfection, should
+nevertheless continue to increase and multiply upon earth, have you not
+victoriously exclaimed, 'Presumptuous mortal! how canst thou presume
+to limit the resources of the Almighty? Would it not be easy for Him to
+continue some other mode, unexposed to trouble and sin and passion, as
+in the nuptials of the vegetable world, by which the generations will
+be renewed? Can we suppose that the angels--the immortal companies
+of heaven--are not hourly increasing in number, and extending their
+population throughout infinity? and yet in heaven there is no marrying
+nor giving in marriage.' All this, clothed by you in words which my
+memory only serves me to quote imperfectly,--all this I unhesitatingly
+concede."
+
+Mr. Roach rose and brought another bottle of the Chateau Margeaux from
+his cellaret, filled Kenelm's glass, reseated himself, and took the
+other knee into his lap to caress.
+
+"But," resumed Kenelm, "my doubt is this."
+
+"Ah!" cried Mr. Roach, "let us hear the doubt."
+
+"In the first place, is celibacy essential to the highest state of
+spiritual perfection; and, in the second place, if it were, are mortals,
+as at present constituted, capable of that culmination?"
+
+"Very well put," said Mr. Roach, and he tossed off his glass with more
+cheerful aspect than he had hitherto exhibited.
+
+"You see," said Kenelm, "we are compelled in this, as in other questions
+of philosophy, to resort to the inductive process, and draw our theories
+from the facts within our cognizance. Now looking round the world, is it
+the fact that old maids and old bachelors are so much more spiritually
+advanced than married folks? Do they pass their time, like an Indian
+dervish, in serene contemplation of divine excellence and beatitude?
+Are they not quite as worldly in their own way as persons who have been
+married as often as the Wife of Bath, and, generally speaking, more
+selfish, more frivolous, and more spiteful? I am sure I don't wish to
+speak uncharitably against old maids and old bachelors. I have three
+aunts who are old maids, and fine specimens of the genus; but I am sure
+they would all three have been more agreeable companions, and quite as
+spiritually gifted, if they had been happily married, and were caressing
+their children, instead of lapdogs. So, too, I have an old bachelor
+cousin, Chillingly Mivers, whom you know. As clever as a man can be.
+But, Lord bless you! as to being wrapped in spiritual meditation, he
+could not be more devoted to the things of earth if he had married as
+many wives as Solomon, and had as many children as Priam. Finally, have
+not half the mistakes in the world arisen from a separation between the
+spiritual and the moral nature of man? Is it not, after all, through his
+dealings with his fellow-men that man makes his safest 'approach to the
+angels'? And is not the moral system a very muscular system? Does it not
+require for healthful vigour plenty of continued exercise, and does it
+not get that exercise naturally by the relationships of family, with
+all the wider collateral struggles with life which the care of family
+necessitates?
+
+"I put these questions to you with the humblest diffidence. I expect to
+hear such answers as will thoroughly convince my reason, and I shall be
+delighted if so. For at the root of the controversy lies the passion of
+love. And love must be a very disquieting, troublesome emotion, and has
+led many heroes and sages into wonderful weaknesses and follies."
+
+"Gently, gently, Mr. Chillingly; don't exaggerate. Love, no doubt,
+is--ahem--a disquieting passion. Still, every emotion that changes life
+from a stagnant pool into the freshness and play of a running stream is
+disquieting to the pool. Not only love and its fellow-passions, such as
+ambition, but the exercise of the reasoning faculty, which is always at
+work in changing our ideas, is very disquieting. Love, Mr. Chillingly,
+has its good side as well as its bad. Pass the bottle."
+
+KENELM (passing the bottle).--"Yes, yes; you are quite right in
+putting the adversary's case strongly, before you demolish it: all good
+rhetoricians do that. Pardon me if I am up to that trick in argument.
+Assume that I know all that can be said in favour of the abnegation of
+common-sense, euphoniously called 'love,' and proceed to the demolition
+of the case."
+
+THE REV. DECIMUS ROACH (hesitatingly).--"The demolition of the case?
+humph! The passions are ingrafted in the human system as part and parcel
+of it, and are not to be demolished so easily as you seem to think.
+Love, taken rationally and morally by a man of good education and sound
+principles, is--is--"
+
+KENELM.--"Well, is what?"
+
+THE REV. DECIMUS ROACH.--"A--a--a--thing not to be despised. Like the
+sun, it is the great colourist of life, Mr. Chillingly. And you are so
+right: the moral system does require daily exercise. What can give that
+exercise to a solitary man, when he arrives at the practical age in
+which he cannot sit for six hours at a stretch musing on the divine
+essence; and rheumatism or other ailments forbid his adventure into
+the wilds of Africa as a missionary? At that age, Nature, which will
+be heard, Mr. Chillingly, demands her rights. A sympathizing female
+companion by one's side; innocent little children climbing one's
+knee,--lovely, bewitching picture! Who can be Goth enough to rub it out,
+who fanatic enough to paint over it the image of a Saint Simeon sitting
+alone on a pillar? Take another glass. You don't drink enough, Mr.
+Chillingly."
+
+"I have drunk enough," replied Kenelm, in a sullen voice, "to think I
+see double. I imagined that before me sat the austere adversary of the
+insanity of love and the miseries of wedlock. Now, I fancy I listen to
+a puling sentimentalist uttering the platitudes which the other Decimus
+Roach had already refuted. Certainly either I see double, or you amuse
+yourself with mocking my appeal to your wisdom."
+
+"Not so, Mr. Chillingly. But the fact is, that when I wrote that book
+of which you speak I was young, and youth is enthusiastic and one-sided.
+Now, with the same disdain of the excesses to which love may hurry weak
+intellects, I recognize its benignant effects when taken, as I before
+said, rationally,--taken rationally, my young friend. At that period
+of life when the judgment is matured, the soothing companionship of
+an amiable female cannot but cheer the mind, and prevent that morose
+hoar-frost into which solitude is chilled and made rigid by increasing
+years. In short, Mr. Chillingly, having convinced myself that I erred
+in the opinion once too rashly put forth, I owe it to Truth, I owe it to
+Mankind, to make my conversion known to the world. And I am about next
+month to enter into the matrimonial state with a young lady who--"
+
+"Say no more, say no more, Mr. Roach. It must be a painful subject to
+you. Let us drop it."
+
+"It is not a painful subject at all!" exclaimed Mr. Roach, with warmth.
+"I look forward to the fulfilment of my duty with the pleasure which
+a well-trained mind always ought to feel in recanting a fallacious
+doctrine. But you do me the justice to understand that of course I do
+not take this step I propose--for my personal satisfaction. No, sir,
+it is the value of my example to others which purifies my motives and
+animates my soul."
+
+After this concluding and noble sentence, the conversation drooped. Host
+and guest both felt they had had enough of each other. Kenelm soon rose
+to depart.
+
+Mr. Roach, on taking leave of, him at the door, said, with marked
+emphasis,--
+
+"Not for my personal satisfaction,--remember that. Whenever you hear my
+conversion discussed in the world, say that from my own lips you heard
+these words,--NOT FOR MY PERSONAL SATISFACTION. No! my kind regards to
+Welby,--a married man himself, and a father: he will understand me."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ON quitting Oxford, Kenelm wandered for several days about the country,
+advancing to no definite goal, meeting with no noticeable adventure.
+At last he found himself mechanically retracing his steps. A magnetic
+influence he could not resist drew him back towards the grassy meads and
+the sparkling rill of Moleswich.
+
+"There must be," said he to himself, "a mental, like an optical,
+illusion. In the last, we fancy we have seen a spectre. If we dare not
+face the apparition,--dare not attempt to touch it,--run superstitiously
+away from it,--what happens? We shall believe to our dying day that it
+was not an illusion, that it was a spectre; and so we may be crazed for
+life. But if we manfully walk up to the phantom, stretch our hands
+to seize it, oh! it fades into thin air, the cheat of our eyesight is
+dispelled, and we shall never be ghost-ridden again. So it must be with
+this mental illusion of mine. I see an image strange to my experience:
+it seems to me, at first sight, clothed with a supernatural charm; like
+an unreasoning coward, I run away from it. It continues to haunt me; I
+cannot shut out its apparition. It pursues me by day alike in the haunts
+of men,--alike in the solitudes of nature; it visits me by night in my
+dreams. I begin to say this must be a real visitant from another world:
+it must be love; the love of which I read in the Poets, as in the Poets
+I read of witchcraft and ghosts. Surely I must approach that apparition
+as a philosopher like Sir David Brewster would approach the black
+cat seated on a hearth-rug, which he tells us that some lady of his
+acquaintance constantly saw till she went into a world into which black
+cats are not held to be admitted. The more I think of it the less
+it appears to me possible that I can be really in love with a wild,
+half-educated, anomalous creature, merely because the apparition of
+her face haunts me. With perfect safety, therefore, I can approach the
+creature; in proportion as I see more of her the illusion will vanish. I
+will go back to Moleswich manfully."
+
+Thus said Kenelm to himself, and himself answered,--"Go; for thou canst
+not help it. Thinkest thou that Daces can escape the net that has meshed
+a Roach? No,--
+
+
+ 'Come it will, the day decreed by fate,'
+
+
+when thou must succumb to the 'Nature which will be heard.' Better
+succumb now, and with a good grace, than resist till thou hast reached
+thy fiftieth year, and then make a rational choice not for thy personal
+satisfaction."
+
+Whereupon Kenelm answered to himself, indignantly, "Pooh! thou flippant.
+My _alter ego_, thou knowest not what thou art talking about! It is
+not a question of Nature; it is a question of the supernatural,--an
+illusion,--a phantom!" Thus Kenelm and himself continued to quarrel with
+each other; and the more they quarrelled, the nearer they approached
+to the haunted spot in which had been seen, and fled from, the fatal
+apparition of first love.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VI.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+SIR PETER had not heard from Kenelm since a letter informing him that
+his son had left town on an excursion, which would probably be short,
+though it might last a few weeks; and the good Baronet now resolved to
+go to London himself, take his chance of Kenelm's return, and if
+still absent, at least learn from Mivers and others how far that very
+eccentric planet had contrived to steer a regular course amidst the
+fixed stars of the metropolitan system. He had other reasons for his
+journey. He wished to make the acquaintance of Chillingly Gordon
+before handing him over the L20,000 which Kenelm had released in that
+resettlement of estates, the necessary deeds of which the young heir had
+signed before quitting London for Moleswich. Sir Peter wished still more
+to see Cecilia Travers, in whom Kenelm's accounts of her had inspired a
+very strong interest.
+
+The day after his arrival in town Sir Peter breakfasted with Mivers.
+
+"Upon my word you are very comfortable here," said Sir Peter, glancing
+at the well-appointed table, and round the well-furnished rooms.
+
+"Naturally so: there is no one to prevent my being comfortable. I am not
+married; taste that omelette."
+
+"Some men declare they never knew comfort till they were married, Cousin
+Miners."
+
+"Some men are reflecting bodies, and catch a pallid gleam from the
+comfort which a wife concentres on herself. With a fortune so modest and
+secure, what comforts, possessed by me now, would not a Mrs. Chillingly
+Mivers ravish from my hold and appropriate to herself! Instead of these
+pleasant rooms, where should I be lodged? In a dingy den looking on
+a backyard excluded from the sun by day and vocal with cats by night;
+while Mrs. Mivers luxuriated in two drawing-rooms with southern aspect
+and perhaps a boudoir. My brougham would be torn from my uses and
+monopolized by 'the angel of my hearth,' clouded in her crinoline and
+halved by her chignon. No! if ever I marry--and I never deprive myself
+of the civilities and needlework which single ladies waste upon me by
+saying I shall not marry--it will be when women have fully established
+their rights; for then men may have a chance of vindicating their own.
+Then if there are two drawing-rooms in the house I shall take one;
+if not, we will toss up who shall have the back parlour; if we keep a
+brougham, it will be exclusively mine three days in the week; if Mrs. M.
+wants L200 a year for her wardrobe she must be contented with one, the
+other half will belong to my personal decoration; if I am oppressed by
+proof-sheets and printers' devils, half of the oppression falls to her
+lot, while I take my holiday on the croquet ground at Wimbledon. Yes,
+when the present wrongs of women are exchanged for equality with men, I
+will cheerfully marry; and to do the thing generous, I will not oppose
+Mrs. M.'s voting in the vestry or for Parliament. I will give her my own
+votes with pleasure."
+
+"I fear, my dear cousin, that you have infected Kenelm with your selfish
+ideas on the nuptial state. He does not seem inclined to marry,--eh?"
+
+"Not that I know of."
+
+"What sort of girl is Cecilia Travers?"
+
+"One of those superior girls who are not likely to tower into that
+terrible giantess called a 'superior woman.' A handsome, well-educated,
+sensible young lady, not spoiled by being an heiress; in fine, just the
+sort of girl whom you could desire to fix on for a daughter-in-law."
+
+"And you don't think Kenelm has a fancy for her?"
+
+"Honestly speaking, I do not."
+
+"Any counter-attraction? There are some things in which sons do not
+confide in their fathers. You have never heard that Kenelm has been a
+little wild?"
+
+"Wild he is, as the noble savage who ran in the woods," said Cousin
+Mivers.
+
+"You frighten me!"
+
+"Before the noble savage ran across the squaws, and was wise enough to
+run away from them. Kenelm has run away now somewhere."
+
+"Yes, he does not tell me where, nor do they know at his lodgings.
+A heap of notes on his table and no directions where they are to
+be forwarded. On the whole, however, he has held his own in London
+society,--eh?"
+
+"Certainly! he has been more courted than most young men, and perhaps
+more talked of. Oddities generally are."
+
+"You own he has talents above the average? Do you not think he will make
+a figure in the world some day, and discharge that debt to the literary
+stores or the political interests of his country, which alas, I and my
+predecessors, the other Sir Peters, failed to do; and for which I hailed
+his birth, and gave him the name of Kenelm?"
+
+"Upon my word," answered Mivers,--who had now finished his breakfast,
+retreated to an easy-chair, and taken from the chimney-piece one of his
+famous trabucos,--"upon my word, I can't guess; if some great reverse
+of fortune befell him, and he had to work for his livelihood, or if some
+other direful calamity gave a shock to his nervous system and jolted it
+into a fussy, fidgety direction, I dare say he might make a splash in
+that current of life which bears men on to the grave. But you see he
+wants, as he himself very truly says, the two stimulants to definite
+action,--poverty and vanity."
+
+"Surely there have been great men who were neither poor nor vain?"
+
+"I doubt it. But vanity is a ruling motive that takes many forms
+and many aliases: call it ambition, call it love of fame, still its
+substance is the same,--the desire of applause carried into fussiness of
+action."
+
+"There may be the desire for abstract truth without care for applause."
+
+"Certainly. A philosopher on a desert island may amuse himself by
+meditating on the distinction between light and heat. But if, on
+returning to the world, he publish the result of his meditations, vanity
+steps in and desires to be applauded."
+
+"Nonsense, Cousin Mivers, he may rather desire to be of use and benefit
+to mankind. You don't deny that there is such a thing as philanthropy."
+
+"I don't deny that there is such a thing as humbug. And whenever I meet
+a man who has the face to tell me that he is taking a great deal
+of trouble, and putting himself very much out of his way, for a
+philanthropical object, without the slightest idea of reward either in
+praise or pence, I know that I have a humbug before me,--a dangerous
+humbug, a swindling humbug, a fellow with his pocket full of villanous
+prospectuses and appeals to subscribers."
+
+"Pooh, pooh; leave off that affectation of cynicism: you are not a
+bad-hearted fellow; you must love mankind; you must have an interest in
+the welfare of posterity."
+
+"Love mankind? Interest in posterity? Bless my soul, Cousin Peter, I
+hope you have no prospectuses in _your_ pockets; no schemes for draining
+the Pontine Marshes out of pure love to mankind; no propositions for
+doubling the income-tax, as a reserve fund for posterity, should our
+coal-fields fail three thousand years hence. Love of mankind! Rubbish!
+This comes of living in the country."
+
+"But you do love the human race; you do care for the generations that
+are to come."
+
+"I! Not a bit of it. On the contrary, I rather dislike the human race,
+taking it altogether, and including the Australian bushmen; and I don't
+believe any man who tells me that he would grieve half as much if
+ten millions of human beings were swallowed up by an earthquake at a
+considerable distance from his own residence, say Abyssinia, as he would
+for a rise in his butcher's bills. As to posterity, who would consent
+to have a month's fit of the gout or tic-douloureux in order that in the
+fourth thousand year, A. D., posterity should enjoy a perfect system of
+sewage?"
+
+Sir Peter, who had recently been afflicted by a very sharp attack
+of neuralgia, shook his head, but was too conscientious not to keep
+silence.
+
+"To turn the subject," said Mivers, relighting the cigar which he had
+laid aside while delivering himself of his amiable opinions, "I think
+you would do well, while in town, to call on your old friend Travers,
+and be introduced to Cecilia. If you think as favourably of her as I do,
+why not ask father and daughter to pay you a visit at Exmundham? Girls
+think more about a man when they see the place which he can offer
+to them as a home, and Exmundham is an attractive place to
+girls,--picturesque and romantic."
+
+"A very good idea," cried Sir Peter, heartily. "And I want also to make
+the acquaintance of Chillingly Gordon. Give me his address."
+
+"Here is his card on the chimney-piece, take it; you will always find
+him at home till two o'clock. He is too sensible to waste the forenoon
+in riding out in Hyde Park with young ladies."
+
+"Give me your frank opinion of that young kinsman. Kenelm tells me that
+he is clever and ambitious."
+
+"Kenelm speaks truly. He is not a man who will talk stuff about love of
+mankind and posterity. He is of our day, with large, keen, wide-awake
+eyes, that look only on such portions of mankind as can be of use to
+him, and do not spoil their sight by poring through cracked telescopes
+to catch a glimpse of posterity. Gordon is a man to be a Chancellor of
+the Exchequer, perhaps a Prime Minister."
+
+"And old Gordon's son is cleverer than my boy,--than the namesake of
+Kenelm Digby!" and Sir Peter sighed.
+
+"I did not say that. I am cleverer than Chillingly Gordon, and the
+proof of it is that I am too clever to wish to be Prime Minister,--very
+disagreeable office, hard work, irregular hours for meals, much abuse
+and confirmed dyspepsia."
+
+Sir Peter went away rather down-hearted. He found Chillingly Gordon at
+home in a lodging in Jermyn Street. Though prepossessed against him by
+all he had heard, Sir Peter was soon propitiated in his favour. Gordon
+had a frank man-of-the-world way with him, and much too fine a tact
+to utter any sentiments likely to displease an old-fashioned country
+gentleman, and a relation who might possibly be of service in his
+career. He touched briefly, and with apparent feeling, on the unhappy
+litigation commenced by his father; spoke with affectionate praise of
+Kenelm; and with a discriminating good-nature of Mivers, as a man who,
+to parody the epigram on Charles II.,
+
+
+ "Never says a kindly thing
+ And never does a harsh one."
+
+
+Then he drew Sir Peter on to talk of the country and agricultural
+prospects. Learned that among his objects in visiting town was the wish
+to inspect a patented hydraulic ram that might be very useful for his
+farm-yard, which was ill supplied with water. Startled the Baronet by
+evincing some practical knowledge of mechanics; insisted on accompanying
+him to the city to inspect the ram; did so, and approved the purchase;
+took him next to see a new American reaping-machine, and did not part
+with him till he had obtained Sir Peter's promise to dine with him at
+the Garrick; an invitation peculiarly agreeable to Sir Peter, who had
+a natural curiosity to see some of the more recently distinguished
+frequenters of that social club. As, on quitting Gordon, Sir Peter took
+his way to the house of Leopold Travers, his thoughts turned with much
+kindliness towards his young kinsman. "Mivers and Kenelm," quoth he to
+himself, "gave me an unfavourable impression of this lad; they represent
+him as worldly, self-seeking, and so forth. But Mivers takes such
+cynical views of character, and Kenelm is too eccentric to judge fairly
+of a sensible man of the world. At all events, it is not like an egotist
+to put himself out of his way to be so civil to an old fellow like me. A
+young man about town must have pleasanter modes of passing his day than
+inspecting hydraulic rams and reaping-machines. Clever they allow him to
+be. Yes, decidedly clever, and not offensively clever,--practical."
+
+Sir Peter found Travers in the dining-room with his daughter, Mrs.
+Campion, and Lady Glenalvon. Travers was one of those men rare in middle
+age, who are more often to be found in their drawing-room than in their
+private study; he was fond of female society; and perhaps it was this
+predilection which contributed to preserve in him the charm of good
+breeding and winning manners. The two men had not met for many years;
+not indeed since Travers was at the zenith of his career of fashion,
+and Sir Peter was one of those pleasant _dilettanti_ and half humoristic
+conversationalists who become popular and courted diners-out.
+
+Sir Peter had originally been a moderate Whig because his father
+had been one before him; but he left the Whig party with the Duke of
+Richmond, Mr. Stanley (afterwards Lord Derby), and others, when it
+seemed to him that that party had ceased to be moderate.
+
+Leopold Travers had, as a youth in the Guards, been a high Tory, but,
+siding with Sir Robert Peel on the repeal of the Corn Laws, remained
+with the Peelites after the bulk of the Tory party had renounced the
+guidance of their former chief, and now went with these Peelites in
+whatever direction the progress of the age might impel their strides in
+advance of Whigs and in defiance of Tories.
+
+However, it is not the politics of these two gentlemen that are in
+question now. As I have just said, they had not met for many years.
+Travers was very little changed. Sir Peter recognized him at a glance;
+Sir Peter was much changed, and Travers hesitated before, on hearing
+his name announced, he felt quite sure that it was the right Sir Peter
+towards whom he advanced, and to whom he extended his cordial hand.
+Travers preserved the colour of his hair and the neat proportions of his
+figure, and was as scrupulously well dressed as in his dandy days. Sir
+Peter, originally very thin and with fair locks and dreamy blue eyes,
+had now become rather portly,--at least towards the middle of him,--and
+very gray; had long ago taken to spectacles; his dress, too, was very
+old-fashioned, and made by a country tailor. He looked quite as much
+a gentleman as Travers did; quite perhaps as healthy, allowing for
+difference of years; quite as likely to last his time. But between them
+there was the difference of the nervous temperament and the lymphatic.
+Travers, with less brain than Sir Peter, had kept his brain constantly
+active; Sir Peter had allowed his brain to dawdle over old books and
+lazily delight in letting the hours slip by. Therefore Travers still
+looked young, alert,--up to his day, up to anything; while Sir Peter,
+entering that drawing-room, seemed a sort of Rip van Winkle who had
+slept through the past generation, and looked on the present with eyes
+yet drowsy. Still, in those rare moments when he was thoroughly roused
+up, there would have been found in Sir Peter a glow of heart, nay,
+even a vigour of thought, much more expressive than the constitutional
+alertness that characterized Leopold Travers, of the attributes we most
+love and admire in the young.
+
+"My dear Sir Peter, is it you? I am so glad to see you again," said
+Travers. "What an age since we met, and how condescendingly kind you
+were then to me; silly fop that I was! But bygones are bygones; come
+to the present. Let me introduce to you, first, my valued friend, Mrs.
+Campion, whose distinguished husband you remember. Ah, what pleasant
+meetings we had at his house! And next, that young lady of whom she
+takes motherly charge, my daughter Cecilia. Lady Glenalvon, your wife's
+friend, of course needs no introduction: time stands still with her."
+
+Sir Peter lowered his spectacles, which in reality he only wanted for
+books in small print, and gazed attentively on the three ladies,--at
+each gaze a bow. But while his eyes were still lingeringly fixed on
+Cecilia, Lady Glenalvon advanced, naturally in right of rank and the
+claim of old acquaintance, the first of the three to greet him.
+
+"Alas, my dear Sir Peter! time does not stand still for any of us; but
+what matter, if it leaves pleasant footprints? When I see you again, my
+youth comes before me,--my early friend, Caroline Brotherton, now Lady
+Chillingly; our girlish walks with each other; wreaths and ball-dresses
+the practical topic; prospective husbands, the dream at a distance. Come
+and sit here: tell me all about Caroline."
+
+Sir Peter, who had little to say about Caroline that could possibly
+interest anybody but himself, nevertheless took his seat beside Lady
+Glenalvon, and, as in duty bound, made the most flattering account
+of his She Baronet which experience or invention would allow. All the
+while, however, his thoughts were on Kenelm, and his eyes on Cecilia.
+
+Cecilia resumes some mysterious piece of lady's work, no matter
+what,--perhaps embroidery for a music-stool, perhaps a pair of slippers
+for her father (which, being rather vain of his feet and knowing they
+looked best in plain morocco, he will certainly never wear). Cecilia
+appears absorbed in her occupation; but her eyes and her thoughts are
+on Sir Peter. Why, my lady reader may guess. And oh, so flatteringly,
+so lovingly fixed! She thinks he has a most charming, intelligent,
+benignant countenance. She admires even his old-fashioned frock-coat,
+high neckcloth, and strapped trousers. She venerates his gray hairs,
+pure of dye. She tries to find a close resemblance between that
+fair, blue-eyed, plumpish, elderly gentleman and the lean, dark-eyed,
+saturnine, lofty Kenelm; she detects the likeness which nobody else
+would. She begins to love Sir Peter, though he has not said a word to
+her.
+
+Ah! on this, a word for what it is worth to you, my young readers. You,
+sir, wishing to marry a girl who is to be deeply, lastingly in love with
+you, and a thoroughly good wife practically, consider well how she takes
+to your parents; how she attaches to them an inexpressible sentiment,
+a disinterested reverence; even should you but dimly recognize the
+sentiment, or feel the reverence, how if between you and your parents
+some little cause of coldness arise, she will charm you back to honour
+your father and your mother, even though they are not particularly
+genial to her: well, if you win that sort of girl as your wife think you
+have got a treasure. You have won a woman to whom Heaven has given the
+two best attributes,--intense feeling of love, intense sense of duty.
+What, my dear lady reader, I say of one sex, I say of another, though
+in a less degree; because a girl who marries becomes of her husband's
+family, and the man does not become of his wife's. Still I distrust the
+depth of any man's love to a woman, if he does not feel a great degree
+of tenderness (and forbearance where differences arise) for her parents.
+But the wife must not so put them in the foreground as to make the
+husband think he is cast in the cold of the shadow. Pardon this
+intolerable length of digression, dear reader: it is not altogether a
+digression, for it belongs to my tale that you should clearly understand
+the sort of girl that is personified in Cecilia Travers.
+
+"What has become of Kenelm?" asked Lady Glenalvon.
+
+"I wish I could tell you," answered Sir Peter. "He wrote me word that he
+was going forth on rambles into 'fresh woods and pastures new,' perhaps
+for some weeks. I have not had a word from him since."
+
+"You make me uneasy," said Lady Glenalvon. "I hope nothing can have
+happened to him: he cannot have fallen ill."
+
+Cecilia stops her work, and looks up wistfully.
+
+"Make your mind easy," said Travers with a laugh; "I am in this secret.
+He has challenged the champion of England, and gone into the country to
+train."
+
+"Very likely," said Sir Peter, quietly: "I should not be in the least
+surprised; should you, Miss Travers?"
+
+"I think it more probable that Mr. Chillingly is doing some kindness to
+others which he wishes to keep concealed."
+
+Sir Peter was pleased with this reply, and drew his chair nearer to
+Cecilia's. Lady Glenalvon, charmed to bring those two together, soon
+rose and took leave.
+
+Sir Peter remained nearly an hour talking chiefly with Cecilia, who won
+her way into his heart with extraordinary ease; and he did not quit the
+house till he had engaged her father, Mrs. Campion, and herself to pay
+him a week's visit at Exmundham, towards the end of the London season,
+which was fast approaching.
+
+Having obtained this promise, Sir Peter went away, and ten minutes
+after Mr. Chillingly Gordon entered the drawing-room. He had already
+established a visiting acquaintance with the Traverses. Travers
+had taken a liking to him. Mrs. Campion found him an extremely
+well-informed, unaffected young man, very superior to young men in
+general. Cecilia was cordially polite to Kenelm's cousin. Altogether
+that was a very happy day for Sir Peter. He enjoyed greatly his dinner
+at the Garrick, where he met some old acquaintance and was presented to
+some new "celebrities." He observed that Gordon stood well with these
+eminent persons. Though as yet undistinguished himself, they treated him
+with a certain respect, as well as with evident liking. The most eminent
+of them, at least the one with the most solidly established reputation,
+said in Sir Peter's ear, "You may be proud of your nephew Gordon!"
+
+"He is not my nephew, only the son of a very distant cousin."
+
+"Sorry for that. But he will shed lustre on kinsfolk, however distant.
+Clever fellow, yet popular; rare combination,--sure to rise."
+
+Sir Peter suppressed a gulp in the throat. "Ah, if some one as eminent
+had spoken thus of Kenelm!"
+
+But he was too generous to allow that half-envious sentiment to last
+more than a moment. Why should he not be proud of any member of the
+family who could irradiate the antique obscurity of the Chillingly race?
+And how agreeable this clever young man made himself to Sir Peter!
+
+The next day Gordon insisted on accompanying him to see the latest
+acquisitions in the British Museum, and various other exhibitions, and
+went at night to the Prince of Wales's Theatre, where Sir Peter was
+infinitely delighted with an admirable little comedy by Mr. Robertson,
+admirably placed on the stage by Marie Wilton. The day after, when
+Gordon called on him at his hotel, he cleared his throat, and thus
+plunged at once into the communication he had hitherto delayed.
+
+"Gordon, my boy, I owe you a debt, and I am now, thanks to Kenelm, able
+to pay it."
+
+Gordon gave a little start of surprise, but remained silent.
+
+"I told your father, shortly after Kenelm was born, that I meant to give
+up my London house, and lay by L1000 a year for you, in compensation
+for your chance of succeeding to Exmundham should I have died childless.
+Well, your father did not seem to think much of that promise, and went
+to law with me about certain unquestionable rights of mine. How so
+clever a man could have made such a mistake would puzzle me, if I did
+not remember that he had a quarrelsome temper. Temper is a thing that
+often dominates cleverness,--an uncontrollable thing; and allowances
+must be made for it. Not being of a quarrelsome temper myself (the
+Chillinglys are a placid race), I did not make the allowance for your
+father's differing, and (for a Chillingly) abnormal, constitution. The
+language and the tone of his letter respecting it nettled me. I did
+not see why, thus treated, I should pinch myself to lay by a thousand a
+year. Facilities for buying a property most desirable for the possessor
+of Exmundham presented themselves. I bought it with borrowed money, and
+though I gave up the house in London, I did not lay by the thousand a
+year."
+
+"My dear Sir Peter, I have always regretted that my poor father
+was misled--perhaps out of too paternal a care for my supposed
+interests--into that unhappy and fruitless litigation, after which
+no one could doubt that any generous intentions on your part would be
+finally abandoned. It has been a grateful surprise to me that I have
+been so kindly and cordially received into the family by Kenelm and
+yourself. Pray oblige me by dropping all reference to pecuniary matters:
+the idea of compensation to a very distant relative for the loss of
+expectations he had no right to form, is too absurd, for me at least,
+ever to entertain."
+
+"But I am absurd enough to entertain it, though you express yourself in
+a very high-minded way. To come to the point, Kenelm is of age, and we
+have cut off the entail. The estate of course remains absolutely with
+Kenelm to dispose of, as it did before, and we must take it for granted
+that he will marry; at all events he cannot fall into your poor father's
+error: but whatever Kenelm hereafter does with his property, it is
+nothing to you, and is not to be counted upon. Even the title dies with
+Kenelm if he has no son. On resettling the estate, however, sums
+of money have been realized which, as I stated before, enable me to
+discharge the debt which Kenelm heartily agrees with me is due to
+you. L20,000 are now lying at my bankers' to be transferred to yours;
+meanwhile, if you will call on my solicitor, Mr. Vining, Lincoln's-inn,
+you can see the new deed and give to him your receipt for the L20,000,
+for which he holds my cheque. Stop! stop! stop! I will not hear a. word:
+no thanks; they are not due."
+
+Here Gordon, who had during this speech uttered various brief
+exclamations, which Sir Peter did not heed, caught hold of his kinsman's
+hand, and, despite of all struggles, pressed his lips on it. "I must
+thank you; I must give some vent to my emotions," cried Gordon. "This
+sum, great in itself, is far more to me than you can imagine: it opens
+my career; it assures my future."
+
+"So Kenelm tells me; he said that sum would be more use to you now than
+ten times the amount twenty years hence."
+
+"So it will,--it will. And Kenelm consents to this sacrifice?"
+
+"Consents! urges it."
+
+Gordon turned away his face, and Sir Peter resumed: "You want to get
+into Parliament; very natural ambition for a clever young fellow. I
+don't presume to dictate politics to you. I hear you are what is called
+a Liberal; a man may be a Liberal, I suppose, without being a Jacobin."
+
+"I hope so, indeed. For my part I am anything but a violent man."
+
+"Violent, no! Who ever heard of a violent Chillingly? But I was reading
+in the newspaper to-day a speech addressed to some popular audience,
+in which the orator was for dividing all the lands and all the capital
+belonging to other people among the working class, calmly and quietly,
+without any violence, and deprecating violence: but saying, perhaps very
+truly, that the people to be robbed might not like it, and might offer
+violence; in which case woe betide them; it was they who would be guilty
+of violence; and they must take the consequences if they resisted the
+reasonable, propositions of himself and his friends! That, I suppose, is
+among the new ideas with which Kenelm is more familiar than I am. Do you
+entertain those new ideas?"
+
+"Certainly not: I despise the fools who do."
+
+"And you will not abet revolutionary measures if you get into
+Parliament?"
+
+"My dear Sir Peter, I fear you have heard very false reports of my
+opinions if you put such questions. Listen," and therewith Gordon
+launched into dissertations very clever, very subtle, which committed
+him to nothing, beyond the wisdom of guiding popular opinions into right
+directions: what might be right directions he did not define; he left
+Sir Peter to guess them. Sir Peter did guess them, as Gordon meant he
+should, to be the directions which he, Sir Peter, thought right; and he
+was satisfied.
+
+That subject disposed of, Gordon said, with much apparent feeling, "May
+I ask you to complete the favours you have lavished on me? I have never
+seen Exmundham, and the home of the race from which I sprang has a deep
+interest for time. Will you allow me to spend a few days with you, and
+under the shade of your own trees take lessons in political science from
+one who has evidently reflected on it profoundly?"
+
+"Profoundly, no; a little,--a little, as a mere bystander," said Sir
+Peter, modestly, but much flattered. "Come, my dear boy, by all means;
+you will have a hearty welcome. By the by, Travers and his handsome
+daughter promised to visit me in about a fortnight, why not come at the
+same time?"
+
+A sudden flash lit up the young man's countenance.
+
+"I shall be so delighted," he cried. "I am but slightly acquainted with
+Mr. Travers, but I like him much, and Mrs. Campion is so well informed."
+
+"And what say you to the girl?"
+
+"The girl, Miss Travers. Oh, she is very well in her way. But I don't
+talk with young ladies more than I can help."
+
+"Then you are like your cousin Kenelm?"
+
+"I wish I were like him in other things."
+
+"No, one such oddity in a family is quite enough. But though I would
+not have you change to a Kenelm, I would not change Kenelm for the most
+perfect model of a son that the world can exhibit." Delivering himself
+of this burst of parental fondness, Sir Peter shook hands with Gordon,
+and walked off to Mivers, who was to give him luncheon and then
+accompany him to the station. Sir Peter was to return to Exmundham by
+the afternoon express.
+
+Left alone, Gordon indulged in one of those luxurious guesses into the
+future which form the happiest moments in youth when so ambitious as
+his. The sum Sir Peter placed at his disposal would insure his entrance
+in Parliament. He counted with confidence on early successes there. He
+extended the scope of his views. With such successes he might calculate
+with certainty on a brilliant marriage, augmenting his fortune, and
+confirming his position. He had previously fixed his thoughts on Cecilia
+Travers. I will do him the justice to say not from mercenary motives
+alone, but not certainly with the impetuous ardour of youthful love. He
+thought her exactly fitted to be the wife of an eminent public man, in
+person, acquirement, dignified yet popular manners. He esteemed her, he
+liked her, and then her fortune would add solidity to his position. In
+fact, he had that sort of rational attachment to Cecilia which wise men,
+like Lord Bacon and Montaigne, would commend to another wise man seeking
+a wife. What opportunities of awaking in herself a similar, perhaps a
+warmer, attachment the visit to Exmundham would afford! He had learned
+when he had called on the Traverses that they were going thither, and
+hence that burst of family sentiment which had procured the invitation
+to himself.
+
+But he must be cautious, he must not prematurely awaken Travers's
+suspicions. He was not as yet a match that the squire could approve of
+for his heiress. And, though he was ignorant of Sir Peter's designs
+on that, young lady, he was much too prudent to confide his own to a
+kinsman of whose discretion he had strong misgivings. It was enough for
+him at present that way was opened for his own resolute energies. And
+cheerfully, though musingly, he weighed its obstacles, and divined its
+goal, as he paced his floor with bended head and restless strides, now
+quick, now slow.
+
+Sir Peter, in the meanwhile, found a very good luncheon prepared for
+him at Mivers's rooms, which he had all to himself, for his host never
+"spoilt his dinner and insulted his breakfast" by that intermediate
+meal. He remained at his desk writing brief notes of business, or
+of pleasure, while Sir Peter did justice to lamb cutlets and grilled
+chicken. But he looked up from his task, with raised eyebrows, when
+Sir Peter, after a somewhat discursive account of his visit to the
+Traverses, his admiration of Cecilia, and the adroitness with which,
+acting on his cousin's hint, he had engaged the family to spend a few
+days at Exmundham, added, "And, by the by, I have asked young Gordon to
+meet them."
+
+"To meet them! meet Mr. and Miss Travers! you have? I thought you wished
+Kenelm to marry Cecilia. I was mistaken, you meant Gordon!"
+
+"Gordon," exclaimed Sir Peter, dropping his knife and fork. "Nonsense,
+you don't suppose that Miss Travers prefers him to Kenelm, or that
+he has the presumption to fancy that her father would sanction his
+addresses?"
+
+"I indulge in no suppositions of the sort. I content myself with
+thinking that Gordon is clever, insinuating, young; and it is a very
+good chance of bettering himself that you have thrown in his way.
+However, it is no affair of mine; and though on the whole I like
+Kenelm better than Gordon, still I like Gordon very well, and I have
+an interest in following his career which I can't say I have in
+conjecturing what may be Kenelm's--more likely no career at all."
+
+"Mivers, you delight in provoking me; you do say such uncomfortable
+things. But, in the first place, Gordon spoke rather slightingly of Miss
+Travers."
+
+"Ah, indeed; that's a bad sign," muttered Mivers.
+
+Sir Peter did not hear him, and went on.
+
+"And, besides, I feel pretty sure that the dear girl has already a
+regard for Kenelm which allows no room for a rival. However, I shall not
+forget your hint, but keep a sharp lookout; and, if I see the young man
+wants to be too sweet on Cecilia, I shall cut short his visit."
+
+"Give yourself no trouble in the matter; it will do no good. Marriages
+are made in heaven. Heaven's will be done. If I can get away I will
+run down to you for a day or two. Perhaps in that case you can ask Lady
+Glenalvon. I like her, and she likes Kenelm. Have you finished? I see
+the brougham is at the door, and we have to call at your hotel to take
+up your carpet-bag."
+
+Mivers was deliberately sealing his notes while he thus spoke. He now
+rang for his servant, gave orders for their delivery, and then followed
+Sir Peter down stairs and into the brougham. Not a word would he say
+more about Gordon, and Sir Peter shrank from telling him about the
+L20,000. Chillingly Mivers was perhaps the last person to whom Sir
+Peter would be tempted to parade an act of generosity. Mivers might not
+unfrequently do a generous act himself, provided it was not divulged;
+but he had always a sneer for the generosity of others.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+WANDERING back towards Moleswich, Kenelm found himself a little before
+sunset on the banks of the garrulous brook, almost opposite to the house
+inhabited by Lily Mordaunt. He stood long and silently by the grassy
+margin, his dark shadow falling over the stream, broken into fragments
+by the eddy and strife of waves, fresh from their leap down the
+neighbouring waterfall. His eyes rested on the house and the garden lawn
+in the front. The upper windows were open. "I wonder which is hers," he
+said to himself. At last he caught a glimpse of the gardener, bending
+over a flower border with his watering-pot, and then moving slowly
+through the little shrubbery, no doubt to his own cottage. Now the lawn
+was solitary, save that a couple of thrushes dropped suddenly on the
+sward.
+
+"Good evening, sir," said a voice. "A capital spot for trout this."
+
+Kenelm turned his head, and beheld on the footpath, just behind him,
+a respectable elderly man, apparently of the class of a small retail
+tradesman, with a fishing-rod in his hand and a basket belted to his
+side.
+
+"For trout," replied Kenelm; "I dare say. A strangely attractive spot
+indeed."
+
+"Are you an angler, sir, if I may make bold to inquire?" asked the
+elderly man, somewhat perhaps puzzled as to the rank of the stranger;
+noticing, on the one hand, his dress and his mien, on the other, slung
+to his shoulders, the worn and shabby knapsack which Kenelm had carried,
+at home and abroad, the preceding year.
+
+"Ay, I am an angler."
+
+"Then this is the best place in the whole stream. Look, sir, there
+is Izaak Walton's summer-house; and further down you see that white,
+neat-looking house. Well, that is my house, sir, and I have an apartment
+which I let to gentleman anglers. It is generally occupied throughout
+the summer months. I expect every day to have a letter to engage it,
+but it is vacant now. A very nice apartment, sir,--sitting-room and
+bedroom."
+
+"_Descende ceolo, et dic age tibia_," said Kenelm.
+
+"Sir?" said the elderly man.
+
+"I beg you ten thousand pardons. I have had the misfortune to have been
+at the university, and to have learned a little Latin, which sometimes
+comes back very inopportunely. But, speaking in plain English, what
+I meant to say is this: I invoked the Muse to descend from heaven and
+bring with her--the original says a fife, but I meant--a fishing-rod. I
+should think your apartment would suit me exactly; pray show it to me."
+
+"With the greatest pleasure," said the elderly man. "The Muse need not
+bring a fishing-rod! we have all sorts of tackle at your service, and a
+boat too, if you care for that. The stream hereabouts is so shallow and
+narrow that a boat is of little use till you get farther down."
+
+"I don't want to get farther down; but should I want to get to the
+opposite bank, without wading across, would the boat take me or is there
+a bridge?"
+
+"The boat can take you. It is a flat-bottomed punt, and there is a
+bridge too for foot-passengers, just opposite my house; and between
+this and Moleswich, where the stream widens, there is a ferry. The stone
+bridge for traffic is at the farther end of the town."
+
+"Good. Let us go at once to your house."
+
+The two men walked on.
+
+"By the by," said Kenelm, as they walked, "do you know much of the
+family that inhabit the pretty cottage on the opposite side, which we
+have just left behind?"
+
+"Mrs. Cameron's. Yes, of course, a very good lady; and Mr. Melville, the
+painter. I am sure I ought to know, for he has often lodged with me
+when he came to visit Mrs. Cameron. He recommends my apartment to his
+friends, and they are my best lodgers. I like painters, sir, though I
+don't know much about paintings. They are pleasant gentlemen, and easily
+contented with my humble roof and fare."
+
+"You are quite right. I don't know much about paintings myself; but I am
+inclined to believe that painters, judging not from what I have seen of
+them, for I have not a single acquaintance among them personally, but
+from what I have read of their lives, are, as a general rule, not only
+pleasant but noble gentlemen. They form within themselves desires to
+beautify or exalt commonplace things, and they can only accomplish their
+desires by a constant study of what is beautiful and what is exalted.
+A man constantly so engaged ought to be a very noble gentleman, even
+though he may be the son of a shoeblack. And living in a higher world
+than we do, I can conceive that he is, as you say, very well contented
+with humble roof and fare in the world we inhabit."
+
+"Exactly, sir; I see--I see now, though you put it in a way that never
+struck me before."
+
+"And yet," said Kenelm, looking benignly at the speaker, "you seem to
+me a well-educated and intelligent man; reflective on things in general,
+without being unmindful of your interests in particular, especially when
+you have lodgings to let. Do not be offended. That sort of man is not
+perhaps born to be a painter, but I respect him highly. The world, sir,
+requires the vast majority of its inhabitants to live in it,--to live
+by it. 'Each for himself, and God for us all.' The greatest happiness
+of the greatest number is best secured by a prudent consideration for
+Number One."
+
+Somewhat to Kenelm's surprise (allowing that he had now learned enough
+of life to be occasionally surprised) the elderly man here made a dead
+halt, stretched out his hand cordially, and cried, "Hear, hear! I see
+that, like me, you are a decided democrat."
+
+"Democrat! Pray, may I ask, not why you are one,--that would be a
+liberty, and democrats resent any liberty taken with themselves; but why
+you suppose I am?"
+
+"You spoke of the greatest happiness of the greatest number. That is
+a democratic sentiment surely! Besides, did not you say, sir, that
+painters,--painters, sir, painters, even if they were the sons of
+shoeblacks, were the true gentlemen,--the true noblemen?"
+
+"I did not say that exactly, to the disparagement of other gentlemen and
+nobles. But if I did, what then?"
+
+"Sir, I agree with you. I despise rank; I despise dukes and earls and
+aristocrats. 'An honest man's the noblest work of God.' Some poet says
+that. I think Shakspeare. Wonderful man, Shakspeare. A tradesman's
+son,--butcher, I believe. Eh! My uncle was a butcher, and might have
+been an alderman. I go along with you heartily, heartily. I am a
+democrat, every inch of me. Shake hands, sir, shake hands; we are all
+equals. 'Each man for himself, and God for us all.'"
+
+"I have no objection to shake hands," said Kenelm; "but don't let me owe
+your condescension to false pretences. Though we are all equal before
+the law, except the rich man, who has little chance of justice as
+against a poor man when submitted to an English jury, yet I utterly deny
+that any two men you select can be equals. One must beat the other
+in something; and, when one man beats another, democracy ceases and
+aristocracy begins."
+
+"Aristocracy! I don't see that. What do you mean by aristocracy?"
+
+"The ascendency of the better man. In a rude State the better man is
+the stronger; in a corrupt State, perhaps the more roguish; in modern
+republics the jobbers get the money and the lawyers get the power. In
+well-ordered States alone aristocracy appears at its genuine worth:
+the better man in birth, because respect for ancestry secures a higher
+standard of honour; the better man in wealth, because of the immense
+uses to enterprise, energy, and the fine arts, which rich men must be if
+they follow their natural inclinations; the better man in character, the
+better man in ability, for reasons too obvious to define; and these two
+last will beat the others in the government of the State, if the State
+be flourishing and free. All these four classes of better men constitute
+true aristocracy; and when a better government than a true aristocracy
+shall be devised by the wit of man, we shall not be far off from
+the Millennium and the reign of saints. But here we are at the
+house,--yours, is it not? I like the look of it extremely."
+
+The elderly man now entered the little porch, over which clambered
+honeysuckle and ivy intertwined, and ushered Kenelm into a pleasant
+parlour, with a bay window, and an equally pleasant bedroom behind it.
+
+"Will it do, sir?"
+
+"Perfectly. I take it from this moment. My knapsack contains all I shall
+need for the night. There is a portmanteau of mine at Mr. Somers's shop,
+which can be sent here in the morning."
+
+"But we have not settled about the terms," said the elderly man,
+beginning to feel rather doubtful whether he ought thus to have
+installed in his home a stalwart pedestrian of whom he knew nothing,
+and who, though talking glibly enough on other things, had preserved an
+ominous silence on the subject of payment.
+
+"Terms? true, name them."
+
+"Including board?"
+
+"Certainly. Chameleons live on air; democrats on wind bags. I have a
+more vulgar appetite, and require mutton."
+
+"Meat is very dear now-a-days," said the elderly man, "and I am afraid,
+for board and lodging I cannot charge you less than L3 3s.,--say L3 a
+week. My lodgers usually pay a week in advance."
+
+"Agreed," said Kenelm, extracting three sovereigns from his purse. "I
+have dined already: I want nothing more this evening; let me detain you
+no further. Be kind enough to shut the door after you."
+
+When he was alone, Kenelm seated himself in the recess of the bay
+window, against the casement, and looked forth intently. Yes; he was
+right: he could see from thence the home of Lily. Not, indeed, more than
+a white gleam of the house through the interstices of trees and shrubs,
+but the gentle lawn sloping to the brook, with the great willow at the
+end dipping its boughs into the water, and shutting out all view beyond
+itself by its bower of tender leaves. The young man bent his face on his
+hands and mused dreamily: the evening deepened; the stars came forth;
+the rays of the moon now peered aslant through the arching dips of the
+willow, silvering their way as they stole to the waves below.
+
+"Shall I bring lights, sir? or do you prefer a lamp or candles?" asked
+a voice behind,--the voice of the elderly man's wife. "Do you like the
+shutters closed?"
+
+The question startled the dreamer. They seemed mocking his own old
+mockings on the romance of love. Lamp or candles, practical lights for
+prosaic eyes, and shutters closed against moon and stars!
+
+"Thank you, ma'am, not yet," he said; and rising quietly he placed his
+hand on the window-sill, swung himself through the open casement, and
+passed slowly along the margin of the rivulet, by a path checkered
+alternately with shade and starlight; the moon yet more slowly rising
+above the willows, and lengthening its track along the wavelets.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THOUGH Kenelm did not think it necessary at present to report to his
+parents or his London acquaintances his recent movements and his present
+resting-place, it never entered into his head to lurk _perdu_ in the
+immediate vicinity of Lily's house, and seek opportunities of meeting
+her clandestinely. He walked to Mrs. Braefield's the next morning, found
+her at home, and said in rather a more off-hand manner than was habitual
+to him, "I have hired a lodging in your neighbourhood, on the banks of
+the brook, for the sake of its trout-fishing. So you will allow me to
+call on you sometimes, and one of these days I hope you will give me the
+dinner I so unceremoniously rejected some days ago. I was then summoned
+away suddenly, much against my will."
+
+"Yes; my husband said that you shot off from him with a wild exclamation
+about duty."
+
+"Quite true; my reason, and I may say my conscience, were greatly
+perplexed upon a matter extremely important and altogether new to me. I
+went to Oxford,--the place above all others in which questions of
+reason and conscience are most deeply considered, and perhaps
+least satisfactorily solved. Relieved in my mind by my visit to a
+distinguished ornament of that university, I felt I might indulge in a
+summer holiday, and here I am."
+
+"Ah! I understand. You had religious doubts,--thought perhaps of turning
+Roman Catholic. I hope you are not going to do so?"
+
+"My doubts were not necessarily of a religious nature. Pagans have
+entertained them."
+
+"Whatever they were I am pleased to see they did not prevent your
+return," said Mrs. Braefield, graciously. "But where have you found a
+lodging; why not have come to us? My husband would have been scarcely
+less glad than myself to receive you."
+
+"You say that so sincerely, and so cordially, that to answer by a brief
+'I thank you' seems rigid and heartless. But there are times in life
+when one yearns to be alone,--to commune with one's own heart, and, if
+possible, be still; I am in one of those moody times. Bear with me."
+
+Mrs. Braefield looked at him with affectionate, kindly interest. She
+had gone before him through the solitary road of young romance. She
+remembered her dreamy, dangerous girlhood, when she, too, had yearned to
+be alone.
+
+"Bear with you; yes, indeed. I wish, Mr. Chillingly, that I were your
+sister, and that you would confide in me. Something troubles you."
+
+"Troubles me,--no. My thoughts are happy ones, and they may sometimes
+perplex me, but they do not trouble."
+
+Kenelm said this very softly; and in the warmer light of his musing
+eyes, the sweeter play of his tranquil smile, there was an expression
+which did not belie his words.
+
+"You have not told me where you have found a lodging," said Mrs.
+Braefield, somewhat abruptly.
+
+"Did I not?" replied Kenelm, with an unconscious start, as from an
+abstracted reverie. "With no undistinguished host, I presume, for when
+I asked him this morning for the right address of this cottage, in order
+to direct such luggage as I have to be sent there, he gave me his card
+with a grand air, saying, 'I am pretty well known at Moleswich, by
+and beyond it.' I have not yet looked at his card. Oh, here it
+is,--'Algernon Sidney Gale Jones, Cromwell Lodge;' you laugh. What do
+you know of him?"
+
+"I wish my husband were here; he would tell you more about him. Mr.
+Jones is quite a character."
+
+"So I perceive."
+
+"A great radical,--very talkative and troublesome at the vestry; but our
+vicar, Mr. Emlyn, says there is no real harm in him, that his bark is
+worse than his bite, and that his republican or radical notions must be
+laid to the door of his godfathers! In addition to his name of Jones, he
+was unhappily christened Gale; Gale Jones being a noted radical orator
+at the time of his birth. And I suppose Algernon Sidney was prefixed
+to Gale in order to devote the new-born more emphatically to republican
+principles."
+
+"Naturally, therefore, Algernon Sidney Gale Jones baptizes his house
+Cromwell Lodge, seeing that Algernon Sidney held the Protectorate in
+especial abhorrence, and that the original Gale Jones, if an honest
+radical, must have done the same, considering what rough usage the
+advocates of Parliamentary Reform met with at the hands of his Highness.
+But we must be indulgent to men who have been unfortunately christened
+before they had any choice of the names that were to rule their fate.
+I myself should have been less whimsical had I not been named after a
+Kenelm who believed in sympathetic powders. Apart from his political
+doctrines, I like my landlord: he keeps his wife in excellent order. She
+seems frightened at the sound of her own footsteps, and glides to and
+fro, a pallid image of submissive womanhood in list slippers."
+
+"Great recommendations certainly, and Cromwell Lodge is very prettily
+situated. By the by, it is very near Mrs. Cameron's."
+
+"Now I think of it, so it is," said Kenelm, innocently. Ah! my friend
+Kenelm, enemy of shams, and truth-teller, _par excellence_, what hast
+thou come to? How are the mighty fallen! "Since you say you will dine
+with us, suppose we fix the day after to-morrow, and I will ask Mrs.
+Cameron and Lily."
+
+"The day after to-morrow: I shall be delighted."
+
+"An early hour?"
+
+"The earlier the better."
+
+"Is six o'clock too early?"
+
+"Too early! certainly not; on the contrary. Good-day: I must now go to
+Mrs. Somers; she has charge of my portmanteau."
+
+Then Kenelm rose.
+
+"Poor dear Lily!" said Mrs. Braefield; "I wish she were less of a
+child."
+
+Kenelm reseated himself.
+
+"Is she a child? I don't think she is actually a child."
+
+"Not in years; she is between seventeen and eighteen: but my husband
+says that she is too childish to talk to, and always tells me to take
+her off his hands; he would rather talk with Mrs. Cameron."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"Still I find something in her."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"Not exactly childish, nor quite womanish."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"I can't exactly define. But you know what Mr. Melville and Mrs. Cameron
+call her as a pet name?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Fairy! Fairies have no age; fairy is neither child nor woman."
+
+"Fairy. She is called fairy by those who know her best? Fairy!"
+
+"And she believes in fairies."
+
+"Does she?--so do I. Pardon me, I must be off. The day after
+to-morrow,--six o'clock."
+
+"Wait one moment," said Elsie, going to her writing-table. "Since you
+pass Grasmere on your way home, will you kindly leave this note?"
+
+"I thought Grasmere was a lake in the north?"
+
+"Yes; but Mr. Melville chose to call the cottage by the name of the
+lake. I think the first picture he ever sold was a view of Wordsworth's
+house there. Here is my note to ask Mrs. Cameron to meet you; but if you
+object to be my messenger--"
+
+"Object! my dear Mrs. Braefield. As you say, I pass close by the
+cottage."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+KENELM went with somewhat rapid pace from Mrs. Braefield's to the shop
+in the High Street kept by Will Somers. Jessie was behind the counter,
+which was thronged with customers. Kenelm gave her a brief direction
+about his portmanteau, and then passed into the back parlour, where
+her husband was employed on his baskets,--with the baby's cradle in
+the corner, and its grandmother rocking it mechanically, as she read a
+wonderful missionary tract full of tales of miraculous conversions: into
+what sort of Christians we will not pause to inquire.
+
+"And so you are happy, Will?" said Kenelm, seating himself between the
+basket-maker and the infant; the dear old mother beside him, reading the
+tract which linked her dreams of life eternal with life just opening
+in the cradle that she rocked. He not happy! How he pitied the man who
+could ask such a question.
+
+"Happy, sir! I should think so, indeed. There is not a night on which
+Jessie and I, and mother too, do not pray that some day or other you may
+be as happy. By and by the baby will learn to pray 'God bless papa, and
+mamma, grandmamma, and Mr. Chillingly.'"
+
+"There is some one else much more deserving of prayers than I, though
+needing them less. You will know some day: pass it by now. To return to
+the point: you are happy; if I asked why, would you not say, 'Because I
+have married the girl I love, and have never repented'?"
+
+"Well, sir, that is about it; though, begging your pardon, I think it
+could be put more prettily somehow."
+
+"You are right there. But perhaps love and happiness never yet found any
+words that could fitly express them. Good-bye, for the present."
+
+Ah! if it were as mere materialists, or as many middle-aged or elderly
+folks, who, if materialists, are so without knowing it, unreflectingly
+say, "The main element of happiness is bodily or animal health and
+strength," that question which Chillingly put would appear a very
+unmeaning or a very insulting one addressed to a pale cripple, who
+however improved of late in health, would still be sickly and ailing
+all his life,--put, too, by a man of the rarest conformation of physical
+powers that nature can adapt to physical enjoyment,--a man who, since
+the age in which memory commences, had never known what it was to
+be unwell, who could scarcely understand you if you talked of a
+finger-ache, and whom those refinements of mental culture which
+multiply the delights of the senses had endowed with the most exquisite
+conceptions of such happiness as mere nature and its instincts can give!
+But Will did not think the question unmeaning or insulting. He, the poor
+cripple, felt a vast superiority on the scale of joyous being over the
+young Hercules, well born, cultured, and wealthy, who could know so
+little of happiness as to ask the crippled basket-maker if he were
+happy.--he, blessed husband and father!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+LILY was seated on the grass under a chestnut-tree on the lawn. A white
+cat, not long emerged from kittenhood, curled itself by her side. On her
+lap was an open volume, which she was reading with the greatest delight.
+
+Mrs. Cameron came from the house, looked round, perceived the girl, and
+approached; and either she moved so gently, or Lily was so absorbed in
+the book, that the latter was not aware of her presence till she felt
+a light hand on her shoulder, and, looking up, recognized her aunt's
+gentle face.
+
+"Ah! Fairy, Fairy, that silly book, when you ought to be at your French
+verbs. What will your guardian say when he comes and finds you have so
+wasted time?"
+
+"He will say that fairies never waste their time; and he will scold you
+for saying so." Therewith Lily threw down the book, sprang to her feet,
+wound her arm round Mrs. Cameron's neck, and kissed her fondly. "There!
+is that wasting time? I love you so, aunty. In a day like this I think I
+love everybody and everything!" As she said this, she drew up her lithe
+form, looked into the blue sky, and with parted lips seemed to drink in
+air and sunshine. Then she woke up the dozing cat, and began chasing it
+round the lawn.
+
+Mrs. Cameron stood still, regarding her with moistened eyes. Just at
+that moment Kenelm entered through the garden gate. He, too, stood
+still, his eyes fixed on the undulating movements of Fairy's exquisite
+form. She had arrested her favourite, and was now at play with it,
+shaking off her straw hat, and drawing the ribbon attached to it
+tantalizingly along the smooth grass. Her rich hair, thus released and
+dishevelled by the exercise, fell partly over her face in wavy ringlets;
+and her musical laugh and words of sportive endearment sounded on
+Kenelm's ear more joyously than the thrill of the skylark, more sweetly
+than the coo of the ring-dove.
+
+He approached towards Mrs. Cameron. Lily turned suddenly and saw him.
+Instinctively she smoothed back her loosened tresses, replaced the straw
+hat, and came up demurely to his side just as he had accosted her aunt.
+
+"Pardon my intrusion, Mrs. Cameron. I am the bearer of this note from
+Mrs. Braefield." While the aunt read the note, he turned to the niece.
+
+"You promised to show me the picture, Miss Mordaunt."
+
+"But that was a long time ago."
+
+"Too long to expect a lady's promise to be kept?"
+
+Lily seemed to ponder that question, and hesitated before she answered.
+
+"I will show you the picture. I don't think I ever broke a promise yet,
+but I shall be more careful how I make one in future."
+
+"Why so?"
+
+"Because you did not value mine when I made it, and that hurt me." Lily
+lifted up her head with a bewitching stateliness, and added gravely, "I
+was offended."
+
+"Mrs. Braefield is very kind," said Mrs. Cameron; "she asks us to dine
+the day after to-morrow. You would like to go, Lily?"
+
+"All grown-up people, I suppose? No, thank you, dear aunt. You go alone,
+I would rather stay at home. May I have little Clemmy to play with? She
+will bring Juba, and Blanche is very partial to Juba, though she does
+scratch him."
+
+"Very well, my dear, you shall have your playmate, and I will go by
+myself."
+
+Kenelm stood aghast. "You will not go, Miss Mordaunt; Mrs. Braefield
+will be so disappointed. And if you don't go, whom shall I have to talk
+to? I don't like grown-up people better than you do."
+
+"You are going?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"And if I go you will talk to me? I am afraid of Mr. Braefield. He is so
+wise."
+
+"I will save you from him, and will not utter a grain of wisdom."
+
+"Aunty, I will go."
+
+Here Lily made a bound and caught up Blanche, who, taking her kisses
+resignedly, stared with evident curiosity upon Kenelm.
+
+Here a bell within the house rang the announcement of luncheon. Mrs.
+Cameron invited Kenelm to partake of that meal. He felt as Romulus might
+have felt when first invited to taste the ambrosia of the gods. Yet
+certainly that luncheon was not such as might have pleased Kenelm
+Chillingly in the early days of the Temperance Hotel. But somehow or
+other of late he had lost appetite; and on this occasion a very modest
+share of a very slender dish of chicken fricasseed, and a few cherries
+daintily arranged on vine leaves, which Lily selected for him, contented
+him,--as probably a very little ambrosia contented Romulus while
+feasting his eyes on Hebe.
+
+Luncheon over, while Mrs. Cameron wrote her reply to Elsie, Kenelm
+was conducted by Lily into her own _own_ room, in vulgar parlance her
+_boudoir_, though it did not look as if any one ever _bouder'd_ there.
+It was exquisitely pretty,--pretty not as a woman's, but as a child's
+dream of the own _own_ room she would like to have,--wondrously neat and
+cool, and pure-looking; a trellis paper, the trellis gay with roses and
+woodbine, and birds and butterflies; draperies of muslin, festooned with
+dainty tassels and ribbons; a dwarf bookcase, that seemed well stored,
+at least as to bindings; a dainty little writing-table in French
+_marqueterie_, looking too fresh and spotless to have known hard
+service. The casement was open, and in keeping with the trellis paper;
+woodbine and roses from without encroached on the window-sides, gently
+stirred by the faint summer breeze, and wafted sweet odours into the
+little room. Kenelm went to the window, and glanced on the view beyond.
+"I was right," he said to himself; "I divined it." But though he
+spoke in a low inward whisper, Lily, who had watched his movements in
+surprise, overheard.
+
+"You divined it. Divined what?"
+
+"Nothing, nothing; I was but talking to myself."
+
+"Tell me what you divined: I insist upon it!" and Fairy petulantly
+stamped her tiny foot on the floor.
+
+"Do you? Then I obey. I have taken a lodging for a short time on the
+other side of the brook,--Cromwell Lodge,--and seeing your house as I
+passed, I divined that your room was in this part of it. How soft here
+is the view of the water! Ah! yonder is Izaak Walton's summer-house."
+
+"Don't talk about Izaak Walton, or I shall quarrel with you, as I did
+with Lion when he wanted me to like that cruel book."
+
+"Who is Lion?"
+
+"Lion,--of course, my guardian. I called him Lion when I was a little
+child. It was on seeing in one of his books a print of a lion playing
+with a little child."
+
+"Ah! I know the design well," said Kenelm, with a slight sigh. "It is
+from an antique Greek gem. It is not the lion that plays with the child,
+it is the child that masters the lion, and the Greeks called the child
+'Love.'"
+
+This idea seemed beyond Lily's perfect comprehension. She paused before
+she answered, with the naivete of a child six years old,--
+
+"I see now why I mastered Blanche, who will not make friends with any
+one else: I love Blanche. Ah, that reminds me,--come and look at the
+picture."
+
+She went to the wall over the writing-table, drew a silk curtain aside
+from a small painting in a dainty velvet framework, and pointing to it,
+cried with triumph, "Look there! is it not beautiful?"
+
+Kenelm had been prepared to see a landscape, or a group, or anything but
+what he did see: it was the portrait of Blanche when a kitten.
+
+Little elevated though the subject was, it was treated with graceful
+fancy. The kitten had evidently ceased from playing with the cotton
+reel that lay between her paws, and was fixing her gaze intently on a
+bulfinch that had lighted on a spray within her reach.
+
+"You understand," said Lily, placing her hand on his arm, and drawing
+him towards what she thought the best light for the picture; "it is
+Blanche's first sight of a bird. Look well at her face; don't you see a
+sudden surprise,--half joy, half fear? She ceases to play with the reel.
+Her intellect--or, as Mr. Braefield would say, 'her instinct'--is for
+the first time aroused. From that moment Blanche was no longer a mere
+kitten. And it required, oh, the most careful education, to teach her
+not to kill the poor little birds. She never does now, but I had such
+trouble with her."
+
+"I cannot say honestly that I do see all that you do in the picture;
+but it seems to me very simply painted, and was, no doubt, a striking
+likeness of Blanche at that early age."
+
+"So it was. Lion drew the first sketch from life with his pencil; and
+when he saw how pleased I was with it--he was so good--he put it on
+canvas, and let me sit by him while he painted it. Then he took it away,
+and brought it back finished and framed as you see, last May, a present
+for my birthday."
+
+"You were born in May--with the flowers."
+
+"The best of all the flowers are born in May,--violets."
+
+"But they are born in the shade, and cling to it. Surely, as a child of
+May, you love the sun!"
+
+"I love the sun; it is never too bright nor too warm for me. But I don't
+think that, though born in May, I was born in sunlight. I feel more like
+my own native self when I creep into the shade and sit down alone. I can
+weep then."
+
+As she thus shyly ended, the character of her whole countenance was
+changed: its infantine mirthfulness was gone; a grave, thoughtful, even
+a sad expression settled on the tender eyes and the tremulous lips.
+
+Kenelm was so touched that words failed him, and there was silence for
+some moments between the two. At length Kenelm said, slowly,--
+
+"You say your own native self. Do you, then, feel, as I often do, that
+there is a second, possibly a _native_, self, deep hid beneath the
+self,--not merely what we show to the world in common (that may be
+merely a mask), but the self that we ordinarily accept even when in
+solitude as our own, an inner innermost self, oh so different and
+so rarely coming forth from its hiding-place, asserting its right of
+sovereignty, and putting out the other self as the sun puts out a star?"
+
+Had Kenelm thus spoken to a clever man of the world--to a Chillingly
+Mivers, to a Chillingly Gordon--they certainly would not have understood
+him. But to such men he never would have thus spoken. He had a vague
+hope that this childlike girl, despite so much of childlike talk, would
+understand him; and she did at once.
+
+Advancing close to him, again laying her hand on his arm, and looking up
+towards his bended face with startled wondering eyes, no longer sad, yet
+not mirthful,--
+
+"How true! You have felt that too? Where _is_ that innermost self,
+so deep down,--so deep; yet when it does come forth, so much
+higher,--higher,--immeasurably higher than one's everyday self? It does
+not tame the butterflies; it longs to get to the stars. And then,--and
+then,--ah, how soon it fades back again! You have felt that. Does it not
+puzzle you?"
+
+"Very much."
+
+"Are there no wise books about it that help to explain?"
+
+"No wise books in my very limited reading even hint at the puzzle. I
+fancy that it is one of those insoluble questions that rest between the
+infant and his Maker. Mind and soul are not the same things, and what
+you and I call 'wise men' are always confounding the two--"
+
+Fortunately for all parties--especially the reader; for Kenelm had here
+got on the back of one of his most cherished hobbies, the distinction
+between psychology and metaphysics, soul and mind scientifically or
+logically considered--Mrs. Cameron here entered the room, and asked him
+how he liked the picture.
+
+"Very much. I am no great judge of the art. But it pleased me at once,
+and now that Miss Mordaunt has interpreted the intention of the painter
+I admire it yet more."
+
+"Lily chooses to interpret his intention in her own way, and insists
+that Blanche's expression of countenance conveys an idea of her capacity
+to restrain her destructive instinct, and be taught to believe that it
+is wrong to kill birds for mere sport. For food she need not kill them,
+seeing that Lily takes care that she has plenty to eat. But I don't
+think that Mr. Melville had the slightest suspicion that he had
+indicated that capacity in his picture."
+
+"He must have done so, whether he suspected it or not," said Lily,
+positively; "otherwise he would not be truthful."
+
+"Why not truthful?" asked Kenelm.
+
+"Don't you see? If you were called upon to describe truthfully the
+character of any little child, would you only speak of such naughty
+impulses as all children have in common, and not even hint at the
+capacity to be made better?"
+
+"Admirably put!" said Kenelm. "There is no doubt that a much fiercer
+animal than a cat--a tiger, for instance, or a conquering hero--may be
+taught to live on the kindest possible terms with the creatures on which
+it was its natural instinct to prey."
+
+"Yes, yes; hear that, aunty! You remember the Happy Family that we
+saw eight years ago, at Moleswich fair, with a cat not half so nice as
+Blanche allowing a mouse to bite her ear? Well, then, would Lion not
+have been shamefully false to Blanche if he had not"--
+
+Lily paused and looked half shyly, half archly, at Kenelm, then added,
+in slow, deep-drawn tones--"given a glimpse of her innermost self?"
+
+"Innermost self!" repeated Mrs. Cameron, perplexed and laughing gently.
+
+Lily stole nearer to Kenelm and whispered,--
+
+"Is not one's innermost self one's best self?"
+
+Kenelm smiled approvingly. The fairy was rapidly deepening her spell
+upon him. If Lily had been his sister, his betrothed, his wife, how
+fondly he would have kissed her! She had expressed a thought over which
+he had often inaudibly brooded, and she had clothed it with all the
+charm of her own infantine fancy and womanlike tenderness. Goethe has
+said somewhere, or is reported to have said, "There is something in
+every man's heart, that, if you knew it, would make you hate him." What
+Goethe said, still more what Goethe is reported to have said, is never
+to be taken quite literally. No comprehensive genius--genius at once
+poet and thinker--ever can be so taken. The sun shines on a dunghill.
+But the sun has no predilection for a dunghill. It only comprehends a
+dunghill as it does a rose. Still Kenelm had always regarded that loose
+ray from Goethe's prodigal orb with an abhorrence most unphilosophical
+for a philosopher so young as generally to take upon oath any words
+of so great a master. Kenelm thought that the root of all private
+benevolence, of all enlightened advance in social reform, lay in the
+adverse theorem,--that in every man's nature there lies a something
+that, could we get at it, cleanse it, polish it, render it visibly clear
+to our eyes, would make us love him. And in this spontaneous, uncultured
+sympathy with the results of so many laborious struggles of his own
+scholastic intellect against the dogma of the German giant, he felt as
+if he had found a younger--true, but oh, how much more subduing, because
+so much younger--sister of his own man's soul. Then came, so strongly,
+the sense of her sympathy with his own strange innermost self, which a
+man will never feel more than once in his life with a daughter of
+Eve, that he dared not trust himself to speak. He somewhat hurried his
+leave-taking.
+
+Passing in the rear of the garden towards the bridge which led to his
+lodging, he found on the opposite bank, at the other end of the bridge,
+Mr. Algernon Sidney Gale Jones peacefully angling for trout.
+
+"Will you not try the stream to-day, sir? Take my rod." Kenelm
+remembered that Lily had called Izaak Walton's book "a cruel one," and
+shaking his head gently, went his way into the house. There he seated
+himself silently by the window, and looked towards the grassy lawn
+and the dipping willows, and the gleam of the white walls through the
+girdling trees, as he had looked the eve before.
+
+"Ah!" he murmured at last, "if, as I hold, a man but tolerably good
+does good unconsciously merely by the act of living,--if he can no more
+traverse his way from the cradle to the grave, without letting fall,
+as he passes, the germs of strength, fertility, and beauty, than can a
+reckless wind or a vagrant bird, which, where it passes, leaves behind
+it the oak, the corn-sheaf, or the flower,--ah, if that be so, how
+tenfold the good must be, if the man find the gentler and purer
+duplicate of his own being in that mysterious, undefinable union which
+Shakspeares and day-labourers equally agree to call love; which Newton
+never recognizes, and which Descartes (his only rival in the realms
+of thought at once severe and imaginative) reduces into links of early
+association, explaining that he loved women who squinted, because, when
+he was a boy, a girl with that infirmity squinted at him from the other
+side of his father's garden-wall! Ah! be this union between man and
+woman what it may; if it be really love, really the bond which embraces
+the innermost and bettermost self of both,--how daily, hourly, momently,
+should we bless God for having made it so easy to be happy and to be
+good!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE dinner-party at Mr. Braefield's was not quite so small as Kenelm
+had anticipated. When the merchant heard from his wife that Kenelm
+was coming, he thought it would be but civil to the young gentleman to
+invite a few other persons to meet him.
+
+"You see, my dear," he said to Elsie, "Mrs. Cameron is a very good,
+simple sort of woman, but not particularly amusing; and Lily, though a
+pretty girl, is so exceedingly childish. We owe much, my sweet Elsie,
+to this Mr. Chillingly,"--here there was a deep tone of feeling in his
+voice and look,--"and we must make it as pleasant for him as we can.
+I will bring down my friend Sir Thomas, and you ask Mr. Emlyn and his
+wife. Sir Thomas is a very sensible man, and Emlyn a very learned one.
+So Mr. Chillingly will find people worth talking to. By the by, when I
+go to town I will send down a haunch of venison from Groves's."
+
+So when Kenelm arrived, a little before six o'clock, he found in the
+drawing-room the Rev. Charles Emlyn, vicar of Moleswich proper, with
+his spouse, and a portly middle-aged man, to whom, as Sir Thomas Pratt,
+Kenelm was introduced. Sir Thomas was an eminent city banker. The
+ceremonies of introduction over, Kenelm stole to Elsie's side.
+
+"I thought I was to meet Mrs. Cameron. I don't see her."
+
+"She will be here presently. It looks as if it might rain, and I have
+sent the carriage for her and Lily. Ah, here they are!"
+
+Mrs. Cameron entered, clothed in black silk. She always wore black; and
+behind her came Lily, in the spotless colour that became her name;
+no ornament, save a slender gold chain to which was appended a single
+locket, and a single blush rose in her hair. She looked wonderfully
+lovely; and with that loveliness there was a certain nameless air of
+distinction, possibly owing to delicacy of form and colouring; possibly
+to a certain grace of carriage, which was not without a something of
+pride.
+
+Mr. Braefield, who was a very punctual man, made a sign to his servant,
+and in another moment or so dinner was announced. Sir Thomas, of course,
+took in the hostess; Mr. Braefield, the vicar's wife (she was a dean's
+daughter); Kenelm, Mrs. Cameron; and the vicar, Lily.
+
+On seating themselves at the table Kenelm was on the left hand, next to
+the hostess, and separated from Lily by Mrs. Cameron and Mr. Emlyn;
+and when the vicar had said grace, Lily glanced behind his back and her
+aunt's at Kenelm (who did the same thing), making at him what the French
+call a _moue_. The pledge to her had been broken. She was between two
+men very much grown up,--the vicar and the host. Kenelm returned the
+_moue_ with a mournful smile and an involuntary shrug.
+
+All was silent till, after his soup and his first glass of sherry, Sir
+Thomas began,--
+
+"I think, Mr. Chillingly, we have met before, though I had not the
+honour then of making your acquaintance." Sir Thomas paused before he
+added, "Not long ago; the last State ball at Buckingham Palace."
+
+Kenelm bent his head acquiescingly. He had been at that ball.
+
+"You were talking with a very charming woman,--a friend of mine,--Lady
+Glenalvon."
+
+(Sir Thomas was Lady Glenalvon's banker.)
+
+"I remember perfectly," said Kenelm. "We were seated in the picture
+gallery. You came to speak to Lady Glenalvon, and I yielded to you my
+place on the settee."
+
+"Quite true; and I think you joined a young lady, very handsome,--the
+great heiress, Miss Travers."
+
+Kenelm again bowed, and, turning away as politely as he could, addressed
+himself to Mrs. Cameron. Sir Thomas, satisfied that he had impressed
+on his audience the facts of his friendship with Lady Glenalvon and his
+attendance at the court ball, now directed his conversational powers
+towards the vicar, who, utterly foiled in the attempt to draw out
+Lily, met the baronet's advances with the ardour of a talker too long
+suppressed. Kenelm continued, unmolested, to ripen his acquaintance with
+Mrs. Cameron. She did not, however, seem to lend a very attentive ear to
+his preliminary commonplace remarks about scenery or weather, but at his
+first pause, said,--
+
+"Sir Thomas spoke about a Miss Travers: is she related to a gentleman
+who was once in the Guards, Leopold Travers?"
+
+"She is his daughter. Did you ever know Leopold Travers?"
+
+"I have heard him mentioned by friends of mine long ago,--long ago,"
+replied Mrs. Cameron with a sort of weary languor, not unwonted, in her
+voice and manner; and then, as if dismissing the bygone reminiscence
+from her thoughts, changed the subject.
+
+"Lily tells me, Mr. Chillingly, that you said you were staying at Mr.
+Jones's, Cromwell Lodge. I hope you are made comfortable there."
+
+"Very. The situation is singularly pleasant."
+
+"Yes, it is considered the prettiest spot on the brook-side, and used to
+be a favourite resort for anglers; but the trout, I believe, are growing
+scarce; at least, now that the fishing in the Thames is improved, poor
+Mr. Jones complains that his old lodgers desert him. Of course you took
+the rooms for the sake of the fishing. I hope the sport may be better
+than it is said to be."
+
+"It is of little consequence to me: I do not care much about fishing;
+and since Miss Mordaunt calls the book which first enticed me to take
+to it 'a cruel one,' I feel as if the trout had become as sacred as
+crocodiles were to the ancient Egyptians."
+
+"Lily is a foolish child on such matters. She cannot bear the thought of
+giving pain to any dumb creature; and just before our garden there are a
+few trout which she has tamed. They feed out of her hand; she is always
+afraid they will wander away and get caught."
+
+"But Mr. Melville is an angler?"
+
+"Several years ago he would sometimes pretend to fish, but I believe
+it was rather an excuse for lying on the grass and reading 'the cruel
+book,' or perhaps, rather, for sketching. But now he is seldom here till
+autumn, when it grows too cold for such amusement."
+
+Here Sir Thomas's voice was so loudly raised that it stopped the
+conversation between Kenelm and Mrs. Cameron. He had got into some
+question of politics on which he and the vicar did not agree, and
+the discussion threatened to become warm, when Mrs. Braefield, with
+a woman's true tact, broached a new topic, in which Sir Thomas was
+immediately interested, relating to the construction of a conservatory
+for orchids that he meditated adding to his country-house, and in
+which frequent appeal was made to Mrs. Cameron, who was considered an
+accomplished florist, and who seemed at some time or other in her life
+to have acquired a very intimate acquaintance with the costly family of
+orchids.
+
+When the ladies retired Kenelm found himself seated next to Mr. Emlyn,
+who astounded him by a complimentary quotation from one of his own
+Latin prize poems at the university, hoped he would make some stay at
+Moleswich, told him of the principal places in the neighbourhood worth
+visiting, and offered him the run of his library, which he flattered
+himself was rather rich, both in the best editions of Greek and Latin
+classics and in early English literature. Kenelm was much pleased with
+the scholarly vicar, especially when Mr. Emlyn began to speak about Mrs.
+Cameron and Lily. Of the first he said, "She is one of those women in
+whom quiet is so predominant that it is long before one can know what
+undercurrents of good feeling flow beneath the unruffled surface.
+I wish, however, she was a little more active in the management and
+education of her niece,--a girl in whom I feel a very anxious interest,
+and whom I doubt if Mrs. Cameron understands. Perhaps, however, only
+a poet, and a very peculiar sort of poet, can understand her: Lily
+Mordaunt is herself a poem."
+
+"I like your definition of her," said Kenelm. "There is certainly
+something about her which differs much from the prose of common life."
+
+"You probably know Wordsworth's lines:
+
+
+ "'... and she shall lean her ear
+ In many a secret place
+ Where rivulets dance their wayward round,
+ And beauty, born of murmuring sound,
+ Shall pass into her face.'
+
+
+"They are lines that many critics have found unintelligible; but Lily
+seems like the living key to them."
+
+Kenelm's dark face lighted up, but he made no answer.
+
+"Only," continued Mr. Emlyn, "how a girl of that sort, left wholly to
+herself, untrained, undisciplined, is to grow up into the practical uses
+of womanhood, is a question that perplexes and saddens me."
+
+"Any more wine?" asked the host, closing a conversation on commercial
+matters with Sir Thomas. "No?--shall we join the ladies?"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE drawing-room was deserted; the ladies were in the garden. As Kenelm
+and Mr. Emlyn walked side by side towards the group (Sir Thomas and Mr.
+Braefield following at a little distance), the former asked, somewhat
+abruptly, "What sort of man is Miss Cameron's guardian, Mr. Melville?"
+
+"I can scarcely answer that question. I see little of him when he comes
+here. Formerly, he used to run down pretty often with a harum-scarum
+set of young fellows, quartered at Cromwell Lodge,--Grasmere had no
+accommodation for them,--students in the Academy, I suppose. For some
+years he has not brought those persons, and when he does come himself it
+is but for a few days. He has the reputation of being very wild."
+
+Further conversation was here stopped. The two men, while they thus
+talked, had been diverging from the straight way across the lawn towards
+the ladies, turning into sequestered paths through the shrubbery; now
+they emerged into the open sward, just before a table, on which coffee
+was served, and round which all the rest of the party were gathered.
+
+"I hope, Mr. Emlyn," said Elsie's cheery voice, "that you have dissuaded
+Mr. Chillingly from turning Papist. I am sure you have taken time enough
+to do so."
+
+Mr. Emlyn, Protestant every inch of him, slightly recoiled from Kenelm's
+side. "Do you meditate turning--" He could not conclude the sentence.
+
+"Be not alarmed, my dear sir. I did but own to Mrs. Braefield that I
+had paid a visit to Oxford in order to confer with a learned man on
+a question that puzzled me, and as abstract as that feminine pastime,
+theology, is now-a-days. I cannot convince Mrs. Braefield that Oxford
+admits other puzzles in life than those which amuse the ladies." Here
+Kenelm dropped into a chair by the side of Lily.
+
+Lily half turned her back to him.
+
+"Have I offended again?"
+
+Lily shrugged her shoulders slightly and would not answer.
+
+"I suspect, Miss Mordaunt, that among your good qualities, nature has
+omitted one; the bettermost self within you should replace it."
+
+Lily here abruptly turned to him her front face: the light of the skies
+was becoming dim, but the evening star shone upon it.
+
+"How! what do you mean?"
+
+"Am I to answer politely or truthfully?"
+
+"Truthfully! Oh, truthfully! What is life without truth?"
+
+"Even though one believes in fairies?"
+
+"Fairies are truthful, in a certain way. But you are not truthful. You
+were not thinking of fairies when you--"
+
+"When I what?"
+
+"Found fault with me."
+
+"I am not sure of that. But I will translate to you my thoughts, so far
+as I can read them myself, and to do so I will resort to the fairies.
+Let us suppose that a fairy has placed her changeling into the cradle of
+a mortal: that into the cradle she drops all manner of fairy gifts which
+are not bestowed on mere mortals; but that one mortal attribute she
+forgets. The changeling grows up; she charms those around her: they
+humour, and pet, and spoil her. But there arises a moment in which the
+omission of the one mortal gift is felt by her admirers and friends.
+Guess what that is."
+
+Lily pondered. "I see what you mean; the reverse of truthfulness,
+politeness."
+
+"No, not exactly that, though politeness slides into it unawares: it is
+a very humble quality, a very unpoetic quality; a quality that many dull
+people possess; and yet without it no fairy can fascinate mortals, when
+on the face of the fairy settles the first wrinkle. Can you not guess it
+now?"
+
+"No: you vex me; you provoke me;" and Lily stamped her foot petulantly,
+as in Kenelm's presence she had stamped it once before. "Speak plainly,
+I insist."
+
+"Miss Mordaunt, excuse me: I dare not," said Kenelm, rising with a sort
+of bow one makes to the Queen; and he crossed over to Mrs. Braefield.
+
+Lily remained, still pouting fiercely.
+
+Sir Thomas took the chair Kenelm had vacated.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE hour for parting came. Of all the guests, Sir Thomas alone stayed
+at the house a guest for the night. Mr. and Mrs. Emlyn had their own
+carriage. Mrs. Braefield's carriage came to the door for Mrs. Cameron
+and Lily.
+
+Said Lily, impatiently and discourteously, "Who would not rather walk on
+such a night?" and she whispered to her aunt.
+
+Mrs. Cameron, listening to the whisper and obedient to every whim
+of Lily's, said, "You are too considerate, dear Mrs. Braefield; Lily
+prefers walking home; there is no chance of rain now."
+
+Kenelm followed the steps of the aunt and niece, and soon overtook them
+on the brook-side.
+
+"A charming night, Mr. Chillingly," said Mrs. Cameron.
+
+"An English summer night; nothing like it in such parts of the world as
+I have visited. But, alas! of English summer nights there are but few."
+
+"You have travelled much abroad?"
+
+"Much, no, a little; chiefly on foot."
+
+Lily hitherto had not said a word, and had been walking with downcast
+head. Now she looked up and said, in the mildest and most conciliatory
+of human voices,--
+
+"You have been abroad;" then, with an acquiescence in the manners of
+the world which to him she had never yet manifested, she added his
+name, "Mr. Chillingly," and went on, more familiarly. "What a breadth
+of meaning the word 'abroad' conveys! Away, afar from one's self, from
+one's everyday life. How I envy you! you have been abroad: so has Lion"
+(here drawing herself up), "I mean my guardian, Mr. Melville."
+
+"Certainly, I have been abroad, but afar from myself--never. It is an
+old saying,--all old sayings are true; most new sayings are false,--a
+man carries his native soil at the sole of his foot."
+
+Here the path somewhat narrowed. Mrs. Cameron went on first, Kenelm and
+Lily behind; she, of course, on the dry path, he on the dewy grass.
+
+She stopped him. "You are walking in the wet, and with those thin
+shoes." Lily moved instinctively away from the dry path.
+
+Homely though that speech of Lily's be, and absurd as said by a fragile
+girl to a gladiator like Kenelm, it lit up a whole world of womanhood:
+it showed all that undiscoverable land which was hidden to the learned
+Mr. Emlyn, all that land which an uncomprehended girl seizes and reigns
+over when she becomes wife and mother.
+
+At that homely speech, and that impulsive movement, Kenelm halted, in
+a sort of dreaming maze. He turned timidly, "Can you forgive me for my
+rude words? I presumed to find fault with you."
+
+"And so justly. I have been thinking over all you said, and I feel you
+were so right; only I still do not quite understand what you meant by
+the quality for mortals which the fairy did not give to her changeling."
+
+"If I did not dare say it before, I should still less dare to say it
+now."
+
+"Do." There was no longer the stamp of the foot, no longer the flash
+from her eyes, no longer the wilfulness which said, "I insist;"--
+
+"Do;" soothingly, sweetly, imploringly.
+
+Thus pushed to it, Kenelm plucked up courage, and not trusting himself
+to look at Lily, answered brusquely,--
+
+"The quality desirable for men, but more essential to women in
+proportion as they are fairy-like, though the tritest thing possible, is
+good temper."
+
+Lily made a sudden bound from his side, and joined her aunt, walking
+through the wet grass.
+
+When they reached the garden-gate, Kenelm advanced and opened it. Lily
+passed him by haughtily; they gained the cottage-door.
+
+"I don't ask you in at this hour," said Mrs. Cameron. "It would be but a
+false compliment."
+
+Kenelm bowed and retreated. Lily left her aunt's side, and came towards
+him, extending her hand.
+
+"I shall consider your words, Mr. Chillingly," she said, with a
+strangely majestic air. "At present I think you are not right. I am not
+ill-tempered; but--" here she paused, and then added with a loftiness
+of mien which, had she not been so exquisitely pretty, would have been
+rudeness--"in any case I forgive you."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THERE were a good many pretty villas in the outskirts of Moleswich, and
+the owners of them were generally well off, and yet there was little of
+what is called visiting society; owing perhaps to the fact that there
+not being among these proprietors any persons belonging to what is
+commonly called "the aristocratic class," there was a vast deal of
+aristocratic pretension. The family of Mr. A-----, who had enriched
+himself as a stock-jobber, turned up its nose at the family of Mr.
+B-----, who had enriched himself still more as a linen-draper, while the
+family of Mr. B----- showed a very cold shoulder to the family of Mr.
+C-----, who had become richer than either of them as a pawnbroker,
+and whose wife wore diamonds, but dropped her h's. England would be a
+community so aristocratic that there would be no living in it, if one
+could exterminate what is now called "aristocracy." The Braefields were
+the only persons who really drew together the antagonistic atoms of the
+Moleswich society, partly because they were acknowledged to be the first
+persons there, in right not only of old settlement (the Braefields had
+held Braefieldville for four generations), but of the wealth derived
+from those departments of commercial enterprise which are recognized as
+the highest, and of an establishment considered to be the most elegant
+in the neighbourhood; principally because Elsie, while exceedingly
+genial and cheerful in temper, had a certain power of will (as her
+runaway folly had manifested), and when she got people together
+compelled them to be civil to each other. She had commenced this
+gracious career by inaugurating children's parties, and when the
+children became friends the parents necessarily grew closer together.
+Still her task had only recently begun, and its effects were not in
+full operation. Thus, though it became known at Moleswich that a young
+gentleman, the heir to a baronetcy and a high estate, was sojourning at
+Cromwell Lodge, no overtures were made to him on the part of the A's,
+B's, and C's. The vicar, who called on Kenelm the day after the dinner
+at Braefieldville, explained to him the social conditions of the place.
+"You understand," said he, "that it will be from no want of courtesy on
+the part of my neighbours if they do not offer you any relief from
+the pleasures of solitude. It will be simply because they are shy, not
+because they are uncivil. And, it is this consideration that makes
+me, at the risk of seeming too forward, entreat you to look into the
+vicarage any morning or evening on which you feel tired of your own
+company; suppose you drink tea with us this evening,--you will find a
+young lady whose heart you have already won."
+
+"Whose heart I have won!" faltered Kenelm, and the warm blood rushed to
+his cheek.
+
+"But," continued the vicar, smiling, "she has no matrimonial designs on
+you at present. She is only twelve years old,--my little girl Clemmy."
+
+"Clemmy!--she is your daughter? I did not know that. I very gratefully
+accept your invitation."
+
+"I must not keep you longer from your amusement. The sky is just clouded
+enough for sport. What fly do you use?"
+
+"To say truth, I doubt if the stream has much to tempt me in the way of
+trout, and I prefer rambling about the lanes and by-paths to
+
+
+ "'The noiseless angler's solitary stand.'
+
+"I am an indefatigable walker, and the home scenery round the place has
+many charms for me. Besides," added Kenelm, feeling conscious that he
+ought to find some more plausible excuse than the charms of home scenery
+for locating himself long in Cromwell Lodge, "besides, I intend to
+devote myself a good deal to reading. I have been very idle of late, and
+the solitude of this place must be favourable to study."
+
+"You are not intended, I presume, for any of the learned professions?"
+
+"The learned professions," replied Kenelm, "is an invidious form of
+speech that we are doing our best to eradicate from the language.
+All professions now-a-days are to have much about the same amount of
+learning. The learning of the military profession is to be levelled
+upwards, the learning of the scholastic to be levelled downwards.
+Cabinet ministers sneer at the uses of Greek and Latin. And even
+such masculine studies as Law and Medicine are to be adapted to the
+measurements of taste and propriety in colleges for young ladies. No,
+I am not intended for any profession; but still an ignorant man like
+myself may not be the worse for a little book-reading now and then."
+
+"You seem to be badly provided with books here," said the vicar,
+glancing round the room, in which, on a table in the corner, lay
+half-a-dozen old-looking volumes, evidently belonging not to the lodger
+but to the landlord. "But, as I before said, my library is at your
+service. What branch of reading do you prefer?"
+
+Kenelm was, and looked, puzzled. But after a pause he answered:
+
+"The more remote it be from the present day, the better for me. You said
+your collection was rich in mediaeval literature. But the Middle
+Ages are so copied by the modern Goths, that I might as well read
+translations of Chaucer or take lodgings in Wardour Street. If you have
+any books about the manners and habits of those who, according to
+the newest idea in science, were our semi-human progenitors in the
+transition state between a marine animal and a gorilla, I should be very
+much edified by the loan."
+
+"Alas," said Mr. Emlyn, laughing, "no such books have been left to us."
+
+"No such books? You must be mistaken. There must be plenty of them
+somewhere. I grant all the wonderful powers of invention bestowed on
+the creators of poetic romance; still not the sovereign masters in that
+realm of literature--not Scott, not Cervantes, not Goethe, not even
+Shakspeare--could have presumed to rebuild the past without such
+materials as they found in the books that record it. And though I, no
+less cheerfully, grant that we have now living among us a creator of
+poetic romance immeasurably more inventive than they,--appealing to our
+credulity in portents the most monstrous, with a charm of style the
+most conversationally familiar,--still I cannot conceive that even that
+unrivalled romance-writer can so bewitch our understandings as to make
+us believe that, if Miss Mordaunt's cat dislikes to wet her feet, it is
+probably because in the prehistoric age her ancestors lived in the dry
+country of Egypt; or that when some lofty orator, a Pitt or a Gladstone,
+rebuts with a polished smile which reveals his canine teeth the rude
+assault of an opponent, he betrays his descent from a 'semi-human
+progenitor' who was accustomed to snap at his enemy. Surely, surely
+there must be some books still extant written by philosophers before the
+birth of Adam, in which there is authority, even though but in mythic
+fable, for such poetic inventions. Surely, surely some early chroniclers
+must depose that they saw, saw with their own eyes, the great gorillas
+who scratched off their hairy coverings to please the eyes of the young
+ladies of their species, and that they noted the gradual metamorphosis
+of one animal into another. For, if you tell me that this illustrious
+romance-writer is but a cautious man of science, and that we must accept
+his inventions according to the sober laws of evidence and fact, there
+is not the most incredible ghost story which does not better satisfy the
+common sense of a sceptic. However, if you have no such books, lend
+me the most unphilosophical you possess,--on magic, for instance,--the
+philosopher's stone"--
+
+"I have some of them," said the vicar, laughing; "you shall choose for
+yourself."
+
+"If you are going homeward, let me accompany you part of the way: I
+don't yet know where the church and the vicarage are, and I ought to
+know before I come in the evening."
+
+Kenelm and the vicar walked side by side, very sociably, across the
+bridge and on the side of the rivulet on which stood Mrs. Cameron's
+cottage. As they skirted the garden pale at the rear of the cottage,
+Kenelm suddenly stopped in the middle of some sentence which had
+interested Mr. Emlyn, and as suddenly arrested his steps on the turf
+that bordered the lane. A little before him stood an old peasant woman,
+with whom Lily, on the opposite side of the garden pale, was conversing.
+Mr. Emlyn did not at first see what Kenelm saw; turning round rather
+to gaze on his companion, surprised by his abrupt halt and silence. The
+girl put a small basket into the old woman's hand, who then dropped a
+low curtsy, and uttered low a "God bless you." Low though it was, Kenelm
+overheard it, and said abstractedly to Mr. Emlyn, "Is there a greater
+link between this life and the next than God's blessing on the young,
+breathed from the lips of the old?"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+"AND how is your good man, Mrs. Haley?" said the vicar, who had now
+reached the spot on which the old woman stood,--with Lily's fair face
+still bended down to her,--while Kenelm slowly followed him.
+
+"Thank you kindly, sir, he is better; out of his bed now. The young lady
+has done him a power of good--"
+
+"Hush!" said Lily, colouring. "Make haste home now; you must not keep
+him waiting for his dinner."
+
+The old woman again curtsied, and went off at a brisk pace.
+
+"Do you know, Mr. Chillingly," said Mr. Emlyn, "that Miss Mordaunt is
+the best doctor in the place? Though if she goes on making so many cures
+she will find the number of her patients rather burdensome."
+
+"It was only the other day," said Lily, "that you scolded me for the
+best cure I have yet made."
+
+"I?--Oh! I remember; you led that silly child Madge to believe that
+there was a fairy charm in the arrowroot you sent her. Own you deserved
+a scolding there."
+
+"No, I did not. I dressed the arrowroot, and am I not Fairy? I have just
+got such a pretty note from Clemmy, Mr. Emlyn, asking me to come up this
+evening and see her new magic lantern. Will you tell her to expect me?
+And, mind, no scolding."
+
+"And all magic?" said Mr. Emlyn; "be it so."
+
+Lily and Kenelm had not hitherto exchanged a word. She had replied with
+a grave inclination of her head to his silent bow. But now she turned to
+him shyly and said, "I suppose you have been fishing all the morning?"
+
+"No; the fishes hereabout are under the protection of a Fairy,--whom I
+dare not displease."
+
+Lily's face brightened, and she extended her hand to him over the
+palings. "Good-day; I hear aunty's voice: those dreadful French verbs!"
+
+She disappeared among the shrubs, amid which they heard the thrill of
+her fresh young voice singing to herself.
+
+"That child has a heart of gold," said Mr. Emlyn, as the two men walked
+on. "I did not exaggerate when I said she was the best doctor in the
+place. I believe the poor really do believe that she is a fairy. Of
+course we send from the vicarage to our ailing parishioners who require
+it, food and wine; but it never seems to do them the good that her
+little dishes made by her own tiny hands do; and I don't know if you
+noticed the basket that old woman took away,--Miss Lily taught Will
+Somers to make the prettiest little baskets; and she puts her jellies or
+other savouries into dainty porcelain gallipots nicely fitted into the
+baskets, which she trims with ribbons. It is the look of the thing that
+tempts the appetite of the invalids, and certainly the child may well be
+called Fairy at present; but I wish Mrs. Cameron would attend a little
+more strictly to her education. She can't be a fairy forever."
+
+Kenelm sighed, but made no answer.
+
+Mr. Emlyn then turned the conversation to erudite subjects, and so they
+came in sight of the town, when the vicar stopped and pointed towards
+the church, of which the spire rose a little to the left, with two aged
+yew-trees half shadowing the burial-ground, and in the rear a glimpse of
+the vicarage seen amid the shrubs of its garden ground.
+
+"You will know your way now," said the vicar; "excuse me if I quit you:
+I have a few visits to make; among others, to poor Haley, husband to the
+old woman you saw. I read to him a chapter in the Bible every day; yet
+still I fancy that he believes in fairy charms."
+
+"Better believe too much, than too little," said Kenelm; and he turned
+aside into the village and spent half-an-hour with Will, looking at the
+pretty baskets Lily had taught Will to make. Then, as he went slowly
+homeward, he turned aside into the churchyard.
+
+The church, built in the thirteenth century, was not large, but it
+probably sufficed for its congregation, since it betrayed no signs of
+modern addition; restoration or repair it needed not. The centuries had
+but mellowed the tints of its solid walls, as little injured by the huge
+ivy stems that shot forth their aspiring leaves to the very summit of
+the stately tower as by the slender roses which had been trained
+to climb up a foot or so of the massive buttresses. The site of the
+burial-ground was unusually picturesque: sheltered towards the north by
+a rising ground clothed with woods, sloping down at the south towards
+the glebe pasture-grounds through which ran the brooklet, sufficiently
+near for its brawling gurgle to be heard on a still day. Kenelm sat
+himself on an antique tomb, which was evidently appropriated to some one
+of higher than common rank in bygone days, but on which the sculpture
+was wholly obliterated.
+
+The stillness and solitude of the place had their charms for his
+meditative temperament; and he remained there long, forgetful of time,
+and scarcely hearing the boom of the clock that warned him of its lapse.
+
+When suddenly, a shadow--the shadow of a human form--fell on the grass
+on which his eyes dreamily rested. He looked up with a start, and beheld
+Lily standing before him mute and still. Her image was so present in his
+thoughts at the moment that he felt a thrill of awe, as if the thoughts
+had conjured up her apparition. She was the first to speak.
+
+"You here, too?" she said very softly, almost whisperingly. "Too!"
+echoed Kenelm, rising; "too! 'Tis no wonder that I, a stranger to
+the place, should find my steps attracted towards its most venerable
+building. Even the most careless traveller, halting at some remote
+abodes of the living, turns aside to gaze on the burial-ground of the
+dead. But my surprise is that you, Miss Mordaunt, should be attracted
+towards the same spot."
+
+"It is my favourite spot," said Lily, "and always has been. I have sat
+many an hour on that tombstone. It is strange to think that no one knows
+who sleeps beneath it. The 'Guide Book to Moleswich,' though it gives
+the history of the church from the reign in which it was first built,
+can only venture a guess that this tomb, the grandest and oldest in the
+burial-ground, is tenanted by some member of a family named Montfichet,
+that was once very powerful in the county, and has become extinct since
+the reign of Henry VI. But," added Lily, "there is not a letter of the
+name Montfichet left. I found out more than any one else has done; I
+learned black-letter on purpose; look here," and she pointed to a small
+spot in which the moss had been removed. "Do you see those figures?
+are they not XVIII? and look again, in what was once the line above
+the figures, ELE. It must have been an Eleanor, who died at the age of
+eighteen--"
+
+"I rather think it more probable that the figures refer to the date
+of the death, 1318 perhaps; and so far as I can decipher black-letter,
+which is more in my father's line than mine, I think it is AL, not EL,
+and that it seems as if there had been a letter between L and the second
+E, which is now effaced. The tomb itself is not likely to belong to any
+powerful family then resident at the place. Their monuments, according
+to usage, would have been within the church,--probably in their own
+mortuary chapel."
+
+"Don't try to destroy my fancy," said Lily, shaking her head; "you
+cannot succeed, I know her history too well. She was young, and some one
+loved her, and built over her the finest tomb he could afford; and see
+how long the epitaph must have been! how much it must have spoken in
+her praise and of his grief. And then he went his way, and the tomb was
+neglected, and her fate forgotten."
+
+"My dear Miss Mordaunt, this is indeed a wild romance to spin out of so
+slender a thread. But even if true, there is no reason to think that a
+life is forgotten, though a tomb be neglected."
+
+"Perhaps not," said Lily, thoughtfully. "But when I am dead, if I can
+look down, I think it would please me to see my grave not neglected by
+those who had loved me once."
+
+She moved from him as she said this, and went to a little mound that
+seemed not long since raised; there was a simple cross at the head and
+a narrow border of flowers round it. Lily knelt beside the flowers and
+pulled out a stray weed. Then she rose, and said to Kenelm, who had
+followed, and now stood beside her,--
+
+"She was the little grandchild of poor old Mrs. Hales. I could not cure
+her, though I tried hard: she was so fond of me, and died in my arms.
+No, let me not say 'died,'--surely there is no such thing as dying. 'Tis
+but a change of life,--
+
+
+ 'Less than the void between two waves of air,
+ The space between existence and a soul.'"
+
+
+"Whose lines are those?" asked Kenelm.
+
+"I don't know; I learnt them from Lion. Don't you believe them to be
+true?"
+
+"Yes. But the truth does not render the thought of quitting this scene
+of life for another more pleasing to most of us. See how soft and gentle
+and bright is all that living summer land beyond; let us find subject
+for talk from that, not from the graveyard on which we stand."
+
+"But is there not a summer land fairer than that we see now; and which
+we do see, as in a dream, best when we take subjects of talk from the
+graveyard?" Without waiting for a reply, Lily went on. "I planted these
+flowers: Mr. Emlyn was angry with me; he said it was 'Popish.' But he
+had not the heart to have them taken up; I come here very often to see
+to them. Do you think it wrong? Poor little Nell! she was so fond of
+flowers. And the Eleanor in the great tomb, she too perhaps knew some
+one who called her Nell; but there are no flowers round her tomb. Poor
+Eleanor!"
+
+She took the nosegay she wore on her bosom, and as she repassed the tomb
+laid it on the mouldering stone.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THEY quitted the burial-ground, taking their way to Grasmere. Kenelm
+walked by Lily's side; not a word passed between them till they came in
+sight of the cottage.
+
+Then Lily stopped abruptly, and lifting towards him her charming face,
+said,--
+
+"I told you I would think over what you said to me last night. I have
+done so, and feel I can thank you honestly. You were very kind: I never
+before thought that I had a bad temper; no one ever told me so. But I
+see now what you mean; sometimes I feel very quickly, and then I show
+it. But how did I show it to you, Mr. Chillingly?"
+
+"Did you not turn your back to me when I seated myself next you in
+Mrs. Braefield's garden, vouchsafing me no reply when I asked if I had
+offended?"
+
+Lily's face became bathed in blushes, and her voice faltered, as she
+answered,--
+
+"I was not offended; I was not in a bad temper then: it was worse than
+that."
+
+"Worse? what could it possibly be?"
+
+"I am afraid it was envy."
+
+"Envy of what? of whom?"
+
+"I don't know how to explain; after all, I fear aunty is right, and the
+fairy tales put very silly, very naughty thoughts into one's head. When
+Cinderella's sisters went to the king's ball, and Cinderella was left
+alone, did not she long to go too? Did not she envy her sisters?"
+
+"Ah! I understand now: Sir Charles spoke of the Court Ball."
+
+"And you were there talking with handsome ladies--and--oh! I was so
+foolish and felt sore."
+
+"You, who when we first met wondered how people who could live in
+the country preferred to live in towns, do then sometimes contradict
+yourself, and sigh for the great world that lies beyond these quiet
+water banks. You feel that you have youth and beauty, and wish to be
+admired!"
+
+"It is not that exactly," said Lily, with a perplexed look in her
+ingenuous countenance, "and in my better moments, when the 'bettermost
+self' comes forth, I know that I am not made for the great world you
+speak of. But you see--" Here she paused again, and as they had now
+entered the garden, dropped wearily on a bench beside the path. Kenelm
+seated himself there too, waiting for her to finish her broken sentence.
+
+"You see," she continued, looking down embarrassed, and describing vague
+circles on the gravel with her fairy-like foot, "that at home, ever
+since I can remember, they have treated me as if--well, as if I
+were--what shall I say? the child of one of your great ladies. Even
+Lion, who is so noble, so grand, seemed to think when I was a mere
+infant that I was a little queen: once when I told a fib he did not
+scold me; but I never saw him look so sad and so angry as when he said,
+'Never again forget that you are a lady.' And, but I tire you--"
+
+"Tire me, indeed! go on."
+
+"No, I have said enough to explain why I have at times proud thoughts,
+and vain thoughts; and why, for instance, I said to myself, 'Perhaps my
+place of right is among those fine ladies whom he--' but it is all over
+now." She rose hastily with a pretty laugh, and bounded towards Mrs.
+Cameron, who was walking slowly along the lawn with a book in her hand.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+IT was a very merry party at the vicarage that evening. Lily had not
+been prepared to meet Kenelm there, and her face brightened wonderfully
+as at her entrance he turned from the book-shelves to which Mr. Emlyn
+was directing his attention. But instead of meeting his advance, she
+darted off to the lawn, where Clemmy and several other children greeted
+her with a joyous shout.
+
+"Not acquainted with Macleane's Juvenal?" said the reverend scholar;
+"you will be greatly pleased with it; here it is,--a posthumous work,
+edited by George Long. I can lend you Munro's Lucretius, '69. Aha! we
+have some scholars yet to pit against the Germans."
+
+"I am heartily glad to hear it," said Kenelm. "It will be a long time
+before they will ever wish to rival us in that game which Miss Clemmy
+is now forming on the lawn, and in which England has recently acquired a
+European reputation."
+
+"I don't take you. What game?"
+
+"Puss in the Corner. With your leave I will look out and see whether
+it be a winning game for puss--in the long-run." Kenelm joined the
+children, amidst whom Lily seemed not the least childlike. Resisting all
+overtures from Clemmy to join their play, he seated himself on a sloping
+bank at a little distance,--an idle looker-on. His eye followed Lily's
+nimble movements, his ear drank in the music of her joyous laugh. Could
+that be the same girl whom he had seen tending the flower-bed amid the
+gravestones? Mrs. Emlyn came across the lawn and joined him, seating
+herself also on the bank. Mrs. Emlyn was an exceedingly clever woman:
+nevertheless she was not formidable,--on the contrary, pleasing; and
+though the ladies in the neighbourhood said 'she talked like a book,'
+the easy gentleness of her voice carried off that offence.
+
+"I suppose, Mr. Chillingly," said she, "I ought to apologize for
+my husband's invitation to what must seem to you so frivolous an
+entertainment as a child's party. But when Mr. Emlyn asked you to come
+to us this evening, he was not aware that Clemmy had also invited her
+young friends. He had looked forward to rational conversation with you
+on his own favourite studies."
+
+"It is not so long since I left school, but that I prefer a half holiday
+to lessons, even from a tutor so pleasant as Mr. Emlyn,--
+
+
+ "'Ah, happy years,--once more who would not be a boy!'"
+
+
+"Nay," said Mrs. Emlyn, with a grave smile. "Who that had started so
+fairly as Mr. Chillingly in the career of man would wish to go back and
+resume a place among boys?"
+
+"But, my dear Mrs. Emlyn, the line I quoted was wrung from the heart of
+a man who had already outstripped all rivals in the race-ground he had
+chosen, and who at that moment was in the very Maytime of youth and of
+fame. And if such a man at such an epoch in his career could sigh to 'be
+once more a boy,' it must have been when he was thinking of the boy's
+half holiday, and recoiling from the task work he was condemned to learn
+as man."
+
+"The line you quote is, I think, from 'Childe Harold,' and surely
+you would not apply to mankind in general the sentiment of a poet so
+peculiarly self-reflecting (if I may use that expression), and in whom
+sentiment is often so morbid."
+
+"You are right, Mrs. Emlyn," said Kenelm, ingenuously. "Still a boy's
+half holiday is a very happy thing; and among mankind in general
+there must be many who would be glad to have it back again,--Mr. Emlyn
+himself, I should think."
+
+"Mr. Emlyn has his half holiday now. Do you not see him standing just
+outside the window? Do you not hear him laughing? He is a child again
+in the mirth of his children. I hope you will stay some time in the
+neighbourhood; I am sure you and he will like each other. And it is such
+a rare delight to him to get a scholar like yourself to talk to."
+
+"Pardon me, I am not a scholar; a very noble title that, and not to be
+given to a lazy trifler on the surface of book-lore like myself."
+
+"You are too modest. My husband has a copy of your Cambridge prize
+verses, and says 'the Latinity of them is quite beautiful.' I quote his
+very words."
+
+"Latin verse-making is a mere knack, little more than a proof that one
+had an elegant scholar for one's tutor, as I certainly had. But it is by
+special grace that a real scholar can send forth another real scholar,
+and a Kennedy produce a Munro. But to return to the more interesting
+question of half holidays; I declare that Clemmy is leading off your
+husband in triumph. He is actually going to be Puss in the Corner."
+
+"When you know more of Charles,--I mean my husband,--you will discover
+that his whole life is more or less of a holiday. Perhaps because he is
+not what you accuse yourself of being: he is not lazy; he never wishes
+to be a boy once more; and taskwork itself is holiday to him. He enjoys
+shutting himself up in his study and reading; he enjoys a walk with
+the children; he enjoys visiting the poor; he enjoys his duties as a
+clergyman. And though I am not always contented for him, though I think
+he should have had those honours in his profession which have been
+lavished on men with less ability and less learning, yet he is never
+discontented himself. Shall I tell you his secret?"
+
+"Do."
+
+"He is a _Thanks-giving Man_. You, too, must have much to thank God
+for, Mr. Chillingly; and in thanksgiving to God does there not blend
+usefulness to man, and such sense of pastime in the usefulness as makes
+each day a holiday?"
+
+Kenelm looked up into the quiet face of this obscure pastor's wife with
+a startled expression in his own.
+
+"I see, ma'am," said he, "that you have devoted much thought to the
+study of the aesthetical philosophy as expounded by German thinkers,
+whom it is rather difficult to understand."
+
+"I, Mr. Chillingly! good gracious! No! What do you mean by your
+aesthetical philosophy?"
+
+"According to aesthetics, I believe man arrives at his highest state
+of moral excellence when labour and duty lose all the harshness of
+effort,--when they become the impulse and habit of life; when as the
+essential attributes of the beautiful, they are, like beauty, enjoyed
+as pleasure; and thus, as you expressed, each day becomes a holiday: a
+lovely doctrine, not perhaps so lofty as that of the Stoics, but more
+bewitching. Only, very few of us can practically merge our cares and our
+worries into so serene an atmosphere."
+
+"Some do so without knowing anything of aesthetics and with no pretence
+to be Stoics; but, then, they are Christians."
+
+"There are some such Christians, no doubt; but they are rarely to be met
+with. Take Christendom altogether, and it appears to comprise the most
+agitated population in the world; the population in which there is the
+greatest grumbling as to the quantity of labour to be done, the
+loudest complaints that duty instead of a pleasure is a very hard and
+disagreeable struggle, and in which holidays are fewest and the moral
+atmosphere least serene. Perhaps," added Kenelm, with a deeper shade of
+thought on his brow, "it is this perpetual consciousness of struggle;
+this difficulty in merging toil into ease, or stern duty into placid
+enjoyment; this refusal to ascend for one's self into the calm of an air
+aloof from the cloud which darkens, and the hail-storm which beats
+upon, the fellow-men we leave below,--that makes the troubled life of
+Christendom dearer to Heaven, and more conducive to Heaven's design in
+rendering earth the wrestling-ground and not the resting-place of man,
+than is that of the Brahmin, ever seeking to abstract himself from
+the Christian's conflicts of action and desire, and to carry into its
+extremest practice the aesthetic theory, of basking undisturbed in the
+contemplation of the most absolute beauty human thought can reflect from
+its idea of divine good!"
+
+Whatever Mrs. Emlyn might have said in reply was interrupted by the rush
+of the children towards her; they were tired of play, and eager for tea
+and the magic lantern.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE room is duly obscured and the white sheet attached to the wall; the
+children are seated, hushed, and awe-stricken. And Kenelm is placed next
+to Lily.
+
+The tritest things in our mortal experience are among the most
+mysterious. There is more mystery in the growth of a blade of grass than
+there is in the wizard's mirror or the feats of a spirit medium. Most of
+us have known the attraction that draws one human being to another, and
+makes it so exquisite a happiness to sit quiet and mute by another's
+side; which stills for the moment the busiest thoughts in our brain, the
+most turbulent desires in our heart, and renders us but conscious of a
+present ineffable bliss. Most of us have known that. But who has ever
+been satisfied with any metaphysical account of its why or wherefore? We
+can but say it is love, and love at that earlier section of its history
+which has not yet escaped from romance; but by what process that other
+person has become singled out of the whole universe to attain such
+special power over one is a problem that, though many have attempted to
+solve it, has never attained to solution. In the dim light of the room
+Kenelm could only distinguish the outlines of Lily's delicate face, but
+at each new surprise in the show, the face intuitively turned to his,
+and once, when the terrible image of a sheeted ghost, pursuing a guilty
+man, passed along the wall, she drew closer to him in her childish
+fright, and by an involuntary innocent movement laid her hand on his. He
+detained it tenderly, but, alas! it was withdrawn the next moment;
+the ghost was succeeded by a couple of dancing dogs. And Lily's ready
+laugh--partly at the dogs, partly at her own previous alarm--vexed
+Kenelm's ear. He wished there had been a succession of ghosts, each more
+appalling than the last.
+
+The entertainment was over, and after a slight refreshment of cakes
+and wine-and-water the party broke up; the children visitors went away
+attended by servant-maids who had come for them. Mrs. Cameron and Lily
+were to walk home on foot.
+
+"It is a lovely night, Mrs. Cameron," said Mr. Emlyn, "and I will attend
+you to your gate."
+
+"Permit me also," said Kenelm.
+
+"Ay," said the vicar, "it is your own way to Cromwell Lodge."
+
+The path led them through the churchyard as the nearest approach to the
+brook-side. The moonbeams shimmered through the yew-trees and rested on
+the old tomb; playing, as it were, round the flowers which Lily's hand
+had that day dropped upon its stone. She was walking beside Kenelm, the
+elder two a few paces in front.
+
+"How silly I was," said she, "to be so frightened at the false ghost! I
+don't think a real one would frighten me, at least if seen here, in this
+loving moonlight, and on God's ground!"
+
+"Ghosts, were they permitted to appear except in a magic lantern, could
+not harm the innocent. And I wonder why the idea of their apparition
+should always have been associated with such phantasies of horror,
+especially by sinless children, who have the least reason to dread
+them."
+
+"Oh, that is true," cried Lily; "but even when we are grown up there
+must be times in which we should so long to see a ghost, and feel what a
+comfort, what a joy it would be."
+
+"I understand you. If some one very dear to us had vanished from our
+life; if we felt the anguish of the separation so intensely as to efface
+the thought that life, as you said so well, 'never dies;' well, yes,
+then I can conceive that the mourner would yearn to have a glimpse of
+the vanished one, were it but to ask the sole and only question he could
+desire to put, 'Art thou happy? May I hope that we shall meet again,
+never to part,--never?'"
+
+Kenelm's voice trembled as he spoke, tears stood in his eyes. A
+melancholy--vague, unaccountable, overpowering--passed across his heart,
+as the shadow of some dark-winged bird passes over a quiet stream.
+
+"You have never yet felt this?" asked Lily doubtingly, in a soft voice,
+full of tender pity, stopping short and looking into his face.
+
+"I? No. I have never yet lost one whom I so loved and so yearned to see
+again. I was but thinking that such losses may befall us all ere we too
+vanish out of sight."
+
+"Lily!" called forth Mrs. Cameron, halting at the gate of the
+burial-ground.
+
+"Yes, auntie?"
+
+"Mr. Emlyn wants to know how far you have got in 'Numa Pompilius.' Come
+and answer for yourself."
+
+"Oh, those tiresome grown-up people!" whispered Lily, petulantly, to
+Kenelm. "I do like Mr. Emlyn; he is one of the very best of men. But
+still he is grown up, and his 'Numa Pompilius' is so stupid."
+
+"My first French lesson-book. No, it is not stupid. Read on. It has
+hints of the prettiest fairy tale I know, and of the fairy in especial
+who bewitched my fancies as a boy."
+
+By this time they had gained the gate of the burial-ground.
+
+"What fairy tale? what fairy?" asked Lily, speaking quickly.
+
+"She was a fairy, though in heathen language she is called a
+nymph,--Egeria. She was the link between men and gods to him she loved;
+she belongs to the race of gods. True, she, too, may vanish, but she can
+never die."
+
+"Well, Miss Lily," said the vicar, "and how far in the book I lent
+you,--'Numa Pompilius.'"
+
+"Ask me this day next week."
+
+"I will; but mind you are to translate as you go on. I must see the
+translation."
+
+"Very well. I will do my best," answered Lily meekly. Lily now walked
+by the vicar's side, and Kenelm by Mrs. Cameron's, till they reached
+Grasmere.
+
+"I will go on with you to the bridge, Mr. Chillingly," said the vicar,
+when the ladies had disappeared within their garden. "We had little
+time to look over my books, and, by the by, I hope you at least took the
+Juvenal."
+
+"No, Mr. Emlyn; who can quit your house with an inclination for satire?
+I must come some morning and select a volume from those works which give
+pleasant views of life and bequeath favourable impressions of mankind.
+Your wife, with whom I have had an interesting conversation, upon the
+principles of aesthetical philosophy--"
+
+"My wife! Charlotte! She knows nothing about aesthetical philosophy."
+
+"She calls it by another name, but she understands it well enough to
+illustrate the principles by example. She tells me that labour and duty
+are so taken up by you--
+
+
+ 'In den heitern Regionen
+ Wo die reinen Formen wohnen,'
+
+
+that they become joy and beauty,--is it so?"
+
+"I am sure that Charlotte never said anything half so poetical. But, in
+plain words, the days pass with me very happily. I should be ungrateful
+if I were not happy. Heaven has bestowed on me so many sources of
+love,--wife, children, books, and the calling which, when one quits
+one's own threshold, carries love along with it into the world beyond;
+a small world in itself,--only a parish,--but then my calling links it
+with infinity."
+
+"I see; it is from the sources of love that you draw the supplies for
+happiness."
+
+"Surely; without love one may be good, but one could scarcely be happy.
+No one can dream of a heaven except as the abode of love. What writer is
+it who says, 'How well the human heart was understood by him who first
+called God by the name of Father'?"
+
+"I do not remember, but it is beautifully said. You evidently do not
+subscribe to the arguments in Decimus Roach's 'Approach to the Angels.'"
+
+"Ah, Mr. Chillingly! your words teach me how lacerated a man's happiness
+may be if he does not keep the claws of vanity closely pared. I actually
+feel a keen pang when you speak to me of that eloquent panegyric on
+celibacy, ignorant that the only thing I ever published which I fancied
+was not without esteem by intellectual readers is a Reply to 'The
+Approach to the Angels,'--a youthful book, written in the first year
+of my marriage. But it obtained success: I have just revised the tenth
+edition of it."
+
+"That is the book I will select from your library. You will be pleased
+to hear that Mr. Roach, whom I saw at Oxford a few days ago, recants his
+opinions, and, at the age of fifty, is about to be married; he begs me
+to add, 'not for his own personal satisfaction.'"
+
+"Going to be married!--Decimus Roach! I thought my Reply would convince
+him at last."
+
+"I shall look to your Reply to remove some lingering doubts in my own
+mind."
+
+"Doubts in favour of celibacy?"
+
+"Well, if not for laymen, perhaps for a priesthood."
+
+"The most forcible part of my Reply is on that head: read it
+attentively. I think that, of all sections of mankind, the clergy are
+those to whom, not only for their own sakes, but for the sake of the
+community, marriage should be most commended. Why, sir," continued the
+vicar, warming up into oratorical enthusiasm, "are you not aware that
+there are no homes in England from which men who have served and adorned
+their country have issued forth in such prodigal numbers as those of
+the clergy of our Church? What other class can produce a list so crowded
+with eminent names as we can boast in the sons we have reared and sent
+forth into the world? How many statesmen, soldiers, sailors, lawyers,
+physicians, authors, men of science, have been the sons of us village
+pastors? Naturally: for with us they receive careful education; they
+acquire of necessity the simple tastes and disciplined habits which lead
+to industry and perseverance; and, for the most part, they carry with
+them throughout life a purer moral code, a more systematic reverence for
+things and thoughts religious, associated with their earliest images
+of affection and respect, than can be expected from the sons of laymen
+whose parents are wholly temporal and worldly. Sir, I maintain that this
+is a cogent argument, to be considered well by the nation, not only in
+favour of a married clergy,--for, on that score, a million of Roaches
+could not convert public opinion in this country,--but in favour of the
+Church, the Established Church, which has been so fertile a nursery
+of illustrious laymen; and I have often thought that one main and
+undetected cause of the lower tone of morality, public and private,
+of the greater corruption of manners, of the more prevalent scorn
+of religion which we see, for instance, in a country so civilized as
+France, is, that its clergy can train no sons to carry into the contests
+of earth the steadfast belief in accountability to Heaven."
+
+"I thank you with a full heart," said Kenelm. "I shall ponder well over
+all that you have so earnestly said. I am already disposed to give up
+all lingering crotchets as to a bachelor clergy; but, as a layman,
+I fear that I shall never attain to the purified philanthropy of Mr.
+Decimus Roach, and, if ever I do marry, it will be very much for my
+personal satisfaction."
+
+Mr. Emlyn laughed good-humouredly, and, as they had now reached the
+bridge, shook hands with Kenelm, and walked homewards, along the
+brook-side and through the burial-ground, with the alert step and the
+uplifted head of a man who has joy in life and admits of no fear in
+death.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+FOR the next two weeks or so Kenelm and Lily met not indeed so often
+as the reader might suppose, but still frequently; five times at Mrs.
+Braefield's, once again at the vicarage, and twice when Kenelm had
+called at Grasmere; and, being invited to stay to tea at one of those
+visits, he stayed the whole evening. Kenelm was more and more fascinated
+in proportion as he saw more and more of a creature so exquisitely
+strange to his experience. She was to him not only a poem, but a poem in
+the Sibylline Books; enigmatical, perplexing conjecture, and somehow or
+other mysteriously blending its interest with visions of the future.
+
+Lily was indeed an enchanting combination of opposites rarely blended
+into harmony. Her ignorance of much that girls know before they number
+half her years was so relieved by candid, innocent simplicity, so
+adorned by pretty fancies and sweet beliefs, and so contrasted and lit
+up by gleams of a knowledge that the young ladies we call well educated
+seldom exhibit,--knowledge derived from quick observation of external
+Nature, and impressionable susceptibility to its varying and subtle
+beauties. This knowledge had been perhaps first instilled, and
+subsequently nourished, by such poetry as she had not only learned by
+heart, but taken up as inseparable from the healthful circulation of her
+thoughts; not the poetry of our own day,--most young ladies know enough
+of that,--but selected fragments from the verse of old, most of them
+from poets now little read by the young of either sex, poets dear to
+spirits like Coleridge or Charles Lamb,--none of them, however, so dear
+to her as the solemn melodies of Milton. Much of such poetry she had
+never read in books: it had been taught her in childhood by her guardian
+the painter. And with all this imperfect, desultory culture, there was
+such dainty refinement in her every look and gesture, and such deep
+woman-tenderness of heart. Since Kenelm had commended "Numa Pompilius"
+to her study, she had taken very lovingly to that old-fashioned romance,
+and was fond of talking to him about Egeria as of a creature who had
+really existed.
+
+But what was the effect that he,--the first man of years correspondent
+to her own with whom she had ever familiarly conversed,--what was the
+effect that Kenelm Chillingly produced on the mind and the heart of
+Lily?
+
+This was, after all, the question that puzzled him the most,--not
+without reason: it might have puzzled the shrewdest bystander. The
+artless candour with which she manifested her liking to him was at
+variance with the ordinary character of maiden love; it seemed more the
+fondness of a child for a favourite brother. And it was this uncertainty
+that, in his own thoughts, justified Kenelm for lingering on, and
+believing that it was necessary to win, or at least to learn more of,
+her secret heart before he could venture to disclose his own. He did not
+flatter himself with the pleasing fear that he might be endangering
+her happiness; it was only his own that was risked. Then, in all those
+meetings, all those conversations to themselves, there had passed none
+of the words which commit our destiny to the will of another. If in the
+man's eyes love would force its way, Lily's frank, innocent gaze chilled
+it back again to its inward cell. Joyously as she would spring
+forward to meet him, there was no tell-tale blush on her cheek, no
+self-betraying tremor in her clear, sweet-toned voice. No; there had not
+yet been a moment when he could say to himself, "She loves me." Often he
+said to himself, "She knows not yet what love is."
+
+In the intervals of time not passed in Lily's society, Kenelm would
+take long rambles with Mr. Emlyn, or saunter into Mrs. Braefield's
+drawing-room. For the former he conceived a more cordial sentiment of
+friendship than he entertained for any man of his own age,--a friendship
+that admitted the noble elements of admiration and respect.
+
+Charles Emlyn was one of those characters in which the colours appear
+pale unless the light be brought very close to them, and then each
+tint seems to change into a warmer and richer one. The manner which, at
+first, you would call merely gentle, becomes unaffectedly genial;
+the mind you at first might term inert, though well-informed, you now
+acknowledge to be full of disciplined vigour. Emlyn was not, however,
+without his little amiable foibles; and it was, perhaps, these that made
+him lovable. He was a great believer in human goodness, and very easily
+imposed upon by cunning appeals to "his well-known benevolence." He
+was disposed to overrate the excellence of all that he once took to his
+heart. He thought he had the best wife in the world, the best children,
+the best servants, the best beehive, the best pony, and the best
+house-dog. His parish was the most virtuous, his church the most
+picturesque, his vicarage the prettiest, certainly, in the whole
+shire,--perhaps, in the whole kingdom. Probably it was this philosophy
+of optimism which contributed to lift him into the serene realm of
+aesthetic joy.
+
+He was not without his dislikes as well as likings. Though a liberal
+Churchman towards Protestant dissenters, he cherished the _odium
+theologicum_ for all that savoured of Popery. Perhaps there was another
+cause for this besides the purely theological one. Early in life a young
+sister of his had been, to use his phrase, "secretly entrapped" into
+conversion to the Roman Catholic faith, and had since entered a convent.
+His affections had been deeply wounded by this loss to the range of
+them. Mr. Emlyn had also his little infirmities of self-esteem rather
+than of vanity. Though he had seen very little of any world beyond that
+of his parish, he piqued himself on his knowledge of human nature and of
+practical affairs in general. Certainly no man had read more about them,
+especially in the books of the ancient classics. Perhaps it was owing
+to this that he so little understood Lily,--a character to which the
+ancient classics afforded no counterpart nor clue; and perhaps it was
+this also that made Lily think him "so terribly grown up." Thus, despite
+his mild good-nature, she did not get on very well with him.
+
+The society of this amiable scholar pleased Kenelm the more, because
+the scholar evidently had not the remotest idea that Kenelm's sojourn at
+Cromwell Lodge was influenced by the vicinity to Grasmere. Mr. Emlyn was
+sure that he knew human nature, and practical affairs in general, too
+well to suppose that the heir to a rich baronet could dream of taking
+for wife a girl without fortune or rank, the orphan ward of a low-born
+artist only just struggling into reputation; or, indeed, that a
+Cambridge prizeman, who had evidently read much on grave and dry
+subjects, and who had no less evidently seen a great deal of polished
+society, could find any other attraction in a very imperfectly-educated
+girl, who tamed butterflies and knew no more than they did of
+fashionable life, than Mr. Emlyn himself felt in the presence of a
+pretty wayward innocent child, the companion and friend of his Clemmy.
+
+Mrs. Braefield was more discerning; but she had a good deal of tact, and
+did not as yet scare Kenelm away from her house by letting him see how
+much she had discerned. She would not even tell her husband, who, absent
+from the place on most mornings, was too absorbed in the cares of his
+own business to interest himself much in the affairs of others.
+
+Now Elsie, being still of a romantic turn of mind, had taken it into
+her head that Lily Mordaunt, if not actually the princess to be found in
+poetic dramas whose rank was for a while kept concealed, was yet one of
+the higher-born daughters of the ancient race whose name she bore,
+and in that respect no derogatory alliance for Kenelm Chillingly. A
+conclusion she had arrived at from no better evidence than the well-bred
+appearance and manners of the aunt, and the exquisite delicacy of the
+niece's form and features, with the undefinable air of distinction
+which accompanied even her most careless and sportive moments. But Mrs.
+Braefield also had the wit to discover that, under the infantine ways
+and phantasies of this almost self-taught girl, there lay, as yet
+undeveloped, the elements of a beautiful womanhood. So that altogether,
+from the very day she first re-encountered Kenelm, Elsie's thought had
+been that Lily was the wife to suit him. Once conceiving that idea, her
+natural strength of will made her resolve on giving all facilities to
+carry it out silently and unobtrusively, and therefore skilfully.
+
+"I am so glad to think," she said one day, when Kenelm had joined her
+walk through the pleasant shrubberies in her garden ground, "that you
+have made such friends with Mr. Emlyn. Though all hereabouts like him so
+much for his goodness, there are few who can appreciate his learning.
+To you it must be a surprise as well as pleasure to find, in this quiet
+humdrum place, a companion so clever and well-informed: it compensates
+for your disappointment in discovering that our brook yields such bad
+sport."
+
+"Don't disparage the brook; it yields the pleasantest banks on which
+to lie down under old pollard oaks at noon, or over which to saunter
+at morn and eve. Where those charms are absent even a salmon could
+not please. Yes; I rejoice to have made friends with Mr. Emlyn. I have
+learned a great deal from him, and am often asking myself whether I
+shall ever make peace with my conscience by putting what I have learned
+into practice."
+
+"May I ask what special branch of learning is that?"
+
+"I scarcely know how to define it. Suppose we call it 'Worth-whileism.'
+Among the New Ideas which I was recommended to study as those that must
+govern my generation, the Not-worth-while Idea holds a very high rank;
+and being myself naturally of calm and equable constitution, that new
+idea made the basis of my philosophical system. But since I have become
+intimate with Charles Emlyn I think there is a great deal to be said in
+favour of Worth-whileism, old idea though it be. I see a man who, with
+very commonplace materials for interest or amusement at his command,
+continues to be always interested or generally amused; I ask myself why
+and how? And it seems to me as if the cause started from fixed beliefs
+which settle his relations with God and man, and that settlement he will
+not allow any speculations to disturb. Be those beliefs questionable or
+not by others, at least they are such as cannot displease a Deity, and
+cannot fail to be kindly and useful to fellow-mortals. Then he plants
+these beliefs on the soil of a happy and genial home, which tends to
+confirm and strengthen and call them into daily practice; and when he
+goes forth from home, even to the farthest verge of the circle that
+surrounds it, he carries with him the home influences of kindliness
+and use. Possibly my line of life may be drawn to the verge of a wider
+circle than his; but so much the better for interest and amusement, if
+it can be drawn from the same centre; namely, fixed beliefs daily warmed
+into vital action in the sunshine of a congenial home."
+
+Mrs. Braefield listened to this speech with pleased attention, and as
+it came to its close, the name of Lily trembled on her tongue, for she
+divined that when he spoke of home Lily was in his thoughts; but she
+checked the impulse, and replied by a generalized platitude.
+
+"Certainly the first thing in life is to secure a happy and congenial
+home. It must be a terrible trial for the best of us if we marry without
+love."
+
+"Terrible, indeed, if the one loves and the other does not."
+
+"That can scarcely be your case, Mr. Chillingly, for I am sure you could
+not marry where you did not love; and do not think I flatter you when I
+say that a man far less gifted than you can scarcely fail to be loved by
+the woman he wooes and wins."
+
+Kenelm, in this respect one of the modestest of human beings, shook his
+head doubtingly, and was about to reply in self-disparagement, when,
+lifting his eyes and looking round, he halted mute and still as if
+rooted to the spot. They had entered the trellised circle through the
+roses of which he had first caught sight of the young face that had
+haunted him ever since.
+
+"Ah!" he said abruptly; "I cannot stay longer here, dreaming away the
+work-day hours in a fairy ring. I am going to town to-day by the next
+train."
+
+"Yoa are coming back?"
+
+"Of course,--this evening. I left no address at my lodgings in London.
+There must be a large accumulation of letters; some, no doubt, from my
+father and mother. I am only going for them. Good-by. How kindly you
+have listened to me!"
+
+"Shall we fix a day next week for seeing the remains of the old Roman
+villa? I will ask Mrs. Cameron and her niece to be of the party."
+
+"Any day you please," said Kenelm joyfully.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+KENELM did indeed find a huge pile of letters and notes on reaching his
+forsaken apartment in Mayfair; many of them merely invitations for days
+long past, none of them of interest except two from Sir Peter, three
+from his mother, and one from Tom Bowles.
+
+Sir Peter's were short. In the first he gently scolded Kenelm for going
+away without communicating any address; and stated the acquaintance he
+had formed with Gordon, the favourable impression that young gentleman
+had made on him, the transfer of the L20,000 and the invitation given to
+Gordon, the Traverses, and Lady Glenalvon. The second, dated much later,
+noted the arrival of his invited guests, dwelt with warmth unusual to
+Sir Peter on the attractions of Cecilia, and took occasion to refer,
+not the less emphatically because as it were incidentally, to the sacred
+promise which Kenelm had given him never to propose to a young lady
+until the case had been submitted to the examination and received
+the consent of Sir Peter. "Come to Exmundham, and if I do not give my
+consent to propose to Cecilia Travers hold me a tyrant and rebel."
+
+Lady Chillingly's letters were much longer. They dwelt more
+complainingly on his persistence in eccentric habits; so exceedingly
+unlike other people, quitting London at the very height of the season,
+going without even a servant nobody knew where: she did not wish to
+wound his feelings; but still those were not the ways natural to a young
+gentleman of station. If he had no respect for himself, he ought to have
+some consideration for his parents, especially his poor mother. She then
+proceeded to comment on the elegant manners of Leopold Travers, and the
+good sense and pleasant conversation of Chillingly Gordon, a young man
+of whom any mother might be proud. From that subject she diverged to
+mildly querulous references to family matters. Parson John had expressed
+himself very rudely to Mr. Chillingly Gordon upon some book by a
+foreigner,--Comte or Count, or some such name,--on which, so far as
+she could pretend to judge, Mr. Gordon had uttered some very benevolent
+sentiments about humanity, which, in the most insolent manner, Parson
+John had denounced as an attack on religion. But really Parson John
+was too High Church for her. Having thus disposed of Parson John, she
+indulged some ladylike wailings on the singular costume of the three
+Miss Chillinglys. They had been asked by Sir Peter, unknown to her--so
+like him--to meet their guests; to meet Lady Glenalvon and Miss Travers,
+whose dress was so perfect (here she described their dress); and they
+came in pea-green with pelerines of mock blonde, and Miss Sally with
+corkscrew ringlets and a wreath of jessamine, "which no girl after
+eighteen would venture to wear."
+
+"But, my dear," added her ladyship, "your poor father's family are
+certainly great oddities. I have more to put up with than any one knows.
+I do my best to carry it off. I know my duties, and will do them."
+
+Family grievances thus duly recorded and lamented, Lady Chillingly
+returned to her guests.
+
+Evidently unconscious of her husband's designs on Cecilia, she dismissed
+her briefly: "A very handsome young lady, though rather too blonde for
+her taste, and certainly with an air _distingue_." Lastly, she enlarged
+on the extreme pleasure she felt on meeting again the friend of her
+youth, Lady Glenalvon.
+
+"Not at all spoilt by the education of the great world, which, alas!
+obedient to the duties of wife and mother, however little my sacrifices
+are appreciated, I have long since relinquished. Lady Glenalvon suggests
+turning that hideous old moat into a fernery,--a great improvement. Of
+course your poor father makes objections."
+
+Tom's letter was written on black-edged paper, and ran thus:--
+
+
+DEAR SIR,--Since I had the honour to see you in London I have had a sad
+loss: my poor uncle is no more. He died very suddenly after a hearty
+supper. One doctor says it was apoplexy, another valvular disease of the
+heart. He has left me his heir, after providing for his sister: no one
+had an idea that he had saved so much money. I am quite a rich man now.
+And I shall leave the veterinary business, which of late--since I
+took to reading, as you kindly advised--is not much to my liking The
+principal corn-merchant here has offered to take me into partnership;
+and, from what I can see, it will be a very good thing and a great rise
+in life. But, sir, I can't settle to it at present; I can't settle, as
+I would wish to anything. I know you will not laugh at me when I say I
+have a strange longing to travel for a while. I have been reading books
+of travels, and they get into my head more than any other books. But I
+don't think I could leave the country with a contented heart till I have
+had just another look at you know whom,--just to see her, and know she
+is happy. I am sure I could shake hands with Will and kiss her little
+one without a wrong thought. What do you say to that, dear sir? You
+promised to write to me about her. But I have not heard from you. Susey,
+the little girl with the flower-ball, has had a loss too: the poor old
+man she lived with died within a few days of my dear uncle's decease.
+Mother moved here, as I think you know, when the forge at Graveleigh was
+sold; and she is going to take Susey to live with her. She is quite fond
+of Susey. Pray let me hear from you soon; and do, dear sir, give me your
+advice about travelling--and about Her. You see I should like Her to
+think of me more kindly when I am in distant parts.
+
+ I remain, dear sir,
+
+ Your grateful servant,
+
+ T. BOWLES.
+
+P.S.--Miss Travers has sent me Will's last remittance. There is
+very little owed me now; so they must be thriving. I hope she is not
+overworked.
+
+
+On returning by the train that evening, Kenelm went to the house of Will
+Somers. The shop was already closed, but he was admitted by a trusty
+servant-maid to the parlour, where he found them all at supper, except
+indeed the baby, who had long since retired to the cradle, and the
+cradle had been removed upstairs. Will and Jessie were very proud when
+Kenelm invited himself to share their repast, which, though simple,
+was by no means a bad one. When the meal was over and the supper things
+removed, Kenelm drew his chair near to the glass door which led into a
+little garden very neatly kept--for it was Will's pride to attend to it
+before he sat down to his more professional work. The door was open,
+and admitted the coolness of the starlit air and the fragrance of the
+sleeping flowers.
+
+"You have a pleasant home here, Mrs. Somers."
+
+"We have, indeed, and know how to bless him we owe it to."
+
+"I am rejoiced to think that. How often when God designs a
+special kindness to us He puts the kindness into the heart of a
+fellow-man,--perhaps the last fellow-man we should have thought of; but
+in blessing him we thank God who inspired him. Now, my dear friends, I
+know that you all three suspect me of being the agent whom God chose for
+His benefits. You fancy that it was from me came the loan which enabled
+you to leave Graveleigh and settle here. You are mistaken,--you look
+incredulous."
+
+"It could not be the Squire," exclaimed Jessie. "Miss Travers assured
+me that it was neither he nor herself. Oh, it must be you, sir. I beg
+pardon, but who else could it be?"
+
+"Your husband shall guess. Suppose, Will, that you had behaved ill
+to some one who was nevertheless dear to you, and on thinking over it
+afterwards felt very sorry and much ashamed of yourself, and suppose
+that later you had the opportunity and the power to render a service to
+that person, do you think you would do it?"
+
+"I should be a bad man if I did not."
+
+"Bravo! And supposing that when the person you thus served came to know
+it was you who rendered the service, he did not feel thankful, he did
+not think it handsome of you, thus to repair any little harm he might
+have done you before, but became churlish and sore and cross-grained,
+and with a wretched false pride said that because he had offended you
+once he resented your taking the liberty of befriending him now, would
+you not think that person an ungrateful fellow; ungrateful not only to
+you his fellow-man,--that is of less moment,--but ungrateful to the
+God who put it into your heart to be His human agent in the benefit
+received?"
+
+"Well, sir, yes, certainly," said Will, with all the superior refinement
+of his intellect to that of Jessie, unaware of what Kenelm was driving
+at; while Jessie, pressing her hands tightly together, turned pale,
+and with a frightened hurried glance towards Will's face, answered,
+impulsively,--
+
+"Oh, Mr. Chillingly, I hope you are not thinking, not speaking, of Mr.
+Bowles?"
+
+"Whom else should I think or speak of?"
+
+Will rose nervously from his chair, all his features writhing.
+
+"Sir, sir, this is a bitter blow,--very bitter, very."
+
+Jessie rushed to Will, flung her arms round him and sobbed. Kenelm
+turned quietly to old Mrs. Somers, who had suspended the work on which
+since supper she had been employed, knitting socks for the baby,--
+
+"My dear Mrs. Somers, what is the good of being a grandmother and
+knitting socks for baby grandchildren, if you cannot assure those silly
+children of yours that they are too happy in each other to harbour any
+resentment against a man who would have parted them, and now repents?"
+
+Somewhat to Kenelm's admiration, I dare not say surprise, old Mrs.
+Somers, thus appealed to, rose from her seat, and, with a dignity of
+thought or of feeling no one could have anticipated from the quiet
+peasant woman, approached the wedded pair, lifted Jessie's face with one
+hand, laid the other on Will's head, and said, "If you don't long to see
+Mr. Bowles again and say 'The Lord bless you, sir!' you don't deserve
+the Lord's blessing upon you." Therewith she went back to her seat, and
+resumed her knitting.
+
+"Thank Heaven, we have paid back the best part of the loan," said Will,
+in very agitated tones, "and I think, with a little pinching, Jessie,
+and with selling off some of the stock, we might pay the rest; and
+then,"--and then he turned to Kenelm,--"and then, sir, we will" (here a
+gulp) "thank Mr. Bowles."
+
+"This don't satisfy me at all, Will," answered Kenelm; "and since I
+helped to bring you two together, I claim the right to say I would never
+have done so could I have guessed you could have trusted your wife so
+little as to allow a remembrance of Mr. Bowles to be a thought of pain.
+You did not feel humiliated when you imagined that it was to me you owed
+some moneys which you have been honestly paying off. Well, then, I will
+lend you whatever trifle remains to discharge your whole debts to Mr.
+Bowles, so that you may sooner be able to say to him, 'Thank you.'
+But between you and me, Will, I think you will be a finer fellow and a
+manlier fellow if you decline to borrow that trifle of me; if you feel
+you would rather say 'Thank you' to Mr. Bowles, without the silly
+notion that when you have paid him his money you owe him nothing for his
+kindness."
+
+Will looked away irresolutely. Kenelm went on: "I have received a letter
+from Mr. Bowles to-day. He has come into a fortune, and thinks of going
+abroad for a time; but before he goes, he says he should like to shake
+hands with Will, and be assured by Jessie that all his old rudeness is
+forgiven. He had no notion that I should blab about the loan: he wished
+that to remain always a secret. But between friends there need be no
+secrets. What say you, Will? As head of this household, shall Mr. Bowles
+be welcomed here as a friend or not?"
+
+"Kindly welcome," said old Mrs. Somers, looking up from the socks.
+
+"Sir," said Will, with sudden energy, "look here; you have never been in
+love, I dare say. If you had, you would not be so hard on me. Mr. Bowles
+was in love with my wife there. Mr. Bowles is a very fine man, and I am
+a cripple."
+
+"Oh, Will! Will!" cried Jessie.
+
+"But I trust my wife with my whole heart and soul; and, now that
+the first pang is over, Mr. Bowles shall be, as mother says, kindly
+welcome,--heartily welcome."
+
+"Shake hands. Now you speak like a man, Will. I hope to bring Bowles
+here to supper before many days are over."
+
+And that night Kenelm wrote to Mr. Bowles:
+
+
+MY DEAR TOM,--Come and spend a few days with me at Cromwell Lodge,
+Moleswich. Mr. and Mrs. Somers wish much to see and to thank you. I
+could not remain forever degraded in order to gratify your whim. They
+would have it that I bought their shop, etc., and I was forced in
+self-defence to say who it was. More on this and on travels when you
+come.
+
+ Your true friend,
+
+ K. C.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+MRS. CAMERON was seated alone in her pretty drawing-room, with a book
+lying open, but unheeded, on her lap. She was looking away from its
+pages, seemingly into the garden without, but rather into empty space.
+
+To a very acute and practised observer, there was in her countenance an
+expression which baffled the common eye.
+
+To the common eye it was simply vacant; the expression of a quiet,
+humdrum woman, who might have been thinking of some quiet humdrum
+household detail,--found that too much for her, and was now not thinking
+at all.
+
+But to the true observer, there were in that face indications of
+a troubled past, still haunted with ghosts never to be laid at
+rest,--indications, too, of a character in herself that had undergone
+some revolutionary change; it had not always been the character of a
+woman quiet and humdrum. The delicate outlines of the lip and nostril
+evinced sensibility, and the deep and downward curve of it bespoke
+habitual sadness. The softness of the look into space did not tell of
+a vacant mind, but rather of a mind subdued and over-burdened by the
+weight of a secret sorrow. There was also about her whole presence, in
+the very quiet which made her prevalent external characteristic, the
+evidence of manners formed in a high-bred society,--the society in which
+quiet is connected with dignity and grace. The poor understood this
+better than her rich acquaintances at Moleswich, when they said, "Mrs.
+Cameron was every inch a lady." To judge by her features she must once
+have been pretty, not a showy prettiness, but decidedly pretty. Now,
+as the features were small, all prettiness had faded away in cold gray
+colourings, and a sort of tamed and slumbering timidity of aspect. She
+was not only not demonstrative, but must have imposed on herself as a
+duty the suppression of demonstration. Who could look at the formation
+of those lips, and not see that they belonged to the nervous, quick,
+demonstrative temperament? And yet, observing her again more closely,
+that suppression of the constitutional tendency to candid betrayal of
+emotion would the more enlist our curiosity or interest; because, if
+physiognomy and phrenology have any truth in them, there was little
+strength in her character. In the womanly yieldingness of the
+short curved upper lip, the pleading timidity of the regard, the
+disproportionate but elegant slenderness of the head between the ear
+and the neck, there were the tokens of one who cannot resist the will,
+perhaps the whim, of another whom she either loves or trusts.
+
+The book open on her lap is a serious book on the doctrine of grace,
+written by a popular clergyman of what is termed "the Low Church." She
+seldom read any but serious books, except where such care as she gave
+to Lily's education compelled her to read "Outlines of History and
+Geography," or the elementary French books used in seminaries for
+young ladies. Yet if any one had decoyed Mrs. Cameron into familiar
+conversation, he would have discovered that she must early have received
+the education given to young ladies of station. She could speak
+and write French and Italian as a native. She had read, and still
+remembered, such classic authors in either language as are conceded to
+the use of pupils by the well-regulated taste of orthodox governesses.
+She had a knowledge of botany, such as botany was taught twenty years
+ago. I am not sure that, if her memory had been fairly aroused, she
+might not have come out strong in divinity and political economy, as
+expounded by the popular manuals of Mrs. Marcet. In short, you could see
+in her a thoroughbred English lady, who had been taught in a generation
+before Lily's, and immeasurably superior in culture to the ordinary run
+of English young ladies taught nowadays. So, in what after all are very
+minor accomplishments,--now made major accomplishments,--such as music,
+it was impossible that a connoisseur should hear her play on the piano
+without remarking, "That woman has had the best masters of her time."
+She could only play pieces that belonged to her generation. She had
+learned nothing since. In short, the whole intellectual culture had come
+to a dead stop long years ago, perhaps before Lily was born.
+
+Now, while she is gazing into space Mrs. Braefield is announced. Mrs.
+Cameron does not start from revery. She never starts. But she makes a
+weary movement of annoyance, resettles herself, and lays the serious
+book on the sofa table. Elsie enters, young, radiant, dressed in all the
+perfection of the fashion, that is, as ungracefully as in the eyes of an
+artist any gentlewoman can be; but rich merchants who are proud of their
+wives so insist, and their wives, in that respect, submissively obey
+them.
+
+The ladies interchange customary salutations, enter into the customary
+preliminaries of talk, and after a pause Elsie begins in earnest.
+
+"But sha'n't I see Lily? Where is she?"
+
+"I fear she has gone into the town. A poor little boy, who did our
+errands, has met with an accident,--fallen from a cherry-tree."
+
+"Which he was robbing?"
+
+"Probably."
+
+"And Lily has gone to lecture him?"
+
+"I don't know as to that; but he is much hurt, and Lily has gone to see
+what is the matter with him."
+
+Mrs. Braefield, in her frank outspoken way,--"I don't take much to girls
+of Lily's age in general, though I am passionately fond of children. You
+know how I do take to Lily; perhaps because she is so like a child. But
+she must be an anxious charge to you."
+
+Mrs. Cameron replied by an anxious "No; she is still a child, a very
+good one; why should I be anxious?"
+
+Mrs. Braefield, impulsively,--"Why, your child must now be eighteen."
+
+Mrs. Cameron,--"Eighteen--is it possible! How time flies! though in a
+life so monotonous as mine, time does not seem to fly, it slips on
+like the lapse of water. Let me think,--eighteen? No, she is but
+seventeen,--seventeen last May."
+
+Mrs. Braefield,--"Seventeen! A very anxious age for a girl; an age in
+which dolls cease and lovers begin."
+
+Mrs. Cameron, not so languidly, but still quietly,--"Lily never cared
+much for dolls,--never much for lifeless pets; and as to lovers, she
+does not dream of them."
+
+Mrs. Braefield, briskly,--"There is no age after six in which girls do
+not dream of lovers. And here another question arises. When a girl so
+lovely as Lily is eighteen next birthday, may not a lover dream of her?"
+
+Mrs. Cameron, with that wintry cold tranquillity of manner, which
+implies that in putting such questions an interrogator is taking a
+liberty,--"As no lover has appeared, I cannot trouble myself about his
+dreams."
+
+Said Elsie inly to herself, "This is the stupidest woman I ever met!"
+and aloud to Mrs. Cameron,--"Do you not think that your neighbour, Mr.
+Chillingly, is a very fine young man?"
+
+"I suppose he would be generally considered so. He is very tall."
+
+"A handsome face?"
+
+"Handsome, is it? I dare say."
+
+"What does Lily say?"
+
+"About what?"
+
+"About Mr. Chillingly. Does she not think him handsome?"
+
+"I never asked her."
+
+"My dear Mrs. Cameron, would it not be a very pretty match for Lily? The
+Chillinglys are among the oldest families in Burke's 'Landed Gentry,'
+and I believe his father, Sir Peter, has a considerable property."
+
+For the first time in this conversation Mrs. Cameron betrayed emotion.
+A sudden flush overspread her countenance, and then left it paler
+than before. After a pause she recovered her accustomed composure, and
+replied, rudely,--
+
+"It would be no friend to Lily who could put such notions into her
+head; and there is no reason to suppose that they have entered into Mr.
+Chillingly's."
+
+"Would you be sorry if they did? Surely you would like your niece to
+marry well, and there are few chances of her doing so at Moleswich."
+
+"Pardon me, Mrs. Braefield, but the question of Lily's marriage I have
+never discussed, even with her guardian. Nor, considering the childlike
+nature of her tastes and habits, rather than the years she has numbered,
+can I think the time has yet come for discussing it at all."
+
+Elsie, thus rebuked, changed the subject to some newspaper topic which
+interested the public mind at the moment and very soon rose to depart.
+Mrs. Cameron detained the hand that her visitor held out, and said in
+low tones, which, though embarrassed, were evidently earnest, "My dear
+Mrs. Braefield, let me trust to your good sense and the affection with
+which you have honoured my niece not to incur the risk of unsettling
+her mind by a hint of the ambitious projects for her future on which you
+have spoken to me. It is extremely improbable that a young man of
+Mr. Chillingly's expectations would entertain any serious thoughts of
+marrying out of his own sphere of life, and--"
+
+"Stop, Mrs. Cameron, I must interrupt you. Lily's personal attractions
+and grace of manner would adorn any station; and have I not rightly
+understood you to say that though her guardian, Mr. Melville, is, as we
+all know, a man who has risen above the rank of his parents, your niece,
+Miss Mordaunt, is like yourself, by birth a gentlewoman?"
+
+"Yes, by birth a gentlewoman," said Mrs. Cameron, raising her head with
+a sudden pride. But she added, with as sudden a change to a sort of
+freezing humility, "What does that matter? A girl without fortune,
+without connection, brought up in this little cottage, the ward of a
+professional artist, who was the son of a city clerk, to whom she owes
+even the home she has found, is not in the same sphere of life as Mr.
+Chillingly, and his parents could not approve of such an alliance for
+him. It would be most cruel to her, if you were to change the innocent
+pleasure she may take in the conversation of a clever and well-informed
+stranger into the troubled interest which, since you remind me of her
+age, a girl even so childlike and beautiful as Lily might conceive in
+one represented to her as the possible partner of her life. Don't commit
+that cruelty; don't--don't, I implore you!"
+
+"Trust me," cried the warm-hearted Elsie, with tears rushing to her
+eyes. "What you say so sensibly, so nobly, never struck me before. I
+do not know much of the world,--knew nothing of it till I married,--and
+being very fond of Lily, and having a strong regard for Mr. Chillingly,
+I fancied I could not serve both better than--than--but I see now; he
+is very young, very peculiar; his parents might object, not to Lily
+herself, but to the circumstances you name. And you would not wish
+her to enter any family where she was not as cordially welcomed as she
+deserves to be. I am glad to have had this talk with you. Happily, I
+have done no mischief as yet. I will do none. I had come to propose
+an excursion to the remains of the Roman Villa, some miles off, and to
+invite you and Mr. Chillingly. I will no longer try to bring him and
+Lily together."
+
+"Thank you. But you still misconstrue me. I do not think that Lily cares
+half so much for Mr. Chillingly as she does for a new butterfly. I do
+not fear their coming together, as you call it, in the light in which
+she now regards him, and in which, from all I observe, he regards her.
+My only fear is that a hint might lead her to regard him in another way,
+and that way impossible."
+
+Elsie left the house extremely bewildered, and with a profound contempt
+for Mrs. Cameron's knowledge of what may happen to two young persons
+"brought together."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+NOW, on that very day, and about the same hour in which the conversation
+just recorded between Elsie and Mrs. Cameron took place, Kenelm, in his
+solitary noonday wanderings, entered the burial-ground in which Lily had
+some short time before surprised him. And there he found her, standing
+beside the flower border which she had placed round the grave of the
+child whom she had tended and nursed in vain.
+
+The day was cloudless and sunless; one of those days that so often
+instil a sentiment of melancholy into the heart of an English summer.
+
+"You come here too often, Miss Mordaunt," said Kenelm, very softly, as
+he approached.
+
+Lily turned her face to him, without any start of surprise, with no
+brightening change in its pensive expression,--an expression rare to the
+mobile play of her features.
+
+"Not too often. I promised to come as often as I could; and, as I told
+you before, I have never broken a promise yet."
+
+Kenelm made no answer. Presently the girl turned from the spot, and
+Kenelm followed her silently till she halted before the old tombstone
+with its effaced inscription.
+
+"See," she said, with a faint smile, "I have put fresh flowers there.
+Since the day we met in this churchyard, I have thought so much of that
+tomb, so neglected, so forgotten, and--" she paused a moment, and went
+on abruptly, "do you not often find that you are much too--what is
+the word? ah! too egotistical, considering and pondering and dreaming
+greatly too much about yourself?"
+
+"Yes, you are right there; though, till you so accused me, my conscience
+did not detect it."
+
+"And don't you find that you escape from being so haunted by the thought
+of yourself, when you think of the dead? they can never have any
+share in your existence _here_. When you say, 'I shall do this or that
+to-day;' when you dream, 'I may be this or that to-morrow,' you are
+thinking and dreaming, all by yourself, for yourself. But you are out of
+yourself, beyond yourself, when you think and dream of the dead, who can
+have nothing to do with your to-day or your to-morrow."
+
+As we all know, Kenelm Chillingly made it one of the rules of his life
+never to be taken by surprise. But when the speech I have written down
+came from the lips of that tamer of butterflies, he was so startled that
+all it occurred to him to say, after a long pause, was,--
+
+"The dead are the past; and with the past rests all in the present or
+the future that can take us out of our natural selves. The past decides
+our present. By the past we divine our future. History, poetry, science,
+the welfare of states, the advancement of individuals, are all connected
+with tombstones of which inscriptions are effaced. You are right to
+honour the mouldered tombstones with fresh flowers. It is only in the
+companionship of the dead that one ceases to be an egotist."
+
+If the imperfectly educated Lily had been above the quick comprehension
+of the academical Kenelm in her speech, so Kenelm was now above the
+comprehension of Lily. She, too, paused before she replied,--
+
+"If I knew you better, I think I could understand you better. I wish you
+knew Lion. I should like to hear you talk with him."
+
+While thus conversing, they had left the burial-ground, and were in the
+pathway trodden by the common wayfarer.
+
+Lily resumed,--"Yes, I should like to hear you talk with Lion."
+
+"You mean your guardian, Mr. Melville?"
+
+"Yes, you know that."
+
+"And why should you like to hear me talk to him?"
+
+"Because there are some things in which I doubt if he was altogether
+right, and I would ask you to express my doubts to him; you would, would
+you not?"
+
+"But why can you not express them yourself to your guardian; are you
+afraid of him?"
+
+"Afraid, no indeed! But--ah, how many people there are coming this way!
+There is some tiresome public meeting in the town to-day. Let us take
+the ferry: the other side of the stream is much pleasanter; we shall
+have it more to ourselves."
+
+Turning aside to the right while she thus spoke, Lily descended a
+gradual slope to the margin of the stream, on which they found an old
+man dozily reclined in his ferry-boat.
+
+As, seated side by side, they were slowly borne over the still waters
+under a sunless sky, Kenelm would have renewed the subject which his
+companion had begun, but she shook her head, with a significant glance
+at the ferryman. Evidently what she had to say was too confidential to
+admit of a listener, not that the old ferryman seemed likely to take
+the trouble of listening to any talk that was not addressed to him.
+Lily soon did address her talk to him, "So, Brown, the cow has quite
+recovered."
+
+"Yes, Miss, thanks to you, and God bless you. To think of your beating
+the old witch like that!"
+
+"'Tis not I who beat the witch, Brown; 'tis the fairy. Fairies, you
+know, are much more powerful than witches."
+
+"So I find, Miss."
+
+Lily here turned to Kenelm; "Mr. Brown has a very nice milch-cow that
+was suddenly taken very ill, and both he and his wife were convinced
+that the cow was bewitched."
+
+"Of course it were, that stands to reason. Did not Mother Wright tell my
+old woman that she would repent of selling milk, and abuse her dreadful;
+and was not the cow taken with shivers that very night?"
+
+"Gently, Brown. Mother Wright did not say that your wife would repent of
+selling milk, but of putting water into it."
+
+"And how did she know that, if she was not a witch? We have the best of
+customers among the gentlefolks, and never any one that complained."
+
+"And," answered Lily to Kenelm, unheeding this last observation, which
+was made in a sullen manner, "Brown had a horrid notion of enticing
+Mother Wright into his ferry-boat and throwing her into the water, in
+order to break the spell upon the cow. But I consulted the fairies, and
+gave him a fairy charm to tie round the cow's neck. And the cow is quite
+well now, you see. So, Brown, there was no necessity to throw Mother
+Wright into the water, because she said you put some of it into the
+milk. But," she added, as the boat now touched the opposite bank, "shall
+I tell you, Brown, what the fairies said to me this morning?"
+
+"Do, Miss."
+
+"It was this: If Brown's cow yields milk without any water in it, and
+if water gets into it when the milk is sold, we, the fairies, will pinch
+Mr. Brown black and blue; and when Brown has his next fit of rheumatics
+he must not look to the fairies to charm it away."
+
+Herewith Lily dropped a silver groat into Brown's hand, and sprang
+lightly ashore, followed by Kenelm.
+
+"You have quite converted him, not only as to the existence, but as to
+the beneficial power of fairies," said Kenelm.
+
+"Ah," answered Lily very gravely, "ah, but would it not be nice if there
+were fairies still? good fairies, and one could get at them? tell them
+all that troubles and puzzles us, and win from them charms against the
+witchcraft we practise on ourselves?"
+
+"I doubt if it would be good for us to rely on such supernatural
+counsellors. Our own souls are so boundless that the more we explore
+them the more we shall find worlds spreading upon worlds into
+infinities; and among the worlds is Fairyland." He added, inly to
+himself, "Am I not in Fairyland now?"
+
+"Hush!" whispered Lily. "Don't speak more yet awhile. I am thinking over
+what you have just said, and trying to understand it."
+
+Thus walking silently they gained the little summer-house which
+tradition dedicated to the memory of Izaak Walton. Lily entered it and
+seated herself; Kenelm took his place beside her. It was a small octagon
+building which, judging by its architecture, might have been built
+in the troubled reign of Charles I.; the walls plastered within were
+thickly covered with names and dates, and inscriptions in praise of
+angling, in tribute to Izaak, or with quotations from his books. On
+the opposite side they could see the lawn of Grasmere, with its great
+willows dipping into the water. The stillness of the place, with its
+associations of the angler's still life, were in harmony with the quiet
+day, its breezeless air, and cloud-vested sky.
+
+"You were to tell me your doubts in connection with your guardian,
+doubts if he were right in something which you left unexplained, which
+you could not yourself explain to him."
+
+Lily started as from thoughts alien to the subject thus reintroduced.
+"Yes, I cannot mention my doubts to him because they relate to me, and
+he is so good. I owe him so much that I could not bear to vex him by a
+word that might seem like reproach or complaint. You remember," here she
+drew nearer to him; and with that ingenuous confiding look and movement
+which had, not unfrequently, enraptured him at the moment, and saddened
+him on reflection,--too ingenuous, too confiding, for the sentiment
+with which he yearned to inspire her,--she turned towards him her frank
+untimorous eyes, and laid her hand on his arm: "you remember that I said
+in the burial-ground how much I felt that one is constantly thinking
+too much of one's self. That must be wrong. In talking to you only about
+myself I know I am wrong, but I cannot help it: I must do so. Do not
+think ill of me for it. You see I have not been brought up like other
+girls. Was my guardian right in that? Perhaps if he had insisted upon
+not letting me have my own wilful way, if he had made me read the books
+which Mr. and Mrs. Emlyn wanted to force on me, instead of the poems and
+fairy tales which he gave me, I should have had so much more to think of
+that I should have thought less of myself. You said that the dead were
+the past; one forgets one's self when one thinks of the dead. If I had
+read more of the past, had more subjects of interest in the dead whose
+history it tells, surely I should be less shut up, as it were, in my
+own small, selfish heart? It is only very lately I have thought of this,
+only very lately that I have felt sorrow and shame in the thought that I
+am so ignorant of what other girls know, even little Clemmy. And I dare
+not say this to Lion when I see him next, lest he should blame himself,
+when he only meant to be kind, and used to say, 'I don't want Fairy to
+be learned, it is enough for me to think she is happy.' And oh, I was so
+happy, till--till of late!"
+
+"Because till of late you only knew yourself as a child. But, now that
+you feel the desire of knowledge, childhood is vanishing. Do not vex
+yourself. With the mind which nature has bestowed on you, such learning
+as may fit you to converse with those dreaded 'grown-up folks' will come
+to you very easily and quickly. You will acquire more in a month now
+than you would have acquired in a year when you were a child, and
+task-work was loathed, not courted. Your aunt is evidently well
+instructed, and if I might venture to talk to her about the choice of
+books--"
+
+"No, don't do that. Lion would not like it."
+
+"Your guardian would not like you to have the education common to other
+young ladies?"
+
+"Lion forbade my aunt to teach me much that I rather wished to learn.
+She wanted to do so, but she has given it up at his wish. She only now
+teases me with those horrid French verbs, and that I know is a mere
+make-belief. Of course on Sunday it is different; then I must not read
+anything but the Bible and sermons. I don't care so much for the sermons
+as I ought, but I could read the Bible all day, every week-day as well
+as Sunday; and it is from the Bible that I learn that I ought to think
+less about myself."
+
+Kenelm involuntarily pressed the little hand that lay so innocently on
+his arm.
+
+"Do you know the difference between one kind of poetry and another?"
+asked Lily, abruptly.
+
+"I am not sure. I ought to know when one kind is good and another kind
+is bad. But in that respect I find many people, especially professed
+critics, who prefer the poetry which I call bad to the poetry I think
+good."
+
+"The difference between one kind of poetry and another, supposing them
+both to be good," said Lily, positively, and with an air of triumph, "is
+this,--I know, for Lion explained it to me,--in one kind of poetry the
+writer throws himself entirely out of his existence, he puts himself
+into other existences quite strange to his own. He may be a very good
+man, and he writes his best poetry about very wicked men: he would not
+hurt a fly, but he delights in describing murderers. But in the other
+kind of poetry the writer does not put himself into other existences, he
+expresses his own joys and sorrows, his own individual heart and mind.
+If he could not hurt a fly, he certainly could not make himself at home
+in the cruel heart of a murderer. There, Mr. Chillingly, that is the
+difference between one kind of poetry and another."
+
+"Very true," said Kenelm, amused by the girl's critical definitions.
+"The difference between dramatic poetry and lyrical. But may I ask what
+that definition has to do with the subject into which you so suddenly
+introduced it?"
+
+"Much; for when Lion was explaining this to my aunt, he said, 'A perfect
+woman is a poem; but she can never be a poem of the one kind, never can
+make herself at home in the hearts with which she has no connection,
+never feel any sympathy with crime and evil; she must be a poem of the
+other kind, weaving out poetry from her own thoughts and fancies.' And,
+turning to me, he said, smiling, 'That is the poem I wish Lily to be.
+Too many dry books would only spoil the poem.' And you now see why I am
+so ignorant, and so unlike other girls, and why Mr. and Mrs. Emlyn look
+down upon me."
+
+"You wrong at least Mr. Emlyn, for it was he who first said to me, 'Lily
+Mordaunt is a poem.'"
+
+"Did he? I shall love him for that. How pleased Lion will be!"
+
+"Mr. Melville seems to have an extraordinary influence over your mind,"
+said Kenelm, with a jealous pang.
+
+"Of course. I have neither father nor mother: Lion has been both to
+me. Aunty has often said, 'You cannot be too grateful to your guardian;
+without him I should have no home to shelter you, no bread to give you.'
+He never said that: he would be very angry with aunty if he knew she had
+said it. When he does not call me Fairy he calls me Princess. I would
+not displease him for the world."
+
+"He is very much older than you; old enough to be your father, I hear."
+
+"I dare say. But if he were twice as old I could not love him better."
+
+Kenelm smiled: the jealousy was gone. Certainly not thus could any girl,
+even Lily, speak of one with whom, however she might love him, she was
+likely to fall in love.
+
+Lily now rose up, rather slowly and wearily. "It is time to go home:
+aunty will be wondering what keeps me away,--come."
+
+They took their way towards the bridge opposite to Cromwell Lodge.
+
+It was not for some minutes that either broke silence. Lily was the
+first to do so, and with one of those abrupt changes of topic which were
+common to the restless play of her secret thoughts.
+
+"You have father and mother still living, Mr. Chillingly?"
+
+"Thank Heaven, yes."
+
+"Which do you love the best?"
+
+"That is scarcely a fair question. I love my mother very much; but my
+father and I understand each other better than--"
+
+"I see: it is so difficult to be understood. No one understands me."
+
+"I think I do."
+
+Lily shook her head with an energetic movement of dissent.
+
+"At least as well as a man can understand a young lady."
+
+"What sort of young lady is Miss Cecilia Travers?"
+
+"Cecilia Travers! When and how did you ever hear that such a person
+existed?"
+
+"That big London man whom they call Sir Thomas mentioned her name the
+day we dined at Braefieldville."
+
+"I remember,--as having been at the Court ball."
+
+"He said she was very handsome."
+
+"So she is."
+
+"Is she a poem too?"
+
+"No; that never struck me."
+
+"Mr. Emlyn, I suppose, would call her perfectly brought up,--well
+educated. He would not raise his eyebrows at her as he does at me,--poor
+me, Cinderella!"
+
+"Ah, Miss Mordaunt, you need not envy her. Again let me say that you
+could very soon educate yourself to the level of any young ladies who
+adorn the Court balls."
+
+"Ay; but then I should not be a poem," said Lily, with a shy, arch
+side-glance at his face.
+
+They were now on the bridge, and before Kenelm could answer Lily resumed
+quickly, "You need not come any farther; it is out of your way."
+
+"I cannot be so disdainfully dismissed, Miss Mordaunt; I insist on
+seeing you to at least your garden gate."
+
+Lily made no objection and again spoke,--
+
+"What sort of country do you live in when at home; is it like this?"
+
+"Not so pretty; the features are larger, more hill and dale and
+woodland: yet there is one feature in our grounds which reminds me a
+little of this landscape,--a light stream, somewhat wider, indeed,
+than your brooklet; but here and there the banks are so like those by
+Cromwell Lodge that I sometimes start and fancy myself at home. I have
+a strange love for rivulets and all running waters, and in my foot
+wanderings I find myself magnetically attracted towards them."
+
+Lily listened with interest, and after a short pause said, with a
+half-suppressed sigh, "Your home is much finer than any place here, even
+than Braefieldville, is it not? Mrs. Braefield says your father is very
+rich."
+
+"I doubt if he is richer than Mr. Braefield; and, though his house may
+be larger than Braefieldville, it is not so smartly furnished, and has
+no such luxurious hothouses and conservatories. My father's tastes are
+like mine, very simple. Give him his library, and he would scarcely miss
+his fortune if he lost it. He has in this one immense advantage over
+me."
+
+"You would miss fortune?" said Lily, quickly.
+
+"Not that; but my father is never tired of books. And shall I own it?
+there are days when books tire me almost as much as they do you."
+
+They were now at the garden gate. Lily, with one hand on the latch, held
+out the other to Kenelm, and her smile lit up the dull sky like a burst
+of sunshine, as she looked in his face and vanished.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VII.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+KENELM did not return home till dusk, and just as he was sitting down to
+his solitary meal there was a ring at the bell, and Mrs. Jones ushered
+in Mr. Thomas Bowles.
+
+Though that gentleman had never written to announce the day of his
+arrival, he was not the less welcome.
+
+"Only," said Kenelm, "if you preserve the appetite I have lost, I fear
+you will find meagre fare to-day. Sit down, man."
+
+"Thank you, kindly, but I dined two hours ago in London, and I really
+can eat nothing more."
+
+Kenelm was too well-bred to press unwelcome hospitalities. In a very few
+minutes his frugal repast was ended; the cloth removed, the two men were
+left alone.
+
+"Your room is here, of course, Tom; that was engaged from the day I
+asked you, but you ought to have given me a line to say when to expect
+you, so that I could have put our hostess on her mettle as to dinner or
+supper. You smoke still, of course: light your pipe."
+
+"Thank you, Mr. Chillingly, I seldom smoke now; but if you will excuse a
+cigar," and Tom produced a very smart cigar-case.
+
+"Do as you would at home. I shall send word to Will Somers that you and
+I sup there to-morrow. You forgive me for letting out your secret.
+All straightforward now and henceforth. You come to their hearth as a
+friend, who will grow dearer to them both every year. Ah, Tom, this love
+for woman seems to me a very wonderful thing. It may sink a man into
+such deeps of evil, and lift a man into such heights of good."
+
+"I don't know as to the good," said Tom, mournfully, and laying aside
+his cigar.
+
+"Go on smoking: I should like to keep you company; can you spare me one
+of your cigars?"
+
+Tom offered his case. Kenelm extracted a cigar, lighted it, drew a few
+whiffs, and, when he saw that Tom had resumed his own cigar, recommenced
+conversation.
+
+"You don't know as to the good; but tell me honestly, do you think if
+you had not loved Jessie Wiles, you would be as good a man as you are
+now?"
+
+"If I am better than I was, it is not because of my love for the girl."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"The loss of her."
+
+Kenelm started, turned very pale, threw aside the cigar, rose, and
+walked the room to and fro with very quick but very irregular strides.
+
+Tom continued quietly. "Suppose I had won Jessie and married her, I
+don't think any idea of improving myself would have entered my head. My
+uncle would have been very much offended at my marrying a day-labourer's
+daughter, and would not have invited me to Luscombe. I should have
+remained at Graveleigh, with no ambition of being more than a common
+farrier, an ignorant, noisy, quarrelsome man; and if I could not have
+made Jessie as fond of me as I wished, I should not have broken myself
+of drinking, and I shudder to think what a brute I might have been, when
+I see in the newspapers an account of some drunken wife-beater. How do
+we know but what that wife-beater loved his wife dearly before marriage,
+and she did not care for him? His home was unhappy, and so he took to
+drink and to wife-beating."
+
+"I was right, then," said Kenelm, halting his strides, "when I told you
+it would be a miserable fate to be married to a girl whom you loved to
+distraction, and whose heart you could never warm to you, whose life you
+could never render happy."
+
+"So right!"
+
+"Let us drop that part of the subject at present," said Kenelm,
+reseating himself, "and talk about your wish to travel. Though contented
+that you did not marry Jessie, though you can now, without anguish,
+greet her as the wife of another, still there are some lingering
+thoughts of her that make you restless; and you feel that you could more
+easily wrench yourself from these thoughts in a marked change of scene
+and adventure, that you might bury them altogether in the soil of a
+strange land. Is it so?"
+
+"Ay, something of that, sir."
+
+Then Kenelm roused himself to talk of foreign lands, and to map out a
+plan of travel that might occupy some months. He was pleased to find
+that Tom had already learned enough of French to make himself understood
+at least upon commonplace matters, and still more pleased to discover
+that he had been not only reading the proper guide-books or manuals
+descriptive of the principal places in Europe worth visiting, but that
+he had acquired an interest in the places; interest in the fame attached
+to them by their history in the past, or by the treasures of art they
+contained.
+
+So they talked far into the night; and when Tom retired to his room,
+Kenelm let himself out of the house noiselessly, and walked with slow
+steps towards the old summer-house in which he had sat with Lily. The
+wind had risen, scattering the clouds that had veiled the preceding day,
+so that the stars were seen in far chasms of the sky beyond,--seen for
+a while in one place, and, when the swift clouds rolled over them there,
+shining out elsewhere. Amid the varying sounds of the trees, through
+which swept the night gusts, Kenelm fancied he could distinguish the
+sigh of the willow on the opposite lawn of Grasmere.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+KENELM despatched a note to Will Somers early the next morning, inviting
+himself and Mr. Bowles to supper that evening. His tact was sufficient
+to make him aware that in such social meal there would be far less
+restraint for each and all concerned than in a more formal visit
+from Tom during the day-time; and when Jessie, too, was engaged with
+customers to the shop.
+
+But he led Tom through the town and showed him the shop itself, with
+its pretty goods at the plate-glass windows, and its general air of
+prosperous trade; then he carried him off into the lanes and fields of
+the country, drawing out the mind of his companion, and impressed with
+great admiration of its marked improvement in culture, and in the trains
+of thought which culture opens out and enriches.
+
+But throughout all their multiform range of subject Kenelm could
+perceive that Tom was still preoccupied and abstracted: the idea of the
+coming interview with Jessie weighed upon him.
+
+When they left Cromwell Lodge at nightfall, to repair to the supper at
+Will's; Kenelm noticed that Bowles had availed himself of the contents
+of his carpet-bag to make some refined alterations in his dress. The
+alterations became him.
+
+When they entered the parlour, Will rose from his chair with the
+evidence of deep emotion on his face, advanced to Tom, took his hand and
+grasped and dropped it without a word. Jessie saluted both guests alike,
+with drooping eyelids and an elaborate curtsy. The old mother alone was
+perfectly self-possessed and up to the occasion.
+
+"I am heartily glad to see you, Mr. Bowles," said she, "and so all three
+of us are, and ought to be; and if baby was older, there would be four."
+
+"And where on earth have you hidden baby?" cried Kenelm. "Surely he
+might have been kept up for me to-night, when I was expected; the last
+time I supped here I took you by surprise, and therefore had no right to
+complain of baby's want of respect to her parents' friends."
+
+Jessie raised the window-curtain, and pointed to the cradle behind it.
+Kenelm linked his arm in Tom's, led him to the cradle, and, leaving
+him alone to gaze on the sleeping inmate, seated himself at the table,
+between old Mrs. Somers and Will. Will's eyes were turned away towards
+the curtain, Jessie holding its folds aside, and the formidable Tom,
+who had been the terror of his neighbourhood, bending smiling over
+the cradle: till at last he laid his large hand on the pillow, gently,
+timidly, careful not to awake the helpless sleeper, and his lips moved,
+doubtless with a blessing; then he, too, came to the table, seating
+himself, and Jessie carried the cradle upstairs.
+
+Will fixed his keen, intelligent eyes on his bygone rival; and noticing
+the changed expression of the once aggressive countenance, the changed
+costume in which, without tinge of rustic foppery, there was the token
+of a certain gravity of station scarcely compatible with a return to old
+loves and old habits in the village world, the last shadow of jealousy
+vanished from the clear surface of Will's affectionate nature.
+
+"Mr. Bowles," he exclaimed, impulsively, "you have a kind heart, and a
+good heart, and a generous heart. And your corning here to-night on this
+friendly visit is an honour which--which"--"Which," interrupted Kenelm,
+compassionating Will's embarrassment, "is on the side of us single men.
+In this free country a married man who has a male baby may be father
+to the Lord Chancellor or the Archbishop of Canterbury. But--well, my
+friends, such a meeting as we have to-night does not come often; and
+after supper let us celebrate it with a bowl of punch. If we have
+headaches the next morning none of us will grumble."
+
+Old Mrs. Somers laughed out jovially. "Bless you, sir, I did not think
+of the punch; I will go and see about it," and, baby's socks still in
+her hands, she hastened from the room.
+
+What with the supper, what with the punch, and what with Kenelm's art
+of cheery talk on general subjects, all reserve, all awkwardness, all
+shyness between the convivialists, rapidly disappeared. Jessie mingled
+in the talk; perhaps (excepting only Kenelm) she talked more than the
+others, artlessly, gayly, no vestige of the old coquetry; but, now and
+then, with a touch of genteel finery, indicative of her rise in life,
+and of the contact of the fancy shopkeeper with noble customers. It was
+a pleasant evening; Kenelm had resolved that it should be so. Not a
+hint of the obligations to Mr. Bowles escaped until Will, following his
+visitor to the door, whispered to Tom, "You don't want thanks, and I
+can't express them. But when we say our prayers at night, we have always
+asked God to bless him who brought us together, and has since made us
+so prosperous,--I mean Mr. Chillingly. To-night there will be another
+besides him, for whom we shall pray, and for whom baby, when he is
+older, will pray too."
+
+Therewith Will's voice thickened; and he prudently receded, with no
+unreasonable fear lest the punch might make him too demonstrative of
+emotion if he said more.
+
+Tom was very silent on the return to Cromwell Lodge; it did not seem the
+silence of depressed spirits, but rather of quiet meditation, from which
+Kenelm did not attempt to rouse him.
+
+It was not till they reached the garden pales of Grasmere that Tom,
+stopping short, and turning his face to Kenelm, said, "I am very
+grateful to you for this evening,--very."
+
+"It has revived no painful thoughts then?"
+
+"No; I feel so much calmer in mind than I ever believed I could have
+been, after seeing her again."
+
+"Is it possible!" said Kenelm, to himself. "How should I feel if I ever
+saw in Lily the wife of another man, the mother of his child?" At that
+question he shuddered, and an involuntary groan escaped from his lips.
+Just then having, willingly in those precincts, arrested his steps when
+Tom paused to address him, something softly touched the arm which he had
+rested on the garden pale. He looked, and saw that it was Blanche.
+The creature, impelled by its instincts towards night-wanderings, had,
+somehow or other, escaped from its own bed within the house, and hearing
+a voice that had grown somewhat familiar to its ear, crept from among
+the shrubs behind upon the edge of the pale. There it stood, with arched
+back, purring low as in pleased salutation.
+
+Kenelm bent down and covered with kisses the blue ribbon which Lily's
+hand had bound round the favourite's neck. Blanche submitted to the
+caress for a moment, and then catching a slight rustle among the shrubs
+made by some awaking bird, sprang into the thick of the quivering leaves
+and vanished.
+
+Kenelm moved on with a quick impatient stride, and no further words were
+exchanged between him and his companion till they reached their lodging
+and parted for the night.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE next day, towards noon, Kenelm and his visitor, walking together
+along the brook-side, stopped before Izaak Walton's summer-house, and,
+at Kenelm's suggestion, entered therein to rest, and more at their ease
+to continue the conversation they had begun.
+
+"You have just told me," said Kenelm, "that you feel as if a load were
+taken off your heart, now that you have again met Jessie Somers, and
+that you find her so changed that she is no longer the woman you loved.
+As to the change, whatever it be, I own, it seems to me for the better,
+in person, in manners, in character; of course I should not say this, if
+I were not convinced of your perfect sincerity when you assured me that
+you are cured of the old wound. But I feel so deeply interested in the
+question how a fervent love, once entertained and enthroned in the heart
+of a man so earnestly affectionate and so warm-blooded as yourself, can
+be, all of a sudden, at a single interview, expelled or transferred into
+the calm sentiment of friendship, that I pray you to explain."
+
+"That is what puzzles me, sir," answered Tom, passing his hand over his
+forehead. "And I don't know if I can explain it.
+
+"Think over it, and try."
+
+Tom mused for some moments and then began. "You see, sir, that I was
+a very different man myself when I fell in love with Jessie Wiles, and
+said, 'Come what may, that girl shall be my wife. Nobody else shall have
+her.'"
+
+"Agreed; go on."
+
+"But while I was becoming a different man, when I thought of her--and I
+was always thinking of her--I still pictured her to myself as the same
+Jessie Wiles; and though, when I did see her again at Graveleigh, after
+she had married--the day--"
+
+"You saved her from the insolence of the Squire."
+
+"She was but very recently married. I did not realize her as married. I
+did not see her husband, and the difference within myself was only
+then beginning. Well, so all the time I was reading and thinking, and
+striving to improve my old self at Luscombe, still Jessie Wiles haunted
+me as the only girl I had ever loved, ever could love; I could not
+believe it possible that I could ever marry any one else. And lately I
+have been much pressed to marry some one else; all my family wish it:
+but the face of Jessie rose up before me, and I said to myself, 'I
+should be a base man if I married one woman, while I could not get
+another woman out of my head.' I must see Jessie once more, must learn
+whether her face is now really the face that haunts me when I sit alone;
+and I have seen her, and it is not that face: it may be handsomer, but
+it is not a girl's face, it is the face of a wife and a mother. And,
+last evening, while she was talking with an open-heartedness which I
+had never found in her before, I became strangely conscious of the
+difference in myself that had been silently at work within the last two
+years or so. Then, sir, when I was but an ill-conditioned, uneducated,
+petty village farrier, there was no inequality between me and a peasant
+girl; or, rather, in all things except fortune, the peasant girl
+was much above me. But last evening I asked myself, watching her and
+listening to her talk, 'If Jessie were now free, should I press her to
+be my wife?' and I answered myself, 'No.'"
+
+Kenelm listened with rapt attention, and exclaimed briefly, but
+passionately, "Why?"
+
+"It seems as if I were giving myself airs to say why. But, sir, lately I
+have been thrown among persons, women as well as men, of a higher class
+than I was born in; and in a wife I should want a companion up to their
+mark, and who would keep me up to mine; and ah, sir, I don't feel as if
+I could find that companion in Mrs. Somers."
+
+"I understand you now, Tom. But you are spoiling a silly romance of
+mine. I had fancied the little girl with the flower face would grow up
+to supply the loss of Jessie; and, I am so ignorant of the human heart,
+I did think it would take all the years required for the little girl to
+open into a woman, before the loss of the old love could be supplied. I
+see now that the poor little child with the flower face has no chance."
+
+"Chance? Why, Mr. Chillingly," cried Tom, evidently much nettled, "Susey
+is a dear little thing, but she is scarcely more than a mere charity
+girl. Sir, when I last saw you in London you touched on that matter as
+if I were still the village farrier's son, who might marry a village
+labourer's daughter. But," added Tom, softening down his irritated tone
+of voice, "even if Susey were a lady born I think a man would make a
+very great mistake, if he thought he could bring up a little girl to
+regard him as a father; and then, when she grew up, expect her to accept
+him as a lover."
+
+"Ah, you think that!" exclaimed Kenelm, eagerly, and turning eyes that
+sparkled with joy towards the lawn of Grasmere. "You think that; it is
+very sensibly said,--well, and you have been pressed to marry, and have
+hung back till you had seen again Mrs. Somers. Now you will be better
+disposed to such a step; tell me about it?"
+
+"I said, last evening, that one of the principal capitalists at
+Luscombe, the leading corn-merchant, had offered to take me into
+partnership. And, sir, he has an only daughter, she is a very amiable
+girl, has had a first-rate education, and has such pleasant manners and
+way of talk, quite a lady. If I married her I should soon be the first
+man in Luscombe, and Luscombe, as you are no doubt aware, returns two
+members to Parliament; who knows, but that some day the farrier's son
+might be--" Tom stopped abruptly, abashed at the aspiring thought which,
+while speaking, had deepened his hardy colour and flashed from his
+honest eyes.
+
+"Ah!" said Kenelm, almost mournfully, "is it so? must each man in his
+life play many parts? Ambition succeeds to love, the reasoning brain to
+the passionate heart. True, you are changed; my Tom Bowles is gone."
+
+"Not gone in his undying gratitude to you, sir," said Tom, with great
+emotion. "Your Tom Bowles would give up all his dreams of wealth or of
+rising in life, and go through fire and water to serve the friend who
+first bid him be a new Tom Bowles! Don't despise me as your own work:
+you said to me that terrible day, when madness was on my brow and crime
+within my heart, 'I will be to you the truest friend man ever found in
+man.' So you have been. You commanded me to read; you commanded me to
+think; you taught me that body should be the servant of mind."
+
+"Hush, hush, times are altered; it is you who can teach me now. Teach
+me, teach me; how does ambition replace love? How does the desire to
+rise in life become the all-mastering passion, and, should it prosper,
+the all-atoning consolation of our life? We can never be as happy,
+though we rose to the throne of the Caesars, as we dream that we
+could have been, had Heaven but permitted us to dwell in the obscurest
+village, side by side with the woman we love."
+
+Tom was exceedingly startled by such a burst of irrepressible passion
+from the man who had told him that, though friends were found only once
+in a life, sweethearts were as plentiful as blackberries.
+
+Again he swept his hand over his forehead, and replied hesitatingly: "I
+can't pretend to say what maybe the case with others. But to judge by my
+own case, it seems to me this: a young man who, out of his own business,
+has nothing to interest or excite him, finds content, interest, and
+excitement when he falls in love; and then, whether for good or ill, he
+thinks there is nothing like love in the world, he don't care a fig for
+ambition then. Over and over again did my poor uncle ask me to come to
+him at Luscombe, and represent all the worldly advantage it would be
+to me; but I could not leave the village in which Jessie lived, and,
+besides, I felt myself unfit to be anything higher than I was. But
+when I had been some time at Luscombe, and gradually got accustomed to
+another sort of people, and another sort of talk, then I began to feel
+interest in the same objects that interested those about me; and when,
+partly by mixing with better educated men, and partly by the pains I
+took to educate myself, I felt that I might now more easily rise above
+my uncle's rank of life than two years ago I could have risen above
+a farrier's forge, then the ambition to rise did stir in me, and grew
+stronger every day. Sir, I don't think you can wake up a man's intellect
+but what you wake with it emulation. And, after all, emulation is
+ambition."
+
+"Then, I suppose, I have no emulation in me, for certainly I have no
+ambition."
+
+"That I can't believe, sir; other thoughts may cover it over and keep it
+down for a time. But sooner or later, it will force its way to the top,
+as it has done with me. To get on in life, to be respected by those who
+know you, more and more as you grow older, I call that a manly desire. I
+am sure it comes as naturally to an Englishman as--as--"
+
+"As the wish to knock down some other Englishman who stands in his way
+does. I perceive now that you were always a very ambitious man, Tom; the
+ambition has only taken another direction. Caesar might have been
+
+
+ "'But the first wrestler on the green.'
+
+
+"And now, I suppose, you abandon the idea of travel: you will return to
+Luscombe, cured of all regret for the loss of Jessie; you will marry the
+young lady you mention, and rise, through progressive steps of alderman
+and mayor, into the rank of member for Luscombe."
+
+"All that may come in good time," answered Tom, not resenting the tone
+of irony in which he was addressed, "but I still intend to travel: a
+year so spent must render me all the more fit for any station I aim at.
+I shall go back to Luscombe to arrange my affairs, come to terms with
+Mr. Leland the corn-merchant, against my return, and--"
+
+"The young lady is to wait till then."
+
+"Emily--"
+
+"Oh, that is the name? Emily! a much more elegant name than Jessie."
+
+"Emily," continued Tom, with an unruffled placidity,--which, considering
+the aggravating bitterness for which Kenelm had exchanged his wonted
+dulcitudes of indifferentism, was absolutely saintlike, "Emily knows
+that if she were my wife I should be proud of her, and will esteem me
+the more if she feels how resolved I am that she shall never be ashamed
+of me."
+
+"Pardon me, Tom," said Kenelm softened, and laying his hand on his
+friend's shoulder with brotherlike tenderness. "Nature has made you a
+thorough gentleman; and you could not think and speak more nobly if you
+had come into the world as the head of all the Howards."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+TOM went away the next morning. He declined to see Jessie again, saying
+curtly, "I don't wish the impression made on me the other evening to
+incur a chance of being weakened."
+
+Kenelm was in no mood to regret his friend's departure. Despite all
+the improvement in Tom's manners and culture, which raised him so
+much nearer to equality with the polite and instructed heir of the
+Chillinglys, Kenelm would have felt more in sympathy and rapport with
+the old disconsolate fellow-wanderer who had reclined with him on the
+grass, listening to the minstrel's talk or verse, than he did with
+the practical, rising citizen of Luscombe. To the young lover of Lily
+Mordaunt there was a discord, a jar, in the knowledge that the human
+heart admits of such well-reasoned, well-justified transfers of
+allegiance; a Jessie to-day, or an Emily to-morrow; "La reine est morte:
+vive la reine"
+
+An hour or two after Tom had gone, Kenelm found himself almost
+mechanically led towards Braefieldville. He had instinctively divined
+Elsie's secret wish with regard to himself and Lily, however skilfully
+she thought she had concealed it.
+
+At Braefieldville he should hear talk of Lily, and in the scenes where
+Lily had been first beheld.
+
+He found Mrs. Braefield alone in the drawing-room, seated by a table
+covered with flowers, which she was assorting and intermixing for the
+vases to which they were destined.
+
+It struck him that her manner was more reserved than usual and somewhat
+embarrassed; and when, after a few preliminary matters of small talk,
+he rushed boldly _in medias res_ and asked if she had seen Mrs. Cameron
+lately, she replied briefly, "Yes, I called there the other day,"
+and immediately changed the conversation to the troubled state of the
+Continent.
+
+Kenelm was resolved not to be so put off, and presently returned to the
+charge.
+
+"The other day you proposed an excursion to the site of the Roman villa,
+and said you would ask Mrs. Cameron to be of the party. Perhaps you have
+forgotten it?"
+
+"No; but Mrs. Cameron declines. We can ask the Emlyns instead. He will
+be an excellent _cicerone_."
+
+"Excellent! Why did Mrs. Cameron decline?"
+
+Elsie hesitated, and then lifted her clear brown eyes to his face, with
+a sudden determination to bring matters to a crisis.
+
+"I cannot say why Mrs. Cameron declined, but in declining she acted very
+wisely and very honourably. Listen to me, Mr. Chillingly. You know how
+highly I esteem, and how cordially I like you, and judging by what I
+felt for some weeks, perhaps longer, after we parted at Tor Hadham--"
+Here again she hesitated, and, with a half laugh and a slight blush,
+again went resolutely on. "If I were Lily's aunt or elder sister, I
+should do as Mrs. Cameron does; decline to let Lily see much more of a
+young gentleman too much above her in wealth and station for--"
+
+"Stop," cried Kenelm, haughtily, "I cannot allow that any man's wealth
+or station would warrant his presumption in thinking himself above Miss
+Mordaunt."
+
+"Above her in natural grace and refinement, certainly not. But in the
+world there are other considerations which, perhaps, Sir Peter and Lady
+Chillingly might take into account."
+
+"You did not think of that before you last saw Mrs. Cameron."
+
+"Honestly speaking, I did not. Assured that Miss Mordaunt was a
+gentlewoman by birth, I did not sufficiently reflect upon other
+disparities."
+
+"You know, then, that she is by birth a gentlewoman?"
+
+"I only know it as all here do, by the assurance of Mrs. Cameron, whom
+no one could suppose not to be a lady. But there are different degrees
+of lady and of gentleman, which are little heeded in the ordinary
+intercourse of society, but become very perceptible in questions of
+matrimonial alliance; and Mrs. Cameron herself says very plainly that
+she does not consider her niece to belong to that station in life from
+which Sir Peter and Lady Chillingly would naturally wish their son
+should select his bride. Then (holding out her hand) pardon me if I have
+wounded or offended you. I speak as a true friend to you and to Lily
+both. Earnestly I advise you, if Miss Mordaunt be the cause of your
+lingering here, earnestly I advise you to leave while yet in time for
+her peace of mind and your own."
+
+"Her peace of mind," said Kenelm, in low faltering tones, scarcely
+hearing the rest of Mrs. Braefield's speech. "Her peace of mind? Do
+you sincerely think that she cares for me,--could care for me,--if I
+stayed?"
+
+"I wish I could answer you decidedly. I am not in the secrets of her
+heart. I can but conjecture that it might be dangerous for the peace of
+any young girl to see too much of a man like yourself, to divine that he
+loved her, and not to be aware that he could not, with the approval of
+his family, ask her to become his wife."
+
+Kenelm bent his face down, and covered it with his right hand. He did
+not speak for some moments. Then he rose, the fresh cheek very pale, and
+said,--
+
+"You are right. Miss Mordaunt's peace of mind must be the first
+consideration. Excuse me if I quit you thus abruptly. You have given me
+much to think of, and I can only think of it adequately when alone."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+FROM KENELM CHILLINGLY TO SIR PETER CHILLINGLY.
+
+
+MY FATHER, MY DEAR FATHER,--This is no reply to your letters. I know
+not if itself can be called a letter. I cannot yet decide whether it be
+meant to reach your hands. Tired with talking to myself, I sit down to
+talk to you. Often have I reproached myself for not seeing every fitting
+occasion to let you distinctly know how warmly I love, how deeply I
+reverence you; you, O friend, O father. But we Chillinglys are not a
+demonstrative race. I don't remember that you, by words, ever expressed
+to me the truth that you loved your son infinitely more than he
+deserves. Yet, do I not know that you would send all your beloved old
+books to the hammer rather than I should pine in vain for some untried,
+if sinless, delight on which I had set my heart? And do you not
+know equally well, that I would part with all my heritage, and turn
+day-labourer, rather than you should miss the beloved old books?
+
+That mutual knowledge is taken for granted in all that my heart yearns
+to pour forth to your own. But, if I divine aright, a day is coming
+when, as between you and me, there must be a sacrifice on the part of
+one to the other. If so, I implore that the sacrifice may come from
+you. How is this? How am I so ungenerous, so egotistical, so selfish, so
+ungratefully unmindful of all I already owe to you, and may never repay?
+I can only answer, "It is fate, it is nature, it is love"--
+
+ *****
+
+Here I must break off. It is midnight, the moon halts opposite to the
+window at which I sit, and on the stream that runs below there is a long
+narrow track on which every wave trembles in her light; on either side
+of the moonlit track all the other waves, running equally to their grave
+in the invisible deep, seem motionless and dark. I can write no more.
+
+.........
+
+ (Dated two days later.)
+
+They say she is beneath us in wealth and station. Are we, my father--we,
+two well-born gentlemen--coveters of gold or lackeys of the great? When
+I was at college, if there were any there more heartily despised than
+another it was the parasite and the tuft-hunter; the man who chose his
+friends according as their money or their rank might be of use to him.
+If so mean where the choice is so little important to the happiness and
+career of a man who has something of manhood in him, how much more mean
+to be the parasite and tuft-hunter in deciding what woman to love, what
+woman to select as the sweetener and ennobler of one's everyday life!
+Could she be to my life that sweetener, that ennobler? I firmly believe
+it. Already life itself has gained a charm that I never even guessed in
+it before; already I begin, though as yet but faintly and vaguely, to
+recognize that interest in the objects and aspirations of my fellow-men
+which is strongest in those whom posterity ranks among its ennoblers. In
+this quiet village it is true that I might find examples enough to prove
+that man is not meant to meditate upon life, but to take active part in
+it, and in that action to find his uses. But I doubt if I should have
+profited by such examples; if I should not have looked on this
+small stage of the world as I have looked on the large one, with the
+indifferent eyes of a spectator on a trite familiar play carried on
+by ordinary actors, had not my whole being suddenly leaped out of
+philosophy into passion, and, at once made warmly human, sympathized
+with humanity wherever it burned and glowed. Ah, is there to be
+any doubt of what station, as mortal bride, is due to her,--her, my
+princess, my fairy? If so, how contented you shall be, my father, with
+the worldly career of your son! how perseveringly he will strive
+(and when did perseverance fail?) to supply all his deficiencies of
+intellect, genius, knowledge, by the energy concentrated on a single
+object which--more than intellect, genius, knowledge, unless they attain
+to equal energy equally concentrated--commands what the world calls
+honours.
+
+Yes, with her, with her as the bearer of my name, with her to whom I,
+whatever I might do of good or of great, could say, "It is thy work,"
+I promise that you shall bless the day when you took to your arms a
+daughter.
+
+.........
+
+"Thou art in contact with the beloved in all that thou feelest elevated
+above thee." So it is written by one of those weird Germans who search
+in our bosoms for the seeds of buried truths, and conjure them into
+flowers before we ourselves were even aware of the seeds.
+
+Every thought that associates itself with my beloved seems to me born
+with wings.
+
+.........
+
+I have just seen her, just parted from her. Since I had been
+told--kindly, wisely told--that I had no right to hazard her peace of
+mind unless I were privileged to woo and to win her, I promised myself
+that I would shun her presence until I had bared my heart to you, as I
+am doing now, and received that privilege from yourself; for even had I
+never made the promise that binds my honour, your consent and blessing
+must hallow my choice. I do not feel as if I could dare to ask one
+so innocent and fair to wed an ungrateful, disobedient son. But this
+evening I met her, unexpectedly, at the vicar's, an excellent man, from
+whom I have learned much; whose precepts, whose example, whose delight
+in his home, and his life at once active and serene, are in harmony with
+my own dreams when I dream of her.
+
+I will tell you the name of the beloved; hold it as yet a profound
+secret between you and me. But oh for the day when I may hear you call
+her by that name, and print on her forehead the only kiss by man of
+which I should not be jealous.
+
+It is Sunday, and after the evening service it is my friend's custom
+to gather his children round him, and, without any formal sermon or
+discourse, engage their interests in subjects harmonious to associations
+with the sanctity of the day; often not directly bearing upon religion;
+more often, indeed, playfully starting from some little incident or some
+slight story-book which had amused the children in the course of the
+past week, and then gradually winding into reference to some sweet moral
+precept or illustration from some divine example. It is a maxim with
+him that, while much that children must learn they can only learn well
+through conscious labour, and as positive task-work, yet Religion should
+be connected in their minds not with labour and task-work, but should
+become insensibly infused into their habits of thought, blending
+itself with memories and images of peace and love; with the indulgent
+tenderness of the earliest teachers, the sinless mirthfulness of the
+earliest home; with consolation in after sorrows, support through after
+trials, and never parting company with its twin sister, Hope.
+
+I entered the vicar's room this evening just as the group had collected
+round him. By the side of his wife sat a lady in whom I feel a keen
+interest. Her face wears that kind of calm which speaks of the lassitude
+bequeathed by sorrow. She is the aunt of my beloved one. Lily had
+nestled herself on a low ottoman, at the good pastor's feet, with one
+of his little girls, round whose shoulder she had wound her arm. She is
+much more fond of the companionship of children than that of girls of
+her own age. The vicar's wife, a very clever woman, once, in my hearing,
+took her to task for this preference, asking her why she persisted in
+grouping herself with mere infants who could teach her nothing? Ah!
+could you have seen the innocent, angel-like expression of her face when
+she answered simply, "I suppose because with them I feel safer, I mean
+nearer to God."
+
+Mr. Emlyn--that is the name of the vicar--deduced his homily this
+evening from a pretty fairy tale which Lily had been telling to his
+children the day before, and which he drew her on to repeat.
+
+Take, in brief, the substance of the story:--
+
+"Once on a time, a king and queen made themselves very unhappy because
+they had no heir to their throne; and they prayed for one; and lo, on
+some bright summer morning, the queen, waking from sleep, saw a cradle
+beside her bed, and in the cradle a beautiful sleeping babe. Great
+day throughout the kingdom! But as the infant grew up, it became very
+wayward and fretful: it lost its beauty; it would not learn its lessons;
+it was as naughty as a child could be. The parents were very sorrowful;
+the heir, so longed for, promised to be a great plague to themselves
+and their subjects. At last one day, to add to their trouble, two little
+bumps appeared on the prince's shoulders. All the doctors were consulted
+as to the cause and the cure of this deformity. Of course they tried
+the effect of back-bands and steel machines, which gave the poor little
+prince great pain, and made him more unamiable than ever. The bumps,
+nevertheless, grew larger, and as they increased, so the prince sickened
+and pined away. At last a skilful surgeon proposed, as the only chance
+of saving the prince's life, that the bumps should be cut out; and the
+next morning was fixed for that operation. But at night the queen saw,
+or dreamed she saw, a beautiful shape standing by her bedside. And it
+said to her reproachfully, 'Ungrateful woman! How wouldst thou repay me
+for the precious boon that my favour bestowed on thee! In me behold the
+Queen of the Fairies. For the heir to thy kingdom, I consigned to thy
+charge an infant from Fairyland, to become a blessing to thee and to
+thy people; and thou wouldst inflict upon it a death of torture by the
+surgeon's knife.' And the queen answered, 'Precious indeed thou mayest
+call the boon,--a miserable, sickly, feverish changeling.'
+
+"'Art thou so dull,' said the beautiful visitant, 'as not to comprehend
+that the earliest instincts of the fairy child would be those of
+discontent, at the exile from its native home? and in that discontent it
+would have pined itself to death, or grown up, soured and malignant,
+a fairy still in its power but a fairy of wrath and evil, had not the
+strength of its inborn nature sufficed to develop the growth of its
+wings. That which thy blindness condemns as the deformity of the
+human-born, is to the fairy-born the crowning perfection of its beauty.
+Woe to thee, if thou suffer not the wings of the fairy child to grow.'
+
+"And the next morning the queen sent away the surgeon when he came with
+his horrible knife, and removed the back-board and the steel machines
+from the prince's shoulders, though all the doctors predicted that the
+child would die. And from that moment the royal heir began to recover
+bloom and health. And when at last, out of those deforming bumps,
+budded delicately forth the plumage of snow-white wings, the wayward
+peevishness of the prince gave place to sweet temper. Instead of
+scratching his teachers, he became the quickest and most docile of
+pupils, grew up to be the joy of his parents and the pride of their
+people; and people said, 'In him we shall have hereafter such a king as
+we have never yet known.'"
+
+Here ended Lily's tale. I cannot convey to you a notion of the pretty,
+playful manner in which it was told. Then she said, with a grave shake
+of the head, "But you do not seem to know what happened afterwards. Do
+you suppose that the prince never made use of his wings? Listen to me.
+It was discovered by the courtiers who attended on His Royal Highness
+that on certain nights, every week, he disappeared. In fact, on these
+nights, obedient to the instinct of the wings, he flew from palace
+halls into Fairyland; coming back thence all the more lovingly disposed
+towards the human home from which he had escaped for a while."
+
+"Oh, my children," interposed the preacher earnestly, "the wings would
+be given to us in vain if we did not obey the instinct which allures us
+to soar; vain, no less, would be the soaring, were it not towards
+the home whence we came, bearing back from its native airs a stronger
+health, and a serener joy; more reconciled to the duties of earth by
+every new flight into heaven."
+
+As he thus completed the moral of Lily's fairy tale, the girl rose
+from her low seat, took his hand, kissed it reverently, and walked away
+towards the window. I could see that she was affected even to tears,
+which she sought to conceal. Later in the evening, when we were
+dispersed on the lawn, for a few minutes before the party broke up, Lily
+came to my side timidly and said, in a low whisper,--
+
+"Are you angry with me? what have I done to displease you?"
+
+"Angry with you; displeased? How can you think of me so unjustly?"
+
+"It is so many days since you have called, since I have seen you,"
+she said so artlessly, looking up at me with eyes in which tears still
+seemed to tremble.
+
+Before I could trust myself to reply, her aunt approached, and noticing
+me with a cold and distant "Good-night," led away her niece.
+
+I had calculated on walking back to their home with them, as I generally
+have done when we met at another house. But the aunt had probably
+conjectured I might be at the vicarage that evening, and in order to
+frustrate my intention had engaged a carriage for their return. No doubt
+she has been warned against permitting further intimacy with her niece.
+
+My father, I must come to you at once, discharge my promise, and receive
+from your own lips your consent to my choice; for you will consent, will
+you not? But I wish you to be prepared beforehand, and I shall therefore
+put up these disjointed fragments of my commune with my own heart and
+with yours, and post them to-morrow. Expect me to follow them after
+leaving you a day free to consider them alone,--alone, my dear father:
+they are meant for no eye but yours.
+
+K. C.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE next day Kenelm walked into the town, posted his voluminous letter
+to Sir Peter, and then looked in at the shop of Will Somers, meaning to
+make some purchases of basket-work or trifling fancy goods in Jessie's
+pretty store of such articles, that might please the taste of his
+mother.
+
+On entering the shop his heart beat quicker. He saw two young forms
+bending over the counter, examining the contents of a glass case. One
+of these customers was Clemmy; in the other there was no mistaking the
+slight graceful shape of Lily Mordaunt. Clemmy was exclaiming, "Oh, it
+is so pretty, Mrs. Somers! but," turning her eyes from the counter to a
+silk purse in her hand, she added sorrowfully, "I can't buy it. I have
+not got enough, not by a great deal."
+
+"And what is it, Miss Clemmy?" asked Kenelm.
+
+The two girls turned round at his voice, and Clemmy's face brightened.
+
+"Look here," she said, "is it not too lovely?"
+
+The object thus admired and coveted was a little gold locket, enriched
+by a cross composed of small pearls.
+
+"I assure you, miss," said Jessie, who had acquired all the coaxing arts
+of her trade, "it is really a great bargain. Miss Mary Burrows, who was
+here just before you came, bought one not nearly so pretty and gave ten
+shillings more for it."
+
+Miss Mary Burrows was the same age as Miss Clementina Emlyn, and there
+was a rivalry as to smartness between those youthful beauties. "Miss
+Burrows!" sighed Clemmy, very scornfully.
+
+But Kenelm's attention was distracted from Clemmy's locket to a little
+ring which Lily had been persuaded by Mrs. Somers to try on, and which
+she now drew off and returned with a shake of the head. Mrs. Somers, who
+saw that she had small chance of selling the locket to Clemmy, was now
+addressing herself to the elder girl more likely to have sufficient
+pocket-money, and whom, at all events, it was quite safe to trust.
+
+"The ring fits you so nicely, Miss Mordaunt, and every young lady of
+your age wears at least one ring; allow me to put it up." She added in
+a lower voice, "Though we only sell the articles in this case on
+commission, it is all the same to us whether we are paid now or at
+Christmas."
+
+"'Tis no use tempting me, Mrs. Somers," said Lily, laughing, and then
+with a grave air, "I promised Lion, I mean my guardian, never to run
+into debt, and I never will."
+
+Lily turned resolutely from the perilous counter, taking up a paper
+that contained a new ribbon she had bought for Blanche, and Clemmy
+reluctantly followed her out of the shop.
+
+Kenelm lingered behind and selected very hastily a few trifles, to be
+sent to him that evening with some specimens of basket-work left to
+Will's tasteful discretion; then purchased the locket on which Clemmy
+had set her heart; but all the while his thoughts were fixed on the ring
+which Lily had tried on. It was no sin against etiquette to give the
+locket to a child like Clemmy, but would it not be a cruel impertinence
+to offer a gift to Lily?
+
+Jessie spoke: "Miss Mordaunt took a great fancy to this ring, Mr.
+Chillingly. I am sure her aunt would like her to have it. I have a great
+mind to put it by on the chance of Mrs. Cameron's calling here. It would
+be a pity if it were bought by some one else."
+
+"I think," said Kenelm, "that I will take the liberty of showing it to
+Mrs. Cameron. No doubt she will buy it for her niece. Add the price
+of it to my bill." He seized the ring and carried it off; a very poor
+little simple ring, with a single stone shaped as a heart, not half the
+price of the locket.
+
+Kenelm rejoined the young ladies just where the path split into two, the
+one leading direct to Grasmere, the other through the churchyard to
+the vicarage. He presented the locket to Clemmy with brief kindly words
+which easily removed any scruple she might have had in accepting it;
+and, delighted with her acquisition, she bounded off to the vicarage,
+impatient to show the prize to her mamma and sisters, and more
+especially to Miss Mary Burrows, who was coming to lunch with them.
+
+Kenelm walked on slowly by Lily's side.
+
+"You have a good heart, Mr. Chillingly," said she, somewhat abruptly.
+"How it must please you to give such pleasure! Dear little Clemmy!"
+
+This artless praise, and the perfect absence of envy or thought of self
+evinced by her joy that her friend's wish was gratified, though her own
+was not, enchanted Kenelm.
+
+"If it pleases to give pleasure," said he, "it is your turn to be
+pleased now; you can confer such pleasure upon me."
+
+"How?" she asked, falteringly, and with quick change of colour.
+
+"By conceding to me the same right your little friend has allowed."
+
+And he drew forth the ring.
+
+Lily reared her head with a first impulse of haughtiness. But when
+her eyes met his the head drooped down again, and a slight shiver ran
+through her frame.
+
+"Miss Mordaunt," resumed Kenelm, mastering his passionate longing to
+fall at her feet and say, "But, oh! in this ring it is my love that
+I offer,--it is my troth that I pledge!" "Miss Mordaunt, spare me the
+misery of thinking that I have offended you; least of all would I do so
+on this day, for it may be some little while before I see you again.
+I am going home for a few days upon a matter which may affect the
+happiness of my life, and on which I should be a bad son and an
+unworthy gentleman if I did not consult him who, in all that concerns
+my affections, has trained me to turn to him, the father; in all that
+concerns my honour to him, the gentleman."
+
+A speech more unlike that which any delineator of manners and morals in
+the present day would put into the mouth of a lover, no critic in "The
+Londoner" could ridicule. But, somehow or other, this poor little tamer
+of butterflies and teller of fairy tales comprehended on the instant all
+that this most eccentric of human beings thus frigidly left untold.
+Into her innermost heart it sank more deeply than would the most ardent
+declaration put into the lips of the boobies or the scamps in whom
+delineators of manners in the present day too often debase the
+magnificent chivalry embodied in the name of "lover."
+
+Where these two had, while speaking, halted on the path along the
+brook-side, there was a bench, on which it so happened that they had
+seated themselves weeks before. A few moments later on that bench they
+were seated again.
+
+And the trumpery little ring with its turquoise heart was on Lily's
+finger, and there they continued to sit for nearly half an hour;
+not talking much, but wondrously happy; not a single vow of troth
+interchanged. No, not even a word that could be construed into "I love."
+And yet when they rose from the bench, and went silently along the
+brook-side, each knew that the other was beloved.
+
+When they reached the gate that admitted into the garden of Grasmere,
+Kenelm made a slight start. Mrs. Cameron was leaning over the gate.
+Whatever alarm at the appearance Kenelm might have felt was certainly
+not shared by Lily; she advanced lightly before him, kissed her aunt on
+the cheek, and passed on across the lawn with a bound in her step and
+the carol of a song upon her lips.
+
+Kenelm remained by the gate, face to face with Mrs. Cameron. She opened
+the gate, put her arm in his, and led him back along the brook-side.
+
+"I am sure, Mr. Chillingly," she said, "that you will not impute to my
+words any meaning more grave than that which I wish them to convey,
+when I remind you that there is no place too obscure to escape from the
+ill-nature of gossip, and you must own that my niece incurs the chance
+of its notice if she be seen walking alone in these by-paths with a
+man of your age and position, and whose sojourn in the neighbourhood,
+without any ostensible object or motive, has already begun to excite
+conjecture. I do not for a moment assume that you regard my niece in any
+other light than that of an artless child, whose originality of tastes
+or fancy may serve to amuse you; and still less do I suppose that she
+is in danger of misrepresenting any attentions on your part. But for her
+sake I am bound to consider what others may say. Excuse me, then, if I
+add that I think you are also bound in honour and in good feeling to do
+the same. Mr. Chillingly, it would give me a great sense of relief if it
+suited your plans to move from the neighbourhood."
+
+"My dear Mrs. Cameron," answered Kenelm, who had listened to this speech
+with imperturbable calm of visage, "I thank you much for your candour,
+and I am glad to have this opportunity of informing you that I am about
+to move from this neighbourhood, with the hope of returning to it in
+a very few days and rectifying your mistake as to the point of view
+in which I regard your niece. In a word," here the expression of his
+countenance and the tone of his voice underwent a sudden change, "it is
+the dearest wish of my heart to be empowered by my parents to assure you
+of the warmth with which they will welcome your niece as their daughter,
+should she deign to listen to my suit and intrust me with the charge of
+her happiness."
+
+Mrs. Cameron stopped short, gazing into his face with a look of
+inexpressible dismay.
+
+"No! Mr. Chillingly," she exclaimed, "this must not be,--cannot be. Put
+out of your mind an idea so wild. A young man's senseless romance.
+Your parents cannot consent to your union with my niece; I tell you
+beforehand they cannot."
+
+"But why?" asked Kenelm, with a slight smile, and not much impressed by
+the vehemence of Mrs. Cameron's adjuration.
+
+"Why?" she repeated passionately; and then recovering something of her
+habitual weariness of quiet. "The why is easily explained. Mr. Kenelm
+Chillingly is the heir of a very ancient house and, I am told, of
+considerable estates. Lily Mordaunt is a nobody, an orphan, without
+fortune, without connection, the ward of a humbly born artist, to
+whom she owes the roof that shelters her; she is without the ordinary
+education of a gentlewoman; she has seen nothing of the world in which
+you move. Your parents have not the right to allow a son so young
+as yourself to throw himself out of his proper sphere by a rash and
+imprudent alliance. And, never would I consent, never would Walter
+Melville consent, to her entering into any family reluctant to receive
+her. There,--that is enough. Dismiss the notion so lightly entertained.
+And farewell."
+
+"Madam," answered Kenelm very earnestly, "believe me, that had I not
+entertained the hope approaching to conviction that the reasons you urge
+against my presumption will not have the weight with my parents which
+you ascribe to them, I should not have spoken to you thus frankly. Young
+though I be, still I might fairly claim the right to choose for myself
+in marriage. But I gave to my father a very binding promise that I would
+not formally propose to any one till I had acquainted him with my desire
+to do so, and obtained his approval of my choice; and he is the last man
+in the world who would withhold that approval where my heart is set on
+it as it is now. I want no fortune with a wife, and should I ever care
+to advance my position in the world, no connection would help me like
+the approving smile of the woman I love. There is but one qualification
+which my parents would deem they had the right to exact from my
+choice of one who is to bear our name. I mean that she should have the
+appearance, the manners, the principles, and--my mother at least might
+add--the birth of a gentlewoman. Well, as to appearance and manners, I
+have seen much of fine society from my boyhood, and found no one among
+the highest born who can excel the exquisite refinement of every look,
+and the inborn delicacy of every thought, in her of whom, if mine, I
+shall be as proud as I shall be fond. As to defects in the frippery
+and tinsel of a boarding-school education, they are very soon remedied.
+Remains only the last consideration,--birth. Mrs. Braefield informs me
+that you have assured her that, though circumstances into which as yet
+I have no right to inquire, have made her the ward of a man of humble
+origin, Miss Mordaunt is of gentle birth. Do you deny that?"
+
+"No," said Mrs. Cameron, hesitating, but with a flash of pride in her
+eyes as she went on. "No. I cannot deny that my niece is descended from
+those who, in point of birth, were not unequal to your own ancestors.
+But what of that?" she added, with a bitter despondency of tone.
+"Equality of birth ceases when one falls into poverty, obscurity,
+neglect, nothingness!"
+
+"Really this is a morbid habit on your part. But, since we have thus
+spoken so confidentially, will you not empower me to answer the question
+which will probably be put to me, and the answer to which will, I doubt
+not, remove every obstacle in the way of my happiness? Whatever the
+reasons which might very sufficiently induce you to preserve, whilst
+living so quietly in this place, a discreet silence as to the parentage
+of Miss Mordaunt and your own,--and I am well aware that those whom
+altered circumstances of fortune have compelled to altered modes of life
+may disdain to parade to strangers the pretensions to a higher station
+than that to which they reconcile their habits,--whatever, I say,
+such reasons for silence to strangers, should they preclude you from
+confiding to me, an aspirant to your niece's hand, a secret which, after
+all, cannot be concealed from her future husband?"
+
+"From her future husband? of course not," answered Mrs. Cameron. "But I
+decline to be questioned by one whom I may never see again, and of whom
+I know so little. I decline, indeed, to assist in removing any obstacle
+to a union with my niece, which I hold to be in every way unsuited to
+either party. I have no cause even to believe that my niece would accept
+you if you were free to propose to her. You have not, I presume, spoken
+to her as an aspirant to her hand. You have not addressed to her
+any declaration of your attachment, or sought to extract from her
+inexperience any words that warrant you in thinking that her heart will
+break if she never sees you again."
+
+"I do not merit such cruel and taunting questions," said Kenelm,
+indignantly. "But I will say no more now. When we again meet let me hope
+you will treat me less unkindly. Adieu!"
+
+"Stay, sir. A word or two more. You persist in asking your father and
+Lady Chillingly to consent to your proposal to Miss Mordaunt?"
+
+"Certainly I do."
+
+"And you will promise me, on your word as a gentleman, to state fairly
+all the causes which might fairly operate against their consent,--the
+poverty, the humble rearing, the imperfect education of my niece,--so
+that they might not hereafter say you had entrapped their consent, and
+avenge themselves for your deceit by contempt for her?"
+
+"Ah, madam, madam, you really try my patience too far. But take my
+promise, if you can hold that of value from one whom you can suspect of
+deliberate deceit."
+
+"I beg your pardon, Mr. Chillingly. Bear with my rudeness. I have been
+so taken by surprise, I scarcely know what I am saying. But let us
+understand each other completely before we part. If your parents
+withhold their consent you will communicate it to me; me only, not to
+Lily. I repeat I know nothing of the state of her affections. But it
+might embitter any girl's life to be led on to love one whom she could
+not marry."
+
+"It shall be as you say. But if they do consent?"
+
+"Then you will speak to me before you seek an interview with Lily, for
+then comes another question: Will her guardian consent?--and--and--"
+
+"And what?"
+
+"No matter. I rely on your honour in this request, as in all else.
+Good-day."
+
+She turned back with hurried footsteps, muttering to herself, "But they
+will not consent. Heaven grant that they will not consent, or if they
+do, what--what is to be said or done? Oh, that Walter Melville were
+here, or that I knew where to write to him!"
+
+On his way back to Cromwell Lodge, Kenelm was overtaken by the vicar.
+
+"I was coming to you, my dear Mr. Chillingly, first to thank you for the
+very pretty present with which you have gladdened the heart of my little
+Clemmy, and next to ask you to come with me quietly to-day to meet Mr.
+-----, the celebrated antiquarian, who came to Moleswich this morning
+at my request to examine that old Gothic tomb in our churchyard. Only
+think, though he cannot read the inscription any better than we can, he
+knows all about its history. It seems that a young knight renowned for
+feats of valour in the reign of Henry IV. married a daughter of one of
+those great Earls of Montfichet who were then the most powerful family
+in these parts. He was slain in defending the church from an assault by
+some disorderly rioters of the Lollard faction; he fell on the very spot
+where the tomb is now placed. That accounts for its situation in the
+churchyard, not within the fabric. Mr. ----- discovered this fact in
+an old memoir of the ancient and once famous family to which the young
+knight Albert belonged, and which came, alas! to so shameful an end,
+the Fletwodes, Barons of Fletwode and Malpas. What a triumph over pretty
+Lily Mordaunt, who always chose to imagine that the tomb must be that of
+some heroine of her own romantic invention! Do come to dinner; Mr. -----
+is a most agreeable man, and full of interesting anecdotes."
+
+"I am so sorry I cannot. I am obliged to return home at once for a few
+days. That old family of Fletwode! I think I see before me, while we
+speak, the gray tower in which they once held sway; and the last of the
+race following Mammon along the Progress of the Age,--a convicted felon!
+What a terrible satire on the pride of birth!"
+
+Kenelm left Cromwell Lodge that evening, but he still kept on his
+apartments there, saying he might be back unexpectedly any day in the
+course of the next week.
+
+He remained two days in London, wishing all that he had communicated to
+Sir Peter in writing to sink into his father's heart before a personal
+appeal to it.
+
+The more he revolved the ungracious manner in which Mrs. Cameron had
+received his confidence, the less importance he attached to it. An
+exaggerated sense of disparities of fortune in a person who appeared
+to him to have the pride so common to those who have known better days,
+coupled with a nervous apprehension lest his family should ascribe to
+her any attempt to ensnare a very young man of considerable worldly
+pretensions into a marriage with a penniless niece, seemed to account
+for much that had at first perplexed and angered him. And if, as he
+conjectured, Mrs. Cameron had once held a much higher position in the
+world than she did now,--a conjecture warranted by a certain peculiar
+conventional undeniable elegance which characterized her habitual
+manner,--and was now, as she implied, actually a dependant on the bounty
+of a painter who had only just acquired some professional distinction,
+she might well shrink from the mortification of becoming an object of
+compassion to her richer neighbours; nor, when he came to think of it,
+had he any more right than those neighbours to any confidence as to
+her own or Lily's parentage, so long as he was not formally entitled to
+claim admission into her privity.
+
+London seemed to him intolerably dull and wearisome. He called nowhere
+except at Lady Glenalvon's; he was glad to hear from the servants that
+she was still at Exmundham. He relied much on the influence of the queen
+of the fashion with his mother, whom he knew would be more difficult to
+persuade than Sir Peter, nor did he doubt that he should win to his side
+that sympathizing and warm-hearted queen.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+IT is somewhere about three weeks since the party invited by Sir Peter
+and Lady Chillingly assembled at Exmundham, and they are still there,
+though people invited to a country house have seldom compassion
+enough for the dulness of its owner to stay more than three days. Mr.
+Chillingly Mivers, indeed, had not exceeded that orthodox limit. Quietly
+observant, during his stay, of young Gordon's manner towards Cecilia,
+and hers towards him, he had satisfied himself that there was no
+cause to alarm Sir Peter, or induce the worthy baronet to regret the
+invitation he had given to that clever kinsman. For all the visitors
+remaining Exmundham had a charm.
+
+To Lady Glenalvon, because in the hostess she met her most familiar
+friend when both were young girls, and because it pleased her to note
+the interest which Cecilia Travers took in the place so associated with
+memories of the man to whom it was Lady Glenalvon's hope to see her
+united. To Chillingly Gordon, because no opportunity could be so
+favourable for his own well-concealed designs on the hand and heart of
+the heiress. To the heiress herself the charm needs no explanation.
+
+To Leopold Travers the attractions of Exmundham were unquestionably less
+fascinating. Still even he was well pleased to prolong his stay. His
+active mind found amusement in wandering over an estate the acreage of
+which would have warranted a much larger rental, and lecturing Sir Peter
+on the old-fashioned system of husbandry which that good-natured easy
+proprietor permitted his tenants to adopt, as well as on the number of
+superfluous hands that were employed on the pleasure-grounds and in the
+general management of the estate, such as carpenters, sawyers, woodmen,
+bricklayers, and smiths.
+
+When the Squire said, "You could do just as well with a third of those
+costly dependants," Sir Peter, unconsciously plagiarizing the answer of
+the old French grand seigneur, replied, "Very likely. But the question
+is, could the rest do just as well without me?"
+
+Exmundham, indeed, was a very expensive place to keep up. The house,
+built by some ambitious Chillingly three centuries ago, would have been
+large for an owner of thrice the revenues; and though the flower-garden
+was smaller than that at Braefieldville, there were paths and drives
+through miles of young plantations and old woodlands that furnished lazy
+occupation to an army of labourers. No wonder that, despite his nominal
+ten thousand a year, Sir Peter was far from being a rich man. Exmundham
+devoured at least half the rental. The active mind of Leopold Travers
+also found ample occupation in the stores of his host's extensive
+library.
+
+Travers, never much of a reader, was by no means a despiser of learning,
+and he soon took to historical and archaeological researches with the
+ardour of a man who must always throw energy into any pursuit that
+occasion presents as an escape from indolence. Indolent Leopold Travers
+never could be. But, more than either of these resources of occupation,
+the companionship of Chillingly Gordon excited his interest and
+quickened the current of his thoughts. Always fond of renewing his own
+youth in the society of the young, and of the sympathizing temperament
+which belongs to cordial natures, he had, as we have seen, entered very
+heartily into the ambition of George Belvoir, and reconciled himself
+very pliably to the humours of Kenelm Chillingly. But the first of these
+two was a little too commonplace, the second a little too eccentric, to
+enlist the complete good-fellowship which, being alike very clever and
+very practical, Leopold Travers established with that very clever and
+very practical representative of the rising generation, Chillingly
+Gordon. Between them there was this meeting-ground, political and
+worldly, a great contempt for innocuous old-fashioned notions; added to
+which, in the mind of Leopold Travers, was a contempt--which would
+have been complete, but that the contempt admitted dread--of harmful
+new-fashioned notions which, interpreted by his thoughts, threatened
+ruin to his country and downfall to the follies of existent society,
+and which, interpreted by his language, tamed itself into the man of the
+world's phrase, "Going too far for me." Notions which, by the much
+more cultivated intellect and the immeasurably more soaring ambition of
+Chillingly Gordon, might be viewed and criticised thus: "Could I accept
+these doctrines? I don't see my way to being Prime Minister of a country
+in which religion and capital are still powers to be consulted. And,
+putting aside religion and capital, I don't see how, if these doctrines
+passed into law, with a good coat on my back I should not be a sufferer.
+Either I, as having a good coat, should have it torn off my back as a
+capitalist, or, if I remonstrated in the name of moral honesty, be put
+to death as a religionist."
+
+Therefore when Leopold Travers said, "Of course we must go on,"
+Chillingly Gordon smiled and answered, "Certainly, go on." And when
+Leopold Travers added, "But we may go too far," Chillingly Gordon shook
+his dead, and replied, "How true that is! Certainly too far."
+
+Apart from the congeniality of political sentiment, there were other
+points of friendly contact between the older and younger man. Each was
+an exceedingly pleasant man of the world; and, though Leopold Travers
+could not have plumbed certain deeps in Chillingly Gordon's nature,--and
+in every man's nature there are deeps which his ablest observer cannot
+fathom,--yet he was not wrong when he said to himself, "Gordon is a
+gentleman."
+
+Utterly would my readers misconceive that very clever young man, if they
+held him to be a hypocrite like Blifil or Joseph Surface. Chillingly
+Gordon, in every private sense of the word, was a gentleman. If he had
+staked his whole fortune on a rubber at whist, and an undetected glance
+at his adversary's hand would have made the difference between loss and
+gain, he would have turned away his head and said, "Hold up your cards."
+Neither, as I have had occasion to explain before, was he actuated
+by any motive in common with the vulgar fortune-hunter in his secret
+resolve to win the hand of the heiress. He recognized no inequality of
+worldly gifts between them. He said to himself, "Whatever she may give
+me in money, I shall amply repay in worldly position if I succeed, and
+succeed I certainly shall. If I were as rich as Lord Westminster, and
+still cared about being Prime Minister, I should select her as the most
+fitting woman I have seen for a Prime Minister's wife."
+
+It must be acknowledged that this sort of self-commune, if not that of
+a very ardent lover, is very much that of a sensible man setting high
+value on himself, bent on achieving the prizes of a public career, and
+desirous of securing in his wife a woman who would adorn the station
+to which he confidently aspired. In fact, no one so able as Chillingly
+Gordon would ever have conceived the ambition of being Minister of
+England if in all that in private life constitutes the English gentleman
+he could be fairly subject to reproach.
+
+He was but in public life what many a gentleman honest in private life
+has been before him, an ambitious, resolute egotist, by no means without
+personal affections, but holding them all subordinate to the objects
+of personal ambition, and with no more of other principle than that
+of expediency in reference to his own career than would cover a silver
+penny. But expediency in itself he deemed the statesman's only rational
+principle. And to the consideration of expediency he brought a very
+unprejudiced intellect, quite fitted to decide whether the public
+opinion of a free and enlightened people was for turning St. Paul's
+Cathedral into an Agapemone or not.
+
+During the summer weeks he had thus vouchsafed to the turfs and groves
+of Exmundham, Leopold Travers was not the only person whose good opinion
+Chillingly Gordon had ingratiated. He had won the warmest approbation
+from Mrs. Campion. His conversation reminded her of that which she had
+enjoyed in the house of her departed spouse. In talking with Cecilia she
+was fond of contrasting him to Kenelm, not to the favour of the
+latter, whose humours she utterly failed to understand, and whom she
+pertinaciously described as "so affected." "A most superior young man
+Mr. Gordon, so well informed, so sensible,--above all, so natural." Such
+was her judgment upon the unavowed candidate to Cecilia's hand; and
+Mrs. Campion required no avowal to divine the candidature. Even Lady
+Glenalvon had begun to take friendly interest in the fortunes of this
+promising young man. Most women can sympathize with youthful ambition.
+He impressed her with a deep conviction of his abilities, and still more
+with respect for their concentration upon practical objects of power
+and renown. She too, like Mrs. Campion, began to draw comparisons
+unfavourable to Kenelm between the two cousins: the one seemed so
+slothfully determined to hide his candle under a bushel, the other so
+honestly disposed to set his light before men. She felt also annoyed and
+angry that Kenelm was thus absenting himself from the paternal home at
+the very time of her first visit to it, and when he had so felicitous
+an opportunity of seeing more of the girl in whom he knew that Lady
+Glenalvon deemed he might win, if he would properly woo, the wife that
+would best suit him. So that when one day Mrs. Campion, walking through
+the gardens alone with Lady Glenalvon while from the gardens into the
+park went Chillingly Gordon, arm-in-arm with Leopold Travers, abruptly
+asked, "Don't you think that Mr. Gordon is smitten with Cecilia, though
+he, with his moderate fortune, does not dare to say so? And don't you
+think that any girl, if she were as rich as Cecilia will be, would be
+more proud of such a husband as Chillingly Gordon than of some silly
+earl?"
+
+Lady Glenalvon answered curtly, but somewhat sorrowfully, "Yes."
+
+After a pause she added, "There is a man with whom I did once think she
+would have been happier than with any other. One man who ought to be
+dearer to me than Mr. Gordon, for he saved the life of my son, and who,
+though perhaps less clever than Mr. Gordon, still has a great deal of
+talent within him, which might come forth and make him--what shall I
+say?--a useful and distinguished member of society, if married to a girl
+so sure of raising any man she marries as Cecilia Travers. But if I am
+to renounce that hope, and look through the range of young men brought
+under my notice, I don't know one, putting aside consideration of rank
+and fortune, I should prefer for a clever daughter who went heart and
+soul with the ambition of a clever man. But, Mrs. Campion, I have not
+yet quite renounced my hope; and, unless I do, I yet think there is one
+man to whom I would rather give Cecilia, if she were my daughter."
+
+Therewith Lady Glenalvon so decidedly broke off the subject of
+conversation that Mrs. Campion could not have renewed it without such a
+breach of the female etiquette of good breeding as Mrs. Campion was the
+last person to adventure.
+
+Lady Chillingly could not help being pleased with Gordon. He was light
+in hand, served to amuse her guests, and made up a rubber of whist in
+case of need.
+
+There were two persons, however, with whom Gordon made no ground;
+namely, Parson John and Sir Peter. When Travers praised him one day for
+the solidity of his parts and the soundness of his judgment, the Parson
+replied snappishly, "Yes, solid and sound as one of those tables you
+buy at a broker's; the thickness of the varnish hides the defects in
+the joints: the whole framework is rickety." But when the Parson was
+indignantly urged to state the reason by which he arrived at so harsh
+a conclusion, he could only reply by an assertion which seemed to his
+questioner a declamatory burst of parsonic intolerance.
+
+"Because," said Parson John, "he has no love for man, and no reverence
+for God. And no character is sound and solid which enlarges its surface
+at the expense of its supports."
+
+On the other hand, the favour with which Sir Peter had at first regarded
+Gordon gradually vanished, in proportion as, acting on the hint Mivers
+had originally thrown out but did not deem it necessary to repeat, he
+watched the pains which the young man took to insinuate himself into
+the good graces of Mr. Travers and Mrs. Campion, and the artful and
+half-suppressed gallantry of his manner to the heiress.
+
+Perhaps Gordon had not ventured thus "to feel his way" till after Mivers
+had departed; or perhaps Sir Peter's parental anxiety rendered him, in
+this instance, a shrewder observer than was the man of the world,
+whose natural acuteness was, in matters of affection, not unfrequently
+rendered languid by his acquired philosophy of indifferentism.
+
+More and more every day, every hour, of her sojourn beneath his roof,
+did Cecilia become dearer to Sir Peter, and stronger and stronger became
+his wish to secure her for his daughter-in-law. He was inexpressibly
+flattered by her preference for his company: ever at hand to share his
+customary walks, his kindly visits to the cottages of peasants or the
+homesteads of petty tenants; wherein both were sure to hear many a
+simple anecdote of Master Kenelm in his childhood, anecdotes of whim or
+good-nature, of considerate pity or reckless courage.
+
+Throughout all these varieties of thought or feeling in the social
+circle around her, Lady Chillingly preserved the unmoved calm of her
+dignified position. A very good woman certainly, and very ladylike. No
+one could detect a flaw in her character, or a fold awry in her flounce.
+She was only, like the gods of Epicurus, too good to trouble her serene
+existence with the cares of us simple mortals. Not that she was without
+a placid satisfaction in the tribute which the world laid upon her
+altars; nor was she so supremely goddess-like as to soar above the
+household affections which humanity entails on the dwellers and denizens
+of earth. She liked her husband as much as most elderly wives like their
+elderly husbands. She bestowed upon Kenelm a liking somewhat more warm,
+and mingled with compassion. His eccentricities would have puzzled her,
+if she had allowed herself to be puzzled: it troubled her less to pity
+them. She did not share her husband's desire for his union with Cecilia.
+She thought that her son would have a higher place in the county if he
+married Lady Jane, the Duke of Clanville's daughter; and "that is what
+he ought to do," said Lady Chillingly to herself. She entertained
+none of the fear that had induced Sir Peter to extract from Kenelm
+the promise not to pledge his hand before he had received his father's
+consent. That the son of Lady Chillingly should make a _mesalliance_,
+however crotchety he might be in other respects, was a thought that it
+would have so disturbed her to admit that she did not admit it.
+
+Such was the condition of things at Exmundham when the lengthy
+communication of Kenelm reached Sir Peter's hands.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VIII.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+NEVER in his whole life had the mind of Sir Peter been so agitated as it
+was during and after the perusal of Kenelm's flighty composition. He had
+received it at the breakfast-table, and, opening it eagerly, ran his eye
+hastily over the contents, till he very soon arrived at sentences
+which appalled him. Lady Chillingly, who was fortunately busied at the
+tea-urn, did not observe the dismay on his countenance. It was visible
+only to Cecilia and to Gordon. Neither guessed who that letter was from.
+
+"No bad news, I hope," said Cecilia, softly.
+
+"Bad news," echoed Sir Peter. "No, my dear, no; a letter on business.
+It seems terribly long," and he thrust the packet into his pocket,
+muttering, "see to it by and by."
+
+"That slovenly farmer of yours, Mr. Nostock, has failed, I suppose,"
+said Mr. Travers, looking up and observing a quiver on his host's
+lip. "I told you he would,--a fine farm too. Let me choose you another
+tenant."
+
+Sir Peter shook his head with a wan smile.
+
+"Nostock will not fail. There have been six generations of Nostocks on
+the farm."
+
+"So I should guess," said Travers, dryly.
+
+"And--and," faltered Sir Peter, "if the last of the race fails, he must
+lean upon me, and--if one of the two break down--it shall not be--"
+
+"Shall not be that cross-cropping blockhead, my dear Sir Peter. This is
+carrying benevolence too far."
+
+Here the tact and _savoir vivre_ of Chillingly Gordon came to the rescue
+of the host. Possessing himself of the "Times" newspaper, he uttered an
+exclamation of surprise, genuine or simulated, and read aloud an extract
+from the leading article, announcing an impending change in the Cabinet.
+
+As soon as he could quit the breakfast-table, Sir Peter hurried into
+his library and there gave himself up to the study of Kenelm's unwelcome
+communication. The task took him long, for he stopped at intervals,
+overcome by the struggle of his heart, now melted into sympathy with the
+passionate eloquence of a son hitherto so free from amorous romance, and
+now sorrowing for the ruin of his own cherished hopes. This uneducated
+country girl would never be such a helpmate to a man like Kenelm as
+would have been Cecilia Travers. At length, having finished the letter,
+he buried his head between his clasped hands, and tried hard to
+realize the situation that placed the father and son into such direct
+antagonism.
+
+"But," he murmured, "after all it is the boy's happiness that must be
+consulted. If he will not be happy in my way, what right have I to say
+that he shall not be happy in his?"
+
+Just then Cecilia came softly into the room. She had acquired the
+privilege of entering his library at will; sometimes to choose a book of
+his recommendation, sometimes to direct and seal his letters,--Sir Peter
+was grateful to any one who saved him an extra trouble,--and
+sometimes, especially at this hour, to decoy him forth into his wonted
+constitutional walk.
+
+He lifted his face at the sound of her approaching tread and her winning
+voice, and the face was so sad that the tears rushed to her eyes on
+seeing it. She laid her hand on his shoulder, and said pleadingly, "Dear
+Sir Peter, what is it,--what is it?"
+
+"Ah--ah, my dear," said Sir Peter, gathering up the scattered sheets of
+Kenelm's effusion with hurried, trembling hands. "Don't ask,--don't talk
+of it; 'tis but one of the disappointments that all of us must undergo,
+when we invest our hopes in the uncertain will of others."
+
+Then, observing that the tears were trickling down the girl's fair, pale
+cheeks, he took her hand in both his, kissed her forehead, and said,
+whisperingly, "Pretty one, how good you have been to me! Heaven bless
+you. What a wife you will be to some man!"
+
+Thus saying, he shambled out of the room through the open casement. She
+followed him impulsively, wonderingly; but before she reached his side
+he turned round, waved his hand with a gently repelling gesture, and
+went his way alone through dense fir-groves which had been planted in
+honour of Kenelm's birth.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+KENELM arrived at Exmundham just in time to dress for dinner. His
+arrival was not unexpected, for the morning after his father had
+received his communication, Sir Peter had said to Lady Chillingly--"that
+he had heard from Kenelm to the effect that he might be down any day."
+
+"Quite time he should come," said Lady Chillingly. "Have you his letter
+about you?"
+
+"No, my dear Caroline. Of course he sends you his kindest love, poor
+fellow."
+
+"Why poor fellow? Has he been ill?"
+
+"No; but there seems to be something on his mind. If so we must do what
+we can to relieve it. He is the best of sons, Caroline."
+
+"I am sure I have nothing to say against him, except," added her
+Ladyship, reflectively, "that I do wish he were a little more like other
+young men."
+
+"Hum--like Chillingly Gordon, for instance?"
+
+"Well, yes; Mr. Gordon is a remarkably well-bred, sensible young man.
+How different from that disagreeable, bearish father of his, who went to
+law with you!"
+
+"Very different indeed, but with just as much of the Chillingly blood in
+him. How the Chillinglys ever gave birth to a Kenelm is a question much
+more puzzling."
+
+"Oh, my dear Sir Peter, don't be metaphysical. You know how I hate
+puzzles."
+
+"And yet, Caroline, I have to thank you for a puzzle which I can never
+interpret by my brain. There are a great many puzzles in human nature
+which can only be interpreted by the heart."
+
+"Very true," said Lady Chillingly. "I suppose Kenelm is to have his old
+room, just opposite to Mr. Gordon's."
+
+"Ay--ay, just opposite. Opposite they will be all their lives. Only
+think, Caroline, I have made a discovery!"
+
+"Dear me! I hope not. Your discoveries are generally very expensive, and
+bring us in contact with such very odd people."
+
+"This discovery shall not cost us a penny, and I don't know any people
+so odd as not to comprehend it. Briefly it is this: To genius the
+first requisite is heart; it is no requisite at all to talent. My dear
+Caroline, Gordon has as much talent as any young man I know, but he
+wants the first requisite of genius. I am not by any means sure that
+Kenelm has genius, but there is no doubt that he has the first requisite
+of genius,--heart. Heart is a very perplexing, wayward, irrational
+thing; and that perhaps accounts for the general incapacity to
+comprehend genius, while any fool can comprehend talent. My dear
+Caroline, you know that it is very seldom, not more than once in three
+years, that I presume to have a will of my own against a will of yours;
+but should there come a question in which our son's heart is concerned,
+then (speaking between ourselves) my will must govern yours."
+
+"Sir Peter is growing more odd every day," said Lady Chillingly to
+herself when left alone. "But he does not mean ill, and there are worse
+husbands in the world."
+
+Therewith she rang for her maid, gave requisite orders for the preparing
+of Kenelm's room, which had not been slept in for many months, and then
+consulted that functionary as to the adaptation of some dress of hers,
+too costly to be laid aside, to the style of some dress less costly
+which Lady Glenalvon had imported from Paris as _la derniere mode_.
+
+On the very day on which Kenelm arrived at Exmundham, Chillingly Gordon
+had received this letter from Mr. Gerald Danvers.
+
+
+DEAR GORDON,--In the ministerial changes announced as rumour in the
+public papers, and which you may accept as certain, that sweet little
+cherub--is to be sent to sit up aloft and pray there for the life of
+poor Jack; namely, of the government he leaves below. In accepting the
+peerage, which I persuaded him to do,--creates a vacancy for the
+borough of -----, just the place for you, far better in every way than
+Saxborough. ----- promises to recommend you to his committee. Come to
+town at once. Yours, etc.
+
+ G. DANVERS.
+
+
+Gordon showed this letter to Mr. Travers, and, on receiving the hearty
+good-wishes of that gentleman, said, with emotion partly genuine, partly
+assumed, "You cannot guess all that the realization of your good-wishes
+would be. Once in the House of Commons, and my motives for action are
+so strong that--do not think me very conceited if I count upon
+Parliamentary success."
+
+"My clear Gordon, I am as certain of your success as I am of my own
+existence."
+
+"Should I succeed,--should the great prizes of public life be within
+my reach,--should I lift myself into a position that would warrant my
+presumption, do you think I could come to you and say, 'There is an
+object of ambition dearer to me than power and office,--the hope of
+attaining which was the strongest of all my motives of action? And in
+that hope shall I also have the good-wishes of the father of Cecilia
+Travers?"
+
+"My dear fellow, give me your hand; you speak manfully and candidly as a
+gentleman should speak. I answer in the same spirit. I don't pretend
+to say that I have not entertained views for Cecilia which included
+hereditary rank and established fortune in a suitor to her hand, though
+I never should have made them imperative conditions. I am neither
+potentate nor _parvenu_ enough for that; and I can never forget" (here
+every muscle in the man's face twitched) "that I myself married for
+love, and was so happy. How happy Heaven only knows! Still, if you had
+thus spoken a few weeks ago, I should not have replied very favourably
+to your question. But now that I have seen so much of you, my answer is
+this: If you lose your election,--if you don't come into Parliament
+at all, you have my good-wishes all the same. If you win my daughter's
+heart, there is no man on whom I would more willingly bestow her hand.
+There she is, by herself too, in the garden. Go and talk to her."
+
+Gordon hesitated. He knew too well that he had not won her heart, though
+he had no suspicion that it was given to another. And he was much
+too clever not to know also how much he hazards who, in affairs of
+courtship, is premature.
+
+"Ah!" he said, "I cannot express my gratitude for words so generous,
+encouragement so cheering. But I have never yet dared to utter to Miss
+Travers a word that would prepare her even to harbour a thought of me as
+a suitor. And I scarcely think I should have the courage to go through
+this election with the grief of her rejection on my heart."
+
+"Well, go in and win the election first; meanwhile, at all events, take
+leave of Cecilia."
+
+Gordon left his friend, and joined Miss Travers, resolved not indeed
+to risk a formal declaration, but to sound his way to his chances of
+acceptance.
+
+The interview was very brief. He did sound his way skilfully, and felt
+it very unsafe for his footsteps. The advantage of having gained the
+approval of the father was too great to be lost altogether, by one of
+those decided answers on the part of the daughter which allow of no
+appeal, especially to a poor gentleman who wooes an heiress.
+
+He returned to Travers, and said simply, "I bear with me her good-wishes
+as well as yours. That is all. I leave myself in your kind hands."
+
+Then he hurried away to take leave of his host and hostess, say a few
+significant words to the ally he had already gained in Mrs. Campion, and
+within an hour was on his road to London, passing on his way the train
+that bore Kenelm to Exmundham. Gordon was in high spirits. At least he
+felt as certain of winning Cecilia as he did of winning his election.
+
+"I have never yet failed in what I desired," said he to himself,
+"because I have ever taken pains not to fail."
+
+The cause of Gordon's sudden departure created a great excitement in
+that quiet circle, shared by all except Cecilia and Sir Peter.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+KENELM did not see either father or mother till he appeared at dinner.
+Then he was seated next to Cecilia. There was but little conversation
+between the two; in fact, the prevalent subject of talk was general and
+engrossing, the interest in Chillingly Gordon's election; predictions
+of his success, of what he would do in Parliament. "Where," said Lady
+Glenalvon, "there is such a dearth of rising young men, that if he were
+only half as clever as he is he would be a gain."
+
+"A gain to what?" asked Sir Peter, testily. "To his country? about which
+I don't believe he cares a brass button."
+
+To this assertion Leopold Travers replied warmly, and was not less
+warmly backed by Mrs. Campion.
+
+"For my part," said Lady Glenalvon, in conciliatory accents, "I think
+every able man in Parliament is a gain to the country; and he may not
+serve his country less effectively because he does not boast of his
+love for it. The politicians I dread most are those so rampant in France
+nowadays, the bawling patriots. When Sir Robert Walpole said, 'All
+those men have their price,' he pointed to the men who called themselves
+'patriots.'"
+
+"Bravo!" cried Travers.
+
+"Sir Robert Walpole showed his love for his country by corrupting it.
+There are many ways besides bribing for corrupting a country," said
+Kenelm, mildly, and that was Kenelm's sole contribution to the general
+conversation.
+
+It was not till the rest of the party had retired to rest that the
+conference, longed for by Kenelm, dreaded by Sir Peter, took place in
+the library. It lasted deep into the night; both parted with lightened
+hearts and a fonder affection for each other. Kenelm had drawn so
+charming a picture of the Fairy, and so thoroughly convinced Sir Peter
+that his own feelings towards her were those of no passing youthful
+fancy, but of that love which has its roots in the innermost heart,
+that though it was still with a sigh, a deep sigh, that he dismissed
+the thought of Cecilia, Sir Peter did dismiss it; and, taking comfort at
+last from the positive assurance that Lily was of gentle birth, and
+the fact that her name of Mordaunt was that of ancient and illustrious
+houses, said, with half a smile, "It might have been worse, my dear
+boy. I began to be afraid that, in spite of the teachings of Mivers and
+Welby, it was 'The Miller's Daughter,' after all. But we still have
+a difficult task to persuade your poor mother. In covering your first
+flight from our roof I unluckily put into her head the notion of Lady
+Jane, a duke's daughter, and the notion has never got out of it. That
+comes of fibbing."
+
+"I count on Lady Glenalvon's influence on my mother in support of
+your own," said Kenelm. "If so accepted an oracle in the great world
+pronounce in my favour, and promise to present my wife at Court and
+bring her into fashion, I think that my mother will consent to allow us
+to reset the old family diamonds for her next reappearance in London.
+And then, too, you can tell her that I will stand for the county. I will
+go into Parliament, and if I meet there our clever cousin, and find that
+he does not care a brass button for the country, take my word for it, I
+will lick him more easily than I licked Tom Bowles."
+
+"Tom Bowles! who is he?--ah! I remember some letter of yours in which
+you spoke of a Bowles, whose favourite study was mankind, a moral
+philosopher."
+
+"Moral philosophers," answered Kenelm, "have so muddled their brains
+with the alcohol of new ideas that their moral legs have become shaky,
+and the humane would rather help them to bed than give them a licking.
+My Tom Bowles is a muscular Christian, who became no less muscular, but
+much more Christian, after he was licked."
+
+And in this pleasant manner these two oddities settled their conference,
+and went up to bed with arms wrapped round each other's shoulder.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+KENELM found it a much harder matter to win Lady Glenalvon to his side
+than he had anticipated. With the strong interest she had taken in
+Kenelm's future, she could not but revolt from the idea of his union
+with an obscure portionless girl whom he had only known a few weeks,
+and of whose very parentage he seemed to know nothing, save an assurance
+that she was his equal in birth. And, with the desire, which she had
+cherished almost as fondly as Sir Peter, that Kenelm might win a bride
+in every way so worthy of his choice as Cecilia Travers, she felt not
+less indignant than regretful at the overthrow of her plans.
+
+At first, indeed, she was so provoked that she would not listen to
+his pleadings. She broke away from him with a rudeness she had never
+exhibited to any one before, refused to grant him another interview in
+order to re-discuss the matter, and said that, so far from using her
+influence in favour of his romantic folly, she would remonstrate well
+with Lady Chillingly and Sir Peter against yielding their assent to his
+"thus throwing himself away."
+
+It was not till the third day after his arrival that, touched by the
+grave but haughty mournfulness of his countenance, she yielded to the
+arguments of Sir Peter in the course of a private conversation with that
+worthy baronet. Still it was reluctantly (she did not fulfil her threat
+of remonstrance with Lady Chillingly) that she conceded the point,
+that a son who, succeeding to the absolute fee-simple of an estate, had
+volunteered the resettlement of it on terms singularly generous to both
+his parents, was entitled to some sacrifice of their inclinations on a
+question in which he deemed his happiness vitally concerned; and that he
+was of age to choose for himself independently of their consent, but for
+a previous promise extracted from him by his father, a promise which,
+rigidly construed, was not extended to Lady Chillingly, but confined
+to Sir Peter as the head of the family and master of the household. The
+father's consent was already given, and, if in his reverence for both
+parents Kenelm could not dispense with his mother's approval, surely
+it was the part of a true friend to remove every scruple from his
+conscience, and smooth away every obstacle to a love not to be condemned
+because it was disinterested.
+
+After this conversation, Lady Glenalvon sought Kenelm, found him
+gloomily musing on the banks of the trout-stream, took his arm, led him
+into the sombre glades of the fir-grove, and listened patiently to
+all he had to say. Even then her woman's heart was not won to his
+reasonings, until he said pathetically, "You thanked me once for saving
+your son's life: you said then that you could never repay me; you can
+repay me tenfold. Could your son, who is now, we trust, in heaven, look
+down and judge between us, do you think he would approve you if you
+refuse?"
+
+Then Lady Glenalvon wept, and took his hand, kissed his forehead as
+a mother might kiss it, and said, "You triumph; I will go to Lady
+Chillingly at once. Marry her whom you so love, on one condition: marry
+her from my house."
+
+Lady Glenalvon was not one of those women who serve a friend by
+halves. She knew well how to propitiate and reason down the apathetic
+temperament of Lady Chillingly; she did not cease till that lady herself
+came into Kenelm's room, and said very quietly,--
+
+"So you are going to propose to Miss Mordaunt, the Warwickshire
+Mordaunts I suppose? Lady Glenalvon says she is a very lovely girl,
+and will stay with her before the wedding. And as the young lady is an
+orphan Lady Glenalvon's uncle the Duke, who is connected with the eldest
+branch of the Mordaunts, will give her away. It will be a very brilliant
+affair. I am sure I wish you happy; it is time you should have sown your
+wild oats."
+
+Two days after the consent thus formally given, Kenelm quitted
+Exmundham. Sir Peter would have accompanied him to pay his respects to
+the intended, but the agitation he had gone through brought on a sharp
+twinge of the gout, which consigned his feet to flannels.
+
+After Kenelm had gone, Lady Glenalvon went into Cecilia's room. Cecilia
+was seated very desolately by the open window. She had detected that
+something of an anxious and painful nature had been weighing upon the
+minds of father and son, and had connected it with the letter which had
+so disturbed the even mind of Sir Peter; but she did not divine what the
+something was, and if mortified by a certain reserve, more distant than
+heretofore, which had characterized Kenelm's manner towards herself,
+the mortification was less sensibly felt than a tender sympathy for the
+sadness she had observed on his face and yearned to soothe. His reserve
+had, however, made her own manner more reserved than of old, for which
+she was now rather chiding herself than reproaching him.
+
+Lady Glenalvon put her arms round Cecilia's neck and kissed her,
+whispering, "That man has so disappointed me: he is so unworthy of the
+happiness I had once hoped for him!"
+
+"Whom do you speak of?" murmured Cecilia, turning very pale.
+
+"Kenelm Chillingly. It seems that he has conceived a fancy for some
+penniless girl whom he has met in his wanderings, has come here to
+get the consent of his parents to propose to her, has obtained their
+consent, and is gone to propose."
+
+Cecilia remained silent for a moment with her eyes closed, then she
+said, "He is worthy of all happiness, and he would never make an
+unworthy choice. Heaven bless him--and--and--" She would have added,
+"his bride," but her lips refused to utter the word bride.
+
+"Cousin Gordon is worth ten of him," cried Lady Glenalvon, indignantly.
+
+She had served Kenelm, but she had not forgiven him.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+KENELM slept in London that night, and, the next day, being singularly
+fine for an English summer, he resolved to go to Moleswich on foot. He
+had no need this time to encumber himself with a knapsack; he had left
+sufficient change of dress in his lodgings at Cromwell Lodge.
+
+It was towards the evening when he found himself in one of the prettiest
+rural villages by which
+
+
+ "Wanders the hoary Thames along
+ His silver-winding way."
+
+
+It was not in the direct road from London to Moleswich, but it was a
+pleasanter way for a pedestrian. And when, quitting the long street of
+the sultry village, he came to the shelving margin of the river, he was
+glad to rest a while, enjoy the cool of the rippling waters, and listen
+to their placid murmurs amid the rushes in the bordering shallows. He
+had ample time before him. His rambles while at Cromwell Lodge had made
+him familiar with the district for miles round Moleswich, and he knew
+that a footpath through the fields at the right would lead him, in less
+than an hour, to the side of the tributary brook on which Cromwell Lodge
+was placed, opposite the wooden bridge which conducted to Grasmere and
+Moleswich.
+
+To one who loves the romance of history, English history, the whole
+course of the Thames is full of charm. Ah! could I go back to the days
+in which younger generations than that of Kenelm Chillingly were unborn,
+when every wave of the Rhine spoke of history and romance to me, what
+fairies should meet on thy banks, O thou our own Father Thames! Perhaps
+some day a German pilgrim may repay tenfold to thee the tribute rendered
+by the English kinsman to the Father Rhine.
+
+Listening to the whispers of the reeds, Kenelm Chillingly felt the
+haunting influence of the legendary stream. Many a poetic incident or
+tradition in antique chronicle, many a votive rhyme in song, dear to
+forefathers whose very names have become a poetry to us, thronged dimly
+and confusedly back to his memory, which had little cared to retain such
+graceful trinkets in the treasure-house of love. But everything that,
+from childhood upward, connects itself with romance, revives with yet
+fresher bloom in the memories of him who loves.
+
+And to this man, through the first perilous season of youth, so
+abnormally safe from youth's most wonted peril,--to this would-be
+pupil of realism, this learned adept in the schools of a Welby or a
+Mivers,--to this man, love came at last as with the fatal powers of
+the fabled Cytherea; and with that love all the realisms of life became
+ideals, all the stern lines of our commonplace destinies undulated into
+curves of beauty, all the trite sounds of our every-day life attuned
+into delicacies of song. How full of sanguine yet dreamy bliss was his
+heart--and seemed his future--in the gentle breeze and the softened glow
+of that summer eve! He should see Lily the next morn, and his lips were
+now free to say all that they had as yet suppressed.
+
+Suddenly he was roused from the half-awake, half-asleep happiness that
+belongs to the moments in which we transport ourselves into Elysium, by
+the carol of a voice more loudly joyous than that of his own heart--
+
+
+ "Singing, singing,
+ Lustily singing,
+ Down the road, with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Nierestein."
+
+
+Kenelm turned his head so quickly that he frightened Max, who had for
+the last minute been standing behind him inquisitively with one paw
+raised, and sniffing, in some doubt whether he recognized an old
+acquaintance; but at Kenelm's quick movement the animal broke into a
+nervous bark, and ran back to his master.
+
+The minstrel, little heeding the figure reclined on the bank, would have
+passed on with his light tread and his cheery carol, but Kenelm rose to
+his feet, and holding out his hand, said, "I hope you don't share Max's
+alarm at meeting me again?"
+
+"Ah, my young philosopher, is it indeed you?"
+
+"If I am to be designated a philosopher it is certainly not I. And,
+honestly speaking, I am not the same. I, who spent that pleasant day
+with you among the fields round Luscombe two years ago--"
+
+"Or who advised me at Tor Hadham to string my lyre to the praise of a
+beefsteak. I, too, am not quite the same,--I, whose dog presented you
+with the begging-tray."
+
+"Yet you still go through the world singing."
+
+"Even that vagrant singing time is pretty well over. But I disturbed you
+from your repose; I would rather share it. You are probably not going my
+way, and as I am in no hurry, I should not like to lose the opportunity
+chance has so happily given me of renewing acquaintance with one who has
+often been present to my thoughts since we last met." Thus saying, the
+minstrel stretched himself at ease on the bank, and Kenelm followed his
+example.
+
+There certainly was a change in the owner of the dog with the
+begging-tray, a change in costume, in countenance, in that indescribable
+self-evidence which we call "manner." The costume was not that Bohemian
+attire in which Kenelm had first encountered the wandering minstrel, nor
+the studied, more graceful garb, which so well became his shapely form
+during his visit to Luscombe. It was now neatly simple, the cool and
+quiet summer dress any English gentleman might adopt in a long rural
+walk. And as he uncovered his head to court the cooling breeze, there
+was a graver dignity in the man's handsome Rubens-like face, a line of
+more concentrated thought in the spacious forehead, a thread or two of
+gray shimmering here and there through the thick auburn curls of hair
+and beard. And in his manner, though still very frank, there was just
+perceptible a sort of self-assertion, not offensive, but manly; such
+as does not misbecome one of maturer years, and of some established
+position, addressing another man much younger than himself, who in
+all probability has achieved no position at all beyond that which the
+accident of birth might assign to him.
+
+"Yes," said the minstrel, with a half-suppressed sigh, "the last year
+of my vagrant holidays has come to its close. I recollect that the first
+day we met by the road-side fountain, I advised you to do like me, seek
+amusement and adventure as a foot-traveller. Now, seeing you, evidently
+a gentleman by education and birth, still a foot-traveller, I feel as if
+I ought to say, 'You have had enough of such experience: vagabond life
+has its perils as well as charms; cease it, and settle down.'"
+
+"I think of doing so," replied Kenelm, laconically.
+
+"In a profession?--army, law, medicine?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Ah, in marriage then. Right; give me your hand on that. So a petticoat
+indeed has at last found its charm for you in the actual world as well
+as on the canvas of a picture?"
+
+"I conclude," said Kenelm, evading any direct notice of that playful
+taunt, "I conclude from your remark that it is in marriage _you_ are
+about to settle down."
+
+"Ay, could I have done so before I should have been saved from many
+errors, and been many years nearer to the goal which dazzled my sight
+through the haze of my boyish dreams."
+
+"What is that goal,--the grave?"
+
+"The grave! That which allows of no grave,--fame."
+
+"I see--despite of what you just now said--you still mean to go through
+the world seeking a poet's fame."
+
+"Alas! I resign that fancy," said the minstrel, with another half-sigh.
+"It was not indeed wholly, but in great part the hope of the poet's fame
+that made me a truant in the way to that which destiny, and such few
+gifts as Nature conceded to me, marked out for my proper and only goal.
+But what a strange, delusive Will-o'-the-Wisp the love of verse-making
+is! How rarely a man of good sense deceives himself as to other things
+for which he is fitted, in which he can succeed; but let him once drink
+into his being the charm of verse-making, how the glamour of the charm
+bewitches his understanding! how long it is before he can believe that
+the world will not take his word for it, when he cries out to sun, moon,
+and stars, 'I, too, am a poet.' And with what agonies, as if at the
+wrench of soul from life, he resigns himself at last to the conviction
+that whether he or the world be right, it comes to the same thing. Who
+can plead his cause before a court that will not give him a hearing?"
+
+It was with an emotion so passionately strong, and so intensely painful,
+that the owner of the dog with the begging-tray thus spoke, that Kenelm
+felt, through sympathy, as if he himself were torn asunder by the wrench
+of life from soul. But then Kenelm was a mortal so eccentric that, if
+a single acute suffering endured by a fellow mortal could be brought
+before the evidence of his senses, I doubt whether he would not have
+suffered as much as that fellow-mortal. So that, though if there were a
+thing in the world which Kenelm Chillingly would care not to do, it was
+verse-making, his mind involuntarily hastened to the arguments by which
+he could best mitigate the pang of the verse-maker.
+
+Quoth he: "According to my very scanty reading, you share the love
+of verse-making with men the most illustrious in careers which have
+achieved the goal of fame. It must, then, be a very noble love:
+Augustus, Pollio, Varius, Maecenas,--the greatest statesmen of their
+day,--they were verse-makers. Cardinal Richelieu was a verse-maker;
+Walter Raleigh and Philip Sidney, Fox, Burke, Sheridan, Warren
+Hastings, Canning, even the grave William Pitt,--all were verse-makers.
+Verse-making did not retard--no doubt the qualities essential to
+verse-making accelerated--their race to the goal of fame. What great
+painters have been verse-makers! Michael Angelo, Leonardo da Vinci,
+Salvator Rosa"--and Heaven knows how may other great names Kenelm
+Chillingly might have proceeded to add to his list, if the minstrel had
+not here interposed.
+
+"What! all those mighty painters were verse-makers?"
+
+"Verse-makers so good, especially Michael Angelo,--the greatest painter
+of all,--that they would have had the fame of poets, if, unfortunately
+for that goal of fame, their glory in the sister art of painting did not
+outshine it. But when you give to your gift of song the modest title of
+verse-making, permit me to observe that your gift is perfectly distinct
+from that of the verse-maker. Your gift, whatever it may be, could not
+exist without some sympathy with the non verse-making human heart.
+No doubt in your foot travels, you have acquired not only observant
+intimacy with external Nature in the shifting hues at each hour of a
+distant mountain, in the lengthening shadows which yon sunset casts on
+the waters at our feet, in the habits of the thrush dropped fearlessly
+close beside me, in that turf moistened by its neighbourhood to those
+dripping rushes, all of which I could describe no less accurately than
+you,--as a Peter Bell might describe them no less accurately than a
+William Wordsworth. But in such songs of yours as you have permitted me
+to hear, you seem to have escaped out of that elementary accidence
+of the poet's art, and to touch, no matter how slightly, on the only
+lasting interest which the universal heart of man can have in the song
+of the poet; namely, in the sound which the poet's individual sympathy
+draws forth from the latent chords in that universal heart. As for what
+you call 'the world,' what is it more than the fashion of the present
+day? How far the judgment of that is worth a poet's pain I can't pretend
+to say. But of one thing I am sure, that while I could as easily square
+the circle as compose a simple couplet addressed to the heart of a
+simple audience with sufficient felicity to decoy their praises
+into Max's begging-tray, I could spin out by the yard the sort of
+verse-making which characterizes the fashion of the present day."
+
+Much flattered, and not a little amused, the wandering minstrel turned
+his bright countenance, no longer dimmed by a cloud, towards that of his
+lazily reclined consoler, and answered gayly,--
+
+"You say that you could spin out by the yard verses in the fashion of
+the present day. I wish you would give me a specimen of your skill in
+that handiwork."
+
+"Very well; on one condition, that you will repay my trouble by
+a specimen of your own verses, not in the fashion of the present
+day,--something which I can construe. I defy you to construe mine."
+
+"Agreed."
+
+"Well, then, let us take it for granted that this is the Augustan age of
+English poetry, and that the English language is dead, like the Latin.
+Suppose I am writing for a prize-medal in English, as I wrote at
+college for a prize-medal in Latin: of course, I shall be successful in
+proportion as I introduce the verbal elegances peculiar to our Augustan
+age, and also catch the prevailing poetic characteristic of that
+classical epoch.
+
+"Now I think that every observant critic will admit that the striking
+distinctions of the poetry most in the fashion of the present day,
+namely, of the Augustan age, are,--first, a selection of such verbal
+elegances as would have been most repulsive to the barbaric taste of the
+preceding century; and, secondly, a very lofty disdain of all prosaic
+condescensions to common-sense, and an elaborate cultivation of that
+element of the sublime which Mr. Burke defines under the head of
+obscurity.
+
+"These premises conceded, I will only ask you to choose the metre. Blank
+verse is very much in fashion just now."
+
+"Pooh! blank verse indeed! I am not going so to free your experiment
+from the difficulties of rhyme."
+
+"It is all one to me," said Kenelm, yawning; "rhyme be it: heroic or
+lyrical?"
+
+"Heroics are old-fashioned; but the Chaucer couplet, as brought to
+perfection by our modern poets, I think the best adapted to dainty
+leaves and uncrackable nuts. I accept the modern Chaucerian. The
+subject?"
+
+"Oh, never trouble yourself about that. By whatever title your Augustan
+verse-maker labels his poem, his genius, like Pindar's, disdains to be
+cramped by the subject. Listen, and don't suffer Max to howl, if he can
+help it. Here goes."
+
+And in an affected but emphatic sing-song Kenelm began:--
+
+
+ "In Attica the gentle Pythias dwelt.
+ Youthful he was, and passing rich: he felt
+ As if nor youth nor riches could suffice
+ For bliss. Dark-eyed Sophronia was a nice
+ Girl: and one summer day, when Neptune drove
+ His sea-car slowly, and the olive grove
+ That skirts Ilissus, to thy shell, Harmonia,
+ Rippled, he said 'I love thee' to Sophronia.
+ Crocus and iris, when they heard him, wagged
+ Their pretty heads in glee: the honey-bagged
+ Bees became altars: and the forest dove
+ Her plumage smoothed. Such is the charm of love.
+ Of this sweet story do ye long for more?
+ Wait till I publish it in volumes four;
+ Which certain critics, my good friends, will cry
+ Up beyond Chaucer. Take their word for 't. I
+ Say 'Trust them, but not read,--or you'll not buy.'"
+
+
+"You have certainly kept your word," said the minstrel, laughing; "and
+if this be the Augustan age, and the English were a dead language, you
+deserve to win the prize-medal."
+
+"You flatter me," said Kenelm, modestly. "But if I, who never before
+strung two rhymes together, can improvise so readily in the style of the
+present day, why should not a practical rhymester like yourself dash off
+at a sitting a volume or so in the same style; disguising completely the
+verbal elegances borrowed, adding to the delicacies of the rhyme by the
+frequent introduction of a line that will not scan, and towering yet
+more into the sublime by becoming yet more unintelligible? Do that, and
+I promise you the most glowing panegyric in 'The Londoner,' for I will
+write it myself."
+
+"'The Londoner'!" exclaimed the minstrel, with an angry flush on his
+cheek and brow, "my bitter, relentless enemy."
+
+"I fear, then, you have as little studied the critical press of the
+Augustan age as you have imbued your muse with the classical spirit of
+its verse. For the art of writing a man must cultivate himself. The art
+of being reviewed consists in cultivating the acquaintance of reviewers.
+In the Augustan age criticism is cliquism. Belong to a clique and you
+are Horace or Tibullus. Belong to no clique and, of course, you are
+Bavius or Maevius. 'The Londoner' is the enemy of no man: it holds all
+men in equal contempt. But as, in order to amuse, it must abuse, it
+compensates the praise it is compelled to bestow upon the members of its
+clique by heaping additional scorn upon all who are cliqueless. Hit him
+hard: he has no friends."
+
+"Ah," said the minstrel, "I believe that there is much truth in what you
+say. I never had a friend among the cliques. And Heaven knows with what
+pertinacity those from whom I, in utter ignorance of the rules which
+govern so-called organs of opinion, had hoped, in my time of struggle,
+for a little sympathy, a kindly encouragement, have combined to crush
+me down. They succeeded long. But at last I venture to hope that I
+am beating them. Happily, Nature endowed me with a sanguine, joyous,
+elastic temperament. He who never despairs seldom completely fails."
+
+This speech rather perplexed Kenelm, for had not the minstrel declared
+that his singing days were over, that he had decided on the renunciation
+of verse-making? What other path to fame, from which the critics had
+not been able to exclude his steps, was he, then, now pursuing,--he whom
+Kenelm had assumed to belong to some commercial moneymaking firm? No
+doubt some less difficult prose-track, probably a novel. Everybody
+writes novels nowadays, and as the public will read novels without being
+told to do so, and will not read poetry unless they are told that they
+ought, possibly novels are not quite so much at the mercy of cliques as
+are the poems of our Augustan age.
+
+However, Kenelm did not think of seeking for further confidence on that
+score. His mind at that moment, not unnaturally, wandered from books and
+critics to love and wedlock.
+
+"Our talk," said he, "has digressed into fretful courses; permit me
+to return to the starting-point. You are going to settle down into the
+peace of home. A peaceful home is like a good conscience. The rains
+without do not pierce its roof, the winds without do not shake its
+walls. If not an impertinent question, is it long since you have known
+your intended bride?"
+
+"Yes, very long."
+
+"And always loved her?"
+
+"Always, from her infancy. Out of all womankind, she was designed to be
+my life's playmate and my soul's purifier. I know not what might have
+become of me, if the thought of her had not walked beside me as my
+guardian angel. For, like many vagrants from the beaten high roads of
+the world, there is in my nature something of that lawlessness which
+belongs to high animal spirits, to the zest of adventure, and the warm
+blood that runs into song, chiefly because song is the voice of a joy.
+And no doubt, when I look back on the past years I must own that I have
+too often been led astray from the objects set before my reason, and
+cherished at my heart, by erring impulse or wanton fancy."
+
+"Petticoat interest, I presume," interposed Kenelm, dryly.
+
+"I wish I could honestly answer 'No,'" said the minstrel, colouring
+high. "But from the worst, from all that would have permanently blasted
+the career to which I intrust my fortunes, all that would have rendered
+me unworthy of the pure love that now, I trust, awaits and crowns
+my dreams of happiness, I have been saved by the haunting smile in a
+sinless infantine face. Only once was I in great peril,--that hour of
+peril I recall with a shudder. It was at Luscombe."
+
+"At Luscombe!"
+
+"In the temptation of a terrible crime I thought I heard a voice say,
+'Mischief! Remember the little child.' In that supervention which is so
+readily accepted as a divine warning, when the imagination is morbidly
+excited, and when the conscience, though lulled asleep for a moment, is
+still asleep so lightly that the sigh of a breeze, the fall of a leaf,
+can awake it with a start of terror, I took the voice for that of my
+guardian angel. Thinking it over later, and coupling the voice with the
+moral of those weird lines you repeated to me so appositely the next
+day, I conclude that I am not mistaken when I say it was from your lips
+that the voice which preserved me came."
+
+"I confess the impertinence: you pardon it?"
+
+The minstrel seized Kenelm's hand and pressed it earnestly.
+
+"Pardon it! Oh, could you but guess what cause I have to be grateful,
+everlastingly grateful! That sudden cry, the remorse and horror of my
+own self that it struck into me,--deepened by those rugged lines which
+the next day made me shrink in dismay from 'the face of my darling
+sin'! Then came the turning-point of my life. From that day, the lawless
+vagabond within me was killed. I mean not, indeed, the love of Nature
+and of song which had first allured the vagabond, but the hatred of
+steadfast habits and of serious work,--_that_ was killed. I no longer
+trifled with my calling: I took to it as a serious duty. And when I saw
+her, whom fate has reserved and reared for my bride, her face was no
+longer in my eyes that of the playful child; the soul of the woman was
+dawning into it. It is but two years since that day, to me so eventful.
+Yet my fortunes are now secured. And if fame be not established, I am at
+last in a position which warrants my saying to her I love, 'The time has
+come when, without fear for thy future, I can ask thee to be mine.'"
+
+The man spoke with so fervent a passion that Kenelm silently left him
+to recover his wonted self-possession,--not unwilling to be silent,--not
+unwilling, in the softness of the hour, passing from roseate sunset into
+starry twilight, to murmur to himself, "And the time, too, has come for
+me!"
+
+After a few moments the minstrel resumed lightly and cheerily,--
+
+"Sir, your turn: pray have you long known--judging by our former
+conversation you cannot have long loved--the lady whom you have wooed
+and won?"
+
+As Kenelm had neither as yet wooed nor won the lady in question, and did
+not deem it necessary to enter into any details on the subject of love
+particular to himself, he replied by a general observation,--
+
+"It seems to me that the coming of love is like the coming of spring:
+the date is not to be reckoned by the calendar. It may be slow and
+gradual; it may be quick and sudden. But in the morning, when we wake
+and recognize a change in the world without, verdure on the trees,
+blossoms on the sward, warmth in the sunshine, music in the air, then we
+say Spring has come!"
+
+"I like your illustration. And if it be an idle question to ask a lover
+how long he has known the beloved one, so it is almost as idle to ask if
+she be not beautiful. He cannot but see in her face the beauty she has
+given to the world without."
+
+"True; and that thought is poetic enough to make me remind you that I
+favoured you with the maiden specimen of my verse-making on condition
+that you repaid me by a specimen of your own practical skill in the art.
+And I claim the right to suggest the theme. Let it be--"
+
+"Of a beefsteak?"
+
+"Tush, you have worn out that tasteless joke at my expense. The theme
+must be of love, and if you could improvise a stanza or two expressive
+of the idea you just uttered I shall listen with yet more pleased
+attention."
+
+"Alas! I am no _improvisatore_. Yet I will avenge myself on your former
+neglect of my craft by chanting to you a trifle somewhat in unison with
+the thought you ask me to versify, but which you would not stay to hear
+at Tor Hadham (though you did drop a shilling into Max's tray); it was
+one of the songs I sang that evening, and it was not ill-received by my
+humble audience.
+
+
+ "THE BEAUTY OF THE MISTRESS IS IN THE LOVER'S EYE.
+
+ "Is she not pretty, my Mabel May?
+ Nobody ever yet called her so.
+ Are not her lineaments faultless, say?
+ If I must answer you plainly, No.
+
+ "Joy to believe that the maid I love
+ None but myself as she is can see;
+ Joy that she steals from her heaven above,
+ And is only revealed on this earth to me!"
+
+
+As soon as he had finished this very artless ditty, the minstrel rose
+and said,--
+
+"Now I must bid you good-by. My way lies through those meadows, and
+yours no doubt along the high road."
+
+"Not so. Permit me to accompany you. I have a lodging not far from
+hence, to which the path through the fields is the shortest way."
+
+The minstrel turned a somewhat surprised and somewhat inquisitive look
+towards Kenelm. But feeling, perhaps, that having withheld from his
+fellow-traveller all confidence as to his own name and attributes, he
+had no right to ask any confidence from that gentleman not voluntarily
+made to him, he courteously said "that he wished the way were longer,
+since it would be so pleasantly halved," and strode forth at a brisk
+pace.
+
+The twilight was now closing into the brightness of a starry summer
+night, and the solitude of the fields was unbroken. Both these men,
+walking side by side, felt supremely happy. But happiness is like wine;
+its effect differing with the differing temperaments on which it
+acts. In this case garrulous and somewhat vaunting with the one man,
+warm-coloured, sensuous, impressionable to the influences of external
+Nature, as an Aeolian harp to the rise or fall of a passing wind; and,
+with the other man, taciturn and somewhat modestly expressed, saturnine,
+meditative, not indeed dull to the influences of external Nature, but
+deeming them of no value, save where they passed out of the domain of
+the sensuous into that of the intellectual, and the soul of man dictated
+to the soulless Nature its own questions and its own replies.
+
+The minstrel took the talk on himself, and the talk charmed his
+listener. It became so really eloquent in the tones of its utterance, in
+the frank play of its delivery, that I could no more adequately describe
+it than a reporter, however faithful to every word a true orator may
+say, can describe that which, apart from all words, belongs to the
+presence of the orator himself.
+
+Not, then, venturing to report the language of this singular itinerant,
+I content myself with saying that the substance of it was of the
+nature on which it is said most men can be eloquent: it was personal
+to himself. He spoke of aspirations towards the achievement of a name,
+dating back to the dawn of memory; of early obstacles in lowly birth,
+stinted fortunes; of a sudden opening to his ambition while yet in
+boyhood, through the generous favour of a rich man, who said, "The child
+has genius: I will give it the discipline of culture; one day it shall
+repay to the world what it owes to me;" of studies passionately begun,
+earnestly pursued, and mournfully suspended in early youth. He did not
+say how or wherefore: he rushed on to dwell upon the struggles for a
+livelihood for himself and those dependent on him; how in such struggles
+he was compelled to divert toil and energy from the systematic pursuit
+of the object he had once set before him; the necessities for money
+were too urgent to be postponed to the visions of fame. "But even," he
+exclaimed, passionately, "even in such hasty and crude manifestations
+of what is within me, as circumstances limited my powers, I know that
+I ought to have found from those who profess to be authoritative judges
+the encouragement of praise. How much better, then, I should have done
+if I had found it! How a little praise warms out of a man the good
+that is in him, and the sneer of a contempt which he feels to be unjust
+chills the ardour to excel! However, I forced my way, so far as was then
+most essential to me, the sufficing breadmaker for those I loved; and in
+my holidays of song and ramble I found a delight that atoned for all the
+rest. But still the desire of fame, once conceived in childhood, once
+nourished through youth, never dies but in our grave. Foot and hoof may
+tread it down, bud, leaf, stalk; its root is too deep below the surface
+for them to reach, and year after year stalk and leaf and bud re-emerge.
+Love may depart from our mortal life: we console ourselves; the beloved
+will be reunited to us in the life to come. But if he who sets his heart
+on fame loses it in this life, what can console him?"
+
+"Did you not say a little while ago that fame allowed of no grave?"
+
+"True; but if we do not achieve it before we ourselves are in the grave,
+what comfort can it give to us? Love ascends to heaven, to which we hope
+ourselves to ascend; but fame remains on the earth, which we shall never
+again revisit. And it is because fame is earth-born that the desire for
+it is the most lasting, the regret for the want of it the most bitter,
+to the child of earth. But I shall achieve it now; it is already in my
+grasp."
+
+By this time the travellers had arrived at the brook, facing the wooden
+bridge beside Cromwell Lodge.
+
+Here the minstrel halted; and Kenelm with a certain tremble in his
+voice, said, "Is it not time that we should make ourselves known to
+each other by name? I have no longer any cause to conceal mine, indeed I
+never had any cause stronger than whim,--Kenelm Chillingly, the only son
+of Sir Peter, of Exmundham, -----shire."
+
+"I wish your father joy of so clever a son," said the minstrel with his
+wonted urbanity. "You already know enough of me to be aware that I am
+of much humbler birth and station than you; but if you chance to have
+visited the exhibition of the Royal Academy this year--ah! I understand
+that start--you might have recognized a picture of which you have seen
+the rudimentary sketch, 'The Girl with the Flower-ball,' one of three
+pictures very severely handled by 'The Londoner,' but, in spite of
+that potent enemy, insuring fortune and promising fame to the wandering
+minstrel, whose name, if the sight of the pictures had induced you to
+inquire into that, you would have found to be Walter Melville. Next
+January I hope, thanks to that picture, to add, 'Associate of the Royal
+Academy.' The public will not let them keep me out of it, in spite of
+'The Londoner.' You are probably an expected guest at one of the more
+imposing villas from which we see the distant lights. I am going to a
+very humble cottage, in which henceforth I hope to find my established
+home. I am there now only for a few days, but pray let me welcome you
+there before I leave. The cottage is called Grasmere."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE minstrel gave a cordial parting shake of the hand to the
+fellow-traveller whom he had advised to settle down, not noticing how
+very cold had become the hand in his own genial grasp. Lightly he passed
+over the wooden bridge, preceded by Max, and merrily, when he had gained
+the other side of the bridge, came upon Kenelm's ear, through the hush
+of the luminous night, the verse of the uncompleted love-song,--
+
+
+ "Singing, singing,
+ Lustily singing,
+ Down the road, with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Nierestein."
+
+
+Love-song, uncompleted; why uncompleted? It was not given to Kenelm to
+divine the why. It was a love-song versifying one of the prettiest fairy
+tales in the world, which was a great favourite with Lily, and which
+Lion had promised Lily to versify, but only to complete it in her
+presence and to her perfect satisfaction.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+IF I could not venture to place upon paper the exact words of an
+eloquent coveter of fame, the earth-born, still less can I dare to place
+upon paper all that passed through the voiceless heart of a coveter of
+love, the heaven-born.
+
+From the hour in which Kenelm Chillingly had parted from Walter Melville
+until somewhere between sunrise and noon the next day, the summer
+joyousness of that external Nature which does now and then, though, for
+the most part, deceitfully, address to the soul of man questions and
+answers all her soulless own, laughed away the gloom of his misgivings.
+
+No doubt this Walter Melville was the beloved guardian of Lily; no doubt
+it was Lily whom he designated as reserved and reared to become his
+bride. But on that question Lily herself had the sovereign voice. It
+remained yet to be seen whether Kenelm had deceived himself in the
+belief that had made the world so beautiful to him since the hour of
+their last parting. At all events it was due to her, due even to his
+rival, to assert his own claim to her choice. And the more he recalled
+all that Lily had ever said to him of her guardian, so openly, so
+frankly, proclaiming affection, admiration, gratitude, the more
+convincingly his reasonings allayed his fears, whispering, "So might
+a child speak of a parent: not so does the maiden speak of the man she
+loves; she can scarcely trust herself to praise."
+
+In fine, it was not in despondent mood, nor with dejected looks, that,
+a little before noon, Kenelm crossed the bridge and re-entered the
+enchanted land of Grasmere. In answer to his inquiries, the servant who
+opened the door said that neither Mr. Melville nor Miss Mordaunt were
+at home; they had but just gone out together for a walk. He was about to
+turn back, when Mrs. Cameron came into the hall, and, rather by
+gesture than words, invited him to enter. Kenelm followed her into the
+drawing-room, taking his seat beside her. He was about to speak, when
+she interrupted him in a tone of voice so unlike its usual languor, so
+keen, so sharp, that it sounded like a cry of distress.
+
+"I was just about to come to you. Happily, however, you find me alone,
+and what may pass between us will be soon over. But first tell me: you
+have seen your parents; you have asked their consent to wed a girl such
+as I described; tell me, oh tell me that that consent is refused!"
+
+"On the contrary, I am here with their full permission to ask the hand
+of your niece."
+
+Mrs. Cameron sank back in her chair, rocking herself to and fro in the
+posture of a person in great pain.
+
+"I feared that. Walter said he had met you last evening; that you, like
+himself, entertained the thought of marriage. You, of course when you
+learned his name, must have known with whom his thought was connected.
+Happily, he could not divine what was the choice to which your youthful
+fancy had been so blindly led."
+
+"My dear Mrs. Cameron," said Kenelm, very mildly, but very firmly, "you
+were aware of the purpose for which I left Moleswich a few days ago,
+and it seems to me that you might have forestalled my intention, the
+intention which brings me; thus early to your house. I come to say to
+Miss Mordaunt's guardian, 'I ask the hand of your ward. If you also woo
+her, I have a very noble rival. With both of us no consideration for our
+own happiness can be comparable to the duty of consulting hers. Let her
+choose between the two.'"
+
+"Impossible!" exclaimed Mrs. Cameron; "impossible. You know not what you
+say; know not, guess not, how sacred are the claims of Walter Melville
+to all that the orphan whom he has protected from her very birth can
+give him in return. She has no right to a preference for another: her
+heart is too grateful to admit of one. If the choice were given to her
+between him and you, it is he whom she would choose. Solemnly I assure
+you of this. Do not, then, subject her to the pain of such a choice.
+Suppose, if you will, that you had attracted her fancy, and that now you
+proclaimed your love and urged your suit, she would not, must not, the
+less reject your hand, but you might cloud her happiness in accepting
+Melville's. Be generous. Conquer your own fancy; it can be but a passing
+one. Speak not to her, nor to Mr. Melville, of a wish which can never be
+realized. Go hence, silently, and at once."
+
+The words and the manner of the pale imploring woman struck a vague
+awe into the heart of her listener. But he did not the less resolutely
+answer, "I cannot obey you. It seems to me that my honour commands me
+to prove to your niece that, if I mistook the nature of her feelings
+towards me, I did not, by word or look, lead her to believe mine towards
+herself were less in earnest than they are; and it seems scarcely less
+honourable towards my worthy rival to endanger his own future happiness,
+should he discover later that his bride would have been happier with
+another. Why be so mysteriously apprehensive? If, as you say, with such
+apparent conviction, there is no doubt of your niece's preference for
+another, at a word from her own lips I depart, and you will see me no
+more. But that word must be said by her; and if you will not permit me
+to ask for it in your own house, I will take my chance of finding her
+now, on her walk with Mr. Melville; and, could he deny me the right to
+speak to her alone, that which I would say can be said in his presence.
+Ah! madam, have you no mercy for the heart that you so needlessly
+torture? If I must bear the worst, let me learn it, and at once."
+
+"Learn it, then, from my lips," said Mrs. Cameron, speaking with voice
+unnaturally calm, and features rigidly set into stern composure. "And I
+place the secret you wring from me under the seal of that honour which
+you so vauntingly make your excuse for imperilling the peace of the home
+I ought never to have suffered you to enter. An honest couple, of
+humble station and narrow means, had an only son, who evinced in early
+childhood talents so remarkable that they attracted the notice of
+the father's employer, a rich man of very benevolent heart and very
+cultivated taste. He sent the child, at his expense, to a first-rate
+commercial school, meaning to provide for him later in his own firm.
+The rich man was the head partner of an eminent bank; but very infirm
+health, and tastes much estranged from business, had induced him to
+retire from all active share in the firm, the management of which was
+confined to a son whom he idolized. But the talents of the protege he
+had sent to school took there so passionate a direction towards art
+and estranged from trade, and his designs in drawing when shown to
+connoisseurs were deemed so promising of future excellence, that the
+patron changed his original intention, entered him as a pupil in the
+studio of a distinguished French painter, and afterwards bade him
+perfect his taste by the study of Italian and Flemish masterpieces.
+
+"He was still abroad, when--" here Mrs. Cameron stopped, with visible
+effort, suppressed a sob, and went on, whisperingly, through teeth
+clenched together--"when a thunderbolt fell on the house of the patron,
+shattering his fortunes, blasting his name. The son, unknown to the
+father, had been decoyed into speculations which proved unfortunate: the
+loss might have been easily retrieved in the first instance; unhappily
+he took the wrong course to retrieve it, and launched into new hazards.
+I must be brief. One day the world was startled by the news that a firm,
+famed for its supposed wealth and solidity, was bankrupt. Dishonesty
+was alleged, was proved, not against the father,--he went forth from
+the trial, censured indeed for neglect, not condemned for fraud, but a
+penniless pauper. The--son, the son, the idolized son, was removed from
+the prisoner's dock, a convicted felon, sentenced to penal servitude;
+escaped that sentence by--by--you guess--you guess. How could he escape
+except through death?--death by his own guilty deed?"
+
+Almost as much overpowered by emotion as Mrs. Cameron herself, Kenelm
+covered his bended face with one hand, stretching out the other blindly
+to clasp her own, but she would not take it.
+
+A dreary foreboding. Again before his eyes rose the old gray
+tower,--again in his ears thrilled the tragic tale of the Fletwodes.
+What was yet left untold held the young man in spell-bound silence. Mrs.
+Cameron resumed,--
+
+"I said the father was a penniless pauper; he died lingeringly
+bedridden. But one faithful friend did not desert that bed,--the youth
+to whose genius his wealth had ministered. He had come from abroad
+with some modest savings from the sale of copies or sketches made in
+Florence. These savings kept a roof over the heads of the old man and
+the two helpless, broken-hearted women,--paupers like himself,--his own
+daughter and his son's widow. When the savings were gone, the young man
+stooped from his destined calling, found employment somehow, no matter
+how alien to his tastes, and these three whom his toil supported never
+wanted a home or food. Well, a few weeks after her husband's terrible
+death, his young widow (they had not been a year married) gave birth to
+a child,--a girl. She did not survive the exhaustion of her confinement
+many days. The shock of her death snapped the feeble thread of the poor
+father's life. Both were borne to the grave on the same day. Before they
+died, both made the same prayer to their sole two mourners, the felon's
+sister, the old man's young benefactor. The prayer was this, that the
+new-born infant should be reared, however humbly, in ignorance of her
+birth, of a father's guilt and shame. She was not to pass a suppliant
+for charity to rich and high-born kinsfolk, who had vouchsafed no word
+even of pity to the felon's guiltless father and as guiltless wife. That
+promise has been kept till now. I am that daughter. The name I bear,
+and the name which I gave to my niece, are not ours, save as we may
+indirectly claim them through alliances centuries ago. I have never
+married. I was to have been a bride, bringing to the representative of
+no ignoble house what was to have been a princely dower; the wedding day
+was fixed, when the bolt fell. I have never again seen my betrothed. He
+went abroad and died there. I think he loved me; he knew I loved him.
+Who can blame him for deserting me? Who could marry the felon's sister?
+Who would marry the felon's child? Who but one? The man who knows
+her secret, and will guard it; the man who, caring little for other
+education, has helped to instil into her spotless childhood so steadfast
+a love of truth, so exquisite a pride of honour, that did she know such
+ignominy rested on her birth she would pine herself away."
+
+"Is there only one man on earth," cried Kenelm, suddenly, rearing his
+face,--till then concealed and downcast,--and with a loftiness of pride
+on its aspect, new to its wonted mildness, "is there only one man who
+would deem the virgin at whose feet he desires to kneel and say, 'Deign
+to be the queen of my life,' not far too noble in herself to be debased
+by the sins of others before she was even born; is there only one man
+who does not think that the love of truth and the pride of honour are
+most royal attributes of woman or of man, no matter whether the fathers
+of the woman or the man were pirates as lawless as the fathers of
+Norman kings, or liars as unscrupulous, where their own interests
+were concerned, as have been the crowned representatives of lines as
+deservedly famous as Caesars and Bourbons, Tudors and Stuarts? Nobility,
+like genius, is inborn. One man alone guard _her_ secret!--guard a
+secret that if made known could trouble a heart that recoils from shame!
+Ah, madam, we Chillinglys are a very obscure, undistinguished race, but
+for more than a thousand years we have been English gentlemen. Guard her
+secret rather than risk the chance of discovery that could give her a
+pang! I would pass my whole life by her side in Kamtchatka, and even
+there I would not snatch a glimpse of the secret itself with mine own
+eyes: it should be so closely muffled and wrapped round by the folds of
+reverence and worship."
+
+This burst of passion seemed to Mrs. Cameron the senseless declamation
+of an inexperienced, hot-headed young man; and putting it aside, much
+as a great lawyer dismisses as balderdash the florid rhetoric of some
+junior counsel, rhetoric in which the great lawyer had once indulged,
+or as a woman for whom romance is over dismisses as idle verbiage some
+romantic sentiment that befools her young daughter, Mrs. Cameron simply
+replied, "All this is hollow talk, Mr. Chillingly; let us come to the
+point. After all I have said, do you mean to persist in your suit to my
+niece?"
+
+"I persist."
+
+"What!" she cried, this time indignantly, and with generous indignation;
+"what, even were it possible that you could win your parents' consent to
+marry the child of a man condemned to penal servitude, or, consistently
+with the duties a son owes to parents, conceal that fact from them,
+could you, born to a station on which every gossip will ask, 'Who and
+what is the name of the future Lady Chillingly?' believe that the
+who and the what will never be discovered! Have you, a mere stranger,
+unknown to us a few weeks ago, a right to say to Walter Melville,
+'Resign to me that which is your sole reward for the sublime sacrifices,
+for the loyal devotion, for the watchful tenderness of patient years'?"
+
+"Surely, madam," cried Kenelm, more startled, more shaken in soul by
+this appeal, than by the previous revelations, "surely, when we
+last parted, when I confided to you my love for your niece, when you
+consented to my proposal to return home and obtain my father's approval
+of my suit,--surely then was the time to say, 'No; a suitor with claims
+paramount and irresistible has come before you.'"
+
+"I did not then know, Heaven is my witness, I did not then even suspect,
+that Walter Melville ever dreamed of seeking a wife in the child who had
+grown up under his eyes. You must own, indeed, how much I discouraged
+your suit; I could not discourage it more without revealing the secret
+of her birth, only to be revealed as an extreme necessity. But my
+persuasion was that your father would not consent to your alliance with
+one so far beneath the expectations he was entitled to form, and the
+refusal of that consent would terminate all further acquaintance between
+you and Lily, leaving her secret undisclosed. It was not till you had
+left, only indeed two days ago, that I received a letter from Walter
+Melville,--a letter which told me what I had never before conjectured.
+Here is the letter, read it, and then say if you have the heart to
+force yourself into rivalry, with--with--" She broke off, choked by her
+exertion, thrust the letter into his hands, and with keen, eager, hungry
+stare watched his countenance while he read.
+
+
+
+ ----- STREET, BLOOMSBURY.
+
+MY DEAR FRIEND,--Joy and triumph! My picture is completed, the picture
+on which for so many months I have worked night and day in this den of
+a studio, without a glimpse of the green fields, concealing my address
+from every one, even from you, lest I might be tempted to suspend my
+labours. The picture is completed: it is sold; guess the price! Fifteen
+hundred guineas, and to a dealer,--a dealer! Think of that! It is to be
+carried about the country exhibited by itself. You remember those three
+little landscapes of mine which two years ago I would gladly have sold
+for ten pounds, only neither Lily nor you would let me. My good friend
+and earliest patron, the German merchant at Luscombe, who called on
+me yesterday, offered to cover them with guineas thrice piled over the
+canvas. Imagine how happy I felt when I forced him to accept them as a
+present. What a leap in a man's life it is when he can afford to say, "I
+give!" Now then, at last, at last I am in a position which justifies the
+utterance of the hope which has for eighteen years been my solace, my
+support; been the sunbeam that ever shone through the gloom when my fate
+was at the darkest; been the melody that buoyed me aloft as in the
+song of the skylark, when in the voices of men I heard but the laugh of
+scorn. Do you remember the night on which Lily's mother besought us
+to bring up her child in ignorance of her parentage, not even to
+communicate to unkind and disdainful relatives that such a child was
+born? Do you remember how plaintively, and yet how proudly, she, so
+nobly born, so luxuriously nurtured, clasping my hand when I ventured
+to remonstrate, and say that her own family could not condemn her child
+because of the father's guilt,--she, the proudest woman I ever knew, she
+whose smile I can at rare moments detect in Lily, raised her head from
+her pillow, and gasped forth,--
+
+"I am dying: the last words of the dying are commands. I command you to
+see that my child's lot is not that of a felon's daughter transported to
+the hearth of nobles. To be happy, her lot must be humble: no roof too
+humble to shelter, no husband too humble to wed, the felon's daughter."
+
+From that hour I formed a resolve that I would keep hand and heart
+free, that when the grandchild of my princely benefactor grew up into
+womanhood I might say to her, "I am humbly born, but thy mother would
+have given thee to me." The newborn, consigned to our charge, has now
+ripened into woman, and I have now so assured my fortune that it is
+no longer poverty and struggle that I should ask her to share. I am
+conscious that, were her fate not so exceptional, this hope of mine
+would be a vain presumption,--conscious that I am but the creature
+of her grandsire's bounty, and that from it springs all I ever can
+be,--conscious of the disparity in years,-conscious of many a past error
+and present fault. But, as fate so ordains, such considerations are
+trivial; I am her rightful choice. What other choice, compatible with
+these necessities which weigh, dear and honoured friend, immeasurably
+more on your sense of honour than they do upon mine? and yet mine is
+not dull. Granting, then, that you, her nearest and most responsible
+relative, do not contemn me for presumption, all else seems to me clear.
+Lily's childlike affection for me is too deep and too fond not to
+warm into a wife's love. Happily, too, she has not been reared in the
+stereotyped boarding-school shallowness of knowledge and vulgarities of
+gentility; but educated, like myself, by the free influences of Nature,
+longing for no halls and palaces save those that we build as we list, in
+fairyland; educated to comprehend and share the fancies which are
+more than booklore to the worshipper of art and song. In a day or two,
+perhaps the day after you receive this, I shall be able to escape from
+London, and most likely shall come on foot as usual. How I long to
+see once more the woodbine on the hedgerows, the green blades of the
+cornfields, the sunny lapse of the river, and dearer still the tiny
+falls of our own little noisy rill! Meanwhile I entreat you, dearest,
+gentlest, most honored of such few friends as my life has hitherto won
+to itself, to consider well the direct purport of this letter. If you,
+born in a grade so much higher than mine, feel that it is unwarrantable
+insolence in me to aspire to the hand of my patron's grandchild, say so
+plainly; and I remain not less grateful for your friendship than I was
+to your goodness when dining for the first time at your father's palace.
+Shy and sensitive and young, I felt that his grand guests wondered why I
+was invited to the same board as themselves. You, then courted, admired,
+you had sympathetic compassion on the raw, sullen boy; left those, who
+then seemed to me like the gods and goddesses of a heathen Pantheon, to
+come and sit beside your father's protege and cheeringly whisper to
+him such words as make a low-born ambitious lad go home light-hearted,
+saying to himself, "Some day or other." And what it is to an ambitious
+lad, fancying himself lifted by the gods and goddesses of a Pantheon, to
+go home light-hearted muttering to himself, "Some day or other," I doubt
+if even you can divine.
+
+But should you be as kind to the presumptuous man as you were to the
+bashful boy, and say, "Realized be the dream, fulfilled be the object of
+your life! take from me as her next of kin, the last descendant of your
+benefactor," then I venture to address to you this request. You are in
+the place of mother to your sister's child, act for her as a keeper now,
+to prepare her mind and heart for the coming change in the relations
+between her and me. When I last saw her, six months ago, she was still
+so playfully infantine that it half seems to me I should be sinning
+against the reverence due to a child, if I said too abruptly, "You are
+woman, and I love you not as child but as woman." And yet, time is
+not allowed to me for long, cautious, and gradual slide from the
+relationship of friend into that of lover. I now understand what the
+great master of my art once said to me, "A career is a destiny." By one
+of those merchant princes who now at Manchester, as they did once at
+Genoa or Venice, reign alike over those two civilizers of the world
+which to dull eyes seem antagonistic, Art and Commerce, an offer is made
+to me for a picture on a subject which strikes his fancy: an offer so
+magnificently liberal that his commerce must command my art; and the
+nature of the subject compels me to seek the banks of the Rhine as
+soon as may be. I must have all the hues of the foliage in the meridian
+glories of summer. I can but stay at Grasmere a very few days; but
+before I leave I must know this, am I going to work for Lily or am I
+not? On the answer to that question depends all. If not to work for her,
+there would be no glory in the summer, no triumph in art to me: I refuse
+the offer. If she says, "Yes; it is for me you work," then she becomes
+my destiny. She assures my career. Here I speak as an artist: nobody who
+is not an artist can guess how sovereign over even his moral being, at
+a certain critical epoch in his career of artist or his life of man,
+is the success or the failure of a single work. But I go on to speak as
+man. My love for Lily is such for the last six months that, though if
+she rejected me I should still serve art, still yearn for fame, it would
+be as an old man might do either. The youth of my life would be gone.
+
+As man I say, all my thoughts, all my dreams of happiness, distinct from
+Art and fame, are summed up in the one question, "Is Lily to be my wife
+or not?"
+
+ Yours affectionately,
+
+ W. M.
+
+
+Kenelm returned the letter without a word.
+
+Enraged by his silence, Mrs. Cameron exclaimed, "Now, sir, what say you?
+You have scarcely known Lily five weeks. What is the feverish fancy of
+five weeks' growth to the lifelong devotion of a man like this? Do you
+now dare to say, 'I persist'?"
+
+Kenelm waved his hand very quietly, as if to dismiss all conception of
+taunt and insult and said with his soft melancholy eyes fixed upon the
+working features of Lily's aunt, "This man is more worthy of her than
+I. He prays you, in his letter, to prepare your niece for that change of
+relationship which he dreads too abruptly to break to her himself. Have
+you done so?"
+
+"I have; the night I got the letter."
+
+"And--you hesitate; speak truthfully, I implore. And she--"
+
+"She," answered Mrs. Cameron, feeling herself involuntarily compelled to
+obey the voice of that prayer--"she seemed stunned at first, muttering,
+'This is a dream: it cannot be true,--cannot! I Lion's wife--I--I!
+I, his destiny! In me his happiness!' And then she laughed her pretty
+child's laugh, and put her arms round my neck, and said, 'You are
+jesting, aunty. He could not write thus!' So I put that part of his
+letter under her eyes; and when she had convinced herself, her face
+became very grave, more like a woman's face than I ever saw it; and
+after a pause she cried out passionately, 'Can you think me--can I think
+myself--so bad, so ungrateful, as to doubt what I should answer, if
+Lion asked me whether I would willingly say or do anything that made him
+unhappy? If there be such a doubt in my heart, I would tear it out
+by the roots, heart and all!' Oh, Mr. Chillingly! There would be no
+happiness for her with another, knowing that she had blighted the life
+of him to whom she owes so much, though she never will learn how
+much more she owes." Kenelm not replying to this remark, Mrs. Cameron
+resumed, "I will be perfectly frank with you, Mr. Chillingly. I was not
+quite satisfied with Lily's manner and looks the next morning, that is,
+yesterday. I did fear there might be some struggle in her mind in which
+there entered a thought of yourself. And when Walter, on his arrival
+here in the evening, spoke of you as one he had met before in his rural
+excursions, but whose name he only learned on parting at the bridge by
+Cromwell Lodge, I saw that Lily turned pale, and shortly afterwards
+went to her own room for the night. Fearing that any interview with you,
+though it would not alter her resolve, might lessen her happiness on
+the only choice she can and ought to adopt, I resolved to visit you this
+morning, and make that appeal to your reason and your heart which I have
+done now,--not, I am sure, in vain. Hush! I hear his voice!"
+
+Melville entered the room, Lily leaning on his arm. The artist's comely
+face was radiant with ineffable joyousness. Leaving Lily, he reached
+Kenelm's side as with a single bound, shook him heartily by the hand,
+saying, "I find that you have already been a welcomed visitor in this
+house. Long may you be so, so say I, so (I answer for her) says my fair
+betrothed, to whom I need not present you."
+
+Lily advanced, and held out her hand very timidly. Kenelm touched rather
+than clasped it. His own strong hand trembled like a leaf. He ventured
+but one glance at her face. All the bloom had died out of it, but the
+expression seemed to him wondrously, cruelly tranquil.
+
+"Your betrothed! your future bride!" he said to the artist, with a
+mastery over his emotion rendered less difficult by the single glance
+at that tranquil face. "I wish you joy. All happiness to you, Miss
+Mordaunt. You have made a noble choice."
+
+He looked round for his hat; it lay at his feet, but he did not see
+it; his eyes wandering away with uncertain vision, like those of a
+sleep-walker.
+
+Mrs. Cameron picked up the hat and gave it to him.
+
+"Thank you," he said meekly; then with a smile half sweet, half bitter,
+"I have so much to thank you for, Mrs. Cameron."
+
+"But you are not going already,--just as I enter too. Hold! Mrs. Cameron
+tells me you are lodging with my old friend Jones. Come and stop a
+couple of days with us: we can find you a room; the room over your
+butterfly cage, eh, Fairy?"
+
+"Thank you too. Thank you all. No; I must be in London by the first
+train."
+
+Speaking thus, he had found his way to the door, bowed with the quiet
+grace that characterized all his movements, and was gone.
+
+"Pardon his abruptness, Lily; he too loves; he too is impatient to
+find a betrothed," said the artist gayly: "but now he knows my dearest
+secret, I think I have a right to know his; and I will try."
+
+He had scarcely uttered the words before he too had quitted the room and
+overtaken Kenelm just at the threshold.
+
+"If you are going back to Cromwell Lodge,--to pack up, I suppose,--let
+me walk with you as far as the bridge."
+
+Kenelm inclined his head assentingly and tacitly as they passed through
+the garden-gate, winding backwards through the lane which skirted the
+garden pales; when, at the very spot in which the day after their first
+and only quarrel Lily's face had been seen brightening through the
+evergreen, that day on which the old woman, quitting her, said, "God
+bless you!" and on which the vicar, walking with Kenelm, spoke of her
+fairy charms; well, just in that spot Lily's face appeared again, not
+this time brightening through the evergreens, unless the palest gleam
+of the palest moon can be said to brighten. Kenelm saw, started, halted.
+His companion, then in the rush of a gladsome talk, of which Kenelm had
+not heard a word, neither saw nor halted; he walked on mechanically,
+gladsome, and talking.
+
+Lily stretched forth her hand through the evergreens. Kenelm took it
+reverentially. This time it was not his hand that trembled.
+
+"Good-by," she said in a whisper, "good-by forever in this world. You
+understand,--you do understand me. Say that you do."
+
+"I understand. Noble child! noble choice! God bless you! God comfort
+me!" murmured Kenelm. Their eyes met. Oh, the sadness; and, alas! oh the
+love in the eyes of both!
+
+Kenelm passed on.
+
+All said in an instant. How many Alls are said in an instant! Melville
+was in the midst of some glowing sentence, begun when Kenelm dropped
+from his side, and the end of the sentence was this:
+
+"Words cannot say how fair seems life; how easy seems conquest of fame,
+dating from this day--this day"--and in his turn he halted, looked round
+on the sunlit landscape, and breathed deep, as if to drink into his soul
+all of the earth's joy and beauty which his gaze could compass and the
+arch of the horizon bound.
+
+"They who knew her even the best," resumed the artist, striding on,
+"even her aunt, never could guess how serious and earnest, under all
+her infantine prettiness of fancy, is that girl's real nature. We were
+walking along the brook-side, when I began to tell how solitary the
+world would be to me if I could not win her to my side; while I spoke
+she had turned aside from the path we had taken, and it was not till we
+were under the shadow of the church in which we shall be married that
+she uttered the word that gives to every cloud in my fate the silver
+lining; implying thus how solemnly connected in her mind was the thought
+of love with the sanctity of religion."
+
+Kenelm shuddered,--the church, the burial-ground, the old Gothic tomb,
+the flowers round the infant's grave!
+
+"But I am talking a great deal too much about myself," resumed the
+artist. "Lovers are the most consummate of all egotists, and the
+most garrulous of all gossips. You have wished me joy on my destined
+nuptials, when shall I wish you joy on yours? Since we have begun to
+confide in each other, you are in my debt as to a confidence."
+
+They had now gained the bridge. Kenelm turned round abruptly, "Good-day;
+let us part here. I have nothing to confide to you that might not seem
+to your ears a mockery when I wish you joy." So saying, so obeying in
+spite of himself the anguish of his heart, Kenelm wrung his companion's
+hand with the force of an uncontrollable agony, and speeded over the
+bridge before Melville recovered his surprise.
+
+The artist would have small claim to the essential attribute of
+genius--namely, the intuitive sympathy of passion with passion--if that
+secret of Kenelm's which he had so lightly said "he had acquired the
+right to learn," was not revealed to him as by an electric flash. "Poor
+fellow!" he said to himself pityingly; "how natural that he should fall
+in love with Fairy! but happily he is so young, and such a philosopher,
+that it is but one of those trials through which, at least ten times a
+year, I have gone with wounds that leave not a scar."
+
+Thus soliloquizing, the warm-blooded worshipper of Nature returned
+homeward, too blest in the triumph of his own love to feel more than a
+kindly compassion for the wounded heart, consigned with no doubt of
+the healing result to the fickleness of youth and the consolations of
+philosophy. Not for a moment did the happier rival suspect that Kenelm's
+love was returned; that an atom in the heart of the girl who had
+promised to be his bride could take its light or shadow from any love
+but his own. Yet, more from delicacy of respect to the rival so suddenly
+self-betrayed than from any more prudential motive, he did not speak
+even to Mrs. Cameron of Kenelm's secret and sorrow; and certainly
+neither she nor Lily was disposed to ask any question that concerned the
+departed visitor.
+
+In fact the name of Kenelm Chillingly was scarcely, if at all, mentioned
+in that household during the few days which elapsed before Walter
+Melville quitted Grasmere for the banks of the Rhine, not to return till
+the autumn, when his marriage with Lily was to take place. During
+those days Lily was calm and seemingly cheerful; her manner towards
+her betrothed, if more subdued, not less affectionate than of old.
+Mrs. Cameron congratulated herself on having so successfully got rid of
+Kenelm Chillingly.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+SO, then, but for that officious warning, uttered under the balcony
+at Luscombe, Kenelm Chillingly might never have had a rival in Walter
+Melville. But ill would any reader construe the character of Kenelm, did
+he think that such a thought increased the bitterness of his sorrow.
+No sorrow in the thought that a noble nature had been saved from the
+temptation to a great sin.
+
+The good man does good merely by living. And the good he does may often
+mar the plans he formed for his own happiness. But he cannot regret that
+Heaven has permitted him to do good.
+
+What Kenelm did feel is perhaps best explained in the letter to Sir
+Peter, which is here subjoined:--
+
+
+"MY DEAREST FATHER,--Never till my dying day shall I forget that
+tender desire for my happiness with which, overcoming all worldly
+considerations, no matter at what disappointment to your own cherished
+plans or ambition for the heir to your name and race, you sent me
+away from your roof, these words ringing in my ear like the sound of
+joy-bells, 'Choose as you will, with my blessing on your choice. I open
+my heart to admit another child: your wife shall be my daughter.' It
+is such an unspeakable comfort to me to recall those words now. Of all
+human affections gratitude is surely the holiest; and it blends itself
+with the sweetness of religion when it is gratitude to a father. And,
+therefore, do not grieve too much for me, when I tell you that the hopes
+which enchanted me when we parted are not to be fulfilled. Her hand is
+pledged to another,--another with claims upon her preference to which
+mine cannot be compared; and he is himself, putting aside the accidents
+of birth and fortune, immeasurably my superior. In that thought--I mean
+the thought that the man she selects deserves her more than I do, and
+that in his happiness she will blend her own--I shall find comfort, so
+soon as I can fairly reason down the first all-engrossing selfishness
+that follows the sense of unexpected and irremediable loss. Meanwhile
+you will think it not unnatural that I resort to such aids for change
+of heart as are afforded by change of scene. I start for the Continent
+to-night, and shall not rest till I reach Venice, which I have not yet
+seen. I feel irresistibly attracted towards still canals and gliding
+gondolas. I will write to you and to my dear mother the day I arrive.
+And I trust to write cheerfully, with full accounts of all I see and
+encounter. Do not, dearest father, in your letters to me, revert or
+allude to that grief which even the tenderest word from your own tender
+self might but chafe into pain more sensitive. After all, a disappointed
+love is a very common lot. And we meet every day, men--ay, and women
+too--who have known it, and are thoroughly cured. The manliest of our
+modern lyrical poets has said very nobly, and, no doubt, very justly,
+
+
+ "To bear is to conquer our fate.
+
+
+ "Ever your loving son,
+
+ "K. C."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+NEARLY a year and a half has elapsed since the date of my last chapter.
+Two Englishmen were--the one seated, the other reclined at length--on
+one of the mounds that furrow the ascent of Posilippo. Before them
+spread the noiseless sea, basking in the sunshine, without visible
+ripple; to the left there was a distant glimpse through gaps of
+brushwood of the public gardens and white water of the Chiaja. They were
+friends who had chanced to meet abroad unexpectedly, joined company, and
+travelled together for many months, chiefly in the East. They had been
+but a few days in Naples. The elder of the two had important affairs in
+England which ought to have summoned him back long since. But he did not
+let his friend know this; his affairs seemed to him less important than
+the duties he owed to one for whom he entertained that deep and noble
+love which is something stronger than brotherly, for with brotherly
+affection it combines gratitude and reverence. He knew, too, that
+his friend was oppressed by a haunting sorrow, of which the cause was
+divined by one, not revealed by the other.
+
+To leave him, so beloved, alone with that sorrow in strange lands, was a
+thought not to be cherished by a friend so tender; for in the friendship
+of this man there was that sort of tenderness which completes a nature,
+thoroughly manlike, by giving it a touch of the woman's.
+
+It was a day which in our northern climates is that of winter: in the
+southern clime of Naples it was mild as an English summer day, lingering
+on the brink of autumn; the sun sloping towards the west, and already
+gathering around it roseate and purple fleeces; elsewhere the deep blue
+sky was without a cloudlet.
+
+Both had been for some minutes silent; at length the man reclining on
+the grass--it was the younger man--said suddenly, and with no previous
+hint of the subject introduced, "Lay your hand on your heart, Tom, and
+answer me truly. Are your thoughts as clear from regrets as the heavens
+above us are from a cloud? Man takes regret from tears that have ceased
+to flow, as the heavens take clouds from the rains that have ceased to
+fall."
+
+"Regrets? Ah, I understand, for the loss of the girl I once loved to
+distraction! No; surely I made that clear to you many, many, many months
+ago, when I was your guest at Moleswich."
+
+"Ay, but I have never, since then, spoken to you on that subject. I did
+not dare. It seems to me so natural that a man, in the earlier struggle
+between love and reason, should say, 'Reason shall conquer, and
+has conquered;' and yet--and yet--as time glides on, feel that the
+conquerors who cannot put down rebellion have a very uneasy reign.
+Answer me not as at Moleswich, during the first struggle, but now, in
+the after-day, when reaction from struggle comes."
+
+"Upon my honour," answered the friend, "I have had no reaction at all.
+I was cured entirely, when I had once seen Jessie again, another man's
+wife, mother to his child, happy in her marriage; and, whether she was
+changed or not,--very different from the sort of wife I should like to
+marry, now that I am no longer a village farrier."
+
+"And, I remember, you spoke of some other girl whom it would suit you
+to marry. You have been long abroad from her. Do you ever think of
+her,--think of her still as your future wife? Can you love her? Can you,
+who have once loved so faithfully, love again?"
+
+"I am sure of that. I love Emily better than I did when I left England.
+We correspond. She writes such nice letters." Tom hesitated, blushed,
+and continued timidly, "I should like to show you one of her letters."
+
+"Do."
+
+Tom drew forth the last of such letters from his breast-pocket.
+
+Kenelm raised himself from the grass, took the letter, and read slowly,
+carefully, while Tom watched in vain for some approving smile to
+brighten up the dark beauty of that melancholy face.
+
+Certainly it was the letter a man in love might show with pride to a
+friend: the letter of a lady, well educated, well brought up, evincing
+affection modestly, intelligence modestly too; the sort of letter in
+which a mother who loved her daughter, and approved the daughter's
+choice, could not have suggested a correction.
+
+As Kenelm gave back the letter, his eyes met his friend's. Those were
+eager eyes,--eyes hungering for praise. Kenelm's heart smote him for
+that worst of sins in friendship,--want of sympathy; and that uneasy
+heart forced to his lips congratulations, not perhaps quite sincere, but
+which amply satisfied the lover. In uttering them, Kenelm rose to his
+feet, threw his arm round his friend's shoulder, and said, "Are you not
+tired of this place, Tom? I am. Let us go back to England to-morrow."
+Tom's honest face brightened vividly. "How selfish and egotistical I
+have been!" continued Kenelm; "I ought to have thought more of you, your
+career, your marriage,--pardon me--"
+
+"Pardon you,--pardon! Don't I owe to you all,--owe to you Emily herself?
+If you had never come to Graveleigh, never said, 'Be my friend,' what
+should I have been now? what--what?"
+
+The next day the two friends quitted Naples _en route_ for England, not
+exchanging many words by the way. The old loquacious crotchety humour
+of Kenelm had deserted him. A duller companion than he was you could not
+have conceived. He might have been the hero of a young lady's novel.
+It was only when they parted in London, that Kenelm evinced more secret
+purpose, more external emotion than one of his heraldic Daces shifting
+from the bed to the surface of a waveless pond.
+
+"If I have rightly understood you, Tom, all this change in you, all this
+cure of torturing regret, was wrought, wrought lastingly,--wrought so as
+to leave you heart-free for the world's actions and a home's peace, on
+that eve when you saw her whose face till then had haunted you, another
+man's happy wife, and in so seeing her, either her face was changed or
+your heart became so."
+
+"Quite true. I might express it otherwise, but the fact remains the
+same."
+
+"God bless you, Tom; bless you in your career without, in your home
+within," said Kenelm, wringing his friend's hand at the door of the
+carriage that was to whirl to love and wealth and station the whilom
+bully of a village, along the iron groove of that contrivance which,
+though now the tritest of prosaic realities, seemed once too poetical
+for a poet's wildest visions.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+A WINTER'S evening at Moleswich. Very different from a winter sunset
+at Naples. It is intensely cold. There has been a slight fall of snow,
+accompanied with severe, bright, clean frost, a thin sprinkling of white
+on the pavements. Kenelm Chillingly entered the town on foot, no longer
+a knapsack on his back. Passing through the main street, he paused a
+moment at the door of Will Somers. The shop was closed. No, he would
+not stay there to ask in a roundabout way for news. He would go in
+straightforwardly and manfully to Grasmere. He would take the inmates
+there by surprise. The sooner he could bring Tom's experience home
+to himself, the better. He had schooled his heart to rely on that
+experience, and it brought him back the old elasticity of his stride.
+In his lofty carriage and buoyant face were again visible the old
+haughtiness of the indifferentism that keeps itself aloof from the
+turbulent emotions and conventional frivolities of those whom its
+philosophy pities and scorns.
+
+"Ha! ha!" laughed he who like Swift never laughed aloud, and often
+laughed inaudibly. "Ha! ha! I shall exorcise the ghost of my grief. I
+shall never be haunted again. If that stormy creature whom love might
+have maddened into crime, if he were cured of love at once by a single
+visit to the home of her whose face was changed to him,--for the smiles
+and the tears of it had become the property of another man,--how much
+more should I be left without a scar! I, the heir of the Chillinglys!
+I, the kinsman of a Mivers! I, the pupil of a Welby! I--I, Kenelm
+Chillingly, to be thus--thus--" Here, in the midst of his boastful
+soliloquy, the well-remembered brook rushed suddenly upon eye and ear,
+gleaming and moaning under the wintry moon. Kenelm Chillingly stopped,
+covered his face with his hands, and burst into a passion of tears.
+
+Recovering himself slowly, he went on along the path, every step of
+which was haunted by the form of Lily. He reached the garden gate of
+Grasmere, lifted the latch, and entered. As he did so, a man, touching
+his hat, rushed beside, and advanced before him,--the village postman.
+Kenelm drew back, allowing the man to pass to the door, and as he thus
+drew back, he caught a side view of lighted windows looking on the
+lawn,--the windows of the pleasant drawing-room in which he had first
+heard Lily speak of her guardian.
+
+The postman left his letters, and regained the garden gate, while
+Kenelm still stood wistfully gazing on those lighted windows. He had,
+meanwhile, advanced along the whitened sward to the light, saying to
+himself, "Let me just see her and her happiness, and then I will knock
+boldly at the door, and say, 'Good-evening, Mrs. Melville.'"
+
+So Kenelm stole across the lawn, and, stationing himself at the angle of
+the wall, looked into the window.
+
+Melville, in dressing-robe and slippers, was seated alone by the
+fireside. His dog was lazily stretched on the hearth rug. One by one the
+features of the room, as the scene of his vanished happiness, grew out
+from its stillness; the delicately tinted walls, the dwarf bookcase,
+with its feminine ornaments on the upper shelf; the piano standing in
+the same place. Lily's own small low chair; that was not in its old
+place, but thrust into a remote angle, as if it had passed into disuse.
+Melville was reading a letter, no doubt one of those which the postman
+had left. Surely the contents were pleasant, for his fair face, always
+frankly expressive of emotion, brightened wonderfully as he read on.
+Then he rose with a quick, brisk movement, and pulled the bell hastily.
+
+A neat maid-servant entered,--a strange face to Kenelm. Melville gave
+her some brief message. "He has had joyous news," thought Kenelm. "He
+has sent for his wife that she may share his joy." Presently the door
+opened, and entered not Lily, but Mrs. Cameron.
+
+She looked changed. Her natural quietude of mien and movement the same,
+indeed, but with more languor in it. Her hair had become gray. Melville
+was standing by the table as she approached him. He put the letter into
+her hands with a gay, proud smile, and looked over her shoulder while
+she read it, pointing with his finger as to some lines that should more
+emphatically claim her attention.
+
+When she had finished her face reflected his smile. They exchanged a
+hearty shake of the hand, as if in congratulation.
+
+"Ah," thought Kenelm, "the letter is from Lily. She is abroad. Perhaps
+the birth of a first-born."
+
+Just then Blanche, who had not been visible before, emerged from under
+the table, and as Melville reseated himself by the fireside, sprang into
+his lap, rubbing herself against his breast. The expression of his face
+changed; he uttered some low exclamation. Mrs. Cameron took the creature
+from his lap, stroking it quietly, carried it across the room, and put
+it outside the door. Then she seated herself beside the artist, placing
+her hand in his, and they conversed in low tones, till Melville's face
+again grew bright, and again he took up the letter.
+
+A few minutes later the maid-servant entered with the tea-things,
+and after arranging them on the table approached the window. Kenelm
+retreated into the shade, the servant closed the shutters and drew the
+curtains; that scene of quiet home comfort vanished from the eyes of the
+looker-on.
+
+Kenelm felt strangely perplexed. What had become of Lily? was she indeed
+absent from her home? Had he conjectured rightly that the letter
+which had evidently so gladdened Melville was from her, or was
+it possible--here a thought of joy seized his heart and held him
+breathless--was it possible that, after all, she had not married her
+guardian; had found a home elsewhere,--was free? He moved on farther
+down the lawn, towards the water, that he might better bring before his
+sight that part of the irregular building in which Lily formerly had her
+sleeping-chamber, and her "own-own room."
+
+All was dark there; the shutters inexorably closed. The place with which
+the childlike girl had associated her most childlike fancies, taming and
+tending the honey-drinkers destined to pass into fairies, that fragile
+tenement was not closed against the winds and snows; its doors were
+drearily open; gaps in the delicate wire-work; of its dainty draperies a
+few tattered shreds hanging here and there; and on the depopulated floor
+the moonbeams resting cold and ghostly. No spray from the tiny fountain;
+its basin chipped and mouldering; the scanty waters therein frozen. Of
+all the pretty wild ones that Lily fancied she could tame, not one. Ah!
+yes, there was one, probably not of the old familiar number; a stranger
+that might have crept in for shelter from the first blasts of
+winter, and now clung to an angle in the farther wall, its wings
+folded,--asleep, not dead. But Kenelm saw it not; he noticed only the
+general desolation of the spot.
+
+"Natural enough," thought he. "She has outgrown all such pretty
+silliness. A wife cannot remain a child. Still, if she had belonged to
+me--" The thought choked even his inward, unspoken utterance. He turned
+away, paused a moment under the leafless boughs of the great willow
+still dipping into the brook, and then with impatient steps strode back
+towards the garden gate.
+
+"No,--no,--no. I cannot now enter that house and ask for Mrs. Melville.
+Trial enough for one night to stand on the old ground. I will return to
+the town. I will call at Jessie's, and there I can learn if she indeed
+be happy."
+
+So he went on by the path along the brook-side, the night momently
+colder and colder, and momently clearer and clearer, while the moon
+noiselessly glided into loftier heights. Wrapped in his abstracted
+thoughts, when he came to the spot in which the path split in twain,
+he did not take that which led more directly to the town. His steps,
+naturally enough following the train of his thoughts, led him along
+the path with which the object of his thoughts was associated. He found
+himself on the burial-ground, and in front of the old ruined tomb with
+the effaced inscription.
+
+"Ah! child! child!" he murmured almost audibly, "what depths of woman
+tenderness lay concealed in thee! In what loving sympathy with the
+past--sympathy only vouchsafed to the tenderest women and the highest
+poets--didst thou lay thy flowers on the tomb, to which thou didst give
+a poet's history interpreted by a woman's heart, little dreaming that
+beneath the stone slept a hero of thine own fallen race."
+
+He passed beneath the shadow of the yews, whose leaves no winter wind
+can strew, and paused at the ruined tomb,--no flower now on its stone,
+only a sprinkling of snow at the foot of it,--sprinklings of snow at the
+foot of each humbler grave-mound. Motionless in the frosty air rested
+the pointed church-spire, and through the frosty air, higher and higher
+up the arch of heaven, soared the unpausing moon. Around and below and
+above her, the stars which no science can number; yet not less difficult
+to number are the thoughts, desires, aspirations which, in a space of
+time briefer than a winter's night, can pass through the infinite deeps
+of a human soul.
+
+From his stand by the Gothic tomb, Kenelm looked along the churchyard
+for the infant's grave which Lily's pious care had bordered with votive
+flowers. Yes, in that direction there was still a gleam of colour; could
+it be of flowers in that biting winter time?--the moon is so deceptive,
+it silvers into the hue of the jessamines the green of the everlastings.
+
+He passed towards the white grave-mound. His sight had duped him; no
+pale flower, no green "everlasting" on its neglected border,--only brown
+mould, withered stalks, streaks of snow.
+
+"And yet," he said sadly, "she told me she had never broken a promise;
+and she had given a promise to the dying child. Ah! she is too happy now
+to think of the dead."
+
+So murmuring, he was about to turn towards the town, when close by
+that child's grave he saw another. Round that other there were pale
+"everlastings," dwarfed blossoms of the laurestinus; at the four angles
+the drooping bud of a Christmas rose; at the head of the grave was a
+white stone, its sharp edges cutting into the starlit air; and on the
+head, in fresh letters, were inscribed these words:--
+
+
+ To the Memory of
+ L. M.
+ Aged 17,
+ Died October 29, A. D. 18--,
+ This stone, above the grave to which her mortal
+ remains are consigned, beside that of an infant not
+ more sinless, is consecrated by those who
+ most mourn and miss her,
+ ISABEL CAMERON,
+ WALTER MELVILLE.
+ "Suffer the little children to come unto me."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE next morning Mr. Emlyn, passing from his garden to the town of
+Moleswich, descried a human form stretched on the burial-ground,
+stirring restlessly but very slightly, as if with an involuntary shiver,
+and uttering broken sounds, very faintly heard, like the moans that a
+man in pain strives to suppress and cannot.
+
+The rector hastened to the spot. The man was lying, his face downward,
+on a grave-mound, not dead, not asleep.
+
+"Poor fellow overtaken by drink, I fear," thought the gentle pastor; and
+as it was the habit of his mind to compassionate error even more than
+grief, he accosted the supposed sinner in very soothing tones--trying to
+raise him from the ground--and with very kindly words.
+
+Then the man lifted his face from its pillow on the grave-mound, looked
+round him dreamily into the gray, blank air of the cheerless morn,
+and rose to his feet quietly and slowly. The vicar was startled; he
+recognized the face of him he had last seen in the magnificent affluence
+of health and strength. But the character of the face was changed,--so
+changed! its old serenity of expression, at once grave and sweet,
+succeeded by a wild trouble in the heavy eyelids and trembling lips.
+
+"Mr. Chillingly,--you! Is it possible?"
+
+"Varus, Varus," exclaimed Kenelm, passionately, "what hast thou done
+with my legions?"
+
+At that quotation of the well-known greeting of Augustus to his
+unfortunate general, the scholar recoiled. Had his young friend's mind
+deserted him,--dazed, perhaps, by over-study?
+
+He was soon reassured; Kenelm's face settled back into calm, though a
+dreary calm, like that of the wintry day.
+
+"I beg pardon, Mr. Emlyn; I had not quite shaken off the hold of a
+strange dream. I dreamed that I was worse off than Augustus: he did not
+lose the world when the legions he had trusted to another vanished into
+a grave."
+
+Here Kenelm linked his arm in that of the rector,--on which he leaned
+rather heavily,--and drew him on from the burial-ground into the open
+space where the two paths met.
+
+"But how long have you returned to Moleswich?" asked Emlyn; "and how
+came you to choose so damp a bed for your morning slumbers?"
+
+"The wintry cold crept into my veins when I stood in the burial-ground,
+and I was very weary; I had no sleep at night. Do not let me take you
+out of your way; I am going on to Grasmere. So I see, by the record on a
+gravestone, that it is more than a year ago since Mr. Melville lost his
+wife."
+
+"Wife? He never married."
+
+"What!" cried Kenelm. "Whose, then, is that gravestone,--'L. M.'?"
+
+"Alas! it is our poor Lily's."
+
+"And she died unmarried?"
+
+As Kenelm said this he looked up, and the sun broke out from the
+gloomy haze of the morning. "I may claim thee, then," he thought within
+himself, "claim thee as mine when we meet again."
+
+"Unmarried,--yes," resumed the vicar. "She was indeed betrothed to her
+guardian; they were to have been married in the autumn, on his return
+from the Rhine. He went there to paint on the spot itself his great
+picture, which is now so famous,--'Roland, the Hermit Knight, looking
+towards the convent lattice for a sight of the Holy Nun.' Melville had
+scarcely gone before the symptoms of the disease which proved fatal to
+poor Lily betrayed themselves; they baffled all medical skill,--rapid
+decline. She was always very delicate, but no one detected in her the
+seeds of consumption. Melville only returned a day or two before her
+death. Dear childlike Lily! how we all mourned for her!--not least the
+poor, who believed in her fairy charms."
+
+"And least of all, it appears, the man she was to have married."
+
+"He?--Melville? How can you wrong him so? His grief was
+intense--overpowering--for the time."
+
+"For the time! what time?" muttered Kenelm, in tones too low for the
+pastor's ear.
+
+They moved on silently. Mr. Emlyn resumed,--
+
+"You noticed the text on Lily's gravestone--'Suffer the little children
+to come unto me'? She dictated it herself the day before she died. I was
+with her then, so I was at the last."
+
+"Were you--were you--at the last--the last? Good-day, Mr. Emlyn; we
+are just in sight of the garden gate. And--excuse me--I wish to see Mr.
+Melville alone."
+
+"Well, then, good-day; but if you are making any stay in the
+neighbourhood, will you not be our guest? We have a room at your
+service."
+
+"I thank you gratefully; but I return to London in an hour or so. Hold,
+a moment. You were with her at the last? She was resigned to die?"
+
+"Resigned! that is scarcely the word. The smile left upon her lips was
+not that of human resignation: it was the smile of a divine joy."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+"YES, sir, Mr. Melville is at home in his studio."
+
+Kenelm followed the maid across the hall into a room not built at the
+date of Kenelm's former visits to the house: the artist, making Grasmere
+his chief residence after Lily's death, had added it at the back of
+the neglected place wherein Lily had encaged "the souls of infants
+unbaptized."
+
+A lofty room, with a casement partially darkened, to the bleak north;
+various sketches on the walls; gaunt specimens of antique furniture,
+and of gorgeous Italian silks, scattered about in confused disorder;
+one large picture on its easel curtained; another as large, and half
+finished, before which stood the painter. He turned quickly, as Kenelm
+entered the room unannounced, let fall brush and palette, came up to him
+eagerly, grasped his hand, drooped his head on Kenelm's shoulder, and
+said, in a voice struggling with evident and strong emotion,--
+
+"Since we parted, such grief! such a loss!"
+
+"I know it; I have seen her grave. Let us not speak of it. Why
+so needlessly revive your sorrow? So--so--your sanguine hopes are
+fulfilled: the world at last has done you justice? Emlyn tells me that
+you have painted a very famous picture."
+
+Kenelm had seated himself as he thus spoke. The painter still stood with
+dejected attitude on the middle of the floor, and brushed his hand
+over his moistened eyes once or twice before he answered, "Yes, wait a
+moment, don't talk of fame yet. Bear with me. The sudden sight of you
+unnerved me."
+
+The artist here seated himself also on an old worm-eaten Gothic chest,
+rumpling and chafing the golden or tinselled threads of the embroidered
+silk, so rare and so time-worn, flung over the Gothic chest, so rare
+also, and so worm-eaten.
+
+Kenelm looked through half-closed lids at the artist, and his lips,
+before slightly curved with a secret scorn, became gravely compressed.
+In Melville's struggle to conceal emotion the strong man recognized a
+strong man,--recognized, and yet only wondered; wondered how such a man,
+to whom Lily had pledged her hand, could so soon after the loss of Lily
+go on painting pictures, and care for any praise bestowed on a yard of
+canvas.
+
+In a very few minutes Melville recommenced conversation,--no more
+reference to Lily than if she had never existed. "Yes, my last picture
+has been indeed a success,--a reward complete, if tardy, for all the
+bitterness of former struggles made in vain, for the galling sense of
+injustice, the anguish of which only an artist knows, when unworthy
+rivals are ranked before him.
+
+
+ "'Foes quick to blame, and friends afraid to praise.'
+
+
+"True that I have still much to encounter; the cliques still seek to
+disparage me, but between me and the cliques there stands at last the
+giant form of the public, and at last critics of graver weight than the
+cliques have deigned to accord to me a higher rank than even the public
+yet acknowledge. Ah, Mr. Chillingly, you do not profess to be a judge of
+paintings, but, excuse me, just look at this letter. I received it
+only last night from the greatest connoisseur of my art, certainly in
+England, perhaps in Europe." Here Melville drew, from the side-pocket
+of his picturesque _moyen age_ surtout, a letter signed by a name
+authoritative to all who, being painters themselves, acknowledge
+authority in one who could no more paint a picture himself than Addison,
+the ablest critic of the greatest poem modern Europe has produced, could
+have written ten lines of the "Paradise Lost," and thrust the letter
+into Kenelm's hand. Kenelm read it listlessly, with an increased
+contempt for an artist who could so find in gratified vanity consolation
+for the life gone from earth. But, listlessly as he read the letter, the
+sincere and fervent enthusiasm of the laudatory contents impressed him,
+and the preeminent authority of the signature could not be denied.
+
+The letter was written on the occasion of Melville's recent election to
+the dignity of R. A., successor to a very great artist whose death had
+created a vacancy in the Academy. He returned the letter to Melville,
+saying, "This is the letter I saw you reading last night as I looked
+in at your window. Indeed, for a man who cares for the opinion of other
+men, this letter is very flattering; and for the painter who cares for
+money, it must be very pleasant to know by how many guineas every inch
+of his canvas may be covered." Unable longer to control his passions of
+rage, of scorn, of agonizing grief, Kenelm then burst forth: "Man, man,
+whom I once accepted as a teacher on human life,--a teacher to warm, to
+brighten, to exalt mine own indifferent, dreamy, slow-pulsed self! has
+not the one woman whom thou didst select out of this overcrowded world
+to be bone of thy bone, flesh of thy flesh, vanished evermore from the
+earth,--little more than a year since her voice was silenced, her heart
+ceased to beat? But how slight is such loss to thy life compared to the
+worth of a compliment that flatters thy vanity!"
+
+The artist rose to his feet with an indignant impulse. But the angry
+flush faded from his cheek as he looked on the countenance of his
+rebuker. He walked up to him, and attempted to take his hand, but Kenelm
+snatched it scornfully from his grasp.
+
+"Poor friend," said Melville, sadly and soothingly, "I did not think you
+loved her thus deeply. Pardon me." He drew a chair close to Kenelm's,
+and after a brief pause went on thus, in very earnest tones, "I am not
+so heartless, not so forgetful of my loss as you suppose. But reflect,
+you have but just learned of her death, you are under the first shock of
+grief. More than a year has been given to me for gradual submission to
+the decree of Heaven. Now listen to me, and try to listen calmly. I
+am many years older than you: I ought to know better the conditions
+on which man holds the tenure of life. Life is composite, many-sided:
+nature does not permit it to be lastingly monopolized by a single
+passion, or while yet in the prime of its strength to be lastingly
+blighted by a single sorrow. Survey the great mass of our common race,
+engaged in the various callings, some the humblest, some the loftiest,
+by which the business of the world is carried on,--can you justly
+despise as heartless the poor trader, or the great statesman, when it
+may be but a few days after the loss of some one nearest and dearest to
+his heart, the trader reopens his shop, the statesman reappears in his
+office? But in me, the votary of art, in me you behold but the weakness
+of gratified vanity; if I feel joy in the hope that my art may triumph,
+and my country may add my name to the list of those who contribute to
+her renown, where and when ever lived an artist not sustained by that
+hope, in privation, in sickness, in the sorrows he must share with his
+kind? Nor is this hope that of a feminine vanity, a sicklier craving for
+applause; it identifies itself with glorious services to our land, to
+our race, to the children of all after time. Our art cannot triumph, our
+name cannot live, unless we achieve a something that tends to beautify
+or ennoble the world in which we accept the common heritage of toil and
+of sorrow, in order therefrom to work out for successive multitudes a
+recreation and a joy."
+
+While the artist thus spoke Kenelm lifted towards his face eyes charged
+with suppressed tears. And the face, kindling as the artist vindicated
+himself from the young man's bitter charge, became touchingly sweet in
+its grave expression at the close of the not ignoble defence.
+
+"Enough," said Kenelm, rising. "There is a ring of truth in what you
+say. I can conceive the artist's, the poet's escape from this world,
+when all therein is death and winter, into the world he creates and
+colours at his will with the hues of summer. So, too, I can conceive
+how the man whose life is sternly fitted into the grooves of a trader's
+calling, or a statesman's duties, is borne on by the force of custom,
+afar from such brief halting-spot as a grave. But I am no poet, no
+artist, no trader, no statesman; I have no calling, my life is fixed
+into no grooves. Adieu."
+
+"Hold a moment. Not now, but somewhat later, ask yourself whether any
+life can be permitted to wander in space, a monad detached from the
+lives of others. Into some groove or other, sooner or later, it
+must settle, and be borne on obedient to the laws of Nature and the
+responsibility to God."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+KENELM went back alone, and with downcast looks, through the desolate,
+flowerless garden, when at the other side of the gate a light touch was
+laid on his arm. He looked up, and recognized Mrs. Cameron.
+
+"I saw you," she said, "from my window coming to the house, and I have
+been waiting for you here. I wished to speak to you alone. Allow me to
+walk beside you."'
+
+Kenelm inclined his head assentingly, but made no answer. They were
+nearly midway between the cottage and the burial-ground when Mrs.
+Cameron resumed, her tones quick and agitated, contrasting her habitual
+languid quietude,--
+
+"I have a great weight on my mind; it ought not to be remorse. I acted
+as I thought in my conscience for the best. But oh, Mr. Chillingly, if I
+erred,--if I judged wrongly, do say you at least forgive me." She seized
+his hand, pressing it convulsively. Kenelm muttered inaudibly: a sort
+of dreary stupor had succeeded to the intense excitement of grief. Mrs.
+Cameron went on,--
+
+"You could not have married Lily; you know you could not. The secret of
+her birth could not, in honour, have been concealed from your parents.
+They could not have consented to your marriage; and even if you had
+persisted, without that consent and in spite of that secret, to press
+for it,--even had she been yours--"
+
+"Might she not be living now?" cried Kenelm, fiercely.
+
+"No,--no; the secret must have come out. The cruel world would have
+discovered it; it would have reached her ears. The shame of it would
+have killed her. How bitter then would have been her short interval of
+life! As it is, she passed away,--resigned and happy. But I own that I
+did not, could not, understand her, could not believe her feeling for
+you to be so deep. I did think that when she knew her own heart she
+would find that love for her guardian was its strongest affection. She
+assented, apparently without a pang, to become his wife; and she seemed
+always so fond of him, and what girl would not be? But I was mistaken,
+deceived. From the day you saw her last, she began to fade away; but
+then Walter left a few days after, and I thought that it was his absence
+she mourned. She never owned to me that it was yours,--never till too
+late,--too late,--just when my sad letter had summoned him back, only
+three days before she died. Had I known earlier, while yet there was
+hope of recovery, I must have written to you, even though the obstacles
+to your union with her remained the same. Oh, again I implore you, say
+that if I erred you forgive me. She did, kissing me so tenderly. She did
+forgive me. Will not you? It would have been her wish."
+
+"Her wish? Do you think I could disobey it? I know not if I have
+anything to forgive. If I have, now could I not forgive one who loved
+her? God comfort us both."
+
+He bent down and kissed Mrs. Cameron's forehead. The poor woman threw
+her arm gratefully, lovingly round him, and burst into tears.
+
+When she had recovered her emotion, she said,--
+
+"And now, it is with so much lighter a heart that I can fulfil her
+commission to you. But, before I place this in your hands, can you
+make me one promise? Never tell Melville how she loved you. She was so
+careful he should never guess that. And if he knew it was the thought of
+union with him which had killed her, he would never smile again."
+
+"You would not ask such a promise if you could guess how sacred from all
+the world I hold the secret that you confide to me. By that secret
+the grave is changed into an altar. Our bridals now are only a while
+deferred."
+
+Mrs. Cameron placed a letter in Kenelm's hand, and murmuring in accents
+broken by a sob, "She gave it to me the day before her last," left him,
+and with quick vacillating steps hurried back towards the cottage. She
+now understood him, at last, too well not to feel that on opening that
+letter he must be alone with the dead.
+
+It is strange that we need have so little practical household knowledge
+of each other to be in love. Never till then had Kenelm's eyes rested
+upon Lily's handwriting. And he now gazed at the formal address on the
+envelope with a sort of awe. Unknown handwriting coming to him from an
+unknown world,--delicate, tremulous handwriting,--handwriting not of one
+grown up, yet not of a child who had long to live.
+
+He turned the envelope over and over,--not impatiently, as does the
+lover whose heart beats at the sound of the approaching footstep, but
+lingeringly, timidly. He would not break the seal.
+
+He was now so near the burial-ground. Where should the first letter
+ever received from her--the sole letter he ever could receive--be so
+reverentially, lovingly read, as at her grave?
+
+He walked on to the burial-ground, sat down by the grave, broke the
+envelope; a poor little ring, with a poor little single turquoise,
+rolled out and rested at his feet. The letter contained only these
+words,--
+
+
+The ring comes back to you. I could not live to marry another. I never
+knew how I loved you--till, till I began to pray that you might not love
+me too much. Darling! darling! good-by, darling!
+
+ LILY.
+
+Don't let Lion ever see this, or ever know what it says to you. He is so
+good, and deserves to be so happy. Do you remember the day of the ring?
+Darling! darling!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+SOMEWHAT more than another year has rolled away. It is early spring
+in London. The trees in the park and squares are budding into leaf and
+blossom. Leopold Travers has had a brief but serious conversation with
+his daughter, and now gone forth on horseback. Handsome and graceful
+still, Leopold Travers when in London is pleased to find himself
+scarcely less the fashion with the young than he was when himself in
+youth. He is now riding along the banks of the Serpentine, no one better
+mounted, better dressed, better looking, or talking with greater fluency
+on the topics which interest his companions.
+
+Cecilia is in the smaller drawing-room, which is exclusively
+appropriated to her use, alone with Lady Glenalvon.
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"I own, my dear, dear Cecilia, that I arrange myself at
+last on the side of your father. How earnestly at one time I had hoped
+that Kenelm Chillingly might woo and win the bride that seemed to me
+most fitted to adorn and to cheer his life, I need not say. But when at
+Exmundham he asked me to befriend his choice of another, to reconcile
+his mother to that choice,--evidently not a suitable one,--I gave him
+up. And though that affair is at an end, he seems little likely ever to
+settle down to practical duties and domestic habits, an idle wanderer
+over the face of the earth, only heard of in remote places and with
+strange companions. Perhaps he may never return to England."
+
+CECILIA.--"He is in England now, and in London."
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"You amaze me! Who told you so?"
+
+CECILIA.--"His father, who is with him. Sir Peter called yesterday, and
+spoke to me so kindly." Cecilia here turned aside her face to conceal
+the tears that had started to her eyes.
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"Did Mr. Travers see Sir Peter?"
+
+CECILIA.--"Yes; and I think it was something that passed between them
+which made my father speak to me--for the first time--almost sternly."
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"In urging Chillingly Gordon's suit?"
+
+CECILIA.--"Commanding me to reconsider my rejection of it. He has
+contrived to fascinate my father."
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"So he has me. Of course you might choose among other
+candidates for your hand one of much higher worldly rank, of much larger
+fortune; yet, as you have already rejected them, Gordon's merits become
+still more entitled to a fair hearing. He has already leaped into
+a position that mere rank and mere wealth cannot attain. Men of all
+parties speak highly of his parliamentary abilities. He is already
+marked in public opinion as a coming man,--a future minister of the
+highest grade. He has youth and good looks; his moral character is
+without a blemish: yet his manners are so free from affected austerity,
+so frank, so genial. Any woman might be pleased with his companionship;
+and you, with your intellect, your culture,--you, so born for high
+station,--you of all women might be proud to partake the anxieties of
+his career and the rewards of his ambition."
+
+CECILIA (clasping her hands tightly together).--"I cannot, I cannot. He
+may be all you say,--I know nothing against Mr. Chillingly Gordon,--but
+my whole nature is antagonistic to his, and even were it not so--"
+
+She stopped abruptly, a deep blush warming up her fair face, and
+retreating to leave it coldly pale.
+
+LADY GLENALVON (tenderly kissing her).--"You have not, then, even
+yet conquered the first maiden fancy; the ungrateful one is still
+remembered?"
+
+Cecilia bowed her head on her friend's breast, and murmured imploringly,
+"Don't speak against him; he has been so unhappy. How much he must have
+loved!"
+
+"But it is not you whom he loved."
+
+"Something here, something at my heart, tells me that he will love me
+yet; and, if not, I am contented to be his friend."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+WHILE the conversation just related took place between Cecilia and
+Lady Glenalvon, Chillingly Gordon was seated alone with Mivers in
+the comfortable apartment of the cynical old bachelor. Gordon had
+breakfasted with his kinsman, but that meal was long over; the two
+men having found much to talk about on matters very interesting to the
+younger, nor without interest to the elder one.
+
+It is true that Chillingly Gordon had, within the very short space of
+time that had elapsed since his entrance into the House of Commons,
+achieved one of those reputations which mark out a man for early
+admission into the progressive career of office,--not a very showy
+reputation, but a very solid one. He had none of the gifts of the
+genuine orator, no enthusiasm, no imagination, no imprudent bursts of
+fiery words from a passionate heart. But he had all the gifts of
+an exceedingly telling speaker,--a clear metallic voice; well-bred,
+appropriate action, not less dignified for being somewhat too quiet;
+readiness for extempore replies; industry and method for prepared
+expositions of principle or fact. But his principal merit with the
+chiefs of the assembly was in the strong good sense and worldly tact
+which made him a safe speaker. For this merit he was largely indebted to
+his frequent conferences with Chillingly Mivers. That gentleman, whether
+owing to his social qualities or to the influence of "The Londoner" on
+public opinion, enjoyed an intimate acquaintance with the chiefs of all
+parties, and was up to his ears in the wisdom of the world. "Nothing,"
+he would say, "hurts a young Parliamentary speaker like violence in
+opinion, one way or the other. Shun it. Always allow that much may be
+said on both sides. When the chiefs of your own side suddenly adopt a
+violence, you can go with them or against them, according as best suits
+your own book."
+
+"So," said Mivers, reclined on his sofa, and approaching the end of his
+second Trabuco (he never allowed himself more than two), "so I think we
+have pretty well settled the tone you must take in your speech to-night.
+It is a great occasion."
+
+"True. It is the first time in which the debate has been arranged so
+that I may speak at ten o'clock or later. That in itself is a great
+leap; and it is a Cabinet minister whom I am to answer,--luckily, he
+is a very dull fellow. Do you think I might hazard a joke,--at least a
+witticism?"
+
+"At his expense? Decidedly not. Though his office compels him to
+introduce this measure, he was by no means in its favour when it was
+discussed in the Cabinet; and though, as you say, he is dull, it is
+precisely that sort of dulness which is essential to the formation
+of every respectable Cabinet. Joke at him, indeed! Learn that gentle
+dulness never loves a joke--at its own expense. Vain man! seize the
+occasion which your blame of his measure affords you to secure his
+praise of yourself; compliment him. Enough of politics. It never does to
+think too much over what one has already decided to say. Brooding over
+it, one may become too much in earnest, and commit an indiscretion. So
+Kenelm has come back?"
+
+"Yes. I heard that news last night, at White's, from Travers. Sir Peter
+had called on Travers."
+
+"Travers still favours your suit to the heiress?"
+
+"More, I think, than ever. Success in Parliament has great effect on a
+man who has success in fashion and respects the opinion of clubs. But
+last night he was unusually cordial. Between you and me, I think he is
+a little afraid that Kenelm may yet be my rival. I gathered that from a
+hint he let fall of the unwelcome nature of Sir Peter's talk to him."
+
+"Why has Travers conceived a dislike to poor Kenelm? He seemed partial
+enough to him once."
+
+"Ay, but not as a son-in-law, even before I had a chance of becoming so.
+And when, after Kenelm appeared at Exmundham, while Travers was staying
+there, Travers learned, I suppose from Lady Chillingly, that Kenelm had
+fallen in love with and wanted to marry some other girl, who it
+seems rejected him; and still more when he heard that Kenelm had been
+subsequently travelling on the Continent in company with a low-lived
+fellow, the drunken, riotous son of a farrier, you may well conceive how
+so polished and sensible a man as Leopold Travers would dislike the
+idea of giving his daughter to one so little likely to make an agreeable
+son-in-law. Bah! I have no fear of Kenelm. By the way, did Sir Peter say
+if Kenelm had quite recovered his health? He was at death's door some
+eighteen months ago, when Sir Peter and Lady Chillingly were summoned to
+town by the doctors."
+
+"My dear Gordon, I fear there is no chance of your succession to
+Exmundham. Sir Peter says that his wandering Hercules is as stalwart
+as ever, and more equable in temperament, more taciturn and grave,--in
+short, less odd. But when you say you have no fear of Kenelm's rivalry,
+do you mean only as to Cecilia Travers?"
+
+"Neither as to that nor as to anything in life; and as to the succession
+to Exmundham, it is his to leave as he pleases, and I have cause to
+think he would never leave it to me. More likely to Parson John or the
+parson's son,--or why not to yourself? I often think that for the prizes
+immediately set before my ambition I am better off without land: land is
+a great obfuscator."
+
+"Humph, there is some truth in that. Yet the fear of land and
+obfuscation does not seem to operate against your suit to Cecilia
+Travers?"
+
+"Her father is likely enough to live till I maybe contented to 'rest and
+be thankful' in the Upper House; and I should not like to be a landless
+peer."
+
+"You are right there; but I should tell you that, now Kenelm has come
+back, Sir Peter has set his heart on his son's being your rival."
+
+"For Cecilia?"
+
+"Perhaps; but certainly for Parliamentary reputation. The senior member
+for the county means to retire, and Sir Peter has been urged to allow
+his son to be brought forward,--from what I hear, with the certainty of
+success."
+
+"What! in spite of that wonderful speech of his on coming of age?"
+
+"Pooh! that is now understood to have been but a bad joke on the new
+ideas, and their organs, including 'The Londoner.' But if Kenelm does
+come into the House, it will not be on your side of the question; and
+unless I greatly overrate his abilities--which very likely I do--he will
+not be a rival to despise. Except, indeed, that he may have one fault
+which in the present day would be enough to unfit him for public life."
+
+"And what is that fault?"
+
+"Treason to the blood of the Chillinglys. This is the age, in England,
+when one cannot be too much of a Chillingly. I fear that if Kenelm does
+become bewildered by a political abstraction,--call it, no matter what,
+say, 'love of his country,' or some such old-fashioned crotchet,--I
+fear, I greatly fear, that he may be--in earnest."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE LAST.
+
+IT was a field night in the House of Commons,--an adjourned debate,
+opened by George Belvoir, who had been, the last two years, very slowly
+creeping on in the favour, or rather the indulgence of the House, and
+more than justifying Kenelm's prediction of his career. Heir to a noble
+name and vast estates, extremely hard-working, very well informed, it
+was impossible that he should not creep on. That night he spoke sensibly
+enough, assisting his memory by frequent references to his notes;
+listened to courteously, and greeted with a faint "Hear, hear!" of
+relief when he had done.
+
+Then the House gradually thinned till nine o'clock, at which hour it
+became very rapidly crowded. A Cabinet minister had solemnly risen,
+deposited on the table before him a formidable array of printed papers,
+including a corpulent blue-book. Leaning his arm on the red box, he
+commenced with this awe-compelling sentence,--
+
+"Sir, I join issue with the right honourable gentleman opposite. He
+says this is not raised as a party question. I deny it. Her Majesty's
+Government are put upon their trial."
+
+Here there were cheers, so loudly, and so rarely greeting a speech from
+that Cabinet minister, that he was put out, and had much to "hum" and to
+"ha," before he could recover the thread of his speech. Then he went on,
+with unbroken but lethargic fluency; read long extracts from the public
+papers, inflicted a whole page from the blue-book, wound up with a
+peroration of respectable platitudes, glanced at the clock, saw that he
+had completed the hour which a Cabinet minister who does not profess to
+be oratorical is expected to speak, but not to exceed; and sat down.
+
+Up rose a crowd of eager faces, from which the Speaker, as previously
+arranged with the party whips, selected one,--a young face, hardy,
+intelligent, emotionless.
+
+I need not say that it was the face of Chillingly Gordon. His position
+that night was one that required dexterous management and delicate tact.
+He habitually supported the Government; his speeches had been hitherto
+in their favour. On this occasion he differed from the Government. The
+difference was known to the chiefs of the Opposition, and hence the
+arrangement of the whips, that he should speak for the first time after
+ten o'clock, and for the first time in reply to a Cabinet minister.
+It is a position in which a young party man makes or mars his future.
+Chillingly Gordon spoke from the third row behind the Government; he had
+been duly cautioned by Mivers not to affect a conceited independence, or
+an adhesion to "violence" in ultra-liberal opinions, by seating
+himself below the gangway. Speaking thus, amid the rank and file of the
+Ministerial supporters, any opinion at variance with the mouthpieces of
+the Treasury Bench would be sure to produce a more effective sensation
+than if delivered from the ranks of the mutinous Bashi Bazouks divided
+by the gangway from better disciplined forces. His first brief sentences
+enthralled the House, conciliated the Ministerial side, kept the
+Opposition side in suspense. The whole speech was, indeed, felicitously
+adroit, and especially in this, that, while in opposition to the
+Government as a whole, it expressed the opinions of a powerful section
+of the Cabinet, which, though at present a minority, yet being the most
+enamoured of a New Idea, the progress of the age would probably render
+a safe investment for the confidence which honest Gordon reposed in its
+chance of beating its colleagues.
+
+It was not, however, till Gordon had concluded that the cheers of his
+audience--impulsive and hearty as are the cheers of that assembly when
+the evidence of intellect is unmistakable--made manifest to the gallery
+and the reporters the full effect of the speech he had delivered. The
+chief of the Opposition whispered to his next neighbour, "I wish we
+could get that man." The Cabinet minister whom Gordon had answered--more
+pleased with a personal compliment to himself than displeased with an
+attack on the measure his office compelled him to advocate--whispered to
+his chief, "That is a man we must not lose."
+
+Two gentlemen in the Speaker's gallery, who had sat there from the
+opening of the debate, now quitted their places. Coming into the lobby,
+they found themselves commingled with a crowd of members who had also
+quitted their seats, after Gordon's speech, in order to discuss its
+merits, as they gathered round the refreshment table for oranges or
+soda-water. Among them was George Belvoir, who, on sight of the younger
+of the two gentlemen issuing from the Speaker's gallery, accosted him
+with friendly greeting,--
+
+"Ha! Chillingly, how are you? Did not know you were in town. Been
+here all the evening? Yes; very good debate. How did you like Gordon's
+speech?"
+
+"I liked yours much better."
+
+"Mine!" cried George, very much flattered and very much surprised. "Oh,
+mine was a mere humdrum affair, a plain statement of the reasons for the
+vote I should give. And Gordon's was anything but that. You did not like
+his opinions?"
+
+"I don't know what his opinions are. But I did not like his ideas."
+
+"I don't quite understand you. What ideas?"
+
+"The new ones; by which it is shown how rapidly a great state can be
+made small."
+
+Here Mr. Belvoir was taken aside by a brother member, on an important
+matter to be brought before the committee on salmon fisheries, on which
+they both served; and Kenelm, with his companion, Sir Peter, threaded
+his way through the crowded lobby and disappeared. Emerging into the
+broad space, with its lofty clock-tower, Sir Peter halted, and pointing
+towards the old Abbey, half in shadow, half in light, under the tranquil
+moonbeams, said,--
+
+"It tells much for the duration of a people when it accords with the
+instinct of immortality in a man; when an honoured tomb is deemed
+recompense for the toils and dangers of a noble life. How much of the
+history of England Nelson summed up in the simple words,--'Victory or
+Westminster Abbey.'"
+
+"Admirably expressed, my dear father," said Kenelm, briefly.
+
+"I agree with your remark, which I overheard, on Gordon's speech,"
+resumed Sir Peter. "It was wonderfully clever; yet I should have been
+sorry to hear you speak it. It is not by such sentiments that Nelsons
+become great. If such sentiments should ever be national, the cry will
+not be 'Victory or Westminster Abbey!' but 'Defeat and the Three per
+Cents!'"
+
+Pleased with his own unwonted animation, and with the sympathizing
+half-smile on his son's taciturn lips, Sir Peter then proceeded more
+immediately to the subjects which pressed upon his heart. Gordon's
+success in Parliament, Gordon's suit to Cecilia Travers, favoured, as
+Sir Peter had learned, by her father, rejected as yet by herself, were
+somehow inseparably mixed up in Sir Peter's mind and his words, as he
+sought to kindle his son's emulation. He dwelt on the obligations which
+a country imposed on its citizens, especially on the young and vigorous
+generation to which the destinies of those to follow were intrusted;
+and with these stern obligations he combined all the cheering and tender
+associations which an English public man connects with an English home:
+the wife with a smile to soothe the cares, and a mind to share the
+aspirations, of a life that must go through labour to achieve renown;
+thus, in all he said, binding together, as if they could not be
+disparted, Ambition and Cecilia.
+
+His son did not interrupt him by a word, Sir Peter in his eagerness not
+noticing that Kenelm had drawn him aside from the direct thoroughfare,
+and had now made halt in the middle of Westminster bridge, bending
+over the massive parapet and gazing abstractedly upon the waves of
+the starlit river. On the right the stately length of the people's
+legislative palace, so new in its date, so elaborately in each detail
+ancient in its form, stretching on towards the lowly and jagged roofs of
+penury and crime. Well might these be so near to the halls of a people's
+legislative palace: near to the heart of every legislator for a people
+must be the mighty problem how to increase a people's splendour and its
+virtue, and how to diminish its penury and its crime.
+
+"How strange it is," said Kenelm, still bending over the parapet,
+"that throughout all my desultory wanderings I have ever been attracted
+towards the sight and the sound of running waters, even those of the
+humblest rill! Of what thoughts, of what dreams, of what memories,
+colouring the history of my past, the waves of the humblest rill could
+speak, were the waves themselves not such supreme philosophers,--roused
+indeed on their surface, vexed by a check to their own course, but so
+indifferent to all that makes gloom or death to the mortals who think
+and dream and feel beside their banks."
+
+"Bless me," said Peter to himself, "the boy has got back to his old vein
+of humours and melancholies. He has not heard a word I have been saying.
+Travers is right. He will never do anything in life. Why did I christen
+him Kenelm? he might as well have been christened Peter." Still, loth
+to own that his eloquence had been expended in vain and that the wish of
+his heart was doomed to expire disappointed, Sir Peter said aloud, "You
+have not listened to what I said; Kenelm, you grieve me."
+
+"Grieve you! you! do not say that, Father, dear Father. Listen to you!
+Every word you have said has sunk into the deepest deep of my heart.
+Pardon my foolish, purposeless snatch of talk to myself: it is but my
+way, only my way, dear Father!"
+
+"Boy, boy," cried Sir Peter, with tears in his voice, "if you could
+get out of those odd ways of yours I should be so thankful. But if
+you cannot, nothing you can do shall grieve me. Only, let me say this;
+running waters have had a great charm for you. With a humble rill you
+associate thoughts, dreams, memories in your past. But now you halt by
+the stream of the mighty river: before you the senate of an empire wider
+than Alexander's; behind you the market of a commerce to which that of
+Tyre was a pitiful trade. Look farther down, those squalid hovels,
+how much there to redeem or to remedy; and out of sight, but not very
+distant, the nation's Walhalla, 'Victory or Westminster Abbey!' The
+humble rill has witnessed your past. Has the mighty river no effect on
+your future? The rill keeps no record of your past: shall the river
+keep no record of your future? Ah, boy, boy, I see you are dreaming
+still,--no use talking. Let us go home."
+
+"I was not dreaming, I was telling myself that the time had come to
+replace the old Kenelm with the new ideas, by a new Kenelm with the
+Ideas of Old. Ah! perhaps we must,--at whatever cost to ourselves,--we
+must go through the romance of life before we clearly detect what is
+grand in its realities. I can no longer lament that I stand estranged
+from the objects and pursuits of my race. I have learned how much I have
+with them in common. I have known love; I have known sorrow."
+
+Kenelm paused a moment, only a moment, then lifted the head which,
+during that pause, had drooped, and stood erect at the full height of
+his stature, startling his father by the change that had passed over his
+face; lip, eye, his whole aspect, eloquent with a resolute enthusiasm,
+too grave to be the flash of a passing moment.
+
+"Ay, ay," he said, "Victory or Westminster Abbey! The world is a
+battle-field in which the worst wounded are the deserters, stricken as
+they seek to fly, and hushing the groans that would betray the secret of
+their inglorious hiding-place. The pain of wounds received in the thick
+of the fight is scarcely felt in the joy of service to some honoured
+cause, and is amply atoned by the reverence for noble scars. My choice
+is made. Not that of deserter, that of soldier in the ranks."
+
+"It will not be long before you rise from the ranks, my boy, if you hold
+fast to the Idea of Old, symbolized in the English battle-cry, 'Victory
+or Westminster Abbey.'"
+
+So saying, Sir Peter took his son's arm, leaning on it proudly; and so,
+into the crowded thoroughfares, from the halting-place on the modern
+bridge that spans the legendary river, passes the Man of the Young
+Generation to fates beyond the verge of the horizon to which the eyes of
+my generation must limit their wistful gaze.
+
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Kenelm Chillingly, Complete, by
+Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KENELM CHILLINGLY, COMPLETE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 7658.txt or 7658.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/7/6/5/7658/
+
+Produced by David Widger and Dagny
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/7658.zip b/7658.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d739ef3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/7658.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+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
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5125b44
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #7658 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/7658)
diff --git a/old/b086w10.txt b/old/b086w10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..db90b7e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/b086w10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,21844 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook Kenelm Chillingly,by Lytton, Complete
+#86 in our series by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project
+Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the
+header without written permission.
+
+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions in
+how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**EBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers*****
+
+
+Title: Kenelm Chillingly, Complete
+
+Author: Edward Bulwer-Lytton
+
+Release Date: March 2005 [EBook #7658]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on March 25, 2004]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+
+
+
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHILLINGLY, LYTTON, COMPLETE ***
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by Dagny, dagnypg@yahoo.com
+and David Widger, widger@cecomet.net
+
+
+
+
+
+ KENELM CHILLINGLY
+
+ HIS ADVENTURES AND OPINIONS
+
+ BY
+
+ EDWARD BULWER LYTTON
+
+ (LORD LYTTON)
+
+
+
+
+BOOK I.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, of Exmundham, Baronet, F.R.S. and F.A.S., was
+the representative of an ancient family, and a landed proprietor of
+some importance. He had married young; not from any ardent
+inclination for the connubial state, but in compliance with the
+request of his parents. They took the pains to select his bride; and
+if they might have chosen better, they might have chosen worse, which
+is more than can be said for many men who choose wives for themselves.
+Miss Caroline Brotherton was in all respects a suitable connection.
+She had a pretty fortune, which was of much use in buying a couple of
+farms, long desiderated by the Chillinglys as necessary for the
+rounding of their property into a ring-fence. She was highly
+connected, and brought into the county that experience of fashionable
+life acquired by a young lady who has attended a course of balls for
+three seasons, and gone out in matrimonial honours, with credit to
+herself and her chaperon. She was handsome enough to satisfy a
+husband's pride, but not so handsome as to keep perpetually on the
+/qui vive/ a husband's jealousy. She was considered highly
+accomplished; that is, she played upon the pianoforte so that any
+musician would say she "was very well taught;" but no musician would
+go out of his way to hear her a second time. She painted in
+water-colours--well enough to amuse herself. She knew French and
+Italian with an elegance so lady-like that, without having read more
+than selected extracts from authors in those languages, she spoke them
+both with an accent more correct than we have any reason to attribute
+to Rousseau or Ariosto. What else a young lady may acquire in order
+to be styled highly accomplished I do not pretend to know; but I am
+sure that the young lady in question fulfilled that requirement in the
+opinion of the best masters. It was not only an eligible match for
+Sir Peter Chillingly,--it was a brilliant match. It was also a very
+unexceptionable match for Miss Caroline Brotherton. This excellent
+couple got on together as most excellent couples do. A short time
+after marriage, Sir Peter, by the death of his parents--who, having
+married their heir, had nothing left in life worth the trouble of
+living for--succeeded to the hereditary estates; he lived for nine
+months of the year at Exmundham, going to town for the other three
+months. Lady Chillingly and himself were both very glad to go to
+town, being bored at Exmundham; and very glad to go back to Exmundham,
+being bored in town. With one exception it was an exceedingly happy
+marriage, as marriages go. Lady Chillingly had her way in small
+things; Sir Peter his way in great. Small things happen every day;
+great things once in three years. Once in three years Lady Chillingly
+gave way to Sir Peter; households so managed go on regularly. The
+exception to their connubial happiness was, after all, but of a
+negative description. Their affection was such that they sighed for a
+pledge of it; fourteen years had he and Lady Chillingly remained
+unvisited by the little stranger.
+
+Now, in default of male issue, Sir Peter's estates passed to a distant
+cousin as heir-at-law; and during the last four years this heir-at-law
+had evinced his belief that practically speaking he was already
+heir-apparent; and (though Sir Peter was a much younger man than
+himself, and as healthy as any man well can be) had made his
+expectations of a speedy succession unpleasantly conspicuous. He had
+refused his consent to a small exchange of lands with a neighbouring
+squire, by which Sir Peter would have obtained some good arable land,
+for an outlying unprofitable wood that produced nothing but fagots and
+rabbits, with the blunt declaration that he, the heir-at-law, was fond
+of rabbit-shooting, and that the wood would be convenient to him next
+season if he came into the property by that time, which he very
+possibly might. He disputed Sir Peter's right to make his customary
+fall of timber, and had even threatened him with a bill in Chancery on
+that subject. In short, this heir-at-law was exactly one of those
+persons to spite whom a landed proprietor would, if single, marry at
+the age of eighty in the hope of a family.
+
+Nor was it only on account of his very natural wish to frustrate the
+expectations of this unamiable relation that Sir Peter Chillingly
+lamented the absence of the little stranger. Although belonging to
+that class of country gentlemen to whom certain political reasoners
+deny the intelligence vouchsafed to other members of the community,
+Sir Peter was not without a considerable degree of book-learning and a
+great taste for speculative philosophy. He sighed for a legitimate
+inheritor to the stores of his erudition, and, being a very benevolent
+man, for a more active and useful dispenser of those benefits to the
+human race which philosophers confer by striking hard against each
+other; just as, how full soever of sparks a flint may be, they might
+lurk concealed in the flint till doomsday, if the flint were not hit
+by the steel. Sir Peter, in short, longed for a son amply endowed
+with the combative quality, in which he himself was deficient, but
+which is the first essential to all seekers after renown, and
+especially to benevolent philosophers.
+
+Under these circumstances one may well conceive the joy that filled
+the household of Exmundham and extended to all the tenantry on that
+venerable estate, by whom the present possessor was much beloved and
+the prospect of an heir-at-law with a special eye to the preservation
+of rabbits much detested, when the medical attendant of the
+Chillinglys declared that 'her ladyship was in an interesting way;'
+and to what height that joy culminated when, in due course of time, a
+male baby was safely entbroned in his cradle. To that cradle Sir
+Peter was summoned. He entered the room with a lively bound and a
+radiant countenance: he quitted it with a musing step and an
+overclouded brow.
+
+Yet the baby was no monster. It did not come into the world with two
+heads, as some babies are said to have done; it was formed as babies
+are in general; was on the whole a thriving baby, a fine baby.
+Nevertheless, its aspect awed the father as already it had awed the
+nurse. The creature looked so unutterably solemn. It fixed its eyes
+upon Sir Peter with a melancholy reproachful stare; its lips were
+compressed and drawn downward as if discontentedly meditating its
+future destinies. The nurse declared in a frightened whisper that it
+had uttered no cry on facing the light. It had taken possession of
+its cradle in all the dignity of silent sorrow. A more saddened and a
+more thoughtful countenance a human being could not exhibit if he were
+leaving the world instead of entering it.
+
+"Hem!" said Sir Peter to himself on regaining the solitude of his
+library; "a philosopher who contributes a new inhabitant to this vale
+of tears takes upon himself very anxious responsibilities--"
+
+At that moment the joy-bells rang out from the neighbouring church
+tower, the summer sun shone into the windows, the bees hummed among
+the flowers on the lawn. Sir Peter roused himself and looked forth,
+"After all," said he, cheerily, "the vale of tears is not without a
+smile."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+A FAMILY council was held at Exmundham Hall to deliberate on the name
+by which this remarkable infant should be admitted into the Christian
+community. The junior branches of that ancient house consisted,
+first, of the obnoxious heir-at-law--a Scotch branch named Chillingly
+Gordon. He was the widowed father of one son, now of the age of
+three, and happily unconscious of the injury inflicted on his future
+prospects by the advent of the new-born, which could not be truthfully
+said of his Caledonian father. Mr. Chillingly Gordon was one of those
+men who get on in the world with out our being able to discover why.
+His parents died in his infancy and left him nothing; but the family
+interest procured him an admission into the Charterhouse School, at
+which illustrious academy he obtained no remarkable distinction.
+Nevertheless, as soon as he left it the State took him under its
+special care, and appointed him to a clerkship in a public office.
+From that moment he continued to get on in the world, and was now a
+Commissioner of Customs, with a salary of L1500 a year. As soon as he
+had been thus enabled to maintain a wife, he selected a wife who
+assisted to maintain himself. She was an Irish peer's widow, with a
+jointure of L2000 a year.
+
+A few months after his marriage, Chillingly Gordon effected insurances
+on his wife's life, so as to secure himself an annuity of L1000 a year
+in case of her decease. As she appeared to be a fine healthy woman,
+some years younger than her husband, the deduction from his income
+effected by the annual payments for the insurance seemed an
+over-sacrifice of present enjoyment to future contingencies. The
+result bore witness to his reputation for sagacity, as the lady died
+in the second year of their wedding, a few months after the birth of
+her only child, and of a heart-disease which had been latent to the
+doctors, but which, no doubt, Gordon had affectionately discovered
+before he had insured a life too valuable not to need some
+compensation for its loss. He was now, then, in the possession of
+L2500 a year, and was therefore very well off, in the pecuniary sense
+of the phrase. He had, moreover, acquired a reputation which gave him
+a social rank beyond that accorded to him by a discerning State. He
+was considered a man of solid judgment, and his opinion upon all
+matters, private and public, carried weight. The opinion itself,
+critically examined, was not worth much, but the way he announced it
+was imposing. Mr. Fox said that 'No one ever was so wise as Lord
+Thurlow looked.' Lord Thurlow could not have looked wiser than Mr.
+Chillingly Gordon. He had a square jaw and large red bushy eyebrows,
+which he lowered down with great effect when he delivered judgment.
+He had another advantage for acquiring grave reputation. He was a
+very unpleasant man. He could be rude if you contradicted him; and as
+few persons wish to provoke rudeness, so he was seldom contradicted.
+
+Mr. Chillingly Mivers, another cadet of the house, was also
+distinguished, but in a different way. He was a bachelor, now about
+the age of thirty-five. He was eminent for a supreme well-bred
+contempt for everybody and everything. He was the originator and
+chief proprietor of a public journal called "The Londoner," which had
+lately been set up on that principle of contempt, and we need not say,
+was exceedingly popular with those leading members of the community
+who admire nobody and believe in nothing. Mr. Chillingly Mivers was
+regarded by himself and by others as a man who might have achieved the
+highest success in any branch of literature, if he had deigned to
+exhibit his talents therein. But he did not so deign, and therefore
+he had full right to imply that, if he had written an epic, a drama, a
+novel, a history, a metaphysical treatise, Milton, Shakspeare,
+Cervantes, Hume, Berkeley would have been nowhere. He held greatly to
+the dignity of the anonymous; and even in the journal which he
+originated nobody could ever ascertain what he wrote. But, at all
+events, Mr. Chillingly Mivers was what Mr. Chillingly Gordon was not;
+namely, a very clever man, and by no means an unpleasant one in
+general society.
+
+The Rev. John Stalworth Chillingly was a decided adherent to the creed
+of what is called "muscular Christianity," and a very fine specimen of
+it too. A tall stout man with broad shoulders, and that division of
+lower limb which intervenes between the knee and the ankle powerfully
+developed. He would have knocked down a deist as soon as looked at
+him. It is told by the Sieur de Joinville, in his Memoir of Louis,
+the sainted king, that an assembly of divines and theologians convened
+the Jews of an Oriental city for the purpose of arguing with them on
+the truths of Christianity, and a certain knight, who was at that time
+crippled, and supporting himself on crutches, asked and obtained
+permission to be present at the debate. The Jews flocked to the
+summons, when a prelate, selecting a learned rabbi, mildly put to him
+the leading question whether he owned the divine conception of our
+Lord. "Certainly not," replied the rabbi; whereon the pious knight,
+shocked by such blasphemy, uplifted his crutch and felled the rabbi,
+and then flung himself among the other misbelievers, whom he soon
+dispersed in ignominious flight and in a very belaboured condition.
+The conduct of the knight was reported to the sainted king, with a
+request that it should be properly reprimanded; but the sainted king
+delivered himself of this wise judgment:--
+
+"If a pious knight is a very learned clerk, and can meet in fair
+argument the doctrines of the misbeliever, by all means let him argue
+fairly; but if a pious knight is not a learned clerk, and the argument
+goes against him, then let the pious knight cut the discussion short
+by the edge of his good sword."
+
+The Rev. John Stalworth Chillingly was of the same opinion as Saint
+Louis; otherwise, he was a mild and amiable man. He encouraged
+cricket and other manly sports among his rural parishioners. He was a
+skilful and bold rider, but he did not hunt; a convivial man--and took
+his bottle freely. But his tastes in literature were of a refined and
+peaceful character, contrasting therein the tendencies some might have
+expected from his muscular development of Christianity. He was a
+great reader of poetry, but he disliked Scott and Byron, whom he
+considered flashy and noisy; he maintained that Pope was only a
+versifier, and that the greatest poet in the language was Wordsworth;
+he did not care much for the ancient classics; he refused all merit to
+the French poets; he knew nothing of the Italian, but he dabbled in
+German, and was inclined to bore one about the "Hermann and Dorothea"
+of Goethe. He was married to a homely little wife, who revered him in
+silence, and thought there would be no schism in the Church if he were
+in his right place as Archbishop of Canterbury; in this opinion he
+entirely agreed with his wife.
+
+Besides these three male specimens of the Chillingly race, the fairer
+sex was represented, in the absence of her ladyship, who still kept
+her room, by three female Chillinglys, sisters of Sir Peter, and all
+three spinsters. Perhaps one reason why they had remained single was,
+that externally they were so like each other that a suitor must have
+been puzzled which to choose, and may have been afraid that if he did
+choose one, he should be caught next day kissing another one in
+mistake. They were all tall, all thin, with long throats--and beneath
+the throats a fine development of bone. They had all pale hair, pale
+eyelids, pale eyes, and pale complexions. They all dressed exactly
+alike, and their favourite colour was a vivid green: they were so
+dressed on this occasion.
+
+As there was such similitude in their persons, so, to an ordinary
+observer, they were exactly the same in character and mind. Very well
+behaved, with proper notions of female decorum: very distant and
+reserved in manner to strangers; very affectionate to each other and
+their relations or favourites; very good to the poor, whom they looked
+upon as a different order of creation, and treated with that sort of
+benevolence which humane people bestow upon dumb animals. Their minds
+had been nourished on the same books--what one read the others had
+read. The books were mainly divided into two classes,--novels, and
+what they called "good books." They had a habit of taking a specimen
+of each alternately; one day a novel, then a good book, then a novel
+again, and so on. Thus if the imagination was overwarmed on Monday,
+on Tuesday it was cooled down to a proper temperature; and if
+frost-bitten on Tuesday, it took a tepid bath on Wednesday. The
+novels they chose were indeed rarely of a nature to raise the
+intellectual thermometer into blood heat: the heroes and heroines were
+models of correct conduct. Mr. James's novels were then in vogue, and
+they united in saying that those "were novels a father might allow his
+daughters to read." But though an ordinary observer might have failed
+to recognize any distinction between these three ladies, and, finding
+them habitually dressed in green, would have said they were as much
+alike as one pea is to another, they had their idiosyncratic
+differences, when duly examined. Miss Margaret, the eldest, was the
+commanding one of the three; it was she who regulated their household
+(they all lived together), kept the joint purse, and decided every
+doubtful point that arose: whether they should or should not ask Mrs.
+So-and-so to tea; whether Mary should or should not be discharged;
+whether or not they should go to Broadstairs or to Sandgate for the
+month of October. In fact, Miss Margaret was the WILL of the body
+corporate.
+
+Miss Sibyl was of milder nature and more melancholy temperament; she
+had a poetic turn of mind, and occasionally wrote verses. Some of
+these had been printed on satin paper, and sold for objects of
+beneficence at charity bazaars. The county newspapers said that the
+verses "were characterized by all the elegance of a cultured and
+feminine mind." The other two sisters agreed that Sibyl was the
+genius of the household, but, like all geniuses, not sufficiently
+practical for the world. Miss Sarah Chillingly, the youngest of the
+three, and now just in her forty-fourth year, was looked upon by the
+others as "a dear thing, inclined to be naughty, but such a darling
+that nobody could have the heart to scold her." Miss Margaret said
+"she was a giddy creature." Miss Sibyl wrote a poem on her, entitled,
+"Warning to a young Lady against the Pleasures of the World." They
+all called her Sally; the other two sisters had no diminutive
+synonyms. Sally is a name indicative of fastness. But this Sally
+would not have been thought fast in another household, and she was now
+little likely to sally out of the one she belonged to. These sisters,
+who were all many years older than Sir Peter, lived in a handsome,
+old-fashioned, red-brick house, with a large garden at the back, in
+the principal street of the capital of their native county. They had
+each L10,000 for portion; and if he could have married all three, the
+heir-at-law would have married them, and settled the aggregate L30,000
+on himself. But we have not yet come to recognize Mormonism as legal,
+though if our social progress continues to slide in the same grooves
+as at present, Heaven only knows what triumphs over the prejudices of
+our ancestors may not be achieved by the wisdom of our descendants!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SIR PETER stood on his hearthstone, surveyed the guests seated in
+semicircle, and said: "Friends,--in Parliament, before anything
+affecting the fate of a Bill is discussed, it is, I believe, necessary
+to introduce the Bill." He paused a moment, rang the bell, and said
+to the servant who entered, "Tell Nurse to bring in the Baby."
+
+Mr. CHILLINGLY GORDON.--"I don't see the necessity for that, Sir
+Peter. We may take the existence of the Baby for granted."
+
+Mr. MIVERS.--"It is an advantage to the reputation of Sir Peter's work
+to preserve the incognito. /Omne ignotum pro magnifico/."
+
+THE REV. JOHN STALWORTH CHILLINGLY.--"I don't approve the cynical
+levity of such remarks. Of course we must all be anxious to see, in
+the earliest stage of being, the future representative of our name and
+race. Who would not wish to contemplate the source, however small, of
+the Tigris or the Nile!--"
+
+MISS SALLY (tittering).--"He! he!"
+
+MISS MARGARET.--"For shame, you giddy thing!"
+
+The Baby enters in the nurse's arms. All rise and gather round the
+Baby with one exception,--Mr. Gordon, who has ceased to be
+heir-at-law.
+
+The Baby returned the gaze of its relations with the most contemptuous
+indifference. Miss Sibyl was the first to pronounce an opinion on the
+Baby's attributes. Said she, in a solemn whisper, "What a heavenly
+mournful expression! it seems so grieved to have left the angels!"
+
+THE REV. JOHN.--"That is prettily said, Cousin Sibyl; but the infant
+must pluck up its courage and fight its way among mortals with a good
+heart, if it wants to get back to the angels again. And I think it
+will; a fine child." He took it from the nurse, and moving it
+deliberately up and down, as if to weigh it, said cheerfully,
+"Monstrous heavy! by the time it is twenty it will be a match for a
+prize-fighter of fifteen stone!"
+
+Therewith he strode to Gordon, who as if to show that he now
+considered himself wholly apart from all interest in the affairs of a
+family who had so ill-treated him in the birth of that Baby, had taken
+up the "Times" newspaper and concealed his countenance beneath the
+ample sheet. The Parson abruptly snatched away the "Times" with one
+hand, and, with the other substituting to the indignant eyes of the
+/ci-devant/ heir-at-law the spectacle of the Baby, said, "Kiss it."
+
+"Kiss it!" echoed Chillingly Gordon, pushing back his chair--"kiss it!
+pooh, sir, stand off! I never kissed my own baby: I shall not kiss
+another man's. Take the thing away, sir: it is ugly; it has black
+eyes."
+
+Sir Peter, who was near-sighted, put on his spectacles and examined
+the face of the new-born. "True," said he, "it has black eyes,--very
+extraordinary: portentous: the first Chillingly that ever had black
+eyes."
+
+"Its mamma has black eyes," said Miss Margaret: "it takes after its
+mamma; it has not the fair beauty of the Chillinglys, but it is not
+ugly."
+
+"Sweet infant!" sighed Sibyl; "and so good; does not cry."
+
+"It has neither cried nor crowed since it was born," said the nurse;
+"bless its little heart."
+
+She took the Baby from the Parson's arms, and smoothed back the frill
+of its cap, which had got ruffled.
+
+"You may go now, Nurse," said Sir Peter.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+"I AGREE with Mr. Shandy," said Sir Peter, resuming his stand on the
+hearthstone, "that among the responsibilities of a parent the choice
+of the name which his child is to bear for life is one of the gravest.
+And this is especially so with those who belong to the order of
+baronets. In the case of a peer his Christian name, fused into his
+titular designation, disappears. In the case of a Mister, if his
+baptismal be cacophonous or provocative of ridicule, he need not
+ostentatiously parade it: he may drop it altogether on his visiting
+cards, and may be imprinted as Mr. Jones instead of Mr. Ebenezer
+Jones. In his signature, save where the forms of the law demand
+Ebenezer in full, he may only use an initial and be your obedient
+servant E. Jones, leaving it to be conjectured that E. stands for
+Edward or Ernest,--names inoffensive, and not suggestive of a
+Dissenting Chapel, like Ebenezer. If a man called Edward or Ernest be
+detected in some youthful indiscretion, there is no indelible stain on
+his moral character: but if an Ebenezer be so detected he is set down
+as a hypocrite; it produces that shock on the public mind which is
+felt when a professed saint is proved to be a bit of a sinner. But a
+baronet never can escape from his baptismal: it cannot lie /perdu/; it
+cannot shrink into an initial, it stands forth glaringly in the light
+of day; christen him Ebenezer, and he is Sir Ebenezer in full, with
+all its perilous consequences if he ever succumb to those temptations
+to which even baronets are exposed. But, my friends, it is not only
+the effect that the sound of a name has upon others which is to be
+thoughtfully considered: the effect that his name produces on the man
+himself is perhaps still more important. Some names stimulate and
+encourage the owner; others deject and paralyze him: I am a melancholy
+instance of that truth. Peter has been for many generations, as you
+are aware, the baptismal to which the eldest-born of our family has
+been devoted. On the altar of that name I have been sacrificed.
+Never has there been a Sir Peter Chillingly who has, in any way,
+distinguished himself above his fellows. That name has been a dead
+weight on my intellectual energies. In the catalogue of illustrious
+Englishmen there is, I think, no immortal Sir Peter, except Sir Peter
+Teazle, and he only exists on the comic stage."
+
+MISS SIBYL.--"Sir Peter Lely?"
+
+SIR PETER CHILLINGLY.--"That painter was not an Englishman. He was
+born in Westphalia, famous for hams. I confine my remarks to the
+children of our native land. I am aware that in foreign countries the
+name is not an extinguisher to the genius of its owner. But why? In
+other countries its sound is modified. Pierre Corneille was a great
+man; but I put it to you whether, had he been an Englishman, he could
+have been the father of European tragedy as Peter Crow?"
+
+MISS SIBYL.--"Impossible!"
+
+MISS SALLY.--"He! he!"
+
+MISS MARGARET.--"There is nothing to laugh at, you giddy child!"
+
+SIR PETER.--"My son shall not be petrified into Peter."
+
+MR. CHILLINGLY GORDON.--"If a man is such a fool--and I don't say your
+son will not be a fool, Cousin Peter--as to be influenced by the sound
+of his own name, and you want the booby to turn the world topsy-turvy,
+you had better call him Julius Caesar or Hannibal or Attila or
+Charlemagne."
+
+SIR PETER, (who excels mankind in imperturbability of temper).--"On
+the contrary, if you inflict upon a man the burden of one of those
+names, the glory of which he cannot reasonably expect to eclipse or
+even to equal, you crush him beneath the weight. If a poet were
+called John Milton or William Shakspeare, he could not dare to publish
+even a sonnet. No: the choice of a name lies between the two extremes
+of ludicrous insignificance and oppressive renown. For this reason I
+have ordered the family pedigree to be suspended on yonder wall. Let
+us examine it with care, and see whether, among the Chillinglys
+themselves or their alliances, we can discover a name that can be
+borne with becoming dignity by the destined head of our house--a name
+neither too light nor too heavy."
+
+Sir Peter here led the way to the family tree--a goodly roll of
+parchment, with the arms of the family emblazoned at the top. Those
+arms were simple, as ancient heraldic coats are,--three fishes
+/argent/ on a field /azure/; the crest a mermaid's head. All flocked
+to inspect the pedigree except Mr. Gordon, who resumed the "Times"
+newspaper.
+
+"I never could quite make out what kind of fishes these are," said the
+Rev. John Stalworth. "They are certainly not pike which formed the
+emblematic blazon of the Hotofts, and are still grim enough to
+frighten future Shakspeares on the scutcheon of the Warwickshire
+Lucys."
+
+"I believe they are tenches," said Mr. Mivers. "The tench is a fish
+that knows how to keep itself safe by a philosophical taste for an
+obscure existence in deep holes and slush."
+
+SIR PETER.--"No, Mivers; the fishes are dace, a fish that, once
+introduced into any pond, never can be got out again. You may drag
+the water; you may let off the water; you may say, 'Those dace are
+extirpated,'--vain thought!--the dace reappear as before; and in this
+respect the arms are really emblematic of the family. All the
+disorders and revolutions that have occurred in England since the
+Heptarchy have left the Chillinglys the same race in the same place.
+Somehow or other the Norman Conquest did not despoil them; they held
+fiefs under Eudo Dapifer as peacefully as they had held them under
+King Harold; they took no part in the Crusades, nor the Wars of the
+Roses, nor the Civil Wars between Charles the First and the
+Parliament. As the dace sticks to the water and the water sticks by
+the dace, so the Chillinglys stuck to the land and the land stuck by
+the Chillinglys. Perhaps I am wrong to wish that the new Chillingly
+may be a little less like a dace."
+
+"Oh!" cried Miss Margaret, who, mounted on a chair, had been
+inspecting the pedigree through an eye-glass, "I don't see a fine
+Christian name from the beginning, except Oliver."
+
+SIR PETER.--"That Chillingly was born in Oliver Cromwell's
+Protectorate, and named Oliver in compliment to him, as his father,
+born in the reign of James I., was christened James. The three fishes
+always swam with the stream. Oliver!--Oliver not a bad name, but
+significant of radical doctrines."
+
+Mr. MIVERS.--"I don't think so. Oliver Cromwell made short work of
+radicals and their doctrines; but perhaps we can find a name less
+awful and revolutionary."
+
+"I have it! I have it!" cried the Parson. "Here is a descent from
+Sir Kenelm Digby and Venetia Stanley. Sir Kenelm Digby! No finer
+specimen of muscular Christianity. He fought as well as he wrote;
+eccentric, it is true, but always a gentleman. Call the boy Kenelm!"
+
+"A sweet name," said Miss Sibyl: "it breathes of romance."
+
+"Sir Kenelm Chillingly! It sounds well,--imposing!" said Miss
+Margaret.
+
+"And," remarked Mr. Mivers, "it has this advantage--that while it has
+sufficient association with honourable distinction to affect the mind
+of the namesake and rouse his emulation, it is not that of so
+stupendous a personage as to defy rivalry. Sir Kenelm Digby was
+certainly an accomplished and gallant gentleman; but what with his
+silly superstition about sympathetic powders, etc., any man nowadays
+might be clever in comparison without being a prodigy. Yes, let us
+decide on Kenelm."
+
+Sir Peter meditated. "Certainly," said he, after a pause, "certainly
+the name of Kenelm carries with it very crotchety associations; and I
+am afraid that Sir Kenelm Digby did not make a prudent choice in
+marriage. The fair Venetia was no better than she should be; and I
+should wish my heir not to be led away by beauty but wed a woman of
+respectable character and decorous conduct."
+
+Miss MARGARET.--"A British matron, of course!"
+
+THREE SISTERS (in chorus).--"Of course! of course!"
+
+"But," resumed Sir Peter, "I am crotchety myself, and crotchets are
+innocent things enough; and as for marriage the Baby cannot marry
+to-morrow, so that we have ample time to consider that matter. Kenelm
+Digby was a man any family might be proud of; and, as you say, sister
+Margaret, Kenelm Chillingly does not sound amiss: Kenelm Chillingly it
+shall be!"
+
+The Baby was accordingly christened Kenelm, after which ceremony its
+face grew longer than before.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+BEFORE his relations dispersed, Sir Peter summoned Mr. Gordon into his
+library.
+
+"Cousin," said he, kindly, "I do not blame you for the want of family
+affection, or even of humane interest, which you exhibit towards the
+New-born."
+
+"Blame me, Cousin Peter! I should think not. I exhibit as much
+family affection and humane interest as could be expected from
+me,--circumstances considered."
+
+"I own," said Sir Peter, with all his wonted mildness, "that after
+remaining childless for fourteen years of wedded life, the advent of
+this little stranger must have occasioned you a disagreeable surprise.
+But, after all, as I am many years younger than you, and in the course
+of nature shall outlive you, the loss is less to yourself than to your
+son, and upon that I wish to say a few words. You know too well the
+conditions on which I hold my estate not to be aware that I have not
+legally the power to saddle it with any bequest to your boy. The
+New-born succeeds to the fee-simple as last in tail. But I intend,
+from this moment, to lay by something every year for your son out of
+my income; and, fond as I am of London for a part of the year, I shall
+now give up my town-house. If I live to the years the Psalmist allots
+to man, I shall thus accumulate something handsome for your son, which
+may be taken in the way of compensation."
+
+Mr. Gordon was by no means softened by this generous speech. However,
+he answered more politely than was his wont, "My son will be very much
+obliged to you, should he ever need your intended bequest." Pausing a
+moment, he added with a cheerful smile, "A large percentage of infants
+die before attaining the age of twenty-one."
+
+"Nay, but I am told your son is an uncommonly fine healthy child."
+
+"My son, Cousin Peter! I was not thinking of my son, but of yours.
+Yours has a big head. I should not wonder if he had water in it. I
+don't wish to alarm you, but he may go off any day, and in that case
+it is not likely that Lady Chillingly will condescend to replace him.
+So you will excuse me if I still keep a watchful eye on my rights;
+and, however painful to my feelings, I must still dispute your right
+to cut a stick of the field timber."
+
+"That is nonsense, Gordon. I am tenant for life without impeachment
+of waste, and can cut down all timber not ornamental."
+
+"I advise you not, Cousin Peter. I have told you before that I shall
+try the question at law, should you provoke it, amicably, of course.
+Rights are rights; and if I am driven to maintain mine, I trust that
+you are of a mind too liberal to allow your family affection for me
+and mine to be influenced by a decree of the Court of Chancery. But
+my fly is waiting. I must not miss the train."
+
+"Well, good-by, Gordon. Shake hands."
+
+"Shake hands!--of course, of course. By the by, as I came through the
+lodge, it seemed to me sadly out of repair. I believe you are liable
+for dilapidations. Good-by."
+
+"The man is a hog in armour," soliloquized Sir Peter, when his cousin
+was gone; "and if it be hard to drive a common pig in the way he don't
+choose to go, a hog in armour is indeed undrivable. But his boy ought
+not to suffer for his father's hoggishness; and I shall begin at once
+to see what I can lay by for him. After all, it is hard upon Gordon.
+Poor Gordon; poor fellow! poor fellow! Still I hope he will not go to
+law with me. I hate law. And a worm will turn, especially a worm
+that is put into Chancery."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+DESPITE the sinister semi-predictions of the /ci-devant/ heir-at-law,
+the youthful Chillingly passed with safety, and indeed with dignity,
+through the infant stages of existence. He took his measles and
+whooping-cough with philosophical equanimity. He gradually acquired
+the use of speech, but he did not too lavishly exercise that special
+attribute of humanity. During the earlier years of childhood he spoke
+as little as if he had been prematurely trained in the school of
+Pythagoras. But he evidently spoke the less in order to reflect the
+more. He observed closely and pondered deeply over what he observed.
+At the age of eight he began to converse more freely, and it was in
+that year that he startled his mother with the question, "Mamma, are
+you not sometimes overpowered by the sense of your own identity?"
+
+Lady Chillingly,--I was about to say rushed, but Lady Chillingly never
+rushed,--Lady Chillingly glided less sedately than her wont to Sir
+Peter, and repeating her son's question, said, "The boy is growing
+troublesome, too wise for any woman: he must go to school."
+
+Sir Peter was of the same opinion. But where on earth did the child
+get hold of so long a word as "identity," and how did so extraordinary
+and puzzling a metaphysical question come into his head? Sir Peter
+summoned Kenelm, and ascertained that the boy, having free access to
+the library, had fastened upon Locke on the Human Understanding, and
+was prepared to dispute with that philosopher upon the doctrine of
+innate ideas. Quoth Kenelm, gravely, "A want is an idea; and if, as
+soon as I was born, I felt the want of food and knew at once where to
+turn for it, without being taught, surely I came into the world with
+an 'innate idea.'"
+
+Sir Peter, though he dabbled in metaphysics, was posed, and scratched
+his head without getting out a proper answer as to the distinction
+between ideas and instincts. "My child," he said at last, "you don't
+know what you are talking about: go and take a good gallop on your
+black pony; and I forbid you to read any books that are not given to
+you by myself or your mamma. Stick to 'Puss in Boots.'"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+SIR PETER ordered his carriage and drove to the house of the stout
+parson. That doughty ecclesiastic held a family living a few miles
+distant from the Hall, and was the only one of the cousins with whom
+Sir Peter habitually communed on his domestic affairs.
+
+He found the Parson in his study, which exhibited tastes other than
+clerical. Over the chimney-piece were ranged fencing-foils,
+boxing-gloves, and staffs for the athletic exercise of single-stick;
+cricket-bats and fishing-rods filled up the angles. There were sundry
+prints on the walls: one of Mr. Wordsworth, flanked by two of
+distinguished race-horses; one of a Leicestershire short-horn, with
+which the Parson, who farmed his own glebe and bred cattle in its rich
+pastures, had won a prize at the county show; and on either side of
+that animal were the portraits of Hooker and Jeremy Taylor. There
+were dwarf book-cases containing miscellaneous works very handsomely
+bound; at the open window, a stand of flower-pots, the flowers in full
+bloom. The Parson's flowers were famous.
+
+The appearance of the whole room was that of a man who is tidy and
+neat in his habits.
+
+"Cousin," said Sir Peter, "I have come to consult you." And therewith
+he related the marvellous precocity of Kenelm Chillingly. "You see
+the name begins to work on him rather too much. He must go to school;
+and now what school shall it be? Private or public?"
+
+THE REV. JOHN STALWORTH.--"There is a great deal to be said for or
+against either. At a public school the chances are that Kenelm will
+no longer be overpowered by a sense of his own identity; he will more
+probably lose identity altogether. The worst of a public school is
+that a sort of common character is substituted for individual
+character. The master, of course, can't attend to the separate
+development of each boy's idiosyncrasy. All minds are thrown into one
+great mould, and come out of it more or less in the same form. An
+Etonian may be clever or stupid, but, as either, he remains
+emphatically Etonian. A public school ripens talent, but its tendency
+is to stifle genius. Then, too, a public school for an only son, heir
+to a good estate, which will be entirely at his own disposal, is apt
+to encourage reckless and extravagant habits; and your estate requires
+careful management, and leaves no margin for an heir's notes-of-hand
+and post-obits. On the whole, I am against a public school for
+Kenelm."
+
+"Well then, we will decide on a private one."
+
+"Hold!" said the Parson: "a private school has its drawbacks. You
+can seldom produce large fishes in small ponds. In private schools
+the competition is narrowed, the energies stinted. The schoolmaster's
+wife interferes, and generally coddles the boys. There is not
+manliness enough in those academies; no fagging, and very little
+fighting. A clever boy turns out a prig; a boy of feebler intellect
+turns out a well-behaved young lady in trousers. Nothing muscular in
+the system. Decidedly the namesake and descendant of Kenelm Digby
+should not go to a private seminary."
+
+"So far as I gather from your reasoning," said Sir Peter, with
+characteristic placidity, "Kenelm Chillingly is not to go to school at
+all."
+
+"It does look like it," said the Parson, candidly; "but, on
+consideration, there is a medium. There are schools which unite the
+best qualities of public and private schools, large enough to
+stimulate and develop energies mental and physical, yet not so framed
+as to melt all character in one crucible. For instance, there is a
+school which has at this moment one of the first scholars in Europe
+for head-master,--a school which has turned out some of the most
+remarkable men of the rising generation. The master sees at a glance
+if a boy be clever, and takes pains with him accordingly. He is not a
+mere teacher of hexameters and sapphics. His learning embraces all
+literature, ancient and modern. He is a good writer and a fine
+critic; admires Wordsworth. He winks at fighting: his boys know how
+to use their fists; and they are not in the habit of signing
+post-obits before they are fifteen. Merton School is the place for
+Kenelm."
+
+"Thank you," said Sir Peter. "It is a great comfort in life to find
+somebody who can decide for one. I am an irresolute man myself, and
+in ordinary matters willingly let Lady Chillingly govern me."
+
+"I should like to see a wife govern /me/," said the stout Parson.
+
+"But you are not married to Lady Chillingly. And now let us go into
+the garden and look at your dahlias."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE youthful confuter of Locke was despatched to Merton School, and
+ranked, according to his merits, as lag of the penultimate form. When
+he came home for the Christmas holidays he was more saturnine than
+ever; in fact, his countenance bore the impression of some absorbing
+grief. He said, however, that he liked school very well, and eluded
+all other questions. But early the next morning he mounted his black
+pony and rode to the Parson's rectory. The reverend gentleman was in
+his farmyard examining his bullocks when Kenelm accosted him thus
+briefly,--
+
+"Sir, I am disgraced, and I shall die of it if you cannot help to set
+me right in my own eyes."
+
+"My dear boy, don't talk in that way. Come into my study."
+
+As soon as they entered that room, and the Parson had carefully closed
+the door, he took the boy's arm, turned him round to the light, and
+saw at once that there was something very grave on his mind. Chucking
+him under the chin, the Parson said cheerily, "Hold up your head,
+Kenelm. I am sure you have done nothing unworthy of a gentleman."
+
+"I don't know that. I fought a boy very little bigger than myself,
+and I have been licked. I did not give in, though; but the other boys
+picked me up, for I could not stand any longer; and the fellow is a
+great bully; and his name is Butt; and he's the son of a lawyer; and
+he got my head into chancery; and I have challenged him to fight again
+next half; and unless you can help me to lick him, I shall never be
+good for anything in the world,--never. It will break my heart."
+
+"I am very glad to hear you have had the pluck to challenge him. Just
+let me see how you double your fist. Well, that's not amiss. Now,
+put yourself into a fighting attitude, and hit out at me,--hard!
+harder! Pooh! that will never do. You should make your blows as
+straight as an arrow. And that's not the way to stand. Stop,--so:
+well on your haunches; weight on the left leg; good! Now, put on
+these gloves, and I'll give you a lesson in boxing."
+
+Five minutes afterwards Mrs. John Chillingly, entering the room to
+summon her husband to breakfast, stood astounded to see him with his
+coat off, and parrying the blows of Kenelm, who flew at him like a
+young tiger. The good pastor at that moment might certainly have
+appeared a fine type of muscular Christianity, but not of that kind of
+Christianity out of which one makes Archbishops of Canterbury.
+
+"Good gracious me!" faltered Mrs. John Chillingly; and then,
+wife-like, flying to the protection of her husband, she seized Kenelm
+by the shoulders, and gave him a good shaking. The Parson, who was
+sadly out of breath, was not displeased at the interruption, but took
+that opportunity to put on his coat, and said, "We'll begin again
+to-morrow. Now, come to breakfast." But during breakfast Kenelm's
+face still betrayed dejection, and he talked little and ate less.
+
+As soon as the meal was over, he drew the Parson into the garden and
+said, "I have been thinking, sir, that perhaps it is not fair to Butt
+that I should be taking these lessons; and if it is not fair, I'd
+rather not--"
+
+"Give me your hand, my boy!" cried the Parson, transported. "The name
+of Kenelm is not thrown away upon you. The natural desire of man in
+his attribute of fighting animal (an attribute in which, I believe, he
+excels all other animated beings, except a quail and a gamecock) is to
+beat his adversary. But the natural desire of that culmination of man
+which we call gentleman is to beat his adversary fairly. A gentleman
+would rather be beaten fairly than beat unfairly. Is not that your
+thought?"
+
+"Yes," replied Kenelm, firmly; and then, beginning to philosophize, he
+added, "And it stands to reason; because if I beat a fellow unfairly,
+I don't really beat him at all."
+
+"Excellent! But suppose that you and another boy go into examination
+upon Caesar's Commentaries or the multiplication table, and the other
+boy is cleverer than you, but you have taken the trouble to learn the
+subject and he has not: should you say you beat him unfairly?"
+
+Kenelm meditated a moment, and then said decidedly, "No."
+
+"That which applies to the use of your brains applies equally to the
+use of your fists. Do you comprehend me?"
+
+"Yes, sir; I do now."
+
+"In the time of your namesake, Sir Kenelm Digby, gentlemen wore
+swords, and they learned how to use them, because, in case of quarrel,
+they had to fight with them. Nobody, at least in England, fights with
+swords now. It is a democratic age, and if you fight at all, you are
+reduced to fists; and if Kenelm Digby learned to fence, so Kenelm
+Chillingly must learn to box; and if a gentleman thrashes a drayman
+twice his size, who has not learned to box, it is not unfair; it is
+but an exemplification of the truth that knowledge is power. Come and
+take another lesson on boxing to-morrow."
+
+Kenelm remounted his pony and returned home. He found his father
+sauntering in the garden with a book in his hand. "Papa," said
+Kenelm, "how does one gentleman write to another with whom he has a
+quarrel, and he don't want to make it up, but he has something to say
+about the quarrel which it is fair the other gentleman should know?"
+
+"I don't understand what you mean."
+
+"Well, just before I went to school I remember hearing you say that
+you had a quarrel with Lord Hautfort, and that he was an ass, and you
+would write and tell him so. When you wrote did you say, 'You are an
+ass'? Is that the way one gentleman writes to another?"
+
+"Upon my honour, Kenelm, you ask very odd questions. But you cannot
+learn too early this fact, that irony is to the high-bred what
+Billingsgate is to the vulgar; and when one gentleman thinks another
+gentleman an ass, he does not say it point-blank: he implies it in the
+politest terms he can invent. Lord Hautfort denies my right of free
+warren over a trout-stream that runs through his lands. I don't care
+a rush about the trout-stream, but there is no doubt of my right to
+fish in it. He was an ass to raise the question; for, if he had not,
+I should not have exercised the right. As he did raise the question,
+I was obliged to catch his trout."
+
+"And you wrote a letter to him?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How did you write, Papa? What did you say?"
+
+"Something like this. 'Sir Peter Chillingly presents his compliments
+to Lord Hautfort, and thinks it fair to his lordship to say that he
+has taken the best legal advice with regard to his rights of free
+warren; and trusts to be forgiven if he presumes to suggest that Lord
+Hautfort might do well to consult his own lawyer before he decides on
+disputing them.'"
+
+"Thank you, Papa. I see."
+
+That evening Kenelm wrote the following letter:--
+
+
+Mr. Chillingly presents his compliments to Mr. Butt, and thinks it
+fair to Mr. Butt to say that he is taking lessons in boxing; and
+trusts to be forgiven if he presumes to suggest that Mr. Butt might do
+well to take lessons himself before fighting with Mr. Chillingly next
+half.
+
+
+"Papa," said Kenelm the next morning, "I want to write to a
+schoolfellow whose name is Butt; he is the son of a lawyer who is
+called a serjeant. I don't know where to direct to him."
+
+"That is easily ascertained," said Sir Peter. "Serjeant Butt is an
+eminent man, and his address will be in the Court Guide."
+
+The address was found,--Bloomsbury Square; and Kenelm directed his
+letter accordingly. In due course he received this answer,--
+
+
+You are an insolent little fool, and I'll thrash you within an inch of
+your life.
+
+ROBERT BUTT.
+
+
+After the receipt of that polite epistle, Kenelm Chillingly's scruples
+vanished, and he took daily lessons in muscular Christianity.
+
+Kenelm returned to school with a brow cleared from care, and three
+days after his return he wrote to the Reverend John,--
+
+
+DEAR SIR,--I have licked Butt. Knowledge is power.
+
+Your affectionate KENELM.
+
+P. S.--Now that I have licked Butt, I have made it up with him.
+
+
+From that time Kenelm prospered. Eulogistic letters from the
+illustrious head-master showered in upon Sir Peter. At the age of
+sixteen Kenelm Chillingly was the head of the school, and, quitting it
+finally, brought home the following letter from his Orbilius to Sir
+Peter, marked "confidential":--
+
+
+DEAR SIR PETER CHILLINGLY,--I have never felt more anxious for the
+future career of any of my pupils than I do for that of your son. He
+is so clever that, with ease to himself, he may become a great man.
+He is so peculiar that it is quite as likely that he may only make
+himself known to the world as a great oddity. That distinguished
+teacher Dr. Arnold said that the difference between one boy and
+another was not so much talent as energy. Your son has talent, has
+energy: yet he wants something for success in life; he wants the
+faculty of amalgamation. He is of a melancholic and therefore
+unsocial temperament. He will not act in concert with others. He is
+lovable enough: the other boys like him, especially the smaller ones,
+with whom he is a sort of hero; but he has not one intimate friend.
+So far as school learning is concerned, he might go to college at
+once, and with the certainty of distinction provided he chose to exert
+himself. But if I may venture to offer an advice, I should say employ
+the next two years in letting him see a little more of real life and
+acquire a due sense of its practical objects. Send him to a private
+tutor who is not a pedant, but a man of letters or a man of the world,
+and if in the metropolis so much the better. In a word, my young
+friend is unlike other people; and, with qualities that might do
+anything in life, I fear, unless you can get him to be like other
+people, that be will do nothing. Excuse the freedom with which I
+write, and ascribe it to the singular interest with which your son has
+inspired me. I have the honour to be, dear Sir Peter,
+
+Yours truly, WILLIAM HORTON.
+
+
+Upon the strength of this letter Sir Peter did not indeed summon
+another family council; for he did not consider that his three maiden
+sisters could offer any practical advice on the matter. And as to Mr.
+Gordon, that gentleman having gone to law on the great timber
+question, and having been signally beaten thereon, had informed Sir
+Peter that he disowned him as a cousin and despised him as a man; not
+exactly in those words,--more covertly, and therefore more stingingly.
+But Sir Peter invited Mr. Mivers for a week's shooting, and requested
+the Reverend John to meet him.
+
+Mr. Mivers arrived. The sixteen years that had elapsed since he was
+first introduced to the reader had made no perceptible change in his
+appearance. It was one of his maxims that in youth a man of the world
+should appear older than he is; and in middle age, and thence to his
+dying day, younger. And he announced one secret for attaining that
+art in these words: "Begin your wig early, thus you never become
+gray."
+
+Unlike most philosophers, Mivers made his practice conform to his
+precepts; and while in the prime of youth inaugurated a wig in a
+fashion that defied the flight of time, not curly and hyacinthine, but
+straight-haired and unassuming. He looked five-and-thirty from the
+day he put on that wig at the age of twenty-five. He looked
+five-and-thirty now at the age of fifty-one.
+
+"I mean," said he, "to remain thirty-five all my life. No better age
+to stick at. People may choose to say I am more, but I shall not own
+it. No one is bound to criminate himself."
+
+Mr. Mivers had some other aphorisms on this important subject. One
+was, "Refuse to be ill. Never tell people you are ill; never own it
+to yourself. Illness is one of those things which a man should resist
+on principle at the onset. It should never be allowed to get in the
+thin end of the wedge. But take care of your constitution, and,
+having ascertained the best habits for it, keep to them like
+clockwork." Mr. Mivers would not have missed his constitutional walk
+in the Park before breakfast if, by going in a cab to St. Giles's, he
+could have saved the city of London from conflagration.
+
+Another aphorism of his was, "If you want to keep young, live in a
+metropolis; never stay above a few weeks at a time in the country.
+Take two men of similar constitution at the age of twenty-five; let
+one live in London and enjoy a regular sort of club life; send the
+other to some rural district, preposterously called 'salubrious.'
+Look at these men when they have both reached the age of forty-five.
+The London man has preserved his figure: the rural man has a paunch.
+The London man has an interesting delicacy of complexion: the face of
+the rural man is coarse-grained and perhaps jowly."
+
+A third axiom was, "Don't be a family man; nothing ages one like
+matrimonial felicity and paternal ties. Never multiply cares, and
+pack up your life in the briefest compass you can. Why add to your
+carpet-bag of troubles the contents of a lady's imperials and
+bonnet-boxes, and the travelling /fourgon/ required by the nursery?
+Shun ambition: it is so gouty. It takes a great deal out of a man's
+life, and gives him nothing worth having till he has ceased to enjoy
+it." Another of his aphorisms was this, "A fresh mind keeps the body
+fresh. Take in the ideas of the day, drain off those of yesterday.
+As to the morrow, time enough to consider it when it becomes to-day."
+
+Preserving himself by attention to these rules, Mr. Mivers appeared at
+Exmundham /totus, teres/, but not /rotundus/,--a man of middle height,
+slender, upright, with well-cut, small, slight features, thin lips,
+enclosing an excellent set of teeth, even, white, and not indebted to
+the dentist. For the sake of those teeth he shunned acid wines,
+especially hock in all its varieties, culinary sweets, and hot drinks.
+He drank even his tea cold.
+
+"There are," he said, "two things in life that a sage must preserve at
+every sacrifice, the coats of his stomach and the enamel of his teeth.
+Some evils admit of consolations: there are no comforters for
+dyspepsia and toothache." A man of letters, but a man of the world,
+he had so cultivated his mind as both that he was feared as the one
+and liked as the other. As a man of letters he despised the world; as
+a man of the world he despised letters. As the representative of both
+he revered himself.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ON the evening of the third day from the arrival of Mr. Mivers, he,
+the Parson, and Sir Peter were seated in the host's parlour, the
+Parson in an armchair by the ingle, smoking a short cutty-pipe; Mivers
+at length on the couch, slowly inhaling the perfumes of one of his own
+choice /trabucos/. Sir Peter never smoked. There were spirits and
+hot water and lemons on the table. The Parson was famed for skill in
+the composition of toddy. From time to time the Parson sipped his
+glass, and Sir Peter less frequently did the same. It is needless to
+say that Mr. Mivers eschewed toddy; but beside him, on a chair, was a
+tumbler and a large carafe of iced water.
+
+SIR PETER.--"Cousin Mivers, you have now had time to study Kenelm, and
+to compare his character with that assigned to him in the Doctor's
+letter."
+
+MIVERS (languidly).--"Ay."
+
+SIR PETER.--"I ask you, as a man of the world, what you think I had
+best do with the boy. Shall I send him to such a tutor as the Doctor
+suggests? Cousin John is not of the same mind as the Doctor, and
+thinks that Kenelm's oddities are fine things in their way, and should
+not be prematurely ground out of him by contact with worldly tutors
+and London pavements."
+
+"Ay," repeated Mr. Mivers more languidly than before. After a pause
+he added, "Parson John, let us hear you."
+
+The Parson laid aside his cutty-pipe and emptied his fourth tumbler of
+toddy; then, throwing back his head in the dreamy fashion of the great
+Coleridge when he indulged in a monologue, he thus began, speaking
+somewhat through his nose,--
+
+"At the morning of life--"
+
+Here Mivers shrugged his shoulders, turned round on his couch, and
+closed his eyes with the sigh of a man resigning himself to a homily.
+
+"At the morning of life, when the dews--"
+
+"I knew the dews were coming," said Mivers. "Dry them, if you please;
+nothing so unwholesome. We anticipate what you mean to say, which is
+plainly this, When a fellow is sixteen he is very fresh: so he is;
+pass on; what then?"
+
+"If you mean to interrupt me with your habitual cynicism," said the
+Parson, "why did you ask to hear me?"
+
+"That was a mistake I grant; but who on earth could conceive that you
+were going to commence in that florid style? Morning of life indeed!
+bosh!"
+
+"Cousin Mivers," said Sir Peter, "you are not reviewing John's style
+in 'The Londoner;' and I will beg you to remember that my son's
+morning of life is a serious thing to his father, and not to be nipped
+in its bud by a cousin. Proceed, John!"
+
+Quoth the Parson, good-humouredly, "I will adapt my style to the taste
+of my critic. When a fellow is at the age of sixteen, and very fresh
+to life, the question is whether he should begin thus prematurely to
+exchange the ideas that belong to youth for the ideas that properly
+belong to middle age,--whether he should begin to acquire that
+knowledge of the world which middle-aged men have acquired and can
+teach. I think not. I would rather have him yet a while in the
+company of the poets; in the indulgence of glorious hopes and
+beautiful dreams, forming to himself some type of the Heroic, which he
+will keep before his eyes as a standard when he goes into the world as
+man. There are two schools of thought for the formation of
+character,--the Real and the Ideal. I would form the character in the
+Ideal school, in order to make it bolder and grander and lovelier when
+it takes its place in that every-day life which is called Real. And
+therefore I am not for placing the descendant of Sir Kenelm Digby, in
+the interval between school and college, with a man of the world,
+probably as cynical as Cousin Mivers and living in the stony
+thoroughfares of London."
+
+MR. MIVERS (rousing himself).--"Before we plunge into that Serbonian
+bog--the controversy between the Realistic and the Idealistic
+academicians--I think the first thing to decide is what you want
+Kenelm to be hereafter. When I order a pair of shoes, I decide
+beforehand what kind of shoes they are to be,--court pumps or strong
+walking shoes; and I don't ask the shoemaker to give me a preliminary
+lecture upon the different purposes of locomotion to which leather can
+be applied. If, Sir Peter, you want Kenelm to scribble lackadaisical
+poems, listen to Parson John; if you want to fill his head with
+pastoral rubbish about innocent love, which may end in marrying the
+miller's daughter, listen to Parson John; if you want him to enter
+life a soft-headed greenhorn, who will sign any bill carrying 50 per
+cent to which a young scamp asks him to be security, listen to Parson
+John; in fine, if you wish a clever lad to become either a pigeon or a
+ring-dove, a credulous booby or a sentimental milksop, Parson John is
+the best adviser you can have."
+
+"But I don't want my son to ripen into either of those imbecile
+developments of species."
+
+"Then don't listen to Parson John; and there's an end of the
+discussion."
+
+"No, there is not. I have not heard your advice what to do if John's
+advice is not to be taken."
+
+Mr. Mivers hesitated. He seemed puzzled.
+
+"The fact is," said the Parson, "that Mivers got up 'The Londoner'
+upon a principle that regulates his own mind,--find fault with the way
+everything is done, but never commit yourself by saying how anything
+can be done better."
+
+"That is true," said Mivers, candidly. "The destructive order of mind
+is seldom allied to the constructive. I and 'The Londoner' are
+destructive by nature and by policy. We can reduce a building into
+rubbish, but we don't profess to turn rubbish into a building. We are
+critics, and, as you say, not such fools as to commit ourselves to the
+proposition of amendments that can be criticised by others.
+Nevertheless, for your sake, Cousin Peter, and on the condition that
+if I give my advice you will never say that I gave it, and if you take
+it that you will never reproach me if it turns out, as most advice
+does, very ill,--I will depart from my custom and hazard my opinion."
+
+"I accept the conditions."
+
+"Well then, with every new generation there springs up a new order of
+ideas. The earlier the age at which a man seizes the ideas that will
+influence his own generation, the more he has a start in the race with
+his contemporaries. If Kenelm comprehends at sixteen those
+intellectual signs of the time which, when he goes up to college, he
+will find young men of eighteen or twenty only just /prepared/ to
+comprehend, he will produce a deep impression of his powers for
+reasoning and their adaptation to actual life, which will be of great
+service to him later. Now the ideas that influence the mass of the
+rising generation never have their well-head in the generation itself.
+They have their source in the generation before them, generally in a
+small minority, neglected or contemned by the great majority which
+adopt them later. Therefore a lad at the age of sixteen, if he wants
+to get at such ideas, must come into close contact with some superior
+mind in which they were conceived twenty or thirty years before. I am
+consequently for placing Kenelm with a person from whom the new ideas
+can be learned. I am also for his being placed in the metropolis
+during the process of this initiation. With such introductions as are
+at our command, he may come in contact not only with new ideas, but
+with eminent men in all vocations. It is a great thing to mix betimes
+with clever people. One picks their brains unconsciously. There is
+another advantage, and not a small one, in this early entrance into
+good society. A youth learns manners, self-possession, readiness of
+resource; and he is much less likely to get into scrapes and contract
+tastes for low vices and mean dissipation, when he comes into life
+wholly his own master, after having acquired a predilection for
+refined companionship under the guidance of those competent to select
+it. There, I have talked myself out of breath. And you had better
+decide at once in favour of my advice; for as I am of a contradictory
+temperament, myself of to-morrow may probably contradict myself of
+to-day."
+
+Sir Peter was greatly impressed with his cousin's argumentative
+eloquence.
+
+The Parson smoked his cutty-pipe in silence until appealed to by Sir
+Peter, and he then said, "In this programme of education for a
+Christian gentleman, the part of Christian seems to me left out."
+
+"The tendency of the age," observed Mr. Mivers, calmly, "is towards
+that omission. Secular education is the necessary reaction from the
+special theological training which arose in the dislike of one set of
+Christians to the teaching of another set; and as these antagonists
+will not agree how religion is to be taught, either there must be no
+teaching at all, or religion must be eliminated from the tuition."
+
+"That may do very well for some huge system of national education,"
+said Sir Peter, "but it does not apply to Kenelm, as one of a family
+all of whose members belong to the Established Church. He may be
+taught the creed of his forefathers without offending a Dissenter."
+
+"Which Established Church is he to belong to?" asked Mr.
+Mivers,--"High Church, Low Church, Broad Church, Puseyite Church,
+Ritualistic Church, or any other Established Church that may be coming
+into fashion?"
+
+"Pshaw!" said the Parson. "That sneer is out of place. You know very
+well that one merit of our Church is the spirit of toleration, which
+does not magnify every variety of opinion into a heresy or a schism.
+But if Sir Peter sends his son at the age of sixteen to a tutor who
+eliminates the religion of Christianity from his teaching, he deserves
+to be thrashed within an inch of his life; and," continued the Parson,
+eying Sir Peter sternly, and mechanically turning up his cuffs, "I
+should /like/ to thrash him."
+
+"Gently, John," said Sir Peter, recoiling; "gently, my dear kinsman.
+My heir shall not be educated as a heathen, and Mivers is only
+bantering us. Come, Mivers, do you happen to know among your London
+friends some man who, though a scholar and a man of the world, is
+still a Christian?"
+
+"A Christian as by law established?"
+
+"Well--yes."
+
+"And who will receive Kenelm as a pupil?"
+
+"Of course I am not putting, such questions to you out of idle
+curiosity."
+
+"I know exactly the man. He was originally intended for orders, and
+is a very learned theologian. He relinquished the thought of the
+clerical profession on succeeding to a small landed estate by the
+sudden death of an elder brother. He then came to London and bought
+experience: that is, he was naturally generous; he became easily taken
+in; got into difficulties; the estate was transferred to trustees for
+the benefit of creditors, and on the payment of L400 a year to
+himself. By this time he was married and had two children. He found
+the necessity of employing his pen in order to add to his income, and
+is one of the ablest contributors to the periodical press. He is an
+elegant scholar, an effective writer, much courted by public men, a
+thorough gentleman, has a pleasant house, and receives the best
+society. Having been once taken in, he defies any one to take him in
+again. His experience was not bought too dearly. No more acute and
+accomplished man of the world. The three hundred a year or so that
+you would pay for Kenelm would suit him very well. His name is Welby,
+and he lives in Chester Square."
+
+"No doubt he is a contributor to 'The Londoner,'" said the Parson,
+sarcastically.
+
+"True. He writes our classical, theological, and metaphysical
+articles. Suppose I invite him to come here for a day or two, and you
+can see him and judge for yourself, Sir Peter?"
+
+"Do."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+MR. WELBY arrived, and pleased everybody. A man of the happiest
+manners, easy and courteous. There was no pedantry in him, yet you
+could soon see that his reading covered an extensive surface, and here
+and there had dived deeply. He enchanted the Parson by his comments
+on Saint Chrysostom; he dazzled Sir Peter with his lore in the
+antiquities of ancient Britain; he captivated Kenelm by his readiness
+to enter into that most disputatious of sciences called metaphysics;
+while for Lady Chillingly, and the three sisters who were invited to
+meet him, he was more entertaining, but not less instructive. Equally
+at home in novels and in good books, he gave to the spinsters a list
+of innocent works in either; while for Lady Chillingly he sparkled
+with anecdotes of fashionable life, the newest /bons mots/, the latest
+scandals. In fact, Mr. Welby was one of those brilliant persons who
+adorn any society amidst which they are thrown. If at heart he was a
+disappointed man, the disappointment was concealed by an even serenity
+of spirits; he had entertained high and justifiable hopes of a
+brilliant career and a lasting reputation as a theologian and a
+preacher; the succession to his estate at the age of twenty-three had
+changed the nature of his ambition. The charm of his manner was such
+that he sprang at once into the fashion, and became beguiled by his
+own genial temperament into that lesser but pleasanter kind of
+ambition which contents itself with social successes and enjoys the
+present hour. When his circumstances compelled him to eke out his
+income by literary profits, he slid into the grooves of periodical
+composition, and resigned all thoughts of the labour required for any
+complete work, which might take much time and be attended with scanty
+profits. He still remained very popular in society, and perhaps his
+general reputation for ability made him fearful to hazard it by any
+great undertaking. He was not, like Mivers, a despiser of all men and
+all things; but he regarded men and things as an indifferent though
+good-natured spectator regards the thronging streets from a
+drawing-room window. He could not be called /blase/, but he was
+thoroughly /desillusionne/. Once over-romantic, his character now was
+so entirely imbued with the neutral tints of life that romance
+offended his taste as an obtrusion of violent colour into a sober
+woof. He was become a thorough Realist in his code of criticism, and
+in his worldly mode of action and thought. But Parson John did not
+perceive this, for Welby listened to that gentleman's eulogies on the
+Ideal school without troubling himself to contradict them. He had
+grown too indolent to be combative in conversation, and only as a
+critic betrayed such pugnacity as remained to him by the polished
+cruelty of sarcasm.
+
+He came off with flying colours through an examination into his Church
+orthodoxy instituted by the Parson and Sir Peter. Amid a cloud of
+ecclesiastical erudition, his own opinions vanished in those of the
+Fathers. In truth, he was a Realist, in religion as in everything
+else. He regarded Christianity as a type of existent civilization,
+which ought to be reverenced, as one might recognize the other types
+of that civilization; such as the liberty of the press, the
+representative system, white neckcloths and black coats of an evening,
+etc. He belonged, therefore, to what he himself called the school of
+Eclectical Christiology; and accommodated the reasonings of Deism to
+the doctrines of the Church, if not as a creed, at least as an
+institution. Finally, he united all the Chillingly votes in his
+favour; and when he departed from the Hall carried off Kenelm for his
+initiation into the new ideas that were to govern his generation.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+KENELM remained a year and a half with this distinguished preceptor.
+During that time he learned much in book-lore; he saw much, too, of
+the eminent men of the day, in literature, the law, and the senate.
+He saw, also, a good deal of the fashionable world. Fine ladies, who
+had been friends of his mother in her youth, took him up, counselled
+and petted him,--one in especial, the Marchioness of Glenalvon, to
+whom he was endeared by grateful association, for her youngest son had
+been a fellow-pupil of Kenelm at Merton School, and Kenelm had saved
+his life from drowning. The poor boy died of consumption later, and
+her grief for his loss made her affection for Kenelm yet more tender.
+Lady Glenalvon was one of the queens of the London world. Though in
+the fiftieth year she was still very handsome: she was also very
+accomplished, very clever, and very kind-hearted, as some of such
+queens are; just one of those women invaluable in forming the manners
+and elevating the character of young men destined to make a figure in
+after-life. But she was very angry with herself in thinking that she
+failed to arouse any such ambition in the heir of the Chillinglys.
+
+It may here be said that Kenelm was not without great advantages of
+form and countenance. He was tall, and the youthful grace of his
+proportions concealed his physical strength, which was extraordinary
+rather from the iron texture than the bulk of his thews and sinews.
+His face, though it certainly lacked the roundness of youth, had a
+grave, sombre, haunting sort of beauty, not artistically regular, but
+picturesque, peculiar, with large dark expressive eyes, and a certain
+indescribable combination of sweetness and melancholy in his quiet
+smile. He never laughed audibly, but he had a quick sense of the
+comic, and his eye would laugh when his lips were silent. He would
+say queer, droll, unexpected things which passed for humour; but, save
+for that gleam in the eye, he could not have said them with more
+seeming innocence of intentional joke if he had been a monk of La
+Trappe looking up from the grave he was digging in order to utter
+"memento mori."
+
+That face of his was a great "take in." Women thought it full of
+romantic sentiment; the face of one easily moved to love, and whose
+love would be replete alike with poetry and passion. But he remained
+as proof as the youthful Hippolytus to all female attraction. He
+delighted the Parson by keeping up his practice in athletic pursuits;
+and obtained a reputation at the pugilistic school, which he attended
+regularly, as the best gentleman boxer about town.
+
+He made many acquaintances, but still formed no friendships. Yet
+every one who saw him much conceived affection for him. If he did not
+return that affection, he did not repel it. He was exceedingly gentle
+in voice and manner, and had all his father's placidity of temper:
+children and dogs took to him as by instinct.
+
+On leaving Mr. Welby's, Kenelm carried to Cambridge a mind largely
+stocked with the new ideas that were budding into leaf. He certainly
+astonished the other freshmen, and occasionally puzzled the mighty
+Fellows of Trinity and St. John's. But he gradually withdrew himself
+much from general society. In fact, he was too old in mind for his
+years; and after having mixed in the choicest circles of a metropolis,
+college suppers and wine parties had little charm for him. He
+maintained his pugilistic renown; and on certain occasions, when some
+delicate undergraduate had been bullied by some gigantic bargeman, his
+muscular Christianity nobly developed itself. He did not do as much
+as he might have done in the more intellectual ways of academical
+distinction. Still, he was always among the first in the college
+examinations; he won two university prizes, and took a very creditable
+degree, after which he returned home, more odd, more saturnine--in
+short, less like other people--than when he had left Merton School.
+He had woven a solitude round him out of his own heart, and in that
+solitude he sat still and watchful as a spider sits in his web.
+
+Whether from natural temperament or from his educational training
+under such teachers as Mr. Mivers, who carried out the new ideas of
+reform by revering nothing in the past, and Mr. Welby, who accepted
+the routine of the present as realistic, and pooh-poohed all visions
+of the future as idealistic, Kenelm's chief mental characteristic was
+a kind of tranquil indifferentism. It was difficult to detect in him
+either of those ordinary incentives to action,--vanity or ambition,
+the yearning for applause or the desire of power. To all female
+fascinations he had been hitherto star-proof. He had never
+experienced love, but he had read a good deal about it; and that
+passion seemed to him an unaccountable aberration of human reason, and
+an ignominious surrender of the equanimity of thought which it should
+be the object of masculine natures to maintain undisturbed. A very
+eloquent book in praise of celibacy, and entitled "The Approach to the
+Angels," written by that eminent Oxford scholar, Decimus Roach, had
+produced so remarkable an effect upon his youthful mind that, had he
+been a Roman Catholic, he might have become a monk. Where he most
+evinced ardour it was a logician's ardour for abstract truth; that is,
+for what he considered truth: and, as what seems truth to one man is
+sure to seem falsehood to some other man, this predilection of his was
+not without its inconveniences and dangers, as may probably be seen in
+the following chapter.
+
+Meanwhile, rightly to appreciate his conduct therein, I entreat thee,
+O candid reader (not that any reader ever is candid), to remember that
+he is brimful of new ideas, which, met by a deep and hostile
+undercurrent of old ideas, become more provocatively billowy and
+surging.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THERE had been great festivities at Exmundham, in celebration of the
+honour bestowed upon the world by the fact that Kenelm Chillingly had
+lived twenty-one years in it.
+
+The young heir had made a speech to the assembled tenants and other
+admitted revellers, which had by no means added to the exhilaration of
+the proceedings. He spoke with a fluency and self-possession which
+were surprising in a youth addressing a multitude for the first time.
+But his speech was not cheerful.
+
+The principal tenant on the estate, in proposing his health, had
+naturally referred to the long line of his ancestors. His father's
+merits as man and landlord had been enthusiastically commemorated; and
+many happy auguries for his own future career had been drawn, partly
+from the excellences of his parentage, partly from his own youthful
+promise in the honours achieved at the University.
+
+Kenelm Chillingly in reply largely availed himself of those new ideas
+which were to influence the rising generation, and with which he had
+been rendered familiar by the journal of Mr. Mivers and the
+conversation of Mr. Welby.
+
+He briefly disposed of the ancestral part of the question. He
+observed that it was singular to note how long any given family or,
+dynasty could continue to flourish in any given nook of matter in
+creation, without any exhibition of intellectual powers beyond those
+displayed by a succession of vegetable crops. "It is certainly true,"
+he said, "that the Chillinglys have lived in this place from father to
+son for about a fourth part of the history of the world, since the
+date which Sir Isaac Newton assigns to the Deluge. But, so far as can
+be judged by existent records, the world has not been in any way wiser
+or better for their existence. They were born to eat as long as they
+could eat, and when they could eat no longer they died. Not that in
+this respect they were a whit less insignificant than the generality
+of their fellow-creatures. Most of us now present," continued the
+youthful orator, "are only born in order to die; and the chief
+consolation of our wounded pride in admitting this fact is in the
+probability that our posterity will not be of more consequence to the
+scheme of Nature than we ourselves are." Passing from that
+philosophical view of his own ancestors in particular, and of the
+human race in general, Kenelm Chillingly then touched with serene
+analysis on the eulogies lavished on his father as man and landlord.
+
+"As man," he said, "my father no doubt deserves all that can be said
+by man in favour of man. But what, at the best, is man? A crude,
+struggling, undeveloped embryo, of whom it is the highest attribute
+that he feels a vague consciousness that he is only an embryo, and
+cannot complete himself till he ceases to be a man; that is, until he
+becomes another being in another form of existence. We can praise a
+dog as a dog, because a dog is a completed /ens/, and not an embryo.
+But to praise a man as man, forgetting that he is only a germ out of
+which a form wholly different is ultimately to spring, is equally
+opposed to Scriptural belief in his present crudity and imperfection,
+and to psychological or metaphysical examination of a mental
+construction evidently designed for purposes that he can never fulfil
+as man. That my father is an embryo not more incomplete than any
+present is quite true; but that, you will see on reflection, is saying
+very little on his behalf. Even in the boasted physical formation of
+us men, you are aware that the best-shaped amongst us, according to
+the last scientific discoveries, is only a development of some hideous
+hairy animal, such as a gorilla; and the ancestral gorilla itself had
+its own aboriginal forefather in a small marine animal shaped like a
+two-necked bottle. The probability is that, some day or other, we
+shall be exterminated by a new development of species.
+
+"As for the merits assigned to my father as landlord, I must
+respectfully dissent from the panegyrics so rashly bestowed on him.
+For all sound reasoners must concur in this, that the first duty of an
+owner of land is not to the occupiers to whom he leases it, but to the
+nation at large. It is his duty to see that the land yields to the
+community the utmost it can yield. In order to effect this object, a
+landlord should put up his farms to competition, exacting the highest
+rent he can possibly get from responsible competitors. Competitive
+examination is the enlightened order of the day, even in professions
+in which the best men would have qualities that defy examination. In
+agriculture, happily, the principle of competitive examination is not
+so hostile to the choice of the best man as it must be, for instance,
+in diplomacy, where a Talleyrand would be excluded for knowing no
+language but his own; and still more in the army, where promotion
+would be denied to an officer who, like Marlborough, could not spell.
+But in agriculture a landlord has only to inquire who can give the
+highest rent, having the largest capital, subject by the strictest
+penalties of law to the conditions of a lease dictated by the most
+scientific agriculturists under penalties fixed by the most cautious
+conveyancers. By this mode of procedure, recommended by the most
+liberal economists of our age,--barring those still more liberal who
+deny that property in land is any property at all,--by this mode of
+procedure, I say, a landlord does his duty to his country. He secures
+tenants who can produce the most to the community by their capital,
+tested through competitive examination in their bankers' accounts and
+the security they can give, and through the rigidity of covenants
+suggested by a Liebig and reduced into law by a Chitty. But on my
+father's land I see a great many tenants with little skill and less
+capital, ignorant of a Liebig and revolting from a Chitty, and no
+filial enthusiasm can induce me honestly to say that my father is a
+good landlord. He has preferred his affection for individuals to his
+duties to the community. It is not, my friends, a question whether a
+handful of farmers like yourselves go to the workhouse or not. It is
+a consumer's question. Do you produce the maximum of corn to the
+consumer?
+
+"With respect to myself," continued the orator, warming as the cold he
+had engendered in his audience became more freezingly felt,--"with
+respect to myself, I do not deny that, owing to the accident of
+training for a very faulty and contracted course of education, I have
+obtained what are called 'honours' at the University of Cambridge; but
+you must not regard that fact as a promise of any worth in my future
+passage through life. Some of the most useless persons--especially
+narrow-minded and bigoted--have acquired far higher honours at the
+University than have fallen to my lot.
+
+"I thank you no less for the civil things you have said of me and of
+my family; but I shall endeavour to walk to that grave to which we are
+all bound with a tranquil indifference as to what people may say of me
+in so short a journey. And the sooner, my friends, we get to our
+journey's end, the better our chance of escaping a great many pains,
+troubles, sins, and diseases. So that when I drink to your good
+healths, you must feel that in reality I wish you an early deliverance
+from the ills to which flesh is exposed, and which so generally
+increase with our years that good health is scarcely compatible with
+the decaying faculties of old age. Gentlemen, your good healths!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE morning after these birthday rejoicings, Sir Peter and Lady
+Chillingly held a long consultation on the peculiarities of their
+heir, and the best mode of instilling into his mind the expediency
+either of entertaining more pleasing views, or at least of professing
+less unpopular sentiments; compatibly of course, though they did not
+say it, with the new ideas that were to govern his century. Having
+come to an agreement on this delicate subject, they went forth, arm in
+arm, in search of their heir. Kenelm seldom met them at breakfast.
+He was an early riser, and accustomed to solitary rambles before his
+parents were out of bed.
+
+The worthy pair found Kenelm seated on the banks of a trout-stream
+that meandered through Chillingly Park, dipping his line into the
+water, and yawning, with apparent relief in that operation.
+
+"Does fishing amuse you, my boy?" said Sir Peter, heartily.
+
+"Not in the least, sir," answered Kenelm.
+
+"Then why do you do it?" asked Lady Chillingly.
+
+"Because I know nothing else that amuses me more."
+
+"Ah! that is it," said Sir Peter: "the whole secret of Kenelm's
+oddities is to be found in these words, my dear; he needs amusement.
+Voltaire says truly, 'Amusement is one of the wants of man.' And if
+Kenelm could be amused like other people, he would be like other
+people."
+
+"In that case," said Kenelm, gravely, and extracting from the water a
+small but lively trout, which settled itself in Lady Chillingly's
+lap,--"in that case I would rather not be amused. I have no interest
+in the absurdities of other people. The instinct of self-preservation
+compels me to have some interest in my own."
+
+"Kenelm, sir," exclaimed Lady Chillingly, with an animation into which
+her tranquil ladyship was very rarely betrayed, "take away that horrid
+damp thing! Put down your rod and attend to what your father says.
+Your strange conduct gives us cause of serious anxiety."
+
+Kenelm unhooked the trout, deposited the fish in his basket, and
+raising his large eyes to his father's face, said, "What is there in
+my conduct that occasions you displeasure?"
+
+"Not displeasure, Kenelm," said Sir Peter, kindly, "but anxiety; your
+mother has hit upon the right word. You see, my dear son, that it is
+my wish that you should distinguish yourself in the world. You might
+represent this county, as your ancestors have done before. I have
+looked forward to the proceedings of yesterday as an admirable
+occasion for your introduction to your future constituents. Oratory
+is the talent most appreciated in a free country, and why should you
+not be an orator? Demosthenes says that delivery, delivery, delivery,
+is the art of oratory; and your delivery is excellent, graceful,
+self-possessed, classical."
+
+"Pardon me, my dear father, Demosthenes does not say delivery, nor
+action, as the word is commonly rendered; he says, 'acting, or
+stage-play,'--the art by which a man delivers a speech in a feigned
+character, whence we get the word hypocrisy. Hypocrisy, hypocrisy,
+hypocrisy! is, according to Demosthenes, the triple art of the orator.
+Do you wish me to become triply a hypocrite?"
+
+"Kenelm, I am ashamed of you. You know as well as I do that it is
+only by metaphor that you can twist the word ascribed to the great
+Athenian into the sense of hypocrisy. But assuming it, as you say, to
+mean not delivery, but acting, I understand why your debut as an
+orator was not successful. Your delivery was excellent, your acting
+defective. An orator should please, conciliate, persuade, prepossess.
+You did the reverse of all this; and though you produced a great
+effect, the effect was so decidedly to your disadvantage that it would
+have lost you an election on any hustings in England."
+
+"Am I to understand, my dear father," said Kenelm, in the mournful and
+compassionate tones with which a pious minister of the Church reproves
+some abandoned and hoary sinner,--"am I to understand that you would
+commend to your son the adoption of deliberate falsehood for the gain
+of a selfish advantage?"
+
+"Deliberate falsehood! you impertinent puppy!"
+
+"Puppy!" repeated Kenelm, not indignantly but musingly,--"puppy! a
+well-bred puppy takes after its parents."
+
+Sir Peter burst out laughing.
+
+Lady Chillingly rose with dignity, shook her gown, unfolded her
+parasol, and stalked away speechless.
+
+"Now, look you, Kenelm," said Sir Peter, as soon as he had composed
+himself. "These quips and humours of yours are amusing enough to an
+eccentric man like myself, but they will not do for the world; and how
+at your age, and with the rare advantages you have had in an early
+introduction to the best intellectual society, under the guidance of a
+tutor acquainted with the new ideas which are to influence the conduct
+of statesmen, you could have made so silly a speech as you did
+yesterday, I cannot understand."
+
+"My dear father, allow me to assure you that the ideas I expressed are
+the new ideas most in vogue,--ideas expressed in still plainer, or, if
+you prefer the epithet, still sillier terms than I employed. You will
+find them instilled into the public mind by 'The Londoner' and by most
+intellectual journals of a liberal character."
+
+"Kenelm, Kenelm, such ideas would turn the world topsy-turvy."
+
+"New ideas always do tend to turn old ideas topsy-turvy. And the
+world, after all, is only an idea, which is turned topsy-turvy with
+every successive century."
+
+"You make me sick of the word 'ideas.' Leave off your metaphysics and
+study real life."
+
+"It is real life which I did study under Mr. Welby. He is the
+Archimandrite of Realism. It is sham life which you wish me to study.
+To oblige you I am willing to commence it. I dare say it is very
+pleasant. Real life is not; on the contrary--dull," and Kenelm yawned
+again.
+
+"Have you no young friends among your fellow-collegians?"
+
+"Friends! certainly not, sir. But I believe I have some enemies, who
+answer the same purpose as friends, only they don't hurt one so much."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you lived alone at Cambridge?"
+
+"No, I lived a good deal with Aristophanes, and a little with Conic
+Sections and Hydrostatics."
+
+"Books. Dry company."
+
+"More innocent, at least, than moist company. Did you ever get drunk,
+sir?"
+
+"Drunk!"
+
+"I tried to do so once with the young companions whom you would
+commend to me as friends. I don't think I succeeded, but I woke with
+a headache. Real life at college abounds with headache."
+
+"Kenelm, my boy, one thing is clear: you must travel."
+
+"As you please, sir. Marcus Antoninus says that it is all one to a
+stone whether it be thrown upwards or downwards. When shall I start?"
+
+"Very soon. Of course there are preparations to make; you should have
+a travelling companion. I don't mean a tutor,--you are too clever and
+too steady to need one,--but a pleasant, sensible, well-mannered young
+person of your own age."
+
+"My own age,--male or female?"
+
+Sir Peter tried hard to frown. The utmost he could do was to reply
+gravely, "FEMALE! If I said you were too steady to need a tutor, it
+was because you have hitherto seemed little likely to be led out of
+your way by female allurements. Among your other studies may I
+inquire if you have included that which no man has ever yet thoroughly
+mastered,--the study of women?"
+
+"Certainly. Do you object to my catching another trout?"
+
+"Trout be--blessed, or the reverse. So you have studied woman. I
+should never have thought it. Where and when did you commence that
+department of science?"
+
+"When? ever since I was ten years old. Where? first in your own
+house, then at college. Hush!--a bite," and another trout left its
+native element and alighted on Sir Peter's nose, whence it was
+solemnly transferred to the basket.
+
+"At ten years old, and in my own house! That flaunting hussy Jane,
+the under-housemaid--"
+
+"Jane! No, sir. Pamela, Miss Byron, Clarissa,--females in
+Richardson, who, according to Dr. Johnson, 'taught the passions to
+move at the command of virtue.' I trust for your sake that Dr. Johnson
+did not err in that assertion, for I found all these females at night
+in your own private apartments."
+
+"Oh!" said Sir Peter, "that's all?"
+
+"All I remember at ten years old," replied Kenelm.
+
+"And at Mr. Welby's or at college," proceeded Sir Peter, timorously,
+"was your acquaintance with females of the same kind?"
+
+Kenelm shook his head. "Much worse: they were very naughty indeed at
+college."
+
+"I should think so, with such a lot of young fellows running after
+them."
+
+"Very few fellows run after the females. I mean--rather avoid them."
+
+"So much the better."
+
+"No, my father, so much the worse; without an intimate knowledge of
+those females there is little use going to college at all."
+
+"Explain yourself."
+
+"Every one who receives a classical education is introduced into their
+society,--Pyrrha and Lydia, Glycera and Corinna, and many more of the
+same sort; and then the females in Aristophanes, what do you say to
+them, sir?"
+
+"Is it only females who lived two thousand or three thousand years
+ago, or more probably never lived at all, whose intimacy you have
+cultivated? Have you never admired any real women?"
+
+"Real women! I never met one. Never met a woman who was not a sham,
+a sham from the moment she is told to be pretty-behaved, conceal her
+sentiments, and look fibs when she does not speak them. But if I am
+to learn sham life, I suppose I must put up with sham women."
+
+"Have you been crossed in love that you speak so bitterly of the sex?"
+
+"I don't speak bitterly of the sex. Examine any woman on her oath,
+and she'll own she is a sham, always has been, and always will be, and
+is proud of it."
+
+"I am glad your mother is not by to hear you. You will think
+differently one of these days. Meanwhile, to turn to the other sex,
+is there no young man of your own rank with whom you would like to
+travel?"
+
+"Certainly not. I hate quarrelling."
+
+"As you please. But you cannot go quite alone: I will find you a good
+travelling-servant. I must write to town to-day about your
+preparations, and in another week or so I hope all will be ready.
+Your allowance will be whatever you like to fix it at; you have never
+been extravagant, and--boy--I love you. Amuse yourself, enjoy
+yourself, and come back cured of your oddities, but preserving your
+honour."
+
+Sir Peter bent down and kissed his son's brow. Kenelm was moved; he
+rose, put his arm round his father's shoulder, and lovingly said, in
+an undertone, "If ever I am tempted to do a base thing, may I remember
+whose son I am: I shall be safe then." He withdrew his arm as he said
+this, and took his solitary way along the banks of the stream,
+forgetful of rod and line.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE young man continued to skirt the side of the stream until he
+reached the boundary pale of the park. Here, placed on a rough grass
+mound, some former proprietor, of a social temperament, had built a
+kind of belvidere, so as to command a cheerful view of the high road
+below. Mechanically the heir of the Chillinglys ascended the mound,
+seated himself within the belvidere, and leaned his chin on his hand
+in a thoughtful attitude. It was rarely that the building was
+honoured by a human visitor: its habitual occupants were spiders. Of
+those industrious insects it was a well-populated colony. Their webs,
+darkened with dust and ornamented with the wings and legs and
+skeletons of many an unfortunate traveller, clung thick to angle and
+window-sill, festooned the rickety table on which the young man leaned
+his elbow, and described geometrical circles and rhomboids between the
+gaping rails that formed the backs of venerable chairs. One large
+black spider--who was probably the oldest inhabitant, and held
+possession of the best place by the window, ready to offer perfidious
+welcome to every winged itinerant who might be tempted to turn aside
+from the high road for the sake of a little cool and repose--rushed
+from its innermost penetralia at the entrance of Kenelm, and remained
+motionless in the centre of its meshes, staring at him. It did not
+seem quite sure whether the stranger was too big or not.
+
+"It is a wonderful proof of the wisdom of Providence," said Kenelm,
+"that whenever any large number of its creatures forms a community or
+class, a secret element of disunion enters into the hearts of the
+individuals forming the congregation, and prevents their co-operating
+heartily and effectually for their common interest. 'The fleas would
+have dragged me out of bed if they had been unanimous,' said the great
+Mr. Curran; and there can be no doubt that if all the spiders in this
+commonwealth would unite to attack me in a body, I should fall a
+victim to their combined nippers. But spiders, though inhabiting the
+same region, constituting the same race, animated by the same
+instincts, do not combine even against a butterfly: each seeks his own
+special advantage, and not that of the community at large. And how
+completely the life of each thing resembles a circle in this respect,
+that it can never touch another circle at more than one point. Nay, I
+doubt if it quite touches it even there,--there is a space between
+every atom; self is always selfish: and yet there are eminent masters
+in the Academe of New Ideas who wish to make us believe that all the
+working classes of a civilized world could merge every difference of
+race, creed, intellect, individual propensities and interests into the
+construction of a single web, stocked as a larder in common!" Here the
+soliloquist came to a dead stop, and, leaning out of the window,
+contemplated the high road. It was a very fine high road, straight
+and level, kept in excellent order by turn pikes at every eight miles.
+A pleasant greensward bordered it on either side, and under the
+belvidere the benevolence of some mediaeval Chillingly had placed a
+little drinking-fountain for the refreshment of wayfarers. Close to
+the fountain stood a rude stone bench, overshadowed by a large willow,
+and commanding from the high table-ground on which it was placed a
+wide view of cornfields, meadows, and distant hills, suffused in the
+mellow light of the summer sun. Along that road there came
+successively a wagon filled with passengers seated on straw,--an old
+woman, a pretty girl, two children; then a stout farmer going to
+market in his dog-cart; then three flies carrying fares to the nearest
+railway station; then a handsome young man on horseback, a handsome
+young lady by his side, a groom behind. It was easy to see that the
+young man and young lady were lovers. See it in his ardent looks and
+serious lips parted but for whispers only to be heard by her; see it
+in her downcast eyes and heightened colour. "'Alas! regardless of
+their doom,'" muttered Kenelm, "what trouble those 'little victims'
+are preparing for themselves and their progeny! Would I could lend
+them Decimus Roach's 'Approach to the Angels'!" The road now for some
+minutes became solitary and still, when there was heard to the right a
+sprightly sort of carol, half sung, half recited, in musical voice,
+with a singularly clear enunciation, so that the words reached
+Kenelm's ear distinctly. They ran thus:--
+
+
+ "Black Karl looked forth from his cottage door,
+ He looked on the forest green;
+ And down the path, with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Neirestein:
+ Singing, singing, lustily singing,
+ Down the path with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Neirestein."
+
+
+At a voice so English, attuned to a strain so Germanic, Kenelm pricked
+up attentive ears, and, turning his eye down the road, beheld,
+emerging from the shade of beeches that overhung the park pales, a
+figure that did not altogether harmonize with the idea of a Ritter of
+Neirestein. It was, nevertheless, a picturesque figure enough. The
+man was attired in a somewhat threadbare suit of Lincoln green, with a
+high-crowned Tyrolese hat; a knapsack was slung behind his shoulders,
+and he was attended by a white Pomeranian dog, evidently foot-sore,
+but doing his best to appear proficient in the chase by limping some
+yards in advance of his master, and sniffing into the hedges for rats
+and mice, and such small deer.
+
+By the time the pedestrian had reached to the close of his refrain he
+had gained the fountain, and greeted it with an exclamation of
+pleasure. Slipping the knapsack from his shoulder, he filled the iron
+ladle attached to the basin. He then called the dog by the name of
+Max, and held the ladle for him to drink. Not till the animal had
+satisfied his thirst did the master assuage his own. Then, lifting
+his hat and bathing his temples and face, the pedestrian seated
+himself on the bench, and the dog nestled on the turf at his feet.
+After a little pause the wayfarer began again, though in a lower and
+slower tone, to chant his refrain, and proceeded, with abrupt
+snatches, to link the verse on to another stanza. It was evident that
+he was either endeavouring to remember or to invent, and it seemed
+rather like the latter and more laborious operation of mind.
+
+
+ "'Why on foot, why on foot, Ritter Karl,' quoth he,
+ 'And not on thy palfrey gray?'
+
+
+Palfrey gray--hum--gray.
+
+
+ "'The run of ill-luck was too strong for me,
+ 'And has galloped my steed away.'
+
+
+That will do: good!"
+
+"Good indeed! He is easily satisfied," muttered Kenelm. "But such
+pedestrians don't pass the road every day. Let us talk to him." So
+saying he slipped quietly out of the window, descended the mound, and
+letting himself into the road by a screened wicket-gate, took his
+noiseless stand behind the wayfarer and beneath the bowery willow.
+
+The man had now sunk into silence. Perhaps he had tired himself of
+rhymes; or perhaps the mechanism of verse-making had been replaced by
+that kind of sentiment, or that kind of revery, which is common to the
+temperaments of those who indulge in verse-making. But the loveliness
+of the scene before him had caught his eye, and fixed it into an
+intent gaze upon wooded landscapes stretching farther and farther to
+the range of hills on which the heaven seemed to rest.
+
+"I should like to hear the rest of that German ballad," said a voice,
+abruptly.
+
+The wayfarer started, and, turning round, presented to Kenelm's view a
+countenance in the ripest noon of manhood, with locks and beard of a
+deep rich auburn, bright blue eyes, and a wonderful nameless charm
+both of feature and expression, very cheerful, very frank, and not
+without a certain nobleness of character which seemed to exact
+respect.
+
+"I beg your pardon for my interruption," said Kenelm, lifting his hat:
+"but I overheard you reciting; and though I suppose your verses are a
+translation from the German, I don't remember anything like them in
+such popular German poets as I happen to have read."
+
+"It is not a translation, sir," replied the itinerant. "I was only
+trying to string together some ideas that came into my head this fine
+morning."
+
+"You are a poet, then?" said Kenelm, seating himself on the bench.
+
+"I dare not say poet. I am a verse-maker."
+
+"Sir, I know there is a distinction. Many poets of the present day,
+considered very good, are uncommonly bad verse-makers. For my part, I
+could more readily imagine them to be good poets if they did not make
+verses at all. But can I not hear the rest of the ballad?"
+
+"Alas! the rest of the ballad is not yet made. It is rather a long
+subject, and my flights are very brief."
+
+"That is much in their favour, and very unlike the poetry in fashion.
+You do not belong, I think, to this neighbourhood. Are you and your
+dog travelling far?"
+
+"It is my holiday time, and I ramble on through the summer. I am
+travelling far, for I travel till September. Life amid summer fields
+is a very joyous thing."
+
+"Is it indeed?" said Kenelm, with much /naivete/. "I should have
+thought that long before September you would have got very much bored
+with the fields and the dog and yourself altogether. But, to be sure,
+you have the resource of verse-making, and that seems a very pleasant
+and absorbing occupation to those who practise it,--from our old
+friend Horace, kneading laboured Alcaics into honey in his summer
+rambles among the watered woodlands of Tibur, to Cardinal Richelieu,
+employing himself on French rhymes in the intervals between chopping
+off noblemen's heads. It does not seem to signify much whether the
+verses be good or bad, so far as the pleasure of the verse-maker
+himself is concerned; for Richelieu was as much charmed with his
+occupation as Horace was, and his verses were certainly not Horatian."
+
+"Surely at your age, sir, and with your evident education--"
+
+"Say culture; that's the word in fashion nowadays."
+
+"Well, your evident culture, you must have made verses."
+
+"Latin verses, yes; and occasionally Greek. I was obliged to do so at
+school. It did not amuse me."
+
+"Try English."
+
+Kenelm shook his head. "Not I. Every cobbler should stick to his
+last."
+
+"Well, put aside the verse-making: don't you find a sensible enjoyment
+in those solitary summer walks, when you have Nature all to
+yourself,--enjoyment in marking all the mobile evanescent changes in
+her face,--her laugh, her smile, her tears, her very frown!"
+
+"Assuming that by Nature you mean a mechanical series of external
+phenomena, I object to your speaking of a machinery as if it were a
+person of the feminine gender,--/her/ laugh, /her/ smile, etc. As
+well talk of the laugh and smile of a steam-engine. But to descend to
+common-sense. I grant there is some pleasure in solitary rambles in
+fine weather and amid varying scenery. You say that it is a holiday
+excursion that you are enjoying. I presume, therefore, that you have
+some practical occupation which consumes the time that you do not
+devote to a holiday?"
+
+"Yes; I am not altogether an idler. I work sometimes, though not so
+hard as I ought. 'Life is earnest,' as the poet says. But I and my
+dog are rested now, and as I have still a long walk before me I must
+wish you good-day."
+
+"I fear," said Kenelm, with a grave and sweet politeness of tone and
+manner, which he could command at times, and which, in its difference
+from merely conventional urbanity, was not without fascination,--"I
+fear that I have offended you by a question that must have seemed to
+you inquisitive, perhaps impertinent; accept my excuse: it is very
+rarely that I meet any one who interests me; and you do." As he spoke
+he offered his hand, which the wayfarer shook very cordially.
+
+"I should be a churl indeed if your question could have given me
+offence. It is rather perhaps I who am guilty of impertinence, if I
+take advantage of my seniority in years and tender you a counsel. Do
+not despise Nature or regard her as a steam-engine; you will find in
+her a very agreeable and conversable friend if you will cultivate her
+intimacy. And I don't know a better mode of doing so at your age, and
+with your strong limbs, than putting a knapsack on your shoulders and
+turning foot-traveller like myself."
+
+"Sir, I thank you for your counsel; and I trust we may meet again and
+interchange ideas as to the thing you call Nature,--a thing which
+science and art never appear to see with the same eyes. If to an
+artist Nature has a soul, why, so has a steam-engine. Art gifts with
+soul all matter that it contemplates: science turns all that is
+already gifted with soul into matter. Good-day, sir."
+
+Here Kenelm turned back abruptly, and the traveller went his way,
+silently and thoughtfully.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+KENELM retraced his steps homeward under the shade of his "old
+hereditary trees." One might have thought his path along the
+greenswards, and by the side of the babbling rivulet, was pleasanter
+and more conducive to peaceful thoughts than the broad, dusty
+thoroughfare along which plodded the wanderer he had quitted. But the
+man addicted to revery forms his own landscapes and colours his own
+skies.
+
+"It is," soliloquized Kenelm Chillingly, "a strange yearning I have
+long felt,--to get out of myself, to get, as it were, into another
+man's skin, and have a little variety of thought and emotion. One's
+self is always the same self; and that is why I yawn so often. But if
+I can't get into another man's skin, the next best thing is to get as
+unlike myself as I possibly can do. Let me see what is myself.
+Myself is Kenelm Chillingly, son and heir to a rich gentleman. But a
+fellow with a knapsack on his back, sleeping at wayside inns, is not
+at all like Kenelm Chillingly; especially if he is very short of money
+and may come to want a dinner. Perhaps that sort of fellow may take a
+livelier view of things: he can't take a duller one. Courage, Myself:
+you and I can but try."
+
+For the next two days Kenelm was observed to be unusually pleasant.
+He yawned much less frequently, walked with his father, played piquet
+with his mother, was more like other people. Sir Peter was charmed:
+he ascribed this happy change to the preparations he was making for
+Kenelm's travelling in style. The proud father was in active
+correspondence with his great London friends, seeking letters of
+introduction for Kenelm to all the courts of Europe. Portmanteaus,
+with every modern convenience, were ordered; an experienced courier,
+who could talk all languages and cook French dishes if required, was
+invited to name his terms. In short, every arrangement worthy a young
+patrician's entrance into the great world was in rapid progress, when
+suddenly Kenelm Chillingly disappeared, leaving behind him on Sir
+Peter's library table the following letter:--
+
+
+MY VERY DEAR FATHER,--Obedient to your desire, I depart in search of
+real life and real persons, or of the best imitations of them.
+Forgive me, I beseech you, if I commence that search in my own way. I
+have seen enough of ladies and gentlemen for the present: they must be
+all very much alike in every part of the world. You desired me to be
+amused. I go to try if that be possible. Ladies and gentlemen are
+not amusing; the more ladylike or gentlemanlike they are, the more
+insipid I find them. My dear father, I go in quest of adventure like
+Amadis of Gaul, like Don Quixote, like Gil Blas, like Roderick Random;
+like, in short, the only people seeking real life, the people who
+never existed except in books. I go on foot; I go alone. I have
+provided myself with a larger amount of money than I ought to spend,
+because every man must buy experience, and the first fees are heavy.
+In fact, I have put fifty pounds into my pocket-book and into my purse
+five sovereigns and seventeen shillings. This sum ought to last me a
+year; but I dare say inexperience will do me out of it in a month, so
+we will count it as nothing. Since you have asked me to fix my own
+allowance, I will beg you kindly to commence it this day in advance,
+by an order to your banker to cash my checks to the amount of five
+pounds, and to the same amount monthly; namely, at the rate of sixty
+pounds a year. With that sum I can't starve, and if I want more it
+may be amusing to work for it. Pray don't send after me, or institute
+inquiries, or disturb the household and set all the neighbourhood
+talking, by any mention either of my project or of your surprise at
+it. I will not fail to write to you from time to time. You will judge
+best what to say to my dear mother. If you tell her the truth, which
+of course I should do did I tell her anything, my request is virtually
+frustrated, and I shall be the talk of the county. You, I know, don't
+think telling fibs is immoral when it happens to be convenient, as it
+would be in this case.
+
+I expect to be absent a year or eighteen months; if I prolong my
+travels it shall be in the way you proposed. I will then take my
+place in polite society, call upon you to pay all expenses, and fib on
+my own account to any extent required by that world of fiction which
+is peopled by illusions and governed by shams.
+
+Heaven bless you, my dear Father, and be quite sure that if I get into
+any trouble requiring a friend, it is to you I shall turn. As yet I
+have no other friend on earth, and with prudence and good luck I may
+escape the infliction of any other friend.
+
+ Yours ever affectionately,
+
+ KENELM.
+
+P. S.--Dear Father, I open my letter in your library to say again
+"Bless you," and to tell you how fondly I kissed your old beaver
+gloves, which I found on the table.
+
+
+When Sir Peter came to that postscript he took off his spectacles and
+wiped them: they were very moist.
+
+Then he fell into a profound meditation. Sir Peter was, as I have
+said, a learned man; he was also in some things a sensible man, and he
+had a strong sympathy with the humorous side of his son's crotchety
+character. What was to be said to Lady Chillingly? That matron was
+quite guiltless of any crime which should deprive her of a husband's
+confidence in a matter relating to her only son. She was a virtuous
+matron; morals irreproachable, manners dignified, and /she-baronety/.
+Any one seeing her for the first time would intuitively say, "Your
+ladyship." Was this a matron to be suppressed in any well-ordered
+domestic circle? Sir Peter's conscience loudly answered, "No;" but
+when, putting conscience into his pocket, he regarded the question at
+issue as a man of the world, Sir Peter felt that to communicate the
+contents of his son's letter to Lady Chillingly would be the
+foolishest thing he could possibly do. Did she know that Kenelm had
+absconded with the family dignity invested in his very name, no
+marital authority short of such abuses of power as constitute the
+offence of cruelty in a wife's action for divorce from social board
+and nuptial bed could prevent Lady Chillingly from summoning all the
+grooms, sending them in all directions with strict orders to bring
+back the runaway dead or alive; the walls would be placarded with
+hand-bills, "Strayed from his home," etc.; the police would be
+telegraphing private instructions from town to town; the scandal would
+stick to Kenelm Chillingly for life, accompanied with vague hints of
+criminal propensities and insane hallucinations; he would be ever
+afterwards pointed out as "THE MAN WHO HAD DISAPPEARED." And to
+disappear and to turn up again, instead of being murdered, is the most
+hateful thing a man can do: all the newspapers bark at him, "Tray,
+Blanche, Sweetheart, and all;" strict explanations of the unseemly
+fact of his safe existence are demanded in the name of public decorum,
+and no explanations are accepted; it is life saved, character lost.
+
+Sir Peter seized his hat and walked forth, not to deliberate whether
+to fib or not to fib to the wife of his bosom, but to consider what
+kind of fib would the most quickly sink into the bosom of his wife.
+
+A few turns to and fro on the terrace sufficed for the conception and
+maturing of the fib selected; a proof that Sir Peter was a practised
+fibber. He re-entered the house, passed into her ladyship's habitual
+sitting-room, and said with careless gayety, "My old friend the Duke
+of Clareville is just setting off on a tour to Switzerland with his
+family. His youngest daughter, Lady Jane, is a pretty girl, and would
+not be a bad match for Kenelm."
+
+"Lady Jane, the youngest daughter with fair hair, whom I saw last as a
+very charming child, nursing a lovely doll presented to her by the
+Empress Eugenie,--a good match indeed for Kenelm."
+
+"I am glad you agree with me. Would it not be a favourable step
+towards that alliance, and an excellent thing for Kenelm generally, if
+he were to visit the Continent as one of the Duke's travelling party?"
+
+"Of course it would."
+
+"Then you approve what I have done; the Duke starts the day after
+to-morrow, and I have packed Kenelm off to town, with a letter to my
+old friend. You will excuse all leave taking. You know that though
+the best of sons he is an odd fellow; and seeing that I had talked him
+into it, I struck while the iron was hot, and sent him off by the
+express at nine o'clock this morning, for fear that if I allowed any
+delay he would talk himself out of it."
+
+"Do you mean to say Kenelm is actually gone? Good gracious."
+
+Sir Peter stole softly from the room, and summoning his valet, said,
+"I have sent Mr. Chillingly to London. Pack up the clothes he is
+likely to want, so that he can have them sent at once, whenever he
+writes for them."
+
+And thus, by a judicious violation of truth on the part of his father,
+that exemplary truth-teller Kenelm Chillingly saved the honour of his
+house and his own reputation from the breath of scandal and the
+inquisition of the police. He was not "THE MAN WHO HAD DISAPPEARED."
+
+
+
+
+BOOK II.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY had quitted the paternal home at daybreak before any
+of the household was astir. "Unquestionably," said he, as he walked
+along the solitary lanes,--"unquestionably I begin the world as poets
+begin poetry, an imitator and a plagiarist. I am imitating an
+itinerant verse-maker, as, no doubt, he began by imitating some other
+maker of verse. But if there be anything in me, it will work itself
+out in original form. And, after all, the verse-maker is not the
+inventor of ideas. Adventure on foot is a notion that remounts to the
+age of fable. Hercules, for instance; that was the way in which he
+got to heaven, as a foot-traveller. How solitary the world is at this
+hour! Is it not for that reason that this is of all hours the most
+beautiful?"
+
+Here he paused, and looked around and above. It was the very height
+of summer. The sun was just rising over gentle sloping uplands. All
+the dews on the hedgerows sparkled. There was not a cloud in the
+heavens. Up rose from the green blades of corn a solitary skylark.
+His voice woke up the other birds. A few minutes more and the joyous
+concert began. Kenelm reverently doffed his hat, and bowed his head
+in mute homage and thanksgiving.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ABOUT nine o'clock Kenelm entered a town some twelve miles distant
+from his father's house, and towards which he had designedly made his
+way, because in that town he was scarcely if at all known by sight,
+and he might there make the purchases he required without attracting
+any marked observation. He had selected for his travelling costume a
+shooting-dress, as the simplest and least likely to belong to his rank
+as a gentleman. But still in its very cut there was an air of
+distinction, and every labourer he had met on the way had touched his
+hat to him. Besides, who wears a shooting-dress in the middle of
+June, or a shooting-dress at all, unless he be either a game-keeper or
+a gentleman licensed to shoot?
+
+Kenelm entered a large store-shop for ready-made clothes and purchased
+a suit such as might be worn on Sundays by a small country yeoman or
+tenant-farmer of a petty holding,--a stout coarse broadcloth upper
+garment, half coat, half jacket, with waistcoat to match, strong
+corduroy trousers, a smart Belcher neckcloth, with a small stock of
+linen and woollen socks in harmony with the other raiment. He bought
+also a leathern knapsack, just big enough to contain this wardrobe,
+and a couple of books, which with his combs and brushes he had brought
+away in his pockets; for among all his trunks at home there was no
+knapsack.
+
+These purchases made and paid for, he passed quickly through the town,
+and stopped at a humble inn at the outskirt, to which he was attracted
+by the notice, "Refreshment for man and beast." He entered a little
+sanded parlour, which at that hour he had all to himself, called for
+breakfast, and devoured the best part of a fourpenny loaf with a
+couple of hard eggs.
+
+Thus recruited, he again sallied forth, and deviating into a thick
+wood by the roadside, he exchanged the habiliments with which he had
+left home for those he had purchased, and by the help of one or two
+big stones sunk the relinquished garments into a small but deep pool
+which he was lucky enough to find in a bush-grown dell much haunted by
+snipes in the winter.
+
+"Now," said Kenelm, "I really begin to think I have got out of myself.
+I am in another man's skin; for what, after all, is a skin but a
+soul's clothing, and what is clothing but a decenter skin? Of its own
+natural skin every civilized soul is ashamed. It is the height of
+impropriety for any one but the lowest kind of savage to show it. If
+the purest soul now existent upon earth, the Pope of Rome's or the
+Archbishop of Canterbury's, were to pass down the Strand with the skin
+which Nature gave to it bare to the eye, it would be brought up before
+a magistrate, prosecuted by the Society for the Suppression of Vice,
+and committed to jail as a public nuisance.
+
+"Decidedly I am now in another man's skin. Kenelm Chillingly, I no
+longer
+
+ "Remain
+
+ "Yours faithfully;
+
+"But am,
+
+ "With profound consideration,
+
+ "Your obedient humble servant."
+
+With light step and elated crest, the wanderer, thus transformed,
+sprang from the wood into the dusty thoroughfare. He had travelled on
+for about an hour, meeting but few other passengers, when he heard to
+the right a loud shrill young voice, "Help! help! I will not go; I
+tell you, I will not!" Just before him stood, by a high five-barred
+gate, a pensive gray cob attached to a neat-looking gig. The bridle
+was loose on the cob's neck. The animal was evidently accustomed to
+stand quietly when ordered to do so, and glad of the opportunity.
+
+The cries, "Help, help!" were renewed, mingled with louder tones in a
+rougher voice, tones of wrath and menace. Evidently these sounds did
+not come from the cob. Kenelm looked over the gate, and saw a few
+yards distant in a grass field a well-dressed boy struggling violently
+against a stout middle-aged man who was rudely hauling him along by
+the arm.
+
+The chivalry natural to a namesake of the valiant Sir Kenelm Digby was
+instantly aroused. He vaulted over the gate, seized the man by the
+collar, and exclaimed, "For shame! what are you doing to that poor
+boy? let him go!"
+
+"Why the devil do you interfere?" cried the stout man, his eyes
+glaring and his lips foaming with rage. "Ah, are you the villain?
+yes, no doubt of it. I'll give it to you, jackanapes," and still
+grasping the boy with one hand, with the other the stout man darted a
+blow at Kenelm, from which nothing less than the practised pugilistic
+skill and natural alertness of the youth thus suddenly assaulted could
+have saved his eyes and nose. As it was, the stout man had the worst
+of it: the blow was parried, returned with a dexterous manoeuvre of
+Kenelm's right foot in Cornish fashion, and /procumbit humi bos/; the
+stout man lay sprawling on his back. The boy, thus released, seized
+hold of Kenelm by the arm, and hurrying him along up the field, cried,
+"Come, come before he gets up! save me! save me!" Ere he had
+recovered his own surprise, the boy had dragged Kenelm to the gate,
+and jumped into the gig, sobbing forth, "Get in, get in, I can't
+drive; get in, and drive--you. Quick! Quick!"
+
+"But--" began Kenelm.
+
+"Get in, or I shall go mad." Kenelm obeyed; the boy gave him the
+reins, and seizing the whip himself, applied it lustily to the cob.
+On sprang the cob. "Stop, stop, stop, thief! villain! Holloa!
+thieves! thieves! thieves! stop!" cried a voice behind. Kenelm
+involuntarily turned his head and beheld the stout man perched upon
+the gate and gesticulating furiously. It was but a glimpse; again the
+whip was plied, the cob frantically broke into a gallop, the gig
+jolted and bumped and swerved, and it was not till they had put a good
+mile between themselves and the stout man that Kenelm succeeded in
+obtaining possession of the whip and calming the cob into a rational
+trot.
+
+"Young gentleman," then said Kenelm, "perhaps you will have the
+goodness to explain."
+
+"By and by; get on, that's a good fellow; you shall be well paid for
+it, well and handsomely."
+
+Quoth Kenelm, gravely, "I know that in real life payment and service
+naturally go together. But we will put aside the payment till you
+tell me what is to be the service. And first, whither am I to drive
+you? We are coming to a place where three roads meet; which of the
+three shall I take?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know; there is a finger-post. I want to get to,--but it
+is a secret; you'll not betray me? Promise,--swear."
+
+"I don't swear except when I am in a passion, which, I am sorry to
+say, is very seldom; and I don't promise till I know what I promise;
+neither do I go on driving runaway boys in other men's gigs unless I
+know that I am taking them to a safe place, where their papas and
+mammas can get at them."
+
+"I have no papa, no mamma," said the boy, dolefully and with quivering
+lips.
+
+"Poor boy! I suppose that burly brute is your schoolmaster, and you
+are running away home for fear of a flogging."
+
+The boy burst out laughing; a pretty, silvery, merry laugh: it
+thrilled through Kenelm Chillingly. "No, he would not flog me: he is
+not a schoolmaster; he is worse than that."
+
+"Is it possible? What is he?"
+
+"An uncle."
+
+"Hum! uncles are proverbial for cruelty; were so in the classical
+days, and Richard III. was the only scholar in his family."
+
+"Eh! classical and Richard III.!" said the boy, startled, and looking
+attentively at the pensive driver. "Who are you? you talk like a
+gentleman."
+
+"I beg pardon. I'll not do so again if I can help it."--"Decidedly,"
+thought Kenelm, "I am beginning to be amused. What a blessing it is
+to get into another man's skin, and another man's gig too!" Aloud,
+"Here we are at the fingerpost. If you are running away from your
+uncle, it is time to inform me where you are running to."
+
+Here the boy leaned over the gig and examined the fingerpost. Then he
+clapped his hands joyfully.
+
+"All right! I thought so, 'To Tor-Hadham, eighteen miles.' That's the
+road to 'Tor-Hadham."
+
+"Do you mean to say I am to drive you all that way,--eighteen miles?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And to whom are you going?"
+
+"I will tell you by and by. Do go on; do, pray. I can't drive--never
+drove in my life--or I would not ask you. Pray, pray, don't desert
+me! If you are a gentleman you will not; and if you are not a
+gentleman, I have got L10 in my purse, which you shall have when I am
+safe at Tor-Hadham. Don't hesitate: my whole life is at stake!" And
+the boy began once more to sob.
+
+Kenelm directed the pony's head towards Tor-Hadham, and the boy ceased
+to sob.
+
+"You are a good, dear fellow," said the boy, wiping his eyes. "I am
+afraid I am taking you very much out of your road."
+
+"I have no road in particular, and would as soon go to Tor-Hadham,
+which I have never seen, as anywhere else. I am but a wanderer on the
+face of the earth."
+
+"Have you lost your papa and mamma too? Why, you are not much older
+than I am."
+
+"Little gentleman," said Kenelm, gravely, "I am just of age, and you,
+I suppose, are about fourteen."
+
+"What fun!" cried the boy, abruptly. "Isn't it fun?"
+
+"It will not be fun if I am sentenced to penal servitude for stealing
+your uncle's gig, and robbing his little nephew of L10. By the by,
+that choleric relation of yours meant to knock down somebody else when
+he struck at me. He asked, 'Are you the villain?' Pray who is the
+villain? he is evidently in your confidence."
+
+"Villain! he is the most honourable, high-minded--But no matter now:
+I'll introduce you to him when we reach Tor-Hadham. Whip that pony:
+he is crawling."
+
+"It is up hill: a good man spares his beast."
+
+No art and no eloquence could extort from his young companion any
+further explanation than Kenelm had yet received; and indeed, as the
+journey advanced, and they approached their destination, both parties
+sank into silence. Kenelm was seriously considering that his first
+day's experience of real life in the skin of another had placed in
+some peril his own. He had knocked down a man evidently respectable
+and well to do, had carried off that man's nephew, and made free with
+that man's goods and chattels; namely, his gig and horse. All this
+might be explained satisfactorily to a justice of the peace, but how?
+By returning to his former skin; by avowing himself to be Kenelm
+Chillingly, a distinguished university medalist, heir to no ignoble
+name and some L10,000 a year. But then what a scandal! he who
+abhorred scandal; in vulgar parlance, what a "row!" he who denied that
+the very word "row" was sanctioned by any classic authorities in the
+English language. He would have to explain how he came to be found
+disguised, carefully disguised, in garments such as no baronet's
+eldest son--even though that baronet be the least ancestral man of
+mark whom it suits the convenience of a First Minister to recommend to
+the Sovereign for exaltation over the rank of Mister--was ever beheld
+in, unless he had taken flight to the gold-diggings. Was this a
+position in which the heir of the Chillinglys, a distinguished family,
+whose coat-of-arms dated from the earliest authenticated period of
+English heraldry under Edward III. as Three Fishes /azure/, could be
+placed without grievous slur on the cold and ancient blood of the
+Three Fishes?
+
+And then individually to himself, Kenelm, irrespectively of the Three
+Fishes,--what a humiliation! He had put aside his respected father's
+deliberate preparations for his entrance into real life; he had
+perversely chosen his own walk on his own responsibility; and here,
+before half the first day was over, what an infernal scrape he had
+walked himself into! and what was his excuse? A wretched little boy,
+sobbing and chuckling by turns, and yet who was clever enough to twist
+Kenelm Chillingly round his finger; twist /him/, a man who thought
+himself so much wiser than his parents,--a man who had gained honours
+at the University,--a man of the gravest temperament,--a man of so
+nicely critical a turn of mind that there was not a law of art or
+nature in which he did not detect a flaw; that he should get himself
+into this mess was, to say the least of it, an uncomfortable
+reflection.
+
+The boy himself, as Kenelm glanced at him from time to time, became
+impish and Will-of-the-Wisp-ish. Sometimes he laughed to himself
+loudly, sometimes he wept to himself quietly; sometimes, neither
+laughing nor weeping, he seemed absorbed in reflection. Twice as they
+came nearer to the town of Tor-Hadham, Kenelm nudged the boy, and
+said, "My boy, I must talk with you;" and twice the boy, withdrawing
+his arm from the nudge, had answered dreamily, "Hush! I am thinking."
+
+And so they entered the town of Tor-Hadham, the cob very much done up.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+"NOW, young sir," said Kenelm, in a tone calm, but peremptory,--"now
+we are in the town, where am I to take you? and wherever it be, there
+to say good-by."
+
+"No, not good-by. Stay with me a little bit. I begin to feel
+frightened, and I am so friendless;" and the boy, who had before
+resented the slightest nudge on the part of Kenelm, now wound his arm
+into Kenelm's, and clung to him caressingly.
+
+I don't know what my readers have hitherto thought of Kenelm
+Chillingly: but, amid all the curves and windings of his whimsical
+humour, there was one way that went straight to his heart; you had
+only to be weaker than himself and ask his protection.
+
+He turned round abruptly; he forgot all the strangeness of his
+position, and replied: "Little brute that you are, I'll be shot if I
+forsake you if in trouble. But some compassion is also due to the
+cob: for his sake say where we are to stop."
+
+"I am sure I can't say: I never was here before. Let us go to a nice
+quiet inn. Drive slowly: we'll look out for one."
+
+Tor-Hadham was a large town, not nominally the capital of the county,
+but, in point of trade and bustle and life, virtually the capital.
+The straight street, through which the cob went as slowly as if he had
+been drawing a Triumphal Car up the Sacred Hill, presented an animated
+appearance. The shops had handsome facades and plate-glass windows;
+the pavements exhibited a lively concourse, evidently not merely of
+business, but of pleasure, for a large proportion of the passers-by
+was composed of the fair sex, smartly dressed, many of them young and
+some pretty. In fact a regiment of her Majesty's -----th Hussars had
+been sent into the town two days before; and, between the officers of
+that fortunate regiment and the fair sex in that hospitable town,
+there was a natural emulation which should make the greater number of
+slain and wounded. The advent of these heroes, professional
+subtracters from hostile and multipliers of friendly populations, gave
+a stimulus to the caterers for those amusements which bring young
+folks together,--archery-meetings, rifle-shootings, concerts, balls,
+announced in bills attached to boards and walls and exposed at
+shop-windows.
+
+The boy looked eagerly forth from the gig, scanning especially these
+advertisements, till at length he uttered an excited exclamation, "Ah,
+I was right: there it is!"
+
+"There what is?" asked Kenelm,--"the inn?" His companion did not
+answer, but Kenelm following the boy's eye perceived an immense
+hand-bill.
+
+
+ "TO-MORROW NIGHT THEATRE OPENS.
+
+ "RICHARD III. Mr. COMPTON."
+
+
+"Do just ask where the theatre is," said the boy, in a whisper,
+turning away his head.
+
+Kenelm stopped the cob, made the inquiry, and was directed to take the
+next turning to the right. In a few minutes the compo portico of an
+ugly dilapidated building, dedicated to the Dramatic Muses, presented
+itself at the angle of a dreary, deserted lane. The walls were
+placarded with play-bills, in which the name of Compton stood forth as
+gigantic as capitals could make it. The boy drew a sigh. "Now," said
+he, "let us look out for an inn near here,--the nearest."
+
+No inn, however, beyond the rank of a small and questionable looking
+public-house was apparent, until at a distance somewhat remote from
+the theatre, and in a quaint, old-fashioned, deserted square, a neat,
+newly whitewashed house displayed upon its frontispiece, in large
+black letters of funereal aspect, "Temperance Hotel."
+
+"Stop," said the boy; "don't you think that would suit us? it looks
+quiet."
+
+"Could not look more quiet if it were a tombstone," replied Kenelm.
+
+The boy put his hand upon the reins and stopped the cob. The cob was
+in that condition that the slightest touch sufficed to stop him,
+though he turned his head somewhat ruefully as if in doubt whether hay
+and corn would be within the regulations of a Temperance Hotel.
+Kenelm descended and entered the house. A tidy woman emerged from a
+sort of glass cupboard which constituted the bar, minus the comforting
+drinks associated with the /beau ideal/ of a bar, but which displayed
+instead two large decanters of cold water with tumblers /a discretion,
+and sundry plates of thin biscuits and sponge-cakes. This tidy woman
+politely inquired what was his "pleasure."
+
+"Pleasure," answered Kenelm, with his usual gravity, "is not the word
+I should myself have chosen. But could you oblige my horse--I mean
+/that/ horse--with a stall and a feed of oats, and that young
+gentleman and myself with a private room and a dinner?"
+
+"Dinner!" echoed the hostess,--"dinner!"
+
+"A thousand pardons, ma'am. But if the word 'dinner' shock you I
+retract it, and would say instead something to eat and drink.'"
+
+"Drink! This is strictly a Temperance Hotel, sir."
+
+"Oh, if you don't eat and drink here," exclaimed Kenelm, fiercely, for
+he was famished, "I wish you good morning."
+
+"Stay a bit, sir. We do eat and drink here. But we are very simple
+folks. We allow no fermented liquors."
+
+"Not even a glass of beer?"
+
+"Only ginger-beer. Alcohols are strictly forbidden. We have tea and
+coffee and milk. But most of our customers prefer the pure liquid.
+As for eating, sir,--anything you order, in reason."
+
+Kenelm shook his head and was retreating, when the boy, who had sprung
+from the gig and overheard the conversation, cried petulantly, "What
+does it signify? Who wants fermented liquors? Water will do very
+well. And as for dinner,--anything convenient. Please, ma'am, show
+us into a private room: I am so tired." The last words were said in a
+caressing manner, and so prettily, that the hostess at once changed
+her tone, and muttering, "Poor boy!" and, in a still more subdued
+mutter, "What a pretty face he has!" nodded, and led the way up a
+very clean old-fashioned staircase.
+
+"But the horse and gig, where are they to go?" said Kenelm, with a
+pang of conscience on reflecting how ill treated hitherto had been
+both horse and owner.
+
+"Oh, as for the horse and gig, sir, you will find Jukes's
+livery-stables a few yards farther down. We don't take in horses
+ourselves; our customers seldom keep them: but you will find the best
+of accommodation at Jukes's."
+
+Kenelm conducted the cob to the livery-stables thus indicated, and
+waited to see him walked about to cool, well rubbed down, and made
+comfortable over half a peck of oats,--for Kenelm Chillingly was a
+humane man to the brute creation,--and then, in a state of ravenous
+appetite, returned to the Temperance Hotel, and was ushered into a
+small drawing-room, with a small bit of carpet in the centre, six
+small chairs with cane seats, prints on the walls descriptive of the
+various effects of intoxicating liquors upon sundry specimens of
+mankind,--some resembling ghosts, others fiends, and all with a
+general aspect of beggary and perdition; contrasted by Happy-Family
+pictures,--smiling wives, portly husbands, rosy infants, emblematic of
+the beatified condition of members of the Temperance Society.
+
+A table with a spotless cloth, and knives and forks for two, chiefly,
+however, attracted Kenelm's attention.
+
+The boy was standing by the window, seemingly gazing on a small
+aquarium which was there placed, and contained the usual variety of
+small fishes, reptiles, and insects, enjoying the pleasures of
+Temperance in its native element, including, of course, an occasional
+meal upon each other.
+
+"What are they going to give us to eat?" inquired Kenelm. "It must be
+ready by this time I should think."
+
+Here he gave a brisk tug at the bell-pull. The boy advanced from the
+window, and as he did so Kenelm was struck with the grace of his
+bearing, and the improvement in his looks, now that he was without his
+hat, and rest and ablution had refreshed from heat and dust the
+delicate bloom of his complexion. There was no doubt about it that he
+was an exceedingly pretty boy, and if he lived to be a man would make
+many a lady's heart ache. It was with a certain air of gracious
+superiority such as is seldom warranted by superior rank if it be less
+than royal, and chiefly becomes a marked seniority in years, that this
+young gentleman, approaching the solemn heir of the Chillinglys, held
+out his hand and said,--
+
+"Sir, you have behaved extremely well, and I thank you very much."
+
+"Your Royal Highness is condescending to say so," replied Kenelm
+Chillingly, bowing low, "but have you ordered dinner? and what are
+they going to give us? No one seems to answer the bell here. As it
+is a Temperance Hotel, probably all the servants are drunk."
+
+"Why should they be drunk at a Temperance Hotel?"
+
+"Why! because, as a general rule, people who flagrantly pretend to
+anything are the reverse of that which they pretend to. A man who
+sets up for a saint is sure to be a sinner, and a man who boasts that
+he is a sinner is sure to have some feeble, maudlin, snivelling bit of
+saintship about him which is enough to make him a humbug. Masculine
+honesty, whether it be saint-like or sinner-like, does not label
+itself either saint or sinner. Fancy Saint Augustine labelling
+himself saint, or Robert Burns sinner; and therefore, though, little
+boy, you have probably not read the poems of Robert Burns, and have
+certainly not read the 'Confessions' of Saint Augustine, take my word
+for it, that both those personages were very good fellows; and with a
+little difference of training and experience, Burns might have written
+the 'Confessions' and Augustine the poems. Powers above! I am
+starving. What did you order for dinner, and when is it to appear?"
+
+The boy, who had opened to an enormous width a naturally large pair of
+hazel eyes, while his tall companion in fustian trousers and Belcher
+neckcloth spoke thus patronizingly of Robert Burns and Saint
+Augustine, now replied, with rather a deprecatory and shamefaced
+aspect, "I am sorry I was not thinking of dinner. I was not so
+mindful of you as I ought to have been. The landlady asked me what we
+would have. I said, 'What you like;' and the landlady muttered
+something about--" here the boy hesitated.
+
+"Yes. About what? Mutton-chops?"
+
+"No. Cauliflowers and rice-pudding."
+
+Kenelm Chillingly never swore, never raged. Where ruder beings of
+human mould swore or raged, he vented displeasure in an expression of
+countenance so pathetically melancholic and lugubrious that it would
+have melted the heart of an Hyrcanian tiger. He turned his
+countenance now on the boy, and murmuring "Cauliflower!--Starvation!"
+sank into one of the cane-bottomed chairs, and added quietly, "so much
+for human gratitude."
+
+The boy was evidently smitten to the heart by the bitter sweetness of
+this reproach. There were almost tears in his Voice, as he said
+falteringly, "Pray forgive me, I /was/ ungrateful. I'll run down and
+see what there is;" and, suiting the action to the word, he
+disappeared.
+
+Kenelm remained motionless; in fact he was plunged into one of those
+reveries, or rather absorptions of inward and spiritual being, into
+which it is said that the consciousness of the Indian dervish can be
+by prolonged fasting preternaturally resolved. The appetite of all
+men of powerful muscular development is of a nature far exceeding the
+properties of any reasonable number of cauliflowers and rice-puddings
+to satisfy. Witness Hercules himself, whose cravings for substantial
+nourishment were the standing joke of the classic poets. I don't know
+that Kenelm Chillingly would have beaten the Theban Hercules either in
+fighting or in eating; but, when he wanted to fight or when he wanted
+to eat, Hercules would have had to put forth all his strength not to
+be beaten.
+
+After ten minutes' absence, the boy came back radiant. He tapped
+Kenelm on the shoulder, and said playfully, "I made them cut a whole
+loin into chops, besides the cauliflower; and such a big rice-pudding,
+and eggs and bacon too! Cheer up! it will be served in a minute."
+
+"A-h!" said Kenelm.
+
+"They are good people; they did not mean to stint you: but most of
+their customers, it seems, live upon vegetables and farinaceous food.
+There is a society here formed upon that principle; the landlady says
+they are philosophers!"
+
+At the word "philosophers" Kenelm's crest rose as that of a practised
+hunter at the cry of "Yoiks! Tally-ho!" "Philosophers!" said he,
+"philosophers indeed! O ignoramuses, who do not even know the
+structure of the human tooth! Look you, little boy, if nothing were
+left on this earth of the present race of man, as we are assured upon
+great authority will be the case one of these days,--and a mighty good
+riddance it will be,--if nothing, I say, of man were left except
+fossils of his teeth and his thumbs, a philosopher of that superior
+race which will succeed to man would at once see in those relics all
+his characteristics and all his history; would say, comparing his
+thumb with the talons of an eagle, the claws of a tiger, the hoof of a
+horse, the owner of that thumb must have been lord over creatures with
+talons and claws and hoofs. You may say the monkey tribe has thumbs.
+True; but compare an ape's thumb with a man's: could the biggest ape's
+thumb have built Westminster Abbey? But even thumbs are trivial
+evidence of man as compared with his teeth. Look at his teeth!"--here
+Kenelm expanded his jaws from ear to ear and displayed semicircles of
+ivory, so perfect for the purposes of mastication that the most
+artistic dentist might have despaired of his power to imitate
+them,--"look, I say, at his teeth!" The boy involuntarily recoiled.
+"Are the teeth those of a miserable cauliflower-eater? or is it purely
+by farinaceous food that the proprietor of teeth like man's obtains
+the rank of the sovereign destroyer of creation? No, little boy, no,"
+continued Kenelm, closing his jaws, but advancing upon the infant, who
+at each stride receded towards the aquarium,--"no; man is the master
+of the world, because of all created beings he devours the greatest
+variety and the greatest number of created things. His teeth evince
+that man can live upon every soil from the torrid to the frozen zone,
+because man can eat everything that other creatures cannot eat. And
+the formation of his teeth proves it. A tiger can eat a deer; so can
+man: but a tiger can't eat an eel; man can. An elephant can eat
+cauliflowers and rice-pudding; so can man! but an elephant can't eat a
+beefsteak; man can. In sum, man can live everywhere, because he can
+eat anything, thanks to his dental formation!" concluded Kenelm,
+making a prodigious stride towards the boy. "Man, when everything
+else fails him, eats his own species."
+
+"Don't; you frighten me," said the boy. "Aha!" clapping his hands
+with a sensation of gleeful relief, "here come the mutton-chops!"
+
+A wonderfully clean, well-washed, indeed well-washed-out, middle-aged
+parlour-maid now appeared, dish in hand. Putting the dish on the
+table and taking off the cover, the handmaiden said civilly, though
+frigidly, like one who lived upon salad and cold water, "Mistress is
+sorry to have kept you waiting, but she thought you were Vegetarians."
+
+After helping his young friend to a mutton-chop, Kenelm helped
+himself, and replied gravely, "Tell your mistress that if she had only
+given us vegetables, I should have eaten you. Tell her that though
+man is partially graminivorous, he is principally carnivorous. Tell
+her that though a swine eats cabbages and such like, yet where a swine
+can get a baby, it eats the baby. Tell her," continued Kenelm (now at
+his third chop), "that there is no animal that in digestive organs
+more resembles man than a swine. Ask her if there is any baby in the
+house; if so, it would be safe for the baby to send up some more
+chops."
+
+As the acutest observer could rarely be quite sure when Kenelm
+Chillingly was in jest or in earnest, the parlour-maid paused a moment
+and attempted a pale smile. Kenelm lifted his dark eyes, unspeakably
+sad and profound, and said mournfully, "I should be so sorry for the
+baby. Bring the chops!" The parlour-maid vanished. The boy laid
+down his knife and fork, and looked fixedly and inquisitively on
+Kenelm. Kenelm, unheeding the look, placed the last chop on the boy's
+plate.
+
+"No more," cried the boy, impulsively, and returned the chop to the
+dish. "I have dined: I have had enough."
+
+"Little boy, you lie," said Kenelm; "you have not had enough to keep
+body and soul together. Eat that chop or I shall thrash you: whatever
+I say I do."
+
+Somehow or other the boy felt quelled; he ate the chop in silence,
+again looked at Kenelm's face, and said to himself, "I am afraid."
+
+The parlour-maid here entered with a fresh supply of chops and a dish
+of bacon and eggs, soon followed by a rice-pudding baked in a tin
+dish, and of size sufficient to have nourished a charity school. When
+the repast was finished, Kenelm seemed to forget the dangerous
+properties of the carnivorous animal; and stretching himself
+indolently out, appeared to be as innocently ruminative as the most
+domestic of animals graminivorous.
+
+Then said the boy, rather timidly, "May I ask you another favour?"
+
+"Is it to knock down another uncle, or to steal another gig and cob?"
+
+"No, it is very simple: it is merely to find out the address of a
+friend here; and when found to give him a note from me."
+
+"Does the commission press? 'After dinner, rest a while,' saith the
+proverb; and proverbs are so wise that no one can guess the author of
+them. They are supposed to be fragments of the philosophy of the
+antediluvians: came to us packed up in the ark."
+
+"Really, indeed," said the boy, seriously. "How interesting! No, my
+commission does not press for an hour or so. Do you think, sir, they
+had any drama before the Deluge?"
+
+"Drama! not a doubt of it. Men who lived one or two thousand years
+had time to invent and improve everything; and a play could have had
+its natural length then. It would not have been necessary to crowd
+the whole history of Macbeth, from his youth to his old age, into an
+absurd epitome of three hours. One cannot trace a touch of real human
+nature in any actor's delineation of that very interesting Scotchman,
+because the actor always comes on the stage as if he were the same age
+when he murdered Duncan, and when, in his sear and yellow leaf, he was
+lopped off by Macduff."
+
+"Do you think Macbeth was young when he murdered Duncan?"
+
+"Certainly. No man ever commits a first crime of violent nature, such
+as murder, after thirty; if he begins before, he may go on up to any
+age. But youth is the season for commencing those wrong calculations
+which belong to irrational hope and the sense of physical power. You
+thus read in the newspapers that the persons who murder their
+sweethearts are generally from two to six and twenty; and persons who
+murder from other motives than love--that is, from revenge, avarice,
+or ambition--are generally about twenty-eight,--Iago's age.
+Twenty-eight is the usual close of the active season for getting rid
+of one's fellow-creatures; a prize-fighter falls off after that age.
+I take it that Macbeth was about twenty-eight when he murdered Duncan,
+and from about fifty-four to sixty when he began to whine about
+missing the comforts of old age. But can any audience understand that
+difference of years in seeing a three-hours' play? or does any actor
+ever pretend to impress it on the audience, and appear as twenty-eight
+in the first act and a sexagenarian in the fifth?"
+
+"I never thought of that," said the boy, evidently interested. "But I
+never saw 'Macbeth.' I have seen 'Richard III.:' is not that nice?
+Don't you dote on the play? I do. What a glorious life an actor's
+must be!"
+
+Kenelm, who had been hitherto rather talking to himself than to his
+youthful companion, here roused his attention, looked on the boy
+intently, and said,--
+
+"I see you are stage-stricken. You have run away from home in order
+to turn player, and I should not wonder if this note you want me to
+give is for the manager of the theatre or one of his company."
+
+The young face that encountered Kenelm's dark eye became very flushed,
+but set and defiant in its expression.
+
+"And what if it were? would not you give it?"
+
+"What! help a child of your age run away from his home, to go upon the
+stage against the consent of his relations? Certainly not."
+
+"I am not a child; but that has nothing to do with it. I don't want
+to go on the stage, at all events without the consent of the person
+who has a right to dictate my actions. My note is not to the manager
+of the theatre, nor to one of his company; but it is to a gentleman
+who condescends to act here for a few nights; a thorough gentleman,--a
+great actor,--my friend, the only friend I have in the world. I say
+frankly I have run away from home so that he may have that note, and
+if you will not give it some one else will!"
+
+The boy had risen while he spoke, and he stood erect beside the
+recumbent Kenelm, his lips quivering, his eyes suffused with
+suppressed tears, but his whole aspect resolute and determined.
+Evidently, if he did not get his own way in this world, it would not
+be for want of will.
+
+"I will take your note," said Kenelm.
+
+"There it is; give it into the hands of the person it is addressed
+to,--Mr. Herbert Compton."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+KENELM took his way to the theatre, and inquired of the door-keeper
+for Mr. Herbert Compton. That functionary replied, "Mr. Compton does
+not act to-night, and is not in the house."
+
+"Where does he lodge?"
+
+The door-keeper pointed to a grocer's shop on the other side of the
+way, and said tersely, "There, private door; knock and ring."
+
+Kenelm did as he was directed. A slatternly maid-servant opened the
+door, and, in answer to his interrogatory, said that Mr. Compton was
+at home, but at supper.
+
+"I am sorry to disturb him," said Kenelm, raising his voice, for he
+heard a clatter of knives and plates within a room hard by at his
+left, "but my business requires to see him forthwith;" and, pushing
+the maid aside, he entered at once the adjoining banquet-hall.
+
+Before a savoury stew smelling strongly of onions sat a man very much
+at his ease, without coat or neckcloth,--a decidedly handsome man, his
+hair cut short and his face closely shaven, as befits an actor who has
+wigs and beards of all hues and forms at his command. The man was not
+alone; opposite to him sat a lady, who might be a few years younger,
+of a somewhat faded complexion, but still pretty, with good stage
+features and a profusion of blond ringlets.
+
+"Mr. Compton, I presume," said Kenelm, with a solemn bow.
+
+"My name is Compton: any message from the theatre? or what do you want
+with me?"
+
+"I--nothing!" replied Kenelm; and then deepening his naturally
+mournful voice into tones ominous and tragic, continued, "By whom you
+are wanted let this explain;" therewith he placed in Mr. Compton's
+hand the letter with which he was charged, and stretching his arms and
+interlacing his fingers in the /pose/ of Talma as Julius Caesar,
+added, "'Qu'en dis-tu, Brute?'"
+
+Whether it was from the sombre aspect and awe-inspiring delivery of
+the messenger, or the sight of the handwriting on the address of the
+missive, Mr. Compton's countenance suddenly fell, and his hand rested
+irresolute, as if not daring to open the letter.
+
+"Never mind me, dear," said the lady with blond ringlets, in a tone of
+stinging affability: "read your /billet-doux/; don't keep the young
+man waiting, love!"
+
+"Nonsense, Matilda, nonsense! /billet-doux/ indeed! more likely a bill
+from Duke the tailor. Excuse me for a moment, my dear. Follow me,
+sir," and rising, still with shirtsleeves uncovered, he quitted the
+room, closing the door after him, motioned Kenelm into a small parlour
+on the opposite side of the passage, and by the light of a suspended
+gas-lamp ran his eye hastily over the letter, which, though it seemed
+very short, drew from him sundry exclamations. "Good heavens, how
+very absurd! what's to be done?" Then, thrusting the letter into his
+trousers-pocket, he fixed upon Kenelm a very brilliant pair of dark
+eyes, which soon dropped before the steadfast look of that saturnine
+adventurer.
+
+"Are you in the confidence of the writer of this letter?" asked Mr.
+Compton, rather confusedly.
+
+"I am not the confidant of the writer," answered Kenelm, "but for the
+time being I am the protector!"
+
+"Protector!"
+
+"Protector."
+
+Mr. Compton again eyed the messenger, and this time fully realizing
+the gladiatorial development of that dark stranger's physical form, he
+grew many shades paler, and involuntarily retreated towards the
+bell-pull.
+
+After a short pause, he said, "I am requested to call on the writer.
+If I do so, may I understand that the interview will be strictly
+private?"
+
+"So far as I am concerned, yes: on the condition that no attempt be
+made to withdraw the writer from the house."
+
+"Certainly not, certainly not; quite the contrary," exclaimed Mr.
+Compton, with genuine animation. "Say I will call in half an hour."
+
+"I will give your message," said Kenelm, with a polite inclination of
+his head; "and pray pardon me if I remind you that I styled myself the
+protector of your correspondent, and if the slightest advantage be
+taken of that correspondent's youth and inexperience or the smallest
+encouragement be given to plans of abduction from home and friends,
+the stage will lose an ornament and Herbert Compton vanish from the
+scene." With these words Kenelm left the player standing aghast.
+Gaining the street-door, a lad with a band-box ran against him and was
+nearly upset.
+
+"Stupid," cried the lad, "can't you see where you are going? Give
+this to Mrs. Compton."
+
+"I should deserve the title you give if I did for nothing the business
+for which you are paid," replied Kenelm, sententiously, and striding
+on.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+"I HAVE fulfilled my mission," said Kenelm, on rejoining his
+travelling companion. "Mr. Compton said he would be here in half an
+hour."
+
+"You saw him?"
+
+"Of course: I promised to give your letter into his own hands."
+
+"Was he alone?"
+
+"No; at supper with his wife."
+
+"His wife! what do you mean, sir?--wife! he has no wife."
+
+"Appearances are deceitful. At least he was with a lady who called
+him 'dear' and 'love' in as spiteful a tone of voice as if she had
+been his wife; and as I was coming out of his street-door a lad who
+ran against me asked me to give a band-box to Mrs. Compton."
+
+The boy turned as white as death, staggered back a few steps, and
+dropped into a chair.
+
+A suspicion which during his absence had suggested itself to Kenelm's
+inquiring mind now took strong confirmation. He approached softly,
+drew a chair close to the companion whom fate had forced upon him, and
+said in a gentle whisper,--
+
+"This is no boy's agitation. If you have been deceived or misled, and
+I can in any way advise or aid you, count on me as women under the
+circumstances count on men and gentlemen."
+
+The boy started to his feet, and paced the room with disordered steps,
+and a countenance working with passions which he attempted vainly to
+suppress. Suddenly arresting his steps, he seized Kenelm's hand,
+pressed it convulsively, and said, in a voice struggling against a
+sob,--
+
+"I thank you,--I bless you. Leave me now: I would be alone. Alone,
+too, I must face this man. There may be some mistake yet; go."
+
+"You will promise not to leave the house till I return?"
+
+"Yes, I promise that."
+
+"And if it be as I fear, you will then let me counsel with and advise
+you?"
+
+"Heaven help me, if so! Whom else should I trust to? Go, go!"
+
+Kenelm once more found himself in the streets, beneath the mingled
+light of gas-lamps and the midsummer moon. He walked on mechanically
+till he reached the extremity of the town. There he halted, and
+seating himself on a milestone, indulged in these meditations:--
+
+"Kenelm, my friend, you are in a still worse scrape than I thought you
+were an hour ago. You have evidently now got a woman on your hands.
+What on earth are you to do with her? A runaway woman, who, meaning
+to run off with somebody else--such are the crosses and contradictions
+in human destiny--has run off with you instead. What mortal can hope
+to be safe? The last thing I thought could befall me when I got up
+this morning was that I should have any trouble about the other sex
+before the day was over. If I were of an amatory temperament, the
+Fates might have some justification for leading me into this snare,
+but, as it is, those meddling old maids have none. Kenelm, my friend,
+do you think you ever can be in love? and, if you were in love, do you
+think you could be a greater fool than you are now?"
+
+Kenelm had not decided this knotty question in the conference held
+with himself, when a light and soft strain of music came upon his ear.
+It was but from a stringed instrument, and might have sounded thin and
+tinkling but for the stillness of the night, and that peculiar
+addition of fulness which music acquires when it is borne along a
+tranquil air. Presently a voice in song was heard from the distance
+accompanying the instrument. It was a man's voice, a mellow and a
+rich voice, but Kenelm's ear could not catch the words. Mechanically
+he moved on towards the quarter from which the sounds came, for Kenelm
+Chillingly had music in his soul, though he was not quite aware of it
+himself. He saw before him a patch of greensward, on which grew a
+solitary elm with a seat for wayfarers beneath it. From this sward
+the ground receded in a wide semicircle bordered partly by shops,
+partly by the tea-gardens of a pretty cottage-like tavern. Round the
+tables scattered throughout the gardens were grouped quiet customers,
+evidently belonging to the class of small tradespeople or superior
+artisans. They had an appearance of decorous respectability, and were
+listening intently to the music. So were many persons at the
+shop-doors and at the windows of upper rooms. On the sward, a little
+in advance of the tree, but beneath its shadow, stood the musician,
+and in that musician Kenelm recognized the wanderer from whose talk he
+had conceived the idea of the pedestrian excursion which had already
+brought him into a very awkward position. The instrument on which the
+singer accompanied himself was a guitar, and his song was evidently a
+love-song, though, as it was now drawing near to its close, Kenelm
+could but imperfectly guess at its general meaning. He heard enough
+to perceive that its words were at least free from the vulgarity which
+generally characterizes street ballads, and were yet simple enough to
+please a very homely audience.
+
+When the singer ended there was no applause; but there was evident
+sensation among the audience,--a feeling as if something that had
+given a common enjoyment had ceased. Presently the white Pomeranian
+dog, who had hitherto kept himself out of sight under the seat of the
+elm-tree, advanced, with a small metal tray between his teeth, and,
+after looking round him deliberately, as if to select whom of the
+audience should be honoured with the commencement of a general
+subscription, gravely approached Kenelm, stood on his hind legs,
+stared at him, and presented the tray.
+
+Kenelm dropped a shilling into that depository, and the dog, looking
+gratified, took his way towards the tea-gardens. Lifting his hat, for
+he was, in his way, a very polite man, Kenelm approached the singer,
+and, trusting to the alteration in his dress for not being recognized
+by a stranger who had only once before encountered him he said,--
+
+"Judging by the little I heard, you sing very well, sir. May I ask
+who composed the words?"
+
+"They are mine," replied the singer.
+
+"And the air?"
+
+"Mine too."
+
+"Accept my compliments. I hope you find these manifestations of
+genius lucrative?"
+
+The singer, who had not hitherto vouchsafed more than a careless
+glance at the rustic garb of the questioner, now fixed his eyes full
+upon Kenelm, and said, with a smile, "Your voice betrays you, sir. We
+have met before."
+
+"True; but I did not then notice your guitar, nor, though acquainted
+with your poetical gifts, suppose that you selected this primitive
+method of making them publicly known."
+
+"Nor did I anticipate the pleasure of meeting you again in the
+character of Hobnail. Hist! let us keep each other's secret. I am
+known hereabouts by no other designation than that of the 'Wandering
+Minstrel.'"
+
+"It is in the capacity of minstrel that I address you. If it be not
+an impertinent question, do you know any songs which take the other
+side of the case?"
+
+"What case? I don't understand you, sir."
+
+"The song I heard seemed in praise of that sham called love. Don't
+you think you could say something more new and more true, treating
+that aberration from reason with the contempt it deserves?"
+
+"Not if I am to get my travelling expenses paid."
+
+"What! the folly is so popular?"
+
+"Does not your own heart tell you so?"
+
+"Not a bit of it,--rather the contrary. Your audience at present seem
+folks who live by work, and can have little time for such idle
+phantasies; for, as it is well observed by Ovid, a poet who wrote much
+on that subject, and professed the most intimate acquaintance with it,
+'Idleness is the parent of love.' Can't you sing something in praise
+of a good dinner? Everybody who works hard has an appetite for food."
+
+The singer again fixed on Kenelm his inquiring eye, but not detecting
+a vestige of humour in the grave face he contemplated, was rather
+puzzled how to reply, and therefore remained silent.
+
+"I perceive," resumed Kenelm, "that my observations surprise you: the
+surprise will vanish on reflection. It has been said by another poet,
+more reflective than Ovid, that 'the world is governed by love and
+hunger.' But hunger certainly has the lion's share of the government;
+and if a poet is really to do what he pretends to do,--namely,
+represent nature,--the greater part of his lays should be addressed to
+the stomach." Here, warming with his subject, Kenelm familiarly laid
+his band on the musician's shoulder, and his voice took a tone
+bordering on enthusiasm. "You will allow that a man in the normal
+condition of health does not fall in love every day. But in the
+normal condition of health he is hungry every day. Nay, in those
+early years when you poets say he is most prone to love, he is so
+especially disposed to hunger that less than three meals a day can
+scarcely satisfy his appetite. You may imprison a man for months, for
+years, nay, for his whole life,--from infancy to any age which Sir
+Cornewall Lewis may allow him to attain,--without letting him be in
+love at all. But if you shut him up for a week without putting
+something into his stomach, you will find him at the end of it as dead
+as a door-nail."
+
+Here the singer, who had gradually retreated before the energetic
+advance of the orator, sank into the seat by the elm-tree and said
+pathetically, "Sir, you have fairly argued me down. Will you please
+to come to the conclusion which you deduce from your premises?"
+
+"Simply this, that where you find one human being who cares about
+love, you will find a thousand susceptible to the charms of a dinner;
+and if you wish to be the popular minne-singer or troubadour of the
+age, appeal to nature, sir,--appeal to nature; drop all hackneyed
+rhapsodies about a rosy cheek, and strike your lyre to the theme of a
+beefsteak."
+
+The dog had for some minutes regained his master's side, standing on
+his hind legs, with the tray, tolerably well filled with copper coins,
+between his teeth; and now, justly aggrieved by the inattention which
+detained him in that artificial attitude, dropped the tray and growled
+at Kenelm.
+
+At the same time there came an impatient sound from the audience in
+the tea-garden. They wanted another song for their money.
+
+The singer rose, obedient to the summons. "Excuse me, sir; but I am
+called upon to--"
+
+"To sing again?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And on the subject I suggest?"
+
+"No, indeed."
+
+"What! love, again?"
+
+"I am afraid so."
+
+"I wish you good evening then. You seem a well-educated man,--more
+shame to you. Perhaps we may meet once more in our rambles, when the
+question can be properly argued out."
+
+Kenelm lifted his hat, and turned on his heel. Before he reached the
+street, the sweet voice of the singer again smote his ears; but the
+only word distinguishable in the distance, ringing out at the close of
+the refrain, was "love."
+
+"Fiddle-de-dee," said Kenelm.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+AS Kenelm regained the street dignified by the edifice of the
+Temperance Hotel, a figure, dressed picturesquely in a Spanish cloak,
+brushed hurriedly by him, but not so fast as to be unrecognized as the
+tragedian. "Hem!" muttered Kenelm, "I don't think there is much
+triumph in that face. I suspect he has been scolded."
+
+The boy--if Kenelm's travelling companion is still to be so
+designated--was leaning against the mantelpiece as Kenelm re-entered
+the dining-room. There was an air of profound dejection about the
+boy's listless attitude and in the drooping tearless eyes.
+
+"My dear child," said Kenelm, in the softest tones of his plaintive
+voice, "do not honour me with any confidence that may be painful. But
+let me hope that you have dismissed forever all thoughts of going on
+the stage."
+
+"Yes," was the scarce audible answer.
+
+"And now only remains the question, 'What is to be done?'"
+
+"I am sure I don't know, and I don't care."
+
+"Then you leave it to me to know and to care; and assuming for the
+moment as a fact that which is one of the greatest lies in this
+mendacious world--namely, that all men are brothers--you will consider
+me as an elder brother, who will counsel and control you as he would
+an imprudent young--sister. I see very well how it is. Somehow or
+other you, having first admired Mr. Compton as Romeo or Richard III.,
+made his acquaintance as Mr. Compton. He allowed you to believe him a
+single man. In a romantic moment you escaped from your home, with the
+design of adopting the profession of the stage and of becoming Mrs.
+Compton."
+
+"Oh," broke out the girl, since her sex must now be declared, "oh,"
+she exclaimed, with a passionate sob, "what a fool I have been! Only
+do not think worse of me than I deserve. The man did deceive me; he
+did not think I should take him at his word, and follow him here, or
+his wife would not have appeared. I should not have known he had one
+and--and--" here her voice was choked under her passion.
+
+"But now you have discovered the truth, let us thank Heaven that you
+are saved from shame and misery. I must despatch a telegram to your
+uncle: give me his address."
+
+"No, no."
+
+"There is not a 'No' possible in this case, my child. Your reputation
+and your future must be saved. Leave me to explain all to your uncle.
+He is your guardian. I must send for him; nay, nay, there is no
+option. Hate me now for enforcing your will: you will thank me
+hereafter. And listen, young lady; if it does pain you to see your
+uncle, and encounter his reproaches, every fault must undergo its
+punishment. A brave nature undergoes it cheerfully, as a part of
+atonement. You are brave. Submit, and in submitting rejoice!"
+
+There was something in Kenelm's voice and manner at once so kindly and
+so commanding that the wayward nature he addressed fairly succumbed.
+She gave him her uncle's address, "John Bovill, Esq., Oakdale, near
+Westmere." And after giving it, she fixed her eyes mournfully upon
+her young adviser, and said with a simple, dreary pathos, "Now, will
+you esteem me more, or rather despise me less?"
+
+She looked so young, nay, so childlike, as she thus spoke, that Kenelm
+felt a parental inclination to draw her on his lap and kiss away her
+tears. But he prudently conquered that impulse, and said, with a
+melancholy half-smile,--
+
+"If human beings despise each other for being young and foolish, the
+sooner we are exterminated by that superior race which is to succeed
+us on earth the better it will be. Adieu, till your uncle comes."
+
+"What! you leave me here--alone?"
+
+"Nay, if your uncle found me under the same roof, now that I know you
+are his niece, don't you think he would have a right to throw me out
+of the window? Allow me to practise for myself the prudence I preach
+to you. Send for the landlady to show you your room, shut yourself in
+there, go to bed, and don't cry more than you can help."
+
+Kenelm shouldered the knapsack he had deposited in a corner of the
+room, inquired for the telegraph-office, despatched a telegram to Mr.
+Bovill, obtained a bedroom at the Commercial Hotel, and fell asleep,
+muttering these sensible words,--
+
+"Rouchefoucauld was perfectly right when he said, 'Very few people
+would fall in love if they had not heard it so much talked about.'"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY rose with the sun, according to his usual custom,
+and took his way to the Temperance Hotel. All in that sober building
+seemed still in the arms of Morpheus. He turned towards the stables
+in which he had left the gray cob, and had the pleasure to see that
+ill-used animal in the healthful process of rubbing down.
+
+"That's right," said he to the hostler. "I am glad to see you are so
+early a riser."
+
+"Why," quoth the hostler, "the gentleman as owns the pony knocked me
+up at two o'clock in the morning, and pleased enough he was to see the
+creature again lying down in the clean straw."
+
+"Oh, he has arrived at the hotel, I presume?--a stout gentleman?"
+
+"Yes, stout enough; and a passionate gentleman too. Came in a yellow
+and two posters, knocked up the Temperance and then knocked up me to
+see for the pony, and was much put out as he could not get any grog at
+the Temperance."
+
+"I dare say he was. I wish he had got his grog: it might have put him
+in better humour. Poor little thing!" muttered Kenelm, turning away;
+"I am afraid she is in for a regular vituperation. My turn next, I
+suppose. But he must be a good fellow to have come at once for his
+niece in the dead of the night."
+
+About nine o'clock Kenelm presented himself again at the Temperance
+Hotel, inquired for Mr. Bovill, and was shown by the prim maid-servant
+into the drawing-room, where he found Mr. Bovill seated amicably at
+breakfast with his niece, who of course was still in boy's clothing,
+having no other costume at hand. To Kenelm's great relief, Mr. Bovill
+rose from the table with a beaming countenance, and extending his hand
+to Kenelm, said,--
+
+"Sir, you are a gentleman; sit down, sit down and take breakfast."
+
+Then, as soon as the maid was out of the room, the uncle continued,--
+
+"I have heard all your good conduct from this young simpleton. Things
+might have been worse, sir."
+
+Kenelm bowed his head, and drew the loaf towards him in silence.
+Then, considering that some apology was due to his entertainer, he
+said,--
+
+"I hope you forgive me for that unfortunate mistake, when--"
+
+"You knocked me down, or rather tripped me up. All right now. Elsie,
+give the gentleman a cup of tea. Pretty little rogue, is she not? and
+a good girl, in spite of her nonsense. It was all my fault letting
+her go to the play and be intimate with Miss Lockit, a stage-stricken,
+foolish old maid, who ought to have known better than to lead her into
+all this trouble."
+
+"No, uncle," cried the girl, resolutely; "don't blame her, nor any one
+but me."
+
+Kenelm turned his dark eyes approvingly towards the girl, and saw that
+her lips were firmly set; there was an expression, not of grief nor
+shame, but compressed resolution in her countenance. But when her
+eyes met his they fell softly, and a blush mantled over her cheeks up
+to her very forehead.
+
+"Ah!" said the uncle, "just like you, Elsie; always ready to take
+everybody's fault on your own shoulders. Well, well, say no more
+about that. Now, my young friend, what brings you across the country
+tramping it on foot, eh? a young man's whim?" As he spoke, he eyed
+Kenelm very closely, and his look was that of an intelligent man not
+unaccustomed to observe the faces of those he conversed with. In fact
+a more shrewd man of business than Mr. Bovill is seldom met with on
+'Change or in market.
+
+"I travel on foot to please myself, sir," answered Kenelm, curtly, and
+unconsciously set on his guard.
+
+"Of course you do," cried Mr. Bovill, with a jovial laugh. "But it
+seems you don't object to a chaise and pony whenever you can get them
+for nothing,--ha, ha!--excuse me,--a joke."
+
+Herewith Mr. Bovill, still in excellent good-humour, abruptly changed
+the conversation to general matters,--agricultural prospects, chance
+of a good harvest, corn trade, money market in general, politics,
+state of the nation. Kenelm felt there was an attempt to draw him
+out, to sound, to pump him, and replied only by monosyllables,
+generally significant of ignorance on the questions broached; and at
+the close, if the philosophical heir of the Chillinglys was in the
+habit of allowing himself to be surprised he would certainly have been
+startled when Mr. Bovill rose, slapped him on the shoulder, and said
+in a tone of great satisfaction, "Just as I thought, sir; you know
+nothing of these matters: you are a gentleman born and bred; your
+clothes can't disguise you, sir. Elsie was right. My dear, just
+leave us for a few minutes: I have something to say to our young
+friend. You can get ready meanwhile to go with me." Elsie left the
+table and walked obediently towards the doorway. There she halted a
+moment, turned round, and looked timidly towards Kenelm. He had
+naturally risen from his seat as she rose, and advanced some paces as
+if to open the door for her. Thus their looks encountered. He could
+not interpret that shy gaze of hers: it was tender, it was
+deprecating, it was humble, it was pleading; a man accustomed to
+female conquests might have thought it was something more, something
+in which was the key to all. But that something more was an unknown
+tongue to Kenelm Chillingly.
+
+When the two men were alone, Mr. Bovill reseated himself and motioned
+to Kenelm to do the same. "Now, young sir," said the former, "you and
+I can talk at our ease. That adventure of yours yesterday may be the
+luckiest thing that could happen to you."
+
+"It is sufficiently lucky if I have been of any service to your niece.
+But her own good sense would have been her safeguard if she had been
+alone, and discovered, as she would have done, that Mr. Compton had,
+knowingly or not, misled her to believe that he was a single man."
+
+"Hang Mr. Compton! we have done with him. I am a plain man, and I
+come to the point. It is you who have carried off my niece; it is
+with you that she came to this hotel. Now when Elsie told me how well
+you had behaved, and that your language and manners were those of a
+real gentleman, my mind was made up. I guess pretty well what you
+are; you are a gentleman's son; probably a college youth; not
+overburdened with cash; had a quarrel with your governor, and he keeps
+you short. Don't interrupt me. Well, Elsie is a good girl and a
+pretty girl, and will make a good wife, as wives go; and, hark ye, she
+has L20,000. So just confide in me; and if you don't like your
+parents to know about it till the thing's done and they be only got to
+forgive and bless you, why, you shall marry Elsie before you can say
+Jack Robinson."
+
+For the first time in his life Kenelm Chillingly was seized with
+terror,--terror and consternation. His jaw dropped; his tongue was
+palsied. If hair ever stands on end, his hair did. At last, with
+superhuman effort, he gasped out the word, "Marry!"
+
+"Yes; marry. If you are a gentleman you are bound to it. You have
+compromised my niece,--a respectable, virtuous girl, sir; an orphan,
+but not unprotected. I repeat, it is you who have plucked her from my
+very arms, and with violence and assault eloped with her; and what
+would the world say if it knew? Would it believe in your prudent
+conduct?--conduct only to be explained by the respect you felt due to
+your future wife. And where will you find a better? Where will you
+find an uncle who will part with his ward and L20,000 without asking
+if you have a sixpence? and the girl has taken a fancy to you; I see
+it: would she have given up that player so easily if you had not
+stolen her heart? Would you break that heart? No, young man: you are
+not a villain. Shake hands on it!"
+
+"Mr. Bovill," said Kenelm, recovering his wonted equanimity, "I am
+inexpressibly flattered by the honour you propose to me, and I do not
+deny that Miss Elsie is worthy of a much better man than myself. But
+I have inconceivable prejudices against the connubial state. If it be
+permitted to a member of the Established Church to cavil at any
+sentence written by Saint Paul,--and I think that liberty may be
+permitted to a simple layman, since eminent members of the clergy
+criticise the whole Bible as freely as if it were the history of Queen
+Elizabeth by Mr. Froude,--I should demur at the doctrine that it is
+better to marry than to burn: I myself should prefer burning. With
+these sentiments it would ill become any one entitled to that
+distinction of 'gentleman' which you confer on me to lead a
+fellow-victim to the sacrificial altar. As for any reproach attached
+to Miss Elsie, since in my telegram I directed you to ask for a young
+gentleman at this hotel, her very sex is not known in this place
+unless you divulge it. And--"
+
+Here Kenelm was interrupted by a violent explosion of rage from the
+uncle. He stamped his feet; he almost foamed at the mouth; he doubled
+his fist, and shook it in Kenelm's face.
+
+"Sir, you are mocking me: John Bovill is not a man to be jeered in
+this way. You /shall/ marry the girl. I'll not have her thrust back
+upon me to be the plague of my life with her whims and tantrums. You
+have taken her, and you shall keep her, or I'll break every bone in
+your skin."
+
+"Break them," said Kenelm, resignedly, but at the same time falling
+back into a formidable attitude of defence, which cooled the pugnacity
+of his accuser. Mr. Bovill sank into his chair, and wiped his
+forehead. Kenelm craftily pursued the advantage he had gained, and in
+mild accents proceeded to reason,--
+
+"When you recover your habitual serenity of humour, Mr. Bovill, you
+will see how much your very excusable desire to secure your niece's
+happiness, and, I may add, to reward what you allow to have been
+forbearing and well-bred conduct on my part, has hurried you into an
+error of judgment. You know nothing of me. I may be, for what you
+know, an impostor or swindler; I may have every bad quality, and yet
+you are to be contented with my assurance, or rather your own
+assumption, that I am born a gentleman, in order to give me your niece
+and her L20,000. This is temporary insanity on your part. Allow me
+to leave you to recover from your excitement."
+
+"Stop, sir," said Mr. Bovill, in a changed and sullen tone; "I am not
+quite the madman you think me. But I dare say I have been too hasty
+and too rough. Nevertheless the facts are as I have stated them, and
+I do not see how, as a man of honour, you can get off marrying my
+niece. The mistake you made in running away with her was, no doubt,
+innocent on your part: but still there it is; and supposing the case
+came before a jury, it would be an ugly one for you and your family.
+Marriage alone could mend it. Come, come, I own I was too
+business-like in rushing to the point at once, and I no longer say,
+'Marry my niece off-hand.' You have only seen her disguised and in a
+false position. Pay me a visit at Oakdale; stay with me a month; and
+if at the end of that time you do not like her well enough to propose,
+I'll let you off and say no more about it."
+
+While Mr. Bovill thus spoke, and Kenelm listened, neither saw that the
+door had been noiselessly opened and that Elsie stood at the
+threshold. Now, before Kenelm could reply, she advanced into the
+middle of the room, and, her small figure drawn up to its fullest
+height, her cheeks glowing, her lips quivering, exclaimed,--
+
+"Uncle, for shame!" Then addressing Kenelm in a sharp tone of
+anguish, "Oh, do not believe I knew anything of this!" she covered her
+face with both hands and stood mute.
+
+All of chivalry that Kenelm had received with his baptismal
+appellation was aroused. He sprang up, and, bending his knee as he
+drew one of her hands into his own, he said,--
+
+"I am as convinced that your uncle's words are abhorrent to you as I
+am that you are a pure-hearted and high-spirited woman, of whose
+friendship I shall be proud. We meet again." Then releasing her
+hand, he addressed Mr. Bovill: "Sir, you are unworthy the charge of
+your niece. Had you not been so, she would have committed no
+imprudence. If she have any female relation, to that relation
+transfer your charge."
+
+"I have! I have!" cried Elsie; "my lost mother's sister: let me go to
+her."
+
+"The woman who keeps a school!" said Mr. Bovill sneeringly.
+
+"Why not?" asked Kenelm.
+
+"She never would go there. I proposed it to her a year ago. The minx
+would not go into a school."
+
+"I will now, Uncle."
+
+"Well, then, you shall at once; and I hope you'll be put on bread and
+water. Fool! fool! you have spoilt your own game. Mr. Chillingly,
+now that Miss Elsie has turned her back on herself, I can convince you
+that I am not the mad man you thought me. I was at the festive
+meeting held when you came of age: my brother is one of your father's
+tenants. I did not recognize your face immediately in the excitement
+of our encounter and in your change of dress; but in walking home it
+struck me that I had seen it before, and I knew it at once when you
+entered the room to-day. It has been a tussle between us which should
+beat the other. You have beat me; and thanks to that idiot! If she
+had not put her spoke into my wheel, she would have lived to be 'my
+lady.' Now good-day, sir."
+
+"Mr. Bovill, you offered to shake hands: shake hands now, and promise
+me, with the good grace of one honourable combatant to another, that
+Miss Elsie shall go to her aunt the schoolmistress at once if she
+wishes it. Hark ye, my friend" (this in Mr. Bovill's ear): "a man can
+never manage a woman. Till a woman marries, a prudent man leaves her
+to women; when she does marry, she manages her husband, and there's an
+end of it."
+
+Kenelm was gone.
+
+"Oh, wise young man!" murmured the uncle. "Elsie, dear, how can you
+go to your aunt's while you are in that dress?"
+
+Elsie started as from a trance, her eyes directed towards the doorway
+through which Kenelm had vanished. "This dress," she said
+contemptuously, "this dress; is not that easily altered with shops in
+the town?"
+
+"Gad!" muttered Mr. Bovill, "that youngster is a second Solomon; and
+if I can't manage Elsie, she'll manage a husband--whenever she gets
+one."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+"BY the powers that guard innocence and celibacy," soliloquized Kenelm
+Chillingly, "but I have had a narrow escape! and had that amphibious
+creature been in girl's clothes instead of boy's, when she intervened
+like the deity of the ancient drama, I might have plunged my armorial
+Fishes into hot water. Though, indeed, it is hard to suppose that a
+young lady head-over-ears in love with Mr. Compton yesterday could
+have consigned her affections to me to-day. Still she looked as if
+she could, which proves either that one is never to trust a woman's
+heart or never to trust a woman's looks. Decimus Roach is right. Man
+must never relax his flight from the women, if he strives to achieve
+an 'Approach to the Angels.'"
+
+These reflections were made by Kenelm Chillingly as, having turned his
+back upon the town in which such temptations and trials had befallen
+him, he took his solitary way along a footpath that wound through
+meads and cornfields, and shortened by three miles the distance to a
+cathedral town at which he proposed to rest for the night.
+
+He had travelled for some hours, and the sun was beginning to slope
+towards a range of blue hills in the west, when he came to the margin
+of a fresh rivulet, overshadowed by feathery willows and the quivering
+leaves of silvery Italian poplars. Tempted by the quiet and cool of
+this pleasant spot, he flung himself down on the banks, drew from his
+knapsack some crusts of bread with which he had wisely provided
+himself, and, dipping them into the pure lymph as it rippled over its
+pebbly bed, enjoyed one of those luxurious repasts for which epicures
+would exchange their banquet in return for the appetite of youth.
+Then, reclining along the bank, and crushing the wild thyme that grows
+best and sweetest in wooded coverts, provided they be neighboured by
+water, no matter whether in pool or rill, he resigned himself to that
+intermediate state between thought and dream-land which we call
+"revery." At a little distance he heard the low still sound of the
+mower's scythe, and the air came to his brow sweet with the fragrance
+of new-mown hay.
+
+He was roused by a gentle tap on the shoulder, and turning lazily
+round, saw a good-humoured jovial face upon a pair of massive
+shoulders, and heard a hearty and winning voice say,--
+
+"Young man, if you are not too tired, will you lend a hand to get in
+my hay? We are very short of hands, and I am afraid we shall have
+rain pretty soon."
+
+Kenelm rose and shook himself, gravely contemplated the stranger, and
+replied in his customary sententious fashion, "Man is born to help his
+fellow-man,--especially to get in hay while the sun shines. I am at
+your service."
+
+"That's a good fellow, and I'm greatly obliged to you. You see I had
+counted on a gang of roving haymakers, but they were bought up by
+another farmer. This way;" and leading on through a gap in the
+brushwood, he emerged, followed by Kenelm, into a large meadow,
+one-third of which was still under the scythe, the rest being occupied
+with persons of both sexes, tossing and spreading the cut grass.
+Among the latter, Kenelm, stripped to his shirt-sleeves, soon found
+himself tossing and spreading like the rest, with his usual melancholy
+resignation of mien and aspect. Though a little awkward at first in
+the use of his unfamiliar implements, his practice in all athletic
+accomplishments bestowed on him that invaluable quality which is
+termed "handiness," and he soon distinguished himself by the superior
+activity and neatness with which he performed his work. Something--it
+might be in his countenance or in the charm of his being a
+stranger--attracted the attention of the feminine section of
+haymakers, and one very pretty girl who was nearer to him than the
+rest attempted to commence conversation.
+
+"This is new to you," she said smiling.
+
+"Nothing is new to me," answered Kenelm, mournfully. "But allow me to
+observe that to do things well you should only do one thing at a time.
+I am here to make hay and not conversation."
+
+"My!" said the girl, in amazed ejaculation, and turned off with a toss
+of her pretty head.
+
+"I wonder if that jade has got an uncle," thought Kenelm. The farmer,
+who took his share of work with the men, halting now and then to look
+round, noticed Kenelm's vigorous application with much approval, and
+at the close of the day's work shook him heartily by the hand, leaving
+a two-shilling piece in his palm. The heir of the Chillinglys gazed
+on that honorarium, and turned it over with the finger and thumb of
+the left hand.
+
+"Be n't it eno'?" said the farmer, nettled.
+
+"Pardon me," answered Kenelm. "But, to tell you the truth, it is the
+first money I ever earned by my own bodily labour; and I regard it
+with equal curiosity and respect. But if it would not offend you, I
+would rather that, instead of the money, you had offered me some
+supper; for I have tasted nothing but bread and water since the
+morning."
+
+"You shall have the money and supper both, my lad," said the farmer,
+cheerily. "And if you will stay and help till I have got in the hay,
+I dare say my good woman can find you a better bed than you'll get in
+the village inn; if, indeed, you can get one there at all."
+
+"You are very kind. But before I accept your hospitality excuse one
+question: have you any nieces about you?"
+
+"Nieces!" echoed the farmer, mechanically thrusting his hands into his
+breeches-pockets as if in search of something there, "nieces about me!
+what do you mean? Be that a newfangled word for coppers?"
+
+"Not for coppers, though perhaps for brass. But I spoke without
+metaphor. I object to nieces upon abstract principle, confirmed by
+the test of experience."
+
+The farmer stared, and thought his new friend not quite so sound in
+his mental as he evidently was in his physical conformation, but
+replied, with a laugh, "Make yourself easy, then. I have only one
+niece, and she is married to an iron-monger and lives in Exeter."
+
+On entering the farmhouse, Kenelm's host conducted him straight into
+the kitchen, and cried out, in a hearty voice, to a comely middle-aged
+dame, who, with a stout girl, was intent on culinary operations,
+"Hulloa! old woman, I have brought you a guest who has well earned his
+supper, for he has done the work of two, and I have promised him a
+bed."
+
+The farmer's wife turned sharply round. "He is heartily welcome to
+supper. As to a bed," she said doubtfully, "I don't know." But here
+her eyes settled on Kenelm; and there was something in his aspect so
+unlike what she expected to see in an itinerant haymaker, that she
+involuntarily dropped a courtesy, and resumed, with a change of tone,
+"The gentleman shall have the guest-room: but it will take a little
+time to get ready; you know, John, all the furniture is covered up."
+
+"Well, wife, there will be leisure eno' for that. He don't want to go
+to roost till he has supped."
+
+"Certainly not," said Kenelm, sniffing a very agreeable odour.
+
+"Where are the girls?" asked the farmer.
+
+"They have been in these five minutes, and gone upstairs to tidy
+themselves."
+
+"What girls?" faltered Kenelm, retreating towards the door. "I
+thought you said you had no nieces."
+
+"But I did not say I had no daughters. Why, you are not afraid of
+them, are you?"
+
+"Sir," replied Kenelm, with a polite and politic evasion of that
+question, "if your daughters are like their mother, you can't say that
+they are not dangerous."
+
+"Come," cried the farmer, looking very much pleased, while his dame
+smiled and blushed, "come, that's as nicely said as if you were
+canvassing the county. 'Tis not among haymakers that you learned
+manners, I guess; and perhaps I have been making too free with my
+betters."
+
+"What!" quoth the courteous Kenelm, "do you mean to imply that you
+were too free with your shillings? Apologize for that, if you like,
+but I don't think you'll get back the shillings. I have not seen so
+much of this life as you have, but, according to my experience, when a
+man once parts with his money, whether to his betters or his worsers,
+the chances are that he'll never see it again."
+
+At this aphorism the farmer laughed ready to kill himself, his wife
+chuckled, and even the maid-of-all-work grinned. Kenelm, preserving
+his unalterable gravity, said to himself,--
+
+"Wit consists in the epigrammatic expression of a commonplace truth,
+and the dullest remark on the worth of money is almost as sure of
+successful appreciation as the dullest remark on the worthlessness of
+women. Certainly I am a wit without knowing it."
+
+Here the farmer touched him on the shoulder--touched it, did not slap
+it, as he would have done ten minutes before--and said,--
+
+"We must not disturb the Missis or we shall get no supper. I'll just
+go and give a look into the cow-sheds. Do you know much about cows?"
+
+"Yes, cows produce cream and butter. The best cows are those which
+produce at the least cost the best cream and butter. But how the best
+cream and butter can be produced at a price which will place them free
+of expense on a poor man's breakfast-table is a question to be settled
+by a Reformed Parliament and a Liberal Administration. In the
+meanwhile let us not delay the supper."
+
+The farmer and his guest quitted the kitchen and entered the farmyard.
+
+"You are quite a stranger in these parts?"
+
+"Quite."
+
+"You don't even know my name?"
+
+"No, except that I heard your wife call you John."
+
+"My name is John Saunderson."
+
+"Ah! you come from the North, then? That's why you are so sensible
+and shrewd. Names that end in 'son' are chiefly borne by the
+descendants of the Danes, to whom King Alfred, Heaven bless him!
+peacefully assigned no less than sixteen English counties. And when a
+Dane was called somebody's son, it is a sign that he was the son of a
+somebody."
+
+"By gosh! I never heard that before."
+
+"If I thought you had I should not have said it."
+
+"Now I have told you my name, what is yours?"
+
+"A wise man asks questions and a fool answers them. Suppose for a
+moment that I am not a fool."
+
+Farmer Saunderson scratched his head, and looked more puzzled than
+became the descendant of a Dane settled by King Alfred in the north of
+England.
+
+"Dash it," said he at last, "but I think you are Yorkshire too."
+
+"Man, who is the most conceited of all animals, says that he alone has
+the prerogative of thought, and condemns the other animals to the
+meaner mechanical operation which he calls instinct. But as instincts
+are unerring and thoughts generally go wrong, man has not much to
+boast of according to his own definition. When you say you think, and
+take it for granted, that I am Yorkshire, you err. I am not
+Yorkshire. Confining yourself to instinct, can you divine when we
+shall sup? The cows you are about to visit divine to a moment when
+they shall be fed."
+
+Said the farmer, recovering his sense of superiority to the guest whom
+he obliged with a supper, "In ten minutes." Then, after a pause, and
+in a tone of deprecation, as if he feared he might be thought fine, he
+continued, "We don't sup in the kitchen. My father did, and so did I
+till I married; but my Bess, though she's as good a farmer's wife as
+ever wore shoe-leather, was a tradesman's daughter, and had been
+brought up different. You see she was not without a good bit of
+money: but even if she had been, I should not have liked her folks to
+say I had lowered her; so we sup in the parlour."
+
+Quoth Kenelm, "The first consideration is to sup at all. Supper
+conceded, every man is more likely to get on in life who would rather
+sup in his parlour than his kitchen. Meanwhile, I see a pump; while
+you go to the cows I will stay here and wash my hands of them."
+
+"Hold! you seem a sharp fellow, and certainly no fool. I have a son,
+a good smart chap, but stuck up; crows it over us all; thinks no small
+beer of himself. You'd do me a service, and him too, if you'd let him
+down a peg or two."
+
+Kenelm, who was now hard at work at the pump-handle, only replied by a
+gracious nod. But as he seldom lost an opportunity for reflection, he
+said to himself, while he laved his face in the stream from the spout,
+"One can't wonder why every small man thinks it so pleasant to let
+down a big one, when a father asks a stranger to let down his own son
+for even fancying that he is not small beer. It is upon that
+principle in human nature that criticism wisely relinquishes its
+pretensions as an analytical science, and becomes a lucrative
+profession. It relies on the pleasure its readers find in letting a
+man down."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+IT was a pretty, quaint farmhouse, such as might well go with two or
+three hundred acres of tolerably good land, tolerably well farmed by
+an active old-fashioned tenant, who, though he did not use
+mowing-machines nor steam-ploughs nor dabble in chemical experiments,
+still brought an adequate capital to his land and made the capital
+yield a very fair return of interest. The supper was laid out in a
+good-sized though low-pitched parlour with a glazed door, now wide
+open, as were all the latticed windows, looking into a small garden,
+rich in those straggling old English flowers which are nowadays
+banished from gardens more pretentious and; infinitely less fragrant.
+At one corner was an arbour covered with honeysuckle, and opposite to
+it a row of beehives. The room itself had an air of comfort, and that
+sort of elegance which indicates the presiding genius of feminine
+taste. There were shelves suspended to the wall by blue ribbons, and
+filled with small books neatly bound; there were flower-pots in all
+the window-sills; there was a small cottage piano; the walls were
+graced partly with engraved portraits of county magnates and prize
+oxen; partly with samplers in worsted-work, comprising verses of moral
+character and the names and birthdays of the farmer's grandmother,
+mother, wife, and daughters. Over the chimney-piece was a small
+mirror, and above that the trophy of a fox's brush; while niched into
+an angle in the room was a glazed cupboard, rich with specimens of old
+china, Indian and English.
+
+The party consisted of the farmer, his wife, three buxom daughters,
+and a pale-faced slender lad of about twenty, the only son, who did
+not take willingly to farming: he had been educated at a superior
+grammar school, and had high notions about the March of Intellect and
+the Progress of the Age.
+
+Kenelm, though among the gravest of mortals, was one of the least shy.
+In fact shyness is the usual symptom of a keen /amour propre/; and of
+that quality the youthful Chillingly scarcely possessed more than did
+the three Fishes of his hereditary scutcheon. He felt himself
+perfectly at home with his entertainers; taking care, however, that
+his attentions were so equally divided between the three daughters as
+to prevent all suspicion of a particular preference. "There is safety
+in numbers," thought he, especially in odd numbers. The three Graces
+never married, neither did the nine Muses."
+
+"I presume, young ladies, that you are fond of music," said Kenelm,
+glancing at the piano.
+
+"Yes, I love it dearly," said the eldest girl, speaking for the
+others.
+
+Quoth the farmer, as he heaped the stranger's plate with boiled beef
+and carrots, "Things are not what they were when I was a boy; then it
+was only great tenant-farmers who had their girls taught the piano,
+and sent their boys to a good school. Now we small folks are for
+helping our children a step or two higher than our own place on the
+ladder."
+
+"The schoolmaster is abroad," said the son, with the emphasis of a
+sage adding an original aphorism to the stores of philosophy.
+
+"There is, no doubt, a greater equality of culture than there was in
+the last generation," said Kenelm. "People of all ranks utter the
+same commonplace ideas in very much the same arrangements of syntax.
+And in proportion as the democracy of intelligence extends--a friend
+of mine, who is a doctor, tells me that complaints formerly reserved
+to what is called aristocracy (though what that word means in plain
+English I don't know) are equally shared by the commonalty--
+/tic-douloureux/ and other neuralgic maladies abound. And the
+human race, in England at least, is becoming more slight and
+delicate. There is a fable of a man who, when he became exceedingly
+old, was turned into a grasshopper. England is very old, and is
+evidently approaching the grasshopper state of development. Perhaps
+we don't eat as much beef as our forefathers did. May I ask you for
+another slice?"
+
+Kenelm's remarks were somewhat over the heads of his audience. But
+the son, taking them as a slur upon the enlightened spirit of the age,
+coloured up and said, with a knitted brow, "I hope, sir, that you are
+not an enemy to progress."
+
+"That depends: for instance, I prefer staying here, where I am well
+off, to going farther and faring worse."
+
+"Well said!" cried the farmer.
+
+Not deigning to notice that interruption, the son took up Kenelm's
+reply with a sneer, "I suppose you mean that it is to fare worse, if
+you march with the time."
+
+"I am afraid we have no option but to march with the time; but when we
+reach that stage when to march any farther is to march into old age,
+we should not be sorry if time would be kind enough to stand still;
+and all good doctors concur in advising us to do nothing to hurry
+him."
+
+"There is no sign of old age in this country, sir; and thank Heaven we
+are not standing still!"
+
+"Grasshoppers never do; they are always hopping and jumping, and
+making what they think 'progress,' till (unless they hop into the
+water and are swallowed up prematurely by a carp or a frog) they die
+of the exhaustion which hops and jumps unremitting naturally produce.
+May I ask you, Mrs. Saunderson, for some of that rice-pudding?"
+
+The farmer, who, though he did not quite comprehend Kenelm's
+metaphorical mode of arguing, saw delightedly that his wise son looked
+more posed than himself, cried with great glee, "Bob, my boy,--Bob,
+our visitor is a little too much for you!"
+
+"Oh, no," said Kenelm, modestly. "But I honestly think Mr. Bob would
+be a wiser man, and a weightier man, and more removed from the
+grasshopper state, if he would think less and eat more pudding."
+
+When the supper was over the farmer offered Kenelm a clay pipe filled
+with shag, which that adventurer accepted with his habitual
+resignation to the ills of life; and the whole party, excepting Mrs.
+Saunderson, strolled into the garden. Kenelm and Mr. Saunderson
+seated themselves in the honeysuckle arbour: the girls and the
+advocate of progress stood without among the garden flowers. It was a
+still and lovely night, the moon at her full. The farmer, seated
+facing his hayfields, smoked on placidly. Kenelm, at the third whiff,
+laid aside his pipe, and glanced furtively at the three Graces. They
+formed a pretty group, all clustered together near the silenced
+beehives, the two younger seated on the grass strip that bordered the
+flower-beds, their arms over each other's shoulders, the elder one
+standing behind them, with the moonlight shining soft on her auburn
+hair.
+
+Young Saunderson walked restlessly by himself to and fro the path of
+gravel.
+
+"It is a strange thing," ruminated Kenelm, "that girls are not
+unpleasant to look at if you take them collectively,--two or three
+bound up together; but if you detach any one of them from the bunch,
+the odds are that she is as plain as a pikestaff. I wonder whether
+that bucolical grasshopper, who is so enamoured of the hop and jump
+that he calls 'progress,' classes the society of the Mormons among the
+evidences of civilized advancement? There is a good deal to be said
+in favour of taking a whole lot of wives as one may buy a whole lot of
+cheap razors. For it is not impossible that out of a dozen a good one
+may be found. And then, too, a whole nosegay of variegated blooms,
+with a faded leaf here and there, must be more agreeable to the eye
+than the same monotonous solitary lady's smock. But I fear these
+reflections are naughty; let us change them. Farmer," he said aloud,
+"I suppose your handsome daughters are too fine to assist you much. I
+did not see them among the haymakers."
+
+"Oh, they were there, but by themselves, in the back part of the
+field. I did not want them to mix with all the girls, many of whom
+are strangers from other places. I don't know anything against them;
+but as I don't know anything for them, I thought it as well to keep my
+lasses apart."
+
+"But I should have supposed it wiser to keep your son apart from them.
+I saw him in the thick of those nymphs."
+
+"Well," said the farmer, musingly, and withdrawing his pipe from his
+lips, "I don't think lasses not quite well brought up, poor things! do
+as much harm to the lads as they can do to proper-behaved lasses;
+leastways my wife does not think so. 'Keep good girls from bad
+girls,' says she, 'and good girls will never go wrong.' And you will
+find there is something in that when you have girls of your own to
+take care of."
+
+"Without waiting for that time, which I trust may never occur, I can
+recognize the wisdom of your excellent wife's observation. My own
+opinion is, that a woman can more easily do mischief to her own sex
+than to ours; since, of course, she cannot exist without doing
+mischief to somebody or other."
+
+"And good, too," said the jovial farmer, thumping his fist on the
+table. "What should we be without women?"
+
+"Very much better, I take it, sir. Adam was as good as gold, and
+never had a qualm of conscience or stomach till Eve seduced him into
+eating raw apples."
+
+"Young man, thou'st been crossed in love. I see it now. That's why
+thou look'st so sorrowful."
+
+"Sorrowful! Did you ever know a man crossed in love who looked less
+sorrowful when he came across a pudding?"
+
+"Hey! but thou canst ply a good knife and fork, that I will say for
+thee." Here the farmer turned round, and gazed on Kenelm with
+deliberate scrutiny. That scrutiny accomplished, his voice took a
+somewhat more respectful tone, as he resumed, "Do you know that you
+puzzle me somewhat?"
+
+"Very likely. I am sure that I puzzle myself. Say on."
+
+"Looking at your dress and--and--"
+
+"The two shillings you gave me? Yes--"
+
+"I took you for the son of some small farmer like myself. But now I
+judge from your talk that you are a college chap,--anyhow, a
+gentleman. Be n't it so?"
+
+"My dear Mr. Saunderson, I set out on my travels, which is not long
+ago, with a strong dislike to telling lies. But I doubt if a man can
+get along through this world without finding that the faculty of lying
+was bestowed on him by Nature as a necessary means of self-
+preservation. If you are going to ask me any questions about
+myself, I am sure that I shall tell you lies. Perhaps, therefore, it
+may be best for both if I decline the bed you proffered me, and take
+my night's rest under a hedge."
+
+"Pooh! I don't want to know more of a man's affairs than he thinks fit
+to tell me. Stay and finish the haymaking. And I say, lad, I'm glad
+you don't seem to care for the girls; for I saw a very pretty one
+trying to flirt with you, and if you don't mind she'll bring you into
+trouble."
+
+"How? Does she want to run away from her uncle?"
+
+"Uncle! Bless you, she don't live with him! She lives with her
+father; and I never knew that she wants to run away. In fact, Jessie
+Wiles--that's her name--is, I believe, a very good girl, and everybody
+likes her,--perhaps a little too much; but then she knows she's a
+beauty, and does not object to admiration."
+
+"No woman ever does, whether she's a beauty or not. But I don't yet
+understand why Jessie Wiles should bring me into trouble."
+
+"Because there is a big hulking fellow who has gone half out of his
+wits for her; and when he fancies he sees any other chap too sweet on
+her he thrashes him into a jelly. So, youngster, you just keep your
+skin out of that trap."
+
+"Hem! And what does the girl say to those proofs of affection? Does
+she like the man the better for thrashing other admirers into jelly?"
+
+"Poor child! No; she hates the very sight of him. But he swears she
+shall marry nobody else if he hangs for it. And, to tell you the
+truth, I suspect that if Jessie does seem to trifle with others a
+little too lightly, it is to draw away this bully's suspicion from the
+only man I think she does care for,--a poor sickly young fellow who
+was crippled by an accident, and whom Tom Bowles could brain with his
+little finger."
+
+"This is really interesting," cried Kenelm, showing something like
+excitement. "I should like to know this terrible suitor."
+
+"That's easy eno'," said the farmer, dryly. "You have only to take a
+stroll with Jessie Wiles after sunset, and you'll know more of Tom
+Bowles than you are likely to forget in a month."
+
+"Thank you very much for your information," said Kenelm, in a soft
+tone, grateful but pensive. "I hope to profit by it."
+
+"Do. I should be sorry if any harm came to thee; and Tom Bowles in
+one of his furies is as bad to cross as a mad bull. So now, as we
+must be up early, I'll just take a look round the stables, and then
+off to bed; and I advise you to do the same."
+
+"Thank you for the hint. I see the young ladies have already gone in.
+Good-night."
+
+Passing through the garden, Kenelm encountered the junior Saunderson.
+
+"I fear," said the Votary of Progress, "that you have found the
+governor awful slow. What have you been talking about?"
+
+"Girls," said Kenelm, "a subject always awful, but not necessarily
+slow."
+
+"Girls,--the governor been talking about girls? You joke."
+
+"I wish I did joke, but that is a thing I could never do since I came
+upon earth. Even in the cradle, I felt that life was a very serious
+matter, and did not allow of jokes. I remember too well my first dose
+of castor-oil. You too, Mr. Bob, have doubtless imbibed that
+initiatory preparation to the sweets of existence. The corners of
+your mouth have not recovered from the downward curves into which it
+so rigidly dragged them. Like myself, you are of grave temperament,
+and not easily moved to jocularity,--nay, an enthusiast for Progress
+is of necessity a man eminently dissatisfied with the present state of
+affairs. And chronic dissatisfaction resents the momentary relief of
+a joke."
+
+"Give off chaffing, if you please," said Bob, lowering the didascular
+intonations of his voice, "and just tell me plainly, did not my father
+say anything particular about me?"
+
+"Not a word: the only person of the male sex of whom he said anything
+particular was Tom Bowles."
+
+"What, fighting Tom! the terror of the whole neighbourhood! Ah, I
+guess the old gentleman is afraid lest Tom may fall foul upon me. But
+Jessie Wiles is not worth a quarrel with that brute. It is a crying
+shame in the Government--"
+
+"What! has the Government failed to appreciate the heroism of Tom
+Bowles, or rather to restrain the excesses of its ardour?"
+
+"Stuff! it is a shame in the Government not to have compelled his
+father to put him to school. If education were universal--"
+
+"You think there would be no brutes in particular. It may be so; but
+education is universal in China, and so is the bastinado. I thought,
+however, that you said the schoolmaster was abroad, and that the age
+of enlightenment was in full progress."
+
+"Yes, in the towns, but not in these obsolete rural districts; and
+that brings me to the point. I feel lost, thrown away here. I have
+something in me, sir, and it can only come out by collision with equal
+minds. So do me a favour, will you?"
+
+"With the greatest pleasure."
+
+"Give the governor a hint that he can't expect me, after the education
+I have had, to follow the plough and fatten pigs; and that Manchester
+is the place for ME."
+
+"Why Manchester?"
+
+"Because I have a relation in business there who will give me a
+clerkship if the governor will consent. And Manchester rules
+England."
+
+"Mr. Bob Saunderson, I will do my best to promote your wishes. This
+is a land of liberty, and every man should choose his own walk in it,
+so that, at the last, if he goes to the dogs, he goes to them without
+that disturbance of temper which is naturally occasioned by the sense
+of being driven to their jaws by another man against his own will. He
+has then no one to blame but himself. And that, Mr. Bob, is a great
+comfort. When, having got into a scrape, we blame others, we
+unconsciously become unjust, spiteful, uncharitable, malignant,
+perhaps revengeful. We indulge in feelings which tend to demoralize
+the whole character. But when we only blame ourselves, we become
+modest and penitent. We make allowances for others. And indeed
+self-blame is a salutary exercise of conscience, which a really good
+man performs every day of his life. And now, will you show me the
+room in which I am to sleep, and forget for a few hours that I am
+alive at all: the best thing that can happen to us in this world, my
+dear Mr. Bob! There's never much amiss with our days, so long as we
+can forget about them the moment we lay our heads on the pillow."
+
+The two young men entered the house amicably, arm in arm. The girls
+had already retired, but Mrs. Saunderson was still up to conduct her
+visitor to the guest's chamber,--a pretty room which had been
+furnished twenty-two years ago on the occasion of the farmer's
+marriage, at the expense of Mrs. Saunderson's mother, for her own
+occupation when she paid them a visit, and with its dimity curtains
+and trellised paper it still looked as fresh and new as if decorated
+and furnished yesterday.
+
+Left alone, Kenelm undressed, and before he got into bed, bared his
+right arm, and doubling it, gravely contemplated its muscular
+development, passing his left hand over that prominence in the upper
+part which is vulgarly called the ball. Satisfied apparently with the
+size and the firmness of that pugilistic protuberance, he gently
+sighed forth, "I fear I shall have to lick Thomas Bowles." In five
+minutes more he was asleep.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE next day the hay-mowing was completed, and a large portion of the
+hay already made carted away to be stacked. Kenelm acquitted himself
+with a credit not less praiseworthy than had previously won Mr.
+Saunderson's approbation. But instead of rejecting as before the
+acquaintance of Miss Jessie Wiles, he contrived towards noon to place
+himself near to that dangerous beauty, and commenced conversation. "I
+am afraid I was rather rude to you yesterday, and I want to beg
+pardon."
+
+"Oh," answered the girl, in that simple intelligible English which is
+more frequent among our village folks nowadays than many popular
+novelists would lead us into supposing, "oh, I ought to ask pardon for
+taking a liberty in speaking to you. But I thought you'd feel
+strange, and I intended it kindly."
+
+"I'm sure you did," returned Kenelm, chivalrously raking her portion
+of hay as well as his own, while he spoke. "And I want to be good
+friends with you. It is very near the time when we shall leave off
+for dinner, and Mrs. Saunderson has filled my pockets with some
+excellent beef-sandwiches, which I shall be happy to share with you,
+if you do not object to dine with me here, instead of going home for
+your dinner."
+
+The girl hesitated, and then shook her head in dissent from the
+proposition.
+
+"Are you afraid that your neighbours will think it wrong?"
+
+Jessie curled up her lips with a pretty scorn, and said, "I don't much
+care what other folks say, but is n't it wrong?"
+
+"Not in the least. Let me make your mind easy. I am here but for a
+day or two: we are not likely ever to meet again; but, before I go, I
+should be glad if I could do you some little service." As he spoke he
+had paused from his work, and, leaning on his rake, fixed his eyes,
+for the first time attentively, on the fair haymaker.
+
+Yes, she was decidedly pretty,--pretty to a rare degree: luxuriant
+brown hair neatly tied up, under a straw hat doubtless of her own
+plaiting; for, as a general rule, nothing more educates the village
+maid for the destinies of flirt than the accomplishment of
+straw-plaiting. She had large, soft blue eyes, delicate small
+features, and a complexion more clear in its healthful bloom than
+rural beauties generally retain against the influences of wind and
+sun. She smiled and slightly coloured as he gazed on her, and,
+lifting her eyes, gave him one gentle, trustful glance, which might
+have bewitched a philosopher and deceived a /roue/. And yet Kenelm by
+that intuitive knowledge of character which is often truthfulest where
+it is least disturbed by the doubts and cavils of acquired knowledge,
+felt at once that in that girl's mind coquetry, perhaps unconscious,
+was conjoined with an innocence of anything worse than coquetry as
+complete as a child's. He bowed his head, in withdrawing his gaze,
+and took her into his heart as tenderly as if she had been a child
+appealing to it for protection.
+
+"Certainly," he said inly, "certainly I must lick Tom Bowles; yet
+stay, perhaps after all she likes him."
+
+"But," he continued aloud, "you do not see how I can be of any service
+to you. Before I explain, let me ask which of the men in the field is
+Tom Bowles?"
+
+"Tom Bowles?" exclaimed Jessie, in a tone of surprise and alarm, and
+turning pale as she looked hastily round; "you frightened me, sir: but
+he is not here; he does not work in the fields. But how came you to
+hear of Tom Bowles?"
+
+"Dine with me and I'll tell you. Look, there is a quiet place in yon
+corner under the thorn-trees by that piece of water. See, they are
+leaving off work: I will go for a can of beer, and then, pray, let me
+join you there."
+
+Jessie paused for a moment as if doubtful still; then again glancing
+at Kenelm, and assured by the grave kindness of his countenance,
+uttered a scarce audible assent and moved away towards the
+thorn-trees.
+
+As the sun now stood perpendicularly over their heads, and the hand of
+the clock in the village church tower, soaring over the hedgerows,
+reached the first hour after noon, all work ceased in a sudden
+silence: some of the girls went back to their homes; those who stayed
+grouped together, apart from the men, who took their way to the
+shadows of a large oak-tree in the hedgerow, where beer kegs and cans
+awaited them.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+"AND now," said Kenelm, as the two young persons, having finished
+their simple repast, sat under the thorn-trees and by the side of the
+water, fringed at that part with tall reeds through which the light
+summer breeze stirred with a pleasant murmur, "now I will talk to you
+about Tom Bowles. Is it true that you don't like that brave young
+fellow? I say young, as I take his youth for granted."
+
+"Like him! I hate the sight of him."
+
+"Did you always hate the sight of him? You must surely at one time
+have allowed him to think that you did not?"
+
+The girl winced, and made no answer, but plucked a daffodil from the
+soil, and tore it ruthlessly to pieces.
+
+"I am afraid you like to serve your admirers as you do that ill-fated
+flower," said Kenelm, with some severity of tone. "But concealed in
+the flower you may sometimes find the sting of a bee. I see by your
+countenance that you did not tell Tom Bowles that you hated him till
+it was too late to prevent his losing his wits for you."
+
+"No; I was n't so bad as that," said Jessie, looking, nevertheless,
+rather ashamed of herself; "but I was silly and giddy-like, I own;
+and, when he first took notice of me, I was pleased, without thinking
+much of it, because, you see, Mr. Bowles (emphasis on /Mr./) is higher
+up than a poor girl like me. He is a tradesman, and I am only a
+shepherd's daughter; though, indeed, Father is more like Mr.
+Saunderson's foreman than a mere shepherd. But I never thought
+anything serious of it, and did not suppose he did; that is, at
+first."
+
+"So Tom Bowles is a tradesman. What trade?"
+
+"A farrier, sir."
+
+"And, I am told, a very fine young man."
+
+"I don't know as to that: he is very big."
+
+"And what made you hate him?"
+
+"The first thing that made me hate him was that he insulted Father,
+who is a very quiet, timid man, and threatened I don't know what if
+Father did not make me keep company with him. Make me indeed! But
+Mr. Bowles is a dangerous, bad-hearted, violent man, and--don't laugh
+at me, sir, but I dreamed one night he was murdering me. And I think
+he will too, if he stays here: and so does his poor mother, who is a
+very nice woman, and wants him to go away; but he will not."
+
+"Jessie," said Kenelm, softly, "I said I wanted to make friends with
+you. Do you think you can make a friend of me? I can never be more
+than friend. But I should like to be that. Can you trust me as one?"
+
+"Yes," answered the girl, firmly, and, as she lifted her eyes to him,
+their look was pure from all vestige of coquetry,--guileless, frank,
+grateful.
+
+"Is there not another young man who courts you more civilly than Tom
+Bowles does, and whom you really could find it in your heart to like?"
+
+Jessie looked round for another daffodil, and not finding one,
+contented herself with a bluebell, which she did not tear to pieces,
+but caressed with a tender hand. Kenelm bent his eyes down on her
+charming face with something in their gaze rarely seen there,
+--something of that unreasoning, inexpressible human fondness,
+for which philosophers of his school have no excuse. Had ordinary
+mortals, like you or myself, for instance, peered through the leaves
+of the thorn-trees, we should have sighed or frowned, according to our
+several temperaments; but we should all have said, whether spitefully
+or envyingly, "Happy young lovers!" and should all have blundered
+lamentably in so saying.
+
+Still, there is no denying the fact that a pretty face has a very
+unfair advantage over a plain one. And, much to the discredit of
+Kenelm's philanthropy, it may be reasonably doubted whether, had
+Jessie Wiles been endowed by nature with a snub nose and a squint,
+Kenelm would have volunteered his friendly services, or meditated
+battle with Tom Bowles on her behalf.
+
+But there was no touch of envy or jealousy in the tone with which he
+said,--
+
+"I see there is some one you would like well enough to marry, and that
+you make a great difference in the way you treat a daffodil and a
+bluebell. Who and what is the young man whom the bluebell represents?
+Come, confide."
+
+"We were much brought up together," said Jessie, still looking down,
+and still smoothing the leaves of the bluebell. "His mother lived in
+the next cottage; and my mother was very fond of him, and so was
+Father too; and, before I was ten years old, they used to laugh when
+poor Will called me his little wife." Here the tears which had
+started to Jessie's eyes began to fall over the flower. "But now
+Father would not hear of it; and it can't be. And I've tried to care
+for some one else, and I can't, and that's the truth."
+
+"But why? Has he turned out ill?--taken to poaching or drink?"
+
+"No, no, no; he's as steady and good a lad as ever lived. But--but--"
+
+"Yes; but--"
+
+"He is a cripple now; and I love him all the better for it." Here
+Jessie fairly sobbed.
+
+Kenelm was greatly moved, and prudently held his peace till she had a
+little recovered herself; then, in answer to his gentle questionings,
+he learned that Will Somers--till then a healthy and strong lad--had
+fallen from the height of a scaffolding, at the age of sixteen, and
+been so seriously injured that he was moved at once to the hospital.
+When he came out of it--what with the fall, and what with the long
+illness which had followed the effects of the accident--he was not
+only crippled for life, but of health so delicate and weakly that he
+was no longer fit for outdoor labour and the hard life of a peasant.
+He was an only son of a widowed mother, and his sole mode of assisting
+her was a very precarious one. He had taught himself basket-making;
+and though, Jessie said, his work was very ingenious and clever, still
+there were but few customers for it in that neighbourhood. And, alas!
+even if Jessie's father would consent to give his daughter to the poor
+cripple, how could the poor cripple earn enough to maintain a wife?
+
+"And," said Jessie, "still I was happy, walking out with him on Sunday
+evenings, or going to sit with him and his mother; for we are both
+young, and can wait. But I dare n't do it any more now: for Tom
+Bowles has sworn that if I do he will beat him before my eyes; and
+Will has a high spirit, and I should break my heart if any harm
+happened to him on my account."
+
+"As for Mr. Bowles, we'll not think of him at present. But if Will
+could maintain himself and you, your father would not object nor you
+either to a marriage with the poor cripple?"
+
+"Father would not; and as for me, if it weren't for disobeying Father,
+I'd marry him to-morrow. /I/ can work."
+
+"They are going back to the hay now; but after that task is over, let
+me walk home with you, and show me Will's cottage and Mr. Bowles's
+shop or forge."
+
+"But you'll not say anything to Mr. Bowles. He would n't mind your
+being a gentleman, as I now see you are, sir; and he's dangerous,--oh,
+so dangerous!--and so strong."
+
+"Never fear," answered Kenelm, with the nearest approach to a laugh he
+had ever made since childhood; "but when we are relieved, wait for me
+a few minutes at yon gate."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+KENELM spoke no more to his new friend in the hayfields; but when the
+day's work was over he looked round for the farmer to make an excuse
+for not immediately joining the family supper. However, he did not
+see either Mr. Saunderson or his son. Both were busied in the
+stackyard. Well pleased to escape excuse and the questions it might
+provoke, Kenelm therefore put on the coat he had laid aside and joined
+Jessie, who had waited for him at the gate. They entered the lane
+side by side, following the stream of villagers who were slowly
+wending their homeward way. It was a primitive English village, not
+adorned on the one hand with fancy or model cottages, nor on the other
+hand indicating penury and squalor. The church rose before them gray
+and Gothic, backed by the red clouds in which the sun had set, and
+bordered by the glebe-land of the half-seen parsonage. Then came the
+village green, with a pretty schoolhouse; and to this succeeded a long
+street of scattered whitewashed cottages, in the midst of their own
+little gardens.
+
+As they walked the moon rose in full splendour, silvering the road
+before them.
+
+"Who is the Squire here?" asked Kenelm. "I should guess him to be a
+good sort of man, and well off."
+
+"Yes, Squire Travers; he is a great gentleman, and they say very rich.
+But his place is a good way from this village. You can see it if you
+stay, for he gives a harvest-home supper on Saturday, and Mr.
+Saunderson and all his tenants are going. It is a beautiful park, and
+Miss Travers is a sight to look at. Oh, she is lovely!" continued
+Jessie, with an unaffected burst of admiration; for women are more
+sensible of the charm of each other's beauty than men give them credit
+for.
+
+"As pretty as yourself?"
+
+"Oh, pretty is not the word. She is a thousand times handsomer!"
+
+"Humph!" said Kenelm, incredulously.
+
+There was a pause, broken by a quick sigh from Jessie.
+
+"What are you sighing for?--tell me."
+
+"I was thinking that a very little can make folks happy, but that
+somehow or other that very little is as hard to get as if one set
+one's heart on a great deal."
+
+"That's very wisely said. Everybody covets a little something for
+which, perhaps, nobody else would give a straw. But what's the very
+little thing for which you are sighing?"
+
+"Mrs. Bawtrey wants to sell that shop of hers. She is getting old,
+and has had fits; and she can get nobody to buy; and if Will had that
+shop and I could keep it,--but 'tis no use thinking of that."
+
+"What shop do you mean?"
+
+"There!"
+
+"Where? I see no shop."
+
+"But it is /the/ shop of the village,--the only one,--where the
+post-office is."
+
+"Ah! I see something at the windows like a red cloak. What do they
+sell?"
+
+"Everything,--tea and sugar and candles and shawls and gowns and
+cloaks and mouse-traps and letter-paper; and Mrs. Bawtrey buys poor
+Will's baskets, and sells them for a good deal more than she pays."
+
+"It seems a nice cottage, with a field and orchard at the back."
+
+"Yes. Mrs. Bawtrey pays L8 a year for it; but the shop can well
+afford it."
+
+Kenelm made no reply. They both walked on in silence, and had now
+reached the centre of the village street when Jessie, looking up,
+uttered an abrupt exclamation, gave an affrighted start, and then came
+to a dead stop.
+
+Kenelm's eye followed the direction of hers, and saw, a few yards
+distant, at the other side of the way, a small red brick house, with
+thatched sheds adjoining it, the whole standing in a wide yard, over
+the gate of which leaned a man smoking a small cutty-pipe. "It is Tom
+Bowles," whispered Jessie, and instinctively she twined her arm into
+Kenelm's; then, as if on second thoughts, withdrew it, and said, still
+in a whisper, "Go back now, sir; do."
+
+"Not I. It is Tom Bowles whom I want to know. Hush!"
+
+For here Tom Bowles had thrown down his pipe and was coming slowly
+across the road towards them.
+
+Kenelm eyed him with attention. A singularly powerful man, not so
+tall as Kenelm by some inches, but still above the middle height,
+herculean shoulders and chest, the lower limbs not in equal
+proportion,--a sort of slouching, shambling gait. As he advanced the
+moonlight fell on his face; it was a handsome one. He wore no hat,
+and his hair, of a light brown, curled close. His face was
+fresh-coloured, with aquiline features; his age apparently about six
+or seven and twenty. Coming nearer and nearer, whatever favourable
+impression the first glance at his physiognomy might have made on
+Kenelm was dispelled, for the expression of his face changed and
+became fierce and lowering.
+
+Kenelm was still walking on, Jessie by his side, when Bowles rudely
+thrust himself between them, and seizing the girl's arm with one hand,
+he turned his face full on Kenelm, with a menacing wave of the other
+hand, and said in a deep burly voice,
+
+"Who be you?"
+
+"Let go that young woman before I tell you."
+
+"If you weren't a stranger," answered Bowles, seeming as if he tried
+to suppress a rising fit of wrath, "you'd be in the kennel for those
+words. But I s'pose you don't know that I'm Tom Bowles, and I don't
+choose the girl as I'm after to keep company with any other man. So
+you be off."
+
+"And I don't choose any other man to lay violent hands on any girl
+walking by my side without telling him that he's a brute; and that I
+only wait till he has both his hands at liberty to let him know that
+he has not a poor cripple to deal with."
+
+Tom Bowles could scarcely believe his ears. Amaze swallowed up for
+the moment every other sentiment. Mechanically he loosened his hold
+of Jessie, who fled off like a bird released. But evidently she
+thought of her new friend's danger more than her own escape; for
+instead of sheltering herself in her father's cottage, she ran towards
+a group of labourers who, near at hand, had stopped loitering before
+the public-house, and returned with those allies towards the spot in
+which she had left the two men. She was very popular with the
+villagers, who, strong in the sense of numbers, overcame their awe of
+Tom Bowles, and arrived at the place half running, half striding, in
+time, they hoped, to interpose between his terrible arm and the bones
+of the unoffending stranger.
+
+Meanwhile Bowles, having recovered his first astonishment, and
+scarcely noticing Jessie's escape, still left his right arm extended
+towards the place she had vacated, and with a quick back-stroke of the
+left levelled at Kenelm's face, growled contemptuously, "Thou'lt find
+one hand enough for thee."
+
+But quick as was his aim, Kenelm caught the lifted arm just above the
+elbow, causing the blow to waste itself on air, and with a
+simultaneous advance of his right knee and foot dexterously tripped up
+his bulky antagonist, and laid him sprawling on his back. The
+movement was so sudden, and the stun it occasioned so utter, morally
+as well as physically, that a minute or more elapsed before Tom Bowles
+picked himself up. And he then stood another minute glowering at his
+antagonist, with a vague sentiment of awe almost like a superstitious
+panic. For it is noticeable that, however fierce and fearless a man
+or even a wild beast may be, yet if either has hitherto been only
+familiar with victory and triumph, never yet having met with a foe
+that could cope with its force, the first effect of a defeat,
+especially from a despised adversary, unhinges and half paralyzes the
+whole nervous system. But as fighting Tom gradually recovered to the
+consciousness of his own strength, and the recollection that it had
+been only foiled by the skilful trick of a wrestler, and not the
+hand-to-hand might of a pugilist, the panic vanished, and Tom Bowles
+was himself again. "Oh, that's your sort, is it? We don't fight with
+our heels hereabouts, like Cornishers and donkeys: we fight with our
+fists, youngster; and since you /will/ have a bout at that, why, you
+must."
+
+"Providence," answered Kenelm, solemnly, "sent me to this village for
+the express purpose of licking Tom Bowles. It is a signal mercy
+vouchsafed to yourself, as you will one day acknowledge."
+
+Again a thrill of awe, something like that which the demagogue in
+Aristophanes might have felt when braved by the sausage-maker, shot
+through the valiant heart of Tom Bowles. He did not like those
+ominous words, and still less the lugubrious tone of voice in which
+they were uttered, But resolved, at least, to proceed to battle with
+more preparation than he had at first designed, he now deliberately
+disencumbered himself of his heavy fustian jacket and vest, rolled up
+his shirt-sleeves, and then slowly advanced towards the foe.
+
+Kenelm had also, with still greater deliberation, taken off his
+coat--which he folded up with care, as being both a new and an only
+one, and deposited by the hedge-side--and bared arms, lean indeed and
+almost slight, as compared with the vast muscle of his adversary, but
+firm in sinew as the hind leg of a stag.
+
+By this time the labourers, led by Jessie, had arrived at the spot,
+and were about to crowd in between the combatants, when Kenelm waved
+them back and said in a calm and impressive voice,--
+
+"Stand round, my good friends, make a ring, and see that it is fair
+play on my side. I am sure it will be fair on Mr. Bowles's. He is
+big enough to scorn what is little. And now, Mr. Bowles, just a word
+with you in the presence of your neighbours. I am not going to say
+anything uncivil. If you are rather rough and hasty, a man is not
+always master of himself--at least so I am told--when he thinks more
+than he ought to do about a pretty girl. But I can't look at your
+face even by this moonlight, and though its expression at this moment
+is rather cross, without being sure that you are a fine fellow at
+bottom, and that if you give a promise as man to man you will keep it.
+Is that so?"
+
+One or two of the bystanders murmured assent; the others pressed round
+in silent wonder.
+
+"What's all that soft-sawder about?" said Tom Bowles, somewhat
+falteringly.
+
+"Simply this: if in the fight between us I beat you, I ask you to
+promise before your neighbours that you will not by word or deed
+molest or interfere again with Miss Jessie Wiles."
+
+"Eh!" roared Tom. "Is it that you are after her?"
+
+"Suppose I am, if that pleases you; and on my side, I promise that if
+you beat me, I quit this place as soon as you leave me well enough to
+do so, and will never visit it again. What! do you hesitate to
+promise? Are you really afraid I shall lick you?"
+
+"You! I'd smash a dozen of you to powder."
+
+"In that case, you are safe to promise. Come, 'tis a fair bargain.
+Is n't it, neighbours?"
+
+Won over by Kenelm's easy show of good temper, and by the sense of
+justice, the bystanders joined in a common exclamation of assent.
+
+"Come, Tom," said an old fellow, "the gentleman can't speak fairer;
+and we shall all think you be afeard if you hold back."
+
+Tom's face worked: but at last he growled, "Well, I promise; that is,
+if he beats me."
+
+"All right," said Kenelm. "You hear, neighbours; and Tom Bowles could
+not show that handsome face of his among you if he broke his word.
+Shake hands on it."
+
+Fighting Tom sulkily shook hands.
+
+"Well now, that's what I call English," said Kenelm, "all pluck and no
+malice. Fall back, friends, and leave a clear space for us."
+
+The men all receded; and as Kenelm took his ground, there was a supple
+ease in his posture which at once brought out into clearer evidence
+the nervous strength of his build, and, contrasted with Tom's bulk of
+chest, made the latter look clumsy and topheavy.
+
+The two men faced each other a minute, the eyes of both vigilant and
+steadfast. Tom's blood began to fire up as he gazed; nor, with all
+his outward calm; was Kenelm insensible of that proud beat of the
+heart which is aroused by the fierce joy of combat. Tom struck out
+first and a blow was parried, but not returned; another and another
+blow,--still parried, still unreturned. Kenelm, acting evidently on
+the defensive, took all the advantages for that strategy which he
+derived from superior length of arm and lighter agility of frame.
+Perhaps he wished to ascertain the extent of his adversary's skill, or
+to try the endurance of his wind, before he ventured on the hazards of
+attack. Tom, galled to the quick that blows which might have felled
+an ox were thus warded off from their mark, and dimly aware that he
+was encountering some mysterious skill which turned his brute strength
+into waste force and might overmaster him in the long run, came to a
+rapid conclusion that the sooner he brought that brute strength to
+bear the better it would be for him. Accordingly, after three rounds,
+in which without once breaking the guard of his antagonist he had
+received a few playful taps on the nose and mouth, he drew back and
+made a bull-like rush at his foe,--bull-like, for it butted full at
+him with the powerful down-bent head, and the two fists doing duty as
+horns. The rush spent, he found himself in the position of a man
+milled. I take it for granted that every Englishman who can call
+himself a man--that is, every man who has been an English boy, and, as
+such, been compelled to the use of his fists--knows what a "mill" is.
+But I sing not only "pueris," but "virginibus." Ladies, "a
+mill,"--using with reluctance and contempt for myself that slang in
+which ladywriters indulge, and Girls of the Period know much better
+than they do their Murray,--"a mill,"--speaking not to ladywriters,
+not to Girls of the Period, but to innocent damsels, and in
+explanation to those foreigners who only understand the English
+language as taught by Addison and Macaulay,--a "mill" periphrastically
+means this: your adversary, in the noble encounter between fist and
+fist, has so plunged his head that it gets caught, as in a vice,
+between the side and doubled left arm of the adversary, exposing that
+head, unprotected and helpless, to be pounded out of recognizable
+shape by the right fist of the opponent. It is a situation in which
+raw superiority of force sometimes finds itself, and is seldom spared
+by disciplined superiority of skill. Kenelm, his right fist raised,
+paused for a moment, then, loosening the left arm, releasing the
+prisoner, and giving him a friendly slap on the shoulder, he turned
+round to the spectators and said apologetically, "He has a handsome
+face: it would be a shame to spoil it."
+
+Tom's position of peril was so obvious to all, and that good-humoured
+abnegation of the advantage which the position gave to the adversary
+seemed so generous, that the labourers actually hurrahed. Tom,
+himself felt as if treated like a child; and alas, and alas for him!
+in wheeling round, and regathering himself up, his eye rested on
+Jessie's face. Her lips were apart with breathless terror: he fancied
+they were apart with a smile of contempt. And now he became
+formidable. He fought as fights the bull in the presence of the
+heifer, who, as he knows too well, will go with the conqueror.
+
+If Tom had never yet fought with a man taught by a prizefighter, so
+never yet had Kenelm encountered a strength which, but for the lack of
+that teaching, would have conquered his own. He could act no longer
+on the defensive; he could no longer play, like a dexterous fencer,
+with the sledge-hammers of those mighty arms. They broke through his
+guard; they sounded on his chest as on an anvil. He felt that did
+they alight on his head he was a lost man. He felt also that the
+blows spent on the chest of his adversary were idle as the stroke of a
+cane on the hide of a rhinoceros. But now his nostrils dilated; his
+eyes flashed fire: Kenelm Chillingly had ceased to be a philosopher.
+Crash came his blow--how unlike the swinging roundabout hits of Tom
+Bowles!--straight to its aim as the rifle-ball of a Tyrolese or a
+British marksman at Aldershot,--all the strength of nerve, sinew,
+purpose, and mind concentred in its vigour,--crash just at that part
+of the front where the eyes meet, and followed up with the rapidity of
+lightning, flash upon flash, by a more restrained but more disabling
+blow with the left hand just where the left ear meets throat and
+jaw-bone.
+
+At the first blow Tom Bowles had reeled and staggered, at the second
+he threw up his hands, made a jump in the air as if shot through the
+heart, and then heavily fell forwards, an inert mass.
+
+The spectators pressed round him in terror. They thought he was dead.
+Kenelm knelt, passed quickly his hand over Tom's lips, pulse, and
+heart, and then rising, said, humbly and with an air of apology,--
+
+"If he had been a less magnificent creature, I assure you on my honour
+that I should never have ventured that second blow. The first would
+have done for any man less splendidly endowed by nature. Lift him
+gently; take him home. Tell his mother, with my kind regards, that
+I'll call and see her and him to-morrow. And, stop, does he ever
+drink too much beer?"
+
+"Well," said one of the villagers, "Tom /can/ drink."
+
+"I thought so. Too much flesh for that muscle. Go for the nearest
+doctor. You, my lad? good; off with you; quick. No danger, but
+perhaps it may be a case for the lancet."
+
+Tom Bowles was lifted tenderly by four of the stoutest men present and
+borne into his home, evincing no sign of consciousness; but his face,
+where not clouted with blood, was very pale, very calm, with a slight
+froth at the lips.
+
+Kenelm pulled down his shirt-sleeves, put on his coat, and turned to
+Jessie,--
+
+"Now, my young friend, show me Will's cottage."
+
+The girl came to him, white and trembling. She did not dare to speak.
+The stranger had become a new man in her eyes. Perhaps he frightened
+her as much as Tom Bowles had done. But she quickened her pace,
+leaving the public-house behind till she came to the farther end of
+the village. Kenelm walked beside her, muttering to himself: and
+though Jessie caught his words, happily she did not understand; for
+they repeated one of those bitter reproaches on her sex as the main
+cause of all strife, bloodshed, and mischief in general, with which
+the classic authors abound. His spleen soothed by that recourse to
+the lessons of the ancients, Kenelm turned at last to his silent
+companion, and said kindly but gravely,--
+
+"Mr. Bowles has given me his promise, and it is fair that I should now
+ask a promise from you. It is this: just consider how easily a girl
+so pretty as you can be the cause of a man's death. Had Bowles struck
+me where I struck him I should have been past the help of a surgeon."
+
+"Oh!" groaned Jessie, shuddering, and covering her face with both
+hands.
+
+"And, putting aside that danger, consider that a man may be hit
+mortally on the heart as well as on the head, and that a woman has
+much to answer for who, no matter what her excuse, forgets what misery
+and what guilt can be inflicted by a word from her lip and a glance
+from her eye. Consider this, and promise that, whether you marry Will
+Somers or not, you will never again give a man fair cause to think you
+can like him unless your own heart tells you that you can. Will you
+promise that?"
+
+"I will, indeed,--indeed." Poor Jessie's voice died in sobs.
+
+"There, my child, I don't ask you not to cry, because I know how much
+women like crying; and in this instance it does you a great deal of
+good. But we are just at the end of the village; which is Will's
+cottage?"
+
+Jessie lifted her head, and pointed to a solitary, small thatched
+cottage.
+
+"I would ask you to come in and introduce me; but that might look too
+much like crowing over poor Tom Bowles. So good-night to you, Jessie,
+and forgive me for preaching."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+KENELM knocked at the cottage door; a voice said faintly, "Come in."
+
+He stooped his head, and stepped over the threshold.
+
+Since his encounter with Tom Bowles his sympathies had gone with that
+unfortunate lover: it is natural to like a man after you have beaten
+him; and he was by no means predisposed to favour Jessie's preference
+for a sickly cripple.
+
+Yet, when two bright, soft, dark eyes, and a pale intellectual
+countenance, with that nameless aspect of refinement which delicate
+health so often gives, especially to the young, greeted his quiet
+gaze, his heart was at once won over to the side of the rival. Will
+Somers was seated by the hearth, on which a few live embers despite
+the warmth of the summer evening still burned; a rude little table was
+by his side, on which were laid osier twigs and white peeled chips,
+together with an open book. His hands, pale and slender, were at work
+on a small basket half finished. His mother was just clearing away
+the tea-things from another table that stood by the window. Will
+rose, with the good breeding that belongs to the rural peasant, as the
+stranger entered; the widow looked round with surprise, and dropped
+her simple courtesy,--a little thin woman, with a mild, patient face.
+
+The cottage was very tidily kept, as it is in most village homes where
+the woman has it her own way. The deal dresser opposite the door had
+its display of humble crockery. The whitewashed walls were relieved
+with coloured prints, chiefly Scriptural subjects from the New
+Testament, such as the Return of the Prodigal Son, in a blue coat and
+yellow inexpressibles, with his stockings about his heels.
+
+At one corner there were piled up baskets of various sizes, and at
+another corner was an open cupboard containing books,--an article of
+decorative furniture found in cottages much more rarely than coloured
+prints and gleaming crockery.
+
+All this, of course, Kenelm could not at a glance comprehend in
+detail. But as the mind of a man accustomed to generalization is
+marvellously quick in forming a sound judgment, whereas a mind
+accustomed to dwell only on detail is wonderfully slow at arriving at
+any judgment at all, and when it does, the probability is that it will
+arrive at a wrong one, Kenelm judged correctly when he came to this
+conclusion: "I am among simple English peasants; but, for some reason
+or other, not to be explained by the relative amount of wages, it is a
+favourable specimen of that class."
+
+"I beg your pardon for intruding at this hour, Mrs. Somers," said
+Kenelm, who had been too familiar with peasants from his earliest
+childhood not to know how quickly, when in the presence of their
+household gods, they appreciate respect, and how acutely they feel the
+want of it. "But my stay in the village is very short, and I should
+not like to leave without seeing your son's basket-work, of which I
+have heard much."
+
+"You are very good, sir," said Will, with a pleased smile that
+wonderfully brightened up his face. "It is only just a few common
+things that I keep by me. Any finer sort of work I mostly do by
+order."
+
+"You see, sir," said Mrs. Somers, "it takes so much more time for
+pretty work-baskets, and such like; and unless done to order, it might
+be a chance if he could get it sold. But pray be seated, sir," and
+Mrs. Somers placed a chair for her visitor, "while I just run up
+stairs for the work-basket which my son has made for Miss Travers. It
+is to go home to-morrow, and I put it away for fear of accidents."
+
+Kenelm seated himself, and, drawing his chair near to Will's, took up
+the half-finished basket which the young man had laid down on the
+table.
+
+"This seems to me very nice and delicate workmanship," said Kenelm;
+"and the shape, when you have finished it, will be elegant enough to
+please the taste of a lady."
+
+"It is for Mrs. Lethbridge," said Will: "she wanted something to hold
+cards and letters; and I took the shape from a book of drawings which
+Mr. Lethbridge kindly lent me. You know Mr. Lethbridge, sir? He is a
+very good gentleman."
+
+"No, I don't know him. Who is he?"
+
+"Our clergyman, sir. This is the book."
+
+To Kenelm's surprise, it was a work on Pompeii, and contained woodcuts
+of the implements and ornaments, mosaics and frescos, found in that
+memorable little city.
+
+"I see this is your model," said Kenelm; "what they call a /patera/,
+and rather a famous one. You are copying it much more truthfully than
+I should have supposed it possible to do in substituting basket-work
+for bronze. But you observe that much of the beauty of this shallow
+bowl depends on the two doves perched on the brim. You can't manage
+that ornamental addition."
+
+"Mrs. Lethbridge thought of putting there two little stuffed
+canary-birds."
+
+"Did she? Good heavens!" exclaimed Kenelm.
+
+"But somehow," continued Will, "I did not like that, and I made bold
+to say so."
+
+"Why did not you do it?"
+
+"Well, I don't know; but I did not think it would be the right thing."
+
+"It would have been very bad taste, and spoiled the effect of your
+basket-work; and I'll endeavour to explain why. You see here, in the
+next page, a drawing of a very beautiful statue. Of course this
+statue is intended to be a representation of nature, but nature
+idealized. You don't know the meaning of that hard word, idealized,
+and very few people do. But it means the performance of a something
+in art according to the idea which a man's mind forms to itself out of
+a something in nature. That something in nature must, of course, have
+been carefully studied before the man can work out anything in art by
+which it is faithfully represented. The artist, for instance, who
+made that statue, must have known the proportions of the human frame.
+He must have made studies of various parts of it,--heads and hands,
+and arms and legs, and so forth,--and having done so, he then puts
+together all his various studies of details, so as to form a new
+whole, which is intended to personate an idea formed in his own mind.
+Do you go with me?"
+
+"Partly, sir; but I am puzzled a little still."
+
+"Of course you are; but you'll puzzle yourself right if you think over
+what I say. Now if, in order to make this statue, which is composed
+of metal or stone, more natural, I stuck on it a wig of real hair,
+would not you feel at once that I had spoilt the work; that as you
+clearly express it, 'it would not be the right thing'? and instead of
+making the work of art more natural, I should have made it laughably
+unnatural, by forcing insensibly upon the mind of him who looked at it
+the contrast between the real life, represented by a wig of actual
+hair, and the artistic life, represented by an idea embodied in stone
+or metal. The higher the work of art (that is, the higher the idea it
+represents as a new combination of details taken from nature), the
+more it is degraded or spoilt by an attempt to give it a kind of
+reality which is out of keeping with the materials employed. But the
+same rule applies to everything in art, however humble. And a couple
+of stuffed canary-birds at the brim of a basket-work imitation of a
+Greek drinking-cup would be as bad taste as a wig from the barber's on
+the head of a marble statue of Apollo."
+
+"I see," said Will, his head downcast, like a man pondering,--"at
+least I think I see; and I'm very much obliged to you, sir."
+
+Mrs. Somers had long since returned with the work-basket, but stood
+with it in her hands, not daring to interrupt the gentleman, and
+listening to his discourse with as much patience and as little
+comprehension as if it had been one of the controversial sermons upon
+Ritualism with which on great occasions Mr. Lethbridge favoured his
+congregation.
+
+Kenelm having now exhausted his critical lecture--from which certain
+poets and novelists who contrive to caricature the ideal by their
+attempt to put wigs of real hair upon the heads of stone statues might
+borrow a useful hint or two if they would condescend to do so, which
+is not likely--perceived Mrs. Somers standing by him, took from her
+the basket, which was really very pretty and elegant, subdivided into
+various compartments for the implements in use among ladies, and
+bestowed on it a well-merited eulogium.
+
+"The young lady means to finish it herself with ribbons, and line it
+with satin," said Mrs. Somers, proudly.
+
+"The ribbons will not be amiss, sir?" said Will, interrogatively.
+
+"Not at all. Your natural sense of the fitness of things tells you
+that ribbons go well with straw and light straw-like work such as
+this; though you would not put ribbons on those rude hampers and
+game-baskets in the corner. Like to like; a stout cord goes suitably
+with them: just as a poet who understands his art employs pretty
+expressions for poems intended to be pretty and suit a fashionable
+drawing-room, and carefully shuns them to substitute a simple cord for
+poems intended to be strong and travel far, despite of rough usage by
+the way. But you really ought to make much more money by this
+fancy-work than you could as a day-labourer."
+
+Will sighed. "Not in this neighbourhood, sir; I might in a town."
+
+"Why not move to a town, then?"
+
+The young man coloured, and shook his head.
+
+Kenelm turned appealingly to Mrs. Somers. "I'll be willing to go
+wherever it would be best for my boy, sir. But--" and here she
+checked herself, and a tear trickled silently down her cheeks.
+
+Will resumed, in a more cheerful tone, "I am getting a little known
+now, and work will come if one waits for it." Kenelm did not deem it
+courteous or discreet to intrude further on Will's confidence in the
+first interview; and he began to feel, more than he had done at first,
+not only the dull pain of the bruises he had received in the recent
+combat, but also somewhat more than the weariness which follows long
+summer-day's work in the open air. He therefore, rather abruptly, now
+took his leave, saying that he should be very glad of a few specimens
+of Will's ingenuity and skill, and would call or write to give
+directions about them.
+
+Just as he came in sight of Tom Bowles's house on his way back to Mr.
+Saunderson's, Kenelm saw a man mounting a pony that stood tied up at
+the gate, and exchanging a few words with a respectable-looking woman
+before he rode on. He was passing by Kenelm without notice, when that
+philosophical vagrant stopped him, saying, "If I am not mistaken, sir,
+you are the doctor. There is not much the matter with Mr. Bowles?"
+
+The doctor shook his head. "I can't say yet. He has had a very ugly
+blow somewhere."
+
+"It was just under the left ear. I did not aim at that exact spot:
+but Bowles unluckily swerved a little aside at the moment, perhaps in
+surprise at a tap between his eyes immediately preceding it: and so,
+as you say, it was an ugly blow that he received. But if it cures him
+of the habit of giving ugly blows to other people who can bear them
+less safely, perhaps it may be all for his good, as, no doubt, sir,
+your schoolmaster said when he flogged you."
+
+"Bless my soul! are you the man who fought with him,--you? I can't
+believe it."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Why not! So far as I can judge by this light, though you are a tall
+fellow, Tom Bowles must be a much heavier weight than you are."
+
+"Tom Spring was the champion of England; and according to the records
+of his weight, which history has preserved in her archives, Tom Spring
+was a lighter weight than I am."
+
+"But are you a prize-fighter?"
+
+"I am as much that as I am anything else. But to return to Mr.
+Bowles, was it necessary to bleed him?"
+
+"Yes; he was unconscious, or nearly so, when I came. I took away a
+few ounces; and I am happy to say he is now sensible, but must be kept
+very quiet."
+
+"No doubt; but I hope he will be well enough to see me to-morrow."
+
+"I hope so too; but I can't say yet. Quarrel about a girl,--eh?"
+
+"It was not about money. And I suppose if there were no money and no
+women in the world, there would be no quarrels and very few doctors.
+Good-night, Sir."
+
+"It is a strange thing to me," said Kenelm, as he now opened the
+garden-gate of Mr. Saunderson's homestead, "that though I've had
+nothing to eat all day, except a few pitiful sandwiches, I don't feel
+the least hungry. Such arrest of the lawful duties of the digestive
+organs never happened to me before. There must be something weird and
+ominous in it."
+
+On entering the parlour, the family party, though they had long since
+finished supper, were still seated round the table. They all rose at
+the sight of Kenelm. The fame of his achievements had preceded him.
+He checked the congratulations, the compliments, and the questions
+which the hearty farmer rapidly heaped upon him, with a melancholic
+exclamation, "But I have lost my appetite! No honours can compensate
+for that. Let me go to bed peaceably, and perhaps in the magic land
+of sleep Nature may restore me by a dream of supper."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+KENELM rose betimes the next morning somewhat stiff and uneasy, but
+sufficiently recovered to feel ravenous. Fortunately, one of the
+young ladies, who attended specially to the dairy, was already up, and
+supplied the starving hero with a vast bowl of bread and milk. He
+then strolled into the hayfield, in which there was now very little
+left to do, and but few hands besides his own were employed. Jessie
+was not there. Kenelm was glad of that. By nine o'clock his work was
+over, and the farmer and his men were in the yard completing the
+ricks. Kenelm stole away unobserved, bent on a round of visits. He
+called first at the village shop kept by Mrs. Bawtrey, which Jessie
+had pointed out to him, on pretence of buying a gaudy neckerchief; and
+soon, thanks to his habitual civility, made familiar acquaintance with
+the shopwoman. She was a little sickly old lady, her head shaking, as
+with palsy, somewhat deaf, but still shrewd and sharp, rendered
+mechanically so by long habits of shrewdness and sharpness. She
+became very communicative, spoke freely of her desire to give up the
+shop, and pass the rest of her days with a sister, widowed like
+herself, in a neighbouring town. Since she had lost her husband, the
+field and orchard attached to the shop had ceased to be profitable,
+and become a great care and trouble; and the attention the shop
+required was wearisome. But she had twelve years unexpired of the
+lease granted for twenty-one years to her husband on low terms, and
+she wanted a premium for its transfer, and a purchaser for the stock
+of the shop. Kenelm soon drew from her the amount of the sum she
+required for all,--L45.
+
+"You be n't thinking of it for yourself?" she asked, putting on her
+spectacles, and examining him with care.
+
+"Perhaps so, if one could get a decent living out of it. Do you keep
+a book of your losses and your gains?"
+
+"In course, sir," she said proudly. "I kept the books in my goodman's
+time, and he was one who could find out if there was a farthing wrong,
+for he had been in a lawyer's office when a lad."
+
+"Why did he leave a lawyer's office to keep a little shop?"
+
+"Well, he was born a farmer's son in this neighbourhood, and he always
+had a hankering after the country, and--and besides that--"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I'll tell you the truth; he had got into a way of drinking speerrits,
+and he was a good young man, and wanted to break himself of it, and he
+took the temperance oath; but it was too hard on him, for he could not
+break himself of the company that led him into liquor. And so, one
+time when he came into the neighbourhood to see his parents for the
+Christmas holiday, he took a bit of liking to me; and my father, who
+was Squire Travers's bailiff, had just died, and left me a little
+money. And so, somehow or other, we came together, and got this house
+and the land from the Squire on lease very reasonable; and my goodman
+being well eddyeated, and much thought of, and never being tempted to
+drink, now that he had a missis to keep him in order, had a many
+little things put into his way. He could help to measure timber, and
+knew about draining, and he got some bookkeeping from the farmers
+about; and we kept cows and pigs and poultry, and so we did very well,
+specially as the Lord was merciful and sent us no children."
+
+"And what does the shop bring in a year since your husband died?"
+
+"You had best judge for yourself. Will you look at the book, and take
+a peep at the land and apple-trees? But they's been neglected since
+my goodman died."
+
+In another minute the heir of the Chillinglys was seated in a neat
+little back parlour, with a pretty though confined view of the orchard
+and grass slope behind it, and bending over Mrs. Bawtrey's ledger.
+
+Some customers for cheese and bacon coming now into the shop, the old
+woman left him to his studies. Though they were not of a nature
+familiar to him, he brought to them, at least, that general clearness
+of head and quick seizure of important points which are common to most
+men who have gone through some disciplined training of intellect, and
+been accustomed to extract the pith and marrow out of many books on
+many subjects. The result of his examination was satisfactory; there
+appeared to him a clear balance of gain from the shop alone of
+somewhat over L40 a year, taking the average of the last three years.
+Closing the book, he then let himself out of the window into the
+orchard, and thence into the neighbouring grass field. Both were,
+indeed, much neglected; the trees wanted pruning, the field manure.
+But the soil was evidently of rich loam, and the fruit-trees were
+abundant and of ripe age, generally looking healthy in spite of
+neglect. With the quick intuition of a man born and bred in the
+country, and picking up scraps of rural knowledge unconsciously,
+Kenelm convinced himself that the land, properly managed, would far
+more than cover the rent, rates, tithes, and all incidental outgoings,
+leaving the profits of the shop as the clear income of the occupiers.
+And no doubt with clever young people to manage the shop, its profits
+might be increased.
+
+Not thinking it necessary to return at present to Mrs. Bawtrey's,
+Kenelm now bent his way to Tom Bowles's.
+
+The house-door was closed. At the summons of his knock it was quickly
+opened by a tall, stout, remarkably fine-looking woman, who might have
+told fifty years, and carried them off lightly on her ample shoulders.
+She was dressed very respectably in black, her brown hair braided
+simply under a neat tight-fitting cap. Her features were aquiline and
+very regular: altogether there was something about her majestic and
+Cornelia-like. She might have sat for the model of that Roman matron,
+except for the fairness of her Anglo-Saxon complexion.
+
+"What's your pleasure?" she asked, in a cold and somewhat stern voice.
+
+"Ma'am," answered Kenelm, uncovering, "I have called to see Mr.
+Bowles, and I sincerely hope he is well enough to let me do so."
+
+"No, sir, he is not well enough for that; he is lying down in his own
+room, and must be kept quiet."
+
+"May I then ask you the favour to let me in? I would say a few words
+to you, who are his mother if I mistake not." Mrs. Bowles paused a
+moment as if in doubt; but she was at no loss to detect in Kenelm's
+manner something superior to the fashion of his dress, and supposing
+the visit might refer to her son's professional business, she opened
+the door wider, drew aside to let him pass first, and when he stood
+midway in the parlour, requested him to take a seat, and, to set him
+the example, seated herself.
+
+"Ma'am," said Kenelm, "do not regret to have admitted me, and do not
+think hardly of me when I inform you that I am the unfortunate cause
+of your son's accident."
+
+Mrs. Bowles rose with a start. "You're the man who beat my boy?"
+
+"No, ma'am, do not say I beat him. He is not beaten. He is so brave
+and so strong that he would easily have beaten me if I had not, by
+good luck, knocked him down before he had time to do so. Pray, ma'am,
+retain your seat and listen to me patiently for a few moments."
+
+Mrs. Bowles, with an indignant heave of her Juno-like bosom, and with
+a superbly haughty expression of countenance which suited well with
+its aquiline formation, tacitly obeyed.
+
+"You will allow, ma'am," recommenced Kenelm, "that this is not the
+first time by many that Mr. Bowles has come to blows with another man.
+Am I not right in that assumption?"
+
+"My son is of hasty temper," replied Mrs. Bowles, reluctantly, "and
+people should not aggravate him."
+
+"You grant the fact, then?" said Kenelm, imperturbably, but with a
+polite inclination of head. "Mr. Bowles has often been engaged in
+these encounters, and in all of them it is quite clear that he
+provoked the battle; for you must be aware that he is not tho sort of
+man to whom any other would be disposed to give the first blow. Yet,
+after these little incidents had occurred, and Mr. Bowles had, say,
+half killed the person who aggravated him, you did not feel any
+resentment against that person, did you? Nay, if he had wanted
+nursing, you would have gone and nursed him."
+
+"I don't know as to nursing," said Mrs. Bowles, beginning to lose her
+dignity of mien; "but certainly I should have been very sorry for him.
+And as for Tom,--though I say it who should not say,--he has no more
+malice than a baby: he'd go and make it up with any man, however badly
+he had beaten him."
+
+"Just as I supposed; and if the man had sulked and would not make it
+up, Tom would have called him a bad fellow, and felt inclined to beat
+him again."
+
+Mrs. Bowles's face relaxed into a stately smile.
+
+"Well, then," pursued Kenelm, "I do but humbly imitate Mr. Bowles, and
+I come to make it up and shake hands with him."
+
+"No, sir,--no," exclaimed Mrs. Bowles, though in a low voice, and
+turning pale. "Don't think of it. 'Tis not the blows; he'll get over
+those fast enough: 'tis his pride that's hurt; and if he saw you there
+might be mischief. But you're a stranger, and going away: do go soon;
+do keep out of his way; do!" And the mother clasped her hands.
+
+"Mrs. Bowles," said Kenelm, with a change of voice and aspect,--a
+voice and aspect so earnest and impressive that they stilled and awed
+her,--"will you not help me to save your son from the dangers into
+which that hasty temper and that mischievous pride may at any moment
+hurry him? Does it never occur to you that these are the causes of
+terrible crime, bringing terrible punishment; and that against brute
+force, impelled by savage passions, society protects itself by the
+hulks and the gallows?"
+
+"Sir; how dare you--"
+
+"Hush! If one man kill another in a moment of ungovernable wrath,
+that is a crime which, though heavily punished by the conscience, is
+gently dealt with by the law, which calls it only manslaughter; but if
+a motive to the violence, such as jealousy or revenge, can be
+assigned, and there should be no witness by to prove that the violence
+was not premeditated, then the law does not call it manslaughter, but
+murder. Was it not that thought which made you so imploringly
+exclaim, 'Go soon; keep out of his way'?"
+
+The woman made no answer, but, sinking back in her chair, gasped for
+breath.
+
+"Nay, madam," resumed Kenelm, mildly; "banish your fears. If you will
+help me I feel sure that I can save your son from such perils, and I
+only ask you to let me save him. I am convinced that he has a good
+and a noble nature, and he is worth saving." And as he thus said he
+took her hand. She resigned it to him and returned the pressure, all
+her pride softening as she began to weep.
+
+At length, when she recovered voice, she said,--
+
+"It is all along of that girl. He was not so till she crossed him,
+and made him half mad. He is not the same man since then,--my poor
+Tom!"
+
+"Do you know that he has given me his word, and before his
+fellow-villagers, that if he had the worst of the fight he would never
+molest Jessie Wiles again?"
+
+"Yes, he told me so himself; and it is that which weighs on him now.
+He broods and broods and mutters, and will not be comforted; and--and
+I do fear that he means revenge. And again, I implore you to keep out
+of his way."
+
+"It is not revenge on me that he thinks of. Suppose I go and am seen
+no more, do you think in your own heart that that girl's life is
+safe?"
+
+"What! My Tom kill a woman!"
+
+"Do you never read in your newspaper of a man who kills his
+sweetheart, or the girl who refuses to be his sweetheart? At all
+events, you yourself do not approve this frantic suit of his. If I
+have heard rightly, you have wished to get Tom out of the village for
+some time, till Jessie Wiles is--we'll say, married, or gone elsewhere
+for good."
+
+"Yes, indeed, I have wished and prayed for it many's the time, both
+for her sake and for his. And I am sure I don't know what we shall do
+if he stays, for he has been losing custom fast. The Squire has taken
+away his, and so have many of the farmers; and such a trade as it was
+in his good father's time! And if he would go, his uncle, the
+veterinary at Luscombe, would take him into partnership; for he has no
+son of his own, and he knows how clever Tom is: there be n't a man who
+knows more about horses; and cows, too, for the matter of that."
+
+"And if Luscombe is a large place, the business there must be more
+profitable than it can be here, even if Tom got back his custom?"
+
+"Oh yes! five times as good,--if he would but go; but he'll not hear
+of it."
+
+"Mrs. Bowles, I am very much obliged to you for your confidence, and I
+feel sure that all will end happily now we have had this talk. I'll
+not press further on you at present. Tom will not stir out, I
+suppose, till the evening."
+
+"Ah, sir, he seems as if he had no heart to stir out again, unless for
+something dreadful."
+
+"Courage! I will call again in the evening, and then you just take me
+up to Tom's room, and leave me there to make friends with him, as I
+have with you. Don't say a word about me in the meanwhile."
+
+"But--"
+
+"'But,' Mrs. Bowles, is a word that cools many a warm impulse, stifles
+many a kindly thought, puts a dead stop to many a brotherly deed.
+Nobody would ever love his neighbour as himself if he listened to all
+the Buts that could be said on the other side of the question."
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+KENELM now bent his way towards the parsonage, but just as he neared
+its glebe-lands he met a gentleman whose dress was so evidently
+clerical that he stopped and said,--
+
+"Have I the honour to address Mr. Lethbridge?"
+
+"That is my name," said the clergyman, smiling pleasantly. "Anything
+I can do for you?"
+
+"Yes, a great deal, if you will let me talk to you about a few of your
+parishioners."
+
+"My parishioners! I beg your pardon, but you are quite a stranger to
+me, and, I should think, to the parish."
+
+"To the parish,--no, I am quite at home in it; and I honestly believe
+that it has never known a more officious busybody, thrusting himself
+into its most private affairs."
+
+Mr. Lethbridge stared, and, after a short pause, said, "I have heard
+of a young man who has been staying at Mr. Saunderson's, and is indeed
+at this moment the talk of the village. You are--"
+
+"That young man. Alas! yes."
+
+"Nay," said Mr. Lethbridge, kindly, "I cannot myself, as a minister of
+the Gospel, approve of your profession, and, if I might take the
+liberty, I would try and dissuade you from it; but still, as for the
+one act of freeing a poor girl from the most scandalous persecution,
+and administering, though in a rough way, a lesson to a savage brute
+who has long been the disgrace and terror of the neighbourhood, I
+cannot honestly say that it has my condemnation. The moral sense of a
+community is generally a right one: you have won the praise of the
+village. Under all the circumstances, I do not withhold mine. You
+woke this morning and found yourself famous. Do not sigh 'Alas.'"
+
+"Lord Byron woke one morning and found himself famous, and the result
+was that he sighed 'Alas' for the rest of his life. If there be two
+things which a wise man should avoid, they are fame and love. Heaven
+defend me from both!"
+
+Again the parson stared; but being of compassionate nature, and
+inclined to take mild views of everything that belongs to humanity, he
+said, with a slight inclination of his head,--
+
+"I have always heard that the Americans in general enjoy the advantage
+of a better education than we do in England, and their reading public
+is infinitely larger than ours; still, when I hear one of a calling
+not highly considered in this country for intellectual cultivation or
+ethical philosophy cite Lord Byron, and utter a sentiment at variance
+with the impetuosity of inexperienced youth, but which has much to
+commend it in the eyes of a reflective Christian impressed with the
+nothingness of the objects mostly coveted by the human heart, I am
+surprised, and--oh, my dear young friend, surely your education might
+fit you for something better!"
+
+It was among the maxims of Kenelm Chillingly's creed that a sensible
+man should never allow himself to be surprised; but here he was, to
+use a popular idiom, "taken aback," and lowered himself to the rank of
+ordinary minds by saying, simply, "I don't understand."
+
+"I see," resumed the clergyman, shaking his head gently, "as I always
+suspected, that in the vaunted education bestowed on Americans, the
+elementary principles of Christian right and wrong are more neglected
+than they are among our own humble classes. Yes, my young friend, you
+may quote poets, you may startle me by remarks on the nothingness of
+human fame and human love, derived from the precepts of heathen poets,
+and yet not understand with what compassion, and, in the judgment of
+most sober-minded persons, with what contempt, a human being who
+practises your vocation is regarded."
+
+"Have I a vocation?" said Kenelm. "I am very glad to hear it. What
+is my vocation? And why must I be an American?"
+
+"Why, surely I am not misinformed? You are the American--I forget his
+name--who has come over to contest the belt of prize-fighting with the
+champion of England. You are silent; you hang your head. By your
+appearance, your length of limb, your gravity of countenance, your
+evident education, you confirm the impression of your birth. Your
+prowess has proved your profession."
+
+"Reverend sir," said Kenelm, with his unutterable seriousness of
+aspect, "I am on my travels in search of truth and in flight from
+shams, but so great a take-in as myself I have not yet encountered.
+Remember me in your prayers. I am not an American; I am not a
+prize-fighter. I honour the first as the citizen of a grand republic
+trying his best to accomplish an experiment in government in which he
+will find the very prosperity he tends to create will sooner or later
+destroy his experiment. I honour the last because strength, courage,
+and sobriety are essential to the prize-fighter, and are among the
+chiefest ornaments of kings and heroes. But I am neither one nor the
+other. And all I can say for myself is, that I belong to that very
+vague class commonly called English gentlemen, and that, by birth and
+education, I have a right to ask you to shake hands with me as such."
+
+Mr. Lethbridge stared again, raised his hat, bowed, and shook hands.
+
+"You will allow me now to speak to you about your parishioners. You
+take an interest in Will Somers; so do I. He is clever and ingenious.
+But it seems there is not sufficient demand here for his baskets, and
+he would, no doubt, do better in some neighbouring town. Why does he
+object to move?"
+
+"I fear that poor Will would pine away to death if he lost sight of
+that pretty girl for whom you did such chivalrous battle with Tom
+Bowles."
+
+"The unhappy man, then, is really in love with Jessie Wiles? And do
+you think she no less really cares for him?"
+
+"I am sure of it."
+
+"And would make him a good wife; that is, as wives go?"
+
+"A good daughter generally makes a good wife. And there is not a
+father in the place who has a better child than Jessie is to hers.
+She really is a girl of a superior nature. She was the cleverest
+pupil at our school, and my wife is much attached to her. But she has
+something better than mere cleverness: she has an excellent heart."
+
+"What you say confirms my own impressions. And the girl's father has
+no other objection to Will Somers than his fear that Will could not
+support a wife and family comfortably.
+
+"He can have no other objection save that which would apply equally to
+all suitors. I mean his fear lest Tom Bowles might do her some
+mischief, if he knew she was about to marry any one else."
+
+"You think, then, that Mr. Bowles is a thoroughly bad and dangerous
+person?"
+
+"Thoroughly bad and dangerous, and worse since he has taken to
+drinking."
+
+"I suppose he did not take to drinking till he lost his wits for
+Jessie Wiles?"
+
+"No, I don't think he did."
+
+"But, Mr. Lethbridge, have you never used your influence over this
+dangerous man?"
+
+"Of course, I did try, but I only got insulted. He is a godless
+animal, and has not been inside a church for years. He seems to have
+got a smattering of such vile learning as may be found in infidel
+publications, and I doubt if he has any religion at all."
+
+"Poor Polyphemus! no wonder his Galatea shuns him."
+
+"Old Wiles is terribly frightened, and asked my wife to find Jessie a
+place as servant at a distance. But Jessie can't bear the thoughts of
+leaving."
+
+"For the same reason which attaches Will Somers to the native soil?"
+
+"My wife thinks so."
+
+"Do you believe that if Tom Bowles were out of the way, and Jessie and
+Will were man and wife, they could earn a sufficient livelihood as
+successors to Mrs. Bawtrey, Will adding the profits of his basket-work
+to those of the shop and land?"
+
+"A sufficient livelihood! of course. They would be quite rich. I
+know the shop used to turn a great deal of money. The old woman, to
+be sure, is no longer up to the business, but still she retains a good
+custom."
+
+"Will Somers seems in delicate health. Perhaps if he had a less weary
+struggle for a livelihood, and no fear of losing Jessie, his health
+would improve."
+
+"His life would be saved, sir."
+
+"Then," said Kenelm, with a heavy sigh and a face as long as an
+undertaker's, "though I myself entertain a profound compassion for
+that disturbance to our mental equilibrium which goes by the name of
+'love,' and I am the last person who ought to add to the cares and
+sorrows which marriage entails upon its victims,--I say nothing of the
+woes destined to those whom marriage usually adds to a population
+already overcrowded,--I fear that I must be the means of bringing
+these two love-birds into the same cage. I am ready to purchase the
+shop and its appurtenances on their behalf, on the condition that you
+will kindly obtain the consent of Jessie's father to their union. As
+for my brave friend Tom Bowles, I undertake to deliver them and the
+village from that exuberant nature, which requires a larger field for
+its energies. Pardon me for not letting you interrupt me. I have not
+yet finished what I have to say. Allow me to ask if Mrs. Grundy
+resides in this village."
+
+"Mrs. Grundy! Oh, I understand. Of course; wherever a woman has a
+tongue, there Mrs. Grundy has a home."
+
+"And seeing that Jessie is very pretty, and that in walking with her I
+encountered Mr. Bowles, might not Mrs. Grundy say, with a toss of her
+head, 'that it was not out of pure charity that the stranger had been
+so liberal to Jessie Wiles'? But if the money for the shop be paid
+through you to Mrs. Bawtrey, and you kindly undertake all the
+contingent arrangements, Mrs. Grundy will have nothing to say against
+any one."
+
+Mr. Lethbridge gazed with amaze at the solemn countenance before him.
+
+"Sir," he said, after a long pause, "I scarcely know how to express my
+admiration of a generosity so noble, so thoughtful, and accompanied
+with a delicacy, and, indeed, with a wisdom, which--which--"
+
+"Pray, my dear sir, do not make me still more ashamed of myself than I
+am at present for an interference in love matters quite alien to my
+own convictions as to the best mode of making an 'Approach to the
+Angels.' To conclude this business, I think it better to deposit in
+your hands the sum of L45, for which Mrs. Bawtrey has agreed to sell
+the remainder of her lease and stock-in-hand; but, of course, you will
+not make anything public till I am gone, and Tom Bowles too. I hope I
+may get him away to-morrow; but I shall know to-night when I can
+depend on his departure, and till he goes I must stay."
+
+As he spoke, Kenelm transferred from his pocket-book to Mr.
+Lethbridge's hand bank-notes to the amount specified.
+
+"May I at least ask the name of the gentleman who honours me with his
+confidence, and has bestowed so much happiness on members of my
+flock?"
+
+"There is no great reason why I should not tell you my name, but I see
+no reason why I should. You remember Talleyrand's advice, 'If you are
+in doubt whether to write a letter or not, don't.' The advice applies
+to many doubts in life besides that of letter-writing. Farewell,
+sir!"
+
+"A most extraordinary young man," muttered the parson, gazing at the
+receding form of the tall stranger; then gently shaking his head, he
+added, "Quite an original." He was contented with that solution of
+the difficulties which had puzzled him. May the reader be the same.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+AFTER the family dinner, at which the farmer's guest displayed more
+than his usual powers of appetite, Kenelm followed his host towards
+the stackyard, and said,--
+
+"My dear Mr. Saunderson, though you have no longer any work for me to
+do, and I ought not to trespass further on your hospitality, yet if I
+might stay with you another day or so, I should be very grateful."
+
+"My dear lad," cried the farmer, in whose estimation Kenelm had risen
+prodigiously since the victory over Tom Bowles, "you are welcome to
+stay as long as you like, and we shall be all sorry when you go.
+Indeed, at all events, you must stay over Saturday, for you shall go
+with us to the squire's harvest-supper. It will be a pretty sight,
+and my girls are already counting on you for a dance."
+
+"Saturday,--the day after to-morrow. You are very kind; but
+merrymakings are not much in my way, and I think I shall be on my road
+before you set off to the Squire's supper."
+
+"Pooh! you shall stay; and, I say, young 'un, if you want more to do,
+I have a job for you quite in your line."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"Thrash my ploughman. He has been insolent this morning, and he is
+the biggest fellow in the county, next to Tom Bowles."
+
+Here the farmer laughed heartily, enjoying his own joke.
+
+"Thank you for nothing," said Kenelm, rubbing his bruises. "A burnt
+child dreads the fire."
+
+The young man wandered alone into the fields. The day was becoming
+overcast, and the clouds threatened rain. The air was exceedingly
+still; the landscape, missing the sunshine, wore an aspect of gloomy
+solitude. Kenelm came to the banks of the rivulet not far from the
+spot on which the farmer had first found him. There he sat down, and
+leaned his cheek on his hand, with eyes fixed on the still and
+darkened stream lapsing mournfully away: sorrow entered into his heart
+and tinged its musings.
+
+"Is it then true," said he, soliloquizing, "that I am born to pass
+through life utterly alone; asking, indeed, for no sister-half of
+myself, disbelieving its possibility, shrinking from the thought of
+it,--half scorning, half pitying those who sigh for it?--thing
+unattainable,--better sigh for the moon!
+
+"Yet if other men sigh for it, why do I stand apart from them? If the
+world be a stage, and all the men and women in it merely players, am I
+to be the solitary spectator, with no part in the drama and no
+interest in the vicissitudes of its plot? Many there are, no doubt,
+who covet as little as I do the part of 'Lover,' 'with a woful ballad,
+made to his mistress's eyebrow;' but then they covet some other part
+in the drama, such as that of Soldier 'bearded as a pard,' or that of
+Justice 'in fair round belly with fat capon lined.' But me no
+ambition fires: I have no longing either to rise or to shine. I don't
+desire to be a colonel, nor an admiral, nor a member of Parliament,
+nor an alderman; I do not yearn for the fame of a wit, or a poet, or a
+philosopher, or a diner-out, or a crack shot at a rifle-match or a
+/battue/. Decidedly, I am the one looker-on, the one bystander, and
+have no more concern with the active world than a stone has. It is a
+horrible phantasmal crotchet of Goethe, that originally we were all
+monads, little segregated atoms adrift in the atmosphere, and carried
+hither and thither by forces over which we had no control, especially
+by the attraction of other monads, so that one monad, compelled by
+porcine monads, crystallizes into a pig; another, hurried along by
+heroic monads, becomes a lion or an Alexander. Now it is quite
+clear," continued Kenelm, shifting his position and crossing the right
+leg over the left, "that a monad intended or fitted for some other
+planet may, on its way to that destination, be encountered by a
+current of other monads blowing earthward, and be caught up in the
+stream and whirled on, till, to the marring of its whole proper
+purpose and scene of action, it settles here,--conglomerated into a
+baby. Probably that lot has befallen me: my monad, meant for another
+region in space, has been dropped into this, where it can never be at
+home, never amalgamate with other monads nor comprehend why they are
+in such a perpetual fidget. I declare I know no more why the minds of
+human beings should be so restlessly agitated about things which, as
+most of them own, give more pain than pleasure, than I understand why
+that swarm of gnats, which has such a very short time to live, does
+not give itself a moment's repose, but goes up and down, rising and
+falling as if it were on a seesaw, and making as much noise about its
+insignificant alternations of ascent and descent as if it were the hum
+of men. And yet, perhaps, in another planet my monad would have
+frisked and jumped and danced and seesawed with congenial monads, as
+contentedly and as sillily as do the monads of men and gnats in this
+alien Vale of Tears."
+
+Kenelm had just arrived at that conjectural solution of his
+perplexities when a voice was heard singing, or rather modulated to
+that kind of chant between recitative and song, which is so pleasingly
+effective where the intonations are pure and musical. They were so in
+this instance, and Kenelm's ear caught every word in the following
+song:--
+
+
+ CONTENT.
+
+ "There are times when the troubles of life are still;
+ The bees wandered lost in the depths of June,
+ And I paused where the chime of a silver rill
+ Sang the linnet and lark to their rest at noon.
+
+ "Said my soul, 'See how calmly the wavelets glide,
+ Though so narrow their way to their ocean vent;
+ And the world that I traverse is wide, is wide,
+ And yet is too narrow to hold content'
+
+ "O my son, never say that the world is wide;
+ The rill in its banks is less closely pent:
+ It is thou who art shoreless on every side,
+ And thy width will not let thee enclose content."
+
+
+As the voice ceased Kenelm lifted his head. But the banks of the
+brook were so curving and so clothed with brushwood that for some
+minutes the singer was invisible. At last the boughs before him were
+put aside, and within a few paces of himself paused the man to whom he
+had commended the praises of a beefsteak, instead of those which
+minstrelsy in its immemorial error dedicates to love.
+
+"Sir," said Kenelm, half rising, "well met once more. Have you ever
+listened to the cuckoo?"
+
+"Sir," answered the minstrel, "have you ever felt the presence of the
+summer?"
+
+"Permit me to shake hands with you. I admire the question by which
+you have countermet and rebuked my own. If you are not in a hurry,
+will you sit down and let us talk?"
+
+The minstrel inclined his head and seated himself. His dog--now
+emerged from the brushwood--gravely approached Kenelm, who with
+greater gravity regarded him; then, wagging his tail, reposed on his
+haunches, intent with ear erect on a stir in the neighbouring reeds,
+evidently considering whether it was caused by a fish or a water-rat.
+
+"I asked you, sir, if you had ever listened to the cuckoo from no
+irrelevant curiosity; for often on summer days, when one is talking
+with one's self,--and, of course, puzzling one's self,--a voice breaks
+out, as it were from the heart of Nature, so far is it and yet so
+near; and it says something very quieting, very musical, so that one
+is tempted inconsiderately and foolishly to exclaim, 'Nature replies
+to me.' The cuckoo has served me that trick pretty often. Your song
+is a better answer to a man's self-questionings than he can ever get
+from a cuckoo."
+
+"I doubt that," said the minstrel. "Song, at the best, is but the
+echo of some voice from the heart of Nature. And if the cuckoo's note
+seemed to you such a voice, it was an answer to your questionings
+perhaps more simply truthful than man can utter, if you had rightly
+construed the language."
+
+"My good friend," answered Kenelm, "what you say sounds very prettily;
+and it contains a sentiment which has been amplified by certain
+critics into that measureless domain of dunderheads which is vulgarly
+called BOSH. But though Nature is never silent, though she abuses the
+privilege of her age in being tediously gossiping and garrulous,
+Nature never replies to our questions: she can't understand an
+argument; she has never read Mr. Mill's work on Logic. In fact, as it
+is truly said by a great philosopher, 'Nature has no mind.' Every man
+who addresses her is compelled to force upon her for a moment the loan
+of his own mind. And if she answers a question which his own mind
+puts to her, it is only by such a reply as his own mind teaches to her
+parrot-like lips. And as every man has a different mind, so every man
+gets a different answer. Nature is a lying old humbug."
+
+The minstrel laughed merrily; and his laugh was as sweet as his chant.
+
+"Poets would have a great deal to unlearn if they are to look upon
+Nature in that light."
+
+"Bad poets would, and so much the better for them and their readers."
+
+"Are not good poets students of Nature?"
+
+"Students of Nature, certainly, as surgeons study anatomy by
+dissecting a dead body. But the good poet, like the good surgeon, is
+the man who considers that study merely as the necessary A B C, and
+not as the all-in-all essential to skill in his practice. I do not
+give the fame of a good surgeon to a man who fills a book with
+details, more or less accurate, of fibres and nerves and muscles; and
+I don't give the fame of a good poet to a man who makes an inventory
+of the Rhine or the Vale of Gloucester. The good surgeon and the good
+poet are they who understand the living man. What is that poetry of
+drama which Aristotle justly ranks as the highest? Is it not a poetry
+in which description of inanimate Nature must of necessity be very
+brief and general; in which even the external form of man is so
+indifferent a consideration that it will vary with each actor who
+performs the part? A Hamlet may be fair or dark. A Macbeth may be
+short or tall. The merit of dramatic poetry consists in the
+substituting for what is commonly called Nature (namely, external and
+material Nature) creatures intellectual, emotional, but so purely
+immaterial that they may be said to be all mind and soul, accepting
+the temporary loans of any such bodies at hand as actors may offer, in
+order to be made palpable and visible to the audience, but needing no
+such bodies to be palpable and visible to readers. The highest kind
+of poetry is therefore that which has least to do with external
+Nature. But every grade has its merit more or less genuinely great,
+according as it instils into Nature that which is not there,--the
+reason and the soul of man."
+
+"I am not much disposed," said the minstrel, "to acknowledge any one
+form of poetry to be practically higher than another; that is, so far
+as to elevate the poet who cultivates what you call the highest with
+some success above the rank of the poet who cultivates what you call a
+very inferior school with a success much more triumphant. In theory,
+dramatic poetry may be higher than lyric, and 'Venice Preserved' is a
+very successful drama; but I think Burns a greater poet than Otway."
+
+"Possibly he may be; but I know of no lyrical poet, at least among the
+moderns, who treats less of Nature as the mere outward form of things,
+or more passionately animates her framework with his own human heart,
+than does Robert Burns. Do you suppose when a Greek, in some
+perplexity of reason or conscience, addressed a question to the
+oracular oak-leaves of Dodona that the oak-leaves answered him? Don't
+you rather believe that the question suggested by his mind was
+answered by the mind of his fellow-man, the priest, who made the
+oak-leaves the mere vehicle of communication, as you and I might make
+such vehicle in a sheet of writing-paper? Is not the history of
+superstition a chronicle of the follies of man in attempting to get
+answers from external Nature?"
+
+"But," said the minstrel, "have I not somewhere heard or read that the
+experiments of Science are the answers made by Nature to the questions
+put to her by man?"
+
+"They are the answers which his own mind suggests to her,--nothing
+more. His mind studies the laws of matter, and in that study makes
+experiments on matter; out of those experiments his mind, according to
+its previous knowledge or natural acuteness, arrives at its own
+deductions, and hence arise the sciences of mechanics and chemistry,
+etc. But the matter itself gives no answer: the answer varies
+according to the mind that puts the question; and the progress of
+science consists in the perpetual correction of the errors and
+falsehoods which preceding minds conceived to be the correct answers
+they received from Nature. It is the supernatural within us,--namely,
+Mind,--which can alone guess at the mechanism of the natural, namely,
+Matter. A stone cannot question a stone."
+
+The minstrel made no reply. And there was a long silence, broken but
+by the hum of the insects, the ripple of onward waves, and the sigh of
+the wind through reeds.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+SAID Kenelm, at last breaking silence--
+
+
+ "'Rapiamus, amici,
+ Occasionem de die, dumque virent genua,
+ Et decet, obducta solvatur fronte senectus!'"
+
+
+"Is not that quotation from Horace?" asked the minstrel.
+
+"Yes; and I made it insidiously, in order to see if you had not
+acquired what is called a classical education."
+
+"I might have received such education, if my tastes and my destinies
+had not withdrawn me in boyhood from studies of which I did not then
+comprehend the full value. But I did pick up a smattering of Latin at
+school; and from time to time since I left school I have endeavoured
+to gain some little knowledge of the most popular Latin poets;
+chiefly, I own to my shame, by the help of literal English
+translations."
+
+"As a poet yourself, I am not sure that it would be an advantage to
+know a dead language so well that its forms and modes of thought ran,
+though perhaps unconsciously, into those of the living one in which
+you compose. Horace might have been a still better poet if he had not
+known Greek better than you know Latin."
+
+"It is at least courteous in you to say so," answered the singer, with
+a pleased smile.
+
+"You would be still more courteous," said Kenelm, "if you would pardon
+an impertinent question, and tell me whether it is for a wager that
+you wander through the land, Homer-like, as a wandering minstrel, and
+allow that intelligent quadruped your companion to carry a tray in his
+mouth for the reception of pennies?"
+
+"No, it is not for a wager; it is a whim of mine, which I fancy from
+the tone of your conversation you could understand, being apparently
+somewhat whimsical yourself."
+
+"So far as whim goes, be assured of my sympathy."
+
+"Well, then, though I follow a calling by the exercise of which I
+secure a modest income, my passion is verse. If the seasons were
+always summer, and life were always youth, I should like to pass
+through the world singing. But I have never ventured to publish any
+verses of mine. If they fell still-born it would give me more pain
+than such wounds to vanity ought to give to a bearded man; and if they
+were assailed or ridiculed it might seriously injure me in my
+practical vocation. That last consideration, were I quite alone in
+the world, might not much weigh on me; but there are others for whose
+sake I should like to make fortune and preserve station. Many years
+ago--it was in Germany--I fell in with a German student who was very
+poor, and who did make money by wandering about the country with lute
+and song. He has since become a poet of no mean popularity, and he
+has told me that he is sure he found the secret of that popularity in
+habitually consulting popular tastes during his roving apprenticeship
+to song. His example strongly impressed me. So I began this
+experiment; and for several years my summers have been all partly
+spent in this way. I am only known, as I think I told you before, in
+the rounds I take as 'The Wandering Minstrel;' I receive the trifling
+moneys that are bestowed on me as proofs of a certain merit. I should
+not be paid by poor people if I did not please; and the songs which
+please them best are generally those I love best myself. For the
+rest, my time is not thrown away,--not only as regards bodily health,
+but healthfulness of mind: all the current of one's ideas becomes so
+freshened by months of playful exercise and varied adventure."
+
+"Yes, the adventure is varied enough," said Kenelm, somewhat ruefully;
+for he felt, in shifting his posture, a sharp twinge of his bruised
+muscles. "But don't you find those mischief-makers, the women, always
+mix themselves up with adventure?"
+
+"Bless them! of course," said the minstrel, with a ringing laugh. "In
+life, as on the stage, the petticoat interest is always the
+strongest."
+
+"I don't agree with you there," said Kenelm, dryly. "And you seem to
+me to utter a claptrap beneath the rank of your understanding.
+However, this warm weather indisposes one to disputation; and I own
+that a petticoat, provided it be red, is not without the interest of
+colour in a picture."
+
+"Well, young gentleman," said the minstrel, rising, "the day is
+wearing on, and I must wish you good-by; probably, if you were to
+ramble about the country as I do, you would see too many pretty girls
+not to teach you the strength of petticoat interest,--not in pictures
+alone; and should I meet you again I may find you writing love-verses
+yourself."
+
+"After a conjecture so unwarrantable, I part company with you less
+reluctantly than I otherwise might do. But I hope we shall meet
+again."
+
+"Your wish flatters me much; but, if we do, pray respect the
+confidence I have placed in you, and regard my wandering minstrelsy
+and my dog's tray as sacred secrets. Should we not so meet, it is but
+a prudent reserve on my part if I do not give you my right name and
+address."
+
+"There you show the cautious common-sense which belongs rarely to
+lovers of verse and petticoat interest. What have you done with your
+guitar?"
+
+"I do not pace the roads with that instrument: it is forwarded to me
+from town to town under a borrowed name, together with other raiment
+that this, should I have cause to drop my character of wandering
+minstrel."
+
+The two men here exchanged a cordial shake of the hand. And as the
+minstrel went his way along the river-side, his voice in chanting
+seemed to lend to the wavelets a livelier murmur, to the reeds a less
+plaintive sigh.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+IN his room, solitary and brooding, sat the defeated hero of a hundred
+fights. It was now twilight; but the shutters had been partially
+closed all day, in order to exclude the sun, which had never before
+been unwelcome to Tom Bowles, and they still remained so, making the
+twilight doubly twilight, till the harvest moon, rising early, shot
+its ray through the crevice, and forced a silvery track amid the
+shadows of the floor.
+
+The man's head drooped on his breast; his strong hands rested
+listlessly on his knees: his attitude was that of utter despondency
+and prostration. But in the expression of his face there were the
+signs of some dangerous and restless thought which belied not the
+gloom but the stillness of the posture. His brow, which was
+habitually open and frank, in its defying aggressive boldness, was now
+contracted into deep furrows, and lowered darkly over his downcast,
+half-closed eyes. His lips were so tightly compressed that the face
+lost its roundness, and the massive bone of the jaw stood out hard and
+salient. Now and then, indeed, the lips opened, giving vent to a
+deep, impatient sigh, but they reclosed as quickly as they had parted.
+It was one of those crises in life which find all the elements that
+make up a man's former self in lawless anarchy; in which the Evil One
+seems to enter and direct the storm; in which a rude untutored mind,
+never before harbouring a thought of crime, sees the crime start up
+from an abyss, feels it to be an enemy, yet yields to it as a fate.
+So that when, at the last, some wretch, sentenced to the gibbet,
+shudderingly looks back to the moment "that trembled between two
+worlds,"--the world of the man guiltless, the world of the man
+guilty,--he says to the holy, highly educated, rational, passionless
+priest who confesses him and calls him "brother," "The devil put it
+into my head."
+
+At that moment the door opened; at its threshold there stood the man's
+mother--whom he had never allowed to influence his conduct, though he
+loved her well in his rough way--and the hated fellow-man whom he
+longed to see dead at his feet. The door reclosed: the mother was
+gone, without a word, for her tears choked her; the fellow-man was
+alone with him. Tom Bowles looked up, recognized his visitor, cleared
+his brow, and rubbed his mighty hands.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY drew a chair close to his antagonist's, and silently
+laid a hand on his.
+
+Tom Bowles took up the hand in both his own, turned it curiously
+towards the moonlight, gazed at it, poised it, then with a sound
+between groan and laugh tossed it away as a thing hostile but trivial,
+rose and locked the door, came back to his seat and said bluffly,--
+
+"What do you want with me now?"
+
+"I want to ask you a favour."
+
+"Favour?"
+
+"The greatest which man can ask from man,--friendship. You see, my
+dear Tom," continued Kenelm, making himself quite at home, throwing
+his arm over the back of Tom's chair, and stretching his legs
+comfortably as one does by one's own fireside; "you see, my dear Tom,
+that men like us--young, single, not on the whole bad-looking as men
+go--can find sweethearts in plenty. If one does not like us, another
+will; sweethearts are sown everywhere like nettles and thistles. But
+the rarest thing in life is a friend. Now, tell me frankly, in the
+course of your wanderings did you ever come into a village where you
+could not have got a sweetheart if you had asked for one; and if,
+having got a sweetheart, you had lost her, do you think you would have
+had any difficulty in finding another? But have you such a thing in
+the world, beyond the pale of your own family, as a true friend,--a
+man friend; and supposing that you had such a friend,--a friend who
+would stand by you through thick and thin; who would tell you your
+faults to your face, and praise you for your good qualities behind
+your back; who would do all he could to save you from a danger, and
+all he could to get you out of one,--supposing you had such a friend
+and lost him, do you believe that if you lived to the age of
+Methuselah you could find another? You don't answer me; you are
+silent. Well, Tom, I ask you to be such a friend to me, and I will be
+such a friend to you."
+
+Tom was so thoroughly "taken aback" by this address that he remained
+dumfounded. But he felt as if the clouds in his soul were breaking,
+and a ray of sunlight were forcing its way through the sullen
+darkness. At length, however, the receding rage within him returned,
+though with vacillating step, and he growled between his teeth,--
+
+"A pretty friend indeed, robbing me of my girl! Go along with you!"
+
+"She was not your girl any more than she was or ever can be mine."
+
+"What, you be n't after her?"
+
+"Certainly not; I am going to Luscombe, and I ask you to come with me.
+Do you think I am going to leave you here?"
+
+"What is it to you?"
+
+"Everything. Providence has permitted me to save you from the most
+lifelong of all sorrows. For--think! Can any sorrow be more lasting
+than had been yours if you had attained your wish; if you had forced
+or frightened a woman to be your partner till death do part,--you
+loving her, she loathing you; you conscious, night and day, that your
+very love had insured her misery, and that misery haunting you like a
+ghost!--that sorrow I have saved you. May Providence permit me to
+complete my work, and save you also from the most irredeemable of all
+crimes! Look into your soul, then recall the thoughts which all day
+long, and not least at the moment I crossed this threshold, were
+rising up, making reason dumb and conscience blind, and then lay your
+hand on your heart and say, 'I am guiltless of a dream of murder.'"
+
+The wretched man sprang up erect, menacing, and, meeting Kenelm's
+calm, steadfast, pitying gaze, dropped no less suddenly,--dropped on
+the floor, covered his face with his hands, and a great cry came forth
+between sob and howl.
+
+"Brother," said Kenelm, kneeling beside him, and twining his arm round
+the man's heaving breast, "it is over now; with that cry the demon
+that maddened you has fled forever."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+WHEN, some time after, Kenelm quitted the room and joined Mrs. Bowles
+below, he said cheerily, "All right; Tom and I are sworn friends. We
+are going together to Luscombe the day after to-morrow,--Sunday; just
+write a line to his uncle to prepare him for Tom's visit, and send
+thither his clothes, as we shall walk, and steal forth unobserved
+betimes in the morning. Now go up and talk to him; he wants a
+mother's soothing and petting. He is a noble fellow at heart, and we
+shall be all proud of him some day or other."
+
+As he walked towards the farmhouse, Kenelm encountered Mr. Lethbridge,
+who said, "I have come from Mr. Saunderson's, where I went in search
+of you. There is an unexpected hitch in the negotiation for Mrs.
+Bawtrey's shop. After seeing you this morning I fell in with Mr.
+Travers's bailiff, and he tells me that her lease does not give her
+the power to sublet without the Squire's consent; and that as the
+premises were originally let on very low terms to a favoured and
+responsible tenant, Mr. Travers cannot be expected to sanction the
+transfer of the lease to a poor basket-marker: in fact, though he will
+accept Mrs. Bawtrey's resignation, it must be in favour of an
+applicant whom he desires to oblige. On hearing this, I rode over to
+the Park and saw Mr. Travers himself. But he was obdurate to my
+pleadings. All I could get him to say was, 'Let the stranger who
+interests himself in the matter come and talk to me. I should like to
+see the man who thrashed that brute Tom Bowles: if he got the better
+of him perhaps he may get the better of me. Bring him with you to my
+harvest-supper to-morrow evening.' Now, will you come?"
+
+"Nay," said Kenelm, reluctantly; "but if he only asks me in order to
+gratify a very vulgar curiosity, I don't think I have much chance of
+serving Will Somers. What do you say?"
+
+"The Squire is a good man of business, and, though no one can call him
+unjust or grasping, still he is very little touched by sentiment; and
+we must own that a sickly cripple like poor Will is not a very
+eligible tenant. If, therefore, it depended only on your chance with
+the Squire, I should not be very sanguine. But we have an ally in his
+daughter. She is very fond of Jessie Wiles, and she has shown great
+kindness to Will. In fact, a sweeter, more benevolent, sympathizing
+nature than that of Cecilia Travers does not exist. She has great
+influence with her father, and through her you may win him."
+
+"I particularly dislike having anything to do with women," said
+Kenelm, churlishly. "Parsons are accustomed to get round them.
+Surely, my dear sir, you are more fit for that work than I am."
+
+"Permit me humbly to doubt that proposition; one does n't get very
+quickly round the women when one carries the weight of years on one's
+back. But whenever you want the aid of a parson to bring your own
+wooing to a happy conclusion, I shall be happy, in my special capacity
+of parson, to perform the ceremony required."
+
+"/Dii meliora/!" said Kenelm, gravely. "Some ills are too serious to
+be approached even in joke. As for Miss Travers, the moment you call
+her benevolent you inspire me with horror. I know too well what a
+benevolent girl is,--officious, restless, fidgety, with a snub nose,
+and her pocket full of tracts. I will not go to the harvest-supper."
+
+"Hist!" said the Parson, softly. They were now passing the cottage
+of Mrs. Somers; and while Kenelm was haranguing against benevolent
+girls, Mr. Lethbridge had paused before it, and was furtively looking
+in at the window. "Hist! and come here,--gently."
+
+Kenelm obeyed, and looked in through the window. Will was seated;
+Jessie Wiles had nestled herself at his feet, and was holding his hand
+in both hers, looking up into his face. Her profile alone was seen,
+but its expression was unutterably soft and tender. His face, bent
+downwards towards her, wore a mournful expression; nay, the tears were
+rolling silently down his cheeks. Kenelm listened and heard her say,
+"Don't talk so, Will, you break my heart; it is I who am not worthy of
+you."
+
+"Parson," said Kenelm, as they walked on, "I must go to that
+confounded harvest-supper. I begin to think there is something true
+in the venerable platitude about love in a cottage. And Will Somers
+must be married in haste, in order to repent at leisure."
+
+"I don't see why a man should repent having married a good girl whom
+he loves."
+
+"You don't? Answer me candidly. Did you ever meet a man who repented
+having married?"
+
+"Of course I have; very often."
+
+"Well, think again, and answer as candidly. Did you ever meet a man
+who repented not having married?"
+
+The Parson mused, and was silent.
+
+"Sir," said Kenelm, "your reticence proves your honesty, and I respect
+it." So saying, he bounded off, and left the Parson crying out
+wildly, "But--but--"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+MR. SAUNDERSON and Kenelm sat in the arbour: the former sipping his
+grog and smoking his pipe; the latter looking forth into the summer
+night skies with an earnest yet abstracted gaze, as if he were trying
+to count the stars in the Milky Way.
+
+"Ha!" said Mr. Saunderson, who was concluding an argument; "you see it
+now, don't you?"
+
+"I? not a bit of it. You tell me that your grandfather was a farmer,
+and your father was a farmer, and that you have been a farmer for
+thirty years; and from these premises you deduce the illogical and
+irrational conclusion that therefore your son must be a farmer."
+
+"Young man, you may think yourself very knowing 'cause you have been
+at the 'Varsity, and swept away a headful of book-learning."
+
+"Stop," quoth Kenelm. "You grant that a university is learned."
+
+"Well, I suppose so."
+
+"But how could it be learned if those who quitted it brought the
+learning away? We leave it all behind us in the care of the tutors.
+But I know what you were going to say,--that it is not because I had
+read more books than you have that I was to give myself airs and
+pretend to have more knowledge of life than a man of your years and
+experience. Agreed, as a general rule. But does not every doctor,
+however wise and skilful, prefer taking another doctor's opinion about
+himself, even though that other doctor has just started in practice?
+And seeing that doctors, taking them as a body, are monstrous clever
+fellows, is not the example they set us worth following? Does it not
+prove that no man, however wise, is a good judge of his own case?
+Now, your son's case is really your case: you see it through the
+medium of your likings and dislikings; and insist upon forcing a
+square peg into a round hole, because in a round hole you, being a
+round peg, feel tight and comfortable. Now I call that irrational."
+
+"I don't see why my son has any right to fancy himself a square peg,"
+said the farmer, doggedly, "when his father and his grandfather and
+his great-grandfather have been round pegs; and it is agin' nature for
+any creature not to take after its own kind. A dog is a pointer or a
+sheep-dog according as its forebears were pointers or sheep-dogs.
+There," cried the farmer, triumphantly, shaking the ashes out of his
+pipe. "I think I have posed you, young master!"
+
+"No; for you have taken it for granted that the breeds have not been
+crossed. But suppose that a sheep-dog has married a pointer, are you
+sure that his son will not be more of a pointer than a sheep-dog?"
+
+Mr. Saunderson arrested himself in the task of refilling his pipe, and
+scratched his head.
+
+"You see," continued Kenelm, "that you have crossed the breed. You
+married a tradesman's daughter, and I dare say her grandfather and
+great-grandfather were tradesmen too. Now, most sons take after their
+mothers, and therefore Mr. Saunderson junior takes after his kind on
+the distaff side, and comes into the world a square peg, which can
+only be tight and comfortable in a square hole. It is no use arguing,
+Farmer: your boy must go to his uncle; and there's an end of the
+matter."
+
+"By goles!" said the farmer, "you seem to think you can talk me out of
+my senses."
+
+"No; but I think if you had your own way you would talk your son into
+the workhouse."
+
+"What! by sticking to the land like his father before him? Let a man
+stick by the land, and the land will stick by him."
+
+"Let a man stick in the mud, and the mud will stick to him. You put
+your heart in your farm, and your son would only put his foot into it.
+Courage! Don't you see that Time is a whirligig, and all things come
+round? Every day somebody leaves the land and goes off into trade.
+By and by he grows rich, and then his great desire is to get back to
+the land again. He left it the son of a farmer: he returns to it as a
+squire. Your son, when he gets to be fifty, will invest his savings
+in acres, and have tenants of his own. Lord, how he will lay down the
+law to them! I would not advise you to take a farm under him."
+
+"Catch me at it!" said the farmer. "He would turn all the contents of
+the 'pothecary's shop into my fallows, and call it 'progress.'"
+
+"Let him physic the fallows when he has farms of his own: keep yours
+out of his chemical clutches. Come, I shall tell him to pack up and
+be off to his uncle's next week?"
+
+"Well, well," said the farmer, in a resigned tone: "a wilful man must
+e'en have his way."
+
+"And the best thing a sensible man can do is not to cross it. Mr.
+Saunderson, give me your honest hand. You are one of those men who
+put the sons of good fathers in mind of their own; and I think of mine
+when I say 'God bless you!'"
+
+Quitting the farmer, Kenelm re-entered the house, and sought Mr.
+Saunderson junior in his own room. He found that young gentleman
+still up, and reading an eloquent tract on the Emancipation of the
+Human Race from all Tyrannical Control,--Political, Social,
+Ecclesiastical, and Domestic.
+
+The lad looked up sulkily, and said, on encountering Kenelm's
+melancholic visage, "Ah! I see you have talked with the old governor,
+and he'll not hear of it."
+
+"In the first place," answered Kenelm, "since you value yourself on a
+superior education, allow me to advise you to study the English
+language, as the forms of it are maintained by the elder authors,
+whom, in spite of an Age of Progress, men of superior education
+esteem. No one who has gone through that study; no one, indeed, who
+has studied the Ten Commandments in the vernacular,--commits the
+mistake of supposing that 'the old governor' is a synonymous
+expression for 'father.' In the second place, since you pretend to the
+superior enlightenment which results from a superior education, learn
+to know better your own self before you set up as a teacher of
+mankind. Excuse the liberty I take, as your sincere well-wisher, when
+I tell you that you are at present a conceited fool,--in short, that
+which makes one boy call another an 'ass.' But when one has a poor
+head he may redeem the average balance of humanity by increasing the
+wealth of the heart. Try and increase yours. Your father consents to
+your choice of your lot at the sacrifice of all his own inclinations.
+This is a sore trial to a father's pride, a father's affection; and
+few fathers make such sacrifices with a good grace. I have thus kept
+my promise to you, and enforced your wishes on Mr. Saunderson's
+judgment, because I am sure you would have been a very bad farmer. It
+now remains for you to show that you can be a very good tradesman.
+You are bound in honour to me and to your father to try your best to
+be so; and meanwhile leave the task of upsetting the world to those
+who have no shop in it, which would go crash in the general tumble.
+And so good-night to you."
+
+To these admonitory words, /sacro digna silentio/, Saunderson junior
+listened with a dropping jaw and fascinated staring eyes. He felt
+like an infant to whom the nurse has given a hasty shake, and who is
+too stupefied by that operation to know whether he is hurt or not.
+
+A minute after Kenelm had quitted the room he reappeared at the door,
+and said in a conciliatory whisper, "Don't take it to heart that I
+called you a conceited fool and an ass. These terms are no doubt just
+as applicable to myself. But there is a more conceited fool and a
+greater ass than either of us; and that is the Age in which we have
+the misfortune to be born,--an Age of Progress, Mr. Saunderson,
+junior!--an Age of Prigs."
+
+
+
+
+BOOK III.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IF there were a woman in the world who might be formed and fitted to
+reconcile Kenelm Chillingly to the sweet troubles of love and the
+pleasant bickerings of wedded life, one might reasonably suppose that
+that woman could be found in Cecilia Travers. An only daughter and
+losing her mother in childhood, she had been raised to the
+mistress-ship of a household at an age in which most girls are still
+putting their dolls to bed; and thus had early acquired that sense of
+responsibility, accompanied with the habits of self-reliance, which
+seldom fails to give a certain nobility to character; though almost as
+often, in the case of women, it steals away the tender gentleness
+which constitutes the charm of their sex.
+
+It had not done so in the instance of Cecilia Travers, because she was
+so womanlike that even the exercise of power could not make her
+manlike. There was in the depth of her nature such an instinct of
+sweetness that wherever her mind toiled and wandered it gathered and
+hoarded honey.
+
+She had one advantage over most girls in the same rank of life,--she
+had not been taught to fritter away such capacities for culture as
+Providence gave her in the sterile nothingnesses which are called
+feminine accomplishments. She did not paint figures out of drawing in
+meagre water-colours; she had not devoted years of her life to the
+inflicting on polite audiences the boredom of Italian bravuras, which
+they could hear better sung by a third-rate professional singer in a
+metropolitan music-hall. I am afraid she had no other female
+accomplishments than those by which the sempstress or embroideress
+earns her daily bread. That sort of work she loved, and she did it
+deftly.
+
+But if she had not been profitlessly plagued by masters, Cecilia
+Travers had been singularly favoured by her father's choice of a
+teacher: no great merit in him either. He had a prejudice against
+professional governesses, and it chanced that among his own family
+connections was a certain Mrs. Campion, a lady of some literary
+distinction, whose husband had held a high situation in one of our
+public offices, and living, much to his satisfaction, up to a very
+handsome income, had died, much to the astonishment of others, without
+leaving a farthing behind him.
+
+Fortunately, there were no children to provide for. A small
+government pension was allotted to the widow; and as her husband's
+house had been made by her one of the pleasantest in London, she was
+popular enough to be invited by numerous friends to their country
+seats; among others, by Mr. Travers. She came intending to stay a
+fortnight. At the end of that time she had grown so attached to
+Cecilia, and Cecilia to her, and her presence had become so pleasant
+and so useful to her host, that the Squire entreated her to stay and
+undertake the education of his daughter. Mrs. Campion, after some
+hesitation, gratefully consented; and thus Cecilia, from the age of
+eight to her present age of nineteen, had the inestimable advantage of
+living in constant companionship with a woman of richly cultivated
+mind, accustomed to hear the best criticisms on the best books, and
+adding to no small accomplishment in literature the refinement of
+manners and that sort of prudent judgment which result from habitual
+intercourse with an intellectual and gracefully world-wise circle of
+society: so that Cecilia herself, without being at all blue or
+pedantic, became one of those rare young women with whom a
+well-educated man can converse on equal terms; from whom he gains as
+much as he can impart to her; while a man who, not caring much about
+books, is still gentleman enough to value good breeding, felt a relief
+in exchanging the forms of his native language without the shock of
+hearing that a bishop was "a swell" or a croquet-party "awfully
+jolly."
+
+In a word, Cecilia was one of those women whom Heaven forms for man's
+helpmate; who, if he were born to rank and wealth, would, as his
+partner, reflect on them a new dignity, and add to their enjoyment by
+bringing forth their duties; who, not less if the husband she chose
+were poor and struggling, would encourage, sustain, and soothe him,
+take her own share of his burdens, and temper the bitterness of life
+with the all-recompensing sweetness of her smile.
+
+Little, indeed, as yet had she ever thought of love or of lovers. She
+had not even formed to herself any of those ideals which float before
+the eyes of most girls when they enter their teens. But of two things
+she felt inly convinced: first, that she could never wed where she did
+not love; and secondly, that where she did love it would be for life.
+
+And now I close this sketch with a picture of the girl herself. She
+has just come into her room from inspecting the preparations for the
+evening entertainment which her father is to give to his tenants and
+rural neighbours.
+
+She has thrown aside her straw hat, and put down the large basket
+which she has emptied of flowers. She pauses before the glass,
+smoothing back the ruffled bands of her hair,--hair of a dark, soft
+chestnut, silky and luxuriant,--never polluted, and never, so long as
+she lives, to be polluted by auricomous cosmetics, far from that
+delicate darkness, every tint of the colours traditionally dedicated
+to the locks of Judas.
+
+Her complexion, usually of that soft bloom which inclines to paleness,
+is now heightened into glow by exercise and sunlight. The features
+are small and feminine; the eyes dark with long lashes; the mouth
+singularly beautiful, with a dimple on either side, and parted now in
+a half-smile at some pleasant recollection, giving a glimpse of small
+teeth glistening as pearls. But the peculiar charm of her face is in
+an expression of serene happiness, that sort of happiness which seems
+as if it had never been interrupted by a sorrow, had never been
+troubled by a sin,--that holy kind of happiness which belongs to
+innocence, the light reflected from a heart and conscience alike at
+peace.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+IT was a lovely summer evening for the Squire's rural entertainment.
+Mr. Travers had some guests staying with him: they had dined early for
+the occasion, and were now grouped with their host a little before six
+o'clock on the lawn. The house was of irregular architecture, altered
+or added to at various periods from the reign of Elizabeth to that of
+Victoria: at one end, the oldest part, a gable with mullion windows;
+at the other, the newest part, a flat-roofed wing, with modern sashes
+opening to the ground, the intermediate part much hidden by a veranda
+covered with creepers in full bloom. The lawn was a spacious
+table-land facing the west, and backed by a green and gentle hill,
+crowned with the ruins of an ancient priory. On one side of the lawn
+stretched a flower-garden and pleasure-ground, originally planned by
+Repton; on the opposite angles of the sward were placed two large
+marquees,--one for dancing, the other for supper. Towards the south
+the view was left open, and commanded the prospect of an old English
+park, not of the stateliest character; not intersected with ancient
+avenues, nor clothed with profitless fern as lairs for deer: but the
+park of a careful agriculturist, uniting profit with show, the sward
+duly drained and nourished, fit to fatten bullocks in an incredibly
+short time, and somewhat spoilt to the eye by subdivisions of wire
+fence. Mr. Travers was renowned for skilful husbandry, and the
+general management of land to the best advantage. He had come into
+the estate while still in childhood, and thus enjoyed the
+accumulations of a long minority. He had entered the Guards at the
+age of eighteen, and having more command of money than most of his
+contemporaries, though they might be of higher rank and the sons of
+richer men, he had been much courted and much plundered. At the age
+of twenty-five he found himself one of the leaders of fashion,
+renowned chiefly for reckless daring where-ever honour could be
+plucked out of the nettle danger: a steeple-chaser, whose exploits
+made a quiet man's hair stand on end; a rider across country, taking
+leaps which a more cautious huntsman carefully avoided. Known at
+Paris as well as in London, he had been admired by ladies whose smiles
+had cost him duels, the marks of which still remained in glorious
+scars on his person. No man ever seemed more likely to come to direst
+grief before attaining the age of thirty, for at twenty-seven all the
+accumulations of his minority were gone; and his estate, which, when
+he came of age, was scarcely three thousand a year, but entirely at
+his own disposal, was mortgaged up to its eyes.
+
+His friends began to shake their heads and call him "poor fellow;"
+but, with all his wild faults, Leopold Travers had been wholly pure
+from the two vices out of which a man does not often redeem himself.
+He had never drunk and he had never gambled. His nerves were not
+broken, his brain was not besotted. There was plenty of health in him
+yet, mind and body. At the critical period of his life he married for
+love, and his choice was a most felicitous one. The lady had no
+fortune; but though handsome and high-born, she had no taste for
+extravagance, and no desire for other society than that of the man she
+loved. So when he said, "Let us settle in the country and try our
+best to live on a few hundreds, lay by, and keep the old place out of
+the market," she consented with a joyful heart: and marvel it was to
+all how this wild Leopold Travers did settle down; did take to
+cultivating his home farm with his men from sunrise to sunset like a
+common tenant-farmer; did contrive to pay the interest on the
+mortgages, and keep his head above water. After some years of
+pupilage in this school of thrift, during which his habits became
+formed and his whole character braced, Leopold Travers suddenly found
+himself again rich, through the wife whom he had so prudently married
+without other dower than her love and her virtues. Her only brother,
+Lord Eagleton, a Scotch peer, had been engaged in marriage to a young
+lady, considered to be a rare prize in the lottery of wedlock. The
+marriage was broken off under very disastrous circumstances; but the
+young lord, good-looking and agreeable, was naturally expected to seek
+speedy consolation in some other alliance. Nevertheless he did not do
+so: he became a confirmed invalid, and died single, leaving to his
+sister all in his power to save from the distant kinsman who succeeded
+to his lands and title,--a goodly sum, which not only sufficed to pay
+off the mortgages on Neesdale Park but bestowed on its owner a surplus
+which the practical knowledge of country life that he had acquired
+enabled him to devote with extraordinary profit to the general
+improvement of his estate. He replaced tumble-down old farm buildings
+with new constructions on the most approved principles; bought or
+pensioned off certain slovenly incompetent tenants; threw sundry petty
+holdings into large farms suited to the buildings he constructed;
+purchased here and there small bits of land, commodious to the farms
+they adjoined, and completing the integrity of his ring-fence; stubbed
+up profitless woods which diminished the value of neighbouring arables
+by obstructing sun and air and harbouring legions of rabbits; and
+then, seeking tenants of enterprise and capital, more than doubled his
+original yearly rental, and perhaps more than tripled the market value
+of his property. Simultaneously with this acquisition of fortune, he
+emerged from the inhospitable and unsocial obscurity which his
+previous poverty had compelled, took an active part in county
+business, proved himself an excellent speaker at public meetings,
+subscribed liberally to the hunt, and occasionally joined in it,--a
+less bold but a wiser rider than of yore. In short, as Themistocles
+boasted that he could make a small state great, so Leopold Travers
+might boast with equal truth, that, by his energies, his judgment, and
+the weight of his personal character, he had made the owner of a
+property which had been at his accession to it of third-rate rank in
+the county a personage so considerable that no knight of the shire
+against whom he declared could have been elected, and if he had
+determined to stand himself he would have been chosen free of expense.
+
+But he said, on being solicited to become a candidate, "When a man
+once gives himself up to the care and improvement of a landed estate,
+he has no time and no heart for anything else. An estate is an income
+or a kingdom, according as the owner chooses to take it. I take it as
+a kingdom, and I cannot be /roi faineant/, with a steward for /maire
+du palais/. A king does not go into the House of Commons."
+
+Three years after this rise in the social ladder, Mrs. Travers was
+seized with congestion of the lungs followed by pleurisy, and died
+after less than a week's illness. Leopold never wholly recovered her
+loss. Though still young and always handsome, the idea of another
+wife, the love of another woman, were notions which he dismissed from
+his, mind with a quiet scorn. He was too masculine a creature to
+parade grief. For some weeks, indeed, he shut himself up in his own
+room, so rigidly secluded that he would not see even his daughter.
+But one morning he appeared in his fields as usual, and from that day
+resumed his old habits, and gradually renewed that cordial interchange
+of hospitalities which had popularly distinguished him since his
+accession to wealth. Still people felt that the man was changed; he
+was more taciturn, more grave: if always just in his dealings, he took
+the harder side of justice, where in his wife's time he had taken the
+gentler. Perhaps, to a man of strong will, the habitual intercourse
+with an amiable woman is essential for those occasions in which Will
+best proves the fineness of its temper by the facility with which it
+can be bent.
+
+It may be said that Leopold Travers might have found such intercourse
+in the intimate companionship of his own daughter. But she was a mere
+child when his wife died, and she grew up to womanhood too insensibly
+for him to note the change. Besides, where a man has found a wife his
+all-in-all, a daughter can never supply her place. The very reverence
+due to children precludes unrestrained confidence; and there is not
+that sense of permanent fellowship in a daughter which a man has in a
+wife,--any day a stranger may appear and carry her off from him. At
+all events Leopold did not own in Cecilia the softening influence to
+which he had yielded in her mother. He was fond of her, proud of her,
+indulgent to her; but the indulgence had its set limits. Whatever she
+asked solely for herself he granted; whatever she wished for matters
+under feminine control--the domestic household, the parish school, the
+alms-receiving poor--obtained his gentlest consideration. But when
+she had been solicited by some offending out-of-door dependant or some
+petty defaulting tenant to use her good offices in favour of the
+culprit, Mr. Travers checked her interference by a firm "No," though
+uttered in a mild accent, and accompanied with a masculine aphorism to
+the effect that "there would be no such things as strict justice and
+disciplined order in the world if a man yielded to a woman's pleadings
+in any matter of business between man and man." From this it will be
+seen that Mr. Lethbridge had overrated the value of Cecilia's alliance
+in the negotiation respecting Mrs. Bawtrey's premium and shop.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+IF, having just perused what has thus been written on the biographical
+antecedents and mental characteristics of Leopold Travers, you, my
+dear reader, were to be personally presented to that gentleman as he
+now stands, the central figure of the group gathered round him, on his
+terrace, you would probably be surprised,--nay, I have no doubt you
+would say to yourself, "Not at all the sort of man I expected." In
+that slender form, somewhat below the middle height; in that fair
+countenance which still, at the age of forty-eight, retains a delicacy
+of feature and of colouring which is of almost womanlike beauty, and,
+from the quiet placidity of its expression, conveys at first glance
+the notion of almost womanlike mildness,--it would be difficult to
+recognize a man who in youth had been renowned for reckless daring, in
+maturer years more honourably distinguished for steadfast prudence and
+determined purpose, and who, alike in faults or in merits, was as
+emphatically masculine as a biped in trousers can possibly be.
+
+Mr. Travers is listening to a young man of about two and twenty, the
+eldest son of the richest nobleman of the county, and who intends to
+start for the representation of the shire at the next general
+election, which is close at hand. The Hon. George Belvoir is tall,
+inclined to be stout, and will look well on the hustings. He has had
+those pains taken with his education which an English peer generally
+does take with the son intended to succeed to the representation of an
+honourable name and the responsibilities of high station. If eldest
+sons do not often make as great a figure in the world as their younger
+brothers, it is not because their minds are less cultivated, but
+because they have less motive power for action. George Belvoir was
+well read, especially in that sort of reading which befits a future
+senator,--history, statistics, political economy, so far as that
+dismal science is compatible with the agricultural interest. He was
+also well-principled, had a strong sense of discipline and duty, was
+prepared in politics firmly to uphold as right whatever was proposed
+by his own party, and to reject as wrong whatever was proposed by the
+other. At present he was rather loud and noisy in the assertion of
+his opinions,--young men fresh from the University generally are. It
+was the secret wish of Mr. Travers that George Belvoir should become
+his son-in-law; less because of his rank and wealth (though such
+advantages were not of a nature to be despised by a practical man like
+Leopold Travers) than on account of those qualities in his personal
+character which were likely to render him an excellent husband.
+
+Seated on wire benches, just without the veranda, but shaded by its
+fragrant festoons, were Mrs. Campion and three ladies, the wives of
+neighbouring squires. Cecilia stood a little apart from them, bending
+over a long-backed Skye terrier, whom she was teaching to stand on his
+hind legs.
+
+But see, the company are arriving! How suddenly that green space, ten
+minutes ago so solitary, has become animated and populous!
+
+Indeed the park now presented a very lively appearance: vans, carts,
+and farmers' chaises were seen in crowded procession along the winding
+road; foot-passengers were swarming towards the house in all
+directions. The herds and flocks in the various enclosures stopped
+grazing to stare at the unwonted invaders of their pasture: yet the
+orderly nature of their host imparted a respect for order to his ruder
+visitors; not even a turbulent boy attempted to scale the fences, or
+creep through their wires; all threaded the narrow turnstiles which
+gave egress from one subdivision of the sward to another.
+
+Mr. Travers turned to George Belvoir: "I see old farmer Steen's yellow
+gig. Mind how you talk to him, George. He is full of whims and
+crotchets, and if you once brush his feathers the wrong way he will be
+as vindictive as a parrot. But he is the man who must second you at
+the nomination. No other tenant-farmer carries the same weight with
+his class."
+
+"I suppose," said George, "that if Mr. Steen is the best man to second
+me at the hustings, he is a good speaker?"
+
+"A good speaker? in one sense he is. He never says a word too much.
+The last time he seconded the nomination of the man you are to
+succeed, this was his speech: 'Brother Electors, for twenty years I
+have been one of the judges at our county cattle-show. I know one
+animal from another. Looking at the specimens before us to-day none
+of them are as good of their kind as I've seen elsewhere. But if you
+choose Sir John Hogg you'll not get the wrong sow by the ear!'"
+
+"At least," said George, after a laugh at this sample of eloquence
+unadorned, "Mr. Steen does not err on the side of flattery in his
+commendations of a candidate. But what makes him such an authority
+with the farmers? Is he a first-rate agriculturist?"
+
+"In thrift, yes!--in spirit, no! He says that all expensive
+experiments should be left to gentlemen farmers. He is an authority
+with other tenants: firstly, because he is a very keen censor of their
+landlords; secondly, because he holds himself thoroughly independent
+of his own; thirdly, because he is supposed to have studied the
+political bearings of questions that affect the landed interest, and
+has more than once been summoned to give his opinion on such subjects
+to Committees of both Houses of Parliament. Here he comes. Observe,
+when I leave you to talk to him: firstly, that you confess utter
+ignorance of practical farming; nothing enrages him like the
+presumption of a gentleman farmer like myself: secondly, that you ask
+his opinion on the publication of Agricultural Statistics, just
+modestly intimating that you, as at present advised, think that
+inquisitorial researches into a man's business involve principles
+opposed to the British Constitution. And on all that he may say as to
+the shortcomings of landlords in general, and of your father in
+particular, make no reply, but listen with an air of melancholy
+conviction. How do you do, Mr. Steen, and how's the mistress? Why
+have you not brought her with you?"
+
+"My good woman is in the straw again, Squire. Who is that youngster?"
+
+"Hist! let me introduce Mr. Belvoir."
+
+Mr. Belvoir offers his hand.
+
+"No, sir!" vociferates Steen, putting both his own hands behind him.
+"No offence, young gentleman. But I don't give my hand at first sight
+to a man who wants to shake a vote out of it. Not that I know
+anything against you. But, if you be a farmer's friend rabbits are
+not, and my lord your father is a great one for rabbits."
+
+"Indeed you are mistaken there!" cries George, with vehement
+earnestness. Mr. Travers gave him a nudge, as much as to say, "Hold
+your tongue." George understood the hint, and is carried off meekly
+by Mr. Steen down the solitude of the plantations.
+
+The guests now arrived fast and thick. They consisted chiefly not
+only of Mr. Travers's tenants, but of farmers and their families
+within the range of eight or ten miles from the Park, with a few of
+the neighbouring gentry and clergy.
+
+It was not a supper intended to include the labouring class; for Mr.
+Travers had an especial dislike to the custom of exhibiting peasants
+at feeding-time, as if they were so many tamed animals of an inferior
+species. When he entertained work-people, he made them comfortable in
+their own way; and peasants feel more comfortable when not invited to
+be stared out of countenance.
+
+"Well, Lethbridge," said Mr. Travers, "where is the young gladiator
+you promised to bring?"
+
+"I did bring him, and he was by my side not a minute ago. He has
+suddenly given me the slip: 'abiit, evasit, erupit.' I was looking
+round for him in vain when you accosted me."
+
+"I hope he has not seen some guest of mine whom he wants to fight."
+
+"I hope not," answered the Parson, doubtfully. "He's a strange
+fellow. But I think you will be pleased with him; that is, if he can
+be found. Oh, Mr. Saunderson, how do you do? Have you seen your
+visitor?"
+
+"No, sir, I have just come. My mistress, Squire, and my three girls;
+and this is my son."
+
+"A hearty welcome to all," said the graceful Squire; (turning to
+Saunderson junior), "I suppose you are fond of dancing. Get yourself
+a partner. We may as well open the ball."
+
+"Thank you, sir, but I never dance," said Saunderson junior, with an
+air of austere superiority to an amusement which the March of
+Intellect had left behind.
+
+"Then you'll have less to regret when you are grown old. But the band
+is striking up; we must adjourn to the marquee. George" (Mr. Belvoir,
+escaped from Mr. Steen, had just made his appearance), "will you give
+your arm to Cecilia, to whom I think you are engaged for the first
+quadrille?"
+
+"I hope," said George to Cecilia, as they walked towards the marquee,
+"that Mr. Steen is not an average specimen of the electors I shall
+have to canvass. Whether he has been brought up to honour his own
+father and mother I can't pretend to say, but he seems bent upon
+teaching me not to honour mine. Having taken away my father's moral
+character upon the unfounded allegation that he loved rabbits better
+than mankind, he then assailed my innocent mother on the score of
+religion, and inquired when she was going over to the Church of Rome,
+basing that inquiry on the assertion that she had taken away her
+custom from a Protestant grocer and conferred it on a Papist."
+
+"Those are favourable signs, Mr. Belvoir. Mr. Steen always prefaces a
+kindness by a great deal of incivility. I asked him once to lend me a
+pony, my own being suddenly taken lame, and he seized that opportunity
+to tell me that my father was an impostor in pretending to be a judge
+of cattle; that he was a tyrant, screwing his tenants in order to
+indulge extravagant habits of hospitality; and implied that it would
+be a great mercy if we did not live to apply to him, not for a pony,
+but for parochial relief. I went away indignant. But he sent me the
+pony. I am sure he will give you his vote."
+
+"Meanwhile," said George, with a timid attempt at gallantry, as they
+now commenced the quadrille, "I take encouragement from the belief
+that I have the good wishes of Miss Travers. If ladies had votes, as
+Mr. Mill recommends, why, then--"
+
+"Why, then, I should vote as Papa does," said Miss Travers, simply.
+"And if women had votes, I suspect there would be very little peace in
+any household where they did not vote as the man at the head of it
+wished them."
+
+"But I believe, after all," said the aspirant to Parliament,
+seriously, "that the advocates for female suffrage would limit it to
+women independent of masculine control, widows and spinsters voting in
+right of their own independent tenements."
+
+"In that case," said Cecilia, "I suppose they would still generally go
+by the opinion of some man they relied on, or make a very silly choice
+if they did not."
+
+"You underrate the good sense of your sex."
+
+"I hope not. Do you underrate the good sense of yours, if, in far
+more than half the things appertaining to daily life, the wisest men
+say, 'Better leave /them/ to the /women/'? But you're forgetting the
+figure, /cavalier seul/."
+
+"By the way," said George, in another interval of the dance, "do you
+know a Mr. Chillingly, the son of Sir Peter, of Exmundham, in
+Westshire?"
+
+"No; why do you ask?"
+
+"Because I thought I caught a glimpse of his face: it was just as Mr.
+Steen was bearing me away down that plantation. From what you say, I
+must suppose I was mistaken."
+
+"Chillingly! But surely some persons were talking yesterday at dinner
+about a young gentleman of that name as being likely to stand for
+Westshire at the next election, but who had made a very unpopular and
+eccentric speech on the occasion of his coming of age."
+
+"The same man: I was at college with him,--a very singular character.
+He was thought clever; won a prize or two; took a good degree: but it
+was generally said that he would have deserved a much higher one if
+some of his papers had not contained covert jests either on the
+subject or the examiners. It is a dangerous thing to set up as a
+humourist in practical life,--especially public life. They say Mr.
+Pitt had naturally a great deal of wit and humour, but he wisely
+suppressed any evidence of those qualities in his Parliamentary
+speeches. Just like Chillingly, to turn into ridicule the important
+event of festivities in honour of his coming of age,--an occasion that
+can never occur again in the whole course of his life."
+
+"It was bad taste," said Cecilia, "if intentional. But perhaps he was
+misunderstood, or taken by surprise."
+
+"Misunderstood,--possibly; but taken by surprise,--no. The coolest
+fellow I ever met. Not that I have met him very often. Latterly,
+indeed, at Cambridge he lived much alone. It was said that he read
+hard. I doubt that; for my rooms were just over his, and I know that
+he was much more frequently out of doors than in. He rambled a good
+deal about the country on foot. I have seen him in by-lanes a dozen
+miles distant from the town when I have been riding back from the
+bunt. He was fond of the water, and pulled a mighty strong oar, but
+declined to belong to our University crew; yet if ever there was a
+fight between undergraduates and bargemen, he was sure to be in the
+midst of it. Yes, a very great oddity indeed, full of contradictions,
+for a milder, quieter fellow in general intercourse you could not see;
+and as for the jests of which he was accused in his examination
+papers, his very face should have acquitted him of the charge before
+any impartial jury of his countrymen."
+
+"You sketch quite an interesting picture of him," said Cecilia. "I
+wish we did know him: he would be worth seeing."
+
+"And, once seen, you would not easily forget him,--a dark, handsome
+face, with large melancholy eyes, and with one of those spare slender
+figures which enable a man to disguise his strength, as a fraudulent
+billiard-player disguises his play."
+
+The dance had ceased during this conversation, and the speakers were
+now walking slowly to and fro the lawn amid the general crowd.
+
+"How well your father plays the part of host to these rural folks!"
+said George, with a secret envy. "Do observe how quietly he puts that
+shy young farmer at his ease, and now how kindly he deposits that lame
+old lady on the bench, and places the stool under her feet. What a
+canvasser he would be! and how young he still looks, and how monstrous
+handsome!"
+
+This last compliment was uttered as Travers, having made the old lady
+comfortable, had joined the three Miss Saundersons, dividing his
+pleasant smile equally between them; and seemingly unconscious of the
+admiring glances which many another rural beauty directed towards him
+as he passed along. About the man there was a certain indescribable
+elegance, a natural suavity free from all that affectation, whether of
+forced heartiness or condescending civility, which too often
+characterizes the well-meant efforts of provincial magnates to
+accommodate themselves to persons of inferior station and breeding.
+It is a great advantage to a man to have passed his early youth in
+that most equal and most polished of all democracies,--the best
+society of large capitals. And to such acquired advantage Leopold
+Travers added the inborn qualities that please.
+
+Later in the evening Travers, again accosting Mr. Lethbridge, said, "I
+have been talking much to the Saundersons about that young man who did
+us the inestimable service of punishing your ferocious parishioner,
+Tom Bowles; and all I hear so confirms the interest your own account
+inspired me with that I should really like much to make his
+acquaintance. Has not he turned up yet?"
+
+"No; I fear he must have gone. But in that case I hope you will take
+his generous desire to serve my poor basket-maker into benevolent
+consideration."
+
+"Do not press me; I feel so reluctant to refuse any request of yours.
+But I have my own theory as to the management of an estate, and my
+system does not allow of favour. I should wish to explain that to the
+young stranger himself; for I hold courage in such honour that I do
+not like a brave man to leave these parts with an impression that
+Leopold Travers is an ungracious churl. However, he may not have
+gone. I will go and look for him myself. Just tell Cecilia that she
+has danced enough with the gentry, and that I have told Farmer Turby's
+son, a fine young fellow and a capital rider across country, that I
+expect him to show my daughter that he can dance as well as he rides."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+QUITTING Mr. Lethbridge, Travers turned with quick step towards the
+more solitary part of the grounds. He did not find the object of his
+search in the walks of the plantation; and, on taking the circuit of
+his demesne, wound his way back towards the lawn through a sequestered
+rocky hollow in the rear of the marquee, which had been devoted to a
+fernery. Here he came to a sudden pause; for, seated a few yards
+before him on a gray crag, and the moonlight full on his face, he saw
+a solitary man, looking upwards with a still and mournful gaze,
+evidently absorbed in abstract contemplation.
+
+Recalling the description of the stranger which he had heard from Mr.
+Lethbridge and the Saundersons, Mr. Travers felt sure that he had come
+on him at last. He approached gently; and, being much concealed by
+the tall ferns, Kenelm (for that itinerant it was) did not see him
+advance, until he felt a hand on his shoulder, and, turning round,
+beheld a winning smile and heard a pleasant voice.
+
+"I think I am not mistaken," said Leopold Travers, "in assuming you to
+be the gentleman whom Mr. Lethbridge promised to introduce to me, and
+who is staying with my tenant, Mr. Saunderson?"
+
+Kenelm rose and bowed. Travers saw at once that it was the bow of a
+man in his own world, and not in keeping with the Sunday costume of a
+petty farmer. "Nay," said he, "let us talk seated;" and placing
+himself on the crag, he made room for Kenelm beside him.
+
+"In the first place," resumed Travers, "I must thank you for having
+done a public service in putting down the brute force which has long
+tyrannized over the neighbourhood. Often in my young days I have felt
+the disadvantage of height and sinews, whenever it would have been a
+great convenience to terminate dispute or chastise insolence by a
+resort to man's primitive weapons; but I never more lamented my
+physical inferiority than on certain occasions when I would have given
+my ears to be able to thrash Tom Bowles myself. It has been as great
+a disgrace to my estate that that bully should so long have infested
+it as it is to the King of Italy not to be able with all his armies to
+put down a brigand in Calabria."
+
+"Pardon me, Mr. Travers, but I am one of those rare persons who do not
+like to hear ill of their friends. Mr. Thomas Bowles is a particular
+friend of mine."
+
+"Eh!" cried Travers, aghast. "'Friend!' you are joking.
+
+"You would not accuse me of joking if you knew me better. But surely
+you have felt that there are few friends one likes more cordially, and
+ought to respect more heedfully, than the enemy with whom one has just
+made it up."
+
+"You say well, and I accept the rebuke," said Travers, more and more
+surprised. "And I certainly have less right to abuse Mr. Bowles than
+you have, since I had not the courage to fight him. To turn to
+another subject less provocative. Mr. Lethbridge has told me of your
+amiable desire to serve two of his young parishioners, Will Somers and
+Jessie Wiles, and of your generous offer to pay the money Mrs. Bawtrey
+demands for the transfer of her lease. To that negotiation my consent
+is necessary, and that consent I cannot give. Shall I tell you why?"
+
+"Pray do. Your reasons may admit of argument."
+
+"Every reason admits of argument," said Mr. Travers, amused at the
+calm assurance of a youthful stranger in anticipating argument with a
+skilful proprietor on the management of his own property. "I do not,
+however, tell you my reasons for the sake of argument, but in
+vindication of my seeming want of courtesy towards yourself. I have
+had a very hard and a very difficult task to perform in bringing the
+rental of my estate up to its proper value. In doing so, I have been
+compelled to adopt one uniform system, equally applied to my largest
+and my pettiest holdings. That system consists in securing the best
+and safest tenants I can, at the rents computed by a valuer in whom I
+have confidence. To this system, universally adopted on my estate,
+though it incurred much unpopularity at first, I have at length
+succeeded in reconciling the public opinion of my neighbourhood.
+People began by saying I was hard; they now acknowledge I am just. If
+I once give way to favour or sentiment, I unhinge my whole system.
+Every day I am subjected to moving solicitations. Lord Twostars, a
+keen politician, begs me to give a vacant farm to a tenant because he
+is an excellent canvasser, and has always voted straight with the
+party. Mrs. Fourstars, a most benevolent woman, entreats me not to
+dismiss another tenant, because he is in distressed circumstances and
+has a large family; very good reasons perhaps for my excusing him an
+arrear, or allowing him a retiring pension, but the worst reasons in
+the world for letting him continue to ruin himself and my land. Now,
+Mrs. Bawtrey has a small holding on lease at the inadequate rent of L8
+a year. She asks L45 for its transfer, but she can't transfer the
+lease without my consent; and I can get L12 a year as a moderate
+rental from a large choice of competent tenants. It will better
+answer me to pay her the L45 myself, which I have no doubt the
+incoming tenant would pay me back, at least in part; and if he did
+not, the additional rent would be good interest for my expenditure.
+Now, you happen to take a sentimental interest, as you pass through
+the village, in the loves of a needy cripple whose utmost industry has
+but served to save himself from parish relief, and a giddy girl
+without a sixpence, and you ask me to accept these very equivocal
+tenants instead of substantial ones, and at a rent one-third less than
+the market value. Suppose that I yielded to your request, what
+becomes of my reputation for practical, business-like justice? I
+shall have made an inroad into the system by which my whole estate is
+managed, and have invited all manner of solicitations on the part of
+friends and neighbours, which I could no longer consistently refuse,
+having shown how easily I can be persuaded into compliance by a
+stranger whom I may never see again. And are you sure, after all,
+that, if you did prevail on me, you would do the individual good you
+aim at? It is, no doubt, very pleasant to think one has made a young
+couple happy. But if that young couple fail in keeping the little
+shop to which you would transplant them (and nothing more likely:
+peasants seldom become good shopkeepers), and find themselves, with a
+family of children, dependent solely, not on the arm of a strong
+labourer, but the ten fingers of a sickly cripple, who makes clever
+baskets, for which there is but slight and precarious demand in the
+neighbourhood, may you not have insured the misery of the couple you
+wished to render happy?"
+
+"I withdraw all argument," said Kenelm, with an aspect so humiliated
+and dejected, that it would have softened a Greenland bear, or a
+Counsel for the Prosecution. "I am more and more convinced that of
+all the shams in the world that of benevolence is the greatest. It
+seems so easy to do good, and it is so difficult to do it.
+Everywhere, in this hateful civilized life, one runs one's head
+against a system. A system, Mr. Travers, is man's servile imitation of
+the blind tyranny of what in our ignorance we call 'Natural Laws,' a
+mechanical something through which the world is ruled by the cruelty
+of General Principles, to the utter disregard of individual welfare.
+By Natural Laws creatures prey on each other, and big fishes eat
+little ones upon system. It is, nevertheless, a hard thing for the
+little fish. Every nation, every town, every hamlet, every
+occupation, has a system, by which, somehow or other, the pond swarms
+with fishes, of which a great many inferiors contribute to increase
+the size of a superior. It is an idle benevolence to keep one
+solitary gudgeon out of the jaws of a pike. Here am I doing what I
+thought the simplest thing in the world, asking a gentleman, evidently
+as good-natured as myself, to allow an old woman to let her premises
+to a deserving young couple, and paying what she asks for it out of my
+own money. And I find that I am running against a system, and
+invading all the laws by which a rental is increased and an estate
+improved. Mr. Travers, you have no cause for regret in not having
+beaten Tom Bowles. You have beaten his victor, and I now give up all
+dream of further interference with the Natural Laws that govern the
+village which I have visited in vain. I had meant to remove Tom
+Bowles from that quiet community. I shall now leave him to return to
+his former habits,--to marry Jessie Wiles, which he certainly will do,
+and--"
+
+"Hold!" cried Mr. Travers. "Do you mean to say that you can induce
+Tom Bowles to leave the village?"
+
+"I had induced him to do it, provided Jessie Wiles married the
+basket-maker; but, as that is out of the question, I am bound to tell
+him so, and he will stay."
+
+"But if he left, what would become of his business? His mother could
+not keep it on; his little place is a freehold; the only house in the
+village that does not belong to me, or I should have ejected him long
+ago. Would he sell the premises to me?"
+
+"Not if he stays and marries Jessie Wiles. But if he goes with me to
+Luscombe and settles in that town as a partner to his uncle, I suppose
+he would be too glad to sell a house of which he can have no pleasant
+recollections. But what then? You cannot violate your system for the
+sake of a miserable forge."
+
+"It would not violate my system if, instead of yielding to a
+sentiment, I gained an advantage; and, to say truth, I should be very
+glad to buy that forge and the fields that go with it."
+
+"'Tis your affair now, not mine, Mr. Travers. I no longer presume to
+interfere. I leave the neighbourhood to-morrow: see if you can
+negotiate with Mr. Bowles. I have the honour to wish you a good
+evening."
+
+"Nay, young gentleman, I cannot allow you to quit me thus. You have
+declined apparently to join the dancers, but you will at least join
+the supper. Come!"
+
+"Thank you sincerely, no. I came here merely on the business which
+your system has settled."
+
+"But I am not sure that it is settled." Here Mr. Travers wound his
+arm within Kenelm's, and looking him full in the face, said, "I know
+that I am speaking to a gentleman at least equal in rank to myself,
+but as I enjoy the melancholy privilege of being the older man, do not
+think I take an unwarrantable liberty in asking if you object to tell
+me your name. I should like to introduce you to my daughter, who is
+very partial to Jessie Wiles and to Will Somers. But I can't venture
+to inflame her imagination by designating you as a prince in
+disguise."
+
+"Mr. Travers, you express yourself with exquisite delicacy. But I am
+just starting in life, and I shrink from mortifying my father by
+associating my name with a signal failure. Suppose I were an
+anonymous contributor, say, to 'The Londoner,' and I had just brought
+that highly intellectual journal into discredit by a feeble attempt at
+a good-natured criticism or a generous sentiment, would that be the
+fitting occasion to throw off the mask, and parade myself to a mocking
+world as the imbecile violator of an established system? Should I
+not, in a moment so untoward, more than ever desire to merge my
+insignificant unit in the mysterious importance which the smallest
+Singular obtains when he makes himself a Plural, and speaks not as
+'I,' but as 'We'? /We/ are insensible to the charm of young ladies;
+/We/ are not bribed by suppers; /We/, like the witches of 'Macbeth,'
+have no name on earth; /We/ are the greatest wisdom of the greatest
+number; /We/ are so upon system; /We/ salute you, Mr. Travers, and
+depart unassailable."
+
+Here Kenelm rose, doffed and replaced his hat in majestic salutation,
+turned towards the entrance of the fernery, and found himself suddenly
+face to face with George Belvoir, behind whom followed, with a throng
+of guests, the fair form of Cecilia. George Belvoir caught Kenelm by
+the hand, and exclaimed, "Chillingly! I thought I could not be
+mistaken."
+
+"Chillingly!" echoed Leopold Travers from behind. "Are you the son of
+my old friend Sir Peter?"
+
+Thus discovered and environed, Kenelm did not lose his wonted presence
+of mind; he turned round to Leopold Travers, who was now close in his
+rear, and whispered, "If my father was your friend, do not disgrace
+his son. Do not say I am a failure. Deviate from your system, and
+let Will Somers succeed Mrs. Bawtrey." Then reverting his face to Mr.
+Belvoir, he said tranquilly, "Yes; we have met before."
+
+"Cecilia," said Travers, now interposing, "I am happy to introduce to
+you as Mr. Chillingly, not only the son of an old friend of mine, not
+only the knight-errant of whose gallant conduct on behalf of your
+protegee Jessie Wiles we have heard so much, but the eloquent arguer
+who has conquered my better judgment in a matter on which I thought
+myself infallible. Tell Mr. Lethbridge that I accept Will Somers as a
+tenant for Mrs. Bawtrey's premises."
+
+Kenelm grasped the Squire's hand cordially. "May it be in my power to
+do a kind thing to you, in spite of any system to the contrary!"
+
+"Mr. Chillingly, give your arm to my daughter. You will not now
+object to join the dancers?"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+CECILIA stole a shy glance at Kenelm as the two emerged from the
+fernery into the open space of the lawn. His countenance pleased her.
+She thought she discovered much latent gentleness under the cold and
+mournful gravity of its expression; and, attributing the silence he
+maintained to some painful sense of an awkward position in the abrupt
+betrayal of his incognito, sought with womanly tact to dispel his
+supposed embarrassment.
+
+"You have chosen a delightful mode of seeing the country this lovely
+summer weather, Mr. Chillingly. I believe such pedestrian exercises
+are very common with university students during the long vacation."
+
+"Very common, though they generally wander in packs like wild dogs or
+Australian dingoes. It is only a tame dog that one finds on the road
+travelling by himself; and then, unless he behaves very quietly, it is
+ten to one that he is stoned as a mad dog."
+
+"But I am afraid, from what I hear, that you have not been travelling
+very quietly."
+
+"You are quite right, Miss Travers, and I am a sad dog if not a mad
+one. But pardon me: we are nearing the marquee; the band is striking
+up, and, alas! I am not a dancing dog."
+
+He released Cecilia's arm, and bowed.
+
+"Let us sit here a while, then," said she, motioning to a
+garden-bench. "I have no engagement for the next dance, and, as I am
+a little tired, I shall be glad of a reprieve."
+
+Kenelm sighed, and, with the air of a martyr stretching himself on the
+rack, took his place beside the fairest girl in the county.
+
+"You were at college with Mr. Belvoir?"
+
+"I was."
+
+"He was thought clever there?"
+
+"I have not a doubt of it."
+
+"You know he is canvassing our county for the next election. My
+father takes a warm interest in his success, and thinks he will be a
+useful member of Parliament."
+
+"Of that I am certain. For the first five years he will be called
+pushing, noisy, and conceited, much sneered at by men of his own age,
+and coughed down on great occasions; for the five following years he
+will be considered a sensible man in committees, and a necessary
+feature in debate; at the end of those years he will be an
+under-secretary; in five years more he will be a Cabinet Minister, and
+the representative of an important section of opinions; he will be an
+irreproachable private character, and his wife will be seen wearing
+the family diamonds at all the great parties. She will take an
+interest in politics and theology; and if she die before him, her
+husband will show his sense of wedded happiness by choosing another
+lady, equally fitted to wear the family diamonds and to maintain the
+family consequences."
+
+In spite of her laughter, Cecilia felt a certain awe at the solemnity
+of voice and manner with which Kenelm delivered these oracular
+sentences, and the whole prediction seemed strangely in unison with
+her own impressions of the character whose fate was thus shadowed out.
+
+"Are you a fortune-teller, Mr. Chillingly?" she asked, falteringly,
+and after a pause.
+
+"As good a one as any whose hand you could cross with a shilling."
+
+"Will you tell me my fortune?"
+
+"No; I never tell the fortunes of ladies, because your sex is
+credulous, and a lady might believe what I tell her. And when we
+believe such and such is to be our fate, we are too apt to work out
+our life into the verification of the belief. If Lady Macbeth had
+disbelieved in the witches, she would never have persuaded her lord to
+murder Duncan."
+
+"But can you not predict me a more cheerful fortune than that tragical
+illustration of yours seems to threaten?"
+
+"The future is never cheerful to those who look on the dark side of
+the question. Mr. Gray is too good a poet for people to read
+nowadays, otherwise I should refer you to his lines in the 'Ode to
+Eton College,'--
+
+
+ "'See how all around us wait
+ The ministers of human fate,
+ And black Misfortune's baleful train.'
+
+
+"Meanwhile it is something to enjoy the present. We are young; we are
+listening to music; there is no cloud over the summer stars; our
+conscience is clear; our hearts untroubled: why look forward in search
+of happiness? shall we ever be happier than we are at this moment?"
+
+Here Mr. Travers came up. "We are going to supper in a few minutes,"
+said he; "and before we lose sight of each other, Mr. Chillingly, I
+wish to impress on you the moral fact that one good turn deserves
+another. I have yielded to your wish, and now you must yield to mine.
+Come and stay a few days with me, and see your benevolent intentions
+carried out."
+
+Kenelm paused. Now that he was discovered, why should he not pass a
+few days among his equals? Realities or shams might be studied with
+squires no less than with farmers; besides, he had taken a liking to
+Travers. That graceful /ci-devant/ Wildair, with the slight form and
+the delicate face, was unlike rural squires in general. Kenelm
+paused, and then said frankly,--
+
+"I accept your invitation. Would the middle of next week suit you?"
+
+"The sooner the better. Why not to-morrow?"
+
+"To-morrow I am pre-engaged to an excursion with Mr. Bowles. That may
+occupy two or three days, and meanwhile I must write home for other
+garments than those in which I am a sham."
+
+"Come any day you like."
+
+"Agreed."
+
+"Agreed; and, hark! the supper-bell."
+
+"Supper," said Kenelm, offering his arm to Miss Travers,--"supper is a
+word truly interesting, truly poetical. It associates itself with the
+entertainments of the ancients, with the Augustan age, with Horace and
+Maecenas; with the only elegant but too fleeting period of the modern
+world; with the nobles and wits of Paris, when Paris had wits and
+nobles; with Moliere and the warm-hearted Duke who is said to have
+been the original of Moliere's Misanthrope; with Madame de Sevigne and
+the Racine whom that inimitable letter-writer denied to be a poet;
+with Swift and Bolingbroke; with Johnson, Goldsmith, and Garrick.
+Epochs are signalized by their eatings. I honour him who revives the
+Golden Age of suppers." So saying, his face brightened.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY, ESQ., TO SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, BART., ETC.
+
+MY DEAR FATHER,--I am alive and unmarried. Providence has watched
+over me in these respects; but I have had narrow escapes. Hitherto I
+have not acquired much worldly wisdom in my travels. It is true that
+I have been paid two shillings as a day labourer, and, in fact, have
+fairly earned at least six shillings more; but against that additional
+claim I generously set off, as an equivalent, my board and lodging.
+On the other hand, I have spent forty-five pounds out of the fifty
+which I devoted to the purchase of experience. But I hope you will be
+a gainer by that investment. Send an order to Mr. William Somers,
+basket-maker, Graveleigh, -----shire, for the hampers and game-baskets
+you require, and I undertake to say that you will save twenty per cent
+on that article (all expenses of carriage deducted) and do a good
+action into the bargain. You know, from long habit, what a good
+action is worth better than I do. I dare say you will be more pleased
+to learn than I am to record the fact that I have been again decoyed
+into the society of ladies and gentlemen, and have accepted an
+invitation to pass a few days at Neesdale Park with Mr.
+Travers,--christened Leopold, who calls you "his old friend,"--a term
+which I take for granted belongs to that class of poetic exaggeration
+in which the "dears" and "darlings" of conjugal intercourse may be
+categorized. Having for that visit no suitable garments in my
+knapsack, kindly tell Jenkes to forward me a portmanteau full of those
+which I habitually wore as Kenelm Chillingly, directed to me at
+"Neesdale Park, near Beaverston." Let me find it there on Wednesday.
+
+I leave this place to-morrow morning in company with a friend of the
+name of Bowles: no relation to the reverend gentleman of that name who
+held the doctrine that a poet should bore us to death with
+fiddle-faddle minutia of natural objects in preference to that study
+of the insignificant creature Man, in his relations to his species, to
+which Mr. Pope limited the range of his inferior muse; and who,
+practising as he preached, wrote some very nice verses, to which the
+Lake school and its successors are largely indebted. My Mr. Bowles
+has exercised his faculty upon Man, and has a powerful inborn gift in
+that line which only requires cultivation to render him a match for
+any one. His more masculine nature is at present much obscured by
+that passing cloud which, in conventional language, is called "a
+hopeless attachment." But I trust, in the course of our excursion,
+which is to be taken on foot, that this vapour may consolidate by
+motion, as some old-fashioned astronomers held that the nebula does
+consolidate into a matter-of-fact world. Is it Rochefoucauld who says
+that a man is never more likely to form a hopeful attachment for one
+than when his heart is softened by a hopeless attachment to another?
+May it be long, my dear father, before you condole with me on the
+first or congratulate me on the second.
+
+ Your affectionate son,
+
+ KENELM.
+
+Direct to me at Mr. Travers's. Kindest love to my mother.
+
+
+The answer to this letter is here subjoined as the most convenient
+place for its insertion, though of course it was not received till
+some days after the date of my next chapter.
+
+
+SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, BART., TO KENELM CHILLINGLY, ESQ.
+
+MY DEAR Boy,--With this I despatch the portmanteau you require to the
+address that you give. I remember well Leopold Travers when he was in
+the Guards,--a very handsome and a very wild young fellow. But he had
+much more sense than people gave him credit for, and frequented
+intellectual society; at least I met him very often at my friend
+Campion's, whose house was then the favourite rendezvous of
+distinguished persons. He had very winning manners, and one could not
+help taking an interest in him. I was very glad when I heard he had
+married and reformed. Here I beg to observe that a man who contracts
+a taste for low company may indeed often marry, but he seldom reforms
+when he does so. And, on the whole, I should be much pleased to hear
+that the experience which has cost you forty-five pounds had convinced
+you that you might be better employed than earning two, or even six
+shillings as a day-labourer.
+
+I have not given your love to your mother, as you requested. In fact,
+you have placed me in a very false position towards that other author
+of your eccentric being. I could only guard you from the inquisition
+of the police and the notoriety of descriptive hand-bills by allowing
+my lady to suppose that you had gone abroad with the Duke of
+Clairville and his family. It is easy to tell a fib, but it is very
+difficult to untell it. However, as soon as you have made up your
+mind to resume your normal position among ladies and gentlemen, I
+should be greatly obliged if you would apprise me. I don't wish to
+keep a fib on my conscience a day longer than may be necessary to
+prevent the necessity of telling another.
+
+From what you say of Mr. Bowles's study of Man, and his inborn talent
+for that scientific investigation, I suppose that he is a professed
+Metaphysician, and I should be glad of his candid opinion upon the
+Primary Basis of Morals, a subject upon which I have for three years
+meditated the consideration of a critical paper. But having lately
+read a controversy thereon between two eminent philosophers, in which
+each accuses the other of not understanding him, I have resolved for
+the present to leave the Basis in its unsettled condition.
+
+You rather alarm me when you say you have had a narrow escape from
+marriage. Should you, in order to increase the experience you set out
+to acquire, decide on trying the effect of a Mrs. Chillingly upon your
+nervous system, it would be well to let me know a little beforehand,
+so that I might prepare your mother's mind for that event. Such
+household trifles are within her special province; and she would be
+much put out if a Mrs. Chillingly dropped on her unawares.
+
+This subject, however, is too serious to admit of a jest even between
+two persons who understand, so well as you and I do, the secret cipher
+by which each other's outward style of jest is to be gravely
+interpreted into the irony which says one thing and means another. My
+dear boy, you are very young; you are wandering about in a very
+strange manner, and may, no doubt, meet with many a pretty face by the
+way, with which you may fancy that you fall in love. You cannot think
+me a barbarous, tyrant if I ask you to promise me, on your honour,
+that you will not propose to any young lady before you come first to
+me and submit the case to my examination and approval. You know me
+too well to suppose that I should unreasonably withhold my consent if
+convinced that your happiness was at stake. But while what a young
+man may fancy to be love is often a trivial incident in his life,
+marriage is the greatest event in it; if on one side it may involve
+his happiness, on the other side it may insure his misery. Dearest,
+best, and oddest of sons, give me the promise I ask, and you will free
+my breast from a terribly anxious thought which now sits on it like a
+nightmare.
+
+Your recommendation of a basket-maker comes opportunely. All such
+matters go through the bailiff's hands, and it was but the other day
+that Green was complaining of the high prices of the man he employed
+for hampers and game-baskets. Green shall write to your protege.
+
+Keep me informed of your proceedings as much as your anomalous
+character will permit; so that nothing may diminish my confidence that
+the man who had the honour to be christened Kenelm will not disgrace
+his name, but acquire the distinction denied to a Peter.
+
+Your affectionate father.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+VILLAGERS lie abed on Sundays later than on workdays, and no shutter
+was unclosed in a window of the rural street through which Kenelm
+Chillingly and Tom Bowles went, side by side, in the still soft air of
+the Sabbath morn. Side by side they went on, crossing the pastoral
+glebe-lands, where the kine still drowsily reclined under the bowery
+shade of glinting chestnut leaves; and diving thence into a narrow
+lane or by-road, winding deep between lofty banks all tangled with
+convolvulus and wild-rose and honeysuckle.
+
+They walked in silence, for Kenelm, after one or two vain attempts at
+conversation, had the tact to discover that his companion was in no
+mood for talk; and being himself one of those creatures whose minds
+glide easily into the dreamy monologue of revery, he was not
+displeased to muse on undisturbed, drinking quietly into his heart the
+subdued joy of the summer morn, with the freshness of its sparkling
+dews, the wayward carol of its earliest birds, the serene quietude of
+its limpid breezy air. Only when they came to fresh turnings in the
+road that led towards the town to which they were bound, Tom Bowles
+stepped before his companion, indicating the way by a monosyllable or
+a gesture. Thus they journeyed for hours, till the sun attained
+power, and a little wayside inn near a hamlet invited Kenelm to the
+thought of rest and food.
+
+"Tom," said he then, rousing from his revery, "what do you say to
+breakfast?"
+
+Answered Tom sullenly, "I am not hungry; but as you like."
+
+"Thank you, then we will stop here a while. I find it difficult to
+believe that you are not hungry, for you are very strong, and there
+are two things which generally accompany great physical strength: the
+one is a keen appetite; the other is--though you may not suppose it,
+and it is not commonly known--a melancholic temperament."
+
+"Eh!--a what?"
+
+"A tendency to melancholy. Of course you have heard of Hercules: you
+know the saying 'as strong as Hercules'?"
+
+"Yes, of course."
+
+"Well, I was first led to the connection between strength, appetite,
+and melancholy, by reading in an old author named Plutarch that
+Hercules was among the most notable instances of melancholy
+temperament which the author was enabled to quote. That must have
+been the traditional notion of the Herculean constitution; and as for
+appetite, the appetite of Hercules was a standard joke of the comic
+writers. When I read that observation it set me thinking, being
+myself melancholic and having an exceedingly good appetite. Sure
+enough, when I began to collect evidence, I found that the strongest
+men with whom I made acquaintance, including prize-fighters and Irish
+draymen, were disposed to look upon life more on the shady than the
+sunny side of the way; in short, they were melancholic. But the
+kindness of Providence allowed them to enjoy their meals, as you and I
+are about to do." In the utterance of this extraordinary crotchet
+Kenelm had halted his steps; but now striding briskly forward he
+entered the little inn, and after a glance at its larder, ordered the
+whole contents to be brought out and placed within a honeysuckle
+arbour which he spied in the angle of a bowling-green at the rear of
+the house.
+
+In addition to the ordinary condiments of loaf and butter and eggs and
+milk and tea, the board soon groaned beneath the weight of pigeon-pie,
+cold ribs of beef, and shoulder of mutton, remains of a feast which
+the members of a monthly rustic club had held there the day before.
+Tom ate little at first; but example is contagious, and gradually he
+vied with his companion in the diminution of the solid viands before
+him. Then he called for brandy.
+
+"No," said Kenelm. "No, Tom; you have promised me friendship, and
+that is not compatible with brandy. Brandy is the worst enemy a man
+like you can have; and would make you quarrel even with me. If you
+want a stimulus I allow you a pipe. I don't smoke myself, as a rule,
+but there have been times in my life when I required soothing, and
+then I have felt that a whiff of tobacco stills and softens one like
+the kiss of a little child. Bring this gentleman a pipe."
+
+Tom grunted, but took to the pipe kindly, and in a few minutes, during
+which Kenelm left him in silence, a lowering furrow between his brows
+smoothed itself away.
+
+Gradually he felt the sweetening influences of the day and the place,
+of the merry sunbeams at play amid the leaves of the arbour, of the
+frank perfume of the honeysuckle, of the warble of the birds before
+they sank into the taciturn repose of a summer noon.
+
+It was with a reluctant sigh that he rose at last, when Kenelm said,
+"We have yet far to go: we must push on."
+
+The landlady, indeed, had already given them a hint that she and the
+family wanted to go to church, and to shut up the house in their
+absence. Kenelm drew out his purse, but Tom did the same with a
+return of cloud on his brow, and Kenelm saw that he would be mortally
+offended if suffered to be treated as an inferior; so each paid his
+due share, and the two men resumed their wandering. This time it was
+along a by-path amid fields, which was a shorter cut than the lane
+they had previously followed, to the main road to Luscombe. They
+walked slowly till they came to a rustic foot-bridge which spanned a
+gloomy trout-stream, not noisy, but with a low, sweet murmur,
+doubtless the same stream beside which, many miles away, Kenelm had
+conversed with the minstrel. Just as they came to this bridge there
+floated to their ears the distant sound of the hamlet church-bell.
+
+"Now let us sit here a while and listen," said Kenelm, seating himself
+on the baluster of the bridge. "I see that you brought away your pipe
+from the inn, and provided yourself with tobacco: refill the pipe and
+listen."
+
+Tom half smiled and obeyed.
+
+"O friend," said Kenelm, earnestly, and after a long pause of thought,
+"do you not feel what a blessed thing it is in this mortal life to be
+ever and anon reminded that you have a soul?"
+
+Tom, startled, withdrew the pipe from his lips, and muttered,--
+
+"Eh!"
+
+Kenelm continued,--
+
+"You and I, Tom, are not so good as we ought to be: of that there is
+no doubt; and good people would say justly that we should now be
+within yon church itself rather than listening to its bell. Granted,
+my friend, granted; but still it is something to hear that bell, and
+to feel by the train of thought which began in our innocent childhood,
+when we said our prayers at the knees of a mother, that we were lifted
+beyond this visible Nature, beyond these fields and woods and waters,
+in which, fair though they be, you and I miss something; in which
+neither you nor I are as happy as the kine in the fields, as the birds
+on the bough, as the fishes in the water: lifted to a consciousness of
+a sense vouchsafed to you and to me, not vouchsafed to the kine, to
+the bird, and the fish,--a sense to comprehend that Nature has a God,
+and Man has a life hereafter. The bell says that to you and to me.
+Were that bell a thousand times more musical it could not say that to
+beast, bird, and fish. Do you understand me, Tom?"
+
+Tom remains silent for a minute, and then replies, "I never thought of
+it before; but, as you put it, I understand."
+
+"Nature never gives to a living thing capacities not practically meant
+for its benefit and use. If Nature gives to us capacities to believe
+that we have a Creator whom we never saw, of whom we have no direct
+proof, who is kind and good and tender beyond all that we know of kind
+and good and tender on earth, it is because the endowment of
+capacities to conceive such a Being must be for our benefit and use:
+it would not be for our benefit and use if it were a lie. Again, if
+Nature has given to us a capacity to receive the notion that we live
+again, no matter whether some of us refuse so to believe, and argue
+against it,--why, the very capacity to receive the idea (for unless we
+receive it we could not argue against it) proves that it is for our
+benefit and use; and if there were no such life hereafter, we should
+be governed and influenced, arrange our modes of life, and mature our
+civilization, by obedience to a lie, which Nature falsified herself in
+giving us the capacity to believe. You still understand me?"
+
+"Yes; it bothers me a little, for you see I am not a parson's man; but
+I do understand."
+
+"Then, my friend, study to apply,--for it requires constant
+study,--study to apply that which you understand to your own case.
+You are something more than Tom Bowles, the smith and doctor of
+horses; something more than the magnificent animal who rages for his
+mate and fights every rival: the bull does that. You are a soul
+endowed with the capacity to receive the idea of a Creator so divinely
+wise and great and good that, though acting by the agency of general
+laws, He can accommodate them to all individual cases, so that--taking
+into account the life hereafter, which He grants to you the capacity
+to believe--all that troubles you now will be proved to you wise and
+great and good either in this life or the other. Lay that truth to
+your heart, friend, now--before the bell stops ringing; recall it
+every time you hear the church-bell ring again. And oh, Tom, you have
+such a noble nature!--"
+
+"I--I! don't jeer me,--don't."
+
+"Such a noble nature; for you can love so passionately, you can war so
+fiercely, and yet, when convinced that your love would be misery to
+her you love, can resign it; and yet, when beaten in your war, can so
+forgive your victor that you are walking in this solitude with him as
+a friend, knowing that you have but to drop a foot behind him in order
+to take his life in an unguarded moment; and rather than take his
+life, you would defend it against an army. Do you think I am so dull
+as not to see all that? and is not all that a noble nature?"
+
+Tom Bowles covered his face with his hands, and his broad breast
+heaved.
+
+"Well, then, to that noble nature I now trust. I myself have done
+little good in life. I may never do much; but let me think that I
+have not crossed your life in vain for you and for those whom your
+life can colour for good or for bad. As you are strong, be gentle; as
+you can love one, be kind to all; as you have so much that is grand as
+Man,--that is, the highest of God's works on earth,--let all your acts
+attach your manhood to the idea of Him, to whom the voice of the bell
+appeals. Ah! the bell is hushed; but not your heart, Tom,--that
+speaks still."
+
+Tom was weeping like a child.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+NOW when our two travellers resumed their journey, the relationship
+between them had undergone a change; nay, you might have said that
+their characters were also changed. For Tom found himself pouring out
+his turbulent heart to Kenelm, confiding to this philosophical scoffer
+at love all the passionate humanities of love,--its hope, its anguish,
+its jealousy, its wrath,--the all that links the gentlest of emotions
+to tragedy and terror. And Kenelm, listening tenderly, with softened
+eyes, uttered not one cynic word,--nay, not one playful jest. He,
+felt that the gravity of all he heard was too solemn for mockery, too
+deep even for comfort. True love of this sort was a thing he had
+never known, never wished to know, never thought he could know, but he
+sympathized in it not the less. Strange, indeed, how much we do
+sympathize, on the stage, for instance, or in a book, with passions
+that have never agitated ourselves! Had Kenelm jested or reasoned or
+preached, Tom would have shrunk at once into dreary silence; but
+Kenelm said nothing, save now and then, as he rested his arm,
+brother-like, on the strong man's shoulder, he murmured, "Poor
+fellow!" So, then, when Tom had finished his confessions, he felt
+wondrously relieved and comforted. He had cleansed his bosom of the
+perilous stuff that weighed upon the heart.
+
+Was this good result effected by Kenelm's artful diplomacy, or by that
+insight into human passions vouchsafed unconsciously to himself, by
+gleams or in flashes, to this strange man who surveyed the objects and
+pursuits of his fellows with a yearning desire to share them,
+murmuring to himself, "I cannot, I do not stand in this world; like a
+ghost I glide beside it, and look on "?
+
+Thus the two men continued their way slowly, amid soft pastures and
+yellowing cornfields, out at length into the dusty thoroughfares of
+the main road. That gained, their talk insensibly changed its tone:
+it became more commonplace; and Kenelm permitted himself the license
+of those crotchets by which he extracted a sort of quaint pleasantry
+out of commonplace itself; so that from time to time Tom was startled
+into the mirth of laughter. This big fellow had one very agreeable
+gift, which is only granted, I think, to men of genuine character and
+affectionate dispositions,--a spontaneous and sweet laugh, manly and
+frank, but not boisterous, as you might have supposed it would be.
+But that sort of laugh had not before come from his lips, since the
+day on which his love for Jessie Wiles had made him at war with
+himself and the world.
+
+The sun was setting when from the brow of a hill they beheld the
+spires of Luscombe, imbedded amid the level meadows that stretched
+below, watered by the same stream that had wound along their more
+rural pathway, but which now expanded into stately width, and needed,
+to span it, a mighty bridge fit for the convenience of civilized
+traffic. The town seemed near, but it was full two miles off by road.
+
+"There is a short cut across the fields beyond that stile, which leads
+straight to my uncle's house," said Tom; "and I dare say, sir, that
+you will be glad to escape the dirty suburb by which the road passes
+before we get into the town."
+
+"A good thought, Tom. It is very odd that fine towns always are
+approached by dirty suburbs; a covert symbolical satire, perhaps, on
+the ways to success in fine towns. Avarice or ambition go through
+very mean little streets before they gain the place which they jostle
+the crowd to win,--in the Townhall or on 'Change. Happy the man who,
+like you, Tom, finds that there is a shorter and a cleaner and a
+pleasanter way to goal or to resting-place than that through the dirty
+suburbs!"
+
+They met but few passengers on their path through the fields,--a
+respectable, staid, elderly couple, who had the air of a Dissenting
+minister and his wife; a girl of fourteen leading a little boy seven
+years younger by the hand; a pair of lovers, evidently lovers at least
+to the eye of Tom Bowles; for, on regarding them as they passed
+unheeding him, he winced, and his face changed. Even after they had
+passed, Kenelm saw on the face that pain lingered there: the lips were
+tightly compressed, and their corners gloomily drawn down.
+
+Just at this moment a dog rushed towards them with a short quick
+bark,--a Pomeranian dog with pointed nose and pricked ears. It hushed
+its bark as it neared Kenelm, sniffed his trousers, and wagged its
+tail.
+
+"By the sacred Nine," cried Kenelm, "thou art the dog with the tin
+tray! where is thy master?"
+
+The dog seemed to understand the question, for it turned its head
+significantly; and Kenelm saw, seated under a lime-tree, at a good
+distance from the path, a man, with book in hand, evidently employed
+in sketching.
+
+"Come this way," he said to Tom: "I recognize an acquaintance. You
+will like him." Tom desired no new acquaintance at that moment, but
+he followed Kenelm submissively.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+"YOU see we are fated to meet again," said Kenelm, stretching himself
+at his ease beside the Wandering Minstrel, and motioning Tom to do the
+same. "But you seem to add the accomplishment of drawing to that of
+verse-making! You sketch from what you call Nature?"
+
+"From what I call Nature! yes, sometimes."
+
+"And do you not find in drawing, as in verse-making, the truth that I
+have before sought to din into your reluctant ears; namely, that
+Nature has no voice except that which man breathes into her out of his
+mind? I would lay a wager that the sketch you are now taking is
+rather an attempt to make her embody some thought of your own, than to
+present her outlines as they appear to any other observer. Permit me
+to judge for myself." And he bent over the sketch-book. It is often
+difficult for one who is not himself an artist nor a connoisseur to
+judge whether the pencilled jottings in an impromptu sketch are by the
+hand of a professed master or a mere amateur. Kenelm was neither
+artist nor connoisseur, but the mere pencil-work seemed to him much
+what might be expected from any man with an accurate eye who had taken
+a certain number of lessons from a good drawing-master. It was enough
+for him, however, that it furnished an illustration of his own theory.
+"I was right," he cried triumphantly. "From this height there is a
+beautiful view, as it presents itself to me; a beautiful view of the
+town, its meadows, its river, harmonized by the sunset; for sunset,
+like gilding, unites conflicting colours, and softens them in uniting.
+But I see nothing of that view in your sketch. What I do see is to me
+mysterious."
+
+"The view you suggest," said the minstrel, "is no doubt very fine, but
+it is for a Turner or a Claude to treat it. My grasp is not wide
+enough for such a landscape."
+
+"I see indeed in your sketch but one figure, a child."
+
+"Hist! there she stands. Hist! while I put in this last touch."
+
+Kenelm strained his sight, and saw far off a solitary little girl, who
+was tossing something in the air (he could not distinguish what), and
+catching it as it fell. She seemed standing on the very verge of the
+upland, backed by rose-clouds gathered round the setting sun; below
+lay in confused outlines the great town. In the sketch those outlines
+seemed infinitely more confused, being only indicated by a few bold
+strokes; but the figure and face of the child were distinct and
+lovely. There was an ineffable sentiment in her solitude; there was a
+depth of quiet enjoyment in her mirthful play, and in her upturned
+eyes.
+
+"But at that distance," asked Kenelm, when the wanderer had finished
+his last touch, and, after contemplating it, silently closed his book,
+and turned round with a genial smile, "but at that distance, how can
+you distinguish the girl's face? How can you discover that the dim
+object she has just thrown up and recaught is a ball made of flowers?
+Do you know the child?"
+
+"I never saw her before this evening; but as I was seated here she was
+straying around me alone, weaving into chains some wild-flowers which
+she had gathered by the hedgerows yonder, next the high road; and as
+she strung them she was chanting to herself some pretty nursery
+rhymes. You can well understand that when I heard her thus chanting I
+became interested, and as she came near me I spoke to her, and we soon
+made friends. She told me she was an orphan, and brought up by a very
+old man distantly related to her, who had been in some small trade and
+now lived in a crowded lane in the heart of the town. He was very
+kind to her, and being confined himself to the house by age or ailment
+he sent her out to play in the fields on summer Sundays. She had no
+companions of her own age. She said she did not like the other little
+girls in the lane; and the only little girl she liked at school had a
+grander station in life, and was not allowed to play with her, and so
+she came out to play alone; and as long as the sun shines and the
+flowers bloom, she says she never wants other society."
+
+"Tom, do you hear that? As you will be residing in Luscombe, find out
+this strange little girl, and be kind to her, Tom, for my sake."
+
+Tom put his large hand upon Kenelm's, making no other answer; but he
+looked hard at the minstrel, recognized the genial charm of his voice
+and face, and slid along the grass nearer to him.
+
+The minstrel continued: "While the child was talking to me I
+mechanically took the flower-chains from her hands, and not thinking
+what I was about, gathered them up into a ball. Suddenly she saw what
+I had done, and instead of scolding me for spoiling her pretty chains,
+which I richly deserved, was delighted to find I had twisted them into
+a new plaything. She ran off with the ball, tossing it about till,
+excited with her own joy, she got to the brow of the hill, and I began
+my sketch."
+
+"Is that charming face you have drawn like hers?"
+
+"No; only in part. I was thinking of another face while I sketched,
+but it is not like that either; in fact, it is one of those patchworks
+which we call 'fancy heads,' and I meant it to be another version of a
+thought that I had just put into rhyme when the child came across me."
+
+"May we hear the rhyme?"
+
+"I fear that if it did not bore yourself it would bore your friend."
+
+"I am sure not. Tom, do you sing?"
+
+"Well, I /have/ sung," said Tom, hanging his head sheepishly, "and I
+should like to hear this gentleman."
+
+"But I do not know these verses, just made, well enough to sing them;
+it is enough if I can recall them well enough to recite." Here the
+minstrel paused a minute or so as if for recollection, and then, in
+the sweet clear tones and the rare purity of enunciation which
+characterized his utterance, whether in recital or song, gave to the
+following verses a touching and a varied expression which no one could
+discover in merely reading them.
+
+
+ THE FLOWER-GIRL BY THE CROSSING.
+
+ "By the muddy crossing in the crowded streets
+ Stands a little maid with her basket full of posies,
+ Proffering all who pass her choice of knitted sweets,
+ Tempting Age with heart's-ease, courting Youth with roses.
+
+ "Age disdains the heart's-ease,
+ Love rejects the roses;
+ London life is busy,--
+ Who can stop for posies?
+
+ "One man is too grave, another is too gay;
+ This man has his hothouse, that man not a penny:
+ Flowerets too are common in the month of May,
+ And the things most common least attract the many.
+
+ "Ill, on London crossings,
+ Fares the sale of posies;
+ Age disdains the heart's-ease,
+ Youth rejects the roses."
+
+
+When the verse-maker had done, he did not pause for approbation, nor
+look modestly down, as do most people who recite their own verses, but
+unaffectedly thinking much more of his art than his audience, hurried
+on somewhat disconsolately,--
+
+"I see with great grief that I am better at sketching than rhyming.
+Can you" (appealing to Kenelm) "even comprehend what I mean by the
+verses?"
+
+KENELM.--"Do you comprehend, Tom?"
+
+TOM (in a whisper).--"No."
+
+KENELM.--"I presume that by his flower-girl our friend means to
+represent not only poetry, but a poetry like his own, which is not at
+all the sort of poetry now in fashion. I, however, expand his
+meaning, and by his flower-girl I understand any image of natural
+truth or beauty for which, when we are living the artificial life of
+crowded streets, we are too busy to give a penny."
+
+"Take it as you please," said the minstrel, smiling and sighing at the
+same time; "but I have not expressed in words that which I did mean
+half so well as I have expressed it in my sketch-book."
+
+"Ah! and how?" asked Kenelm.
+
+"The image of my thought in the sketch, be it poetry or whatever you
+prefer to call it, does not stand forlorn in the crowded streets: the
+child stands on the brow of the green hill, with the city stretched in
+confused fragments below, and, thoughtless of pennies and passers-by,
+she is playing with the flowers she has gathered; but in play casting
+them heavenward, and following them with heavenward eyes."
+
+"Good!" muttered Kenelm, "good!" and then, after a long pause, he
+added, in a still lower mutter, "Pardon me that remark of mine the
+other day about a beefsteak. But own that I am right: what you call a
+sketch from Nature is but a sketch of your own thought."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE child with the flower-ball had vanished from the brow of the hill;
+sinking down amid the streets below, the rose-clouds had faded from
+the horizon; and night was closing round, as the three men entered the
+thick of the town. Tom pressed Kenelm to accompany him to his
+uncle's, promising him a hearty welcome and bed and board, but Kenelm
+declined. He entertained a strong persuasion that it would be better
+for the desired effect on Tom's mind that he should be left alone with
+his relations that night, but proposed that they should spend the next
+day together, and agreed to call at the veterinary surgeon's in the
+morning.
+
+When Tom quitted them at his uncle's door, Kenelm said to the
+minstrel, "I suppose you are going to some inn; may I accompany you?
+We can sup together, and I should like to hear you talk upon poetry
+and Nature."
+
+"You flatter me much; but I have friends in the town, with whom I
+lodge, and they are expecting me. Do you not observe that I have
+changed my dress? I am not known here as the 'Wandering Minstrel.'"
+
+Kenelm glanced at the man's attire, and for the first time observed
+the change. It was still picturesque in its way, but it was such as
+gentlemen of the highest rank frequently wear in the country,--the
+knickerbocker costume,--very neat, very new, and complete, to the
+square-toed shoes with their latchets and buckles.
+
+"I fear," said Kenelm, gravely, "that your change of dress betokens
+the neighbourhood of those pretty girls of whom you spoke in an
+earlier meeting. According to the Darwinian doctrine of selection,
+fine plumage goes far in deciding the preference of Jenny Wren and her
+sex, only we are told that fine-feathered birds are very seldom
+songsters as well. It is rather unfair to rivals when you unite both
+attractions."
+
+The minstrel laughed. "There is but one girl in my friend's
+house,--his niece; she is very plain, and only thirteen. But to me
+the society of women, whether ugly or pretty, is an absolute
+necessity; and I have been trudging without it for so many days that I
+can scarcely tell you how my thoughts seemed to shake off the dust of
+travel when I found myself again in the presence of--"
+
+"Petticoat interest," interrupted Kenelm. "Take care of yourself. My
+poor friend with whom you found me is a grave warning against
+petticoat interest, from which I hope to profit. He is passing
+through a great sorrow; it might have been worse than sorrow. My
+friend is going to stay in this town. If you are staying here too,
+pray let him see something of you. It will do him a wondrous good if
+you can beguile him from this real life into the gardens of poetland;
+but do not sing or talk of love to him."
+
+"I honour all lovers," said the minstrel, with real tenderness in his
+tone, "and would willingly serve to cheer or comfort your friend, if I
+could; but I am bound elsewhere, and must leave Luscombe, which I
+visit on business--money business--the day after to-morrow."
+
+"So, too, must I. At least give us both some hours of your time
+to-morrow."
+
+"Certainly; from twelve to sunset I shall be roving about,--a mere
+idler. If you will both come with me, it will be a great pleasure to
+myself. Agreed! Well, then, I will call at your inn to-morrow at
+twelve; and I recommend for your inn the one facing us,--The Golden
+Lamb. I have heard it recommended for the attributes of civil people
+and good fare."
+
+Kenelm felt that he here received his /conge/, and well comprehended
+the fact that the minstrel, desiring to preserve the secret of his
+name, did not give the address of the family with whom he was a guest.
+
+"But one word more," said Kenelm. "Your host or hostess, if resident
+here, can, no doubt, from your description of the little girl and the
+old man her protector, learn the child's address. If so, I should
+like my companion to make friends with her. Petticoat interest there
+at least will be innocent and safe. And I know nothing so likely to
+keep a big, passionate heart like Tom's, now aching with a horrible
+void, occupied and softened, and turned to directions pure and gentle,
+as an affectionate interest in a little child."
+
+The minstrel changed colour: he even started. "Sir, are you a wizard
+that you say that to me?"
+
+"I am not a wizard, but I guess from your question that you have a
+little child of your own. So much the better: the child may keep you
+out of much mischief. Remember the little child. Good evening."
+
+Kenelm crossed the threshold of The Golden Lamb, engaged his room,
+made his ablutions, ordered, and, with his usual zest, partook of his
+evening meal; and then, feeling the pressure of that melancholic
+temperament which he so strangely associated with Herculean
+constitutions, roused himself up, and, seeking a distraction from
+thought, sauntered forth into the gaslit streets.
+
+It was a large handsome town,--handsomer than Tor-Hadham, on account
+of its site in a valley surrounded by wooded hills, and watered by the
+fair stream whose windings we have seen as a brook,--handsomer, also,
+because it boasted a fair cathedral, well cleared to the sight, and
+surrounded by venerable old houses, the residences of the clergy or of
+the quiet lay gentry with mediaeval tastes. The main street was
+thronged with passengers,--some soberly returning home from the
+evening service; some, the younger, lingering in pleasant promenade
+with their sweethearts or families, or arm in arm with each other, and
+having the air of bachelors or maidens unattached. Through this
+street Kenelm passed with inattentive eye. A turn to the right took
+him towards the cathedral and its surroundings. There all was
+solitary. The solitude pleased him, and he lingered long, gazing on
+the noble church lifting its spires and turrets into the deep blue
+starry air.
+
+Musingly, then, he strayed on, entering a labyrinth of gloomy lanes,
+in which, though the shops were closed, many a door stood open, with
+men of the working class lolling against the threshold, idly smoking
+their pipes, or women seated on the doorsteps gossiping, while noisy
+children were playing or quarrelling in the kennel. The whole did not
+present the indolent side of an English Sabbath in the pleasantest and
+rosiest point of view. Somewhat quickening his steps, he entered a
+broader street, attracted to it involuntarily by a bright light in the
+centre. On nearing the light he found that it shone forth from a
+gin-palace, of which the mahogany doors opened and shut momently as
+customers went in and out. It was the handsomest building he had seen
+in his walk, next to that of the cathedral. "The new civilization
+versus the old," murmured Kenelm. As he so murmured, a hand was laid
+on his arm with a sort of timid impudence. He looked down and saw a
+young face, but it had survived the look of youth; it was worn and
+hard, and the bloom on it was not that of Nature's giving. "Are you
+kind to-night?" asked a husky voice.
+
+"Kind!" said Kenelm, with mournful tones and softened eyes, "kind!
+Alas, my poor sister mortal! if pity be kindness, who can see you and
+not be kind?"
+
+The girl released his arm, and he walked on. She stood some moments
+gazing after him till out of sight, then she drew her hand suddenly
+across her eyes, and retracing her steps, was, in her turn, caught
+hold of by a rougher hand than hers, as she passed the gin-palace.
+She shook off the grasp with a passionate scorn, and went straight
+home. Home! is that the right word? Poor sister mortal!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+AND now Kenelm found himself at the extremity of the town, and on the
+banks of the river. Small squalid houses still lined the bank for
+some way, till, nearing the bridge, they abruptly ceased, and he
+passed through a broad square again into the main street. On the
+other side of the street there was a row of villa-like mansions, with
+gardens stretching towards the river.
+
+All around in the thoroughfare was silent and deserted. By this time
+the passengers had gone home. The scent of night-flowers from the
+villa-gardens came sweet on the starlit air. Kenelm paused to inhale
+it, and then lifting his eyes, hitherto downcast, as are the eyes of
+men in meditative moods, he beheld, on the balcony of the nearest
+villa, a group of well-dressed persons. The balcony was unusually
+wide and spacious. On it was a small round table, on which were
+placed wine and fruits. Three ladies were seated round the table on
+wire-work chairs, and on the side nearest to Kenelm, one man. In that
+man, now slightly turning his profile, as if to look towards the
+river, Kenelm recognized the minstrel. He was still in his
+picturesque knickerbocker dress, and his clear-cut features, with the
+clustering curls of hair, and Rubens-like hue and shape of beard, had
+more than their usual beauty, softened in the light of skies, to which
+the moon, just risen, added deeper and fuller radiance. The ladies
+were in evening dress, but Kenelm could not distinguish their faces
+hidden behind the minstrel. He moved softly across the street, and
+took his stand behind a buttress in the low wall of the garden, from
+which he could have full view of the balcony, unseen himself. In this
+watch he had no other object than that of a vague pleasure. The whole
+grouping had in it a kind of scenic romance, and he stopped as one
+stops before a picture.
+
+He then saw that of the three ladies one was old; another was a slight
+girl of the age of twelve or thirteen; the third appeared to be
+somewhere about seven or eight and twenty. She was dressed with more
+elegance than the others. On her neck, only partially veiled by a
+thin scarf, there was the glitter of jewels; and, as she now turned
+her full face towards the moon, Kenelm saw that she was very
+handsome,--a striking kind of beauty, calculated to fascinate a poet
+or an artist,--not unlike Raphael's Fornarina, dark, with warm tints.
+
+Now there appeared at the open window a stout, burly, middle-aged
+gentleman, looking every inch of him a family man, a moneyed man,
+sleek and prosperous. He was bald, fresh-coloured, and with light
+whiskers.
+
+"Holloa," he said, in an accent very slightly foreign, and with a loud
+clear voice, which Kenelm heard distinctly, "is it not time for you to
+come in?"
+
+"Don't be so tiresome, Fritz," said the handsome lady, half
+petulantly, half playfully, in the way ladies address the tiresome
+spouses they lord it over. "Your friend has been sulking the whole
+evening, and is only just beginning to be pleasant as the moon rises."
+
+"The moon has a good effect on poets and other mad folks, I dare say,"
+said the bald man, with a good-humoured laugh. "But I can't have my
+little niece laid up again just as she is on the mend: Annie, come
+in."
+
+The girl obeyed reluctantly. The old lady rose too.
+
+"Ah, Mother, you are wise," said the bald man; "and a game at euchre
+is safer than poetizing in night air." He wound his arm round the old
+lady with a careful fondness, for she moved with some difficulty as if
+rather lame. "As for you two sentimentalists and moon-gazers, I give
+you ten minutes' time,--not more, mind."
+
+"Tyrant!" said the minstrel.
+
+The balcony now held only two forms,--the minstrel and the handsome
+lady. The window was closed, and partially veiled by muslin
+draperies, but Kenelm caught glimpses of the room within. He could
+see that the room, lit by a lamp on the centre table and candles
+elsewhere, was decorated and fitted up with cost and in a taste not
+English. He could see, for instance, that the ceiling was painted,
+and the walls were not papered, but painted in panels between
+arabesque pilasters.
+
+"They are foreigners," thought Kenelm, "though the man does speak
+English so well. That accounts for playing euchre of a Sunday
+evening, as if there were no harm in it. Euchre is an American game.
+The man is called Fritz. Ah! I guess--Germans who have lived a good
+deal in America; and the verse-maker said he was at Luscombe on
+pecuniary business. Doubtless his host is a merchant, and the
+verse-maker in some commercial firm. That accounts for his
+concealment of name, and fear of its being known that he was addicted
+in his holiday to tastes and habits so opposed to his calling."
+
+While he was thus thinking, the lady had drawn her chair close to the
+minstrel, and was speaking to him with evident earnestness, but in
+tones too low for Kenelm to hear. Still it seemed to him, by her
+manner and by the man's look, as if she were speaking in some sort of
+reproach, which he sought to deprecate. Then he spoke, also in a
+whisper, and she averted her face for a moment; then she held out her
+hand, and the minstrel kissed it. Certainly, thus seen, the two might
+well be taken for lovers; and the soft night, the fragrance of the
+flowers, silence and solitude, stars and moon light, all girt them as
+with an atmosphere of love. Presently the man rose and leaned over
+the balcony, propping his cheek on his hand, and gazing on the river.
+The lady rose too, and also leaned over the balustrade, her dark hair
+almost touching the auburn locks of her companion.
+
+Kenelm sighed. Was it from envy, from pity, from fear? I know not;
+but he sighed.
+
+After a brief pause, the lady said, still in low tones, but not too
+low this time to escape Kenelm's fine sense of hearing,--
+
+"Tell me those verses again. I must remember every word of them when
+you are gone."
+
+The man shook his head gently, and answered, but inaudibly.
+
+"Do," said the lady; "set them to music later; and the next time you
+come I will sing them. I have thought of a title for them."
+
+"What?" asked the minstrel.
+
+"Love's quarrel."
+
+The minstrel turned his head, and their eyes met, and, in meeting,
+lingered long. Then he moved away, and with face turned from her and
+towards the river, gave the melody of his wondrous voice to the
+following lines:--
+
+
+ LOVE'S QUARREL.
+
+ "Standing by the river, gazing on the river,
+ See it paved with starbeams,--heaven is at our feet;
+ Now the wave is troubled, now the rushes quiver;
+ Vanished is the starlight: it was a deceit.
+
+ "Comes a little cloudlet 'twixt ourselves and heaven,
+ And from all the river fades the silver track;
+ Put thine arms around me, whisper low, 'Forgiven!'
+ See how on the river starlight settles back."
+
+
+When he had finished, still with face turned aside, the lady did not,
+indeed, whisper "Forgiven," nor put her arms around him; but, as if by
+irresistible impulse, she laid her hand lightly on his shoulder.
+
+The minstrel started.
+
+There came to his ear,--he knew not from whence, from whom,--
+
+"Mischief! mischief! Remember the little child!"
+
+"Hush!" he said, staring round. "Did you not hear a voice?"
+
+"Only yours," said the lady.
+
+"It was our guardian angel's, Amalie. It came in time. We will go
+within."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE next morning betimes Kenelm visited Tom at his uncle's home. A
+comfortable and respectable home it was, like that of an owner in easy
+circumstances. The veterinary surgeon himself was intelligent, and
+apparently educated beyond the range of his calling; a childless
+widower, between sixty and seventy, living with a sister, an old maid.
+They were evidently much attached to Tom, and delighted by the hope of
+keeping him with them. Tom himself looked rather sad, but not sullen,
+and his face brightened wonderfully at first sight of Kenelm. That
+oddity made himself as pleasant and as much like other people as he
+could in conversing with the old widower and the old maid, and took
+leave, engaging Tom to be at his inn at half past twelve, and spend
+the day with him and the minstrel. He then returned to the Golden
+Lamb, and waited there for his first visitant; the minstrel. That
+votary of the muse arrived punctually at twelve o'clock. His
+countenance was less cheerful and sunny than usual. Kenelm made no
+allusion to the scene he had witnessed, nor did his visitor seem to
+suspect that Kenelm had witnessed it or been the utterer of that
+warning voice.
+
+KENELM.--"I have asked my friend Tom Bowles to come a little later,
+because I wished you to be of use to him, and, in order to be so, I
+should suggest how."
+
+THE MINSTREL.--"Pray do."
+
+KENELM.--"You know that I am not a poet, and I do not have much
+reverence for verse-making merely as a craft."
+
+THE MINSTREL.--"Neither have I."
+
+KENELM.--"But I have a great reverence for poetry as a priesthood. I
+felt that reverence for you when you sketched and talked priesthood
+last evening, and placed in my heart--I hope forever while it
+beats--the image of the child on the sunlit hill, high above the
+abodes of men, tossing her flower-ball heavenward and with heavenward
+eyes."
+
+The singer's cheek coloured high, and his lip quivered: he was very
+sensitive to praise; most singers are.
+
+Kenelm resumed, "I have been educated in the Realistic school, and
+with realism I am discontented, because in realism as a school there
+is no truth. It contains but a bit of truth, and that the coldest and
+hardest bit of it, and he who utters a bit of truth and suppresses the
+rest of it tells a lie."
+
+THE MINSTREL (slyly).--"Does the critic who says to me, 'Sing of
+beefsteak, because the appetite for food is a real want of daily life,
+and don't sing of art and glory and love, because in daily life a man
+may do without such ideas,'--tell a lie?"
+
+KENELM.--"Thank you for that rebuke. I submit to it. No doubt I did
+tell a lie,--that is, if I were quite in earnest in my recommendation,
+and if not in earnest, why--"
+
+THE MINSTREL.--"You belied yourself."
+
+KENELM.--"Very likely. I set out on my travels to escape from shams,
+and begin to discover that I am a sham /par excellence/. But I
+suddenly come across you, as a boy dulled by his syntax and his vulgar
+fractions suddenly comes across a pleasant poem or a picture-book, and
+feels his wits brighten up. I owe you much: you have done me a world
+of good."
+
+"I cannot guess how."
+
+"Possibly not, but you have shown me how the realism of Nature herself
+takes colour and life and soul when seen on the ideal or poetic side
+of it. It is not exactly the words that you say or sing that do me
+the good, but they awaken within me new trains of thought, which I
+seek to follow out. The best teacher is the one who suggests rather
+than dogmatizes, and inspires his listener with the wish to teach
+himself. Therefore, O singer! whatever be the worth in critical eyes
+of your songs, I am glad to remember that you would like to go through
+the world always singing."
+
+"Pardon me: you forget that I added, 'if life were always young, and
+the seasons were always summer.'"
+
+"I do not forget. But if youth and summer fade for you, you leave
+youth and summer behind you as you pass along,--behind in hearts which
+mere realism would make always old, and counting their slothful beats
+under the gray of a sky without sun or stars; wherefore I pray you to
+consider how magnificent a mission the singer's is,--to harmonize your
+life with your song, and toss your flowers, as your child does,
+heavenward, with heavenward eyes. Think only of this when you talk
+with my sorrowing friend, and you will do him good, as you have done
+me, without being able to guess how a seeker after the Beautiful, such
+as you, carries us along with him on his way; so that we, too, look
+out for beauty, and see it in the wild-flowers to which we had been
+blind before."
+
+Here Tom entered the little sanded parlour where this dialogue had
+been held, and the three men sallied forth, taking the shortest cut
+from the town into the fields and woodlands.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+WHETHER or not his spirits were raised by Kenelm's praise and
+exhortations, the minstrel that day talked with a charm that
+spellbound Tom, and Kenelm was satisfied with brief remarks on his
+side tending to draw out the principal performer.
+
+The talk was drawn from outward things, from natural objects,--objects
+that interest children, and men who, like Tom Bowles, have been
+accustomed to view surroundings more with the heart's eye than the
+mind's eye. This rover about the country knew much of the habits of
+birds and beasts and insects, and told anecdotes of them with a
+mixture of humour and pathos, which fascinated Tom's attention, made
+him laugh heartily, and sometimes brought tears into his big blue
+eyes.
+
+They dined at an inn by the wayside, and the dinner was mirthful; then
+they wended their way slowly back. By the declining daylight their
+talk grew somewhat graver, and Kenelm took more part in it. Tom
+listened mute,--still fascinated. At length, as the town came in
+sight, they agreed to halt a while, in a bosky nook soft with mosses
+and sweet with wild thyme.
+
+There, as they lay stretched at their ease, the birds hymning vesper
+songs amid the boughs above, or dropping, noiseless and fearless, for
+their evening food on the swards around them, the wanderer said to
+Kenelm, "You tell me that you are no poet, yet I am sure you have a
+poet's perception: you must have written poetry?"
+
+"Not I; as I before told you, only school verses in dead languages:
+but I found in my knapsack this morning a copy of some rhymes, made by
+a fellow-collegian, which I put into my pocket meaning to read them to
+you both. They are not verses like yours, which evidently burst from
+you spontaneously, and are not imitated from any other poets. These
+verses were written by a Scotchman, and smack of imitation from the
+old ballad style. There is little to admire in the words themselves,
+but there is something in the idea which struck me as original, and
+impressed me sufficiently to keep a copy, and somehow or other it got
+into the leaves of one of the two books I carried with me from home."
+
+"What are those books? Books of poetry both, I will venture to
+wager--"
+
+"Wrong! Both metaphysical, and dry as a bone. Tom, light your pipe,
+and you, sir, lean more at ease on your elbow; I should warn you that
+the ballad is long. Patience!"
+
+"Attention!" said the minstrel.
+
+"Fire!" added Tom.
+
+Kenelm began to read,--and he read well.
+
+
+ LORD RONALD'S BRIDE.
+
+ PART I.
+
+ "WHY gathers the crowd in the market-place
+ Ere the stars have yet left the sky?"
+ "For a holiday show and an act of grace,--
+ At the sunrise a witch shall die."
+
+ "What deed has she done to deserve that doom?
+ Has she blighted the standing corn,
+ Or rifled for philters a dead man's tomb,
+ Or rid mothers of babes new-born?"
+
+ "Her pact with the fiend was not thus revealed,
+ She taught sinners the Word to hear;
+ The hungry she fed, and the sick she healed,
+ And was held as a Saint last year.
+
+ "But a holy man, who at Rome had been,
+ Had discovered, by book and bell,
+ That the marvels she wrought were through arts unclean,
+ And the lies of the Prince of Hell.
+
+ "And our Mother the Church, for the dame was rich,
+ And her husband was Lord of Clyde,
+ Would fain have been mild to this saint-like witch
+ If her sins she had not denied.
+
+ "But hush, and come nearer to see the sight,
+ Sheriff, halberds, and torchmen,--look!
+ That's the witch standing mute in her garb of white,
+ By the priest with his bell and book."
+
+ So the witch was consumed on the sacred pyre,
+ And the priest grew in power and pride,
+ And the witch left a son to succeed his sire
+ In the halls and the lands of Clyde.
+
+ And the infant waxed comely and strong and brave,
+ But his manhood had scarce begun,
+ When his vessel was launched on the northern wave
+ To the shores which are near the sun.
+
+ PART II.
+
+ Lord Ronald has come to his halls in Clyde
+ With a bride of some unknown race;
+ Compared with the man who would kiss that bride
+ Wallace wight were a coward base.
+
+ Her eyes had the glare of the mountain-cat
+ When it springs on the hunter's spear,
+ At the head of the board when that lady sate
+ Hungry men could not eat for fear.
+
+ And the tones of her voice had that deadly growl
+ Of the bloodhound that scents its prey;
+ No storm was so dark as that lady's scowl
+ Under tresses of wintry gray.
+
+ "Lord Ronald! men marry for love or gold,
+ Mickle rich must have been thy bride!"
+ "Man's heart may be bought, woman's hand be sold,
+ On the banks of our northern Clyde.
+
+ "My bride is, in sooth, mickle rich to me
+ Though she brought not a groat in dower,
+ For her face, couldst thou see it as I do see,
+ Is the fairest in hall or bower!"
+
+ Quoth the bishop one day to our lord the king,
+ "Satan reigns on the Clyde alway,
+ And the taint in the blood of the witch doth cling
+ To the child that she brought to day.
+
+ "Lord Ronald hath come from the Paynim land
+ With a bride that appals the sight;
+ Like his dam she hath moles on her dread right hand,
+ And she turns to a snake at night.
+
+ "It is plain that a Scot who can blindly dote
+ On the face of an Eastern ghoul,
+ And a ghoul who was worth not a silver groat,
+ Is a Scot who has lost his soul.
+
+ "It were wise to have done with this demon tree
+ Which has teemed with such caukered fruit;
+ Add the soil where it stands to my holy See,
+ And consign to the flames its root."
+
+ "Holy man!" quoth King James, and he laughed, "we know
+ That thy tongue never wags in vain,
+ But the Church cist is full, and the king's is low,
+ And the Clyde is a fair domain.
+
+ "Yet a knight that's bewitched by a laidly fere
+ Needs not much to dissolve the spell;
+ We will summon the bride and the bridegroom here
+ Be at hand with thy book and bell."
+
+ PART III.
+
+ Lord Ronald stood up in King James's court,
+ And his dame by his dauntless side;
+ The barons who came in the hopes of sport
+ Shook with fright when they saw the bride.
+
+ The bishop, though armed with his bell and book,
+ Grew as white as if turned to stone;
+ It was only our king who could face that look,
+ But he spoke with a trembling tone.
+
+ "Lord Ronald, the knights of thy race and mine
+ Should have mates in their own degree;
+ What parentage, say, hath that bride of thine
+ Who hath come from the far countree?
+
+ "And what was her dowry in gold or land,
+ Or what was the charm, I pray,
+ That a comely young gallant should woo the hand
+ Of the ladye we see to-day?"
+
+ And the lords would have laughed, but that awful dame
+ Struck them dumb with her thunder-frown:
+ "Saucy king, did I utter my father's name,
+ Thou wouldst kneel as his liegeman down.
+
+ "Though I brought to Lord Ronald nor lands nor gold,
+ Nor the bloom of a fading cheek;
+ Yet, were I a widow, both young and old
+ Would my hand and my dowry seek.
+
+ "For the wish that he covets the most below,
+ And would hide from the saints above,
+ Which he dares not to pray for in weal or woe,
+ Is the dowry I bring my love.
+
+ "Let every man look in his heart and see
+ What the wish he most lusts to win,
+ And then let him fasten his eyes on me
+ While he thinks of his darling sin."
+
+ And every man--bishop, and lord, and king
+ Thought of what he most wished to win,
+ And, fixing his eye on that grewsome thing,
+ He beheld his own darling sin.
+
+ No longer a ghoul in that face he saw;
+ It was fair as a boy's first love:
+ The voice that had curdled his veins with awe
+ Was the coo of the woodland dove.
+
+ Each heart was on flame for the peerless dame
+ At the price of the husband's life;
+ Bright claymores flash out, and loud voices shout,
+ "In thy widow shall be my wife."
+
+ Then darkness fell over the palace hall,
+ More dark and more dark it fell,
+ And a death-groan boomed hoarse underneath the pall,
+ And was drowned amid roar and yell.
+
+ When light through the lattice-pane stole once more,
+ It was gray as a wintry dawn,
+ And the bishop lay cold on the regal floor,
+ With a stain on his robes of lawn.
+
+ Lord Ronald was standing beside the dead,
+ In the scabbard he plunged his sword,
+ And with visage as wan as the corpse, he said,
+ "Lo! my ladye hath kept her word.
+
+ "Now I leave her to others to woo and win,
+ For no longer I find her fair;
+ Could I look on the face of my darling sin,
+ I should see but a dead man's there.
+
+ "And the dowry she brought me is here returned,
+ For the wish of my heart has died,
+ It is quenched in the blood of the priest who burned
+ My sweet mother, the Saint of Clyde."
+
+ Lord Ronald strode over the stony floor,
+ Not a hand was outstretched to stay;
+ Lord Ronald has passed through the gaping door,
+ Not an eye ever traced the way.
+
+ And the ladye, left widowed, was prized above
+ All the maidens in hall and bower,
+ Many bartered their lives for that ladye's love,
+ And their souls for that ladye's dower.
+
+ God grant that the wish which I dare not pray
+ Be not that which I lust to win,
+ And that ever I look with my first dismay
+ On the face of my darling sin!
+
+
+As he ceased, Kenelm's eye fell on Tom's face upturned to his own,
+with open lips, an intent stare, and paled cheeks, and a look of that
+higher sort of terror which belongs to awe. The man, then recovering
+himself, tried to speak, and attempted a sickly smile, but neither
+would do. He rose abruptly and walked away, crept under the shadow of
+a dark beech-tree, and stood there leaning against the trunk.
+
+"What say you to the ballad?" asked Kenelm of the singer.
+
+"It is not without power," answered he.
+
+"Ay, of a certain kind."
+
+The minstrel looked hard at Kenelm, and dropped his eyes, with a
+heightened glow on his cheek.
+
+"The Scotch are a thoughtful race. The Scot who wrote this thing may
+have thought of a day when he saw beauty in the face of a darling sin;
+but, if so, it is evident that his sight recovered from that glamoury.
+Shall we walk on? Come, Tom."
+
+The minstrel left them at the entrance of the town, saying, "I regret
+that I cannot see more of either of you, as I quit Luscombe at
+daybreak. Here, by the by, I forgot to give it before, is the address
+you wanted."
+
+KENELM.--"Of the little child. I am glad you remembered her."
+
+The minstrel again looked hard at Kenelm, this time without dropping
+his eyes. Kenelm's expression of face was so simply quiet that it
+might be almost called vacant.
+
+Kenelm and Tom continued to walk on towards the veterinary surgeon's
+house, for some minutes silently. Then Tom said in a whisper, "Did
+you not mean those rhymes to hit me here--/here/?" and he struck his
+breast.
+
+"The rhymes were written long before I saw you, Tom; but it is well if
+their meaning strike us all. Of you, my friend, I have no fear now.
+Are you not already a changed man?"
+
+"I feel as if I were going through a change," answered Tom, in slow,
+dreary accents. "In hearing you and that gentleman talk so much of
+things that I never thought of, I felt something in me,--you will
+laugh when I tell you,--something like a bird."
+
+"Like a bird,--good!--a bird has wings."
+
+"Just so."
+
+"And you felt wings that you were unconscious of before, fluttering
+and beating themselves as against the wires of a cage. You were true
+to your instincts then, my dear fellow-man,--instincts of space and
+Heaven. Courage!--the cage-door will open soon. And now, practically
+speaking, I give you this advice in parting: You have a quick and
+sensitive mind which you have allowed that strong body of yours to
+incarcerate and suppress. Give that mind fair play. Attend to the
+business of your calling diligently; the craving for regular work is
+the healthful appetite of mind: but in your spare hours cultivate the
+new ideas which your talk with men who have been accustomed to
+cultivate the mind more than the body has sown within you. Belong to
+a book-club, and interest yourself in books. A wise man has said,
+'Books widen the present by adding to it the past and the future.'
+Seek the company of educated men and educated women too; and when you
+are angry with another, reason with him: don't knock him down; and
+don't be knocked down yourself by an enemy much stronger than
+yourself,--Drink. Do all this, and when I see you again you will
+be--"
+
+"Stop, sir,--you will see me again?"
+
+"Yes, if we both live, I promise it."
+
+"When?"
+
+"You see, Tom, we have both of us something in our old selves which we
+must work off. You will work off your something by repose, and I must
+work off mine, if I can, by moving about. So I am on my travels. May
+we both have new selves better than the old selves, when we again
+shake hands! For your part try your best, dear Tom, and Heaven
+prosper you."
+
+"And Heaven bless you!" cried Tom, fervently, with tears rolling
+unheeded from his bold blue eyes.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THOUGH Kenelm left Luscombe on Tuesday morning, he did not appear at
+Neesdale Park till the Wednesday, a little before the dressing-bell
+for dinner. His adventures in the interim are not worth repeating.
+He had hoped he might fall in again with the minstrel, but he did not.
+
+His portmanteau had arrived, and he heaved a sigh as he cased himself
+in a gentleman's evening dress. "Alas! I have soon got back again
+into my own skin."
+
+There were several other guests in the house, though not a large
+party,--they had been asked with an eye to the approaching
+election,--consisting of squires and clergy from remoter parts of the
+county. Chief among the guests in rank and importance, and rendered
+by the occasion the central object of interest, was George Belvoir.
+
+Kenelm bore his part in this society with a resignation that partook
+of repentance.
+
+The first day he spoke very little, and was considered a very dull
+young man by the lady he took in to dinner. Mr. Travers in vain tried
+to draw him out. He had anticipated much amusement from the
+eccentricities of his guest, who had talked volubly enough in the
+fernery, and was sadly disappointed. "I feel," he whispered to Mrs.
+Campion, "like poor Lord Pomfret, who, charmed with Punch's lively
+conversation, bought him, and was greatly surprised that, when he had
+once brought him home, Punch would not talk."
+
+"But your Punch listens," said Mrs. Campion, "and he observes."
+
+George Belvoir, on the other hand, was universally declared to be very
+agreeable. Though not naturally jovial, he forced himself to appear
+so,--laughing loud with the squires, and entering heartily with their
+wives and daughters into such topics as county-balls and
+croquet-parties; and when after dinner he had, Cato-like, 'warmed his
+virtue with wine,' the virtue came out very lustily in praise of good
+men,--namely, men of his own party,--and anathemas on bad
+men,--namely, men of the other party.
+
+Now and then he appealed to Kenelm, and Kenelm always returned the
+same answer, "There is much in what you say."
+
+The first evening closed in the usual way in country houses. There
+was some lounging under moonlight on the terrace before the house;
+then there was some singing by young lady amateurs, and a rubber of
+whist for the elders; then wine-and-water, hand-candlesticks, a
+smoking-room for those who smoked, and bed for those who did not.
+
+In the course of the evening, Cecilia, partly in obedience to the
+duties of hostess and partly from that compassion for shyness which
+kindly and high-bred persons entertain, had gone a little out of her
+way to allure Kenelm forth from the estranged solitude he had
+contrived to weave around him. In vain for the daughter as for the
+father. He replied to her with the quiet self-possession which should
+have convinced her that no man on earth was less entitled to
+indulgence for the gentlemanlike infirmity of shyness, and no man less
+needed the duties of any hostess for the augmentation of his comforts,
+or rather for his diminished sense of discomfort; but his replies were
+in monosyllables, and made with the air of a man who says in his
+heart, "If this creature would but leave me alone!"
+
+Cecilia, for the first time in her life, was piqued, and, strange to
+say, began to feel more interest about this indifferent stranger than
+about the popular, animated, pleasant George Belvoir, who she knew by
+womanly instinct was as much in love with her as he could be.
+
+Cecilia Travers that night on retiring to rest told her maid,
+smilingly, that she was too tired to have her hair done; and yet, when
+the maid was dismissed, she looked at herself in the glass more
+gravely and more discontentedly than she had ever looked there before;
+and, tired though she was, stood at the window gazing into the moonlit
+night for a good hour after the maid left her.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY has now been several days a guest at Neesdale Park.
+He has recovered speech; the other guests have gone, including George
+Belvoir. Leopold Travers has taken a great fancy to Kenelm. Leopold
+was one of those men, not uncommon perhaps in England, who, with great
+mental energies, have little book-knowledge, and when they come in
+contact with a book-reader who is not a pedant feel a pleasant
+excitement in his society, a source of interest in comparing notes
+with him, a constant surprise in finding by what venerable authorities
+the deductions which their own mother-wit has drawn from life are
+supported, or by what cogent arguments derived from books those
+deductions are contravened or upset. Leopold Travers had in him that
+sense of humour which generally accompanies a strong practical
+understanding (no man, for instance, has more practical understanding
+than a Scot, and no man has a keener susceptibility to humour), and
+not only enjoyed Kenelm's odd way of expressing himself, but very
+often mistook Kenelm's irony for opinion spoken in earnest.
+
+Since his early removal from the capital and his devotion to
+agricultural pursuits, it was so seldom that Leopold Travers met a man
+by whose conversation his mind was diverted to other subjects than
+those which were incidental to the commonplace routine of his life
+that he found in Kenelm's views of men and things a source of novel
+amusement, and a stirring appeal to such metaphysical creeds of his
+own as had been formed unconsciously, and had long reposed unexamined
+in the recesses of an intellect shrewd and strong, but more accustomed
+to dictate than to argue. Kenelm, on his side, saw much in his host
+to like and to admire; but, reversing their relative positions in
+point of years, he conversed with Travers as with a mind younger than
+his own. Indeed, it was one of his crotchety theories that each
+generation is in substance mentally older than the generation
+preceding it, especially in all that relates to science; and, as he
+would say, "The study of life is a science, and not an art."
+
+But Cecilia,--what impression did she create upon the young visitor?
+Was he alive to the charm of her rare beauty, to the grace of a mind
+sufficiently stored for commune with those who love to think and to
+imagine, and yet sufficiently feminine and playful to seize the
+sportive side of realities, and allow their proper place to the
+trifles which make the sum of human things? An impression she did
+make, and that impression was new to him and pleasing. Nay, sometimes
+in her presence and sometimes when alone, he fell into abstracted
+consultations with himself, saying, "Kenelm Chillingly, now that thou
+hast got back into thy proper skin, dost thou not think that thou
+hadst better remain there? Couldst thou not be contented with thy lot
+as erring descendant of Adam, if thou couldst win for thy mate so
+faultless a descendant of Eve as now flits before thee?" But he could
+not abstract from himself any satisfactory answer to the question he
+had addressed to himself.
+
+Once he said abruptly to Travers, as, on their return from their
+rambles, they caught a glimpse of Cecilia's light form bending over
+the flower-beds on the lawn, "Do you admire Virgil?"
+
+"To say truth I have not read Virgil since I was a boy; and, between
+you and me, I then thought him rather monotonous."
+
+"Perhaps because his verse is so smooth in its beauty?"
+
+"Probably. When one is very young one's taste is faulty; and if a
+poet is not faulty, we are apt to think he wants vivacity and fire."
+
+"Thank you for your lucid explanation," answered Kenelm, adding
+musingly to himself, "I am afraid I should yawn very often if I were
+married to a Miss Virgil."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE house of Mr. Travers contained a considerable collection of family
+portraits, few of them well painted, but the Squire was evidently
+proud of such evidences of ancestry. They not only occupied a
+considerable space on the walls of the reception rooms, but swarmed
+into the principal sleeping-chambers, and smiled or frowned on the
+beholder from dark passages and remote lobbies. One morning, Cecilia,
+on her way to the china closet, found Kenelm gazing very intently upon
+a female portrait consigned to one of those obscure receptacles by
+which through a back staircase he gained the only approach from the
+hall to his chamber.
+
+"I don't pretend to be a good judge of paintings," said Kenelm, as
+Cecilia paused beside him; "but it strikes me that this picture is
+very much better than most of those to which places of honour are
+assigned in your collection. And the face itself is so lovely that it
+would add an embellishment to the princeliest galleries."
+
+"Yes," said Cecilia, with a half-sigh. "The face is lovely, and the
+portrait is considered one of Lely's rarest masterpieces. It used to
+hang over the chimney-piece in the drawing-room. My father had it
+placed here many years ago."
+
+"Perhaps because he discovered it was not a family portrait?"
+
+"On the contrary,--because it grieves him to think it is a family
+portrait. Hush! I hear his footstep: don't speak of it to him; don't
+let him see you looking at it. The subject is very painful to him."
+
+Here Cecilia vanished into the china closet and Kenelm turned off to
+his own room.
+
+What sin committed by the original in the time of Charles II. but only
+discovered in the reign of Victoria could have justified Leopold
+Travers in removing the most pleasing portrait in the house from the
+honoured place it had occupied, and banishing it to so obscure a
+recess? Kenelm said no more on the subject, and indeed an hour
+afterwards had dismissed it from his thoughts. The next day he rode
+out with Travers and Cecilia. Their way passed through quiet shady
+lanes without any purposed direction, when suddenly, at the spot where
+three of those lanes met on an angle of common ground, a lonely gray
+tower, in the midst of a wide space of grass-land which looked as if
+it had once been a park, with huge boles of pollarded oak dotting the
+space here and there, rose before them.
+
+"Cissy!" cried Travers, angrily reining in his horse and stopping
+short in a political discussion which he had forced upon Kenelm,
+"Cissy! How comes this? We have taken the wrong turn! No matter, I
+see there," pointing to the right, "the chimney-pots of old Mondell's
+homestead. He has not yet promised his vote to George Belvoir. I'll
+go and have a talk with him. Turn back, you and Mr. Chillingly,--meet
+me at Terner's Green, and wait for me there till I come. I need not
+excuse myself to you, Chillingly. A vote is a vote." So saying, the
+Squire, whose ordinary riding-horse was an old hunter, halted, turned,
+and, no gate being visible, put the horse over a stiff fence and
+vanished in the direction of old Mondell's chimney-pots. Kenelm,
+scarcely hearing his host's instructions to Cecilia and excuses to
+himself, remained still and gazing on the old tower thus abruptly
+obtruded on his view.
+
+Though no learned antiquarian like his father, Kenelm had a strange
+fascinating interest in all relics of the past; and old gray towers,
+where they are not church towers, are very rarely to be seen in
+England. All around the old gray tower spoke with an unutterable
+mournfulness of a past in ruins: you could see remains of some large
+Gothic building once attached to it, rising here and there in
+fragments of deeply buttressed walls; you could see in a dry ditch,
+between high ridges, where there had been a fortified moat: nay, you
+could even see where once had been the bailey hill from which a baron
+of old had dispensed justice. Seldom indeed does the most acute of
+antiquarians discover that remnant of Norman times on lands still held
+by the oldest of Anglo-Norman families. Then, the wild nature of the
+demesne around; those ranges of sward, with those old giant
+oak-trunks, hollowed within and pollarded at top,--all spoke, in
+unison with the gray tower, of a past as remote from the reign of
+Victoria as the Pyramids are from the sway of the Viceroy of Egypt.
+
+"Let us turn back," said Miss Travers; "my father would not like me to
+stay here."
+
+"Pardon me a moment. I wish my father were here; he would stay till
+sunset. But what is the history of that old tower? a history it must
+have."
+
+"Every home has a history, even a peasant's hut," said Cecilia. "But
+do pardon me if I ask you to comply with my father's request. I at
+least must turn back."
+
+Thus commanded, Kenelm reluctantly withdrew his gaze from the ruin and
+regained Cecilia, who was already some paces in return down the lane.
+
+"I am far from a very inquisitive man by temperament," said Kenelm,
+"so far as the affairs of the living are concerned. But I should not
+care to open a book if I had no interest in the past. Pray indulge my
+curiosity to learn something about that old tower. It could not look
+more melancholy and solitary if I had built it myself."
+
+"Its most melancholy associations are with a very recent past,"
+answered Cecilia. "The tower, in remote times, formed the keep of a
+castle belonging to the most ancient and once the most powerful family
+in these parts. The owners were barons who took active share in the
+Wars of the Roses. The last of them sided with Richard III., and
+after the battle of Bosworth the title was attainted, and the larger
+portion of the lands was confiscated. Loyalty to a Plantagenet was of
+course treason to a Tudor. But the regeneration of the family rested
+with their direct descendants, who had saved from the general wreck of
+their fortunes what may be called a good squire's estate,--about,
+perhaps, the same rental as my father's, but of much larger acreage.
+These squires, however, were more looked up to in the county than the
+wealthiest peer. They were still by far the oldest family in the
+county; and traced in their pedigree alliances with the most
+illustrious houses in English history. In themselves too for many
+generations they were a high-spirited, hospitable, popular race,
+living unostentatiously on their income, and contented with their rank
+of squires. The castle, ruined by time and siege, they did not
+attempt to restore. They dwelt in a house near to it, built about
+Elizabeth's time, which you could not see, for it lies in a hollow
+behind the tower,--a moderate-sized, picturesque, country gentleman's
+house. Our family intermarried with them,--the portrait you saw was a
+daughter of their house,--and very proud was any squire in the county
+of intermarriage with the Fletwodes."
+
+"Fletwode,--that was their name? I have a vague recollection of
+having heard the name connected with some disastrous--oh, but it can't
+be the same family: pray go on."
+
+"I fear it is the same family. But I will finish the story as I have
+heard it. The property descended at last to one Bertram Fletwode,
+who, unfortunately, obtained the reputation of being a very clever man
+of business. There was some mining company in which, with other
+gentlemen in the county, he took great interest; invested largely in
+shares; became the head of the direction--"
+
+"I see; and was of course ruined."
+
+"No; worse than that: he became very rich; and, unhappily, became
+desirous of being richer still. I have heard that there was a great
+mania for speculations just about that time. He embarked in these,
+and prospered, till at last he was induced to invest a large share of
+the fortune thus acquired in the partnership of a bank which enjoyed a
+high character. Up to that time he had retained popularity and esteem
+in the county; but the squires who shared in the adventures of the
+mining company, and knew little or nothing about other speculations in
+which his name did not appear, professed to be shocked at the idea of
+a Fletwode of Fletwode being ostensibly joined in partnership with a
+Jones of Clapham in a London bank."
+
+"Slow folks, those country squires,--behind the progress of the age.
+Well?"
+
+"I have heard that Bertram Fletwode was himself very reluctant to take
+this step, but was persuaded to do so by his son. This son, Alfred,
+was said to have still greater talents for business than the father,
+and had been not only associated with but consulted by him in all the
+later speculations which had proved so fortunate. Mrs. Campion knew
+Alfred Fletwode very well. She describes him as handsome, with quick,
+eager eyes; showy and imposing in his talk; immensely ambitious, more
+ambitious than avaricious,--collecting money less for its own sake
+than for that which it could give,--rank and power. According to her
+it was the dearest wish of his heart to claim the old barony, but not
+before there could go with the barony a fortune adequate to the lustre
+of a title so ancient, and equal to the wealth of modern peers with
+higher nominal rank."
+
+"A poor ambition at the best; of the two I should prefer that of a
+poet in a garret. But I am no judge. Thank Heaven I have no
+ambition. Still, all ambition, all desire to rise, is interesting to
+him who is ignominiously contented if he does not fall. So the son
+had his way, and Fletwode joined company with Jones on the road to
+wealth and the peerage; meanwhile did the son marry? if so, of course
+the daughter of a duke or a millionnaire. Tuft-hunting, or
+money-making, at the risk of degradation and the workhouse. Progress
+of the age!"
+
+"No," replied Cecilia, smiling at this outburst, but smiling sadly,
+"Fletwode did not marry the daughter of a duke or a millionnaire; but
+still his wife belonged to a noble family,--very poor, but very proud.
+Perhaps he married from motives of ambition, though not of gain. Her
+father was of much political influence that might perhaps assist his
+claim to the barony. The mother, a woman of the world, enjoying a
+high social position, and nearly related to a connection of
+ours,--Lady Glenalvon."
+
+"Lady Glenalvon, the dearest of my lady friends! You are connected
+with her?"
+
+"Yes; Lord Glenalvon was my mother's uncle. But I wish to finish my
+story before my father joins us. Alfred Fletwode did not marry till
+long after the partnership in the bank. His father, at his desire,
+had bought up the whole business, Mr. Jones having died. The bank was
+carried on in the names of Fletwode and Son. But the father had
+become merely a nominal or what I believe is called a 'sleeping'
+partner. He had long ceased to reside in the county. The old house
+was not grand enough for him. He had purchased a palatial residence
+in one of the home counties; lived there in great splendour; was a
+munificent patron of science and art; and in spite of his earlier
+addictions to business-like speculations he appears to have been a
+singularly accomplished, high-bred gentleman. Some years before his
+son's marriage, Mr. Fletwode had been afflicted with partial
+paralysis, and his medical attendant enjoined rigid abstention from
+business. From that time he never interfered with his son's
+management of the bank. He had an only daughter, much younger than
+Alfred. Lord Eagleton, my mother's brother, was engaged to be married
+to her. The wedding-day was fixed,--when the world was startled by
+the news that the great firm of Fletwode and Son had stopped payment;
+is that the right phrase?"
+
+"I believe so."
+
+"A great many people were ruined in that failure. The public
+indignation was very great. Of course all the Fletwode property went
+to the creditors. Old Mr. Fletwode was legally acquitted of all other
+offence than that of overconfidence in his son. Alfred was convicted
+of fraud,--of forgery. I don't, of course, know the particulars, they
+are very complicated. He was sentenced to a long term of servitude,
+but died the day he was condemned; apparently by poison, which he had
+long secreted about his person. Now you can understand why my father,
+who is almost gratuitously sensitive on the point of honour, removed
+into a dark corner the portrait of Arabella Fletwode,--his own
+ancestress, but also the ancestress of a convicted felon: you can
+understand why the whole subject is so painful to him. His wife's
+brother was to have married the felon's sister; and though, of course,
+that marriage was tacitly broken off by the terrible disgrace that had
+befallen the Fletwodes, yet I don't think my poor uncle ever recovered
+the blow to his hopes. He went abroad, and died in Madeira of a slow
+decline."
+
+"And the felon's sister, did she die too?"
+
+"No; not that I know of. Mrs. Campion says that she saw in a
+newspaper the announcement of old Mr. Fletwode's death, and a
+paragraph to the effect that after that event Miss Fletwode had sailed
+from Liverpool to New York."
+
+"Alfred Fletwode's wife went back, of course, to her family?"
+
+"Alas! no,--poor thing! She had not been many months married when the
+bank broke; and among his friends her wretched husband appears to have
+forged the names of the trustees to her marriage settlement, and sold
+out the sums which would otherwise have served her as a competence.
+Her father, too, was a great sufferer by the bankruptcy, having by his
+son-in-law's advice placed a considerable portion of his moderate
+fortune in Alfred's hands for investment, all of which was involved in
+the general wreck. I am afraid he was a very hard-hearted man: at all
+events his poor daughter never returned to him. She died, I think,
+even before the death of Bertram Fletwode. The whole story is very
+dismal."
+
+"Dismal indeed, but pregnant with salutary warnings to those who live
+in an age of progress. Here you see a family of fair fortune, living
+hospitably, beloved, revered, more looked up to by their neighbours
+than the wealthiest nobles; no family not proud to boast alliance with
+it. All at once, in the tranquil record of this happy race, appears
+that darling of the age, that hero of progress,--a clever man of
+business. He be contented to live as his fathers! He be contented
+with such trifles as competence, respect, and love! Much too clever
+for that. The age is money-making,--go with the age! He goes with
+the age. Born a gentleman only, he exalts himself into a trader. But
+at least he, it seems, if greedy, was not dishonest. He was born a
+gentleman, but his son was born a trader. The son is a still cleverer
+man of business; the son is consulted and trusted. Aha! He too goes
+with the age; to greed he links ambition. The trader's son wishes to
+return--what? to the rank of gentleman?--gentleman! nonsense!
+everybody is a gentleman nowadays,--to the title of Lord. How ends it
+all! Could I sit but for twelve hours in the innermost heart of that
+Alfred Fletwode; could I see how, step by step from his childhood, the
+dishonest son was avariciously led on by the honest father to depart
+from the old /vestigia/ of Fletwodes of Fletwode,--scorning The Enough
+to covet The More, gaining The More to sigh, 'It is not The
+Enough,'--I think I might show that the age lives in a house of glass,
+and had better not for its own sake throw stones on the felon!"
+
+"Ah, but, Mr. Chillingly, surely this is a very rare exception in the
+general--"
+
+"Rare!" interrupted Kenelm, who was excited to a warmth of passion
+which would have startled his most intimate friend,-if indeed an
+intimate friend had ever been vouchsafed to him,--"rare! nay, how
+common--I don't say to the extent of forgery and fraud, but to the
+extent of degradation and ruin--is the greed of a Little More to those
+who have The Enough! is the discontent with competence, respect, and
+love, when catching sight of a money-bag! How many well-descended
+county families, cursed with an heir who is called a clever man of
+business, have vanished from the soil! A company starts, the clever
+man joins it one bright day. Pouf! the old estates and the old name
+are powder. Ascend higher. Take nobles whose ancestral titles ought
+to be to English ears like the sound of clarions, awakening the most
+slothful to the scorn of money-bags and the passion for renown. Lo!
+in that mocking dance of death called the Progress of the Age, one who
+did not find Enough in a sovereign's revenue, and seeks The Little
+More as a gambler on the turf by the advice of blacklegs! Lo!
+another, with lands wider than his greatest ancestors ever possessed,
+must still go in for The Little More, adding acre to acre, heaping
+debt upon debt! Lo! a third, whose name, borne by his ancestors, was
+once the terror of England's foes,--the landlord of a hotel! A
+fourth,--but why go on through the list? Another and another still
+succeeds; each on the Road to Ruin, each in the Age of Progress. Ah,
+Miss Travers! in the old time it was through the Temple of Honour that
+one passed to the Temple of Fortune. In this wise age the process is
+reversed. But here comes your father."
+
+"A thousand pardons!" said Leopold Travers. "That numskull Mondell
+kept me so long with his old-fashioned Tory doubts whether liberal
+politics are favourable to agricultural prospects. But as he owes a
+round sum to a Whig lawyer I had to talk with his wife, a prudent
+woman; convinced her that his own agricultural prospects were safest
+on the Whig side of the question; and, after kissing his baby and
+shaking his hand, booked his vote for George Belvoir,--a plumper."
+
+"I suppose," said Kenelm to himself, and with that candour which
+characterized him whenever he talked to himself, "that Travers has
+taken the right road to the Temple, not of Honour, but of honours, in
+every country, ancient or modern, which has adopted the system of
+popular suffrage."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+THE next day Mrs. Campion and Cecilia were seated under the veranda.
+They were both ostensibly employed on two several pieces of
+embroidery, one intended for a screen, the other for a sofa-cushion;
+but the mind of neither was on her work.
+
+MRS. CAMPION.--"Has Mr. Chillingly said when he means to take leave?"
+
+CECILIA.--"Not to me. How much my dear father enjoys his
+conversation!"
+
+MRS. CAMPION.--"Cynicism and mockery were not so much the fashion
+among young men in your father's day as I suppose they are now, and
+therefore they seem new to Mr. Travers. To me they are not new,
+because I saw more of the old than the young when I lived in London,
+and cynicism and mockery are more natural to men who are leaving the
+world than to those who are entering it."
+
+CECILIA.--"Dear Mrs. Campion, how bitter you are, and how unjust! You
+take much too literally the jesting way in which Mr. Chillingly
+expresses himself. There can be no cynicism in one who goes out of
+his way to make others happy."
+
+MRS. CAMPION.--"You mean in the whim of making an ill-assorted
+marriage between a pretty village flirt and a sickly cripple, and
+settling a couple of peasants in a business for which they are wholly
+unfitted."
+
+CECILIA.--"Jessie Wiles is not a flirt, and I am convinced that she
+will make Will Somers a very good wife, and that the shop will be a
+great success."
+
+MRS. CAMPION.--"We shall see. Still, if Mr. Chillingly's talk belies
+his actions, he may be a good man, but he is a very affected one."
+
+CECILIA.--"Have I not heard you say that there are persons so natural
+that they seem affected to those who do not understand them?"
+
+Mrs. Campion raised her eyes to Cecilia's face, dropped them again
+over her work, and said, in grave undertones,--"Take care, Cecilia."
+
+"Take care of what?"
+
+"My dearest child, forgive me; but I do not like the warmth with which
+you defend Mr. Chillingly."
+
+"Would not my father defend him still more warmly if he had heard
+you?"
+
+"Men judge of men in their relations to men. I am a woman, and judge
+of men in their relations to women. I should tremble for the
+happiness of any woman who joined her fate with that of Kenelm
+Chillingly."
+
+"My dear friend, I do not understand you to-day."
+
+"Nay; I did not mean to be so solemn, my love. After all, it is
+nothing to us whom Mr. Chillingly may or may not marry. He is but a
+passing visitor, and, once gone, the chances are that we may not see
+him again for years."
+
+Thus speaking, Mrs. Campion again raised her eyes from her work,
+stealing a sidelong glance at Cecilia; and her mother-like heart sank
+within her, on noticing how suddenly pale the girl had become, and how
+her lips quivered. Mrs. Campion had enough knowledge of life to feel
+aware that she had committed a grievous blunder. In that earliest
+stage of virgin affection, when a girl is unconscious of more than a
+certain vague interest in one man which distinguishes him from others
+in her thoughts,--if she hears him unjustly disparaged, if some
+warning against him is implied, if the probability that he will never
+be more to her than a passing acquaintance is forcibly obtruded on
+her,--suddenly that vague interest, which might otherwise have faded
+away with many another girlish fancy, becomes arrested, consolidated;
+the quick pang it occasions makes her involuntarily, and for the first
+time, question herself, and ask, "Do I love?" But when a girl of a
+nature so delicate as that of Cecilia Travers can ask herself the
+question, "Do I love?" her very modesty, her very shrinking from
+acknowledging that any power over her thoughts for weal or for woe can
+be acquired by a man, except through the sanction of that love which
+only becomes divine in her eyes when it is earnest and pure and
+self-devoted, makes her prematurely disposed to answer "yes." And
+when a girl of such a nature in her own heart answers "yes" to such a
+question, even if she deceive herself at the moment, she begins to
+cherish the deceit till the belief in her love becomes a reality. She
+has adopted a religion, false or true, and she would despise herself
+if she could be easily converted.
+
+Mrs. Campion had so contrived that she had forced that question upon
+Cecilia, and she feared, by the girl's change of countenance, that the
+girl's heart had answered "yes."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+WHILE the conversation just narrated took place, Kenelm had walked
+forth to pay a visit to Will Somers. All obstacles to Will's marriage
+were now cleared away; the transfer of lease for the shop had been
+signed, and the banns were to be published for the first time on the
+following Sunday. We need not say that Will was very happy. Kenelm
+then paid a visit to Mrs. Bowles, with whom he stayed an hour. On
+reentering the Park, he saw Travers, walking slowly, with downcast
+eyes and his hands clasped behind him (his habit when in thought). He
+did not observe Kenelm's approach till within a few feet of him, and
+he then greeted his guest in listless accents, unlike his usual
+cheerful tones.
+
+"I have been visiting the man you have made so happy," said Kenelm.
+
+"Who can that be?"
+
+"Will Somers. Do you make so many people happy that your reminiscence
+of them is lost in their number?"
+
+Travers smiled faintly, and shook his head.
+
+Kenelm went on. "I have also seen Mrs. Bowles, and you will be
+pleased to hear that Tom is satisfied with his change of abode: there
+is no chance of his returning to Graveleigh; and Mrs. Bowles took very
+kindly to my suggestion that the little property you wish for should
+be sold to you, and, in that case, she would remove to Luscombe to be
+near her son."
+
+"I thank you much for your thought of me," said Travers, "and the
+affair shall be seen to at once, though the purchase is no longer
+important to me. I ought to have told you three days ago, but it
+slipped my memory, that a neighbouring squire, a young fellow just
+come into his property, has offered to exchange a capital farm, much
+nearer to my residence, for the lands I hold in Graveleigh, including
+Saunderson's farm and the cottages: they are quite at the outskirts of
+my estate, but run into his, and the exchange will be advantageous to
+both. Still I am glad that the neighbourhood should be thoroughly rid
+of a brute like Tom Bowles."
+
+"You would not call him brute if you knew him; but I am sorry to hear
+that Will Somers will be under another landlord."
+
+"It does not matter, since his tenure is secured for fourteen years."
+
+"What sort of man is the new landlord?"
+
+"I don't know much of him. He was in the army till his father died,
+and has only just made his appearance in the county. He has, however,
+already earned the character of being too fond of the other sex: it is
+well that pretty Jessie is to be safely married."
+
+Travers then relapsed into a moody silence from which Kenelm found it
+difficult to rouse him. At length the latter said kindly,--
+
+"My dear Mr. Travers, do not think I take a liberty if I venture to
+guess that something has happened this morning which troubles or vexes
+you. When that is the case, it is often a relief to say what it is,
+even to a confidant so unable to advise or to comfort as myself."
+
+"You are a good fellow, Chillingly, and I know not, at least in these
+parts, a man to whom I would unburden myself more freely. I am put
+out, I confess; disappointed unreasonably, in a cherished wish, and,"
+he added, with a slight laugh, "it always annoys me when I don't have
+my own way."
+
+"So it does me."
+
+"Don't you think that George Belvoir is a very fine young man?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"/I/ call him handsome; he is steadier, too, than most men of his age,
+and of his command of money; and yet he does not want spirit nor
+knowledge of life. To every advantage of rank and fortune he adds the
+industry and the ambition which attain distinction in public life."
+
+"Quite true. Is he going to withdraw from the election after all?"
+
+"Good heavens, no!"
+
+"Then how does he not let you have your own way?"
+
+"It is not he," said Travers, peevishly; "it is Cecilia. Don't you
+understand that George is precisely the husband I would choose for
+her; and this morning came a very well written manly letter from him,
+asking my permission to pay his addresses to her."
+
+"But that is your own way so far."
+
+"Yes, and here comes the balk. Of course I had to refer it to
+Cecilia, and she positively declines, and has no reasons to give; does
+not deny that George is good-looking and sensible, that he is a man of
+whose preference any girl might be proud; but she chooses to say she
+cannot love him, and when I ask why she cannot love him, has no other
+answer than that 'she cannot say.' It is too provoking."
+
+"It is provoking," answered Kenelm; "but then Love is the most
+dunderheaded of all the passions; it never will listen to reason. The
+very rudiments of logic are unknown to it. 'Love has no wherefore,'
+says one of those Latin poets who wrote love-verses called elegies,--a
+name which we moderns appropriate to funeral dirges. For my own part,
+I can't understand how any one can be expected voluntarily to make up
+his mind to go out of his mind. And if Miss Travers cannot go out of
+her mind because George Belvoir does, you could not argue her into
+doing so if you talked till doomsday."
+
+Travers smiled in spite of himself, but he answered gravely,
+"Certainly, I would not wish Cissy to marry any man she disliked, but
+she does not dislike George; no girl could: and where that is the
+case, a girl so sensible, so affectionate, so well brought up, is sure
+to love, after marriage, a thoroughly kind and estimable man,
+especially when she has no previous attachment,--which, of course,
+Cissy never had. In fact, though I do not wish to force my daughter's
+will, I am not yet disposed to give up my own. Do you understand?"
+
+"Perfectly."
+
+"I am the more inclined to a marriage so desirable in every way,
+because when Cissy comes out in London, which she has not yet done,
+she is sure to collect round her face and her presumptive inheritance
+all the handsome fortune-hunters and titled /vauriens/; and if in love
+there is no wherefore, how can I be sure that she may not fall in love
+with a scamp?"
+
+"I think you may be sure of that," said Kenelm. "Miss Travers has too
+much mind."
+
+"Yes, at present; but did you not say that in love people go out of
+their mind?"
+
+"True! I forgot that."
+
+"I am not then disposed to dismiss poor George's offer with a decided
+negative, and yet it would be unfair to mislead him by encouragement.
+In fact, I'll be hanged if I know how to reply."
+
+"You think Miss Travers does not dislike George Belvoir, and if she
+saw more of him may like him better, and it would be good for her as
+well as for him not to put an end to that, chance?"
+
+"Exactly so."
+
+"Why not then write: 'My dear George,--You have my best wishes, but my
+daughter does not seem disposed to marry at present. Let me consider
+your letter not written, and continue on the same terms as we were
+before.' Perhaps, as George knows Virgil, you might find your own
+schoolboy recollections of that poet useful here, and add, /Varium et
+mutabile semper femina/; hackneyed, but true."
+
+"My dear Chillingly, your suggestion is capital. How the deuce at
+your age have you contrived to know the world so well?"
+
+Kenelm answered in the pathetic tones so natural to his voice, "By
+being only a looker-on; alas!"
+
+Leopold Travers felt much relieved after he had written his reply to
+George. He had not been quite so ingenuous in his revelation to
+Chillingly as he may have seemed. Conscious, like all proud and fond
+fathers, of his daughter's attractions, he was not without some
+apprehension that Kenelm himself might entertain an ambition at
+variance with that of George Belvoir: if so, he deemed it well to put
+an end to such ambition while yet in time: partly because his interest
+was already pledged to George; partly because, in rank and fortune,
+George was the better match; partly because George was of the same
+political party as himself,--while Sir Peter, and probably Sir Peter's
+heir, espoused the opposite side; and partly also because, with all
+his personal liking to Kenelm, Leopold Travers, as a very sensible,
+practical man of the world, was not sure that a baronet's heir who
+tramped the country on foot in the dress of a petty farmer, and
+indulged pugilistic propensities in martial encounters with stalwart
+farriers, was likely to make a safe husband and a comfortable
+son-in-law. Kenelm's words, and still more his manner, convinced
+Travers that any apprehensions of rivalry that he had previously
+conceived were utterly groundless.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE same evening, after dinner (during that lovely summer month they
+dined at Neesdale Park at an unfashionably early hour), Kenelm, in
+company with Travers and Cecilia, ascended a gentle eminence at the
+back of the gardens, on which there were some picturesque ivy-grown
+ruins of an ancient priory, and commanding the best view of a glorious
+sunset and a subject landscape of vale and wood, rivulet and distant
+hills.
+
+"Is the delight in scenery," said Kenelm, "really an acquired gift, as
+some philosophers tell us? Is it true that young children and rude
+savages do not feel it; that the eye must be educated to comprehend
+its charm, and that the eye can be only educated through the mind?"
+
+"I should think your philosophers are right," said Travers. "When I
+was a schoolboy, I thought no scenery was like the flat of a cricket
+ground; when I hunted at Melton, I thought that unpicturesque country
+more beautiful than Devonshire. It is only of late years that I feel
+a sensible pleasure in scenery for its own sake, apart from
+associations of custom or the uses to which we apply them."
+
+"And what say you, Miss Travers?"
+
+"I scarcely know what to say," answered Cecilia, musingly. "I can
+remember no time in my childhood when I did not feel delight in that
+which seemed to me beautiful in scenery, but I suspect that I vaguely
+distinguished one kind of beauty from another. A common field with
+daisies and buttercups was beautiful to me then, and I doubt if I saw
+anything more beautiful in extensive landscapes."
+
+"True," said Kenelm: "it is not in early childhood that we carry the
+sight into distance: as is the mind so is the eye; in early childhood
+the mind revels in the present, and the eye rejoices most in the
+things nearest to it. I don't think in childhood that we--
+
+
+ "'Watched with wistful eyes the setting sun.'"
+
+
+"Ah! what a world of thought in that word 'wistful'!" murmured
+Cecilia, as her gaze riveted itself on the western heavens, towards
+which Kenelm had pointed as he spoke, where the enlarging orb rested
+half its disk on the rim of the horizon.
+
+She had seated herself on a fragment of the ruin, backed by the
+hollows of a broken arch. The last rays of the sun lingered on her
+young face, and then lost themselves in the gloom of the arch behind.
+There was a silence for some minutes, during which the sun had sunk.
+Rosy clouds in thin flakes still floated, momently waning: and the
+eve-star stole forth steadfast, bright, and lonely,--nay, lonely not
+now; that sentinel has aroused a host.
+
+Said a voice, "No sign of rain yet, Squire. What will become of the
+turnips?"
+
+"Real life again! Who can escape it?" muttered Kenelm, as his eye
+rested on the burly figure of the Squire's bailiff.
+
+"Ha! North," said Travers, "what brings you here? No bad news, I
+hope?"
+
+"Indeed, yes, Squire. The Durham bull--"
+
+"The Durham bull! What of him? You frighten me."
+
+"Taken bad. Colic."
+
+"Excuse me, Chillingly," cried Travers; "I must be off. A most
+valuable animal, and no one I can trust to doctor him but myself."
+
+"That's true enough," said the bailiff, admiringly. "There's not a
+veterinary in the county like the Squire."
+
+Travers was already gone, and the panting bailiff had hard work to
+catch him up.
+
+Kenelm seated himself beside Cecilia on the ruined fragment.
+
+"How I envy your father!" said he.
+
+"Why just at this moment,--because he knows how to doctor the bull?"
+said Cecilia, with a sweet low laugh.
+
+"Well, that is something to envy. It is a pleasure to relieve from
+pain any of God's creatures,--even a Durham bull."
+
+"Indeed, yes. I am justly rebuked."
+
+"On the contrary you are to be justly praised. Your question
+suggested to me an amiable sentiment in place of the selfish one which
+was uppermost in my thoughts. I envied your father because he creates
+for himself so many objects of interest; because while he can
+appreciate the mere sensuous enjoyment of a landscape and a sunset, he
+can find mental excitement in turnip crops and bulls. Happy, Miss
+Travers, is the Practical Man."
+
+"When my dear father was as young as you, Mr. Chillingly, I am sure
+that he had no more interest in turnips and bulls than you have. I do
+not doubt that some day you will be as practical as he is in that
+respect."
+
+"Do you think so--sincerely?"
+
+Cecilia made no answer.
+
+Kenelm repeated the question.
+
+"Sincerely, then, I do not know whether you will take interest in
+precisely the same things that interest my father; but there are other
+things than turnips and cattle which belong to what you call
+'practical life,' and in these you will take interest, as you took in
+the fortunes of Will Somers and Jessie Wiles."
+
+"That was no practical interest. I got nothing by it. But even if
+that interest were practical,--I mean productive, as cattle and turnip
+crops are,--a succession of Somerses and Wileses is not to be hoped
+for. History never repeats itself."
+
+"May I answer you, though very humbly?"
+
+"Miss Travers, the wisest man that ever existed never was wise enough
+to know woman; but I think most men ordinarily wise will agree in
+this, that woman is by no means a humble creature, and that when she
+says she 'answers very humbly,' she does not mean what she says.
+Permit me to entreat you to answer very loftily."
+
+Cecilia laughed and blushed. The laugh was musical; the blush
+was--what? Let any man, seated beside a girl like Cecilia at starry
+twilight, find the right epithet for that blush. I pass it by
+epithetless. But she answered, firmly though sweetly,--
+
+"Are there not things very practical, and affecting the happiness, not
+of one or two individuals, but of innumerable thousands, in which a
+man like Mr. Chillingly cannot fail to feel interest, long before he
+is my father's age?"
+
+"Forgive me: you do not answer; you question. I imitate you, and ask
+what are those things as applicable to a man like Mr. Chillingly?"
+
+Cecilia gathered herself up, as with the desire to express a great
+deal in short substance, and then said,--
+
+"In the expression of thought, literature; in the conduct of action,
+politics."
+
+Kenelm Chillingly stared, dumfounded. I suppose the greatest
+enthusiast for woman's rights could not assert more reverentially than
+he did the cleverness of women; but among the things which the
+cleverness of woman did not achieve, he had always placed "laconics."
+"No woman," he was wont to say, "ever invented an axiom or a proverb."
+
+"Miss Travers," he said at last, "before we proceed further, vouchsafe
+to tell me if that very terse reply of yours is spontaneous and
+original; or whether you have not borrowed it from some book which I
+have not chanced to read?"
+
+Cecilia pondered honestly, and then said, "I don't think it is from
+any book; but I owe so many of my thoughts to Mrs. Campion, and she
+lived so much among clever men, that--"
+
+"I see it all, and accept your definition, no matter whence it came.
+You think I might become an author or a politician. Did you ever read
+an essay by a living author called 'Motive Power'?"
+
+"No."
+
+"That essay is designed to intimate that without motive power a man,
+whatever his talents or his culture, does nothing practical. The
+mainsprings of motive power are Want and Ambition. They are absent
+from my mechanism. By the accident of birth I do not require bread
+and cheese; by the accident of temperament and of philosophical
+culture I care nothing about praise or blame. But without want of
+bread and cheese, and with a most stolid indifference to praise and
+blame, do you honestly think that a man will do anything practical in
+literature or politics? Ask Mrs. Campion."
+
+"I will not ask her. Is the sense of duty nothing?"
+
+"Alas! we interpret duty so variously. Of mere duty, as we commonly
+understand the word, I do not think I shall fail more than other men.
+But for the fair development of all the good that is in us, do you
+believe that we should adopt some line of conduct against which our
+whole heart rebels? Can you say to the clerk, 'Be a poet'? Can you
+say to the poet, 'Be a clerk'? It is no more to the happiness of a
+man's being to order him to take to one career when his whole heart is
+set on another, than it is to order him to marry one woman when it is
+to another woman that his heart will turn."
+
+Cecilia here winced and looked away. Kenelm had more tact than most
+men of his age,--that is, a keener perception of subjects to avoid;
+but then Kenelm had a wretched habit of forgetting the person he
+talked to and talking to himself. Utterly oblivious of George
+Belvoir, he was talking to himself now. Not then observing the effect
+his /mal-a-propos/ dogma had produced on his listener, he went on,
+"Happiness is a word very lightly used. It may mean little; it may
+mean much. By the word happiness I would signify, not the momentary
+joy of a child who gets a plaything, but the lasting harmony between
+our inclinations and our objects; and without that harmony we are a
+discord to ourselves, we are incompletions, we are failures. Yet
+there are plenty of advisers who say to us, 'It is a duty to be a
+discord.' I deny it."
+
+Here Cecilia rose and said in a low voice, "It is getting late. We
+must go homeward."
+
+They descended the green eminence slowly, and at first in silence.
+The bats, emerging from the ivied ruins they left behind, flitted and
+skimmed before them, chasing the insects of the night. A moth,
+escaping from its pursuer, alighted on Cecilia's breast, as if for
+refuge.
+
+"The bats are practical," said Kenelm; "they are hungry, and their
+motive power to-night is strong. Their interest is in the insects
+they chase. They have no interest in the stars; but the stars lure
+the moth."
+
+Cecilia drew her slight scarf over the moth, so that it might not fly
+off and become a prey to the bats. "Yet," said she, "the moth is
+practical too."
+
+"Ay, just now, since it has found an asylum from the danger that
+threatened it in its course towards the stars."
+
+Cecilia felt the beating of her heart, upon which lay the moth
+concealed. Did she think that a deeper and more tender meaning than
+they outwardly expressed was couched in these words? If so, she
+erred. They now neared the garden gate, and Kenelm paused as he
+opened it. "See," he said, "the moon has just risen over those dark
+firs, making the still night stiller. Is it not strange that we
+mortals, placed amid perpetual agitation and tumult and strife, as if
+our natural element, conceive a sense of holiness in the images
+antagonistic to our real life; I mean in images of repose? I feel at
+the moment as if I suddenly were made better, now that heaven and
+earth have suddenly become yet more tranquil. I am now conscious of a
+purer and sweeter moral than either I or you drew from the insect you
+have sheltered. I must come to the poets to express it,--
+
+
+ "'The desire of the moth for the star,
+ Of the night for the morrow;
+ The devotion to something afar
+ From the sphere of our sorrow.'
+
+
+"Oh, that something afar! that something afar! never to be reached on
+this earth,--never, never!"
+
+There was such a wail in that cry from the man's heart that Cecilia
+could not resist the impulse of a divine compassion. She laid her
+hand on his, and looked on the dark wildness of his upward face with
+eyes that Heaven meant to be wells of comfort to grieving man. At the
+light touch of that hand Kenelm started, looked down, and met those
+soothing eyes.
+
+"I am happy to tell you that I have saved my Durham," cried out Mr.
+Travers from the other side of the gate.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+AS Kenelm that night retired to his own room, he paused on the
+landing-place opposite to the portrait which Mr. Travers had consigned
+to that desolate exile. This daughter of a race dishonoured in its
+extinction might well have been the glory of the house she had entered
+as a bride. The countenance was singularly beautiful, and of a
+character of beauty eminently patrician; there was in its expression a
+gentleness and modesty not often found in the female portraits of Sir
+Peter Lely, and in the eyes and in the smile a wonderful aspect of
+innocent happiness.
+
+"What a speaking homily," soliloquized Kenelm, addressing the picture,
+"against the ambition thy fair descendant would awake in me, art thou,
+O lovely image! For generations thy beauty lived in this canvas, a
+thing of joy, the pride of the race it adorned. Owner after owner
+said to admiring guests, 'Yes, a fine portrait, by Lely; she was my
+ancestress,--a Fletwode of Fletwode.' Now, lest guests should
+remember that a Fletwode married a Travers thou art thrust out of
+sight; not even Lely's art can make thee of value, can redeem thine
+innocent self from disgrace. And the last of the Fletwodes, doubtless
+the most ambitious of all, the most bent on restoring and regilding
+the old lordly name, dies a felon; the infamy of one living man is so
+large that it can blot out the honour of the dead." He turned his
+eyes from the smile of the portrait, entered his own room, and,
+seating himself by the writing-table, drew blotting-book and
+note-paper towards him, took up the pen, and instead of writing fell
+into deep revery. There was a slight frown on his brow, on which
+frowns were rare. He was very angry with himself.
+
+"Kenelm," he said, entering into his customary dialogue with that
+self, "it becomes you, forsooth, to moralize about the honour of races
+which have no affinity with you. Son of Sir Peter Chillingly, look at
+home. Are you quite sure that you have not said or done or looked a
+something that may bring trouble to the hearth on which you are
+received as guest? What right had you to be moaning forth your
+egotisms, not remembering that your words fell on compassionate ears,
+and that such words, heard at moonlight by a girl whose heart they
+move to pity, may have dangers for her peace? Shame on you, Kenelm!
+shame! knowing too what her father's wish is; and knowing too that you
+have not the excuse of desiring to win that fair creature for
+yourself. What do you mean, Kenelm? I don't hear you; speak out. Oh,
+'that I am a vain coxcomb to fancy that she could take a fancy to me:'
+well, perhaps I am; I hope so earnestly; and at all events, there has
+been and shall be no time for much mischief. We are off to-morrow,
+Kenelm; bestir yourself and pack up, write your letters, and then 'put
+out the light,--put out /the/ light!'"
+
+But this converser with himself did not immediately set to work, as
+agreed upon by that twofold one. He rose and walked restlessly to and
+fro the floor, stopping ever and anon to look at the pictures on the
+walls.
+
+Several of the worst painted of the family portraits had been
+consigned to the room tenanted by Kenelm, which, though both the
+oldest and largest bed-chamber in the house, was always appropriated
+to a bachelor male guest, partly because it was without dressing-room,
+remote, and only approached by the small back-staircase, to the
+landing-place of which Arabella had been banished in disgrace; and
+partly because it had the reputation of being haunted, and ladies are
+more alarmed by that superstition than men are supposed to be. The
+portraits on which Kenelm now paused to gaze were of various dates,
+from the reign of Elizabeth to that of George III., none of them by
+eminent artists, and none of them the effigies of ancestors who had
+left names in history,--in short, such portraits as are often seen in
+the country houses of well-born squires. One family type of features
+or expression pervaded most of these portraits; features clear-cut and
+hardy, expression open and honest. And though not one of those dead
+men had been famous, each of them had contributed his unostentatious
+share, in his own simple way, to the movements of his time. That
+worthy in ruff and corselet had manned his own ship at his own cost
+against the Armada; never had been repaid by the thrifty Burleigh the
+expenses which had harassed him and diminished his patrimony; never
+had been even knighted. That gentleman with short straight hair,
+which overhung his forehead, leaning on his sword with one hand, and a
+book open in the other hand, had served as representative of his
+county town in the Long Parliament, fought under Cromwell at Marston
+Moor, and, resisting the Protector when he removed the "bauble," was
+one of the patriots incarcerated in "Hell hole." He, too, had
+diminished his patrimony, maintaining two troopers and two horses at
+his own charge, and "Hell hole" was all he got in return. A third,
+with a sleeker expression of countenance, and a large wig, flourishing
+in the quiet times of Charles II., had only been a justice of the
+peace, but his alert look showed that he had been a very active one.
+He had neither increased nor diminished his ancestral fortune. A
+fourth, in the costume of William III.'s reign, had somewhat added to
+the patrimony by becoming a lawyer. He must have been a successful
+one. He is inscribed "Sergeant-at-law." A fifth, a lieutenant in the
+army, was killed at Blenheim; his portrait was that of a very young
+and handsome man, taken the year before his death. His wife's
+portrait is placed in the drawing-room because it was painted by
+Kneller. She was handsome too, and married again a nobleman, whose
+portrait, of course, was not in the family collection. Here there was
+a gap in chronological arrangement, the lieutenant's heir being an
+infant; but in the time of George II. another Travers appeared as the
+governor of a West India colony. His son took part in a very
+different movement of the age. He is represented old, venerable, with
+white hair, and underneath his effigy is inscribed, "Follower of
+Wesley." His successor completes the collection. He is in naval
+uniform; he is in full length, and one of his legs is a wooden one.
+He is Captain, R.N., and inscribed, "Fought under Nelson at
+Trafalgar." That portrait would have found more dignified place in
+the reception-rooms if the face had not been forbiddingly ugly, and
+the picture itself a villanous daub.
+
+"I see," said Kenelm, stopping short, "why Cecilia Travers has been
+reared to talk of duty as a practical interest in life. These men of
+a former time seem to have lived to discharge a duty, and not to
+follow the progress of the age in the chase of a money-bag,--except
+perhaps one, but then to be sure he was a lawyer. Kenelm, rouse up
+and listen to me; whatever we are, whether active or indolent, is not
+my favourite maxim a just and a true one; namely, 'A good man does
+good by living'? But, for that, he must be a harmony and not a
+discord. Kenelm, you lazy dog, we must pack up."
+
+Kenelm then refilled his portmanteau, and labelled and directed it to
+Exmundham, after which he wrote these three notes:--
+
+
+NOTE I.
+
+TO THE MARCHIONESS OF GLENALVON.
+
+MY DEAR FRIEND AND MONITRESS,--I have left your last letter a month
+unanswered. I could not reply to your congratulations on the event of
+my attaining the age of twenty-one. That event is a conventional
+sham, and you know how I abhor shams and conventions. The truth is
+that I am either much younger than twenty-one or much older. As to
+all designs on my peace in standing for our county at the next
+election, I wished to defeat them, and I have done so; and now I have
+commenced a course of travel. I had intended on starting to confine
+it to my native country. Intentions are mutable. I am going abroad.
+You shall hear of my whereabout. I write this from the house of
+Leopold Travers, who, I understand from his fair daughter, is a
+connection of yours; a man to be highly esteemed and cordially liked.
+
+No, in spite of all your flattering predictions, I shall never be
+anything in this life more distinguished than what I am now. Lady
+Glenalvon allows me to sign myself her grateful friend,
+
+K. C.
+
+
+NOTE II.
+
+DEAR COUSIN MIVERS,--I am going abroad. I may want money; for, in
+order to rouse motive power within me, I mean to want money if I can.
+When I was a boy of sixteen you offered me money to write attacks upon
+veteran authors for "The Londoner." Will you give me money now for a
+similar display of that grand New Idea of our generation; namely, that
+the less a man knows of a subject the better he understands it? I am
+about to travel into countries which I have never seen, and among
+races I have never known. My arbitrary judgments on both will be
+invaluable to "The Londoner" from a Special Correspondent who shares
+your respect for the anonymous, and whose name is never to be
+divulged. Direct your answer by return to me, /poste restante/,
+Calais.
+
+Yours truly,
+
+K. C.
+
+
+NOTE III.
+
+MY DEAR FATHER,--I found your letter here, whence I depart to-morrow.
+Excuse haste. I go abroad, and shall write to you from Calais.
+
+I admire Leopold Travers very much. After all, how much of
+self-balance there is in a true English gentleman! Toss him up and
+down where you will, and he always alights on his feet,--a gentleman.
+He has one child, a daughter named Cecilia,--handsome enough to allure
+into wedlock any mortal whom Decimus Roach had not convinced that in
+celibacy lay the right "Approach to the Angels." Moreover, she is a
+girl whom one can talk with. Even you could talk with her. Travers
+wishes her to marry a very respectable, good-looking, promising
+gentleman, in every way "suitable," as they say. And if she does, she
+will rival that pink and perfection of polished womanhood, Lady
+Glenalvon. I send you back my portmanteau. I have pretty well
+exhausted my experience-money, but have not yet encroached on my
+monthly allowance. I mean still to live upon that, eking it out, if
+necessary, by the sweat of my brow or brains. But if any case
+requiring extra funds should occur,--a case in which that extra would
+do such real good to another that I feel /you/ would do it,--why, I
+must draw a check on your bankers. But understand that is your
+expense, not mine, and it is /you/ who are to be repaid in Heaven.
+Dear father, how I do love and honour you every day more and more!
+Promise you not to propose to any young lady till I come first to you
+for consent!--oh, my dear father, how could you doubt it? how doubt
+that I could not be happy with any wife whom you could not love as a
+daughter? Accept that promise as sacred. But I wish you had asked me
+something in which obedience was not much too facile to be a test of
+duty. I could not have obeyed you more cheerfully if you had asked me
+to promise never to propose to any young lady at all. Had you asked
+me to promise that I would renounce the dignity of reason for the
+frenzy of love, or the freedom of man for the servitude of husband,
+then I might have sought to achieve the impossible; but I should have
+died in the effort!--and thou wouldst have known that remorse which
+haunts the bed of the tyrant.
+
+Your affectionate son,
+
+K. C.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE next morning Kenelm surprised the party at breakfast by appearing
+in the coarse habiliments in which he had first made his host's
+acquaintance. He did not glance towards Cecilia when he announced his
+departure; but, his eye resting on Mrs. Campion, he smiled, perhaps a
+little sadly, at seeing her countenance brighten up and hearing her
+give a short sigh of relief. Travers tried hard to induce him to stay
+a few days longer, but Kenelm was firm. "The summer is wearing away,"
+said he, "and I have far to go before the flowers fade and the snows
+fall. On the third night from this I shall sleep on foreign soil."
+
+"You are going abroad, then?" asked Mrs. Campion.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"A sudden resolution, Mr. Chillingly. The other day you talked of
+visiting the Scotch lakes."
+
+"True; but, on reflection, they will be crowded with holiday tourists,
+many of whom I shall probably know. Abroad I shall be free, for I
+shall be unknown."
+
+"I suppose you will be back for the hunting season," said Travers.
+
+"I think not. I do not hunt foxes."
+
+"Probably we shall at all events meet in London," said Travers. "I
+think, after long rustication, that a season or two in the bustling
+capital may be a salutary change for mind as well as for body; and it
+is time that Cecilia were presented and her court-dress specially
+commemorated in the columns of the 'Morning Post.'"
+
+Cecilia was seemingly too busied behind the tea-urn to heed this
+reference to her debut.
+
+"I shall miss you terribly," cried Travers, a few moments afterwards,
+and with a hearty emphasis. "I declare that you have quite unsettled
+me. Your quaint sayings will be ringing in my ears long after you are
+gone."
+
+There was a rustle as of a woman's dress in sudden change of movement
+behind the tea-urn.
+
+"Cissy," said Mrs. Campion, "are we ever to have our tea?"
+
+"I beg pardon," answered a voice behind the urn. "I hear Pompey" (the
+Skye terrier) "whining on the lawn. They have shut him out. I will
+be back presently."
+
+Cecilia rose and was gone. Mrs. Campion took her place at the
+tea-urn.
+
+"It is quite absurd of Cissy to be so fond of that hideous dog," said
+Travers, petulantly.
+
+"Its hideousness is its beauty," returned Mrs. Campion, laughing.
+"Mr. Belvoir selected it for her as having the longest back and the
+shortest legs of any dog he could find in Scotland."
+
+"Ah, George gave it to her; I forgot that," said Travers, laughing
+pleasantly.
+
+It was some minutes before Miss Travers returned with the Skye
+terrier, and she seemed to have recovered her spirits in regaining
+that ornamental accession to the party; talking very quickly and
+gayly, and with flushed cheeks, like a young person excited by her own
+overflow of mirth.
+
+But when, half an hour afterwards, Kenelm took leave of her and Mrs.
+Campion at the hall-door, the flush was gone, her lips were tightly
+compressed, and her parting words were not audible. Then, as his
+figure (side by side with her father, who accompanied his guest to the
+lodge) swiftly passed across the lawn and vanished amid the trees
+beyond, Mrs. Campion wound a mother-like arm around her waist and
+kissed her. Cecilia shivered and turned her face to her friend
+smiling; but such a smile,--one of those smiles that seem brimful of
+tears.
+
+"Thank you, dear," she said meekly; and, gliding away towards the
+flower-garden, lingered a while by the gate which Kenelm had opened
+the night before. Then she went with languid steps up the green
+slopes towards the ruined priory.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK IV.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IT is somewhat more than a year and a half since Kenelm Chillingly
+left England, and the scene now is in London, during that earlier and
+more sociable season which precedes the Easter holidays,--season in
+which the charm of intellectual companionship is not yet withered away
+in the heated atmosphere of crowded rooms,--season in which parties
+are small, and conversation extends beyond the interchange of
+commonplace with one's next neighbour at a dinner-table,--season in
+which you have a fair chance of finding your warmest friends not
+absorbed by the superior claims of their chilliest acquaintances.
+
+There was what is called a /conversazione/ at the house of one of
+those Whig noblemen who yet retain the graceful art of bringing
+agreeable people together, and collecting round them the true
+aristocracy, which combines letters and art and science with
+hereditary rank and political distinction,--that art which was the
+happy secret of the Lansdownes and Hollands of the last generation.
+Lord Beaumanoir was himself a genial, well-read man, a good judge of
+art, and a pleasant talker. He had a charming wife, devoted to him
+and to her children, but with enough love of general approbation to
+make herself as popular in the fashionable world as if she sought in
+its gayeties a refuge from the dulness of domestic life.
+
+Amongst the guests at the Beaumanoirs, this evening were two men,
+seated apart in a small room, and conversing familiarly. The one
+might be about fifty-four; he was tall, strongly built, but not
+corpulent, somewhat bald, with black eyebrows, dark eyes, bright and
+keen, mobile lips round which there played a shrewd and sometimes
+sarcastic smile.
+
+This gentleman, the Right Hon. Gerard Danvers, was a very influential
+member of Parliament. He had, when young for English public life,
+attained to high office; but--partly from a great distaste to the
+drudgery of administration; partly from a pride of temperament, which
+unfitted him for the subordination that a Cabinet owes to its chief;
+partly, also, from a not uncommon kind of epicurean philosophy, at
+once joyous and cynical, which sought the pleasures of life and held
+very cheap its honours--he had obstinately declined to re-enter
+office, and only spoke on rare occasions. On such occasions he
+carried great weight, and, by the brief expression of his opinions,
+commanded more votes than many an orator infinitely more eloquent.
+Despite his want of ambition, he was fond of power in his own
+way,--power over the people who /had/ power; and, in the love of
+political intrigue, he found an amusement for an intellect very subtle
+and very active. At this moment he was bent on a new combination
+among the leaders of different sections in the same party, by which
+certain veterans were to retire, and certain younger men to be
+admitted into the Administration. It was an amiable feature in his
+character that he had a sympathy with the young, and had helped to
+bring into Parliament, as well as into office, some of the ablest of a
+generation later than his own. He gave them sensible counsel, was
+pleased when they succeeded, and encouraged them when they
+failed,--always provided that they had stuff enough in them to redeem
+the failure; if not, he gently dropped them from his intimacy, but
+maintained sufficiently familiar terms with them to be pretty sure
+that he could influence their votes whenever he so desired.
+
+The gentleman with whom he was now conversing was young, about
+five-and-twenty; not yet in Parliament, but with an intense desire to
+obtain a seat in it, and with one of those reputations which a youth
+carries away from school and college, justified, not by honours purely
+academical, but by an impression of ability and power created on the
+minds of his contemporaries and endorsed by his elders. He had done
+little at the University beyond taking a fair degree, except acquiring
+at the debating society the fame of an exceedingly ready and adroit
+speaker. On quitting college he had written one or two political
+articles in a quarterly review, which created a sensation; and though
+belonging to no profession, and having but a small yet independent
+income, society was very civil to him, as to a man who would some day
+or other attain a position in which he could damage his enemies and
+serve his friends. Something in this young man's countenance and
+bearing tended to favour the credit given to his ability and his
+promise. In his countenance there was no beauty; in his bearing no
+elegance. But in that countenance there was vigour, there was energy,
+there was audacity. A forehead wide but low, protuberant in those
+organs over the brow which indicate the qualities fitted for
+perception and judgment,--qualities for every-day life; eyes of the
+clear English blue, small, somewhat sunken, vigilant, sagacious,
+penetrating; a long straight upper lip, significant of resolute
+purpose; a mouth in which a student of physiognomy would have detected
+a dangerous charm. The smile was captivating, but it was artificial,
+surrounded by dimples, and displaying teeth white, small, strong, but
+divided from each other. The expression of that smile would have been
+frank and candid to all who failed to notice that it was not in
+harmony with the brooding forehead and the steely eye; that it seemed
+to stand distinct from the rest of the face, like a feature that had
+learned its part. There was that physical power in the back of the
+head which belongs to men who make their way in life,--combative and
+destructive. All gladiators have it; so have great debaters and great
+reformers,--that is, reformers who can destroy, but not necessarily
+reconstruct. So, too, in the bearing of the man there was a hardy
+self-confidence, much too simple and unaffected for his worst enemy to
+call it self-conceit. It was the bearing of one who knew how to
+maintain personal dignity without seeming to care about it. Never
+servile to the great, never arrogant to the little; so little
+over-refined that it was never vulgar,--a popular bearing.
+
+The room in which these gentlemen were seated was separated from the
+general suite of apartments by a lobby off the landing-place, and
+served for Lady Beaumanoir's boudoir. Very pretty it was, but simply
+furnished, with chintz draperies. The walls were adorned with
+drawings in water-colours, and precious specimens of china on fanciful
+Parian brackets. At one corner, by a window that looked southward and
+opened on a spacious balcony, glazed in and filled with flowers, stood
+one of those high trellised screens, first invented, I believe, in
+Vienna, and along which ivy is so trained as to form an arbour.
+
+The recess thus constructed, and which was completely out of sight
+from the rest of the room, was the hostess's favourite writing-nook.
+The two men I have described were seated near the screen, and had
+certainly no suspicion that any one could be behind it.
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Danvers, from an ottoman niched in another recess of
+the room, "I think there will be an opening at Saxboro' soon: Milroy
+wants a Colonial Government; and if we can reconstruct the Cabinet as
+I propose, he would get one. Saxboro' would thus be vacant. But, my
+dear fellow, Saxboro' is a place to be wooed through love, and only
+won through money. It demands liberalism from a candidate,--two kinds
+of liberalism seldom united; the liberalism in opinion which is
+natural enough to a very poor man, and the liberalism in expenditure
+which is scarcely to be obtained except from a very rich one. You may
+compute the cost of Saxboro' at L3000 to get in, and about L2000 more
+to defend your seat against a petition,--the defeated candidate nearly
+always petitions. L5000 is a large sum; and the worst of it is, that
+the extreme opinions to which the member for Saxboro' must pledge
+himself are a drawback to an official career. Violent politicians are
+not the best raw material out of which to manufacture fortunate
+placemen."
+
+"The opinions do not so much matter; the expense does. I cannot
+afford L5000, or even L3000."
+
+"Would not Sir Peter assist? He has, you say, only one son; and if
+anything happen to that son, you are the next heir."
+
+"My father quarrelled with Sir Peter, and harassed him by an imprudent
+and ungracious litigation. I scarcely think I could apply to him for
+money to obtain a seat in Parliament upon the democratic side of the
+question; for, though I know little of his politics, I take it for
+granted that a country gentleman of old family and L10,000 a year
+cannot well be a democrat."
+
+"Then I presume you would not be a democrat if, by the death of your
+cousin, you became heir to the Chillinglys."
+
+"I am not sure what I might be in that case. There are times when a
+democrat of ancient lineage and good estates could take a very high
+place amongst the aristocracy."
+
+"Humph! my dear Gordon, /vous irez loin/."
+
+"I hope to do so. Measuring myself against the men of my own day, I
+do not see many who should outstrip me."
+
+"What sort of a fellow is your cousin Kenelm? I met him once or twice
+when he was very young, and reading with Welby in London. People then
+said that he was very clever; he struck me as very odd."
+
+"I never saw him, but from all I hear, whether he be clever or whether
+he be odd, he is not likely to do anything in life,--a dreamer."
+
+"Writes poetry perhaps?"
+
+"Capable of it, I dare say."
+
+Just then some other guests came into the room, amongst them a lady of
+an appearance at once singularly distinguished and singularly
+prepossessing, rather above the common height, and with a certain
+indescribable nobility of air and presence. Lady Glenalvon was one of
+the queens of the London world, and no queen of that world was ever
+less worldly or more queen-like. Side by side with the lady was Mr.
+Chillingly Mivers. Gordon and Mivers interchanged friendly nods, and
+the former sauntered away and was soon lost amid a crowd of other
+young men, with whom, as he could converse well and lightly on things
+which interested them, he was rather a favourite, though he was not an
+intimate associate. Mr. Danvers retired into a corner of the
+adjoining lobby, where he favoured the French ambassador with his
+views on the state of Europe and the reconstruction of Cabinets in
+general.
+
+"But," said Lady Glenalvon to Chillingly Mivers, "are you quite sure
+that my old young friend Kenelm is here? Since you told me so, I have
+looked everywhere for him in vain. I should so much like to see him
+again."
+
+"I certainly caught a glimpse of him half an hour ago; but before I
+could escape from a geologist who was boring me about the Silurian
+system, Kenelm had vanished."
+
+"Perhaps it was his ghost!"
+
+"Well, we certainly live in the most credulous and superstitious age
+upon record; and so many people tell me that they converse with the
+dead under the table that it seems impertinent in me to say that I
+don't believe in ghosts."
+
+"Tell me some of those incomprehensible stories about table-rapping,"
+said Lady Glenalvon. "There is a charming, snug recess here behind
+the screen."
+
+Scarcely had she entered the recess when she drew back with a start
+and an exclamation of amaze. Seated at the table within the recess,
+his chin resting on his hand, and his face cast down in abstracted
+revery, was a young man. So still was his attitude, so calmly
+mournful the expression of his face, so estranged did he seem from all
+the motley but brilliant assemblage which circled around the solitude
+he had made for himself, that he might well have been deemed one of
+those visitants from another world whose secrets the intruder had
+wished to learn. Of that intruder's presence he was evidently
+unconscious. Recovering her surprise, she stole up to him, placed her
+hand on his shoulder, and uttered his name in a low gentle voice. At
+that sound Kenelm Chillingly looked up.
+
+"Do you not remember me?" asked Lady Glenalvon. Before he could
+answer, Mivers, who had followed the marchioness into the recess,
+interposed.
+
+"My dear Kenelm, how are you? When did you come to London? Why have
+you not called on me; and what on earth are you hiding yourself for?"
+
+Kenelm had now recovered the self-possession which he rarely lost long
+in the presence of others. He returned cordially his kinsman's
+greeting, and kissed with his wonted chivalrous grace the fair hand
+which the lady withdrew from his shoulder and extended to his
+pressure. "Remember you!" he said to Lady Glenalvon with the
+kindliest expression of his soft dark eyes; "I am not so far advanced
+towards the noon of life as to forget the sunshine that brightened its
+morning. My dear Mivers, your questions are easily answered. I
+arrived in England two weeks ago, stayed at Exmundham till this
+morning, to-day dined with Lord Thetford, whose acquaintance I made
+abroad, and was persuaded by him to come here and be introduced to his
+father and mother, the Beaumanoirs. After I had undergone that
+ceremony, the sight of so many strange faces frightened me into
+shyness. Entering this room at a moment when it was quite deserted, I
+resolved to turn hermit behind the screen."
+
+"Why, you must have seen your cousin Gordon as you came into the
+room."
+
+"But you forget I don't know him by sight. However, there was no one
+in the room when I entered; a little later some others came in, for I
+heard a faint buzz, like that of persons talking in a whisper.
+However, I was no eavesdropper, as a person behind a screen is on the
+dramatic stage."
+
+This was true. Even had Gordon and Danvers talked in a louder tone,
+Kenelm had been too absorbed in his own thoughts to have heard a word
+of their conversation.
+
+"You ought to know young Gordon; he is a very clever fellow, and has
+an ambition to enter Parliament. I hope no old family quarrel between
+his bear of a father and dear Sir Peter will make you object to meet
+him."
+
+"Sir Peter is the most forgiving of men, but he would scarcely forgive
+me if I declined to meet a cousin who had never offended him."
+
+"Well said. Come and meet Gordon at breakfast to-morrow,--ten
+o'clock. I am still in the old rooms."
+
+While the kinsmen thus conversed, Lady Glenalvon had seated herself on
+the couch beside Kenelm, and was quietly observing his countenance.
+Now she spoke. "My dear Mr. Mivers, you will have many opportunities
+of talking with Kenelm; do not grudge me five minutes' talk with him
+now."
+
+"I leave your ladyship alone in your hermitage. How all the men in
+this assembly will envy the hermit!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+"I AM glad to see you once more in the world," said Lady Glenalvon;
+"and I trust that you are now prepared to take that part in it which
+ought to be no mean one if you do justice to your talents and your
+nature."
+
+KENELM.--"When you go to the theatre, and see one of the pieces which
+appear now to be the fashion, which would you rather be,--an actor or
+a looker-on?"
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"My dear young friend, your question saddens me."
+(After a pause.)--"But though I used a stage metaphor when I expressed
+my hope that you would take no mean part in the world, the world is
+not really a theatre. Life admits of no lookers-on. Speak to me
+frankly, as you used to do. Your face retains its old melancholy
+expression. Are you not happy?"
+
+KENELM.--"Happy, as mortals go, I ought to be. I do not think I am
+unhappy. If my temper be melancholic, melancholy has a happiness of
+its own. Milton shows that there are as many charms in life to be
+found on the /Penseroso/ side of it as there are on the /Allegro/."
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"Kenelm, you saved the life of my poor son, and when,
+later, he was taken from me, I felt as if he had commended you to my
+care. When at the age of sixteen, with a boy's years and a man's
+heart, you came to London, did I not try to be to you almost as a
+mother? and did you not often tell me that you could confide to me the
+secrets of your heart more readily than to any other?"
+
+"You were to me," said Kenelm, with emotion, "that most precious and
+sustaining good genius which a youth can find at the threshold of
+life,--a woman gently wise, kindly sympathizing, shaming him by the
+spectacle of her own purity from all grosser errors, elevating him
+from mean tastes and objects by the exquisite, ineffable loftiness of
+soul which is only found in the noblest order of womanhood. Come, I
+will open my heart to you still. I fear it is more wayward than ever.
+It still feels estranged from the companionship and pursuits natural
+to my age and station. However, I have been seeking to brace and
+harden my nature, for the practical ends of life, by travel and
+adventure, chiefly among rougher varieties of mankind than we meet in
+drawing-rooms. Now, in compliance with the duty I owe to my dear
+father's wishes, I come back to these circles, which under your
+auspices I entered in boyhood, and which even then seemed to me so
+inane and artificial. Take a part in the world of these circles; such
+is your wish. My answer is brief. I have been doing my best to
+acquire a motive power, and have not succeeded. I see nothing that I
+care to strive for, nothing that I care to gain. The very times in
+which we live are to me, as to Hamlet, out of joint; and I am not born
+like Hamlet to set them right. Ah! if I could look on society through
+the spectacles with which the poor hidalgo in 'Gil Blas' looked on his
+meagre board,--spectacles by which cherries appear the size of
+peaches, and tomtits as large as turkeys! The imagination which is
+necessary to ambition is a great magnifier."
+
+"I have known more than one man, now very eminent, very active, who at
+your age felt the same estrangement from the practical pursuits of
+others."
+
+"And what reconciled those men to such pursuits?"
+
+"That diminished sense of individual personality, that unconscious
+fusion of one's own being into other existences, which belong to home
+and marriage."
+
+"I don't object to home, but I do to marriage."
+
+"Depend on it there is no home for man where there is no woman."
+
+"Prettily said. In that case I resign the home."
+
+"Do you mean seriously to tell me that you never see the woman you
+could love enough to make her your wife, and never enter any home that
+you do not quit with a touch of envy at the happiness of married
+life?"
+
+"Seriously, I never see such a woman; seriously, I never enter such a
+home."
+
+"Patience, then; your time will come, and I hope it is at hand.
+Listen to me. It was only yesterday that I felt an indescribable
+longing to see you again,--to know your address that I might write to
+you; for yesterday, when a certain young lady left my house after a
+week's visit, I said this girl would make a perfect wife, and, above
+all, the exact wife to suit Kenelm Chillingly."
+
+"Kenelm Chillingly is very glad to hear that this young lady has left
+your house."
+
+"But she has not left London: she is here to-night. She only stayed
+with me till her father came to town, and the house he had taken for
+the season was vacant; those events happened yesterday."
+
+"Fortunate events for me: they permit me to call on you without
+danger."
+
+"Have you no curiosity to know, at least, who and what is the young
+lady who appears to me so well suited to you?"
+
+"No curiosity, but a vague sensation of alarm."
+
+"Well, I cannot talk pleasantly with you while you are in this
+irritating mood, and it is time to quit the hermitage. Come, there
+are many persons here, with some of whom you should renew old
+acquaintance, and to some of whom I should like to make you known."
+
+"I am prepared to follow Lady Glenalvon wherever she deigns to lead
+me,--except to the altar with another."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE rooms were now full,--not overcrowded, but full,--and it was
+rarely even in that house that so many distinguished persons were
+collected together. A young man thus honoured by so /grande/ a dame
+as Lady Glenalvon could not but be cordially welcomed by all to whom
+she presented him, Ministers and Parliamentary leaders, ball-givers,
+and beauties in vogue,--even authors and artists; and there was
+something in Kenelm Chillingly, in his striking countenance and
+figure, in that calm ease of manner natural to his indifference to
+effect, which seemed to justify the favour shown to him by the
+brilliant princess of fashion and mark him out for general
+observation.
+
+That first evening of his reintroduction to the polite world was a
+success which few young men of his years achieve. He produced a
+sensation. Just as the rooms were thinning, Lady Glenalvon whispered
+to Kenelm,--
+
+"Come this way: there is one person I must reintroduce you to; thank
+me for it hereafter."
+
+Kenelm followed the marchioness, and found himself face to face with
+Cecilia Travers. She was leaning on her father's arm, looking very
+handsome, and her beauty was heightened by the blush which overspread
+her cheeks as Kenelm Chillingly approached.
+
+Travers greeted him with great cordiality; and Lady Glenalvon asking
+him to escort her to the refreshment-room, Kenelm had no option but to
+offer his arm to Cecilia.
+
+Kenelm felt somewhat embarrassed. "Have you been long in town, Miss
+Travers?"
+
+"A little more than a week, but we only settled into our house
+yesterday."
+
+"Ah, indeed! were you then the young lady who--" He stopped short,
+and his face grew gentler and graver in its expression.
+
+"The young lady who--what?" asked Cecilia with a smile.
+
+"Who has been staying with Lady Glenalvon?"
+
+"Yes; did she tell you?"
+
+"She did not mention your name, but praised that young lady so justly
+that I ought to have guessed it."
+
+Cecilia made some not very audible answer, and on entering the
+refreshment-room other young men gathered round her, and Lady
+Glenalvon and Kenelm remained silent in the midst of a general
+small-talk. When Travers, after giving his address to Kenelm, and, of
+course, pressing him to call, left the house with Cecilia, Kenelm said
+to Lady Glenalvon, musingly, "So that is the young lady in whom I was
+to see my fate: you knew that we had met before?"
+
+"Yes, she told me when and where. Besides, it is not two years since
+you wrote to me from her father's house. Do you forget?"
+
+"Ah," said Kenelm, so abstractedly that he seemed to be dreaming, "no
+man with his eyes open rushes on his fate: when he does so his sight
+is gone. Love is blind. They say the blind are very happy, yet I
+never met a blind man who would not recover his sight if he could."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Mr. CHILLINGLY MIVERS never gave a dinner at his own rooms. When he
+did give a dinner it was at Greenwich or Richmond. But he gave
+breakfast-parties pretty often, and they were considered pleasant. He
+had handsome bachelor apartments in Grosvenor Street, daintily
+furnished, with a prevalent air of exquisite neatness, a good library
+stored with books of reference, and adorned with presentation copies
+from authors of the day, very beautifully bound. Though the room
+served for the study of the professed man of letters, it had none of
+the untidy litter which generally characterizes the study of one whose
+vocation it is to deal with books and papers. Even the implements for
+writing were not apparent, except when required. They lay concealed
+in a vast cylinder bureau, French made, and French polished. Within
+that bureau were numerous pigeon-holes and secret drawers, and a
+profound well with a separate patent lock. In the well were deposited
+the articles intended for publication in "The Londoner," proof-sheets,
+etc.; pigeon-holes were devoted to ordinary correspondence; secret
+drawers to confidential notes, and outlines of biographies of eminent
+men now living, but intended to be completed for publication the day
+after their death.
+
+No man wrote such funeral compositions with a livelier pen than that
+of Chillingly Mivers; and the large and miscellaneous circle of his
+visiting acquaintances allowed him to ascertain, whether by
+authoritative report or by personal observation, the signs of mortal
+disease in the illustrious friends whose dinners he accepted, and
+whose failing pulses he instinctively felt in returning the pressure
+of their hands; so that he was often able to put the finishing-stroke
+to their obituary memorials days, weeks, even months, before their
+fate took the public by surprise. That cylinder bureau was in harmony
+with the secrecy in which this remarkable man shrouded the productions
+of his brain. In his literary life Mivers had no "I," there he was
+ever the inscrutable, mysterious "We." He was only "I" when you met
+him in the world, and called him Mivers.
+
+Adjoining the library on one side was a small dining or rather
+breakfast room, hung with valuable pictures,--presents from living
+painters. Many of these painters had been severely handled by Mr.
+Mivers in his existence as "We,"--not always in "The Londoner." His
+most pungent criticisms were often contributed to other intellectual
+journals conducted by members of the same intellectual clique.
+Painters knew not how contemptuously "We" had treated them when they
+met Mr. Mivers. His "I" was so complimentary that they sent him a
+tribute of their gratitude.
+
+On the other side was his drawing-room, also enriched by many gifts,
+chiefly from fair hands,--embroidered cushions and table-covers, bits
+of Sevres or old Chelsea, elegant knick-knacks of all kinds.
+Fashionable authoresses paid great court to Mr. Mivers; and in the
+course of his life as a single man, he had other female adorers
+besides fashionable authoresses.
+
+Mr. Mivers had already returned from his early constitutional walk in
+the Park, and was now seated by the cylinder /secretaire/ with a
+mild-looking man, who was one of the most merciless contributors to
+"The Londoner" and no unimportant councillor in the oligarchy of the
+clique that went by the name of the "Intellectuals."
+
+"Well," said Mivers, languidly, "I can't even get through the book; it
+is as dull as the country in November. But, as you justly say, the
+writer is an 'Intellectual,' and a clique would be anything but
+intellectual if it did not support its members. Review the book
+yourself; mind and make the dulness of it the signal proof of its
+merit. Say: 'To the ordinary class of readers this exquisite work may
+appear less brilliant than the flippant smartness of'--any other
+author you like to name; 'but to the well educated and intelligent
+every line is pregnant with,' etc. By the way, when we come by and by
+to review the exhibition at Burlington House, there is one painter
+whom we must try our best to crush. I have not seen his pictures
+myself, but he is a new man; and our friend, who has seen him, is
+terribly jealous of him, and says that if the good judges do not put
+him down at once, the villanous taste of the public will set him up as
+a prodigy. A low-lived fellow too, I hear. There is the name of the
+man and the subject of the pictures. See to it when the time comes.
+Meanwhile, prepare the way for onslaught on the pictures by occasional
+sneers at the painter." Here Mr. Mivers took out of his cylinder a
+confidential note from the jealous rival and handed it to his
+mild-looking /confrere/; then rising, he said, "I fear we must suspend
+our business till to-morrow; I expect two young cousins to breakfast."
+
+As soon as the mild-looking man was gone, Mr. Mivers sauntered to his
+drawing-room window, amiably offering a lump of sugar to a canary-bird
+sent to him as a present the day before, and who, in the gilded cage
+which made part of the present, scanned him suspiciously and refused
+the sugar.
+
+Time had remained very gentle in its dealings with Chillingly Mivers.
+He scarcely looked a day older than when he was first presented to the
+reader on the birth of his kinsman Kenelm. He was reaping the fruit
+of his own sage maxims. Free from whiskers and safe in wig, there was
+no sign of gray, no suspicion of dye. Superiority to passion,
+abnegation of sorrow, indulgence of amusement, avoidance of excess,
+had kept away the crow's-feet, preserved the elasticity of his frame
+and the unflushed clearness of his gentlemanlike complexion. The door
+opened, and a well-dressed valet, who had lived long enough with
+Mivers to grow very much like him, announced Mr. Chillingly Gordon.
+
+"Good morning," said Mivers; "I was much pleased to see you talking so
+long and so familiarly with Danvers: others, of course, observed it,
+and it added a step to your career. It does you great good to be seen
+in a drawing-room talking apart with a Somebody. But may I ask if the
+talk itself was satisfactory?"
+
+"Not at all: Danvers throws cold water on the notion of Saxboro', and
+does not even hint that his party will help me to any other opening.
+Party has few openings at its disposal nowadays for any young man.
+The schoolmaster being abroad has swept away the school for statesmen
+as he has swept away the school for actors,--an evil, and an evil of a
+far greater consequence to the destinies of the nation than any good
+likely to be got from the system that succeeded it."
+
+"But it is of no use railing against things that can't be helped. If
+I were you, I would postpone all ambition of Parliament and read for
+the bar."
+
+"The advice is sound, but too unpalatable to be taken. I am resolved
+to find a seat in the House, and where there is a will there is a
+way."
+
+"I am not so sure of that."
+
+"But I am."
+
+"Judging by what your contemporaries at the University tell me of your
+speeches at the Debating Society, you were not then an ultra-Radical.
+But it is only an ultra-Radical who has a chance of success at
+Saxboro'."
+
+"I am no fanatic in politics. There is much to be said on all sides:
+/coeteris paribus/, I prefer the winning side to the losing; nothing
+succeeds like success."
+
+"Ay, but in politics there is always reaction. The winning side one
+day may be the losing side another. The losing side represents a
+minority, and a minority is sure to comprise more intellect than a
+majority: in the long run intellect will force its way, get a majority
+and then lose it, because with a majority it will become stupid."
+
+"Cousin Mivers, does not the history of the world show you that a
+single individual can upset all theories as to the comparative wisdom
+of the few or the many? Take the wisest few you can find, and one man
+of genius not a tithe so wise crushes them into powder. But then that
+man of genius, though he despises the many, must make use of them.
+That done, he rules them. Don't you see how in free countries
+political destinations resolve themselves into individual
+impersonations? At a general election it is one name around which
+electors rally. The candidate may enlarge as much as he pleases on
+political principles, but all his talk will not win him votes enough
+for success, unless he says, 'I go with Mr. A.,' the minister, or with
+Mr. Z., the chief of the opposition. It was not the Tories who beat
+the Whigs when Mr. Pitt dissolved Parliament. It was Mr. Pitt who
+beat Mr. Fox, with whom in general political principle--slave-trade,
+Roman Catholic emancipation, Parliamentary reform--he certainly agreed
+much more than he did with any man in his own cabinet."
+
+"Take care, my young cousin," cried Mivers, in accents of alarm;
+"don't set up for a man of genius. Genius is the worst quality a
+public man can have nowadays: nobody heeds it, and everybody is
+jealous of it."
+
+"Pardon me, you mistake; my remark was purely objective, and intended
+as a reply to your argument. I prefer at present to go with the many
+because it is the winning side. If we then want a man of genius to
+keep it the winning side, by subjugating its partisans to his will, he
+will be sure to come. The few will drive him to us, for the few are
+always the enemies of the one man of genius. It is they who
+distrust,--it is they who are jealous,--not the many. You have
+allowed your judgment, usually so clear, to be somewhat dimmed by your
+experience as a critic. The critics are the few. They have
+infinitely more culture than the many. But when a man of real genius
+appears and asserts himself, the critics are seldom such fair judges
+of him as the many are. If he be not one of their oligarchical
+clique, they either abuse, or disparage, or affect to ignore him;
+though a time at last comes when, having gained the many, the critics
+acknowledge him. But the difference between the man of action and the
+author is this, that the author rarely finds this acknowledgment till
+he is dead, and it is necessary to the man of action to enforce it
+while he is alive. But enough of this speculation: you ask me to meet
+Kenelm; is he not coming?"
+
+"Yes, but I did not ask him till ten o'clock. I asked you at
+half-past nine, because I wished to hear about Danvers and Saxboro',
+and also to prepare you somewhat for your introduction to your cousin.
+I must be brief as to the last, for it is only five minutes to the
+hour, and he is a man likely to be punctual. Kenelm is in all ways
+your opposite. I don't know whether he is cleverer or less clever;
+there is no scale of measurement between you: but he is wholly void of
+ambition, and might possibly assist yours. He can do what he likes
+with Sir Peter; and considering how your poor father--a worthy man,
+but cantankerous--harassed and persecuted Sir Peter, because Kenelm
+came between the estate and you, it is probable that Sir Peter bears
+you a grudge, though Kenelm declares him incapable of it; and it would
+be well if you could annul that grudge in the father by conciliating
+the goodwill of the son."
+
+"I should be glad so to annul it; but what is Kenelm's weak side?--the
+turf? the hunting-field? women? poetry? One can only conciliate a man
+by getting on his weak side."
+
+"Hist! I see him from the windows. Kenelm's weak side was, when I
+knew him some years ago, and I rather fancy it still is--"
+
+"Well, make haste! I hear his ring at your door-bell."
+
+"A passionate longing to find ideal truth in real life."
+
+"Ah!" said Gordon, "as I thought,--a mere dreamer"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+KENELM entered the room. The young cousins were introduced, shook
+hands, receded a step, and gazed at each other. It is scarcely
+possible to conceive a greater contrast outwardly than that between
+the two Chillingly representatives of the rising generation. Each was
+silently impressed by the sense of that contrast. Each felt that the
+contrast implied antagonism, and that if they two met in the same
+arena it must be as rival combatants; still, by some mysterious
+intuition, each felt a certain respect for the other, each divined in
+the other a power that he could not fairly estimate, but against which
+his own power would be strongly tasked to contend. So might exchange
+looks a thorough-bred deer-hound and a half-bred mastiff: the
+bystander could scarcely doubt which was the nobler animal; but he
+might hesitate which to bet on, if the two came to deadly quarrel.
+Meanwhile the thorough-bred deer-hound and the half-bred mastiff
+sniffed at each other in polite salutation. Gordon was the first to
+give tongue.
+
+"I have long wished to know you personally," said he, throwing into
+his voice and manner that delicate kind of deference which a well-born
+cadet owes to the destined head of his house. "I cannot conceive how
+I missed you last night at Lady Beaumanoir's, where Mivers tells me he
+met you; but I left early,"
+
+Here Mivers led the way to the breakfast-room, and, there seated, the
+host became the principal talker, running with lively glibness over
+the principal topics of the day,--the last scandal, the last new book,
+the reform of the army, the reform of the turf, the critical state of
+Spain, and the debut of an Italian singer. He seemed an embodied
+Journal, including the Leading Article, the Law Reports, Foreign
+Intelligence, the Court Circular, down to the Births, Deaths, and
+Marriages. Gordon from time to time interrupted this flow of soul
+with brief, trenchant remarks, which evinced his own knowledge of the
+subjects treated, and a habit of looking on all subjects connected
+with the pursuits and business of mankind from a high ground
+appropriated to himself, and through the medium of that blue glass
+which conveys a wintry aspect to summer landscapes. Kenelm said
+little, but listened attentively.
+
+The conversation arrested its discursive nature, to settle upon a
+political chief, the highest in fame and station of that party to
+which Mivers professed--not to belong, he belonged to himself alone,
+but to appropinquate. Mivers spoke of this chief with the greatest
+distrust, and in a spirit of general depreciation. Gordon acquiesced
+in the distrust and the depreciation, adding, "But he is master of the
+position, and must, of course, be supported through thick and thin for
+the present."
+
+"Yes, for the present," said Mivers, "one has no option. But you will
+see some clever articles in 'The Londoner' towards the close of the
+session, which will damage him greatly, by praising him in the wrong
+place, and deepening the alarm of important followers,--an alarm now
+at work, though suppressed."
+
+Here Kenelm asked, in humble tones, why Gordon thought that a minister
+he considered so untrustworthy and dangerous must for the present be
+supported through thick and thin.
+
+"Because at present a member elected so to support him would lose his
+seat if he did not: needs must when the devil drives."
+
+KENELM.--"When the devil drives, I should have thought it better to
+resign one's seat on the coach; perhaps one might be of some use, out
+of it, in helping to put on the drag."
+
+MIVERS.--"Cleverly said, Kenelm. But, metaphor apart, Gordon is
+right. A young politician must go with his party; a veteran
+journalist like myself is more independent. So long as the journalist
+blames everybody, he will have plenty of readers."
+
+Kenelm made no reply, and Gordon changed the conversation from men to
+measures. He spoke of some Bills before Parliament with remarkable
+ability, evincing much knowledge of the subject, much critical
+acuteness, illustrating their defects, and proving the danger of their
+ultimate consequences.
+
+Kenelm was greatly struck with the vigour of this cold, clear mind,
+and owned to himself that the House of Commons was a fitting place for
+its development.
+
+"But," said Mivers, "would you not be obliged to defend these Bills if
+you were member for Saxboro'?"
+
+"Before I answer your question, answer me this: dangerous as the Bills
+are, is it not necessary that they shall pass? Have not the public so
+resolved?"
+
+"There can be no doubt of that."
+
+"Then the member for Saxboro' cannot be strong enough to go against
+the public."
+
+"Progress of the age!" said Kenelm, musingly. "Do you think the class
+of gentlemen will long last in England?"
+
+"What do you call gentlemen? The aristocracy by birth?--the
+/gentilshommes/?"
+
+"Nay, I suppose no laws can take away a man's ancestors, and a class
+of well-born men is not to be exterminated. But a mere class of
+well-born men--without duties, responsibilities, or sentiment of that
+which becomes good birth in devotion to country or individual
+honour--does no good to a nation. It is a misfortune which statesmen
+of democratic creed ought to recognize, that the class of the
+well-born cannot be destroyed: it must remain as it remained in Rome
+and remains in France, after all efforts to extirpate it, as the most
+dangerous class of citizens when you deprive it of the attributes
+which made it the most serviceable. I am not speaking of that class;
+I speak of that unclassified order peculiar to England, which, no
+doubt, forming itself originally from the ideal standard of honour and
+truth supposed to be maintained by the /gentilshommes/, or well-born,
+no longer requires pedigrees and acres to confer upon its members the
+designation of gentleman; and when I hear a 'gentleman' say that he
+has no option but to think one thing and say another, at whatever risk
+to his country, I feel as if in the progress of the age the class of
+gentleman was about to be superseded by some finer development of
+species."
+
+Therewith Kenelm rose, and would have taken his departure, if Gordon
+had not seized his hand and detained him.
+
+"My dear cousin, if I may so call you," he said, with the frank manner
+which was usual to him, and which suited well the bold expression of
+his face and the clear ring of his voice, "I am one of those who, from
+an over-dislike to sentimentality and cant, often make those not
+intimately acquainted with them think worse of their principles than
+they deserve. It may be quite true that a man who goes with his party
+dislikes the measures he feels bound to support, and says so openly
+when among friends and relations, yet that man is not therefore devoid
+of loyalty and honour; and I trust, when you know me better, you will
+not think it likely I should derogate from that class of gentlemen to
+which we both belong."
+
+"Pardon me if I seemed rude," answered Kenelm; "ascribe it to my
+ignorance of the necessities of public life. It struck me that where
+a politician thought a thing evil, he ought not to support it as good.
+But I dare say I am mistaken."
+
+"Entirely mistaken," said Mivers, "and for this reason: in politics
+formerly there was a direct choice between good and evil. That rarely
+exists now. Men of high education, having to choose whether to accept
+or reject a measure forced upon their option by constituent bodies of
+very low education, are called upon to weigh evil against evil,--the
+evil of accepting or the evil of rejecting; and if they resolve on the
+first, it is as the lesser evil of the two."
+
+"Your definition is perfect," said Gordon, "and I am contented to rest
+on it my excuse for what my cousin deems insincerity."
+
+"I suppose that is real life," said Kenelm, with his mournful smile.
+
+"Of course it is," said Mivers.
+
+"Every day I live," sighed Kenelm, "still more confirms my conviction
+that real life is a phantasmal sham. How absurd it is in philosophers
+to deny the existence of apparitions! what apparitions we, living men,
+must seem to the ghosts!
+
+
+ "'The spirits of the wise
+ Sit in the clouds and mock us.'"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+CHILLINGLY GORDON did not fail to confirm his acquaintance with
+Kenelm. He very often looked in upon him of a morning, sometimes
+joined him in his afternoon rides, introduced him to men of his own
+set who were mostly busy members of Parliament, rising barristers, or
+political journalists, but not without a proportion of brilliant
+idlers,--club men, sporting men, men of fashion, rank, and fortune.
+He did so with a purpose, for these persons spoke well of him,--spoke
+well not only of his talents, but of his honourable character. His
+general nickname amongst them was "HONEST GORDON." Kenelm at first
+thought this sobriquet must be ironical; not a bit of it. It was
+given to him on account of the candour and boldness with which he
+expressed opinions embodying that sort of cynicism which is vulgarly
+called "the absence of humbug." The man was certainly no hypocrite;
+he affected no beliefs which he did not entertain. And he had very
+few beliefs in anything, except the first half of the adage, "Every
+man for himself,--and God for us all."
+
+But whatever Chillingly Gordon's theoretical disbeliefs in things
+which make the current creed of the virtuous, there was nothing in his
+conduct which evinced predilection for vices: he was strictly upright
+in all his dealings, and in delicate matters of honour was a favourite
+umpire amongst his coevals. Though so frankly ambitious, no one could
+accuse him of attempting to climb on the shoulders of patrons. There
+was nothing servile in his nature; and, though he was perfectly
+prepared to bribe electors if necessary, no money could have bought
+himself. His one master-passion was the desire of power. He sneered
+at patriotism as a worn-out prejudice, at philanthropy as a
+sentimental catch-word. He did not want to serve his country, but to
+rule it. He did not want to raise mankind, but to rise himself. He
+was therefore unscrupulous, unprincipled, as hungerers after power for
+itself too often are; yet still if he got power he would probably use
+it well, from the clearness and strength of his mental perceptions.
+The impression he made on Kenelm may be seen in the following
+letter:--
+
+
+TO SIR PETER CHILLINGLY, BART., ETC.
+
+MY DEAR FATHER,--You and my dear mother will be pleased to hear that
+London continues very polite to me: that "arida nutrix leonum" enrolls
+me among the pet class of lions which ladies of fashion admit into the
+society of their lapdogs. It is somewhere about six years since I was
+allowed to gaze on this peep-show through the loopholes of Mr. Welby's
+retreat. It appears to me, perhaps erroneously, that even within that
+short space of time the tone of "society" is perceptibly changed.
+That the change is for the better is an assertion I leave to those who
+belong to the /progressista/ party.
+
+I don't think nearly so many young ladies six years ago painted their
+eyelids and dyed their hair: a few of them there might be, imitators
+of the slang invented by schoolboys and circulated through the medium
+of small novelists; they might use such expressions as "stunning,"
+"cheek," "awfully jolly," etc. But now I find a great many who have
+advanced to a slang beyond that of verbal expressions,--a slang of
+mind, a slang of sentiment, a slang in which very little seems left of
+the woman and nothing at all of the lady.
+
+Newspaper essayists assert that the young men of the day are to blame
+for this; that the young men like it; and the fair husband-anglers
+dress their flies in the colours most likely to attract a nibble.
+Whether this excuse be the true one I cannot pretend to judge; but it
+strikes me that the men about my own age who affect to be fast are a
+more languid race than the men from ten to twenty years older, whom
+they regard as /slow/. The habit of dram-drinking in the morning is a
+very new idea, an idea greatly in fashion at the moment. Adonis calls
+for a "pick-me-up" before he has strength enough to answer a
+/billet-doux/ from Venus. Adonis has not the strength to get nobly
+drunk, but his delicate constitution requires stimulants, and he is
+always tippling.
+
+The men of high birth or renown for social success belonging, my dear
+father, to your time, are still distinguished by an air of good
+breeding, by a style of conversation more or less polished and not
+without evidences of literary culture, from men of the same rank in my
+generation, who appear to pride themselves on respecting nobody and
+knowing nothing, not even grammar. Still we are assured that the
+world goes on steadily improving. /That/ new idea is in full vigour.
+
+Society in the concrete has become wonderfully conceited as to its own
+progressive excellences, and the individuals who form the concrete
+entertain the same complacent opinion of themselves. There are, of
+course, even in my brief and imperfect experience, many exceptions to
+what appear to me the prevalent characteristics of the rising
+generation in "society." Of these exceptions I must content myself
+with naming the most remarkable. /Place aux dames/, the first I name
+is Cecilia Travers. She and her father are now in town, and I meet
+them frequently. I can conceive no civilized era in the world which a
+woman like Cecilia Travers would not grace and adorn, because she is
+essentially the type of woman as man likes to imagine woman; namely,
+on the fairest side of the womanly character. And I say "woman"
+rather than "girl," because among "Girls of the Period" Cecilia
+Travers cannot be classed. You might call her damsel, virgin, maiden,
+but you could no more call her girl than you could call a well-born
+French demoiselle /fille/. She is handsome enough to please the eye
+of any man, however fastidious, but not that kind of beauty which
+dazzles all men too much to fascinate one man; for--speaking, thank
+Heaven, from mere theory--I apprehend that the love for woman has in
+it a strong sense of property; that one requires to individualize
+one's possession as being wholly one's own, and not a possession which
+all the public are invited to admire. I can readily understand how a
+rich man, who has what is called a show place, in which the splendid
+rooms and the stately gardens are open to all inspectors, so that he
+has no privacy in his own demesnes, runs away to a pretty cottage
+which he has all to himself, and of which he can say, "/This/ is home;
+/this/ is all mine."
+
+But there are some kinds of beauty which are eminently show
+places,--which the public think they have as much a right to admire as
+the owner has; and the show place itself would be dull and perhaps
+fall out of repair, if the public could be excluded from the sight of
+it.
+
+The beauty of Cecilia Travers is not that of a show place. There is a
+feeling of safety in her. If Desdemona had been like her, Othello
+would not have been jealous. But then Cecilia would not have deceived
+her father; nor I think have told a blackamoor that she wished "Heaven
+had made her such a man." Her mind harmonizes with her person: it is
+a companionable mind. Her talents are not showy, but, take them
+altogether, they form a pleasant whole: she has good sense enough in
+the practical affairs of life, and enough of that ineffable womanly
+gift called tact to counteract the effects of whimsical natures like
+mine, and yet enough sense of the humouristic views of life not to
+take too literally all that a whimsical man like myself may say. As
+to temper, one never knows what a woman's temper is--till one puts her
+out of it. But I imagine hers, in its normal state, to be serene, and
+disposed to be cheerful. Now, my dear father, if you were not one of
+the cleverest of men you would infer from this eulogistic mention of
+Cecilia Travers that I was in love with her. But you no doubt will
+detect the truth that a man in love with a woman does not weigh her
+merits with so steady a hand as that which guides this steel pen. I
+am not in love with Cecilia Travers. I wish I were. When Lady
+Glenalvon, who remains wonderfully kind to me, says, day after day,
+"Cecilia Travers would make you a perfect wife," I have no answer to
+give; but I don't feel the least inclined to ask Cecilia Travers if
+she would waste her perfection on one who so coldly concedes it.
+
+I find that she persisted in rejecting the man whom her father wished
+her to marry, and that he has consoled himself by marrying somebody
+else. No doubt other suitors as worthy will soon present themselves.
+
+Oh, dearest of all my friends,--sole friend whom I regard as a
+confidant,--shall I ever be in love? and if not, why not? Sometimes I
+feel as if, with love as with ambition, it is because I have some
+impossible ideal in each, that I must always remain indifferent to the
+sort of love and the sort of ambition which are within my reach. I
+have an idea that if I did love, I should love as intensely as Romeo,
+and that thought inspires me with vague forebodings of terror; and if
+I did find an object to arouse my ambition, I could be as earnest in
+its pursuit as--whom shall I name?--Caesar or Cato? I like Cato's
+ambition the better of the two. But people nowadays call ambition an
+impracticable crotchet, if it be invested on the losing side. Cato
+would have saved Rome from the mob and the dictator; but Rome could
+not be saved, and Cato falls on his own sword. Had we a Cato now, the
+verdict at a coroner's inquest would be, "suicide while in a state of
+unsound mind;" and the verdict would have been proved by his senseless
+resistance to a mob and a dictator! Talking of ambition, I come to
+the other exception to the youth of the day; I have named a
+/demoiselle/, I now name a /damoiseau/. Imagine a man of about
+five-and-twenty, and who is morally about fifty years older than a
+healthy man of sixty,--imagine him with the brain of age and the
+flower of youth; with a heart absorbed into the brain, and giving warm
+blood to frigid ideas: a man who sneers at everything I call lofty,
+yet would do nothing that he thinks mean; to whom vice and virtue are
+as indifferent as they were to the Aesthetics of Goethe; who would
+never jeopardize his career as a practical reasoner by an imprudent
+virtue, and never sully his reputation by a degrading vice. Imagine
+this man with an intellect keen, strong, ready, unscrupulous,
+dauntless,--all cleverness and no genius. Imagine this man, and then
+do not be astonished when I tell you he is a Chillingly.
+
+The Chillingly race culminates in him, and becomes Chillinglyest. In
+fact, it seems to me that we live in a day precisely suited to the
+Chillingly idiosyncrasies. During the ten centuries or more that our
+race has held local habitation and a name, it has been as airy
+nothings. Its representatives lived in hot-blooded times, and were
+compelled to skulk in still water with their emblematic daces. But
+the times now, my dear father, are so cold-blooded that you can't be
+too cold-blooded to prosper. What could Chillingly Mivers have been
+in an age when people cared twopence-halfpenny about their religious
+creeds, and their political parties deemed their cause was sacred and
+their leaders were heroes? Chillingly Mivers would not have found
+five subscribers to "The Londoner." But now "The Londoner" is the
+favourite organ of the intellectual public; it sneers away all the
+foundations of the social system, without an attempt at
+reconstruction; and every new journal set up, if it keep its head
+above water, models itself on "The Londoner." Chillingly Mivers is a
+great man, and the most potent writer of the age, though nobody knows
+what he has written. Chillingly Gordon is a still more notable
+instance of the rise of the Chillingly worth in the modern market.
+
+There is a general impression in the most authoritative circles that
+Chillingly Gordon will have high rank in the van of the coming men.
+His confidence in himself is so thorough that it infects all with whom
+he comes into contact,--myself included.
+
+He said to me the other day, with a /sang-froid/ worthy of the iciest
+Chillingly, "I mean to be Prime Minister of England: it is only a
+question of time." Now, if Chillingly Gordon is to be Prime Minister,
+it will be because the increasing cold of our moral and social
+atmosphere will exactly suit the development of his talents.
+
+He is the man above all others to argue down the declaimers of
+old-fashioned sentimentalities,--love of country, care for its
+position among nations, zeal for its honour, pride in its renown.
+(Oh, if you could hear him philosophically and logically sneer away
+the word "prestige"!) Such notions are fast being classified as
+"bosh." And when that classification is complete,--when England has
+no colonies to defend, no navy to pay for, no interest in the affairs
+of other nations, and has attained to the happy condition of
+Holland,--then Chillingly Gordon will be her Prime Minister.
+
+Yet while, if ever I am stung into political action, it will be by
+abnegation of the Chillingly attributes, and in opposition, however
+hopeless, to Chillingly Gordon, I feel that this man cannot be
+suppressed, and ought to have fair play; his ambition will be
+infinitely more dangerous if it become soured by delay. I propose, my
+dear father, that you should have the honour of laying this clever
+kinsman under an obligation, and enabling him to enter Parliament. In
+our last conversation at Exmundham, you told me of the frank
+resentment of Gordon /pere/, when my coming into the world shut him
+out from the Exmundham inheritance; you confided to me your intention
+at that time to lay by yearly a sum that might ultimately serve as a
+provision for Gordon /fils/, and as some compensation for the loss of
+his expectations when you realized your hope of an heir; you told me
+also how this generous intention on your part had been frustrated by a
+natural indignation at the elder Gordon's conduct in his harassing and
+costly litigation, and by the addition you had been tempted to make to
+the estate in a purchase which added to its acreage, but at a rate of
+interest which diminished your own income, and precluded the
+possibility of further savings. Now, chancing to meet your lawyer,
+Mr. Vining, the other day, I learned from him that it had been long a
+wish which your delicacy prevented your naming to me, that I, to whom
+the fee-simple descends, should join with you in cutting off the
+entail and resettling the estate. He showed me what an advantage this
+would be to the property, because it would leave your hands free for
+many improvements in which I heartily go with the progress of the age,
+for which, as merely tenant for life, you could not raise the money
+except upon ruinous terms; new cottages for labourers, new buildings
+for tenants, the consolidation of some old mortgages and charges on
+the rent-roll, etc. And allow me to add that I should like to make a
+large increase to the jointure of my dear mother. Vining says, too,
+that there is a part of the outlying land which, as being near a town,
+could be sold to considerable profit if the estate were resettled.
+
+Let us hasten to complete the necessary deeds, and so obtain the
+L20,000 required for the realization of your noble and, let me add,
+your just desire to do something for Chillingly Gordon. In the new
+deeds of settlement we could insure the power of willing the estate as
+we pleased, and I am strongly against devising it to Chillingly
+Gordon. It may be a crotchet of mine, but one which I think you
+share, that the owner of English soil should have a son's love for the
+native land, and Gordon will never have that. I think, too, that it
+will be best for his own career, and for the establishment of a frank
+understanding between us and himself, that he should be fairly told
+that he would not be benefited in the event of our death. Twenty
+thousand pounds given to him now would be a greater boon to him than
+ten times the sum twenty years later. With that at his command, he
+can enter Parliament, and have an income, added to what he now
+possesses, if modest, still sufficient to make him independent of a
+minister's patronage.
+
+Pray humour me, my dearest father, in the proposition I venture to
+submit to you.
+
+ Your affectionate son, KENELM.
+
+
+FROM SIR PETER CHILLINGLY TO KENELM CHILLINGLY.
+
+MY DEAR BOY,--You are not worthy to be a Chillingly; you are decidedly
+warm-blooded: never was a load lifted off a man's mind with a gentler
+hand. Yes, I have wished to cut off the entail and resettle the
+property; but, as it was eminently to my advantage to do so, I shrank
+from asking it, though eventually it would be almost as much to your
+own advantage. What with the purchase I made of the Faircleuch
+lands--which I could only effect by money borrowed at high interest on
+my personal security, and paid off by yearly instalments, eating
+largely into income--and the old mortgages, etc., I own I have been
+pinched of late years. But what rejoices me the most is the power to
+make homes for our honest labourers more comfortable, and nearer to
+their work, which last is the chief point, for the old cottages in
+themselves are not bad; the misfortune is, when you build an extra
+room for the children, the silly people let it out to a lodger.
+
+My dear boy, I am very much touched by your wish to increase your
+mother's jointure,--a very proper wish, independently of filial
+feeling, for she brought to the estate a very pretty fortune, which,
+the trustees consented to my investing in land; and though the land
+completed our ring-fence, it does not bring in two per cent, and the
+conditions of the entail limited the right of jointure to an amount
+below that which a widowed Lady Chillingly may fairly expect.
+
+I care more about the provision on these points than I do for the
+interests of old Chillingly Gordon's son. I had meant to behave very
+handsomely to the father; and when the return for behaving handsomely
+is being put into Chancery--A Worm Will Turn. Nevertheless, I agree
+with you that a son should not be punished for his father's faults;
+and, if the sacrifice of L20,000 makes you and myself feel that we are
+better Christians and truer gentlemen, we shall buy that feeling very
+cheaply.
+
+
+Sir Peter then proceeded, half jestingly, half seriously, to combat
+Kenelm's declaration that he was not in love with Cecilia Travers;
+and, urging the advantages of marriage with one whom Kenelm allowed
+would be a perfect wife, astutely remarked that unless Kenelm had a
+son of his own it did not seem to him quite just to the next of kin to
+will the property from him, upon no better plea than the want of love
+for his native country. "He would love his country fast enough if he
+had 10,000 acres in it."
+
+Kenelm shook his head when he came to this sentence.
+
+"Is even then love for one's country but cupboard-love after all?"
+said he; and he postponed finishing the perusal of his father's
+letter.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+KENELM CHILLINGLY did not exaggerate the social position he had
+acquired when he classed himself amongst the lions of the fashionable
+world. I dare not count the number of three-cornered notes showered
+upon him by the fine ladies who grow romantic upon any kind of
+celebrity; or the carefully sealed envelopes, containing letters from
+fair Anonymas, who asked if he had a heart, and would be in such a
+place in the Park at such an hour. What there was in Kenelm
+Chillingly that should make him thus favoured, especially by the fair
+sex, it would be difficult to say, unless it was the two-fold
+reputation of being unlike other people, and of being unaffectedly
+indifferent to the gain of any reputation at all. He might, had he so
+pleased, have easily established a proof that the prevalent though
+vague belief in his talents was not altogether unjustified. For the
+articles he had sent from abroad to "The Londoner" and by which his
+travelling expenses were defrayed, had been stamped by that sort of
+originality in tone and treatment which rarely fails to excite
+curiosity as to the author, and meets with more general praise than
+perhaps it deserves.
+
+But Mivers was true to his contract to preserve inviolable the
+incognito of the author, and Kenelm regarded with profound contempt
+the articles themselves and the readers who praised them.
+
+Just as misanthropy with some persons grows out of benevolence
+disappointed, so there are certain natures--and Kenelm Chillingly's
+was perhaps one of them--in which indifferentism grows out of
+earnestness baffled.
+
+He had promised himself pleasure in renewing acquaintance with his old
+tutor, Mr. Welby,--pleasure in refreshing his own taste for
+metaphysics and casuistry and criticism. But that accomplished
+professor of realism had retired from philosophy altogether, and was
+now enjoying a holiday for life in the business of a public office. A
+minister in favour of whom, when in opposition, Mr. Welby, in a moment
+of whim, wrote some very able articles in a leading journal, had, on
+acceding to power, presented the realist with one of those few good
+things still left to ministerial patronage,--a place worth about
+L1,200 a year. His mornings thus engaged in routine work, Mr. Welby
+enjoyed his evenings in a convivial way.
+
+"/Inveni portum/," he said to Kenelm; "I plunge into no troubled
+waters now. But come and dine with me to-morrow, tete-a-tete. My
+wife is at St. Leonard's with my youngest born for the benefit of
+sea-air." Kenelm accepted the invitation.
+
+The dinner would have contented a Brillat-Savarin: it was faultless;
+and the claret was that rare nectar, the Lafitte of 1848.
+
+"I never share this," said Welby, "with more than one friend at a
+time."
+
+Kenelm sought to engage his host in discussion on certain new works in
+vogue, and which were composed according to purely realistic canons of
+criticism. "The more realistic; these books pretend to be, the less
+real they are," said Kenelm. "I am half inclined to think that the
+whole school you so systematically sought to build up is a mistake,
+and that realism in art is a thing impossible."
+
+"I dare say you are right. I took up that school in earnest because I
+was in a passion with pretenders to the Idealistic school; and
+whatever one takes up in earnest is generally a mistake, especially if
+one is in a passion. I was not in earnest and I was not in a passion
+when I wrote those articles to which I am indebted for my office."
+Mr. Welby here luxuriously stretched his limbs, and lifting his glass
+to his lips, voluptuously inhaled its bouquet.
+
+"You sadden me," returned Kenelm. "It is a melancholy thing to find
+that one's mind was influenced in youth by a teacher who mocks at his
+own teachings."
+
+Welby shrugged his shoulders. "Life consists in the alternate process
+of learning and unlearning; but it is often wiser to unlearn than to
+learn. For the rest, as I have ceased to be a critic, I care little
+whether I was wrong or right when I played that part. I think I am
+right now as a placeman. Let the world go its own way, provided the
+world lets you live upon it. I drain my wine to the lees, and cut
+down hope to the brief span of life. Reject realism in art if you
+please, and accept realism in conduct. For the first time in my life
+I am comfortable: my mind, having worn out its walking-shoes, is now
+enjoying the luxury of slippers. Who can deny the realism of
+comfort?"
+
+"Has a man a right," Kenelm said to himself, as he entered his
+brougham, "to employ all the brilliancy of a rare wit, all the
+acquisitions of as rare a scholarship, to the scaring of the young
+generation out of the safe old roads which youth left to itself would
+take,--old roads skirted by romantic rivers and bowery trees,--
+directing them into new paths on long sandy flats, and then,
+when they are faint and footsore, to tell them that he cares not a pin
+whether they have worn out their shoes in right paths or wrong paths,
+for that he has attained the /summum bonum/ of philosophy in the
+comfort of easy slippers?"
+
+Before he could answer the question he thus put to himself, his
+brougham stopped at the door of the minister whom Welby had
+contributed to bring into power.
+
+That night there was a crowded muster of the fashionable world at the
+great man's house. It happened to be a very critical moment for the
+minister. The fate of his cabinet depended on the result of a motion
+about to be made the following week in the House of Commons. The
+great man stood at the entrance of the apartments to receive his
+guests, and among the guests were the framers of the hostile motion
+and the leaders of the opposition. His smile was not less gracious to
+them than to his dearest friends and stanchest supporters.
+
+"I suppose this is realism," said Kenelm to himself; "but it is not
+truth, and it is not comfort." Leaning against the wall near the
+doorway, he contemplated with grave interest the striking countenance
+of his distinguished host. He detected beneath that courteous smile
+and that urbane manner the signs of care. The eye was absent, the
+cheek pinched, the brow furrowed. Kenelm turned away his looks, and
+glanced over the animated countenances of the idle loungers along
+commoner thoroughfares in life. Their eyes were not absent; their
+brows were not furrowed; their minds seemed quite at home in
+exchanging nothings. Interest many of them had in the approaching
+struggle, but it was much such an interest as betters of small sums
+may have on the Derby day,--just enough to give piquancy to the race;
+nothing to make gain a great joy, or loss a keen anguish.
+
+"Our host is looking ill," said Mivers, accosting Kenelm. "I detect
+symptoms of suppressed gout. You know my aphorism, 'nothing so gouty
+as ambition,' especially Parliamentary ambition."
+
+"You are not one of those friends who press on my choice of life that
+source of disease; allow me to thank you."
+
+"Your thanks are misplaced. I strongly advise you to devote yourself
+to a political career."
+
+"Despite the gout?"
+
+"Despite the gout. If you could take the world as I do, my advice
+might be different. But your mind is overcrowded with doubts and
+fantasies and crotchets, and you have no choice but to give them vent
+in active life."
+
+"You had something to do in making me what I am,--an idler; something
+to answer for as to my doubts, fantasies, and crotchets. It was by
+your recommendation that I was placed under the tuition of Mr. Welby,
+and at that critical age in which the bent of the twig forms the shape
+of the tree."
+
+"And I pride myself on that counsel. I repeat the reasons for which I
+gave it: it is an incalculable advantage for a young man to start in
+life thoroughly initiated into the New Ideas which will more or less
+influence his generation. Welby was the ablest representative of
+these ideas. It is a wondrous good fortune when the propagandist of
+the New Ideas is something more than a bookish philosopher,--when he
+is a thorough 'man of the world,' and is what we emphatically call
+'practical.' Yes, you owe me much that I secured to you such tuition,
+and saved you from twaddle and sentiment, the poetry of Wordsworth and
+the muscular Christianity of Cousin John."
+
+"What you say that you saved me from might have done me more good than
+all you conferred on me. I suspect that when education succeeds in
+placing an old head upon young shoulders the combination is not
+healthful: it clogs the blood and slackens the pulse. However, I must
+not be ungrateful; you meant kindly. Yes, I suppose Welby is
+practical: he has no belief, and he has got a place. But our host, I
+presume, is also practical; his place is a much higher one than
+Welby's, and yet he is surely not without belief?"
+
+"He was born before the new ideas came into practical force; but in
+proportion as they have done so, his beliefs have necessarily
+disappeared. I don't suppose that he believes in much now, except the
+two propositions: firstly, that if he accept the new ideas he will
+have power and keep it, and if he does not accept them power is out of
+the question; and, secondly, that if the new ideas are to prevail he
+is the best man to direct them safely,--beliefs quite enough for a
+minister. No wise minister should have more."
+
+"Does he not believe that the motion he is to resist next week is a
+bad one?"
+
+"A bad one of course, in its consequences, for if it succeed it will
+upset him; a good one in itself I am sure he must think it, for he
+would bring it on himself if he were in opposition."
+
+"I see that Pope's definition is still true, 'Party is the madness of
+the many for the gain of the few.'"
+
+"No, it is not true. Madness is a wrong word applied to the many: the
+many are sane enough; they know their own objects, and they make use
+of the intellect of the few in order to gain their objects. In each
+party it is the many that control the few who nominally lead them. A
+man becomes Prime Minister because he seems to the many of his party
+the fittest person to carry out their views. If he presume to differ
+from these views, they put him into a moral pillory, and pelt him with
+their dirtiest stones and their rottenest eggs."
+
+"Then the maxim should be reversed, and party is rather the madness of
+the few for the gain of the many?
+
+"Of the two, that is the more correct definition."
+
+"Let me keep my senses and decline to be one of the few."
+
+Kenelm moved away from his cousin's side, and entering one of the less
+crowded rooms, saw Cecilia Travers seated there in a recess with Lady
+Glenalvon. He joined them, and after a brief interchange of a few
+commonplaces, Lady Glenalvon quitted her post to accost a foreign
+ambassadress, and Kenelm sank into the chair she vacated.
+
+It was a relief to his eye to contemplate Cecilia's candid brow; to
+his ear to hearken to the soft voice that had no artificial tones, and
+uttered no cynical witticisms.
+
+"Don't you think it strange," said Kenelm, "that we English should so
+mould all our habits as to make even what we call pleasure as little
+pleasurable as possible? We are now in the beginning of June, the
+fresh outburst of summer, when every day in the country is a delight
+to eye and ear, and we say, 'The season for hot rooms is beginning.'
+We alone of civilized races spend our summer in a capital, and cling
+to the country when the trees are leafless and the brooks frozen."
+
+"Certainly that is a mistake; but I love the country in all seasons,
+even in winter."
+
+"Provided the country house is full of London people?"
+
+"No; that is rather a drawback. I never want companions in the
+country."
+
+"True; I should have remembered that you differ from young ladies in
+general, and make companions of books. They are always more
+conversable in the country than they are in town; or rather, we listen
+there to them with less distracted attention. Ha! do I not recognize
+yonder the fair whiskers of George Belvoir? Who is the lady leaning
+on his arm?"
+
+"Don't you know?--Lady Emily Belvoir, his wife."
+
+"Ah! I was told that he had married. The lady is handsome. She will
+become the family diamonds. Does she read Blue-books?"
+
+"I will ask her if you wish."
+
+"Nay, it is scarcely worth while. During my rambles abroad I saw but
+few English newspapers. I did, however, learn that George had won his
+election. Has he yet spoken in Parliament?"
+
+"Yes; he moved the answer to the Address this session, and was much
+complimented on the excellent tone and taste of his speech. He spoke
+again a few weeks afterwards, I fear not so successfully."
+
+"Coughed down?"
+
+"Something like it."
+
+"Do him good; he will recover the cough, and fulfil my prophecy of his
+success."
+
+"Have you done with poor George for the present? If so, allow me to
+ask whether you have quite forgotten Will Somers and Jessie Wiles?"
+
+"Forgotten them! no."
+
+"But you have never asked after them?"
+
+"I took it for granted that they were as happy as could be expected.
+Pray assure me that they are."
+
+"I trust so now; but they have had trouble, and have left Graveleigh."
+
+"Trouble! left Graveleigh! You make me uneasy. Pray explain."
+
+"They had not been three months married and installed in the home they
+owed to you, when poor Will was seized with a rheumatic fever. He was
+confined to his bed for many weeks; and, when at last he could move
+from it, was so weak as to be still unable to do any work. During his
+illness Jessie had no heart and little leisure to attend to the shop.
+Of course I--that is, my dear father--gave them all necessary
+assistance; but--"
+
+"I understand; they were reduced to objects of charity. Brute that I
+am, never to have thought of the duties I owed to the couple I had
+brought together. But pray go on."
+
+"You are aware that just before you left us my father received a
+proposal to exchange his property at Graveleigh for some lands more
+desirable to him?"
+
+"I remember. He closed with that offer."
+
+"Yes; Captain Stavers, the new landlord of Graveleigh, seems to be a
+very bad man; and though he could not turn the Somerses out of the
+cottage so long as they paid rent, which we took care they did
+pay,--yet out of a very wicked spite he set up a rival shop in one of
+his other cottages in the village, and it became impossible for these
+poor young people to get a livelihood at Graveleigh."
+
+"What excuse for spite against so harmless a young couple could
+Captain Stavers find or invent?"
+
+Cecilia looked down and coloured. "It was a revengeful feeling
+against Jessie."
+
+"Ah, I comprehend."
+
+"But they have now left the village, and are happily settled
+elsewhere. Will has recovered his health, and they are prospering
+much more than they could ever have done at Graveleigh."
+
+"In that change you were their benefactress, Miss Travers?" said
+Kenelm, in a more tender voice and with a softer eye than he had ever
+before evinced towards the heiress.
+
+"No, it is not I whom they have to thank and bless."
+
+"Who, then, is it? Your father?"
+
+"No. Do not question me. I am bound not to say. They do not
+themselves know; they rather believe that their gratitude is due to
+you."
+
+"To me! Am I to be forever a sham in spite of myself? My dear Miss
+Travers, it is essential to my honour that I should undeceive this
+credulous pair; where can I find them?"
+
+"I must not say; but I will ask permission of their concealed
+benefactor, and send you their address."
+
+A touch was laid on Kenelm's arm, and a voice whispered, "May I ask
+you to present me to Miss Travers?"
+
+"Miss Travers," said Kenelm, "I entreat you to add to the list of your
+acquaintances a cousin of mine,--Mr. Chillingly Gordon."
+
+While Gordon addressed to Cecilia the well-bred conventionalisms with
+which acquaintance in London drawing-rooms usually commences, Kenelm,
+obedient to a sign from Lady Glenalvon, who had just re-entered the
+room, quitted his seat, and joined the marchioness.
+
+"Is not that young man whom you left talking with Miss Travers your
+clever cousin Gordon?"
+
+"The same."
+
+"She is listening to him with great attention. How his face brightens
+up as he talks! He is positively handsome, thus animated."
+
+"Yes, I could fancy him a dangerous wooer. He has wit and liveliness
+and audacity; he could be very much in love with a great fortune, and
+talk to the owner of it with a fervour rarely exhibited by a
+Chillingly. Well, it is no affair of mine."
+
+"It ought to be."
+
+Alas and alas! that "ought to be;" what depths of sorrowful meaning
+lie within that simple phrase! How happy would be our lives, how
+grand our actions, how pure our souls, if all could be with us as it
+ought to be!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+WE often form cordial intimacies in the confined society of a country
+house, or a quiet watering-place, or a small Continental town, which
+fade away into remote acquaintanceship in the mighty vortex of London
+life, neither party being to blame for the estrangement. It was so
+with Leopold Travers and Kenelm Chillingly. Travers, as we have seen,
+had felt a powerful charm in the converse of the young stranger, so in
+contrast with the routine of the rural companionships to which his
+alert intellect had for many years circumscribed its range. But on
+reappearing in London the season before Kenelm again met him, he had
+renewed old friendships with men of his own standing,--officers in the
+regiment of which he had once been a popular ornament, some of them
+still unmarried, a few of them like himself widowed, others who had
+been his rivals in fashion, and were still pleasant idlers about town;
+and it rarely happens in a metropolis that we have intimate
+friendships with those of another generation, unless there be some
+common tie in the cultivation of art and letters, or the action of
+kindred sympathies in the party strife of politics. Therefore Travers
+and Kenelm had had little familiar communication with each other since
+they first met at the Beaumanoirs'. Now and then they found
+themselves at the same crowded assemblies, and interchanged nods and
+salutations. But their habits were different; the houses at which
+they were intimate were not the same, neither did they frequent the
+same clubs. Kenelm's chief bodily exercise was still that of long and
+early rambles into rural suburbs; Leopold's was that of a late ride in
+the Row. Of the two, Leopold was much more the man of pleasure. Once
+restored to metropolitan life, a temper constitutionally eager,
+ardent, and convivial took kindly, as in earlier youth, to its light
+range of enjoyments.
+
+Had the intercourse between the two men been as frankly familiar as it
+had been at Neesdale Park, Kenelm would probably have seen much more
+of Cecilia at her own home; and the admiration and esteem with which
+she already inspired him might have ripened into much warmer feeling,
+had he thus been brought into clearer comprehension of the soft and
+womanly heart, and its tender predisposition towards himself.
+
+He had said somewhat vaguely in his letter to Sir Peter, that
+"sometimes he felt as if his indifference to love, as to ambition, was
+because he had some impossible ideal in each." Taking that conjecture
+to task, he could not honestly persuade himself that he had formed any
+ideal of woman and wife with which the reality of Cecilia Travers was
+at war. On the contrary, the more he thought over the characteristics
+of Cecilia, the more they seemed to correspond to any ideal that had
+floated before him in the twilight of dreamy revery; and yet he knew
+that he was not in love with her, that his heart did not respond to
+his reason; and mournfully he resigned himself to the conviction that
+nowhere in this planet, from the normal pursuits of whose inhabitants
+he felt so estranged, was there waiting for him the smiling playmate,
+the earnest helpmate. As this conviction strengthened, so an
+increased weariness of the artificial life of the metropolis, and of
+all its objects and amusements, turned his thoughts with an intense
+yearning towards the Bohemian freedom and fresh excitements of his
+foot ramblings. He often thought with envy of the wandering minstrel,
+and wondered whether, if he again traversed the same range of country,
+he might encounter again that vagrant singer.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+IT is nearly a week since Kenelm had met Cecilia, and he is sitting in
+his rooms with Lord Thetford at that hour of three in the afternoon
+which is found the most difficult to dispose of by idlers about town.
+Amongst young men of his own age and class with whom Kenelm assorted
+in the fashionable world, perhaps the one whom he liked the best, and
+of whom he saw the most, was this young heir of the Beaumanoirs; and
+though Lord Thetford has nothing to do with the direct stream of my
+story, it is worth pausing a few minutes to sketch an outline of one
+of the best whom the last generation has produced for a part that,
+owing to accidents of birth and fortune, young men like Lord Thetford
+must play on that stage from which the curtain is not yet drawn up.
+Destined to be the head of a family that unites with princely
+possessions and a historical name a keen though honourable ambition
+for political power, Lord Thetford has been care fully educated,
+especially in the new ideas of his time. His father, though a man of
+no ordinary talents, has never taken a prominent part in public life.
+He desires his eldest son to do so. The Beaumanoirs have been Whigs
+from the time of William III. They have shared the good and the ill
+fortunes of a party which, whether we side with it or not, no
+politician who dreads extremes in the government of a State so
+pre-eminently artificial that a prevalent extreme at either end of the
+balance would be fatal to equilibrium, can desire to become extinct or
+feeble so long as a constitutional monarchy exists in England. From
+the reign of George I. to the death of George IV., the Beaumanoirs
+were in the ascendant. Visit their family portrait gallery, and you
+must admire the eminence of a house which, during that interval of
+less than a century, contributed so many men to the service of the
+State or the adornment of the Court,--so many Ministers, Ambassadors,
+Generals, Lord Chamberlains, and Masters of the Horse. When the
+younger Pitt beat the great Whig Houses, the Beaumanoirs vanish into
+comparative obscurity; they reemerge with the accession of William
+IV., and once more produce bulwarks of the State and ornaments of the
+Crown. The present Lord of Beaumanoir, /poco curante/ in politics
+though he be, has at least held high offices at Court; and, as a
+matter of course, he is Lord Lieutenant of his county, as well as
+Knight of the Garter. He is a man whom the chiefs of his party have
+been accustomed to consult on critical questions. He gives his
+opinions confidentially and modestly, and when they are rejected never
+takes offence. He thinks that a time is coming when the head of the
+Beaumanoirs should descend into the lists and fight hand-to-hand with
+any Hodge or Hobson in the cause of his country for the benefit of the
+Whigs. Too lazy or too old to do this himself, he says to his son,
+"You must do it: without effort of mine the thing may last my life.
+It needs effort of yours that the thing may last through your own."
+
+Lord Thetford cheerfully responds to the paternal admonition. He
+curbs his natural inclinations, which are neither inelegant nor
+unmanly; for, on the one side, he is very fond of music and painting,
+an accomplished amateur, and deemed a sound connoisseur in both; and,
+on the other side, he has a passion for all field sports, and
+especially for hunting. He allows no such attractions to interfere
+with diligent attention to the business of the House of Commons. He
+serves in Committees, he takes the chair at public meetings on
+sanitary questions or projects for social improvement, and acquits
+himself well therein. He has not yet spoken in debate, but he has
+only been two years in Parliament, and he takes his father's wise
+advice not to speak till the third. But he is not without weight
+among the well-born youth of the party, and has in him the stuff out
+of which, when it becomes seasoned, the Corinthian capitals of a
+Cabinet may be very effectively carved. In his own heart he is
+convinced that his party are going too far and too fast; but with that
+party he goes on light-heartedly, and would continue to do so if they
+went to Erebus. But he would prefer their going the other way. For
+the rest, a pleasant, bright-eyed young fellow, with vivid animal
+spirits; and, in the holiday moments of reprieve from public duty he
+brings sunshine into draggling hunting-fields, and a fresh breeze into
+heated ballrooms.
+
+"My dear fellow," said Lord Thetford, as he threw aside his cigar, "I
+quite understand that you bore yourself: you have nothing else to do."
+
+"What can I do?"
+
+"Work."
+
+"Work!"
+
+"Yes, you are clever enough to feel that you have a mind; and mind is
+a restless inmate of body: it craves occupation of some sort, and
+regular occupation too; it needs its daily constitutional exercise.
+Do you give your mind that?"
+
+"I am sure I don't know, but my mind is always busying itself about
+something or other."
+
+"In a desultory way,--with no fixed object."
+
+"True."
+
+"Write a book, and then it will have its constitutional."
+
+"Nay, my mind is always writing a book (though it may not publish
+one), always jotting down impressions, or inventing incidents, or
+investigating characters; and between you and me, I do not think that
+I do bore myself so much as I did formerly. Other people bore me more
+than they did."
+
+"Because you will not create an object in common with other people:
+come into Parliament, side with a party, and you have that object."
+
+"Do you mean seriously to tell me that you are not bored in the House
+of Commons?"
+
+"With the speakers very often, yes; but with the strife between the
+speakers, no. The House of Commons life has a peculiar excitement
+scarcely understood out of it; but you may conceive its charm when you
+observe that a man who has once been in the thick of it feels forlorn
+and shelved if he lose his seat, and even repines when the accident of
+birth transfers him to the serener air of the Upper House. Try that
+life, Chillingly."
+
+"I might if I were an ultra-Radical, a Republican, a Communist, a
+Socialist, and wished to upset everything existing, for then the
+strife would at least be a very earnest one."
+
+"But could not you be equally in earnest against those revolutionary
+gentlemen?"
+
+"Are you and your leaders in earnest against them? They don't appear
+to me so."
+
+Thetford was silent for a minute. "Well, if you doubt the principles
+of my side, go with the other side. For my part, I and many of our
+party would be glad to see the Conservatives stronger."
+
+"I have no doubt they would. No sensible man likes to be carried off
+his legs by the rush of the crowd behind him; and a crowd is less
+headlong when it sees a strong force arrayed against it in front. But
+it seems to me that, at present, Conservatism can but be what it now
+is,--a party that may combine for resistance, and will not combine for
+inventive construction. We are living in an age in which the process
+of unsettlement is going blindly at work, as if impelled by a Nemesis
+as blind as itself. New ideas come beating into surf and surge
+against those which former reasoners had considered as fixed banks and
+breakwaters; and the new ideas are so mutable, so fickle, that those
+which were considered novel ten years ago are deemed obsolete to-day,
+and the new ones of to-day will in their turn be obsolete to-morrow.
+And, in a sort of fatalism, you see statesmen yielding way to these
+successive mockeries of experiment,--for they are experiments against
+experience,--and saying to each other with a shrug of the shoulders,
+'Bismillah! it must be so; the country will have it, even though it
+sends the country to the dogs.' I don't feel sure that the country
+will not go there the sooner, if you can only strengthen the
+Conservative element enough to set it up in office, with the certainty
+of knocking it down again. Alas! I am too dispassionate a looker-on
+to be fit for a partisan: would I were not! Address yourself to my
+cousin Gordon."
+
+"Ay, Chillingly Gordon is a coming man, and has all the earnestness
+you find absent in party and in yourself."
+
+"You call him earnest?"
+
+"Thoroughly, in the pursuit of one object,--the advancement of
+Chillingly Gordon. If he get into the House of Commons, and succeed
+there, I hope he will never become my leader; for if he thought
+Christianity in the way of his promotion, he would bring in a bill for
+its abolition."
+
+"In that case would he still be your leader?"
+
+"My dear Kenelm, you don't know what is the spirit of party, and how
+easily it makes excuses for any act of its leader. Of course, if
+Gordon brought in a bill for the abolition of Christianity, it would
+be on the plea that the abolition was good for the Christians, and his
+followers would cheer that enlightened sentiment."
+
+"Ah," said Kenelm, with a sigh, "I own myself the dullest of
+blockheads; for instead of tempting me into the field of party
+politics, your talk leaves me in stolid amaze that you do not take to
+your heels, where honour can only be saved by flight."
+
+"Pooh! my dear Chillingly, we cannot run away from the age in which we
+live: we must accept its conditions and make the best of them; and if
+the House of Commons be nothing else, it is a famous debating society
+and a capital club. Think over it. I must leave you now. I am going
+to see a picture at the Exhibition which has been most truculently
+criticised in 'The Londoner,' but which I am assured, on good
+authority, is a work of remarkable merit. I can't bear to see a man
+snarled and sneered down, no doubt by jealous rivals, who have their
+influence in journals, so I shall judge of the picture for myself. If
+it be really as good as I am told, I shall talk about it to everybody
+I meet; and in matters of art I fancy my word goes for something.
+Study art, my dear Kenelm. No gentleman's education is complete if he
+does n't know a good picture from a bad one. After the Exhibition I
+shall just have time for a canter round the Park before the debate of
+the session, which begins to-night."
+
+With a light step the young man quitted the room, humming an air from
+the "Figaro" as he descended the stairs. From the window Kenelm
+watched him swinging himself with careless grace into his saddle and
+riding briskly down the street,--in form and face and bearing a very
+model of young, high-born, high-bred manhood. "The Venetians,"
+muttered Kenelm, "decapitated Marino Faliero for conspiring against
+his own order,--the nobles. The Venetians loved their institutions,
+and had faith in them. Is there such love and such faith among the
+English?"
+
+As he thus soliloquized he heard a shrilling sort of squeak; and a
+showman stationed before his window the stage on which Punch satirizes
+the laws and moralities of the world, "kills the beadle and defies the
+devil."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+KENELM turned from the sight of Punch and Punch's friend the cur, as
+his servant, entering, said a person from the country, who would not
+give his name, asked to see him.
+
+Thinking it might be some message from his father, Kenelm ordered the
+stranger to be admitted, and in another minute there entered a young
+man of handsome countenance and powerful frame, in whom, after a
+surprised stare, Kenelm recognized Tom Bowles. Difficult indeed would
+have been that recognition to an unobservant beholder: no trace was
+left of the sullen bully or the village farrier; the expression of the
+face was mild and intelligent,--more bashful than hardy; the brute
+strength of the form had lost its former clumsiness, the simple dress
+was that of a gentleman,--to use an expressive idiom, the whole man
+was wonderfully "toned down."
+
+"I am afraid, sir, I am taking a liberty," said Tom, rather nervously,
+twiddling his hat between his fingers.
+
+"I should be a greater friend to liberty than I am if it were always
+taken in the same way," said Kenelm, with a touch of his saturnine
+humour; but then yielding at once to the warmer impulse of his nature,
+he grasped his old antagonist's hand and exclaimed, "My dear Tom, you
+are so welcome. I am so glad to see you. Sit down, man; sit down:
+make yourself at home."
+
+"I did not know you were back in England, sir, till within the last
+few days; for you did say that when you came back I should see or hear
+from you," and there was a tone of reproach in the last words.
+
+"I am to blame, forgive me," said Kenelm, remorsefully. But how did
+you find me out? you did not then, I think, even know my name. That,
+however, it was easy enough to discover; but who gave you my address
+in this lodging?"
+
+"Well, sir, it was Miss Travers; and she bade me come to you.
+Otherwise, as you did not send for me, it was scarcely my place to
+call uninvited."
+
+"But, my dear Tom, I never dreamed that you were in London. One don't
+ask a man whom one supposes to be more than a hundred miles off to pay
+one an afternoon call. You are still with your uncle, I presume? and
+I need not ask if all thrives well with you: you look a prosperous
+man, every inch of you, from crown to toe."
+
+"Yes," said Tom; "thank you kindly, sir, I am doing well in the way of
+business, and my uncle is to give me up the whole concern at
+Christmas."
+
+While Tom thus spoke Kenelm had summoned his servant, and ordered up
+such refreshments as could be found in the larder of a bachelor in
+lodgings. "And what brings you to town, Tom?"
+
+"Miss Travers wrote to me about a little business which she was good
+enough to manage for me, and said you wished to know about it; and so,
+after turning it over in my mind for a few days, I resolved to come to
+town: indeed," added Tom, heartily, "I did wish to see your face
+again."
+
+"But you talk riddles. What business of yours could Miss Travers
+imagine I wished to know about?"
+
+Tom coloured high, and looked very embarrassed. Luckily, the servant
+here entering with the refreshment-tray allowed him time to recover
+himself. Kenelm helped him to a liberal slice of cold pigeon-pie,
+pressed wine on him, and did not renew the subject till he thought his
+guest's tongue was likely to be more freely set loose; then he said,
+laying a friendly hand on Tom's shoulders, "I have been thinking over
+what passed between me and Miss Travers. I wished to have the new
+address of Will Somers; she promised to write to his benefactor to ask
+permission to give it. You are that benefactor?"
+
+"Don't say benefactor, sir. I will tell how it came about if you will
+let me. You see, I sold my little place at Graveleigh to the new
+Squire, and when Mother removed to Luscombe to be near me, she told me
+how poor Jessie had been annoyed by Captain Stavers, who seems to
+think his purchase included the young women on the property along with
+the standing timber; and I was half afraid that she had given some
+cause for his persecution, for you know she has a blink of those soft
+eyes of hers that might charm a wise man out of his skin and put a
+fool there instead."
+
+"But I hope she has done with those blinks since her marriage."
+
+"Well, and I honestly think she has. It is certain she did not
+encourage Captain Stavers, for I went over to Graveleigh myself on the
+sly, and lodged concealed with one of the cottagers who owed me a
+kindness; and one day, as I was at watch, I saw the Captain peering
+over the stile which divides Holmwood from the glebe,--you remember
+Holmwood?"
+
+"I can't say I do."
+
+"The footway from the village to Squire Travers's goes through the
+wood, which is a few hundred yards at the back of Will Somers's
+orchard. Presently the Captain drew himself suddenly back from the
+stile, and disappeared among the trees, and then I saw Jessie coming
+from the orchard with a basket over her arm, and walking quick towards
+the wood. Then, sir, my heart sank. I felt sure she was going to
+meet the Captain. However, I crept along the hedgerow, hiding myself,
+and got into the wood almost as soon as Jessie got there, by another
+way. Under the cover of the brushwood I stole on till I saw the
+Captain come out from the copse on the other side of the path, and
+plant himself just before Jessie. Then I saw at once I had wronged
+her. She had not expected to see him, for she hastily turned back,
+and began to run homeward; but he caught her up, and seized her by the
+arm. I could not hear what he said, but I heard her voice quite sharp
+with fright and anger. And then he suddenly seized her round the
+waist, and she screamed, and I sprang forward--"
+
+"And thrashed the Captain?"
+
+"No, I did not," said Tom; "I had made a vow to myself that I never
+would be violent again if I could help it. So I took him with one
+hand by the cuff of the neck, and with the other by the waistband, and
+just pitched him on a bramble bush,--quite mildly. He soon picked
+himself up, for he is a dapper little chap, and became very blustering
+and abusive. But I kept my temper, and said civilly, 'Little
+gentleman, hard words break no bones; but if ever you molest Mrs.
+Somers again, I will carry you into her orchard, souse you into the
+duck-pond there, and call all the villagers to see you scramble out of
+it again; and I will do it now if you are not off. I dare say you
+have heard of my name: I am Tom Bowles.' Upon that his face, which
+was before very red, grew very white, and muttering something I did
+not hear, he walked away.
+
+"Jessie--I mean Mrs. Somers--seemed at first as much frightened at me
+as she had been at the Captain; and though I offered to walk with her
+to Miss Travers's, where she was going with a basket which the young
+lady had ordered, she refused, and went back home. I felt hurt, and
+returned to my uncle's the same evening; and it was not for months
+that I heard the Captain had been spiteful enough to set up an
+opposition shop, and that poor Will had been taken ill, and his wife
+was confined about the same time, and the talk was that they were in
+distress and might have to be sold up.
+
+"When I heard all this, I thought that after all it was my rough
+tongue that had so angered the Captain and been the cause of his
+spite, and so it was my duty to make it up to poor Will and his wife.
+I did not know how to set about mending matters, but I thought I'd go
+and talk to Miss Travers; and if ever there was a kind heart in a
+girl's breast, hers is one."
+
+"You are right there, I guess. What did Miss Travers say?"
+
+"Nay; I hardly know what she did say, but she set me thinking, and it
+struck me that Jessie--Mrs. Somers--had better move to a distance, and
+out of the Captain's reach, and that Will would do better in a less
+out-of-the-way place. And then, by good luck, I read in the newspaper
+that a stationary and a fancywork business, with a circulating
+library, was to be sold on moderate terms at Moleswich, the other side
+of London. So I took the train and went to the place, and thought the
+shop would just suit these young folks, and not be too much work for
+either; then I went to Miss Travers, and I had a lot of money lying by
+me from the sale of the old forge and premises, which I did not know
+what to do with; and so, to cut short a long story, I bought the
+business, and Will and his wife are settled at Moleswich, thriving and
+happy, I hope, sir."
+
+Tom's voice quivered at the last words, and he turned aside quickly,
+passing his hand over his eyes.
+
+Kenelm was greatly moved.
+
+"And they don't know what you did for them?"
+
+"To be sure not. I don't think Will would have let him self be
+beholden to me. Ah! the lad has a spirit of his own, and Jessie--Mrs.
+Somers--would have felt pained and humbled that I should even think of
+such a thing. Miss Travers managed it all. They take the money as a
+loan which is to be paid by instalments. They have sent Miss Travers
+more than one instalment already, so I know they are doing well."
+
+"A loan from Miss Travers?"
+
+"No; Miss Travers wanted to have a share in it, but I begged her not.
+It made me happy to do what I did all myself; and Miss Travers felt
+for me and did not press. They perhaps think it is Squire Travers
+(though he is not a man who would like to say it, for fear it should
+bring applicants on him), or some other gentleman who takes an
+interest in them."
+
+"I always said you were a grand fellow, Tom. But you are grander
+still than I thought you."
+
+"If there be any good in me, I owe it to you, sir. Think what a
+drunken, violent brute I was when I first met you. Those walks with
+you, and I may say that other gentleman's talk, and then that long
+kind letter I had from you, not signed in your name, and written from
+abroad,--all these changed me, as the child is changed at nurse."
+
+"You have evidently read a good deal since we parted."
+
+"Yes; I belong to our young men's library and institute; and when of
+an evening I get hold of a book, especially a pleasant story-book, I
+don't care for other company."
+
+"Have you never seen any other girl you could care for, and wish to
+marry?"
+
+"Ah, sir," answered Tom, "a man does not go so mad for a girl as I did
+for Jessie Wiles, and when it is all over, and he has come to his
+senses, put his heart into joint again as easily as if it were only a
+broken leg. I don't say that I may not live to love and to marry
+another woman: it is my wish to do so. But I know that I shall love
+Jessie to my dying day; but not sinfully, sir,--not sinfully. I would
+not wrong her by a thought."
+
+There was a long pause.
+
+At last Kenelm said, "You promised to be kind to that little girl with
+the flower-ball; what has become of her?"
+
+"She is quite well, thank you, sir. My aunt has taken a great fancy
+to her, and so has my mother. She comes to them very often of an
+evening, and brings her work with her. A quick, intelligent little
+thing, and full of pretty thoughts. On Sundays, if the weather is
+fine, we stroll out together in the fields."
+
+"She has been a comfort to you, Tom."
+
+"Oh, yes."
+
+"And loves you?"
+
+"I am sure she does; an affectionate, grateful child."
+
+"She will be a woman soon, Tom, and may love you as a woman then."
+
+Tom looked indignant and rather scornful at that suggestion, and
+hastened to revert to the subject more immediately at his heart.
+
+"Miss Travers said you would like to call on Will Somers and his wife;
+will you? Moleswich is not far from London, you know."
+
+"Certainly, I will call."
+
+"I do hope you will find them happy; and if so, perhaps you will
+kindly let me know; and--and--I wonder whether Jessie's child is like
+her? It is a boy; somehow or other I would rather it had been a
+girl."
+
+"I will write you full particulars. But why not come with me?"
+
+"No, I don't think I could do that, just at present. It unsettled me
+sadly when I did again see her sweet face at Graveleigh, and she was
+still afraid of me too! that was a sharp pang."
+
+"She ought to know what you have done for her, and will."
+
+"On no account, sir; promise me that. I should feel mean if I humbled
+them,--that way."
+
+"I understand, though I will not as yet make you any positive promise.
+Meanwhile, if you are staying in town, lodge with me; my landlady can
+find you a room."
+
+"Thank you heartily, sir; but I go back by the evening train; and,
+bless me! how late it is now! I must wish you good-by. I have some
+commissions to do for my aunt, and I must buy a new doll for Susey."
+
+"Susey is the name of the little girl with the flower-ball?"
+
+"Yes. I must run off now; I feel quite light at heart seeing you
+again and finding that you receive me still so kindly, as if we were
+equals."
+
+"Ah, Tom, I wish I was your equal,--nay, half as noble as Heaven has
+made you!"
+
+Tom laughed incredulously, and went his way.
+
+"This mischievous passion of love," said Kenelm to himself, "has its
+good side, it seems, after all. If it was nearly making a wild beast
+of that brave fellow,--nay, worse than wild beast, a homicide doomed
+to the gibbet,--so, on the other hand, what a refined, delicate,
+chivalrous nature of gentleman it has developed out of the stormy
+elements of its first madness! Yes, I will go and look at this
+new-married couple. I dare say they are already snarling and spitting
+at each other like cat and dog. Moleswich is within reach of a walk."
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK V.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+TWO days after the interview recorded in the last chapter of the
+previous Book, Travers, chancing to call at Kenelm's lodgings, was
+told by his servant that Mr. Chillingly had left London, alone, and
+had given no orders as to forwarding letters. The servant did not
+know where he had gone, or when he would return.
+
+Travers repeated this news incidentally to Cecilia, and she felt
+somewhat hurt that he had not written her a line respecting Tom's
+visit. She, however, guessed that he had gone to see the Somerses,
+and would return to town in a day or so. But weeks passed, the season
+drew to its close, and of Kenelm Chillingly she saw or heard nothing:
+he had wholly vanished from the London world. He had but written a
+line to his servant, ordering him to repair to Exmundham and await him
+there, and enclosing him a check to pay outstanding bills.
+
+We must now follow the devious steps of the strange being who has
+grown into the hero of this story. He had left his apartment at
+daybreak long before his servant was up, with his knapsack, and a
+small portmanteau, into which he had thrust--besides such additional
+articles of dress as he thought he might possibly require, and which
+his knapsack could not contain--a few of his favourite books. Driving
+with these in a hack-cab to the Vauxhall station, he directed the
+portmanteau to be forwarded to Moleswich, and flinging the knapsack on
+his shoulders, walked slowly along the drowsy suburbs that stretched
+far into the landscape, before, breathing more freely, he found some
+evidences of rural culture on either side of the high road. It was
+not, however, till he had left the roofs and trees of pleasant
+Richmond far behind him that he began to feel he was out of reach of
+the metropolitan disquieting influences. Finding at a little inn,
+where he stopped to breakfast, that there was a path along fields, and
+in sight of the river, through which he could gain the place of his
+destination, he then quitted the high road, and traversing one of the
+loveliest districts in one of our loveliest counties, he reached
+Moleswich about noon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ON entering the main street of the pretty town, the name of Somers, in
+gilt capitals, was sufficiently conspicuous over the door of a very
+imposing shop. It boasted two plate-glass windows, at one of which
+were tastefully exhibited various articles of fine stationery,
+embroidery patterns, etc.; at the other, no less tastefully, sundry
+specimens of ornamental basket-work.
+
+Kenelm crossed the threshold and recognized behind the counter--fair
+as ever, but with an expression of face more staid, and a figure more
+rounded and matron-like--his old friend Jessie. There were two or
+three customers before her, between whom she was dividing her
+attention. While a handsome young lady, seated, was saying, in a
+somewhat loud but cheery and pleasant voice, "Do not mind me, Mrs.
+Somers: I can wait," Jessie's quick eye darted towards the stranger,
+but too rapidly to distinguish his features, which, indeed, he turned
+away, and began to examine the baskets.
+
+In a minute or so the other customers were served and had departed;
+and the voice of the lady was again heard, "Now, Mrs. Somers, I want
+to see your picture-books and toys. I am giving a little children's
+party this afternoon, and I want to make them as happy as possible."
+
+"Somewhere or other, on this planet, or before my Monad was whisked
+away to it, I have heard that voice," muttered Kenelm. While Jessie
+was alertly bringing forth her toys and picture-books, she said, "I am
+sorry to keep you waiting, sir; but if it is the baskets you come
+about, I can call my husband."
+
+"Do," said Kenelm.
+
+"William, William," cried Mrs. Somers; and after a delay long enough
+to allow him to slip on his jacket, William Somers emerged from the
+back parlour.
+
+His face had lost its old trace of suffering and ill health; it was
+still somewhat pale, and retained its expression of intellectual
+refinement.
+
+"How you have improved in your art!" said Kenelm, heartily.
+
+William started, and recognized Kenelm at once. He sprang forward and
+took Kenelm's outstretched hand in both his own, and, in a voice
+between laughing and crying, exclaimed, "Jessie, Jessie, it is he!--he
+whom we pray for every night. God bless you! God bless and make you
+as happy as He permitted you to make me!"
+
+Before this little speech was faltered out, Jessie was by her
+husband's side, and she added, in a lower voice, but tremulous with
+deep feeling, "And me too!"
+
+"By your leave, Will," said Kenelm, and he saluted Jessie's white
+forehead with a kiss that could not have been kindlier or colder if it
+had been her grandfather's.
+
+Meanwhile the lady had risen noiselessly and unobserved, and stealing
+up to Kenelm, looked him full in the face.
+
+"You have another friend here, sir, who has also some cause to thank
+you--"
+
+"I thought I remembered your voice," said Kenelm, looking puzzled.
+"But pardon me if I cannot recall your features. Where have we met
+before?"
+
+"Give me your arm when we go out, and I will bring myself to your
+recollection. But no: I must not hurry you away now. I will call
+again in half an hour. Mrs. Somers, meanwhile put up the things I
+have selected. I will take them away with me when I come back from
+the vicarage, where I have left the pony-carriage." So, with a
+parting nod and smile to Kenelm, she turned away, and left him
+bewildered.
+
+"But who is that lady, Will?"
+
+"A Mrs. Braefield. She is a new comer."
+
+"She may well be that, Will," said Jessie, smiling, "for she has only
+been married six months."
+
+"And what was her name before she married?"
+
+"I am sure I don't know, sir. It is only three months since we came
+here, and she has been very kind to us and an excellent customer.
+Everybody likes her. Mr. Braefield is a city gentleman and very rich;
+and they live in the finest house in the place, and see a great deal
+of company."
+
+"Well, I am no wiser than I was before," said Kenelm. "People who ask
+questions very seldom are."
+
+"And how did you find us out, sir?" said Jessie. "Oh! I guess," she
+added, with an arch glance and smile. "Of course, you have seen Miss
+Travers, and she told you."
+
+"You are right. I first learned your change of residence from her,
+and thought I would come and see you, and be introduced to the
+baby,--a boy, I understand? Like you, Will?"
+
+"No, sir, the picture of Jessie."
+
+"Nonsense, Will; it is you all over, even to its little hands."
+
+"And your good mother, Will, how did you leave her?"
+
+"Oh, sir!" cried Jessie, reproachfully; "do you think we could have
+the heart to leave Mother,--so lone and rheumatic too? She is tending
+baby now,--always does while I am in the shop."
+
+Here Kenelm followed the young couple into the parlour, where, seated
+by the window, they found old Mrs. Somers reading the Bible and
+rocking the baby, who slept peacefully in its cradle.
+
+"Will," said Kenelm, bending his dark face over the infant, "I will
+tell you a pretty thought of a foreign poet's, which has been thus
+badly translated:
+
+
+ "'Blest babe, a boundless world this bed so narrow seems to thee;
+ Grow man, and narrower than this bed the boundless world shall
+ be.'"[1]
+
+
+ [1] Schiller.
+
+
+"I don't think that is true, sir," said Will, simply; "for a happy
+home is a world wide enough for any man."
+
+Tears started into Jessie's eyes; she bent down and kissed--not the
+baby, but the cradle. "Will made it." She added blushing, "I mean
+the cradle, sir."
+
+Time flew past while Kenelm talked with Will and the old mother, for
+Jessie was soon summoned back to the shop; and Kenelm was startled
+when he found the half-hour's grace allowed to him was over, and
+Jessie put her head in at the door and said, "Mrs. Braefield is
+waiting for you."
+
+"Good-by, Will; I shall come to see you again soon; and my mother
+gives me a commission to buy I don't know how many specimens of your
+craft."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+A SMART pony-phaeton, with a box for a driver in livery equally smart,
+stood at the shop-door.
+
+"Now, Mr. Chillingly," said Mrs. Braefield, "it is my turn to run away
+with you; get in!"
+
+"Eh!" murmured Kenelm, gazing at her with large dreamy eyes. "Is it
+possible?"
+
+"Quite possible; get in. Coachman, home! Yes, Mr. Chillingly, you
+meet again that giddy creature whom you threatened to thrash; it would
+have served her right. I ought to feel so ashamed to recall myself to
+your recollection, and yet I am not a bit ashamed. I am proud to show
+you that I have turned out a steady, respectable woman, and, my
+husband tells me, a good wife."
+
+"You have only been six months married, I hear," said Kenelm, dryly.
+"I hope your husband will say the same six years hence."
+
+"He will say the same sixty years hence, if we live as long."
+
+"How old is he now?"
+
+"Thirty-eight."
+
+"When a man wants only two years of his hundredth, he probably has
+learned to know his own mind; but then, in most cases, very little
+mind is left to him to know."
+
+"Don't be satirical, sir; and don't talk as if you were railing at
+marriage, when you have just left as happy a young couple as the sun
+ever shone upon; and owing,--for Mrs. Somers has told me all about her
+marriage,--owing their happiness to you."
+
+"Their happiness to me! not in the least. I helped them to marry, and
+in spite of marriage they helped each other to be happy."
+
+"You are still unmarried yourself?"
+
+"Yes, thank Heaven!"
+
+"And are you happy?"
+
+"No; I can't make myself happy: myself is a discontented brute."
+
+"Then why do you say 'thank Heaven'?"
+
+"Because it is a comfort to think I am not making somebody else
+unhappy."
+
+"Do you believe that if you loved a wife who loved you, you should
+make her unhappy?"
+
+"I am sure I don't know; but I have not seen a woman whom I could love
+as a wife. And we need not push our inquiries further. What has
+become of that ill-treated gray cob?"
+
+"He was quite well, thank you, when I last heard of him."
+
+"And the uncle who would have inflicted me upon you, if you had not so
+gallantly defended yourself?"
+
+"He is living where he did live, and has married his housekeeper. He
+felt a delicate scruple against taking that step till I was married
+myself and out of the way."
+
+Here Mrs. Braefield, beginning to speak very hurriedly, as women who
+seek to disguise emotion often do, informed Kenelm how unhappy she had
+felt for weeks after having found an asylum with her aunt,--how she
+had been stung by remorse and oppressed by a sense of humiliation at
+the thought of her folly and the odious recollection of Mr.
+Compton,--how she had declared to herself that she would never marry
+any one now--never! How Mr. Braefield happened to be on a visit in
+the neighbourhood, and saw her at church,--how he had sought an
+introduction to her,--and how at first she rather disliked him than
+not; but he was so good and so kind, and when at last he proposed--and
+she had frankly told him all about her girlish flight and
+infatuation--how generously he had thanked her for a candour which had
+placed her as high in his esteem as she had been before in his love.
+"And from that moment," said Mrs. Braefield, passionately, "my whole
+heart leaped to him. And now you know all; and here we are at the
+Lodge."
+
+The pony-phaeton went with great speed up a broad gravel-drive,
+bordered with rare evergreens, and stopped at a handsome house with a
+portico in front, and a long conservatory at the garden side,--one of
+those houses which belong to "city gentlemen," and often contain more
+comfort and exhibit more luxury than many a stately manorial mansion.
+
+Mrs. Braefield evidently felt some pride as she led Kenelm through the
+handsome hall, paved with Malvern tiles and adorned with Scagliola
+columns, and into a drawing-room furnished with much taste and opening
+on a spacious flower-garden.
+
+"But where is Mr. Braefield?" asked Kenelm.
+
+"Oh, he has taken the rail to his office; but he will be back long
+before dinner, and of course you dine with us."
+
+"You're very hospitable, but--"
+
+"No buts: I will take no excuse. Don't fear that you shall have only
+mutton-chops and a rice-pudding; and, besides, I have a children's
+party coming at two o'clock, and there will be all sorts of fun. You
+are fond of children, I am sure?"
+
+"I rather think I am not. But I have never clearly ascertained my own
+inclinations upon that subject."
+
+"Well, you shall have ample opportunity to do so to-day. And oh! I
+promise you the sight of the loveliest face that you can picture to
+yourself when you think of your future wife."
+
+"My future wife, I hope, is not yet born," said Kenelm, wearily, and
+with much effort suppressing a yawn. "But at all events, I will stay
+till after two o'clock; for two o'clock, I presume, means luncheon."
+
+"Mrs. Braefield laughed. "You retain your appetite?"
+
+"Most single men do, provided they don't fall in love and become
+doubled up."
+
+At this abominable attempt at a pun, Mrs. Braefield disdained to
+laugh; but turning away from its perpetrator she took off her hat and
+gloves and passed her hands lightly over her forehead, as if to smooth
+back some vagrant tress in locks already sufficiently sheen and trim.
+She was not quite so pretty in female attire as she had appeared in
+boy's dress, nor did she look quite as young. In all other respects
+she was wonderfully improved. There was a serener, a more settled
+intelligence in her frank bright eyes, a milder expression in the play
+of her parted lips. Kenelm gazed at her with pleased admiration. And
+as now, turning from the glass, she encountered his look, a deeper
+colour came into the clear delicacy of her cheeks, and the frank eyes
+moistened. She came up to him as he sat, and took his hand in both
+hers, pressing it warmly. "Ah, Mr. Chillingly," she said, with
+impulsive tremulous tones, "look round, look round this happy,
+peaceful home!--the life so free from a care, the husband whom I so
+love and honour; all the blessings that I might have so recklessly
+lost forever had I not met with you, had I been punished as I
+deserved. How often I thought of your words, that 'you would be proud
+of my friendship when we met again'! What strength they gave me in my
+hours of humbled self-reproach!" Her voice here died away as if in
+the effort to suppress a sob.
+
+She released his hand, and, before he could answer, passed quickly
+through the open sash into the garden.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE children have come,--some thirty of them, pretty as English
+children generally are, happy in the joy of the summer sunshine, and
+the flower lawns, and the feast under cover of an awning suspended
+between chestnut-trees, and carpeted with sward.
+
+No doubt Kenelm held his own at the banquet, and did his best to
+increase the general gayety, for whenever he spoke the children
+listened eagerly, and when he had done they laughed mirthfully.
+
+"The fair face I promised you," whispered Mrs. Braefield, "is not here
+yet. I have a little note from the young lady to say that Mrs.
+Cameron does not feel very well this morning, but hopes to recover
+sufficiently to come later in the afternoon."
+
+"And pray who is Mrs. Cameron?"
+
+"Ah! I forgot that you are a stranger to the place. Mrs. Cameron is
+the aunt with whom Lily resides. Is it not a pretty name, Lily?"
+
+"Very! emblematic of a spinster that does not spin, with a white head
+and a thin stalk."
+
+"Then the name belies my Lily, as you will see."
+
+The children now finished their feast, and betook themselves to
+dancing in an alley smoothed for a croquet-ground, and to the sound of
+a violin played by the old grandfather of one of the party. While
+Mrs. Braefield was busying herself with forming the dance, Kenelm
+seized the occasion to escape from a young nymph of the age of twelve
+who had sat next him at the banquet, and taken so great a fancy to him
+that he began to fear she would vow never to forsake his side, and
+stole away undetected.
+
+There are times when the mirth of others only saddens us, especially
+the mirth of children with high spirits, that jar on our own quiet
+mood. Gliding through a dense shrubbery, in which, though the lilacs
+were faded, the laburnum still retained here and there the waning gold
+of its clusters, Kenelm came into a recess which bounded his steps and
+invited him to repose. It was a circle, so formed artificially by
+slight trellises, to which clung parasite roses heavy with leaves and
+flowers. In the midst played a tiny fountain with a silvery murmuring
+sound; at the background, dominating the place, rose the crests of
+stately trees, on which the sunlight shimmered, but which rampired out
+all horizon beyond. Even as in life do the great dominant
+passions--love, ambition, desire of power or gold or fame or
+knowledge--form the proud background to the brief-lived flowerets of
+our youth, lift our eyes beyond the smile of their bloom, catch the
+glint of a loftier sunbeam, and yet, and yet, exclude our sight from
+the lengths and the widths of the space which extends behind and
+beyond them.
+
+Kenelm threw himself on the turf beside the fountain. From afar came
+the whoop and the laugh of the children in their sports or their
+dance. At the distance their joy did not sadden him,--he marvelled
+why; and thus, in musing revcry, thought to explain the why to
+himself.
+
+"The poet," so ran his lazy thinking, "has told us that 'distance
+lends enchantment to the view,' and thus compares to the charm of
+distance the illusion of hope. But the poet narrows the scope of his
+own illustration. Distance lends enchantment to the ear as well as to
+the sight; nor to these bodily senses alone. Memory no less than hope
+owes its charm to 'the far away.'
+
+"I cannot imagine myself again a child when I am in the midst of young
+noisy children. But as their noise reaches me here, subdued and
+mellowed, and knowing, thank Heaven, that the urchins are not within
+reach of me, I could readily dream myself back into childhood, and
+into sympathy with the lost playfields of school.
+
+"So surely it must be with grief: how different the terrible agony for
+a beloved one just gone from earth, to the soft regret for one who
+disappeared into Heaven years ago! So with the art of poetry: how
+imperatively, when it deals with the great emotions of tragedy, it
+must remove the actors from us, in proportion as the emotions are to
+elevate, and the tragedy is to please us by the tears it draws!
+Imagine our shock if a poet were to place on the stage some wise
+gentleman with whom we dined yesterday, and who was discovered to have
+killed his father and married his mother. But when Oedipus commits
+those unhappy mistakes nobody is shocked. Oxford in the nineteenth
+century is a long way off from Thebes three thousand or four thousand
+years ago.
+
+"And," continued Kenelm, plunging deeper into the maze of metaphysical
+criticism, "even where the poet deals with persons and things close
+upon our daily sight,--if he would give them poetic charm he must
+resort to a sort of moral or psychological distance; the nearer they
+are to us in external circumstance, the farther they must be in some
+internal peculiarities. Werter and Clarissa Harlowe are described as
+contemporaries of their artistic creation, and with the minutest
+details of apparent realism; yet they are at once removed from our
+daily lives by their idiosyncrasies and their fates. We know that
+while Werter and Clarissa are so near to us in much that we sympathize
+with them as friends and kinsfolk, they are yet as much remote from us
+in the poetic and idealized side of their natures as if they belonged
+to the age of Homer; and this it is that invests with charm the very
+pain which their fate inflicts on us. Thus, I suppose, it must be in
+love. If the love we feel is to have the glamour of poetry, it must
+be love for some one morally at a distance from our ordinary habitual
+selves; in short, differing from us in attributes which, however near
+we draw to the possessor, we can never approach, never blend, in
+attributes of our own; so that there is something in the loved one
+that always remains an ideal,--a mystery,--'a sun-bright summit
+mingling with the sky'!"
+
+Herewith the soliloquist's musings glided vaguely into mere revery.
+He closed his eyes drowsily, not asleep, nor yet quite awake; as
+sometimes in bright summer days when we recline on the grass we do
+close our eyes, and yet dimly recognize a golden light bathing the
+drowsy lids; and athwart that light images come and go like dreams,
+though we know that we are not dreaming.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+FROM this state, half comatose, half unconscious, Kenelm was roused
+slowly, reluctantly. Something struck softly on his cheek,--again a
+little less softly; he opened his eyes, they fell first upon two tiny
+rosebuds, which, on striking his face, had fallen on his breast; and
+then looking up, he saw before him, in an opening of the trellised
+circle, a female child's laughing face. Her hand was still uplifted
+charged with another rosebud, but behind the child's figure, looking
+over her shoulder and holding back the menacing arm, was a face as
+innocent but lovelier far,--the face of a girl in her first youth,
+framed round with the blossoms that festooned the trellise. How the
+face became the flowers! It seemed the fairy spirit of them.
+
+Kenelm started and rose to his feet. The child, the one whom he had
+so ungallantly escaped from ran towards him through a wicket in the
+circle. Her companion disappeared.
+
+"Is it you?" said Kenelm to the child, "you who pelted me so cruelly?
+Ungrateful creature! Did I not give you the best strawberries in the
+dish and all my own cream?"
+
+"But why did you run away and hide yourself when you ought to be
+dancing with me?" replied the young lady, evading, with the instinct
+of her sex, all answer to the reproach she had deserved.
+
+"I did not run away, and it is clear that I did not mean to hide
+myself, since you so easily found me out. But who was the young lady
+with you? I suspect she pelted me too, for she seems to have run away
+to hide herself."
+
+"No, she did not pelt you; she wanted to stop me, and you would have
+had another rosebud--oh, so much bigger!--if she had not held back my
+arm. Don't you know her,--don't you know Lily?"
+
+"No; so that is Lily? You shall introduce me to her."
+
+By this time they had passed out of the circle through the little
+wicket opposite the path by which Kenelm had entered, and opening at
+once on the lawn. Here at some distance the children were grouped,
+some reclined on the grass, some walking to and fro, in the interval
+of the dance.
+
+In the space between the group and the trellise Lily was walking alone
+and quickly. The child left Kenelm's side and ran after her friend,
+soon overtook, but did not succeed in arresting her steps. Lily did
+not pause till she had reached the grassy ball-room, and here all the
+children came round her and shut out her delicate form from Kenelm's
+sight.
+
+Before he had reached the place, Mrs. Braefield met him.
+
+"Lily is come!"
+
+"I know it: I have seen her."
+
+"Is not she beautiful?"
+
+"I must see more of her if I am to answer critically; but before you
+introduce me, may I be permitted to ask who and what is Lily?"
+
+Mrs. Braefield paused a moment before she answered, and yet the answer
+was brief enough not to need much consideration. "She is a Miss
+Mordaunt, an orphan; and, as I before told you, resides with her aunt,
+Mrs. Cameron, a widow. They have the prettiest cottage you ever saw
+on the banks of the river, or rather rivulet, about a mile from this
+place. Mrs. Cameron is a very good, simple-hearted woman. As to
+Lily, I can praise her beauty only with safe conscience, for as yet
+she is a mere child,--her mind quite unformed."
+
+"Did you ever meet any man, much less any woman, whose mind was
+formed?" muttered Kenelm. "I am sure mine is not, and never will be
+on this earth."
+
+Mrs. Braefield did not hear this low-voiced observation. She was
+looking about for Lily; and perceiving her at last as the children who
+surrounded her were dispersing to renew the dance, she took Kenelm's
+arm, led him to the young lady, and a formal introduction took place.
+
+Formal as it could be on those sunlit swards, amidst the joy of summer
+and the laugh of children. In such scene and such circumstance
+formality does not last long. I know not how it was, but in a very
+few minutes Kenelm and Lily had ceased to be strangers to each other.
+They found themselves seated apart from the rest of the merry-makers,
+on the bank shadowed by lime-trees; the man listening with downcast
+eyes, the girl with mobile shifting glances now on earth, now on
+heaven, and talking freely; gayly,--like the babble of a happy stream,
+with a silvery dulcet voice and a sparkle of rippling smiles.
+
+No doubt this is a reversal of the formalities of well-bred life, and
+conventional narrating thereof. According to them, no doubt, it is
+for the man to talk and the maid to listen; but I state the facts as
+they were, honestly. And Lily knew no more of the formalities of
+drawing-room life than a skylark fresh from its nest knows of the
+song-teacher and the cage. She was still so much of a child. Mrs.
+Braefield was right: her mind was still so unformed.
+
+What she did talk about in that first talk between them that could
+make the meditative Kenelm listen so mutely, so intently, I know not,
+at least I could not jot it down on paper. I fear it was very
+egotistical, as the talk of children generally is,--about herself and
+her aunt, and her home and her friends; all her friends seemed
+children like herself, though younger,--Clemmy the chief of them.
+Clemmy was the one who had taken a fancy to Kenelm. And amidst all
+this ingenuous prattle there came flashes of a quick intellect, a
+lively fancy,--nay, even a poetry of expression or of sentiment. It
+might be the talk of a child, but certainly not of a silly child. But
+as soon as the dance was over, the little ones again gathered round
+Lily. Evidently she was the prime favourite of them all; and as her
+companion had now become tired of dancing, new sports were proposed,
+and Lily was carried off to "Prisoner's Base."
+
+"I am very happy to make your acquaintance, Mr. Chillingly," said a
+frank, pleasant voice; and a well-dressed, good-looking man held out
+his hand to Kenelm.
+
+"My husband," said Mrs. Braefield, with a certain pride in her look.
+
+Kenelm responded cordially to the civilities of the master of the
+house, who had just returned from his city office, and left all its
+cares behind him. You had only to look at him to see that he was
+prosperous, and deserved to be so. There were in his countenance the
+signs of strong sense, of good-humour,--above all, of an active
+energetic temperament. A man of broad smooth forehead, keen hazel
+eyes, firm lips and jaw; with a happy contentment in himself, his
+house, the world in general, mantling over his genial smile, and
+outspoken in the metallic ring of his voice.
+
+"You will stay and dine with us, of course," said Mr. Braefield; "and,
+unless you want very much to be in town to-night, I hope you will take
+a bed here."
+
+Kenelm hesitated.
+
+"Do stay at least till to-morrow," said Mrs. Braefield. Kenelm
+hesitated still; and while hesitating his eye rested on Lily, leaning
+on the arm of a middle-aged lady, and approaching the hostess,--
+evidently to take leave.
+
+"I cannot resist so tempting an invitation," said Kenelm, and he fell
+back a little behind Lily and her companion.
+
+"Thank you much for so pleasant a day," said Mrs. Cameron to the
+hostess. "Lily has enjoyed herself extremely. I only regret we could
+not come earlier."
+
+"If you are walking home," said Mr. Braefield, "let me accompany you.
+I want to speak to your gardener about his heart's-ease: it is much
+finer than mine."
+
+"If so," said Kenelm to Lily, "may I come too? Of all flowers that
+grow, heart's-ease is the one I most prize."
+
+A few minutes afterwards Kenelm was walking by the side of Lily along
+the banks of a little stream, tributary to the Thames; Mrs. Cameron
+and Mr. Braefield in advance, for the path only held two abreast.
+
+Suddenly Lily left his side, allured by a rare butterfly--I think it
+is called the Emperor of Morocco--that was sunning its yellow wings
+upon a group of wild reeds. She succeeded in capturing this wanderer
+in her straw hat, over which she drew her sun-veil. After this
+notable capture she returned demurely to Kenelm's side.
+
+"Do you collect insects?" said that philosopher, as much surprised as
+it was his nature to be at anything.
+
+"Only butterflies," answered Lily; "they are not insects, you know;
+they are souls."
+
+"Emblems of souls you mean,--at least, so the Greeks prettily
+represented them to be."
+
+"No, real souls,--the souls of infants that die in their cradles
+unbaptized; and if they are taken care of, and not eaten by birds, and
+live a year then they pass into fairies."
+
+"It is a very poetical idea, Miss Mordaunt, and founded on evidence
+quite as rational as other assertions of the metamorphosis of one
+creature into another. Perhaps you can do what the philosophers
+cannot,--tell me how you learned a new idea to be an incontestable
+fact?"
+
+"I don't know," replied Lily, looking very much puzzled; "perhaps I
+learned it in a book, or perhaps I dreamed it."
+
+"You could not make a wiser answer if you were a philosopher. But you
+talk of taking care of butterflies; how do you do that? Do you impale
+them on pins stuck into a glass case?"
+
+"Impale them! How can you talk so cruelly? You deserve to be pinched
+by the fairies."
+
+"I am afraid," thought Kenelm, compassionately, "that my companion has
+no mind to be formed; what is euphoniously called 'an innocent.'"
+
+He shook his head and remained silent. Lily resumed,--
+
+"I will show you my collection when we get home; they seem so happy.
+I am sure there are some of them who know me: they will feed from my
+hand. I have only had one die since I began to collect them last
+summer."
+
+"Then you have kept them a year: they ought to have turned into
+fairies."
+
+"I suppose many of them have. Of course I let out all those that had
+been with me twelve months: they don't turn to fairies in the cage,
+you know. Now I have only those I caught this year, or last autumn;
+the prettiest don't appear till the autumn."
+
+The girl here bent her uncovered head over the straw hat, her tresses
+shadowing it, and uttered loving words to the prisoner. Then again
+she looked up and around her, and abruptly stopped, and exclaimed,--
+
+"How can people live in towns? How can people say they are ever dull
+in the country? Look," she continued, gravely and earnestly, "look at
+that tall pine-tree, with its long branch sweeping over the water; see
+how, as the breeze catches it, it changes its shadow, and how the
+shadow changes the play of the sunlight on the brook:--
+
+
+ "'Wave your tops, ye pines;
+ With every plant, in sign of worship wave.'
+
+
+"What an interchange of music there must be between Nature and a poet!"
+
+Kenelm was startled. This "an innocent"!--this a girl who had no mind
+to be formed! In that presence he could not be cynical; could not
+speak of Nature as a mechanism, a lying humbug, as he had done to the
+man poet. He replied gravely,--
+
+"The Creator has gifted the whole universe with language, but few are
+the hearts that can interpret it. Happy those to whom it is no
+foreign tongue, acquired imperfectly with care and pain, but rather a
+native language, learned unconsciously from the lips of the great
+mother. To them the butterfly's wing may well buoy into heaven a
+fairy's soul!"
+
+When he had thus said Lily turned, and for the first time attentively
+looked into his dark soft eyes; then instinctively she laid her light
+hand on his arm, and said in a low voice, "Talk on; talk thus: I like
+to hear you."
+
+But Kenelm did not talk on. They had now arrived at the garden-gate
+of Mrs. Cameron's cottage, and the elder persons in advance paused at
+the gate and walked with them to the house.
+
+It was a long, low, irregular cottage, without pretension to
+architectural beauty, yet exceedingly picturesque,--a flower-garden,
+large, but in proportion to the house, with parterres in which the
+colours were exquisitely assorted, sloping to the grassy margin of the
+rivulet, where the stream expanded into a lake-like basin, narrowed at
+either end by locks, from which with gentle sound flowed shallow
+waterfalls. By the banks was a rustic seat, half overshadowed by the
+drooping boughs of a vast willow.
+
+The inside of the house was in harmony with the
+exterior,--cottage-like, but with an unmistakable air of refinement
+about the rooms, even in the little entrance-hall, which was painted
+in Pompeian frescos.
+
+"Come and see my butterfly-cage," said Lily, whisperingly.
+
+Kenelm followed her through the window that opened on the garden; and
+at one end of a small conservatory, or rather greenhouse, was the
+habitation of these singular favourites. It was as large as a small
+room; three sides of it formed by minute wirework, with occasional
+draperies of muslin or other slight material, and covered at
+intervals, sometimes within, sometimes without, by dainty creepers; a
+tiny cistern in the centre, from which upsprang a sparkling jet. Lily
+cautiously lifted a sash-door and glided in, closing it behind her.
+Her entrance set in movement a multitude of gossamer wings, some
+fluttering round her, some more boldly settling on her hair or dress.
+Kenelm thought she had not vainly boasted when she said that some of
+the creatures had learned to know her. She released the Emperor of
+Morocco from her hat; it circled round her fearlessly, and then
+vanished amidst the leaves of the creepers. Lily opened the door and
+came out.
+
+"I have heard of a philosopher who tamed a wasp," said Kenelm, "but
+never before of a young lady who tamed butterflies."
+
+"No," said Lily, proudly; "I believe I am the first who attempted it.
+I don't think I should have attempted it if I had been told that
+others had succeeded before me. Not that I have succeeded quite. No
+matter; if they don't love me, I love them."
+
+They re-entered the drawing-room, and Mrs. Cameron addressed Kenelm.
+
+"Do you know much of this part of the country, Mr. Chillingly?"
+
+"It is quite new to me, and more rural than many districts farther
+from London."
+
+"That is the good fortune of most of our home counties," said Mr.
+Braefield; "they escape the smoke and din of manufacturing towns, and
+agricultural science has not demolished their leafy hedgerows. The
+walks through our green lanes are as much bordered with convolvulus
+and honeysuckle as they were when Izaak Walton sauntered through them
+to angle in that stream!"
+
+"Does tradition say that he angled in that stream? I thought his
+haunts were rather on the other side of London."
+
+"Possibly; I am not learned in Walton or in his art, but there is an
+old summer-house, on the other side of the lock yonder, on which is
+carved the name of Izaak Walton, but whether by his own hand or
+another's who shall say? Has Mr. Melville been here lately, Mrs.
+Cameron?"
+
+"No, not for several months."
+
+"He has had a glorious success this year. We may hope that at last
+his genius is acknowledged by the world. I meant to buy his picture,
+but I was not in time: a Manchester man was before me."
+
+"Who is Mr. Melville? any relation to you?" whispered Kenelm to Lily.
+
+"Relation,--I scarcely know. Yes, I suppose so, because he is my
+guardian. But if he were the nearest relation on earth, I could not
+love him more," said Lily, with impulsive eagerness, her cheeks
+flushing, her eyes filling with tears.
+
+"And he is an artist,--a painter?" asked Kenelm.
+
+"Oh, yes; no one paints such beautiful pictures,--no one so clever, no
+one so kind."
+
+Kenelm strove to recollect if he had ever heard the name of Melville
+as a painter, but in vain. Kenelm, however, knew but little of
+painters: they were not in his way; and he owned to himself, very
+humbly, that there might be many a living painter of eminent renown
+whose name and works would be strange to him.
+
+He glanced round the wall; Lily interpreted his look. "There are no
+pictures of his here," said she; "there is one in my own room. I will
+show it you when you come again."
+
+"And now," said Mr. Braefield, rising, "I must just have a word with
+your gardener, and then go home. We dine earlier here than in London,
+Mr. Chillingly."
+
+As the two gentlemen, after taking leave, re-entered the hall, Lily
+followed them and said to Kenelm, "What time will you come to-morrow
+to see the picture?"
+
+Kenelm averted his head, and then replied, not with his wonted
+courtesy, but briefly and brusquely,--
+
+"I fear I cannot call to-morrow. I shall be far away by sunrise."
+
+Lily made no answer, but turned back into the room.
+
+Mr. Braefield found the gardener watering a flower-border, conferred
+with him about the heart's-ease, and then joined Kenelm, who had
+halted a few yards beyond the garden-gate.
+
+"A pretty little place that," said Mr. Braefield, with a sort of
+lordly compassion, as became the owner of Braefieldville. "What I
+call quaint."
+
+"Yes, quaint," echoed Kenelm, abstractedly.
+
+"It is always the case with houses enlarged by degrees. I have heard
+my poor mother say that when Melville or Mrs. Cameron first bought it,
+it was little better than a mere labourer's cottage, with a field
+attached to it. And two or three years afterwards a room or so more
+was built, and a bit of the field taken in for a garden; and then by
+degrees the whole part now inhabited by the family was built, leaving
+only the old cottage as a scullery and washhouse; and the whole field
+was turned into the garden, as you see. But whether it was Melville's
+money or the aunt's that did it, I don't know. More likely the
+aunt's. I don't see what interest Melville has in the place: he does
+not go there often, I fancy; it is not his home."
+
+"Mr. Melville, it seems, is a painter, and, from what I heard you say,
+a successful one."
+
+"I fancy he had little success before this year. But surely you saw
+his pictures at the Exhibition?"
+
+"I am ashamed to say I have not been to the Exhibition."
+
+"You surprise me. However, Melville had three pictures there,--all
+very good; but the one I wished to buy made much more sensation than
+the others, and has suddenly lifted him from obscurity into fame."
+
+"He appears to be a relation of Miss Mordaunt's, but so distant a one
+that she could not even tell me what grade of cousinship he could
+claim."
+
+"Nor can I. He is her guardian, I know. The relationship, if any,
+must, as you say, be very distant; for Melville is of humble
+extraction, while any one can see that Mrs. Cameron is a thorough
+gentlewoman, and Lily Mordaunt is her sister's child. I have heard my
+mother say that it was Melville, then a very young man, who bought the
+cottage, perhaps with Mrs. Cameron's money; saying it was for a
+widowed lady, whose husband had left her with very small means. And
+when Mrs. Cameron arrived with Lily, then a mere infant, she was in
+deep mourning, and a very young woman herself,--pretty too. If
+Melville had been a frequent visitor then, of course there would have
+been scandal; but he very seldom came, and when he did, he lodged in a
+cottage, Cromwell Lodge, on the other side of the brook; now and then
+bringing with him a fellow-lodger,--some other young artist, I
+suppose, for the sake of angling. So there could be no cause for
+scandal, and nothing can be more blameless than poor Mrs. Cameron's
+life. My mother, who then resided at Braefieldville, took a great
+fancy to both Lily and her aunt, and when by degrees the cottage grew
+into a genteel sort of place, the few gentry in the neighbourhood
+followed my mother's example and were very kind to Mrs. Cameron, so
+that she has now her place in the society about here, and is much
+liked."
+
+"And Mr. Melville?--does he still very seldom come here?"
+
+"To say truth, he has not been at all since I settled at
+Braefieldville. The place was left to my mother for her life, and I
+was not much there during her occupation. In fact, I was then a
+junior partner in our firm, and conducted the branch business in New
+York, coming over to England for my holiday once a year or so. When
+my mother died, there was much to arrange before I could settle
+personally in England, and I did not come to settle at Braefieldville
+till I married. I did see Melville on one of my visits to the place
+some years ago; but, between ourselves, he is not the sort of person
+whose intimate acquaintance one would wish to court. My mother told
+me he was an idle, dissipated man, and I have heard from others that
+he was very unsteady. Mr. -----, the great painter, told me that he
+was a loose fish; and I suppose his habits were against his getting
+on, till this year, when, perhaps, by a lucky accident, he has painted
+a picture that raises him to the top of the tree. But is not Miss
+Lily wondrously nice to look at? What a pity her education has been
+so much neglected!"
+
+"Has it?"
+
+"Have not you discovered that already? She has not had even a
+music-master, though my wife says she has a good ear, and can sing
+prettily enough. As for reading I don't think she has read anything
+but fairy tales and poetry, and such silly stuff. However, she is
+very young yet; and now that her guardian can sell his pictures, it is
+to be hoped that he will do more justice to his ward. Painters and
+actors are not so regular in their private lives as we plain men are,
+and great allowance is to be made for them; still, every one is bound
+to do his duty. I am sure you agree with me?"
+
+"Certainly," said Kenelm, with an emphasis which startled the
+merchant. "That is an admirable maxim of yours: it seems a
+commonplace, yet how often, when it is put into our heads, it strikes
+as a novelty! A duty may be a very difficult thing, a very
+disagreeable thing, and, what is strange, it is often a very invisible
+thing. It is present,--close before us, and yet we don't see it;
+somebody shouts its name in our ears, 'Duty,' and straight it towers
+before us a grim giant. Pardon me if I leave you: I can't stay to
+dine. Duty summons me elsewhere. Make my excuses to Mrs. Braefield."
+
+Before Mr. Braefield could recover his self-possession, Kenelm had
+vaulted over a stile and was gone.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+KENELM walked into the shop kept by the Somerses, and found Jessie
+still at the counter. "Give me back my knap sack. Thank you," he
+said, flinging the knapsack across his shoulders. "Now, do me a
+favour. A portmanteau of mine ought to be at the station. Send for
+it, and keep it till I give further directions. I think of going to
+Oxford for a day or two. Mrs. Somers, one more word with you. Think,
+answer frankly, are you, as you said this morning, thoroughly happy,
+and yet married to the man you loved?"
+
+"Oh, so happy!"
+
+"And wish for nothing beyond? Do not wish Will to be other than he
+is?"
+
+"God forbid! You frighten me, sir."
+
+"Frighten you! Be it so. Everyone who is happy should be frightened
+lest happiness fly away. Do your best to chain it, and you will, for
+you attach Duty to Happiness; and," muttered Kenelm, as he turned from
+the shop, "Duty is sometimes not a rose-coloured tie, but a heavy
+iron-hued clog."
+
+He strode on through the street towards the sign-post with "To Oxford"
+inscribed thereon. And whether he spoke literally of the knapsack, or
+metaphorically of duty, he murmured, as he strode,--
+
+
+ "A pedlar's pack that bows the bearer down."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+
+KENELM might have reached Oxford that night, for he was a rapid and
+untirable pedestrian; but he halted a little after the moon rose, and
+laid himself down to rest beneath a new-mown haystack, not very far
+from the high road.
+
+He did not sleep. Meditatingly propped on his elbow, he said to
+himself,--
+
+"It is long since I have wondered at nothing. I wonder now: can this
+be love,--really love,--unmistakably love? Pooh! it is impossible;
+the very last person in the world to be in love with. Let us reason
+upon it,--you, myself, and I. To begin with,--face! What is face?
+In a few years the most beautiful face may be very plain. Take the
+Venus at Florence. Animate her; see her ten years after; a chignon,
+front teeth (blue or artificially white), mottled complexion, double
+chin,--all that sort of plump prettiness goes into double chin. Face,
+bah! What man of sense--what pupil of Welby, the realist--can fall in
+love with a face? and even if I were simpleton enough to do so, pretty
+faces are as common as daisies. Cecilia Travers has more regular
+features; Jessie Wiles a richer colouring. I was not in love with
+them,--not a bit of it. Myself, you have nothing to say there. Well,
+then, mind? Talk of mind, indeed! a creature whose favourite
+companionship is that of butterflies, and who tells me that
+butterflies are the souls of infants unbaptized. What an article for
+'The Londoner,' on the culture of young women! What a girl for Miss
+Garrett and Miss Emily Faithfull! Put aside Mind as we have done
+Face. What rests?--the Frenchman's ideal of happy marriage? congenial
+circumstance of birth, fortune, tastes, habits. Worse still. Myself,
+answer honestly, are you not floored?"
+
+Whereon "Myself" took up the parable and answered, "O thou fool! why
+wert thou so ineffably blessed in one presence? Why, in quitting that
+presence, did Duty become so grim? Why dost thou address to me those
+inept pedantic questionings, under the light of yon moon, which has
+suddenly ceased to be to thy thoughts an astronomical body and has
+become, forever and forever, identified in thy heart's dreams with
+romance and poesy and first love? Why, instead of gazing on that
+uncomfortable orb, art thou not quickening thy steps towards a cozy
+inn and a good supper at Oxford? Kenelm, my friend, thou art in for
+it. No disguising the fact: thou art in love!"
+
+"I'll be hanged if I am," said the Second in the Dualism of Kenelm's
+mind; and therewith he shifted his knapsack into a pillow, turned his
+eyes from the moon, and still could not sleep. The face of Lily still
+haunted his eyes; the voice of Lily still rang in his ears.
+
+Oh, my reader! dost thou here ask me to tell thee what Lily was
+like?--was she dark? was she fair? was she tall? was she short? Never
+shalt thou learn these secrets from me. Imagine to thyself the being
+to which thine whole of life, body and mind and soul, moved
+irresistibly as the needle to the pole. Let her be tall or short,
+dark or fair, she is that which out of all womankind has suddenly
+become the one woman for thee. Fortunate art thou, my reader, if thou
+chance to have heard the popular song of "My Queen" sung by the one
+lady who alone can sing it with expression worthy the verse of the
+poetess and the music of the composition, by the sister of the
+exquisite songstress. But if thou hast not heard the verse thus sung,
+to an accompaniment thus composed, still the words themselves are, or
+ought to be, familiar to thee, if thou art, as I take for granted, a
+lover of the true lyrical muse. Recall then the words supposed to be
+uttered by him who knows himself destined to do homage to one he has
+not yet beheld:--
+
+
+ "She is standing somewhere,--she I shall honour,
+ She that I wait for, my queen, my queen;
+ Whether her hair be golden or raven,
+ Whether her eyes be hazel or blue,
+ I know not now, it will be engraven
+ Some day hence as my loveliest hue.
+ She may be humble or proud, my lady,
+ Or that sweet calm which is just between;
+ But whenever she comes, she will find me ready
+ To do her homage, my queen, my queen."
+
+
+Was it possible that the cruel boy-god "who sharpens his arrows on the
+whetstone of the human heart" had found the moment to avenge himself
+for the neglect of his altars and the scorn of his power? Must that
+redoubted knight-errant, the hero of this tale, despite the Three
+Fishes on his charmed shield, at last veil the crest and bow the knee,
+and murmur to himself, "She has come, my queen"?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE next morning Kenelm arrived at Oxford,--"Verum secretumque
+Mouseion."
+
+If there be a place in this busy island which may distract the passion
+of youth from love to scholarship, to Ritualism, to mediaeval
+associations, to that sort of poetical sentiment or poetical
+fanaticism which a Mivers and a Welby and an advocate of the Realistic
+School would hold in contempt,--certainly that place is Oxford,--home;
+nevertheless, of great thinkers and great actors in the practical
+world.
+
+The vacation had not yet commenced, but the commencement was near at
+hand. Kenelm thought he could recognize the leading men by their
+slower walk and more abstracted expression of countenance. Among the
+Fellows was the eminent author of that book which had so powerfully
+fascinated the earlier adolescence of Kenelm Chillingly, and who had
+himself been subject to the fascination of a yet stronger spirit. The
+Rev. Decimus Roach had been ever an intense and reverent admirer of
+John Henry Newman,--an admirer, I mean, of the pure and lofty
+character of the man, quite apart from sympathy with his doctrines.
+But although Roach remained an unconverted Protestant of orthodox, if
+High Church, creed, yet there was one tenet he did hold in common with
+the author of the "Apologia." He ranked celibacy among the virtues
+most dear to Heaven. In that eloquent treatise, "The Approach to the
+Angels," he not only maintained that the state of single blessedness
+was strictly incumbent on every member of a Christian priesthood, but
+to be commended to the adoption of every conscientious layman.
+
+It was the desire to confer with this eminent theologian that had
+induced Kenelm to direct his steps to Oxford.
+
+Mr. Roach was a friend of Welby, at whose house, when a pupil, Kenelm
+had once or twice met him, and been even more charmed by his
+conversation than by his treatise.
+
+Kenelm called on Mr. Roach, who received him very graciously, and, not
+being a tutor or examiner, placed his time at Kenelm's disposal; took
+him the round of the colleges and the Bodleian; invited him to dine in
+his college-hall; and after dinner led him into his own rooms, and
+gave him an excellent bottle of Chateau Margeaux.
+
+Mr. Roach was somewhere about fifty,--a good-looking man and evidently
+thought himself so; for he wore his hair long behind and parted in the
+middle, which is not done by men who form modest estimates of their
+personal appearance.
+
+Kenelm was not long in drawing out his host on the subject to which
+that profound thinker had devoted so much meditation.
+
+"I can scarcely convey to you," said Kenelm, "the intense admiration
+with which I have studied your noble work, 'Approach to the Angels.'
+It produced a great effect on me in the age between boyhood and youth.
+But of late some doubts on the universal application of your doctrine
+have crept into my mind."
+
+"Ay, indeed?" said Mr. Roach, with an expression of interest in his
+face.
+
+"And I come to you for their solution."
+
+Mr. Roach turned away his head, and pushed the bottle to Kenelm.
+
+"I am quite willing to concede," resumed the heir of the Chillinglys,
+"that a priesthood should stand apart from the distracting cares of a
+family, and pure from all carnal affections."
+
+"Hem, hem," grunted Mr. Roach, taking his knee on his lap and
+caressing it.
+
+"I go further," continued Kenelm, "and supposing with you that the
+Confessional has all the importance, whether in its monitory or its
+cheering effects upon repentant sinners, which is attached to it by
+the Roman Catholics, and that it ought to be no less cultivated by the
+Reformed Church, it seems to me essential that the Confessor should
+have no better half to whom it can be even suspected he may, in an
+unguarded moment, hint at the frailties of one of her female
+acquaintances."
+
+"I pushed that argument too far," murmured Roach.
+
+"Not a bit of it. Celibacy in the Confessor stands or falls with the
+Confessional. Your argument there is as sound as a bell. But when it
+comes to the layman, I think I detect a difference."
+
+Mr. Roach shook his head, and replied stoutly, "No; if celibacy be
+incumbent on the one, it is equally incumbent on the other. I say
+'if.'"
+
+"Permit me to deny that assertion. Do not fear that I shall insult
+your understanding by the popular platitude; namely, that if celibacy
+were universal, in a very few years the human race would be extinct.
+As you have justly observed, in answer to that fallacy, 'It is the
+duty of each human soul to strive towards the highest perfection of
+the spiritual state for itself, and leave the fate of the human race
+to the care of the Creator.' If celibacy be necessary to spiritual
+perfection, how do we know but that it may be the purpose and decree
+of the All Wise that the human race, having attained to that
+perfection, should disappear from earth? Universal celibacy would
+thus be the euthanasia of mankind. On the other hand, if the Creator
+decided that the human race, having culminated to this crowning but
+barren flower of perfection, should nevertheless continue to increase
+and multiply upon earth, have you not victoriously exclaimed,
+'Presumptuous mortal! how canst thou presume to limit the resources of
+the Almighty? Would it not be easy for Him to continue some other
+mode, unexposed to trouble and sin and passion, as in the nuptials of
+the vegetable world, by which the generations will be renewed? Can we
+suppose that the angels--the immortal companies of heaven--are not
+hourly increasing in number, and extending their population throughout
+infinity? and yet in heaven there is no marrying nor giving in
+marriage.' All this, clothed by you in words which my memory only
+serves me to quote imperfectly,--all this I unhesitatingly concede."
+
+Mr. Roach rose and brought another bottle of the Chateau Margeaux from
+his cellaret, filled Kenelm's glass, reseated himself, and took the
+other knee into his lap to caress.
+
+"But," resumed Kenelm, "my doubt is this."
+
+"Ah!" cried Mr. Roach, "let us hear the doubt."
+
+"In the first place, is celibacy essential to the highest state of
+spiritual perfection; and, in the second place, if it were, are
+mortals, as at present constituted, capable of that culmination?"
+
+"Very well put," said Mr. Roach, and he tossed off his glass with more
+cheerful aspect than he had hitherto exhibited.
+
+"You see," said Kenelm, "we are compelled in this, as in other
+questions of philosophy, to resort to the inductive process, and draw
+our theories from the facts within our cognizance. Now looking round
+the world, is it the fact that old maids and old bachelors are so much
+more spiritually advanced than married folks? Do they pass their
+time, like an Indian dervish, in serene contemplation of divine
+excellence and beatitude? Are they not quite as worldly in their own
+way as persons who have been married as often as the Wife of Bath,
+and, generally speaking, more selfish, more frivolous, and more
+spiteful? I am sure I don't wish to speak uncharitably against old
+maids and old bachelors. I have three aunts who are old maids, and
+fine specimens of the genus; but I am sure they would all three have
+been more agreeable companions, and quite as spiritually gifted, if
+they had been happily married, and were caressing their children,
+instead of lapdogs. So, too, I have an old bachelor cousin,
+Chillingly Mivers, whom you know. As clever as a man can be. But,
+Lord bless you! as to being wrapped in spiritual meditation, he could
+not be more devoted to the things of earth if he had married as many
+wives as Solomon, and had as many children as Priam. Finally, have
+not half the mistakes in the world arisen from a separation between
+the spiritual and the moral nature of man? Is it not, after all,
+through his dealings with his fellow-men that man makes his safest
+'approach to the angels'? And is not the moral system a very muscular
+system? Does it not require for healthful vigour plenty of continued
+exercise, and does it not get that exercise naturally by the
+relationships of family, with all the wider collateral struggles with
+life which the care of family necessitates?
+
+"I put these questions to you with the humblest diffidence. I expect
+to hear such answers as will thoroughly convince my reason, and I
+shall be delighted if so. For at the root of the controversy lies the
+passion of love. And love must be a very disquieting, troublesome
+emotion, and has led many heroes and sages into wonderful weaknesses
+and follies."
+
+"Gently, gently, Mr. Chillingly; don't exaggerate. Love, no doubt,
+is--ahem--a disquieting passion. Still, every emotion that changes
+life from a stagnant pool into the freshness and play of a running
+stream is disquieting to the pool. Not only love and its
+fellow-passions, such as ambition, but the exercise of the reasoning
+faculty, which is always at work in changing our ideas, is very
+disquieting. Love, Mr. Chillingly, has its good side as well as its
+bad. Pass the bottle."
+
+KENELM (passing the bottle).--"Yes, yes; you are quite right in
+putting the adversary's case strongly, before you demolish it: all
+good rhetoricians do that. Pardon me if I am up to that trick in
+argument. Assume that I know all that can be said in favour of the
+abnegation of common-sense, euphoniously called 'love,' and proceed to
+the demolition of the case."
+
+THE REV. DECIMUS ROACH (hesitatingly).--"The demolition of the case?
+humph! The passions are ingrafted in the human system as part and
+parcel of it, and are not to be demolished so easily as you seem to
+think. Love, taken rationally and morally by a man of good education
+and sound principles, is--is--"
+
+KENELM.--"Well, is what?"
+
+THE REV. DECIMUS ROACH.--"A--a--a--thing not to be despised. Like the
+sun, it is the great colourist of life, Mr. Chillingly. And you are
+so right: the moral system does require daily exercise. What can give
+that exercise to a solitary man, when he arrives at the practical age
+in which he cannot sit for six hours at a stretch musing on the divine
+essence; and rheumatism or other ailments forbid his adventure into
+the wilds of Africa as a missionary? At that age, Nature, which will
+be heard, Mr. Chillingly, demands her rights. A sympathizing female
+companion by one's side; innocent little children climbing one's
+knee,--lovely, bewitching picture! Who can be Goth enough to rub it
+out, who fanatic enough to paint over it the image of a Saint Simeon
+sitting alone on a pillar? Take another glass. You don't drink
+enough, Mr. Chillingly."
+
+"I have drunk enough," replied Kenelm, in a sullen voice, "to think I
+see double. I imagined that before me sat the austere adversary of
+the insanity of love and the miseries of wedlock. Now, I fancy I
+listen to a puling sentimentalist uttering the platitudes which the
+other Decimus Roach had already refuted. Certainly either I see
+double, or you amuse yourself with mocking my appeal to your wisdom."
+
+"Not so, Mr. Chillingly. But the fact is, that when I wrote that book
+of which you speak I was young, and youth is enthusiastic and
+one-sided. Now, with the same disdain of the excesses to which love
+may hurry weak intellects, I recognize its benignant effects when
+taken, as I before said, rationally,--taken rationally, my young
+friend. At that period of life when the judgment is matured, the
+soothing companionship of an amiable female cannot but cheer the mind,
+and prevent that morose hoar-frost into which solitude is chilled and
+made rigid by increasing years. In short, Mr. Chillingly, having
+convinced myself that I erred in the opinion once too rashly put
+forth, I owe it to Truth, I owe it to Mankind, to make my conversion
+known to the world. And I am about next month to enter into the
+matrimonial state with a young lady who--"
+
+"Say no more, say no more, Mr. Roach. It must be a painful subject to
+you. Let us drop it."
+
+"It is not a painful subject at all!" exclaimed Mr. Roach, with
+warmth. "I look forward to the fulfilment of my duty with the
+pleasure which a well-trained mind always ought to feel in recanting a
+fallacious doctrine. But you do me the justice to understand that of
+course I do not take this step I propose--for my personal
+satisfaction. No, sir, it is the value of my example to others which
+purifies my motives and animates my soul."
+
+After this concluding and noble sentence, the conversation drooped.
+Host and guest both felt they had had enough of each other. Kenelm
+soon rose to depart.
+
+Mr. Roach, on taking leave of, him at the door, said, with marked
+emphasis,--
+
+"Not for my personal satisfaction,--remember that. Whenever you hear
+my conversion discussed in the world, say that from my own lips you
+heard these words,--NOT FOR MY PERSONAL SATISFACTION. No! my kind
+regards to Welby,--a, married man himself, and a father: he will
+understand me."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ON quitting Oxford, Kenelm wandered for several days about the
+country, advancing to no definite goal, meeting with no noticeable
+adventure. At last he found himself mechanically retracing his steps.
+A magnetic influence he could not resist drew him back towards the
+grassy meads and the sparkling rill of Moleswich.
+
+"There must be," said he to himself, "a mental, like an optical,
+illusion. In the last, we fancy we have seen a spectre. If we dare
+not face the apparition,--dare not attempt to touch it,--run
+superstitiously away from it,--what happens? We shall believe to our
+dying day that it was not an illusion, that it was a spectre; and so
+we may be crazed for life. But if we manfully walk up to the phantom,
+stretch our hands to seize it, oh! it fades into thin air, the cheat
+of our eyesight is dispelled, and we shall never be ghost-ridden
+again. So it must be with this mental illusion of mine. I see an
+image strange to my experience: it seems to me, at first sight,
+clothed with a supernatural charm; like an unreasoning coward, I run
+away from it. It continues to haunt me; I cannot shut out its
+apparition. It pursues me by day alike in the haunts of men,--alike
+in the solitudes of nature; it visits me by night in my dreams. I
+begin to say this must be a real visitant from another world: it must
+be love; the love of which I read in the Poets, as in the Poets I read
+of witchcraft and ghosts. Surely I must approach that apparition as a
+philosopher like Sir David Brewster would approach the black cat
+seated on a hearth-rug, which he tells us that some lady of his
+acquaintance constantly saw till she went into a world into which
+black cats are not held to be admitted. The more I think of it the
+less it appears to me possible that I can be really in love with a
+wild, half-educated, anomalous creature, merely because the apparition
+of her face haunts me. With perfect safety, therefore, I can approach
+the creature; in proportion as I see more of her the illusion will
+vanish. I will go back to Moleswich manfully."
+
+Thus said Kenelm to himself, and himself answered,--"Go; for thou
+canst not help it. Thinkest thou that Daces can escape the net that
+has meshed a Roach? No,--
+
+
+ 'Come it will, the day decreed by fate,'
+
+
+when thou must succumb to the 'Nature which will be heard.' Better
+succumb now, and with a good grace, than resist till thou hast reached
+thy fiftieth year, and then make a rational choice not for thy
+personal satisfaction."
+
+Whereupon Kenelm answered to himself, indignantly, "Pooh! thou
+flippant. My /alter ego/, thou knowest not what thou art talking
+about! It is not a question of Nature; it is a question of the
+supernatural,--an illusion,--a phantom!" Thus Kenelm and himself
+continued to quarrel with each other; and the more they quarrelled,
+the nearer they approached to the haunted spot in which had been seen,
+and fled from, the fatal apparition of first love.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VI.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+SIR PETER had not heard from Kenelm since a letter informing him that
+his son had left town on an excursion, which would probably be short,
+though it might last a few weeks; and the good Baronet now resolved to
+go to London himself, take his chance of Kenelm's return, and if still
+absent, at least learn from Mivers and others how far that very
+eccentric planet had contrived to steer a regular course amidst the
+fixed stars of the metropolitan system. He had other reasons for his
+journey. He wished to make the acquaintance of Chillingly Gordon
+before handing him over the L20,000 which Kenelm had released in that
+resettlement of estates, the necessary deeds of which the young heir
+had signed before quitting London for Moleswich. Sir Peter wished
+still more to see Cecilia Travers, in whom Kenelm's accounts of her
+had inspired a very strong interest.
+
+The day after his arrival in town Sir Peter breakfasted with Mivers.
+
+"Upon my word you are very comfortable here," said Sir Peter, glancing
+at the well-appointed table, and round the well-furnished rooms.
+
+"Naturally so: there is no one to prevent my being comfortable. I am
+not married; taste that omelette."
+
+"Some men declare they never knew comfort till they were married,
+Cousin Miners."
+
+"Some men are reflecting bodies, and catch a pallid gleam from the
+comfort which a wife concentres on herself. With a fortune so modest
+and secure, what comforts, possessed by me now, would not a Mrs.
+Chillingly Mivers ravish from my hold and appropriate to herself!
+Instead of these pleasant rooms, where should I be lodged? In a dingy
+den looking on a backyard excluded from the sun by day and vocal with
+cats by night; while Mrs. Mivers luxuriated in two drawing-rooms with
+southern aspect and perhaps a boudoir. My brougham would be torn from
+my uses and monopolized by 'the angel of my hearth,' clouded in her
+crinoline and halved by her chignon. No! if ever I marry--and I never
+deprive myself of the civilities and needlework which single ladies
+waste upon me by saying I shall not marry--it will be when women have
+fully established their rights; for then men may have a chance of
+vindicating their own. Then if there are two drawing-rooms in the
+house I shall take one; if not, we will toss up who shall have the
+back parlour; if we keep a brougham, it will be exclusively mine three
+days in the week; if Mrs. M. wants L200 a year for her wardrobe she
+must be contented with one, the other half will belong to my personal
+decoration; if I am oppressed by proof-sheets and printers' devils,
+half of the oppression falls to her lot, while I take my holiday on
+the croquet ground at Wimbledon. Yes, when the present wrongs of
+women are exchanged for equality with men, I will cheerfully marry;
+and to do the thing generous, I will not oppose Mrs. M.'s voting in
+the vestry or for Parliament. I will give her my own votes with
+pleasure."
+
+"I fear, my dear cousin, that you have infected Kenelm with your
+selfish ideas on the nuptial state. He does not seem inclined to
+marry,--eh?"
+
+"Not that I know of."
+
+"What sort of girl is Cecilia Travers?"
+
+"One of those superior girls who are not likely to tower into that
+terrible giantess called a 'superior woman.' A handsome,
+well-educated, sensible young lady, not spoiled by being an heiress;
+in fine, just the sort of girl whom you could desire to fix on for a
+daughter-in-law."
+
+"And you don't think Kenelm has a fancy for her?"
+
+"Honestly speaking, I do not."
+
+"Any counter-attraction? There are some things in which sons do not
+confide in their fathers. You have never heard that Kenelm has been a
+little wild?"
+
+"Wild he is, as the noble savage who ran in the woods," said Cousin
+Mivers.
+
+"You frighten me!"
+
+"Before the noble savage ran across the squaws, and was wise enough to
+run away from them. Kenelm has run away now somewhere."
+
+"Yes, he does not tell me where, nor do they know at his lodgings. A
+heap of notes on his table and no directions where they are to be
+forwarded. On the whole, however, he has held his own in London
+society,--eh?"
+
+"Certainly! he has been more courted than most young men, and perhaps
+more talked of. Oddities generally are."
+
+"You own he has talents above the average? Do you not think he will
+make a figure in the world some day, and discharge that debt to the
+literary stores or the political interests of his country, which alas,
+I and my predecessors, the other Sir Peters, failed to do; and for
+which I hailed his birth, and gave him the name of Kenelm?"
+
+"Upon my word," answered Mivers,--who had now finished his breakfast,
+retreated to an easy-chair, and taken from the chimney-piece one of
+his famous trabucos,--"upon my word, I can't guess; if some great
+reverse of fortune befell him, and he had to work for his livelihood,
+or if some other direful calamity gave a shock to his nervous system
+and jolted it into a fussy, fidgety direction, I dare say he might
+make a splash in that current of life which bears men on to the grave.
+But you see he wants, as he himself very truly says, the two
+stimulants to definite action,--poverty and vanity."
+
+"Surely there have been great men who were neither poor nor vain?"
+
+"I doubt it. But vanity is a ruling motive that takes many forms and
+many aliases: call it ambition, call it love of fame, still its
+substance is the same,--the desire of applause carried into fussiness
+of action."
+
+"There may be the desire for abstract truth without care for
+applause."
+
+"Certainly. A philosopher on a desert island may amuse himself by
+meditating on the distinction between light and heat. But if, on
+returning to the world, he publish the result of his meditations,
+vanity steps in and desires to be applauded."
+
+"Nonsense, Cousin Mivers, he may rather desire to be of use and
+benefit to mankind. You don't deny that there is such a thing as
+philanthropy."
+
+"I don't deny that there is such a thing as humbug. And whenever I
+meet a man who has the face to tell me that he is taking a great deal
+of trouble, and putting himself very much out of his way, for a
+philanthropical object, without the slightest idea of reward either in
+praise or pence, I know that I have a humbug before me,--a dangerous
+humbug, a swindling humbug, a fellow with his pocket full of villanous
+prospectuses and appeals to subscribers."
+
+"Pooh, pooh; leave off that affectation of cynicism: you are not a
+bad-hearted fellow; you must love mankind; you must have an interest
+in the welfare of posterity."
+
+"Love mankind? Interest in posterity? Bless my soul, Cousin Peter, I
+hope you have no prospectuses in /your/ pockets; no schemes for
+draining the Pontine Marshes out of pure love to mankind; no
+propositions for doubling the income-tax, as a reserve fund for
+posterity, should our coal-fields fail three thousand years hence.
+Love of mankind! Rubbish! This comes of living in the country."
+
+"But you do love the human race; you do care for the generations that
+are to come."
+
+"I! Not a bit of it. On the contrary, I rather dislike the human
+race, taking it altogether, and including the Australian bushmen; and
+I don't believe any man who tells me that he would grieve half as much
+if ten millions of human beings were swallowed up by an earthquake at
+a considerable distance from his own residence, say Abyssinia, as he
+would for a rise in his butcher's bills. As to posterity, who would
+consent to have a month's fit of the gout or tic-douloureux in order
+that in the fourth thousand year, A. D., posterity should enjoy a
+perfect system of sewage?"
+
+Sir Peter, who had recently been afflicted by a very sharp attack of
+neuralgia, shook his head, but was too conscientious not to keep
+silence.
+
+"To turn the subject," said Mivers, relighting the cigar which he had
+laid aside while delivering himself of his amiable opinions, "I think
+you would do well, while in town, to call on your old friend Travers,
+and be introduced to Cecilia. If you think as favourably of her as I
+do, why not ask father and daughter to pay you a visit at Exmundham?
+Girls think more about a man when they see the place which he can
+offer to them as a home, and Exmundham is an attractive place to
+girls,--picturesque and romantic."
+
+"A very good idea," cried Sir Peter, heartily. And I want also to
+make the acquaintance of Chillingly Gordon. Give me his address."
+
+"Here is his card on the chimney-piece, take it; you will always find
+him at home till two o'clock. He is too sensible to waste the
+forenoon in riding out in Hyde Park with young ladies."
+
+"Give me your frank opinion of that young kinsman. Kenelm tells me
+that he is clever and ambitious."
+
+"Kenelm speaks truly. He is not a man who will talk stuff about love
+of mankind and posterity. He is of our day, with large, keen,
+wide-awake eyes, that look only on such portions of mankind as can be
+of use to him, and do not spoil their sight by poring through cracked
+telescopes to catch a glimpse of posterity. Gordon is a man to be a
+Chancellor of the Exchequer, perhaps a Prime Minister."
+
+"And old Gordon's son is cleverer than my boy,--than the namesake of
+Kenelm Digby!" and Sir Peter sighed.
+
+"I did not say that. I am cleverer than Chillingly Gordon, and the
+proof of it is that I am too clever to wish to be Prime
+Minister,--very disagreeable office, hard work, irregular hours for
+meals, much abuse and confirmed dyspepsia."
+
+Sir Peter went away rather down-hearted. He found Chillingly Gordon
+at home in a lodging in Jermyn Street. Though prepossessed against
+him by all he had heard, Sir Peter was soon propitiated in his favour.
+Gordon had a frank man-of-the-world way with him, and much too fine a
+tact to utter any sentiments likely to displease an old-fashioned
+country gentleman, and a relation who might possibly be of service in
+his career. He touched briefly, and with apparent feeling, on the
+unhappy litigation commenced by his father; spoke with affectionate
+praise of Kenelm; and with a discriminating good-nature of Mivers, as
+a man who, to parody the epigram on Charles II.,
+
+
+ "Never says a kindly thing
+ And never does a harsh one."
+
+
+Then he drew Sir Peter on to talk of the country and agricultural
+prospects. Learned that among his objects in visiting town was the
+wish to inspect a patented hydraulic ram that might be very useful for
+his farm-yard, which was ill supplied with water. Startled the
+Baronet by evincing some practical knowledge of mechanics; insisted on
+accompanying him to the city to inspect the ram; did so, and approved
+the purchase; took him next to see a new American reaping-machine, and
+did not part with him till he had obtained Sir Peter's promise to dine
+with him at the Garrick; an invitation peculiarly agreeable to Sir
+Peter, who had a natural curiosity to see some of the more recently
+distinguished frequenters of that social club. As, on quitting
+Gordon, Sir Peter took his way to the house of Leopold Travers, his
+thoughts turned with much kindliness towards his young kinsman.
+"Mivers and Kenelm," quoth he to himself, "gave me an unfavourable
+impression of this lad; they represent him as worldly, self-seeking,
+and so forth. But Mivers takes such cynical views of character, and
+Kenelm is too eccentric to judge fairly of a sensible man of the
+world. At all events, it is not like an egotist to put himself out of
+his way to be so civil to an old fellow like me. A young man about
+town must have pleasanter modes of passing his day than inspecting
+hydraulic rams and reaping-machines. Clever they allow him to be.
+Yes, decidedly clever, and not offensively clever,--practical."
+
+Sir Peter found Travers in the dining-room with his daughter, Mrs.
+Campion, and Lady Glenalvon. Travers was one of those men rare in
+middle age, who are more often to be found in their drawing-room than
+in their private study; he was fond of female society; and perhaps it
+was this predilection which contributed to preserve in him the charm
+of good breeding and winning manners. The two men had not met for
+many years; not indeed since Travers was at the zenith of his career
+of fashion, and Sir Peter was one of those pleasant /dilettanti/ and
+half humoristic conversationalists who become popular and courted
+diners-out.
+
+Sir Peter had originally been a moderate Whig because his father had
+been one before him; but he left the Whig party with the Duke of
+Richmond, Mr. Stanley (afterwards Lord Derby), and others, when it
+seemed to him that that party had ceased to be moderate.
+
+Leopold Travers had, as a youth in the Guards, been a high Tory, but,
+siding with Sir Robert Peel on the repeal of the Corn Laws, remained
+with the Peelites after the bulk of the Tory party had renounced the
+guidance of their former chief, and now went with these Peelites in
+whatever direction the progress of the age might impel their strides
+in advance of Whigs and in defiance of Tories.
+
+However, it is not the politics of these two gentlemen that are in
+question now. As I have just said, they had not met for many years.
+Travers was very little changed. Sir Peter recognized him at a
+glance; Sir Peter was much changed, and Travers hesitated before, on
+hearing his name announced, he felt quite sure that it was the right
+Sir Peter towards whom he advanced, and to whom he extended his
+cordial hand. Travers preserved the colour of his hair and the neat
+proportions of his figure, and was as scrupulously well dressed as in
+his dandy days. Sir Peter, originally very thin and with fair locks
+and dreamy blue eyes, had now become rather portly,--at least towards
+the middle of him,--and very gray; had long ago taken to spectacles;
+his dress, too, was very old-fashioned, and made by a country tailor.
+He looked quite as much a gentleman as Travers did; quite perhaps as
+healthy, allowing for difference of years; quite as likely to last his
+time. But between them there was the difference of the nervous
+temperament and the lymphatic. Travers, with less brain than Sir
+Peter, had kept his brain constantly active; Sir Peter had allowed his
+brain to dawdle over old books and lazily delight in letting the hours
+slip by. Therefore Travers still looked young, alert,--up to his day,
+up to anything; while Sir Peter, entering that drawing-room, seemed a
+sort of Rip van Winkle who had slept through the past generation, and
+looked on the present with eyes yet drowsy. Still, in those rare
+moments when he was thoroughly roused up, there would have been found
+in Sir Peter a glow of heart, nay, even a vigour of thought, much more
+expressive than the constitutional alertness that characterized
+Leopold Travers, of the attributes we most love and admire in the
+young.
+
+"My dear Sir Peter, is it you? I am so glad to see you again," said
+Travers. "What an age since we met, and how condescendingly kind you
+were then to me; silly fop that I was! But bygones are bygones; come
+to the present. Let me introduce to you, first, my valued friend,
+Mrs. Campion, whose distinguished husband you remember. Ah, what
+pleasant meetings we had at his house! And next, that young lady of
+whom she takes motherly charge, my daughter Cecilia. Lady Glenalvon,
+your wife's friend, of course needs no introduction: time stands still
+with her."
+
+Sir Peter lowered his spectacles, which in reality he only wanted for
+books in small print, and gazed attentively on the three ladies,--at
+each gaze a bow. But while his eyes were still lingeringly fixed on
+Cecilia, Lady Glenalvon advanced, naturally in right of rank and the
+claim of old acquaintance, the first of the three to greet him.
+
+"Alas, my dear Sir Peter! time does not stand still for any of us;
+but what matter, if it leaves pleasant footprints? When I see you
+again, my youth comes before me,--my early friend, Caroline
+Brotherton, now Lady Chillingly; our girlish walks with each other;
+wreaths and ball-dresses the practical topic; prospective husbands,
+the dream at a distance. Come and sit here: tell me all about
+Caroline."
+
+Sir Peter, who had little to say about Caroline that could possibly
+interest anybody but himself, nevertheless took his seat beside Lady
+Glenalvon, and, as in duty bound, made the most flattering account of
+his She Baronet which experience or invention would allow. All the
+while, however, his thoughts were on Kenelm, and his eyes on Cecilia.
+
+Cecilia resumes some mysterious piece of lady's work, no matter
+what,--perhaps embroidery for a music-stool, perhaps a pair of
+slippers for her father (which, being rather vain of his feet and
+knowing they looked best in plain morocco, he will certainly never
+wear). Cecilia appears absorbed in her occupation; but her eyes and
+her thoughts are on Sir Peter. Why, my lady reader may guess. And
+oh, so flatteringly, so lovingly fixed! She thinks he has a most
+charming, intelligent, benignant countenance. She admires even his
+old-fashioned frock-coat, high neckcloth, and strapped trousers. She
+venerates his gray hairs, pure of dye. She tries to find a close
+resemblance between that fair, blue-eyed, plumpish, elderly gentleman
+and the lean, dark-eyed, saturnine, lofty Kenelm; she detects the
+likeness which nobody else would. She begins to love Sir Peter,
+though he has not said a word to her.
+
+Ah! on this, a word for what it is worth to you, my young readers.
+You, sir, wishing to marry a girl who is to be deeply, lastingly in
+love with you, and a thoroughly good wife practically, consider well
+how she takes to your parents; how she attaches to them an
+inexpressible sentiment, a disinterested reverence; even should you
+but dimly recognize the sentiment, or feel the reverence, how if
+between you and your parents some little cause of coldness arise, she
+will charm you back to honour your father and your mother, even though
+they are not particularly genial to her: well, if you win that sort of
+girl as your wife think you have got a treasure. You have won a woman
+to whom Heaven has given the two best attributes,--intense feeling of
+love, intense sense of duty. What, my dear lady reader, I say of one
+sex, I say of another, though in a less degree; because a girl who
+marries becomes of her husband's family, and the man does not become
+of his wife's. Still I distrust the depth of any man's love to a
+woman, if he does not feel a great degree of tenderness (and
+forbearance where differences arise) for her parents. But the wife
+must not so put them in the foreground as to make the husband think he
+is cast in the cold of the shadow. Pardon this intolerable length of
+digression, dear reader: it is not altogether a digression, for it
+belongs to my tale that you should clearly understand the sort of girl
+that is personified in Cecilia Travers.
+
+"What has become of Kenelm?" asked Lady Glenalvon.
+
+"I wish I could tell you," answered Sir Peter. "He wrote me word that
+he was going forth on rambles into 'fresh woods and pastures new,'
+perhaps for some weeks. I have not had a word from him since."
+
+"You make me uneasy," said Lady Glenalvon. "I hope nothing can have
+happened to him: he cannot have fallen ill."
+
+Cecilia stops her work, and looks up wistfully.
+
+"Make your mind easy," said Travers with a laugh; "I am in this
+secret. He has challenged the champion of England, and gone into the
+country to train."
+
+"Very likely," said Sir Peter, quietly: "I should not be in the least
+surprised; should you, Miss Travers?"
+
+"I think it more probable that Mr. Chillingly is doing some kindness
+to others which he wishes to keep concealed."
+
+Sir Peter was pleased with this reply, and drew his chair nearer to
+Cecilia's. Lady Glenalvon, charmed to bring those two together, soon
+rose and took leave.
+
+Sir Peter remained nearly an hour talking chiefly with Cecilia, who
+won her way into his heart with extraordinary ease; and he did not
+quit the house till he had engaged her father, Mrs. Campion, and
+herself to pay him a week's visit at Exmundham, towards the end of the
+London season, which was fast approaching.
+
+Having obtained this promise, Sir Peter went away, and ten minutes
+after Mr. Chillingly Gordon entered the drawing-room. He had already
+established a visiting acquaintance with the Traverses. Travers had
+taken a liking to him. Mrs. Campion found him an extremely
+well-informed, unaffected young man, very superior to young men in
+general. Cecilia was cordially polite to Kenelm's cousin. Altogether
+that was a very happy day for Sir Peter. He enjoyed greatly his
+dinner at the Garrick, where he met some old acquaintance and was
+presented to some new "celebrities." He observed that Gordon stood
+well with these eminent persons. Though as yet undistinguished
+himself, they treated him with a certain respect, as well as with
+evident liking. The most eminent of them, at least the one with the
+most solidly established reputation, said in Sir Peter's ear, "You may
+be proud of your nephew Gordon!"
+
+"He is not my nephew, only the son of a very distant cousin."
+
+"Sorry for that. But he will shed lustre on kinsfolk, however
+distant. Clever fellow, yet popular; rare combination,--sure to
+rise."
+
+Sir Peter suppressed a gulp in the throat. "Ah, if some one as
+eminent had spoken thus of Kenelm!"
+
+But he was too generous to allow that half-envious sentiment to last
+more than a moment. Why should he not be proud of any member of the
+family who could irradiate the antique obscurity of the Chillingly
+race? And how agreeable this clever young man made himself to Sir
+Peter!
+
+The next day Gordon insisted on accompanying him to see the latest
+acquisitions in the British Museum, and various other exhibitions, and
+went at night to the Prince of Wales's Theatre, where Sir Peter was
+infinitely delighted with an admirable little comedy by Mr. Robertson,
+admirably placed on the stage by Marie Wilton. The day after, when
+Gordon called on him at his hotel, he cleared his throat, and thus
+plunged at once into the communication he had hitherto delayed.
+
+"Gordon, my boy, I owe you a debt, and I am now, thanks to Kenelm,
+able to pay it."
+
+Gordon gave a little start of surprise, but remained silent.
+
+"I told your father, shortly after Kenelm was born, that I meant to
+give up my London house, and lay by L1000 a year for you, in
+compensation for your chance of succeeding to Exmundham should I have
+died childless. Well, your father did not seem to think much of that
+promise, and went to law with me about certain unquestionable rights
+of mine. How so clever a man could have made such a mistake would
+puzzle me, if I did not remember that he had a quarrelsome temper.
+Temper is a thing that often dominates cleverness,--an uncontrollable
+thing; and allowances must be made for it. Not being of a quarrelsome
+temper myself (the Chillinglys are a placid race), I did not make the
+allowance for your father's differing, and (for a Chillingly)
+abnormal, constitution. The language and the tone of his letter
+respecting it nettled me. I did not see why, thus treated, I should
+pinch myself to lay by a thousand a year. Facilities for buying a
+property most desirable for the possessor of Exmundham presented
+themselves. I bought it with borrowed money, and though I gave up the
+house in London, I did not lay by the thousand a year."
+
+"My dear Sir Peter, I have always regretted that my poor father was
+misled--perhaps out of too paternal a care for my supposed
+interests--into that unhappy and fruitless litigation, after which no
+one could doubt that any generous intentions on your part would be
+finally abandoned. It has been a grateful surprise to me that I have
+been so kindly and cordially received into the family by Kenelm and
+yourself. Pray oblige me by dropping all reference to pecuniary
+matters: the idea of compensation to a very distant relative for the
+loss of expectations he had no right to form, is too absurd, for me at
+least, ever to entertain."
+
+"But I am absurd enough to entertain it, though you express yourself
+in a very high-minded way. To come to the point, Kenelm is of age,
+and we have cut off the entail. The estate of course remains
+absolutely with Kenelm to dispose of, as it did before, and we must
+take it for granted that he will marry; at all events he cannot fall
+into your poor father's error: but whatever Kenelm hereafter does with
+his property, it is nothing to you, and is not to be counted upon.
+Even the title dies with Kenelm if he has no son. On resettling the
+estate, however, sums of money have been realized which, as I stated
+before, enable me to discharge the debt which Kenelm heartily agrees
+with me is due to you. L20,000 are now lying at my bankers' to be
+transferred to yours; meanwhile, if you will call on my solicitor, Mr.
+Vining, Lincoln's-inn, you can see the new deed and give to him your
+receipt for the L20,000, for which he holds my cheque. Stop! stop!
+stop! I will not hear a. word: no thanks; they are not due."
+
+Here Gordon, who had during this speech uttered various brief
+exclamations, which Sir Peter did not heed, caught hold of his
+kinsman's hand, and, despite of all struggles, pressed his lips on it.
+"I must thank you; I must give some vent to my emotions," cried
+Gordon. "This sum, great in itself, is far more to me than you can
+imagine: it opens my career; it assures my future."
+
+"So Kenelm tells me; he said that sum would be more use to you now
+than ten times the amount twenty years hence."
+
+"So it will,--it will. And Kenelm consents to this sacrifice?"
+
+"Consents! urges it."
+
+Gordon turned away his face, and Sir Peter resumed: "You want to get
+into Parliament; very natural ambition for a clever young fellow. I
+don't presume to dictate politics to you. I hear you are what is
+called a Liberal; a man may be a Liberal, I suppose, without being a
+Jacobin."
+
+"I hope so, indeed. For my part I am anything but a violent man."
+
+"Violent, no! Who ever heard of a violent Chillingly? But I was
+reading in the newspaper to-day a speech addressed to some popular
+audience, in which the orator was for dividing all the lands and all
+the capital belonging to other people among the working class, calmly
+and quietly, without any violence, and deprecating violence: but
+saying, perhaps very truly, that the people to be robbed might not
+like it, and might offer violence; in which case woe betide them; it
+was they who would be guilty of violence; and they must take the
+consequences if they resisted the reasonable, propositions of himself
+and his friends! That, I suppose, is among the new ideas with which
+Kenelm is more familiar than I am. Do you entertain those new ideas?"
+
+"Certainly not: I despise the fools who do."
+
+"And you will not abet revolutionary measures if you get into
+Parliament?"
+
+"My dear Sir Peter, I fear you have heard very false reports of my
+opinions if you put such questions. Listen," and therewith Gordon
+launched into dissertations very clever, very subtle, which committed
+him to nothing, beyond the wisdom of guiding popular opinions into
+right directions: what might be right directions he did not define; he
+left Sir Peter to guess them. Sir Peter did guess them, as Gordon
+meant he should, to be the directions which he, Sir Peter, thought
+right; and he was satisfied.
+
+That subject disposed of, Gordon said, with much apparent feeling,
+"May I ask you to complete the favours you have lavished on me? I
+have never seen Exmundham, and the home of the race from which I
+sprang has a deep interest for time. Will you allow me to spend a few
+days with you, and under the shade of your own trees take lessons in
+political science from one who has evidently reflected on it
+profoundly?"
+
+"Profoundly, no; a little,--a little, as a mere bystander," said Sir
+Peter, modestly, but much flattered. "Come, my dear boy, by all
+means; you will have a hearty welcome. By the by, Travers and his
+handsome daughter promised to visit me in about a fortnight, why not
+come at the same time?"
+
+A sudden flash lit up the young man's countenance.
+
+"I shall be so delighted," he cried. "I am but slightly acquainted
+with Mr. Travers, but I like him much, and Mrs. Campion is so well
+informed."
+
+"And what say you to the girl?"
+
+"The girl, Miss Travers. Oh, she is very well in her way. But I
+don't talk with young ladies more than I can help."
+
+"Then you are like your cousin Kenelm?"
+
+"I wish I were like him in other things."
+
+"No, one such oddity in a family is quite enough. But though I would
+not have you change to a Kenelm, I would not change Kenelm for the
+most perfect model of a son that the world can exhibit." Delivering
+himself of this burst of parental fondness, Sir Peter shook hands with
+Gordon, and walked off to Mivers, who was to give him luncheon and
+then accompany him to the station. Sir Peter was to return to
+Exmundham by the afternoon express.
+
+Left alone, Gordon indulged in one of those luxurious guesses into the
+future which form the happiest moments in youth when so ambitious as
+his. The sum Sir Peter placed at his disposal would insure his
+entrance in Parliament. He counted with confidence on early successes
+there. He extended the scope of his views. With such successes he
+might calculate with certainty on a brilliant marriage, augmenting his
+fortune, and confirming his position. He had previously fixed his
+thoughts on Cecilia Travers. I will do him the justice to say not
+from mercenary motives alone, but not certainly with the impetuous
+ardour of youthful love. He thought her exactly fitted to be the wife
+of an eminent public man, in person, acquirement, dignified yet
+popular manners. He esteemed her, he liked her, and then her fortune
+would add solidity to his position. In fact, he had that sort of
+rational attachment to Cecilia which wise men, like Lord Bacon and
+Montaigne, would commend to another wise man seeking a wife. What
+opportunities of awaking in herself a similar, perhaps a warmer,
+attachment the visit to Exmundham would afford! He had learned when
+he had called on the Traverses that they were going thither, and hence
+that burst of family sentiment which had procured the invitation to
+himself.
+
+But he must be cautious, he must not prematurely awaken Travers's
+suspicions. He was not as yet a match that the squire could approve
+of for his heiress. And, though he was ignorant of Sir Peter's
+designs on that, young lady, he was much too prudent to confide his
+own to a kinsman of whose discretion he had strong misgivings. It was
+enough for him at present that way was opened for his own resolute
+energies. And cheerfully, though musingly, he weighed its obstacles,
+and divined its goal, as he paced his floor with bended head and
+restless strides, now quick, now slow.
+
+Sir Peter, in the meanwhile, found a very good luncheon prepared for
+him at Mivers's rooms, which he had all to himself, for his host never
+"spoilt his dinner and insulted his breakfast" by that intermediate
+meal. He remained at his desk writing brief notes of business, or of
+pleasure, while Sir Peter did justice to lamb cutlets and grilled
+chicken. But he looked up from his task, with raised eyebrows, when
+Sir Peter, after a somewhat discursive account of his visit to the
+Traverses, his admiration of Cecilia, and the adroitness with which,
+acting on his cousin's hint, he had engaged the family to spend a few
+days at Exmundham, added, "And, by the by, I have asked young Gordon
+to meet them."
+
+"To meet them! meet Mr. and Miss Travers! you have? I thought you
+wished Kenelm to marry Cecilia. I was mistaken, you meant Gordon!"
+
+"Gordon," exclaimed Sir Peter, dropping his knife and fork.
+"Nonsense, you don't suppose that Miss Travers prefers him to Kenelm,
+or that he has the presumption to fancy that her father would sanction
+his addresses?"
+
+"I indulge in no suppositions of the sort. I content myself with
+thinking that Gordon is clever, insinuating, young; and it is a very
+good chance of bettering himself that you have thrown in his way.
+However, it is no affair of mine; and though on the whole I like
+Kenelm better than Gordon, still I like Gordon very well, and I have
+an interest in following his career which I can't say I have in
+conjecturing what may be Kenelm's--more likely no career at all."
+
+"Mivers, you delight in provoking me; you do say such uncomfortable
+things. But, in the first place, Gordon spoke rather slightingly of
+Miss Travers."
+
+"Ah, indeed; that's a bad sign," muttered Mivers.
+
+Sir Peter did not hear him, and went on.
+
+"And, besides, I feel pretty sure that the dear girl has already a
+regard for Kenelm which allows no room for a rival. However, I shall
+not forget your hint, but keep a sharp lookout; and, if I see the
+young man wants to be too sweet on Cecilia, I shall cut short his
+visit."
+
+"Give yourself no trouble in the matter; it will do no good.
+Marriages are made in heaven. Heaven's will be done. If I can get
+away I will run down to you for a day or two. Perhaps in that case
+you can ask Lady Glenalvon. I like her, and she likes Kenelm. Have
+you finished? I see the brougham is at the door, and we have to call
+at your hotel to take up your carpet-bag."
+
+Mivers was deliberately sealing his notes while he thus spoke. He now
+rang for his servant, gave orders for their delivery, and then
+followed Sir Peter down stairs and into the brougham. Not a word
+would he say more about Gordon, and Sir Peter shrank from telling him
+about the L20,000. Chillingly Mivers was perhaps the last person to
+whom Sir Peter would be tempted to parade an act of generosity.
+Mivers might not unfrequently do a generous act himself, provided it
+was not divulged; but he had always a sneer for the generosity of
+others.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+WANDERING back towards Moleswich, Kenelm found himself a little before
+sunset on the banks of the garrulous brook, almost opposite to the
+house inhabited by Lily Mordaunt. He stood long and silently by the
+grassy margin, his dark shadow falling over the stream, broken into
+fragments by the eddy and strife of waves, fresh from their leap down
+the neighbouring waterfall. His eyes rested on the house and the
+garden lawn in the front. The upper windows were open. "I wonder
+which is hers," he said to himself. At last he caught a glimpse of
+the gardener, bending over a flower border with his watering-pot, and
+then moving slowly through the little shrubbery, no doubt to his own
+cottage. Now the lawn was solitary, save that a couple of thrushes
+dropped suddenly on the sward.
+
+"Good evening, sir," said a voice. "A capital spot for trout this."
+
+Kenelm turned his head, and beheld on the footpath, just behind him, a
+respectable elderly man, apparently of the class of a small retail
+tradesman, with a fishing-rod in his hand and a basket belted to his
+side.
+
+"For trout," replied Kenelm; "I dare say. A strangely attractive spot
+indeed."
+
+"Are you an angler, sir, if I may make bold to inquire?" asked the
+elderly man, somewhat perhaps puzzled as to the rank of the stranger;
+noticing, on the one hand, his dress and his mien, on the other, slung
+to his shoulders, the worn and shabby knapsack which Kenelm had
+carried, at home and abroad, the preceding year.
+
+"Ay, I am an angler."
+
+"Then this is the best place in the whole stream. Look, sir, there is
+Izaak Walton's summer-house; and further down you see that white,
+neat-looking house. Well, that is my house, sir, and I have an
+apartment which I let to gentleman anglers. It is generally occupied
+throughout the summer months. I expect every day to have a letter to
+engage it, but it is vacant now. A very nice apartment,
+sir,--sitting-room and bedroom."
+
+"/Descende ceolo, et dic age tibia/," said Kenelm.
+
+"Sir?" said the elderly man.
+
+"I beg you ten thousand pardons. I have had the misfortune to have
+been at the university, and to have learned a little Latin, which
+sometimes comes back very inopportunely. But, speaking in plain
+English, what I meant to say is this: I invoked the Muse to descend
+from heaven and bring with her--the original says a fife, but I
+meant--a fishing-rod. I should think your apartment would suit me
+exactly; pray show it to me."
+
+"With the greatest pleasure," said the elderly man. "The Muse need
+not bring a fishing-rod! we have all sorts of tackle at your service,
+and a boat too, if you care for that. The stream hereabouts is so
+shallow and narrow that a boat is of little use till you get farther
+down."
+
+"I don't want to get farther down; but should I want to get to the
+opposite bank, without wading across, would the boat take me or is
+there a bridge?"
+
+"The boat can take you. It is a flat-bottomed punt, and there is a
+bridge too for foot-passengers, just opposite my house; and between
+this and Moleswich, where the stream widens, there is a ferry. The
+stone bridge for traffic is at the farther end of the town."
+
+"Good. Let us go at once to your house."
+
+The two men walked on.
+
+"By the by," said Kenelm, as they walked, "do you know much of the
+family that inhabit the pretty cottage on the opposite side, which we
+have just left behind?"
+
+"Mrs. Cameron's. Yes, of course, a very good lady; and Mr. Melville,
+the painter. I am sure I ought to know, for he has often lodged with
+me when he came to visit Mrs. Cameron. He recommends my apartment to
+his friends, and they are my best lodgers. I like painters, sir,
+though I don't know much about paintings. They are pleasant
+gentlemen, and easily contented with my humble roof and fare."
+
+"You are quite right. I don't know much about paintings myself; but I
+am inclined to believe that painters, judging not from what I have
+seen of them, for I have not a single acquaintance among them
+personally, but from what I have read of their lives, are, as a
+general rule, not only pleasant but noble gentlemen. They form within
+themselves desires to beautify or exalt commonplace things, and they
+can only accomplish their desires by a constant study of what is
+beautiful and what is exalted. A man constantly so engaged ought to
+be a very noble gentleman, even though he may be the son of a
+shoeblack. And living in a higher world than we do, I can conceive
+that he is, as you say, very well contented with humble roof and fare
+in the world we inhabit."
+
+"Exactly, sir; I see--I see now, though you put it in a way that never
+struck me before."
+
+"And yet," said Kenelm, looking benignly at the speaker, "you seem to
+me a well-educated and intelligent man; reflective on things in
+general, without being unmindful of your interests in particular,
+especially when you have lodgings to let. Do not be offended. That
+sort of man is not perhaps born to be a painter, but I respect him
+highly. The world, sir, requires the vast majority of its inhabitants
+to live in it,--to live by it. 'Each for himself, and God for us
+all.' The greatest happiness of the greatest number is best secured
+by a prudent consideration for Number One."
+
+Somewhat to Kenelm's surprise (allowing that he had now learned enough
+of life to be occasionally surprised) the elderly man here made a dead
+halt, stretched out his hand cordially, and cried, "Hear, hear! I see
+that, like me, you are a decided democrat."
+
+"Democrat! Pray, may I ask, not why you are one,--that would be a
+liberty, and democrats resent any liberty taken with themselves; but
+why you suppose I am?"
+
+"You spoke of the greatest happiness of the greatest number. That is
+a democratic sentiment surely! Besides, did not you say, sir, that
+painters,--painters, sir, painters, even if they were the sons of
+shoeblacks, were the true gentlemen,--the true noblemen?"
+
+"I did not say that exactly, to the disparagement of other gentlemen
+and nobles. But if I did, what then?"
+
+"Sir, I agree with you. I despise rank; I despise dukes and earls and
+aristocrats. 'An honest man's the noblest work of God.' Some poet
+says that. I think Shakspeare. Wonderful man, Shakspeare. A
+tradesman's son,--butcher, I believe. Eh! My uncle was a butcher,
+and might have been an alderman. I go along with you heartily,
+heartily. I am a democrat, every inch of me. Shake hands, sir, shake
+hands; we are all equals. 'Each man for himself, and God for us
+all.'"
+
+"I have no objection to shake hands," said Kenelm; "but don't let me
+owe your condescension to false pretences. Though we are all equal
+before the law, except the rich man, who has little chance of justice
+as against a poor man when submitted to an English jury, yet I utterly
+deny that any two men you select can be equals. One must beat the
+other in something; and, when one man beats another, democracy ceases
+and aristocracy begins."
+
+"Aristocracy! I don't see that. What do you mean by aristocracy?"
+
+"The ascendency of the better man. In a rude State the better man is
+the stronger; in a corrupt State, perhaps the more roguish; in modern
+republics the jobbers get the money and the lawyers get the power. In
+well-ordered States alone aristocracy appears at its genuine worth:
+the better man in birth, because respect for ancestry secures a higher
+standard of honour; the better man in wealth, because of the immense
+uses to enterprise, energy, and the fine arts, which rich men must be
+if they follow their natural inclinations; the better man in
+character, the better man in ability, for reasons too obvious to
+define; and these two last will beat the others in the government of
+the State, if the State be flourishing and free. All these four
+classes of better men constitute true aristocracy; and when a better
+government than a true aristocracy shall be devised by the wit of man,
+we shall not be far off from the Millennium and the reign of saints.
+But here we are at the house,--yours, is it not? I like the look of
+it extremely."
+
+The elderly man now entered the little porch, over which clambered
+honeysuckle and ivy intertwined, and ushered Kenelm into a pleasant
+parlour, with a bay window, and an equally pleasant bedroom behind it.
+
+"Will it do, sir?"
+
+"Perfectly. I take it from this moment. My knapsack contains all I
+shall need for the night. There is a portmanteau of mine at Mr.
+Somers's shop, which can be sent here in the morning."
+
+"But we have not settled about the terms," said the elderly man,
+beginning to feel rather doubtful whether he ought thus to have
+installed in his home a stalwart pedestrian of whom he knew nothing,
+and who, though talking glibly enough on other things, had preserved
+an ominous silence on the subject of payment.
+
+"Terms? true, name them."
+
+"Including board?"
+
+"Certainly. Chameleons live on air; democrats on wind bags. I have a
+more vulgar appetite, and require mutton."
+
+"Meat is very dear now-a-days," said the elderly man, "and I am
+afraid, for board and lodging I cannot charge you less than L3
+3s.,--say L3 a week. My lodgers usually pay a week in advance."
+
+"Agreed," said Kenelm, extracting three sovereigns from his purse. "I
+have dined already: I want nothing more this evening; let me detain
+you no further. Be kind enough to shut the door after you."
+
+When he was alone, Kenelm seated himself in the recess of the bay
+window, against the casement, and looked forth intently. Yes; he was
+right: he could see from thence the home of Lily. Not, indeed, more
+than a white gleam of the house through the interstices of trees and
+shrubs, but the gentle lawn sloping to the brook, with the great
+willow at the end dipping its boughs into the water, and shutting out
+all view beyond itself by its bower of tender leaves. The young man
+bent his face on his hands and mused dreamily: the evening deepened;
+the stars came forth; the rays of the moon now peered aslant through
+the arching dips of the willow, silvering their way as they stole to
+the waves below.
+
+"Shall I bring lights, sir? or do you prefer a lamp or candles?" asked
+a voice behind,--the voice of the elderly man's wife. "Do you like
+the shutters closed?"
+
+The question startled the dreamer. They seemed mocking his own old
+mockings on the romance of love. Lamp or candles, practical lights
+for prosaic eyes, and shutters closed against moon and stars!
+
+"Thank you, ma'am, not yet," he said; and rising quietly he placed his
+hand on the window-sill, swung himself through the open casement, and
+passed slowly along the margin of the rivulet, by a path checkered
+alternately with shade and starlight; the moon yet more slowly rising
+above the willows, and lengthening its track along the wavelets.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THOUGH Kenelm did not think it necessary at present to report to his
+parents or his London acquaintances his recent movements and his
+present resting-place, it never entered into his head to lurk /perdu/
+in the immediate vicinity of Lily's house, and seek opportunities of
+meeting her clandestinely. He walked to Mrs. Braefield's the next
+morning, found her at home, and said in rather a more off-hand manner
+than was habitual to him, "I have hired a lodging in your
+neighbourhood, on the banks of the brook, for the sake of its
+trout-fishing. So you will allow me to call on you sometimes, and one
+of these days I hope you will give me the dinner I so unceremoniously
+rejected some days ago. I was then summoned away suddenly, much
+against my will."
+
+"Yes; my husband said that you shot off from him with a wild
+exclamation about duty."
+
+"Quite true; my reason, and I may say my conscience, were greatly
+perplexed upon a matter extremely important and altogether new to me.
+I went to Oxford,--the place above all others in which questions of
+reason and conscience are most deeply considered, and perhaps least
+satisfactorily solved. Relieved in my mind by my visit to a
+distinguished ornament of that university, I felt I might indulge in a
+summer holiday, and here I am."
+
+"Ah! I understand. You had religious doubts,--thought perhaps of
+turning Roman Catholic. I hope you are not going to do so?"
+
+"My doubts were not necessarily of a religious nature. Pagans have
+entertained them."
+
+"Whatever they were I am pleased to see they did not prevent your
+return," said Mrs. Braefield, graciously. "But where have you found a
+lodging; why not have come to us? My husband would have been scarcely
+less glad than myself to receive you."
+
+"You say that so sincerely, and so cordially, that to answer by a
+brief 'I thank you' seems rigid and heartless. But there are times in
+life when one yearns to be alone,--to commune with one's own heart,
+and, if possible, be still; I am in one of those moody times. Bear
+with me."
+
+Mrs. Braefield looked at him with affectionate, kindly interest. She
+had gone before him through the solitary road of young romance. She
+remembered her dreamy, dangerous girlhood, when she, too, had yearned
+to be alone.
+
+"Bear with you; yes, indeed. I wish, Mr. Chillingly, that I were your
+sister, and that you would confide in me. Something troubles you."
+
+"Troubles me,--no. My thoughts are happy ones, and they may sometimes
+perplex me, but they do not trouble."
+
+Kenelm said this very softly; and in the warmer light of his musing
+eyes, the sweeter play of his tranquil smile, there was an expression
+which did not belie his words.
+
+"You have not told me where you have found a lodging," said Mrs.
+Braefield, somewhat abruptly.
+
+"Did I not?" replied Kenelm, with an unconscious start, as from an
+abstracted reverie. "With no undistinguished host, I presume, for
+when I asked him this morning for the right address of this cottage,
+in order to direct such luggage as I have to be sent there, he gave me
+his card with a grand air, saying, 'I am pretty well known at
+Moleswich, by and beyond it.' I have not yet looked at his card. Oh,
+here it is,--'Algernon Sidney Gale Jones, Cromwell Lodge;' you laugh.
+What do you know of him?"
+
+"I wish my husband were here; he would tell you more about him. Mr.
+Jones is quite a character."
+
+"So I perceive."
+
+"A great radical,--very talkative and troublesome at the vestry; but
+our vicar, Mr. Emlyn, says there is no real harm in him, that his bark
+is worse than his bite, and that his republican or radical notions
+must be laid to the door of his godfathers! In addition to his name
+of Jones, he was unhappily christened Gale; Gale Jones being a noted
+radical orator at the time of his birth. And I suppose Algernon
+Sidney was prefixed to Gale in order to devote the new-born more
+emphatically to republican principles."
+
+"Naturally, therefore, Algernon Sidney Gale Jones baptizes his house
+Cromwell Lodge, seeing that Algernon Sidney held the Protectorate in
+especial abhorrence, and that the original Gale Jones, if an honest
+radical, must have done the same, considering what rough usage the
+advocates of Parliamentary Reform met with at the hands of his
+Highness. But we must be indulgent to men who have been unfortunately
+christened before they had any choice of the names that were to rule
+their fate. I myself should have been less whimsical had I not been
+named after a Kenelm who believed in sympathetic powders. Apart from
+his political doctrines, I like my landlord: he keeps his wife in
+excellent order. She seems frightened at the sound of her own
+footsteps, and glides to and fro, a pallid image of submissive
+womanhood in list slippers."
+
+"Great recommendations certainly, and Cromwell Lodge is very prettily
+situated. By the by, it is very near Mrs. Cameron's."
+
+"Now I think of it, so it is," said Kenelm, innocently. Ah! my friend
+Kenelm, enemy of shams, and truth-teller, /par excellence/, what hast
+thou come to? How are the mighty fallen! "Since you say you will
+dine with us, suppose we fix the day after to-morrow, and I will ask
+Mrs. Cameron and Lily."
+
+"The day after to-morrow: I shall be delighted."
+
+"An early hour?"
+
+"The earlier the better."
+
+"Is six o'clock too early?"
+
+"Too early! certainly not; on the contrary. Good-day: I must now go
+to Mrs. Somers; she has charge of my portmanteau."
+
+Then Kenelm rose.
+
+"Poor dear Lily!" said Mrs. Braefield; "I wish she were less of a
+child."
+
+Kenelm reseated himself.
+
+"Is she a child? I don't think she is actually a child."
+
+"Not in years; she is between seventeen and eighteen: but my husband
+says that she is too childish to talk to, and always tells me to take
+her off his hands; he would rather talk with Mrs. Cameron."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"Still I find something in her."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"Not exactly childish, nor quite womanish."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"I can't exactly define. But you know what Mr. Melville and Mrs.
+Cameron call her as a pet name?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Fairy! Fairies have no age; fairy is neither child nor woman."
+
+"Fairy. She is called fairy by those who know her best? Fairy!"
+
+"And she believes in fairies."
+
+"Does she?--so do I. Pardon me, I must be off. The day after
+to-morrow,--six o'clock."
+
+"Wait one moment," said Elsie, going to her writing-table. "Since you
+pass Grasmere on your way home, will you kindly leave this note?"
+
+"I thought Grasmere was a lake in the north?"
+
+"Yes; but Mr. Melville chose to call the cottage by the name of the
+lake. I think the first picture he ever sold was a view of
+Wordsworth's house there. Here is my note to ask Mrs. Cameron to meet
+you; but if you object to be my messenger--"
+
+"Object! my dear Mrs. Braefield. As you say, I pass close by the
+cottage."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+KENELM went with somewhat rapid pace from Mrs. Braefield's to the shop
+in the High Street kept by Will Somers. Jessie was behind the
+counter, which was thronged with customers. Kenelm gave her a brief
+direction about his portmanteau, and then passed into the back
+parlour, where her husband was employed on his baskets,--with the
+baby's cradle in the corner, and its grandmother rocking it
+mechanically, as she read a wonderful missionary tract full of tales
+of miraculous conversions: into what sort of Christians we will not
+pause to inquire.
+
+"And so you are happy, Will?" said Kenelm, seating himself between the
+basket-maker and the infant; the dear old mother beside him, reading
+the tract which linked her dreams of life eternal with life just
+opening in the cradle that she rocked. He not happy! How he pitied
+the man who could ask such a question.
+
+"Happy, sir! I should think so, indeed. There is not a night on
+which Jessie and I, and mother too, do not pray that some day or other
+you may be as happy. By and by the baby will learn to pray 'God bless
+papa, and mamma, grandmamma, and Mr. Chillingly.'"
+
+"There is some one else much more deserving of prayers than I, though
+needing them less. You will know some day: pass it by now. To return
+to the point: you are happy; if I asked why, would you not say,
+'Because I have married the girl I love, and have never repented'?"
+
+"Well, sir, that is about it; though, begging your pardon, I think it
+could be put more prettily somehow."
+
+"You are right there. But perhaps love and happiness never yet found
+any words that could fitly express them. Good-bye, for the present."
+
+Ah! if it were as mere materialists, or as many middle-aged or elderly
+folks, who, if materialists, are so without knowing it, unreflectingly
+say, "The main element of happiness is bodily or animal health and
+strength," that question which Chillingly put would appear a very
+unmeaning or a very insulting one addressed to a pale cripple, who
+however improved of late in health, would still be sickly and ailing
+all his life,--put, too, by a man of the rarest conformation of
+physical powers that nature can adapt to physical enjoyment,--a man
+who, since the age in which memory commences, had never known what it
+was to be unwell, who could scarcely understand you if you talked of a
+finger-ache, and whom those refinements of mental culture which
+multiply the delights of the senses had endowed with the most
+exquisite conceptions of such happiness as mere nature and its
+instincts can give! But Will did not think the question unmeaning or
+insulting. He, the poor cripple, felt a vast superiority on the scale
+of joyous being over the young Hercules, well born, cultured, and
+wealthy, who could know so little of happiness as to ask the crippled
+basket-maker if he were happy.--he, blessed husband and father!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+LILY was seated on the grass under a chestnut-tree on the lawn. A
+white cat, not long emerged from kittenhood, curled itself by her
+side. On her lap was an open volume, which she was reading with the
+greatest delight.
+
+Mrs. Cameron came from the house, looked round, perceived the girl,
+and approached; and either she moved so gently, or Lily was so
+absorbed in the book, that the latter was not aware of her presence
+till she felt a light hand on her shoulder, and, looking up,
+recognized her aunt's gentle face.
+
+"Ah! Fairy, Fairy, that silly book, when you ought to be at your
+French verbs. What will your guardian say when he comes and finds you
+have so wasted time?"
+
+"He will say that fairies never waste their time; and he will scold
+you for saying so." Therewith Lily threw down the book, sprang to her
+feet, wound her arm round Mrs. Cameron's neck, and kissed her fondly.
+"There! is that wasting time? I love you so, aunty. In a day like
+this I think I love everybody and everything!" As she said this, she
+drew up her lithe form, looked into the blue sky, and with parted lips
+seemed to drink in air and sunshine. Then she woke up the dozing cat,
+and began chasing it round the lawn.
+
+Mrs. Cameron stood still, regarding her with moistened eyes. Just at
+that moment Kenelm entered through the garden gate. He, too, stood
+still, his eyes fixed on the undulating movements of Fairy's exquisite
+form. She had arrested her favourite, and was now at play with it,
+shaking off her straw hat, and drawing the ribbon attached to it
+tantalizingly along the smooth grass. Her rich hair, thus released
+and dishevelled by the exercise, fell partly over her face in wavy
+ringlets; and her musical laugh and words of sportive endearment
+sounded on Kenelm's ear more joyously than the thrill of the skylark,
+more sweetly than the coo of the ring-dove.
+
+He approached towards Mrs. Cameron. Lily turned suddenly and saw him.
+Instinctively she smoothed back her loosened tresses, replaced the
+straw hat, and came up demurely to his side just as he had accosted
+her aunt.
+
+"Pardon my intrusion, Mrs. Cameron. I am the bearer of this note from
+Mrs. Braefield." While the aunt read the note, he turned to the
+niece.
+
+"You promised to show me the picture, Miss Mordaunt."
+
+"But that was a long time ago."
+
+"Too long to expect a lady's promise to be kept?"
+
+Lily seemed to ponder that question, and hesitated before she
+answered.
+
+"I will show you the picture. I don't think I ever broke a promise
+yet, but I shall be more careful how I make one in future."
+
+"Why so?"
+
+"Because you did not value mine when I made it, and that hurt me."
+Lily lifted up her head with a bewitching stateliness, and added
+gravely, "I was offended."
+
+"Mrs. Braefield is very kind," said Mrs. Cameron; "she asks us to dine
+the day after to-morrow. You would like to go, Lily?"
+
+"All grown-up people, I suppose? No, thank you, dear aunt. You go
+alone, I would rather stay at home. May I have little Clemmy to play
+with? She will bring Juba, and Blanche is very partial to Juba,
+though she does scratch him."
+
+"Very well, my dear, you shall have your playmate, and I will go by
+myself."
+
+Kenelm stood aghast. "You will not go, Miss Mordaunt; Mrs. Braefield
+will be so disappointed. And if you don't go, whom shall I have to
+talk to? I don't like grown-up people better than you do."
+
+"You are going?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"And if I go you will talk to me? I am afraid of Mr. Braefield. He
+is so wise."
+
+"I will save you from him, and will not utter a grain of wisdom."
+
+"Aunty, I will go."
+
+Here Lily made a bound and caught up Blanche, who, taking her kisses
+resignedly, stared with evident curiosity upon Kenelm.
+
+Here a bell within the house rang the announcement of luncheon. Mrs.
+Cameron invited Kenelm to partake of that meal. He felt as Romulus
+might have felt when first invited to taste the ambrosia of the gods.
+Yet certainly that luncheon was not such as might have pleased Kenelm
+Chillingly in the early days of the Temperance Hotel. But somehow or
+other of late he had lost appetite; and on this occasion a very modest
+share of a very slender dish of chicken fricasseed, and a few cherries
+daintily arranged on vine leaves, which Lily selected for him,
+contented him,--as probably a very little ambrosia contented Romulus
+while feasting his eyes on Hebe.
+
+Luncheon over, while Mrs. Cameron wrote her reply to Elsie, Kenelm was
+conducted by Lily into her own /own/ room, in vulgar parlance her
+/boudoir/, though it did not look as if any one ever /bouder'd/ there.
+It was exquisitely pretty,--pretty not as a woman's, but as a child's
+dream of the own /own/ room she would like to have,--wondrously neat
+and cool, and pure-looking; a trellis paper, the trellis gay with
+roses and woodbine, and birds and butterflies; draperies of muslin,
+festooned with dainty tassels and ribbons; a dwarf bookcase, that
+seemed well stored, at least as to bindings; a dainty little
+writing-table in French /marqueterie/, looking too fresh and spotless
+to have known hard service. The casement was open, and in keeping
+with the trellis paper; woodbine and roses from without encroached on
+the window-sides, gently stirred by the faint summer breeze, and
+wafted sweet odours into the little room. Kenelm went to the window,
+and glanced on the view beyond. "I was right," he said to himself; "I
+divined it." But though he spoke in a low inward whisper, Lily, who
+had watched his movements in surprise, overheard.
+
+"You divined it. Divined what?"
+
+"Nothing, nothing; I was but talking to myself."
+
+"Tell me what you divined: I insist upon it!" and Fairy petulantly
+stamped her tiny foot on the floor.
+
+"Do you? Then I obey. I have taken a lodging for a short time on the
+other side of the brook,--Cromwell Lodge,--and seeing your house as I
+passed, I divined that your room was in this part of it. How soft
+here is the view of the water! Ah! yonder is Izaak Walton's
+summer-house."
+
+"Don't talk about Izaak Walton, or I shall quarrel with you, as I did
+with Lion when he wanted me to like that cruel book."
+
+"Who is Lion?"
+
+"Lion,--of course, my guardian. I called him Lion when I was a little
+child. It was on seeing in one of his books a print of a lion playing
+with a little child."
+
+"Ah! I know the design well," said Kenelm, with a slight sigh. "It
+is from an antique Greek gem. It is not the lion that plays with the
+child, it is the child that masters the lion, and the Greeks called
+the child 'Love.'"
+
+This idea seemed beyond Lily's perfect comprehension. She paused
+before she answered, with the naivete of a child six years old,--
+
+"I see now why I mastered Blanche, who will not make friends with any
+one else: I love Blanche. Ah, that reminds me,--come and look at the
+picture."
+
+She went to the wall over the writing-table, drew a silk curtain aside
+from a small painting in a dainty velvet framework, and pointing to
+it, cried with triumph, "Look there! is it not beautiful?"
+
+Kenelm had been prepared to see a landscape, or a group, or anything
+but what he did see: it was the portrait of Blanche when a kitten.
+
+Little elevated though the subject was, it was treated with graceful
+fancy. The kitten had evidently ceased from playing with the cotton
+reel that lay between her paws, and was fixing her gaze intently on a
+bulfinch that had lighted on a spray within her reach.
+
+"You understand," said Lily, placing her hand on his arm, and drawing
+him towards what she thought the best light for the picture; "it is
+Blanche's first sight of a bird. Look well at her face; don't you see
+a sudden surprise,--half joy, half fear? She ceases to play with the
+reel. Her intellect--or, as Mr. Braefield would say, 'her
+instinct'--is for the first time aroused. From that moment Blanche
+was no longer a mere kitten. And it required, oh, the most careful
+education, to teach her not to kill the poor little birds. She never
+does now, but I had such trouble with her."
+
+"I cannot say honestly that I do see all that you do in the picture;
+but it seems to me very simply painted, and was, no doubt, a striking
+likeness of Blanche at that early age."
+
+"So it was. Lion drew the first sketch from life with his pencil; and
+when he saw how pleased I was with it--he was so good--he put it on
+canvas, and let me sit by him while he painted it. Then he took it
+away, and brought it back finished and framed as you see, last May, a
+present for my birthday."
+
+"You were born in May--with the flowers."
+
+"The best of all the flowers are born in May,--violets."
+
+"But they are born in the shade, and cling to it. Surely, as a child
+of May, you love the sun!"
+
+"I love the sun; it is never too bright nor too warm for me. But I
+don't think that, though born in May, I was born in sunlight. I feel
+more like my own native self when I creep into the shade and sit down
+alone. I can weep then."
+
+As she thus shyly ended, the character of her whole countenance was
+changed: its infantine mirthfulness was gone; a grave, thoughtful,
+even a sad expression settled on the tender eyes and the tremulous
+lips.
+
+Kenelm was so touched that words failed him, and there was silence for
+some moments between the two. At length Kenelm said, slowly,--
+
+"You say your own native self. Do you, then, feel, as I often do,
+that there is a second, possibly a /native/, self, deep hid beneath
+the self,--not merely what we show to the world in common (that may be
+merely a mask), but the self that we ordinarily accept even when in
+solitude as our own, an inner innermost self, oh so different and so
+rarely coming forth from its hiding-place, asserting its right of
+sovereignty, and putting out the other self as the sun puts out a
+star?"
+
+Had Kenelm thus spoken to a clever man of the world--to a Chillingly
+Mivers, to a Chillingly Gordon--they certainly would not have
+understood him. But to such men he never would have thus spoken. He
+had a vague hope that this childlike girl, despite so much of
+childlike talk, would understand him; and she did at once.
+
+Advancing close to him, again laying her hand on his arm, and looking
+up towards his bended face with startled wondering eyes, no longer
+sad, yet not mirthful,--
+
+"How true! You have felt that too? Where /is/ that innermost self,
+so deep down,--so deep; yet when it does come forth, so much
+higher,--higher,--immeasurably higher than one's everyday self? It
+does not tame the butterflies; it longs to get to the stars. And
+then,--and then,--ah, how soon it fades back again! You have felt
+that. Does it not puzzle you?"
+
+"Very much."
+
+"Are there no wise books about it that help to explain?"
+
+"No wise books in my very limited reading even hint at the puzzle. I
+fancy that it is one of those insoluble questions that rest between
+the infant and his Maker. Mind and soul are not the same things, and
+what you and I call 'wise men' are always confounding the two--"
+
+Fortunately for all parties--especially the reader; for Kenelm had
+here got on the back of one of his most cherished hobbies, the
+distinction between psychology and metaphysics, soul and mind
+scientifically or logically considered--Mrs. Cameron here entered the
+room, and asked him how he liked the picture.
+
+"Very much. I am no great judge of the art. But it pleased me at
+once, and now that Miss Mordaunt has interpreted the intention of the
+painter I admire it yet more."
+
+"Lily chooses to interpret his intention in her own way, and insists
+that Blanche's expression of countenance conveys an idea of her
+capacity to restrain her destructive instinct, and be taught to
+believe that it is wrong to kill birds for mere sport. For food she
+need not kill them, seeing that Lily takes care that she has plenty to
+eat. But I don't think that Mr. Melville had the slightest suspicion
+that he had indicated that capacity in his picture."
+
+"He must have done so, whether he suspected it or not," said Lily,
+positively; "otherwise he would not be truthful."
+
+"Why not truthful?" asked Kenelm.
+
+"Don't you see? If you were called upon to describe truthfully the
+character of any little child, would you only speak of such naughty
+impulses as all children have in common, and not even hint at the
+capacity to be made better?"
+
+"Admirably put!" said Kenelm. "There is no doubt that a much fiercer
+animal than a cat--a tiger, for instance, or a conquering hero--may be
+taught to live on the kindest possible terms with the creatures on
+which it was its natural instinct to prey."
+
+"Yes, yes; hear that, aunty! You remember the Happy Family that we
+saw eight years ago, at Moleswich fair, with a cat not half so nice as
+Blanche allowing a mouse to bite her ear? Well, then, would Lion not
+have been shamefully false to Blanche if he had not"--
+
+Lily paused and looked half shyly, half archly, at Kenelm, then added,
+in slow, deep-drawn tones--"given a glimpse of her innermost self?"
+
+"Innermost self!" repeated Mrs. Cameron, perplexed and laughing
+gently.
+
+Lily stole nearer to Kenelm and whispered,--
+
+"Is not one's innermost self one's best self?"
+
+Kenelm smiled approvingly. The fairy was rapidly deepening her spell
+upon him. If Lily had been his sister, his betrothed, his wife, how
+fondly he would have kissed her! She had expressed a thought over
+which he had often inaudibly brooded, and she had clothed it with all
+the charm of her own infantine fancy and womanlike tenderness. Goethe
+has said somewhere, or is reported to have said, "There is something
+in every man's heart, that, if you knew it, would make you hate him."
+What Goethe said, still more what Goethe is reported to have said, is
+never to be taken quite literally. No comprehensive genius--genius at
+once poet and thinker--ever can be so taken. The sun shines on a
+dunghill. But the sun has no predilection for a dunghill. It only
+comprehends a dunghill as it does a rose. Still Kenelm had always
+regarded that loose ray from Goethe's prodigal orb with an abhorrence
+most unphilosophical for a philosopher so young as generally to take
+upon oath any words of so great a master. Kenelm thought that the
+root of all private benevolence, of all enlightened advance in social
+reform, lay in the adverse theorem,--that in every man's nature there
+lies a something that, could we get at it, cleanse it, polish it,
+render it visibly clear to our eyes, would make us love him. And in
+this spontaneous, uncultured sympathy with the results of so many
+laborious struggles of his own scholastic intellect against the dogma
+of the German giant, he felt as if he had found a younger--true, but
+oh, how much more subduing, because so much younger--sister of his own
+man's soul. Then came, so strongly, the sense of her sympathy with
+his own strange innermost self, which a man will never feel more than
+once in his life with a daughter of Eve, that he dared not trust
+himself to speak. He somewhat hurried his leave-taking.
+
+Passing in the rear of the garden towards the bridge which led to his
+lodging, he found on the opposite bank, at the other end of the
+bridge, Mr. Algernon Sidney Gale Jones peacefully angling for trout.
+
+"Will you not try the stream to-day, sir? Take my rod." Kenelm
+remembered that Lily had called Izaak Walton's book "a cruel one," and
+shaking his head gently, went his way into the house. There he seated
+himself silently by the window, and looked towards the grassy lawn and
+the dipping willows, and the gleam of the white walls through the
+girdling trees, as he had looked the eve before.
+
+"Ah!" he murmured at last, "if, as I hold, a man but tolerably good
+does good unconsciously merely by the act of living,--if he can no
+more traverse his way from the cradle to the grave, without letting
+fall, as he passes, the germs of strength, fertility, and beauty, than
+can a reckless wind or a vagrant bird, which, where it passes, leaves
+behind it the oak, the corn-sheaf, or the flower,--ah, if that be so,
+how tenfold the good must be, if the man find the gentler and purer
+duplicate of his own being in that mysterious, undefinable union which
+Shakspeares and day-labourers equally agree to call love; which Newton
+never recognizes, and which Descartes (his only rival in the realms of
+thought at once severe and imaginative) reduces into links of early
+association, explaining that he loved women who squinted, because,
+when he was a boy, a girl with that infirmity squinted at him from the
+other side of his father's garden-wall! Ah! be this union between man
+and woman what it may; if it be really love, really the bond which
+embraces the innermost and bettermost self of both,--how daily,
+hourly, momently, should we bless God for having made it so easy to be
+happy and to be good!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE dinner-party at Mr. Braefield's was not quite so small as Kenelm
+had anticipated. When the merchant heard from his wife that Kenelm
+was coming, he thought it would be but civil to the young gentleman to
+invite a few other persons to meet him.
+
+"You see, my dear," he said to Elsie, "Mrs. Cameron is a very good,
+simple sort of woman, but not particularly amusing; and Lily, though a
+pretty girl, is so exceedingly childish. We owe much, my sweet Elsie,
+to this Mr. Chillingly,"--here there was a deep tone of feeling in his
+voice and look,--"and we must make it as pleasant for him as we can.
+I will bring down my friend Sir Thomas, and you ask Mr. Emlyn and his
+wife. Sir Thomas is a very sensible man, and Emlyn a very learned
+one. So Mr. Chillingly will find people worth talking to. By the by,
+when I go to town I will send down a haunch of venison from Groves's."
+
+So when Kenelm arrived, a little before six o'clock, he found in the
+drawing-room the Rev. Charles Emlyn, vicar of Moleswich proper, with
+his spouse, and a portly middle-aged man, to whom, as Sir Thomas
+Pratt, Kenelm was introduced. Sir Thomas was an eminent city banker.
+The ceremonies of introduction over, Kenelm stole to Elsie's side.
+
+"I thought I was to meet Mrs. Cameron. I don't see her."
+
+"She will be here presently. It looks as if it might rain, and I have
+sent the carriage for her and Lily. Ah, here they are!"
+
+Mrs. Cameron entered, clothed in black silk. She always wore black;
+and behind her came Lily, in the spotless colour that became her name;
+no ornament, save a slender gold chain to which was appended a single
+locket, and a single blush rose in her hair. She looked wonderfully
+lovely; and with that loveliness there was a certain nameless air of
+distinction, possibly owing to delicacy of form and colouring;
+possibly to a certain grace of carriage, which was not without a
+something of pride.
+
+Mr. Braefield, who was a very punctual man, made a sign to his
+servant, and in another moment or so dinner was announced. Sir
+Thomas, of course, took in the hostess; Mr. Braefield, the vicar's
+wife (she was a dean's daughter); Kenelm, Mrs. Cameron; and the vicar,
+Lily.
+
+On seating themselves at the table Kenelm was on the left hand, next
+to the hostess, and separated from Lily by Mrs. Cameron and Mr. Emlyn;
+and when the vicar had said grace, Lily glanced behind his back and
+her aunt's at Kenelm (who did the same thing), making at him what the
+French call a /moue/. The pledge to her had been broken. She was
+between two men very much grown up,--the vicar and the host. Kenelm
+returned the /moue/ with a mournful smile and an involuntary shrug.
+
+All was silent till, after his soup and his first glass of sherry, Sir
+Thomas began,--
+
+"I think, Mr. Chillingly, we have met before, though I had not the
+honour then of making your acquaintance." Sir Thomas paused before he
+added, "Not long ago; the last State ball at Buckingham Palace."
+
+Kenelm bent his head acquiescingly. He had been at that ball.
+
+"You were talking with a very charming woman,--a friend of mine,--Lady
+Glenalvon."
+
+(Sir Thomas was Lady Glenalvon's banker.)
+
+"I remember perfectly," said Kenelm. "We were seated in the picture
+gallery. You came to speak to Lady Glenalvon, and I yielded to you my
+place on the settee."
+
+"Quite true; and I think you joined a young lady, very handsome,--the
+great heiress, Miss Travers."
+
+Kenelm again bowed, and, turning away as politely as he could,
+addressed himself to Mrs. Cameron. Sir Thomas, satisfied that he had
+impressed on his audience the facts of his friendship with Lady
+Glenalvon and his attendance at the court ball, now directed his
+conversational powers towards the viear, who, utterly foiled in the
+attempt to draw out Lily, met the baronet's advances with the ardour
+of a talker too long suppressed. Kenelm continued, unmolested, to
+ripen his acquaintance with Mrs. Cameron. She did not, however, seem
+to lend a very attentive ear to his preliminary commonplace remarks
+about scenery or weather, but at his first pause, said,--
+
+"Sir Thomas spoke about a Miss Travers: is she related to a gentleman
+who was once in the Guards, Leopold Travers?"
+
+"She is his daughter. Did you ever know Leopold Travers?"
+
+"I have heard him mentioned by friends of mine long ago,--long ago,"
+replied Mrs. Cameron with a sort of weary languor, not unwonted, in
+her voice and manner; and then, as if dismissing the bygone
+reminiscence from her thoughts, changed the subject.
+
+"Lily tells me, Mr. Chillingly, that you said you were staying at Mr.
+Jones's, Cromwell Lodge. I hope you are made comfortable there."
+
+"Very. The situation is singularly pleasant."
+
+"Yes, it is considered the prettiest spot on the brook-side, and used
+to be a favourite resort for anglers; but the trout, I believe, are
+growing scarce; at least, now that the fishing in the Thames is
+improved, poor Mr. Jones complains that his old lodgers desert him.
+Of course you took the rooms for the sake of the fishing. I hope the
+sport may be better than it is said to be."
+
+"It is of little consequence to me: I do not care much about fishing;
+and since Miss Mordaunt calls the book which first enticed me to take
+to it 'a cruel one,' I feel as if the trout had become as sacred as
+crocodiles were to the ancient Egyptians."
+
+"Lily is a foolish child on such matters. She cannot bear the thought
+of giving pain to any dumb creature; and just before our garden there
+are a few trout which she has tamed. They feed out of her hand; she
+is always afraid they will wander away and get caught."
+
+"But Mr. Melville is an angler?"
+
+"Several years ago he would sometimes pretend to fish, but I believe
+it was rather an excuse for lying on the grass and reading 'the cruel
+book,' or perhaps, rather, for sketching. But now he is seldom here
+till autumn, when it grows too cold for such amusement."
+
+Here Sir Thomas's voice was so loudly raised that it stopped the
+conversation between Kenelm and Mrs. Cameron. He had got into some
+question of politics on which he and the vicar did not agree, and the
+discussion threatened to become warm, when Mrs. Braefield, with a
+woman's true tact, broached a new topic, in which Sir Thomas was
+immediately interested, relating to the construction of a conservatory
+for orchids that he meditated adding to his country-house, and in
+which frequent appeal was made to Mrs. Cameron, who was considered an
+accomplished florist, and who seemed at some time or other in her life
+to have acquired a very intimate acquaintance with the costly family
+of orchids.
+
+When the ladies retired Kenelm found himself seated next to Mr. Emlyn,
+who astounded him by a complimentary quotation from one of his own
+Latin prize poems at the university, hoped he would make some stay at
+Moleswich, told him of the principal places in the neighbourhood worth
+visiting, and offered him the run of his library, which he flattered
+himself was rather rich, both in the best editions of Greek and Latin
+classics and in early English literature. Kenelm was much pleased
+with the scholarly vicar, especially when Mr. Emlyn began to speak
+about Mrs. Cameron and Lily. Of the first he said, "She is one of
+those women in whom quiet is so predominant that it is long before one
+can know what undercurrents of good feeling flow beneath the unruffled
+surface. I wish, however, she was a little more active in the
+management and education of her niece,--a girl in whom I feel a very
+anxious interest, and whom I doubt if Mrs. Cameron understands.
+Perhaps, however, only a poet, and a very peculiar sort of poet, can
+understand her: Lily Mordaunt is herself a poem."
+
+"I like your definition of her," said Kenelm. "There is certainly
+something about her which differs much from the prose of common life."
+
+"You probably know Wordsworth's lines:
+
+
+ "' . . . and she shall lean her ear
+ In many a secret place
+ Where rivulets dance their wayward round,
+ And beauty, born of murmuring sound,
+ Shall pass into her face.'
+
+
+"They are lines that many critics have found unintelligible; but Lily
+seems like the living key to them."
+
+Kenelm's dark face lighted up, but he made no answer.
+
+"Only," continued Mr. Emlyn, "how a girl of that sort, left wholly to
+herself, untrained, undisciplined, is to grow up into the practical
+uses of womanhood, is a question that perplexes and saddens me."
+
+"Any more wine?" asked the host, closing a conversation on commercial
+matters with Sir Thomas. "No?--shall we join the ladies?"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE drawing-room was deserted; the ladies were in the garden. As
+Kenelm and Mr. Emlyn walked side by side towards the group (Sir Thomas
+and Mr. Braefield following at a little distance), the former asked,
+somewhat abruptly, "What sort of man is Miss Cameron's guardian, Mr.
+Melville?"
+
+"I can scarcely answer that question. I see little of him when he
+comes here. Formerly, he used to run down pretty often with a
+harum-scarum set of young fellows, quartered at Cromwell
+Lodge,--Grasmere had no accommodation for them,--students in the
+Academy, I suppose. For some years he has not brought those persons,
+and when he does come himself it is but for a few days. He has the
+reputation of being very wild."
+
+Further conversation was here stopped. The two men, while they thus
+talked, had been diverging from the straight way across the lawn
+towards the ladies, turning into sequestered paths through the
+shrubbery; now they emerged into the open sward, just before a table,
+on which coffee was served, and round which all the rest of the party
+were gathered.
+
+"I hope, Mr. Emlyn," said Elsie's cheery voice, "that you have
+dissuaded Mr. Chillingly from turning Papist. I am sure you have
+taken time enough to do so."
+
+Mr. Emlyn, Protestant every inch of him, slightly recoiled from
+Kenelm's side. "Do you meditate turning--" He could not conclude the
+sentence.
+
+"Be not alarmed, my dear sir. I did but own to Mrs. Braefield that I
+had paid a visit to Oxford in order to confer with a learned man on a
+question that puzzled me, and as abstract as that feminine pastime,
+theology, is now-a-days. I cannot convince Mrs. Braefield that Oxford
+admits other puzzles in life than those which amuse the ladies." Here
+Kenelm dropped into a chair by the side of Lily.
+
+Lily half turned her back to him.
+
+"Have I offended again?"
+
+Lily shrugged her shoulders slightly and would not answer.
+
+"I suspect, Miss Mordaunt, that among your good qualities, nature has
+omitted one; the bettermost self within you should replace it."
+
+Lily here abruptly turned to him her front face: the light of the
+skies was becoming dim, but the evening star shone upon it.
+
+"How! what do you mean?"
+
+"Am I to answer politely or truthfully?"
+
+"Truthfully! Oh, truthfully! What is life without truth?"
+
+"Even though one believes in fairies?"
+
+"Fairies are truthful, in a certain way. But you are not truthful.
+You were not thinking of fairies when you--"
+
+"When I what?"
+
+"Found fault with me."
+
+"I am not sure of that. But I will translate to you my thoughts, so
+far as I can read them myself, and to do so I will resort to the
+fairies. Let us suppose that a fairy has placed her changeling into
+the cradle of a mortal: that into the cradle she drops all manner of
+fairy gifts which are not bestowed on mere mortals; but that one
+mortal attribute she forgets. The changeling grows up; she charms
+those around her: they humour, and pet, and spoil her. But there
+arises a moment in which the omission of the one mortal gift is felt
+by her admirers and friends. Guess what that is."
+
+Lily pondered. "I see what you mean; the reverse of truthfulness,
+politeness."
+
+"No, not exactly that, though politeness slides into it unawares: it
+is a very humble quality, a very unpoetic quality; a quality that many
+dull people possess; and yet without it no fairy can fascinate
+mortals, when on the face of the fairy settles the first wrinkle. Can
+you not guess it now?"
+
+"No: you vex me; you provoke me;" and Lily stamped her foot
+petulantly, as in Kenelm's presence she had stamped it once before.
+"Speak plainly, I insist."
+
+"Miss Mordaunt, excuse me: I dare not," said Kenelm, rising with a
+sort of bow one makes to the Queen; and he crossed over to Mrs.
+Braefield.
+
+Lily remained, still pouting fiercely.
+
+Sir Thomas took the chair Kenelm had vacated.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE hour for parting came. Of all the guests, Sir Thomas alone stayed
+at the house a guest for the night. Mr. and Mrs. Emlyn had their own
+carriage. Mrs. Braefield's carriage came to the door for Mrs. Cameron
+and Lily.
+
+Said Lily, impatiently and discourteously, "Who would not rather walk
+on such a night?" and she whispered to her aunt.
+
+Mrs. Cameron, listening to the whisper and obedient to every whim of
+Lily's, said, "You are too considerate, dear Mrs. Braefield; Lily
+prefers walking home; there is no chance of rain now."
+
+Kenelm followed the steps of the aunt and niece, and soon overtook
+them on the brook-side.
+
+"A charming night, Mr. Chillingly," said Mrs. Cameron.
+
+"An English summer night; nothing like it in such parts of the world
+as I have visited. But, alas! of English summer nights there are but
+few."
+
+"You have travelled much abroad?"
+
+"Much, no, a little; chiefly on foot."
+
+Lily hitherto had not said a word, and had been walking with downcast
+head. Now she looked up and said, in the mildest and most
+conciliatory of human voices,--
+
+"You have been abroad;" then, with an acquiescence in the manners of
+the world which to him she had never yet manifested, she added his
+name, "Mr. Chillingly," and went on, more familiarly. "What a breadth
+of meaning the word 'abroad' conveys! Away, afar from one's self,
+from one's everyday life. How I envy you! you have been abroad: so
+has Lion" (here drawing herself up), "I mean my guardian, Mr.
+Melville."
+
+"Certainly, I have been abroad, but afar from myself--never. It is an
+old saying,--all old sayings are true; most new sayings are false,--a
+man carries his native soil at the sole of his foot."
+
+Here the path somewhat narrowed. Mrs. Cameron went on first, Kenelm
+and Lily behind; she, of course, on the dry path, he on the dewy
+grass.
+
+She stopped him. "You are walking in the wet, and with those thin
+shoes." Lily moved instinctively away from the dry path.
+
+Homely though that speech of Lily's be, and absurd as said by a
+fragile girl to a gladiator like Kenelm, it lit up a whole world of
+womanhood: it showed all that undiscoverable land which was hidden to
+the learned Mr. Emlyn, all that land which an uncomprehended girl
+seizes and reigns over when she becomes wife and mother.
+
+At that homely speech, and that impulsive movement, Kenelm halted, in
+a sort of dreaming maze. He turned timidly, "Can you forgive me for
+my rude words? I presumed to find fault with you."
+
+"And so justly. I have been thinking over all you said, and I feel
+you were so right; only I still do not quite understand what you meant
+by the quality for mortals which the fairy did not give to her
+changeling."
+
+"If I did not dare say it before, I should still less dare to say it
+now."
+
+"Do." There was no longer the stamp of the foot, no longer the flash
+from her eyes, no longer the wilfulness which said, "I insist;"--"
+Do;" soothingly, sweetly, imploringly.
+
+Thus pushed to it, Kenelm plucked up courage, and not trusting himself
+to look at Lily, answered brusquely,--
+
+"The quality desirable for men, but more essential to women in
+proportion as they are fairy-like, though the tritest thing possible,
+is good temper."
+
+Lily made a sudden bound from his side, and joined her aunt, walking
+through the wet grass.
+
+When they reached the garden-gate, Kenelm advanced and opened it.
+Lily passed him by haughtily; they gained the cottage-door.
+
+"I don't ask you in at this hour," said Mrs. Cameron. "It would be
+but a false compliment."
+
+Kenelm bowed and retreated. Lily left her aunt's side, and came
+towards him, extending her hand.
+
+"I shall consider your words, Mr. Chillingly," she said, with a
+strangely majestic air. "At present I think you are not right. I am
+not ill-tempered; but--" here she paused, and then added with a
+loftiness of mien which, had she not been so exquisitely pretty, would
+have been rudeness--"in any case I forgive you."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THERE were a good many pretty villas in the outskirts of Moleswich,
+and the owners of them were generally well off, and yet there was
+little of what is called visiting society; owing perhaps to the fact
+that there not being among these proprietors any persons belonging to
+what is commonly called "the aristocratic class," there was a vast
+deal of aristocratic pretension. The family of Mr. A-----, who had
+enriched himself as a stock-jobber, turned up its nose at the family
+of Mr. B-----, who had enriched himself still more as a linen-draper,
+while the family of Mr. B----- showed a very cold shoulder to the
+family of Mr. C-----, who had become richer than either of them as a
+pawnbroker, and whose wife wore diamonds, but dropped her h's.
+England would be a community so aristocratic that there would be no
+living in it, if one could exterminate what is now called
+"aristocracy." The Braefields were the only persons who really drew
+together the antagonistic atoms of the Moleswich society, partly
+because they were acknowledged to be the first persons there, in right
+not only of old settlement (the Braefields had held Braefieldville for
+four generations), but of the wealth derived from those departments of
+commercial enterprise which are recognized as the highest, and of an
+establishment considered to be the most elegant in the neighbourhood;
+principally because Elsie, while exceedingly genial and cheerful in
+temper, had a certain power of will (as her runaway folly had
+manifested), and when she got people together compelled them to be
+civil to each other. She had commenced this gracious career by
+inaugurating children's parties, and when the children became friends
+the parents necessarily grew closer together. Still her task had only
+recently begun, and its effects were not in full operation. Thus,
+though it became known at Moleswich that a young gentleman, the heir
+to a baronetcy and a high estate, was sojourning at Cromwell Lodge, no
+overtures were made to him on the part of the A's, B's, and C's. The
+vicar, who called on Kenelm the day after the dinner at
+Braefieldville, explained to him the social conditions of the place.
+"You understand," said he, "that it will be from no want of courtesy
+on the part of my neighbours if they do not offer you any relief from
+the pleasures of solitude. It will be simply because they are shy,
+not because they are uncivil. And, it is this consideration that
+makes me, at the risk of seeming too forward, entreat you to look into
+the vicarage any morning or evening on which you feel tired of your
+own company; suppose you drink tea with us this evening,--you will
+find a young lady whose heart you have already won."
+
+"Whose heart I have won!" faltered Kenelm, and the warm blood rushed
+to his cheek.
+
+"But," continued the vicar, smiling, "she has no matrimonial designs
+on you at present. She is only twelve years old,--my little girl
+Clemmy."
+
+"Clemmy!--she is your daughter? I did not know that. I very
+gratefully accept your invitation."
+
+"I must not keep you longer from your amusement. The sky is just
+clouded enough for sport. What fly do you use?"
+
+"To say truth, I doubt if the stream has much to tempt me in the way
+of trout, and I prefer rambling about the lanes and by-paths to
+
+
+ "'The noiseless angler's solitary stand.'
+
+"I am an indefatigable walker, and the home scenery round the place has
+many charms for me. Besides," added Kenelm, feeling conscious that he
+ought to find some more plausible excuse than the charms of home
+scenery for locating himself long in Cromwell Lodge, "besides, I
+intend to devote myself a good deal to reading. I have been very idle
+of late, and the solitude of this place must be favourable to study."
+
+"You are not intended, I presume, for any of the learned professions?"
+
+"The learned professions," replied Kenelm, "is an invidious form of
+speech that we are doing our best to eradicate from the language. All
+professions now-a-days are to have much about the same amount of
+learning. The learning of the military profession is to be levelled
+upwards, the learning of the scholastic to be levelled downwards.
+Cabinet ministers sneer at the uses of Greek and Latin. And even such
+masculine studies as Law and Medicine are to be adapted to the
+measurements of taste and propriety in colleges for young ladies. No,
+I am not intended for any profession; but still an ignorant man like
+myself may not be the worse for a little book-reading now and then."
+
+"You seem to be badly provided with books here," said the vicar,
+glancing round the room, in which, on a table in the corner, lay
+half-a-dozen old-looking volumes, evidently belonging not to the
+lodger but to the landlord. "But, as I before said, my library is at
+your service. What branch of reading do you prefer?"
+
+Kenelm was, and looked, puzzled. But after a pause he answered:
+
+"The more remote it be from the present day, the better for me. You
+said your collection was rich in mediaeval literature. But the Middle
+Ages are so copied by the modern Goths, that I might as well read
+translations of Chaucer or take lodgings in Wardour Street. If you
+have any books about the manners and habits of those who, according to
+the newest idea in science, were our semi-human progenitors in the
+transition state between a marine animal and a gorilla, I should be
+very much edified by the loan."
+
+"Alas," said Mr. Emlyn, laughing, "no such books have been left to
+us."
+
+"No such books? You must be mistaken. There must be plenty of them
+somewhere. I grant all the wonderful powers of invention bestowed on
+the creators of poetic romance; still not the sovereign masters in
+that realm of literature--not Scott, not Cervantes, not Goethe, not
+even Shakspeare--could have presumed to rebuild the past without such
+materials as they found in the books that record it. And though I, no
+less cheerfully, grant that we have now living among us a creator of
+poetic romance immeasurably more inventive than they,--appealing to
+our credulity in portents the most monstrous, with a charm of style
+the most conversationally familiar,--still I cannot conceive that even
+that unrivalled romance-writer can so bewitch our understandings as to
+make us believe that, if Miss Mordaunt's cat dislikes to wet her feet,
+it is probably because in the prehistoric age her ancestors lived in
+the dry country of Egypt; or that when some lofty orator, a Pitt or a
+Gladstone, rebuts with a polished smile which reveals his canine teeth
+the rude assault of an opponent, he betrays his descent from a
+'semi-human progenitor' who was accustomed to snap at his enemy.
+Surely, surely there must be some books still extant written by
+philosophers before the birth of Adam, in which there is authority,
+even though but in mythic fable, for such poetic inventions. Surely,
+surely some early chroniclers must depose that they saw, saw with
+their own eyes, the great gorillas who scratched off their hairy
+coverings to please the eyes of the young ladies of their species, and
+that they noted the gradual metamorphosis of one animal into another.
+For, if you tell me that this illustrious romance-writer is but a
+cautious man of science, and that we must accept his inventions
+according to the sober laws of evidence and fact, there is not the
+most incredible ghost story which does not better satisfy the common
+sense of a sceptic. However, if you have no such books, lend me the
+most unphilosophical you possess,--on magic, for instance,--the
+philosopher's stone"--
+
+"I have some of them," said the vicar, laughing; "you shall choose for
+yourself."
+
+"If you are going homeward, let me accompany you part of the way: I
+don't yet know where the church and the vicarage are, and I ought to
+know before I come in the evening."
+
+Kenelm and the vicar walked side by side, very sociably, across the
+bridge and on the side of the rivulet on which stood Mrs. Cameron's
+cottage. As they skirted the garden pale at the rear of the cottage,
+Kenelm suddenly stopped in the middle of some sentence which had
+interested Mr. Emlyn, and as suddenly arrested his steps on the turf
+that bordered the lane. A little before him stood an old peasant
+woman, with whom Lily, on the opposite side of the garden pale, was
+conversing. Mr. Emlyn did not at first see what Kenelm saw; turning
+round rather to gaze on his companion, surprised by his abrupt halt
+and silence. The girl put a small basket into the old woman's hand,
+who then dropped a low curtsy, and uttered low a "God bless you." Low
+though it was, Kenelm overheard it, and said abstractedly to Mr.
+Emlyn, "Is there a greater link between this life and the next than
+God's blessing on the young, breathed from the lips of the old?"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+"AND how is your good man, Mrs. Haley?" said the vicar, who had now
+reached the spot on which the old woman stood,--with Lily's fair face
+still bended down to her,--while Kenelm slowly followed him.
+
+"Thank you kindly, sir, he is better; out of his bed now. The young
+lady has done him a power of good--"
+
+"Hush!" said Lily, colouring. "Make haste home now; you must not keep
+him waiting for his dinner."
+
+The old woman again curtsied, and went off at a brisk pace.
+
+"Do you know, Mr. Chillingly," said Mr. Emlyn, "that Miss Mordaunt is
+the best doctor in the place? Though if she goes on making so many
+cures she will find the number of her patients rather burdensome."
+
+"It was only the other day," said Lily, "that you scolded me for the
+best cure I have yet made."
+
+"I?--Oh! I remember; you led that silly child Madge to believe that
+there was a fairy charm in the arrowroot you sent her. Own you
+deserved a scolding there."
+
+"No, I did not. I dressed the arrowroot, and am I not Fairy? I have
+just got such a pretty note from Clemmy, Mr. Emlyn, asking me to come
+up this evening and see her new magic lantern. Will you tell her to
+expect me? And, mind, no scolding."
+
+"And all magic?" said Mr. Emlyn; "be it so."
+
+Lily and Kenelm had not hitherto exchanged a word. She had replied
+with a grave inclination of her head to his silent bow. But now she
+turned to him shyly and said, "I suppose you have been fishing all the
+morning?"
+
+"No; the fishes hereabout are under the protection of a Fairy,--whom I
+dare not displease."
+
+Lily's face brightened, and she extended her hand to him over the
+palings. "Good-day; I hear aunty's voice: those dreadful French
+verbs!"
+
+She disappeared among the shrubs, amid which they heard the thrill of
+her fresh young voice singing to herself.
+
+"That child has a heart of gold," said Mr. Emlyn, as the two men
+walked on. "I did not exaggerate when I said she was the best doctor
+in the place. I believe the poor really do believe that she is a
+fairy. Of course we send from the vicarage to our ailing parishioners
+who require it, food and wine; but it never seems to do them the good
+that her little dishes made by her own tiny hands do; and I don't know
+if you noticed the basket that old woman took away,--Miss Lily taught
+Will Somers to make the prettiest little baskets; and she puts her
+jellies or other savouries into dainty porcelain gallipots nicely
+fitted into the baskets, which she trims with ribbons. It is the look
+of the thing that tempts the appetite of the invalids, and certainly
+the child may well be called Fairy at present; but I wish Mrs. Cameron
+would attend a little more strictly to her education. She can't be a
+fairy forever."
+
+Kenelm sighed, but made no answer.
+
+Mr. Emlyn then turned the conversation to erudite subjects, and so
+they came in sight of the town, when the vicar stopped and pointed
+towards the church, of which the spire rose a little to the left, with
+two aged yew-trees half shadowing the burial-ground, and in the rear a
+glimpse of the vicarage seen amid the shrubs of its garden ground.
+
+"You will know your way now," said the vicar; "excuse me if I quit
+you: I have a few visits to make; among others, to poor Haley, husband
+to the old woman you saw. I read to him a chapter in the Bible every
+day; yet still I fancy that he believes in fairy charms."
+
+"Better believe too much, than too little," said Kenelm; and he turned
+aside into the village and spent half-an-hour with Will, looking at
+the pretty baskets Lily had taught Will to make. Then, as he went
+slowly homeward, he turned aside into the churchyard.
+
+The church, built in the thirteenth century, was not large, but it
+probably sufficed for its congregation, since it betrayed no signs of
+modern addition; restoration or repair it needed not. The centuries
+had but mellowed the tints of its solid walls, as little injured by
+the huge ivy stems that shot forth their aspiring leaves to the very
+summit of the stately tower as by the slender roses which had been
+trained to climb up a foot or so of the massive buttresses. The site
+of the burial-ground was unusually picturesque: sheltered towards the
+north by a rising ground clothed with woods, sloping down at the south
+towards the glebe pasture-grounds through which ran the brooklet,
+sufficiently near for its brawling gurgle to be heard on a still day.
+Kenelm sat himself on an antique tomb, which was evidently
+appropriated to some one of higher than common rank in bygone days,
+but on which the sculpture was wholly obliterated.
+
+The stillness and solitude of the place had their charms for his
+meditative temperament; and he remained there long, forgetful of time,
+and scarcely hearing the boom of the clock that warned him of its
+lapse.
+
+When suddenly, a shadow--the shadow of a human form--fell on the grass
+on which his eyes dreamily rested. He looked up with a start, and
+beheld Lily standing before him mute and still. Her image was so
+present in his thoughts at the moment that he felt a thrill of awe, as
+if the thoughts had conjured up her apparition. She was the first to
+speak.
+
+"You here, too?" she said very softly, almost whisperingly. "Too!"
+echoed Kenelm, rising; "too! 'Tis no wonder that I, a stranger to the
+place, should find my steps attracted towards its most venerable
+building. Even the most careless traveller, halting at some remote
+abodes of the living, turns aside to gaze on the burial-ground of the
+dead. But my surprise is that you, Miss Mordaunt, should be attracted
+towards the same spot."
+
+"It is my favourite spot," said Lily, "and always has been. I have
+sat many an hour on that tombstone. It is strange to think that no
+one knows who sleeps beneath it. The 'Guide Book to Moleswich,'
+though it gives the history of the church from the reign in which it
+was first built, can only venture a guess that this tomb, the grandest
+and oldest in the burial-ground, is tenanted by some member of a
+family named Montfichet, that was once very powerful in the county,
+and has become extinct since the reign of Henry VI. But," added Lily,
+"there is not a letter of the name Montfichet left. I found out more
+than any one else has done; I learned black-letter on purpose; look
+here," and she pointed to a small spot in which the moss had been
+removed. "Do you see those figures? are they not XVIII? and look
+again, in what was once the line above the figures, ELE. It must have
+been an Eleanor, who died at the age of eighteen--"
+
+"I rather think it more probable that the figures refer to the date of
+the death, 1318 perhaps; and so far as I can decipher black-letter,
+which is more in my father's line than mine, I think it is AL, not EL,
+and that it seems as if there had been a letter between L and the
+second E, which is now effaced. The tomb itself is not likely to
+belong to any powerful family then resident at the place. Their
+monuments, according to usage, would have been within the
+church,--probably in their own mortuary chapel."
+
+"Don't try to destroy my fancy," said Lily, shaking her head; "you
+cannot succeed, I know her history too well. She was young, and some
+one loved her, and built over her the finest tomb he could afford; and
+see how long the epitaph must have been! how much it must have spoken
+in her praise and of his grief. And then he went his way, and the
+tomb was neglected, and her fate forgotten."
+
+"My dear Miss Mordaunt, this is indeed a wild romance to spin out of
+so slender a thread. But even if true, there is no reason to think
+that a life is forgotten, though a tomb be neglected."
+
+"Perhaps not," said Lily, thoughtfully. "But when I am dead, if I can
+look down, I think it would please me to see my grave not neglected by
+those who had loved me once."
+
+She moved from him as she said this, and went to a little mound that
+seemed not long since raised; there was a simple cross at the head and
+a narrow border of flowers round it. Lily knelt beside the flowers
+and pulled out a stray weed. Then she rose, and said to Kenelm, who
+had followed, and now stood beside her,--
+
+"She was the little grandchild of poor old Mrs. Hales. I could not
+cure her, though I tried hard: she was so fond of me, and died in my
+arms. No, let me not say 'died,'--surely there is no such thing as
+dying. 'Tis but a change of life,--
+
+
+ 'Less than the void between two waves of air,
+ The space between existence and a soul.'"
+
+
+"Whose lines are those?" asked Kenelm.
+
+"I don't know; I learnt them from Lion. Don't you believe them to be
+true?"
+
+"Yes. But the truth does not render the thought of quitting this
+scene of life for another more pleasing to most of us. See how soft
+and gentle and bright is all that living summer land beyond; let us
+find subject for talk from that, not from the graveyard on which we
+stand."
+
+"But is there not a summer land fairer than that we see now; and which
+we do see, as in a dream, best when we take subjects of talk from the
+graveyard?" Without waiting for a reply, Lily went on. "I planted
+these flowers: Mr. Emlyn was angry with me; he said it was 'Popish.'
+But he had not the heart to have them taken up; I come here very often
+to see to them. Do you think it wrong? Poor little Nell! she was so
+fond of flowers. And the Eleanor in the great tomb, she too perhaps
+knew some one who called her Nell; but there are no flowers round her
+tomb. Poor Eleanor!"
+
+She took the nosegay she wore on her bosom, and as she repassed the
+tomb laid it on the mouldering stone.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THEY quitted the burial-ground, taking their way to Grasmere. Kenelm
+walked by Lily's side; not a word passed between them till they came
+in sight of the cottage.
+
+Then Lily stopped abruptly, and lifting towards him her charming face,
+said,--
+
+"I told you I would think over what you said to me last night. I have
+done so, and feel I can thank you honestly. You were very kind: I
+never before thought that I had a bad temper; no one ever told me so.
+But I see now what you mean; sometimes I feel very quickly, and then I
+show it. But how did I show it to you, Mr. Chillingly?"
+
+"Did you not turn your back to me when I seated myself next you in
+Mrs. Braefield's garden, vouchsafing me no reply when I asked if I had
+offended?"
+
+Lily's face became bathed in blushes, and her voice faltered, as she
+answered,--
+
+"I was not offended; I was not in a bad temper then: it was worse than
+that."
+
+"Worse? what could it possibly be?"
+
+"I am afraid it was envy."
+
+"Envy of what? of whom?"
+
+"I don't know how to explain; after all, I fear aunty is right, and
+the fairy tales put very silly, very naughty thoughts into one's head.
+When Cinderella's sisters went to the king's ball, and Cinderella was
+left alone, did not she long to go too? Did not she envy her
+sisters?"
+
+"Ah! I understand now: Sir Charles spoke of the Court Ball."
+
+"And you were there talking with handsome ladies--and--oh! I was so
+foolish and felt sore."
+
+"You, who when we first met wondered how people who could live in the
+country preferred to live in towns, do then sometimes contradict
+yourself, and sigh for the great world that lies beyond these quiet
+water banks. You feel that you have youth and beauty, and wish to be
+admired!"
+
+"It is not that exactly," said Lily, with a perplexed look in her
+ingenuous countenance, "and in my better moments, when the 'bettermost
+self' comes forth, I know that I am not made for the great world you
+speak of. But you see--" Here she paused again, and as they had now
+entered the garden, dropped wearily on a bench beside the path.
+Kenelm seated himself there too, waiting for her to finish her broken
+sentence.
+
+"You see," she continued, looking down embarrassed, and describing
+vague circles on the gravel with her fairy-like foot, "that at home,
+ever since I can remember, they have treated me as if--well, as if I
+were--what shall I say? the child of one of your great ladies. Even
+Lion, who is so noble, so grand, seemed to think when I was a mere
+infant that I was a little queen: once when I told a fib he did not
+scold me; but I never saw him look so sad and so angry as when he
+said, 'Never again forget that you are a lady.' And, but I tire you--"
+
+"Tire me, indeed! go on."
+
+"No, I have said enough to explain why I have at times proud thoughts,
+and vain thoughts; and why, for instance, I said to myself, 'Perhaps
+my place of right is among those fine ladies whom he--' but it is all
+over now." She rose hastily with a pretty laugh, and bounded towards
+Mrs. Cameron, who was walking slowly along the lawn with a book in her
+hand.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+IT was a very merry party at the vicarage that evening. Lily had not
+been prepared to meet Kenelm there, and her face brightened
+wonderfully as at her entrance he turned from the book-shelves to
+which Mr. Emlyn was directing his attention. But instead of meeting
+his advance, she darted off to the lawn, where Clemmy and several
+other children greeted her with a joyous shout.
+
+"Not acquainted with Macleane's Juvenal?" said the reverend scholar;
+"you will be greatly pleased with it; here it is,--a posthumous work,
+edited by George Long. I can lend you Munro's Lucretius, '69. Aha!
+we have some scholars yet to pit against the Germans."
+
+"I am heartily glad to hear it," said Kenelm. "It will be a long time
+before they will ever wish to rival us in that game which Miss Clemmy
+is now forming on the lawn, and in which England has recently acquired
+a European reputation."
+
+"I don't take you. What game?"
+
+"Puss in the Corner. With your leave I will look out and see whether
+it be a winning game for puss--in the long-run." Kenelm joined the
+children, amidst whom Lily seemed not the least childlike. Resisting
+all overtures from Clemmy to join their play, he seated himself on a
+sloping bank at a little distance,--an idle looker-on. His eye
+followed Lily's nimble movements, his ear drank in the music of her
+joyous laugh. Could that be the same girl whom he had seen tending
+the flower-bed amid the gravestones? Mrs. Emlyn came across the lawn
+and joined him, seating herself also on the bank. Mrs. Emlyn was an
+exceedingly clever woman: nevertheless she was not formidable,--on the
+contrary, pleasing; and though the ladies in the neighbourhood said
+'she talked like a book,' the easy gentleness of her voice carried off
+that offence.
+
+"I suppose, Mr. Chillingly," said she, "I ought to apologize for my
+husband's invitation to what must seem to you so frivolous an
+entertainment as a child's party. But when Mr. Emlyn asked you to
+come to us this evening, he was not aware that Clemmy had also invited
+her young friends. He had looked forward to rational conversation
+with you on his own favourite studies."
+
+"It is not so long since I left school, but that I prefer a half
+holiday to lessons, even from a tutor so pleasant as Mr. Emlyn,--
+
+
+ "'Ah, happy years,--once more who would not be a boy!'"
+
+
+"Nay," said Mrs. Emlyn, with a grave smile. "Who that had started so
+fairly as Mr. Chillingly in the career of man would wish to go back
+and resume a place among boys?"
+
+"But, my dear Mrs. Emlyn, the line I quoted was wrung from the heart
+of a man who had already outstripped all rivals in the race-ground he
+had chosen, and who at that moment was in the very Maytime of youth
+and of fame. And if such a man at such an epoch in his career could
+sigh to 'be once more a boy,' it must have been when he was thinking
+of the boy's half holiday, and recoiling from the task work he was
+condemned to learn as man."
+
+"The line you quote is, I think, from 'Childe Harold,' and surely you
+would not apply to mankind in general the sentiment of a poet so
+peculiarly self-reflecting (if I may use that expression), and in whom
+sentiment is often so morbid."
+
+"You are right, Mrs. Emlyn," said Kenelm, ingenuously. "Still a boy's
+half holiday is a very happy thing; and among mankind in general there
+must be many who would be glad to have it back again,--Mr. Emlyn
+himself, I should think."
+
+"Mr. Emlyn has his half holiday now. Do you not see him standing just
+outside the window? Do you not hear him laughing? He is a child
+again in the mirth of his children. I hope you will stay some time in
+the neighbourhood; I am sure you and he will like each other. And it
+is such a rare delight to him to get a scholar like yourself to talk
+to."
+
+"Pardon me, I am not a scholar; a very noble title that, and not to be
+given to a lazy trifler on the surface of book-lore like myself."
+
+"You are too modest. My husband has a copy of your Cambridge prize
+verses, and says 'the Latinity of them is quite beautiful.' I quote
+his very words."
+
+"Latin verse-making is a mere knack, little more than a proof that one
+had an elegant scholar for one's tutor, as I certainly had. But it is
+by special grace that a real scholar can send forth another real
+scholar, and a Kennedy produce a Munro. But to return to the more
+interesting question of half holidays; I declare that Clemmy is
+leading off your husband in triumph. He is actually going to be Puss
+in the Corner."
+
+"When you know more of Charles,--I mean my husband,--you will discover
+that his whole life is more or less of a holiday. Perhaps because he
+is not what you accuse yourself of being: he is not lazy; he never
+wishes to be a boy once more; and taskwork itself is holiday to him.
+He enjoys shutting himself up in his study and reading; he enjoys a
+walk with the children; he enjoys visiting the poor; he enjoys his
+duties as a clergyman. And though I am not always contented for him,
+though I think he should have had those honours in his profession
+which have been lavished on men with less ability and less learning,
+yet he is never discontented himself. Shall I tell you his secret?"
+
+"Do."
+
+"He is a /Thanks-giving Man/. You, too, must have much to thank God
+for, Mr. Chillingly; and in thanksgiving to God does there not blend
+usefulness to man, and such sense of pastime in the usefulness as
+makes each day a holiday?"
+
+Kenelm looked up into the quiet face of this obscure pastor's wife
+with a startled expression in his own.
+
+"I see, ma'am," said he, "that you have devoted much thought to the
+study of the aesthetical philosophy as expounded by German thinkers,
+whom it is rather difficult to understand."
+
+"I, Mr. Chillingly! good gracious! No! What do you mean by your
+aesthetical philosophy?"
+
+"According to aesthetics, I believe man arrives at his highest state
+of moral excellence when labour and duty lose all the harshness of
+effort,--when they become the impulse and habit of life; when as the
+essential attributes of the beautiful, they are, like beauty, enjoyed
+as pleasure; and thus, as you expressed, each day becomes a holiday: a
+lovely doctrine, not perhaps so lofty as that of the Stoics, but more
+bewitching. Only, very few of us can practically merge our cares and
+our worries into so serene an atmosphere."
+
+"Some do so without knowing anything of aesthetics and with no
+pretence to be Stoics; but, then, they are Christians."
+
+"There are some such Christians, no doubt; but they are rarely to be
+met with. Take Christendom altogether, and it appears to comprise the
+most agitated population in the world; the population in which there
+is the greatest grumbling as to the quantity of labour to be done, the
+loudest complaints that duty instead of a pleasure is a very hard and
+disagreeable struggle, and in which holidays are fewest and the moral
+atmosphere least serene. Perhaps," added Kenelm, with a deeper shade
+of thought on his brow, "it is this perpetual consciousness of
+struggle; this difficulty in merging toil into ease, or stern duty
+into placid enjoyment; this refusal to ascend for one's self into the
+calm of an air aloof from the cloud which darkens, and the hail-storm
+which beats upon, the fellow-men we leave below,--that makes the
+troubled life of Christendom dearer to Heaven, and more conducive to
+Heaven's design in rendering earth the wrestling-ground and not the
+resting-place of man, than is that of the Brahmin, ever seeking to
+abstract himself from the Christian's conflicts of action and desire,
+and to carry into its extremest practice the aesthetic theory, of
+basking undisturbed in the contemplation of the most absolute beauty
+human thought can reflect from its idea of divine good!"
+
+Whatever Mrs. Emlyn might have said in reply was interrupted by the
+rush of the children towards her; they were tired of play, and eager
+for tea and the magic lantern.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE room is duly obscured and the white sheet attached to the wall;
+the children are seated, hushed, and awe-stricken. And Kenelm is
+placed next to Lily.
+
+The tritest things in our mortal experience are among the most
+mysterious. There is more mystery in the growth of a blade of grass
+than there is in the wizard's mirror or the feats of a spirit medium.
+Most of us have known the attraction that draws one human being to
+another, and makes it so exquisite a happiness to sit quiet and mute
+by another's side; which stills for the moment the busiest thoughts in
+our brain, the most turbulent desires in our heart, and renders us but
+conscious of a present ineffable bliss. Most of us have known that.
+But who has ever been satisfied with any metaphysical account of its
+why or wherefore? We can but say it is love, and love at that earlier
+section of its history which has not yet escaped from romance; but by
+what process that other person has become singled out of the whole
+universe to attain such special power over one is a problem that,
+though many have attempted to solve it, has never attained to
+solution. In the dim light of the room Kenelm could only distinguish
+the outlines of Lily's delicate face, but at each new surprise in the
+show, the face intuitively turned to his, and once, when the terrible
+image of a sheeted ghost, pursuing a guilty man, passed along the
+wall, she drew closer to him in her childish fright, and by an
+involuntary innocent movement laid her hand on his. He detained it
+tenderly, but, alas! it was withdrawn the next moment; the ghost was
+succeeded by a couple of dancing dogs. And Lily's ready laugh--partly
+at the dogs, partly at her own previous alarm--vexed Kenelm's ear. He
+wished there had been a succession of ghosts, each more appalling than
+the last.
+
+The entertainment was over, and after a slight refreshment of cakes
+and wine-and-water the party broke up; the children visitors went away
+attended by servant-maids who had come for them. Mrs. Cameron and
+Lily were to walk home on foot.
+
+"It is a lovely night, Mrs. Cameron," said Mr. Emlyn, "and I will
+attend you to your gate."
+
+"Permit me also," said Kenelm.
+
+"Ay," said the vicar, "it is your own way to Cromwell Lodge."
+
+The path led them through the churchyard as the nearest approach to
+the brook-side. The moonbeams shimmered through the yew-trees and
+rested on the old tomb; playing, as it were, round the flowers which
+Lily's hand had that day dropped upon its stone. She was walking
+beside Kenelm, the elder two a few paces in front.
+
+"How silly I was," said she, "to be so frightened at the false ghost!
+I don't think a real one would frighten me, at least if seen here, in
+this loving moonlight, and on God's ground!"
+
+"Ghosts, were they permitted to appear except in a magic lantern,
+could not harm the innocent. And I wonder why the idea of their
+apparition should always have been associated with such phantasies of
+horror, especially by sinless children, who have the least reason to
+dread them."
+
+"Oh, that is true," cried Lily; "but even when we are grown up there
+must be times in which we should so long to see a ghost, and feel what
+a comfort, what a joy it would be."
+
+"I understand you. If some one very dear to us had vanished from our
+life; if we felt the anguish of the separation so intensely as to
+efface the thought that life, as you said so well, 'never dies;' well,
+yes, then I can conceive that the mourner would yearn to have a
+glimpse of the vanished one, were it but to ask the sole and only
+question he could desire to put, 'Art thou happy? May I hope that we
+shall meet again, never to part,--never?'"
+
+Kenelm's voice trembled as he spoke, tears stood in his eyes. A
+melancholy--vague, unaccountable, overpowering--passed across his
+heart, as the shadow of some dark-winged bird passes over a quiet
+stream.
+
+"You have never yet felt this?" asked Lily doubtingly, in a soft
+voice, full of tender pity, stopping short and looking into his face.
+
+"I? No. I have never yet lost one whom I so loved and so yearned to
+see again. I was but thinking that such losses may befall us all ere
+we too vanish out of sight."
+
+"Lily!" called forth Mrs. Cameron, halting at the gate of the
+burial-ground.
+
+"Yes, auntie?"
+
+"Mr. Emlyn wants to know how far you have got in 'Numa Pompilius.'
+Come and answer for yourself."
+
+"Oh, those tiresome grown-up people!" whispered Lily, petulantly, to
+Kenelm. "I do like Mr. Emlyn; he is one of the very best of men. But
+still he is grown up, and his 'Numa Pompilius' is so stupid."
+
+"My first French lesson-book. No, it is not stupid. Read on. It has
+hints of the prettiest fairy tale I know, and of the fairy in especial
+who bewitched my fancies as a boy."
+
+By this time they had gained the gate of the burial-ground.
+
+"What fairy tale? what fairy?" asked Lily, speaking quickly.
+
+"She was a fairy, though in heathen language she is called a
+nymph,--Egeria. She was the link between men and gods to him she
+loved; she belongs to the race of gods. True, she, too, may vanish,
+but she can never die."
+
+"Well, Miss Lily," said the vicar, "and how far in the book I lent
+you,--'Numa Pompilius.'"
+
+"Ask me this day next week."
+
+"I will; but mind you are to translate as you go on. I must see the
+translation."
+
+"Very well. I will do my best," answered Lily meekly. Lily now
+walked by the vicar's side, and Kenelm by Mrs. Cameron's, till they
+reached Grasmere.
+
+"I will go on with you to the bridge, Mr. Chillingly," said the vicar,
+when the ladies had disappeared within their garden. "We had little
+time to look over my books, and, by the by, I hope you at least took
+the Juvenal."
+
+"No, Mr. Emlyn; who can quit your house with an inclination for
+satire? I must come some morning and select a volume from those works
+which give pleasant views of life and bequeath favourable impressions
+of mankind. Your wife, with whom I have had an interesting
+conversation, upon the principles of aesthetical philosophy--"
+
+"My wife! Charlotte! She knows nothing about aesthetical
+philosophy."
+
+"She calls it by another name, but she understands it well enough to
+illustrate the principles by example. She tells me that labour and
+duty are so taken up by you--
+
+
+ 'In den heitern Regionen
+ Wo die reinen Formen wohnen,'
+
+
+that they become joy and beauty,--is it so?"
+
+"I am sure that Charlotte never said anything half so poetical. But,
+in plain words, the days pass with me very happily. I should be
+ungrateful if I were not happy. Heaven has bestowed on me so many
+sources of love,--wife, children, books, and the calling which, when
+one quits one's own threshold, carries love along with it into the
+world beyond; a small world in itself,--only a parish,--but then my
+calling links it with infinity."
+
+"I see; it is from the sources of love that you draw the supplies for
+happiness."
+
+"Surely; without love one may be good, but one could scarcely be
+happy. No one can dream of a heaven except as the abode of love.
+What writer is it who says, 'How well the human heart was understood
+by him who first called God by the name of Father'?"
+
+"I do not remember, but it is beautifully said. You evidently do not
+subscribe to the arguments in Decimus Roach's 'Approach to the
+Angels.'"
+
+"Ah, Mr. Chillingly! your words teach me how lacerated a man's
+happiness may be if he does not keep the claws of vanity closely
+pared. I actually feel a keen pang when you speak to me of that
+eloquent panegyric on celibacy, ignorant that the only thing I ever
+published which I fancied was not without esteem by intellectual
+readers is a Reply to 'The Approach to the Angels,'--a youthful book,
+written in the first year of my marriage. But it obtained success: I
+have just revised the tenth edition of it."
+
+"That is the book I will select from your library. You will be
+pleased to hear that Mr. Roach, whom I saw at Oxford a few days ago,
+recants his opinions, and, at the age of fifty, is about to be
+married; he begs me to add, 'not for his own personal satisfaction.'"
+
+"Going to be married!--Decimus Roach! I thought my Reply would
+convince him at last."
+
+"I shall look to your Reply to remove some lingering doubts in my own
+mind."
+
+"Doubts in favour of celibacy?"
+
+"Well, if not for laymen, perhaps for a priesthood."
+
+"The most forcible part of my Reply is on that head: read it
+attentively. I think that, of all sections of mankind, the clergy are
+those to whom, not only for their own sakes, but for the sake of the
+community, marriage should be most commended. Why, sir," continued
+the vicar, warming up into oratorical enthusiasm, "are you not aware
+that there are no homes in England from which men who have served and
+adorned their country have issued forth in such prodigal numbers as
+those of the clergy of our Church? What other class can produce a
+list so crowded with eminent names as we can boast in the sons we have
+reared and sent forth into the world? How many statesmen, soldiers,
+sailors, lawyers, physicians, authors, men of science, have been the
+sons of us village pastors? Naturally: for with us they receive
+careful education; they acquire of necessity the simple tastes and
+disciplined habits which lead to industry and perseverance; and, for
+the most part, they carry with them throughout life a purer moral
+code, a more systematic reverence for things and thoughts religious,
+associated with their earliest images of affection and respect, than
+can be expected from the sons of laymen whose parents are wholly
+temporal and worldly. Sir, I maintain that this is a cogent argument,
+to be considered well by the nation, not only in favour of a married
+clergy,--for, on that score, a million of Roaches could not convert
+public opinion in this country,--but in favour of the Church, the
+Established Church, which has been so fertile a nursery of illustrious
+laymen; and I have often thought that one main and undetected cause of
+the lower tone of morality, public and private, of the greater
+corruption of manners, of the more prevalent scorn of religion which
+we see, for instance, in a country so civilized as France, is, that
+its clergy can train no sons to carry into the contests of earth the
+steadfast belief in accountability to Heaven."
+
+"I thank you with a full heart," said Kenelm. "I shall ponder well
+over all that you have so earnestly said. I am already disposed to
+give up all lingering crotchets as to a bachelor clergy; but, as a
+layman, I fear that I shall never attain to the purified philanthropy
+of Mr. Decimus Roach, and, if ever I do marry, it will be very much
+for my personal satisfaction."
+
+Mr. Emlyn laughed good-humouredly, and, as they had now reached the
+bridge, shook hands with Kenelm, and walked homewards, along the
+brook-side and through the burial-ground, with the alert step and the
+uplifted head of a man who has joy in life and admits of no fear in
+death.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+FOR the next two weeks or so Kenelm and Lily met not indeed so often
+as the reader might suppose, but still frequently; five times at Mrs.
+Braefield's, once again at the vicarage, and twice when Kenelm had
+called at Grasmere; and, being invited to stay to tea at one of those
+visits, he stayed the whole evening. Kenelm was more and more
+fascinated in proportion as he saw more and more of a creature so
+exquisitely strange to his experience. She was to him not only a
+poem, but a poem in the Sibylline Books; enigmatical, perplexing
+conjecture, and somehow or other mysteriously blending its interest
+with visions of the future.
+
+Lily was indeed an enchanting combination of opposites rarely blended
+into harmony. Her ignorance of much that girls know before they
+number half her years was so relieved by candid, innocent simplicity,
+so adorned by pretty fancies and sweet beliefs, and so contrasted and
+lit up by gleams of a knowledge that the young ladies we call well
+educated seldom exhibit,--knowledge derived from quick observation of
+external Nature, and impressionable susceptibility to its varying and
+subtle beauties. This knowledge had been perhaps first instilled, and
+subsequently nourished, by such poetry as she had not only learned by
+heart, but taken up as inseparable from the healthful circulation of
+her thoughts; not the poetry of our own day,--most young ladies know
+enough of that,--but selected fragments from the verse of old, most of
+them from poets now little read by the young of either sex, poets dear
+to spirits like Coleridge or Charles Lamb,--none of them, however, so
+dear to her as the solemn melodies of Milton. Much of such poetry she
+had never read in books: it had been taught her in childhood by her
+guardian the painter. And with all this imperfect, desultory culture,
+there was such dainty refinement in her every look and gesture, and
+such deep woman-tenderness of heart. Since Kenelm had commended "Numa
+Pompilius" to her study, she had taken very lovingly to that
+old-fashioned romance, and was fond of talking to him about Egeria as
+of a creature who had really existed.
+
+But what was the effect that he,--the first man of years correspondent
+to her own with whom she had ever familiarly conversed,--what was the
+effect that Kenelm Chillingly produced on the mind and the heart of
+Lily?
+
+This was, after all, the question that puzzled him the most,--not
+without reason: it might have puzzled the shrewdest bystander. The
+artless candour with which she manifested her liking to him was at
+variance with the ordinary character of maiden love; it seemed more
+the fondness of a child for a favourite brother. And it was this
+uncertainty that, in his own thoughts, justified Kenelm for lingering
+on, and believing that it was necessary to win, or at least to learn
+more of, her secret heart before he could venture to disclose his own.
+He did not flatter himself with the pleasing fear that he might be
+endangering her happiness; it was only his own that was risked. Then,
+in all those meetings, all those conversations to themselves, there
+had passed none of the words which commit our destiny to the will of
+another. If in the man's eyes love would force its way, Lily's frank,
+innocent gaze chilled it back again to its inward cell. Joyously as
+she would spring forward to meet him, there was no tell-tale blush on
+her cheek, no self-betraying tremor in her clear, sweet-toned voice.
+No; there had not yet been a moment when he could say to himself, "She
+loves me." Often he said to himself, "She knows not yet what love
+is."
+
+In the intervals of time not passed in Lily's society, Kenelm would
+take long rambles with Mr. Emlyn, or saunter into Mrs. Braefield's
+drawing-room. For the former he conceived a more cordial sentiment of
+friendship than he entertained for any man of his own age,--a
+friendship that admitted the noble elements of admiration and respect.
+
+Charles Emlyn was one of those characters in which the colours appear
+pale unless the light be brought very close to them, and then each
+tint seems to change into a warmer and richer one. The manner which,
+at first, you would call merely gentle, becomes unaffectedly genial;
+the mind you at first might term inert, though well-informed, you now
+acknowledge to be full of disciplined vigour. Emlyn was not, however,
+without his little amiable foibles; and it was, perhaps, these that
+made him lovable. He was a great believer in human goodness, and very
+easily imposed upon by cunning appeals to "his well-known
+benevolence." He was disposed to overrate the excellence of all that
+he once took to his heart. He thought he had the best wife in the
+world, the best children, the best servants, the best beehive, the
+best pony, and the best house-dog. His parish was the most virtuous,
+his church the most picturesque, his vicarage the prettiest,
+certainly, in the whole shire,--perhaps, in the whole kingdom.
+Probably it was this philosophy of optimism which contributed to lift
+him into the serene realm of aesthetic joy.
+
+He was not without his dislikes as well as likings. Though a liberal
+Churchman towards Protestant dissenters, he cherished the /odium
+theologicum/ for all that savoured of Popery. Perhaps there was
+another cause for this besides the purely theological one. Early in
+life a young sister of his had been, to use his phrase, "secretly
+entrapped" into conversion to the Roman Catholic faith, and had since
+entered a convent. His affections had been deeply wounded by this
+loss to the range of them. Mr. Emlyn had also his little infirmities
+of self-esteem rather than of vanity. Though he had seen very little
+of any world beyond that of his parish, he piqued himself on his
+knowledge of human nature and of practical affairs in general.
+Certainly no man had read more about them, especially in the books of
+the ancient classics. Perhaps it was owing to this that he so little
+understood Lily,--a character to which the ancient classics afforded
+no counterpart nor clue; and perhaps it was this also that made Lily
+think him "so terribly grown up." Thus, despite his mild good-nature,
+she did not get on very well with him.
+
+The society of this amiable scholar pleased Kenelm the more, because
+the scholar evidently had not the remotest idea that Kenelm's sojourn
+at Cromwell Lodge was influenced by the vicinity to Grasmere. Mr.
+Emlyn was sure that he knew human nature, and practical affairs in
+general, too well to suppose that the heir to a rich baronet could
+dream of taking for wife a girl without fortune or rank, the orphan
+ward of a low-born artist only just struggling into reputation; or,
+indeed, that a Cambridge prizeman, who had evidently read much on
+grave and dry subjects, and who had no less evidently seen a great
+deal of polished society, could find any other attraction in a very
+imperfectly-educated girl, who tamed butterflies and knew no more than
+they did of fashionable life, than Mr. Emlyn himself felt in the
+presence of a pretty wayward innocent child, the companion and friend
+of his Clemmy.
+
+Mrs. Braefield was more discerning; but she had a good deal of tact,
+and did not as yet scare Kenelm away from her house by letting him see
+how much she had discerned. She would not even tell her husband, who,
+absent from the place on most mornings, was too absorbed in the cares
+of his own business to interest himself much in the affairs of others.
+
+Now Elsie, being still of a romantic turn of mind, had taken it into
+her head that Lily Mordaunt, if not actually the princess to be found
+in poetic dramas whose rank was for a while kept concealed, was yet
+one of the higher-born daughters of the ancient race whose name she
+bore, and in that respect no derogatory alliance for Kenelm
+Chillingly. A conclusion she had arrived at from no better evidence
+than the well-bred appearance and manners of the aunt, and the
+exquisite delicacy of the niece's form and features, with the
+undefinable air of distinction which accompanied even her most
+careless and sportive moments. But Mrs. Braefield also had the wit to
+discover that, under the infantine ways and phantasies of this almost
+self-taught girl, there lay, as yet undeveloped, the elements of a
+beautiful womanhood. So that altogether, from the very day she first
+re-encountered Kenelm, Elsie's thought had been that Lily was the wife
+to suit him. Once conceiving that idea, her natural strength of will
+made her resolve on giving all facilities to carry it out silently and
+unobtrusively, and therefore skilfully.
+
+"I am so glad to think," she said one day, when Kenelm had joined her
+walk through the pleasant shrubberies in her garden ground, "that you
+have made such friends with Mr. Emlyn. Though all hereabouts like him
+so much for his goodness, there are few who can appreciate his
+learning. To you it must be a surprise as well as pleasure to find,
+in this quiet humdrum place, a companion so clever and well-informed:
+it compensates for your disappointment in discovering that our brook
+yields such bad sport."
+
+"Don't disparage the brook; it yields the pleasantest banks on which
+to lie down under old pollard oaks at noon, or over which to saunter
+at morn and eve. Where those charms are absent even a salmon could
+not please. Yes; I rejoice to have made friends with Mr. Emlyn. I
+have learned a great deal from him, and am often asking myself whether
+I shall ever make peace with my conscience by putting what I have
+learned into practice."
+
+"May I ask what special branch of learning is that?"
+
+"I scarcely know how to define it. Suppose we call it
+'Worth-whileism.' Among the New Ideas which I was recommended to study
+as those that must govern my generation, the Not-worth-while Idea
+holds a very high rank; and being myself naturally of calm and equable
+constitution, that new idea made the basis of my philosophical system.
+But since I have become intimate with Charles Emlyn I think there is a
+great deal to be said in favour of Worth-whileism, old idea though it
+be. I see a man who, with very commonplace materials for interest or
+amusement at his command, continues to be always interested or
+generally amused; I ask myself why and how? And it seems to me as if
+the cause started from fixed beliefs which settle his relations with
+God and man, and that settlement he will not allow any speculations to
+disturb. Be those beliefs questionable or not by others, at least
+they are such as cannot displease a Deity, and cannot fail to be
+kindly and useful to fellow-mortals. Then he plants these beliefs on
+the soil of a happy and genial home, which tends to confirm and
+strengthen and call them into daily practice; and when he goes forth
+from home, even to the farthest verge of the circle that surrounds it,
+he carries with him the home influences of kindliness and use.
+Possibly my line of life may be drawn to the verge of a wider circle
+than his; but so much the better for interest and amusement, if it can
+be drawn from the same centre; namely, fixed beliefs daily warmed into
+vital action in the sunshine of a congenial home."
+
+Mrs. Braefield listened to this speech with pleased attention, and as
+it came to its close, the name of Lily trembled on her tongue, for she
+divined that when he spoke of home Lily was in his thoughts; but she
+checked the impulse, and replied by a generalized platitude.
+
+"Certainly the first thing in life is to secure a happy and congenial
+home. It must be a terrible trial for the best of us if we marry
+without love."
+
+"Terrible, indeed, if the one loves and the other does not."
+
+"That can scarcely be your case, Mr. Chillingly, for I am sure you
+could not marry where you did not love; and do not think I flatter you
+when I say that a man far less gifted than you can scarcely fail to be
+loved by the woman he wooes and wins."
+
+Kenelm, in this respect one of the modestest of human beings, shook
+his head doubtingly, and was about to reply in self-disparagement,
+when, lifting his eyes and looking round, he halted mute and still as
+if rooted to the spot. They had entered the trellised circle through
+the roses of which he had first caught sight of the young face that
+had haunted him ever since.
+
+"Ah!" he said abruptly; "I cannot stay longer here, dreaming away the
+work-day hours in a fairy ring. I am going to town to-day by the next
+train."
+
+"Yoa are coming back?"
+
+"Of course,--this evening. I left no address at my lodgings in
+London. There must be a large accumulation of letters; some, no
+doubt, from my father and mother. I am only going for them. Good-by.
+How kindly you have listened to me!"
+
+"Shall we fix a day next week for seeing the remains of the old Roman
+villa? I will ask Mrs. Cameron and her niece to be of the party."
+
+"Any day you please," said Kenelm joyfully.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+KENELM did indeed find a huge pile of letters and notes on reaching
+his forsaken apartment in Mayfair; many of them merely invitations for
+days long past, none of them of interest except two from Sir Peter,
+three from his mother, and one from Tom Bowles.
+
+Sir Peter's were short. In the first he gently scolded Kenelm for
+going away without communicating any address; and stated the
+acquaintance he had formed with Gordon, the favourable impression that
+young gentleman had made on him, the transfer of the L20,000 and the
+invitation given to Gordon, the Traverses, and Lady Glenalvon. The
+second, dated much later, noted the arrival of his invited guests,
+dwelt with warmth unusual to Sir Peter on the attractions of Cecilia,
+and took occasion to refer, not the less emphatically because as it
+were incidentally, to the sacred promise which Kenelm had given him
+never to propose to a young lady until the case had been submitted to
+the examination and received the consent of Sir Peter. "Come to
+Exmundham, and if I do not give my consent to propose to Cecilia
+Travers hold me a tyrant and rebel."
+
+Lady Chillingly's letters were much longer. They dwelt more
+complainingly on his persistence in eccentric habits; so exceedingly
+unlike other people, quitting London at the very height of the season,
+going without even a servant nobody knew where: she did not wish to
+wound his feelings; but still those were not the ways natural to a
+young gentleman of station. If he had no respect for himself, he
+ought to have some consideration for his parents, especially his poor
+mother. She then proceeded to comment on the elegant manners of
+Leopold Travers, and the good sense and pleasant conversation of
+Chillingly Gordon, a young man of whom any mother might be proud.
+From that subject she diverged to mildly querulous references to
+family matters. Parson John had expressed himself very rudely to Mr.
+Chillingly Gordon upon some book by a foreigner,--Comte or Count, or
+some such name,--on which, so far as she could pretend to judge, Mr.
+Gordon had uttered some very benevolent sentiments about humanity,
+which, in the most insolent manner, Parson John had denounced as an
+attack on religion. But really Parson John was too High Church for
+her. Having thus disposed of Parson John, she indulged some ladylike
+wailings on the singular costume of the three Miss Chillinglys. They
+had been asked by Sir Peter, unknown to her--so like him--to meet
+their guests; to meet Lady Glenalvon and Miss Travers, whose dress was
+so perfect (here she described their dress); and they came in
+pea-green with pelerines of mock blonde, and Miss Sally with corkscrew
+ringlets and a wreath of jessamine, "which no girl after eighteen
+would venture to wear."
+
+"But, my dear," added her ladyship, "your poor father's family are
+certainly great oddities. I have more to put up with than any one
+knows. I do my best to carry it off. I know my duties, and will do
+them."
+
+Family grievances thus duly recorded and lamented, Lady Chillingly
+returned to her guests.
+
+Evidently unconscious of her husband's designs on Cecilia, she
+dismissed her briefly: "A very handsome young lady, though rather too
+blonde for her taste, and certainly with an air /distingue/." Lastly,
+she enlarged on the extreme pleasure she felt on meeting again the
+friend of her youth, Lady Glenalvon.
+
+"Not at all spoilt by the education of the great world, which, alas!
+obedient to the duties of wife and mother, however little my
+sacrifices are appreciated, I have long since relinquished. Lady
+Glenalvon suggests turning that hideous old moat into a fernery,--a
+great improvement. Of course your poor father makes objections."
+
+Tom's letter was written on black-edged paper, and ran thus:--
+
+
+DEAR SIR,--Since I had the honour to see you in London I have had a
+sad loss: my poor uncle is no more. He died very suddenly after a
+hearty supper. One doctor says it was apoplexy, another valvular
+disease of the heart. He has left me his heir, after providing for
+his sister: no one had an idea that he had saved so much money. I am
+quite a rich man now. And I shall leave the veterinary business,
+which of late--since I took to reading, as you kindly advised--is not
+much to my liking The principal corn-merchant here has offered to
+take me into partnership; and, from what I can see, it will be a very
+good thing and a great rise in life. But, sir, I can't settle to it
+at present; I can't settle, as I would wish to anything. I know you
+will not laugh at me when I say I have a strange longing to travel for
+a while. I have been reading books of travels, and they get into my
+head more than any other books. But I don't think I could leave the
+country with a contented heart till I have had just another look at
+you know whom,--just to see her, and know she is happy. I am sure I
+could shake hands with Will and kiss her little one without a wrong
+thought. What do you say to that, dear sir? You promised to write to
+me about her. But I have not heard from you. Susey, the little girl
+with the flower-ball, has had a loss too: the poor old man she lived
+with died within a few days of my dear uncle's decease. Mother moved
+here, as I think you know, when the forge at Graveleigh was sold; and
+she is going to take Susey to live with her. She is quite fond of
+Susey. Pray let me hear from you soon; and do, dear sir, give me your
+advice about travelling--and about Her. You see I should like Her to
+think of me more kindly when I am in distant parts.
+
+ I remain, dear sir,
+
+ Your grateful servant,
+
+ T. BOWLES.
+
+P.S.--Miss Travers has sent me Will's last remittance. There is very
+little owed me now; so they must be thriving. I hope she is not
+overworked.
+
+
+On returning by the train that evening, Kenelm went to the house of
+Will Somers. The shop was already closed, but he was admitted by a
+trusty servant-maid to the parlour, where he found them all at supper,
+except indeed the baby, who had long since retired to the cradle, and
+the cradle had been removed upstairs. Will and Jessie were very proud
+when Kenelm invited himself to share their repast, which, though
+simple, was by no means a bad one. When the meal was over and the
+supper things removed, Kenelm drew his chair near to the glass door
+which led into a little garden very neatly kept--for it was Will's
+pride to attend to it before he sat down to his more professional
+work. The door was open, and admitted the coolness of the starlit air
+and the fragrance of the sleeping flowers.
+
+"You have a pleasant home here, Mrs. Somers."
+
+"We have, indeed, and know how to bless him we owe it to."
+
+"I am rejoiced to think that. How often when God designs a special
+kindness to us He puts the kindness into the heart of a
+fellow-man,--perhaps the last fellow-man we should have thought of;
+but in blessing him we thank God who inspired him. Now, my dear
+friends, I know that you all three suspect me of being the agent whom
+God chose for His benefits. You fancy that it was from me came the
+loan which enabled you to leave Graveleigh and settle here. You are
+mistaken,--you look incredulous."
+
+"It could not be the Squire," exclaimed Jessie. "Miss Travers assured
+me that it was neither he nor herself. Oh, it must be you, sir. I
+beg pardon, but who else could it be?"
+
+"Your husband shall guess. Suppose, Will, that you had behaved ill to
+some one who was nevertheless dear to you, and on thinking over it
+afterwards felt very sorry and much ashamed of yourself, and suppose
+that later you had the opportunity and the power to render a service
+to that person, do you think you would do it?"
+
+"I should be a bad man if I did not."
+
+"Bravo! And supposing that when the person you thus served came to
+know it was you who rendered the service, he did not feel thankful, he
+did not think it handsome of you, thus to repair any little harm he
+might have done you before, but became churlish and sore and
+cross-grained, and with a wretched false pride said that because he
+had offended you once he resented your taking the liberty of
+befriending him now, would you not think that person an ungrateful
+fellow; ungrateful not only to you his fellow-man,--that is of less
+moment,--but ungrateful to the God who put it into your heart to be
+His human agent in the benefit received?"
+
+"Well, sir, yes, certainly," said Will, with all the superior
+refinement of his intellect to that of Jessie, unaware of what Kenelm
+was driving at; while Jessie, pressing her hands tightly together,
+turned pale, and with a frightened hurried glance towards Will's face,
+answered, impulsively,--
+
+"Oh, Mr. Chillingly, I hope you are not thinking, not speaking, of Mr.
+Bowles?"
+
+"Whom else should I think or speak of?"
+
+Will rose nervously from his chair, all his features writhing.
+
+"Sir, sir, this is a bitter blow,--very bitter, very."
+
+Jessie rushed to Will, flung her arms round him and sobbed. Kenelm
+turned quietly to old Mrs. Somers, who had suspended the work on which
+since supper she had been employed, knitting socks for the baby,--
+
+"My dear Mrs. Somers, what is the good of being a grandmother and
+knitting socks for baby grandchildren, if you cannot assure those
+silly children of yours that they are too happy in each other to
+harbour any resentment against a man who would have parted them, and
+now repents?"
+
+Somewhat to Kenelm's admiration, I dare not say surprise, old Mrs.
+Somers, thus appealed to, rose from her seat, and, with a dignity of
+thought or of feeling no one could have anticipated from the quiet
+peasant woman, approached the wedded pair, lifted Jessie's face with
+one hand, laid the other on Will's head, and said, "If you don't long
+to see Mr. Bowles again and say 'The Lord bless you, sir!' you don't
+deserve the Lord's blessing upon you." Therewith she went back to her
+seat, and resumed her knitting.
+
+"Thank Heaven, we have paid back the best part of the loan," said
+Will, in very agitated tones, "and I think, with a little pinching,
+Jessie, and with selling off some of the stock, we might pay the rest;
+and then,"--and then he turned to Kenelm,--"and then, sir, we will"
+(here a gulp) "thank Mr. Bowles."
+
+"This don't satisfy me at all, Will," answered Kenelm; "and since I
+helped to bring you two together, I claim the right to say I would
+never have done so could I have guessed you could have trusted your
+wife so little as to allow a remembrance of Mr. Bowles to be a thought
+of pain. You did not feel humiliated when you imagined that it was to
+me you owed some moneys which you have been honestly paying off.
+Well, then, I will lend you whatever trifle remains to discharge your
+whole debts to Mr. Bowles, so that you may sooner be able to say to
+him, 'Thank you.' But between you and me, Will, I think you will be a
+finer fellow and a manlier fellow if you decline to borrow that trifle
+of me; if you feel you would rather say 'Thank you' to Mr. Bowles,
+without the silly notion that when you have paid him his money you owe
+him nothing for his kindness."
+
+Will looked away irresolutely. Kenelm went on: "I have received a
+letter from Mr. Bowles to-day. He has come into a fortune, and thinks
+of going abroad for a time; but before he goes, he says he should like
+to shake hands with Will, and be assured by Jessie that all his old
+rudeness is forgiven. He had no notion that I should blab about the
+loan: he wished that to remain always a secret. But between friends
+there need be no secrets. What say you, Will? As head of this
+household, shall Mr. Bowles be welcomed here as a friend or not?"
+
+"Kindly welcome," said old Mrs. Somers, looking up from the socks.
+
+"Sir," said Will, with sudden energy, "look here; you have never been
+in love, I dare say. If you had, you would not be so hard on me. Mr.
+Bowles was in love with my wife there. Mr. Bowles is a very fine man,
+and I am a cripple."
+
+"Oh, Will! Will!" cried Jessie.
+
+"But I trust my wife with my whole heart and soul; and, now that the
+first pang is over, Mr. Bowles shall be, as mother says, kindly
+welcome,--heartily welcome."
+
+"Shake hands. Now you speak like a man, Will. I hope to bring Bowles
+here to supper before many days are over."
+
+And that night Kenelm wrote to Mr. Bowles:
+
+
+MY DEAR TOM,--Come and spend a few days with me at Cromwell Lodge,
+Moleswich. Mr. and Mrs. Somers wish much to see and to thank you. I
+could not remain forever degraded in order to gratify your whim. They
+would have it that I bought their shop, etc., and I was forced in
+self-defence to say who it was. More on this and on travels when you
+come.
+
+ Your true friend,
+
+ K. C.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+MRS. CAMERON was seated alone in her pretty drawing-room, with a book
+lying open, but unheeded, on her lap. She was looking away from its
+pages, seemingly into the garden without, but rather into empty space.
+
+To a very acute and practised observer, there was in her countenance
+an expression which baffled the common eye.
+
+To the common eye it was simply vacant; the expression of a quiet,
+humdrum woman, who might have been thinking of some quiet humdrum
+household detail,--found that too much for her, and was now not
+thinking at all.
+
+But to the true observer, there were in that face indications of a
+troubled past, still haunted with ghosts never to be laid at
+rest,--indications, too, of a character in herself that had undergone
+some revolutionary change; it had not always been the character of a
+woman quiet and humdrum. The delicate outlines of the lip and nostril
+evinced sensibility, and the deep and downward curve of it bespoke
+habitual sadness. The softness of the look into space did not tell of
+a vacant mind, but rather of a mind subdued and over-burdened by the
+weight of a secret sorrow. There was also about her whole presence,
+in the very quiet which made her prevalent external characteristic,
+the evidence of manners formed in a high-bred society,--the society in
+which quiet is connected with dignity and grace. The poor understood
+this better than her rich acquaintances at Moleswich, when they said,
+"Mrs. Cameron was every inch a lady." To judge by her features she
+must once have been pretty, not a showy prettiness, but decidedly
+pretty. Now, as the features were small, all prettiness had faded
+away in cold gray colourings, and a sort of tamed and slumbering
+timidity of aspect. She was not only not demonstrative, but must have
+imposed on herself as a duty the suppression of demonstration. Who
+could look at the formation of those lips, and not see that they
+belonged to the nervous, quick, demonstrative temperament? And yet,
+observing her again more closely, that suppression of the
+constitutional tendency to candid betrayal of emotion would the more
+enlist our curiosity or interest; because, if physiognomy and
+phrenology have any truth in them, there was little strength in her
+character. In the womanly yieldingness of the short curved upper lip,
+the pleading timidity of the regard, the disproportionate but elegant
+slenderness of the head between the ear and the neck, there were the
+tokens of one who cannot resist the will, perhaps the whim, of another
+whom she either loves or trusts.
+
+The book open on her lap is a serious book on the doctrine of grace,
+written by a popular clergyman of what is termed "the Low Church."
+She seldom read any but serious books, except where such care as she
+gave to Lily's education compelled her to read "Outlines of History
+and Geography," or the elementary French books used in seminaries for
+young ladies. Yet if any one had decoyed Mrs. Cameron into familiar
+conversation, he would have discovered that she must early have
+received the education given to young ladies of station. She could
+speak and write French and Italian as a native. She had read, and
+still remembered, such classic authors in either language as are
+conceded to the use of pupils by the well-regulated taste of orthodox
+governesses. She had a knowledge of botany, such as botany was taught
+twenty years ago. I am not sure that, if her memory had been fairly
+aroused, she might not have come out strong in divinity and political
+economy, as expounded by the popular manuals of Mrs. Marcet. In
+short, you could see in her a thoroughbred English lady, who had been
+taught in a generation before Lily's, and immeasurably superior in
+culture to the ordinary run of English young ladies taught nowadays.
+So, in what after all are very minor accomplishments,--now made major
+accomplishments,--such as music, it was impossible that a connoisseur
+should hear her play on the piano without remarking, "That woman has
+had the best masters of her time." She could only play pieces that
+belonged to her generation. She had learned nothing since. In short,
+the whole intellectual culture had come to a dead stop long years ago,
+perhaps before Lily was born.
+
+Now, while she is gazing into space Mrs. Braefield is announced. Mrs.
+Cameron does not start from revery. She never starts. But she makes
+a weary movement of annoyance, resettles herself, and lays the serious
+book on the sofa table. Elsie enters, young, radiant, dressed in all
+the perfection of the fashion, that is, as ungracefully as in the eyes
+of an artist any gentlewoman can be; but rich merchants who are proud
+of their wives so insist, and their wives, in that respect,
+submissively obey them.
+
+The ladies interchange customary salutations, enter into the customary
+preliminaries of talk, and after a pause Elsie begins in earnest.
+
+"But sha'n't I see Lily? Where is she?"
+
+"I fear she has gone into the town. A poor little boy, who did our
+errands, has met with an accident,--fallen from a cherry-tree."
+
+"Which he was robbing?"
+
+"Probably."
+
+"And Lily has gone to lecture him?"
+
+"I don't know as to that; but he is much hurt, and Lily has gone to
+see what is the matter with him."
+
+Mrs. Braefield, in her frank outspoken way,--"I don't take much to
+girls of Lily's age in general, though I am passionately fond of
+children. You know how I do take to Lily; perhaps because she is so
+like a child. But she must be an anxious charge to you."
+
+Mrs. Cameron replied by an anxious "No; she is still a child, a very
+good one; why should I be anxious?"
+
+Mrs. Braefield, impulsively,--"Why, your child must now be eighteen."
+
+Mrs. Cameron,--"Eighteen--is it possible! How time flies! though in a
+life so monotonous as mine, time does not seem to fly, it slips on
+like the lapse of water. Let me think,--eighteen? No, she is but
+seventeen,--seventeen last May."
+
+Mrs. Braefield,--"Seventeen! A very anxious age for a girl; an age in
+which dolls cease and lovers begin."
+
+Mrs. Cameron, not so languidly, but still quietly,--"Lily never cared
+much for dolls,--never much for lifeless pets; and as to lovers, she
+does not dream of them."
+
+Mrs. Braefield, briskly,--"There is no age after six in which girls do
+not dream of lovers. And here another question arises. When a girl
+so lovely as Lily is eighteen next birthday, may not a lover dream of
+her?"
+
+Mrs. Cameron, with that wintry cold tranquillity of manner, which
+implies that in putting such questions an interrogator is taking a
+liberty,--"As no lover has appeared, I cannot trouble myself about his
+dreams."
+
+Said Elsie inly to herself, "This is the stupidest woman I ever met!"
+and aloud to Mrs. Cameron,--"Do you not think that your neighbour, Mr.
+Chillingly, is a very fine young man?"
+
+"I suppose he would be generally considered so. He is very tall."
+
+"A handsome face?"
+
+"Handsome, is it? I dare say."
+
+"What does Lily say?"
+
+"About what?"
+
+"About Mr. Chillingly. Does she not think him handsome?"
+
+"I never asked her."
+
+"My dear Mrs. Cameron, would it not be a very pretty match for Lily?
+The Chillinglys are among the oldest families in Burke's 'Landed
+Gentry,' and I believe his father, Sir Peter, has a considerable
+property."
+
+For the first time in this conversation Mrs. Cameron betrayed emotion.
+A sudden flush overspread her countenance, and then left it paler than
+before. After a pause she recovered her accustomed composure, and
+replied, rudely,--
+
+"It would be no friend to Lily who could put such notions into her
+head; and there is no reason to suppose that they have entered into
+Mr. Chillingly's."
+
+"Would you be sorry if they did? Surely you would like your niece to
+marry well, and there are few chances of her doing so at Moleswich."
+
+"Pardon me, Mrs. Braefield, but the question of Lily's marriage I have
+never discussed, even with her guardian. Nor, considering the
+childlike nature of her tastes and habits, rather than the years she
+has numbered, can I think the time has yet come for discussing it at
+all."
+
+Elsie, thus rebuked, changed the subject to some newspaper topic which
+interested the public mind at the moment and very soon rose to depart.
+Mrs. Cameron detained the hand that her visitor held out, and said in
+low tones, which, though embarrassed, were evidently earnest, "My dear
+Mrs. Braefield, let me trust to your good sense and the affection with
+which you have honoured my niece not to incur the risk of unsettling
+her mind by a hint of the ambitious projects for her future on which
+you have spoken to me. It is extremely improbable that a young man of
+Mr. Chillingly's expectations would entertain any serious thoughts of
+marrying out of his own sphere of life, and--"
+
+"Stop, Mrs. Cameron, I must interrupt you. Lily's personal
+attractions and grace of manner would adorn any station; and have I
+not rightly understood you to say that though her guardian, Mr.
+Melville, is, as we all know, a man who has risen above the rank of
+his parents, your niece, Miss Mordaunt, is like yourself, by birth a
+gentlewoman?"
+
+"Yes, by birth a gentlewoman," said Mrs. Cameron, raising her head
+with a sudden pride. But she added, with as sudden a change to a sort
+of freezing humility, "What does that matter? A girl without fortune,
+without connection, brought up in this little cottage, the ward of a
+professional artist, who was the son of a city clerk, to whom she owes
+even the home she has found, is not in the same sphere of life as Mr.
+Chillingly, and his parents could not approve of such an alliance for
+him. It would be most cruel to her, if you were to change the
+innocent pleasure she may take in the conversation of a clever and
+well-informed stranger into the troubled interest which, since you
+remind me of her age, a girl even so childlike and beautiful as Lily
+might conceive in one represented to her as the possible partner of
+her life. Don't commit that cruelty; don't--don't, I implore you!"
+
+"Trust me," cried the warm-hearted Elsie, with tears rushing to her
+eyes. "What you say so sensibly, so nobly, never struck me before. I
+do not know much of the world,--knew nothing of it till I
+married,--and being very fond of Lily, and having a strong regard for
+Mr. Chillingly, I fancied I could not serve both better
+than--than--but I see now; he is very young, very peculiar; his
+parents might object, not to Lily herself, but to the circumstances
+you name. And you would not wish her to enter any family where she
+was not as cordially welcomed as she deserves to be. I am glad to
+have had this talk with you. Happily, I have done no mischief as yet.
+I will do none. I had come to propose an excursion to the remains of
+the Roman Villa, some miles off, and to invite you and Mr. Chillingly.
+I will no longer try to bring him and Lily together."
+
+"Thank you. But you still misconstrue me. I do not think that Lily
+cares half so much for Mr. Chillingly as she does for a new butterfly.
+I do not fear their coming together, as you call it, in the light in
+which she now regards him, and in which, from all I observe, he
+regards her. My only fear is that a hint might lead her to regard him
+in another way, and that way impossible."
+
+Elsie left the house extremely bewildered, and with a profound
+contempt for Mrs. Cameron's knowledge of what may happen to two young
+persons "brought together."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+NOW, on that very day, and about the same hour in which the
+conversation just recorded between Elsie and Mrs. Cameron took place,
+Kenelm, in his solitary noonday wanderings, entered the burial-ground
+in which Lily had some short time before surprised him. And there he
+found her, standing beside the flower border which she had placed
+round the grave of the child whom she had tended and nursed in vain.
+
+The day was cloudless and sunless; one of those days that so often
+instil a sentiment of melancholy into the heart of an English summer.
+
+"You come here too often, Miss Mordaunt," said Kenelm, very softly, as
+he approached.
+
+Lily turned her face to him, without any start of surprise, with no
+brightening change in its pensive expression,--an expression rare to
+the mobile play of her features.
+
+"Not too often. I promised to come as often as I could; and, as I
+told you before, I have never broken a promise yet."
+
+Kenelm made no answer. Presently the girl turned from the spot, and
+Kenelm followed her silently till she halted before the old tombstone
+with its effaced inscription.
+
+"See," she said, with a faint smile, "I have put fresh flowers there.
+Since the day we met in this churchyard, I have thought so much of
+that tomb, so neglected, so forgotten, and--" she paused a moment, and
+went on abruptly, "do you not often find that you are much too--what
+is the word? ah! too egotistical, considering and pondering and
+dreaming greatly too much about yourself?"
+
+"Yes, you are right there; though, till you so accused me, my
+conscience did not detect it."
+
+"And don't you find that you escape from being so haunted by the
+thought of yourself, when you think of the dead? they can never have
+any share in your existence /here/. When you say, 'I shall do this or
+that to-day;' when you dream, 'I may be this or that to-morrow,' you
+are thinking and dreaming, all by yourself, for yourself. But you are
+out of yourself, beyond yourself, when you think and dream of the
+dead, who can have nothing to do with your to-day or your to-morrow."
+
+As we all know, Kenelm Chillingly made it one of the rules of his life
+never to be taken by surprise. But when the speech I have written
+down came from the lips of that tamer of butterflies, he was so
+startled that all it occurred to him to say, after a long pause,
+was,--
+
+"The dead are the past; and with the past rests all in the present or
+the future that can take us out of our natural selves. The past
+decides our present. By the past we divine our future. History,
+poetry, science, the welfare of states, the advancement of
+individuals, are all connected with tombstones of which inscriptions
+are effaced. You are right to honour the mouldered tombstones with
+fresh flowers. It is only in the companionship of the dead that one
+ceases to be an egotist."
+
+If the imperfectly educated Lily had been above the quick
+comprehension of the academical Kenelm in her speech, so Kenelm was
+now above the comprehension of Lily. She, too, paused before she
+replied,--
+
+"If I knew you better, I think I could understand you better. I wish
+you knew Lion. I should like to hear you talk with him."
+
+While thus conversing, they had left the burial-ground, and were in
+the pathway trodden by the common wayfarer.
+
+Lily resumed,--"Yes, I should like to hear you talk with Lion."
+
+"You mean your guardian, Mr. Melville?"
+
+"Yes, you know that."
+
+"And why should you like to hear me talk to him?"
+
+"Because there are some things in which I doubt if he was altogether
+right, and I would ask you to express my doubts to him; you would,
+would you not?"
+
+"But why can you not express them yourself to your guardian; are you
+afraid of him?"
+
+"Afraid, no indeed! But--ah, how many people there are coming this
+way! There is some tiresome public meeting in the town to-day. Let
+us take the ferry: the other side of the stream is much pleasanter; we
+shall have it more to ourselves."
+
+Turning aside to the right while she thus spoke, Lily descended a
+gradual slope to the margin of the stream, on which they found an old
+man dozily reclined in his ferry-boat.
+
+As, seated side by side, they were slowly borne over the still waters
+under a sunless sky, Kenelm would have renewed the subject which his
+companion had begun, but she shook her head, with a significant glance
+at the ferryman. Evidently what she had to say was too confidential
+to admit of a listener, not that the old ferryman seemed likely to
+take the trouble of listening to any talk that was not addressed to
+him. Lily soon did address her talk to him, "So, Brown, the cow has
+quite recovered."
+
+"Yes, Miss, thanks to you, and God bless you. To think of your
+beating the old witch like that!"
+
+"'Tis not I who beat the witch, Brown; 'tis the fairy. Fairies, you
+know, are much more powerful than witches."
+
+"So I find, Miss."
+
+Lily here turned to Kenelm; "Mr. Brown has a very nice milch-cow that
+was suddenly taken very ill, and both he and his wife were convinced
+that the cow was bewitched."
+
+"Of course it were, that stands to reason. Did not Mother Wright tell
+my old woman that she would repent of selling milk, and abuse her
+dreadful; and was not the cow taken with shivers that very night?"
+
+"Gently, Brown. Mother Wright did not say that your wife would repent
+of selling milk, but of putting water into it."
+
+"And how did she know that, if she was not a witch? We have the best
+of customers among the gentlefolks, and never any one that
+complained."
+
+"And," answered Lily to Kenelm, unheeding this last observation, which
+was made in a sullen manner, "Brown had a horrid notion of enticing
+Mother Wright into his ferry-boat and throwing her into the water, in
+order to break the spell upon the cow. But I consulted the fairies,
+and gave him a fairy charm to tie round the cow's neck. And the cow
+is quite well now, you see. So, Brown, there was no necessity to
+throw Mother Wright into the water, because she said you put some of
+it into the milk. But," she added, as the boat now touched the
+opposite bank, "shall I tell you, Brown, what the fairies said to me
+this morning?"
+
+"Do, Miss."
+
+"It was this: If Brown's cow yields milk without any water in it, and
+if water gets into it when the milk is sold, we, the fairies, will
+pinch Mr. Brown black and blue; and when Brown has his next fit of
+rheumatics he must not look to the fairies to charm it away."
+
+Herewith Lily dropped a silver groat into Brown's hand, and sprang
+lightly ashore, followed by Kenelm.
+
+"You have quite converted him, not only as to the existence, but as to
+the beneficial power of fairies," said Kenelm.
+
+"Ah," answered Lily very gravely, "ah, but would it not be nice if
+there were fairies still? good fairies, and one could get at them?
+tell them all that troubles and puzzles us, and win from them charms
+against the witchcraft we practise on ourselves?"
+
+"I doubt if it would be good for us to rely on such supernatural
+counsellors. Our own souls are so boundless that the more we explore
+them the more we shall find worlds spreading upon worlds into
+infinities; and among the worlds is Fairyland." He added, inly to
+himself, "Am I not in Fairyland now?"
+
+"Hush!" whispered Lily. "Don't speak more yet awhile. I am thinking
+over what you have just said, and trying to understand it."
+
+Thus walking silently they gained the little summer-house which
+tradition dedicated to the memory of Izaak Walton. Lily entered it
+and seated herself; Kenelm took his place beside her. It was a small
+octagon building which, judging by its architecture, might have been
+built in the troubled reign of Charles I.; the walls plastered within
+were thickly covered with names and dates, and inscriptions in praise
+of angling, in tribute to Izaak, or with quotations from his books.
+On the opposite side they could see the lawn of Grasmere, with its
+great willows dipping into the water. The stillness of the place,
+with its associations of the angler's still life, were in harmony with
+the quiet day, its breezeless air, and cloud-vested sky.
+
+"You were to tell me your doubts in connection with your guardian,
+doubts if he were right in something which you left unexplained, which
+you could not yourself explain to him."
+
+Lily started as from thoughts alien to the subject thus reintroduced.
+"Yes, I cannot mention my doubts to him because they relate to me, and
+he is so good. I owe him so much that I could not bear to vex him by
+a word that might seem like reproach or complaint. You remember,"
+here she drew nearer to him; and with that ingenuous confiding look
+and movement which had, not unfrequently, enraptured him at the
+moment, and saddened him on reflection,--too ingenuous, too confiding,
+for the sentiment with which he yearned to inspire her,--she turned
+towards him her frank untimorous eyes, and laid her hand on his arm:
+"you remember that I said in the burial-ground how much I felt that
+one is constantly thinking too much of one's self. That must be
+wrong. In talking to you only about myself I know I am wrong, but I
+cannot help it: I must do so. Do not think ill of me for it. You see
+I have not been brought up like other girls. Was my guardian right in
+that? Perhaps if he had insisted upon not letting me have my own
+wilful way, if he had made me read the books which Mr. and Mrs. Emlyn
+wanted to force on me, instead of the poems and fairy tales which he
+gave me, I should have had so much more to think of that I should have
+thought less of myself. You said that the dead were the past; one
+forgets one's self when one thinks of the dead. If I had read more of
+the past, had more subjects of interest in the dead whose history it
+tells, surely I should be less shut up, as it were, in my own small,
+selfish heart? It is only very lately I have thought of this, only
+very lately that I have felt sorrow and shame in the thought that I am
+so ignorant of what other girls know, even little Clemmy. And I dare
+not say this to Lion when I see him next, lest he should blame
+himself, when he only meant to be kind, and used to say, 'I don't want
+Fairy to be learned, it is enough for me to think she is happy.' And
+oh, I was so happy, till--till of late!"
+
+"Because till of late you only knew yourself as a child. But, now
+that you feel the desire of knowledge, childhood is vanishing. Do not
+vex yourself. With the mind which nature has bestowed on you, such
+learning as may fit you to converse with those dreaded 'grown-up
+folks' will come to you very easily and quickly. You will acquire
+more in a month now than you would have acquired in a year when you
+were a child, and task-work was loathed, not courted. Your aunt is
+evidently well instructed, and if I might venture to talk to her about
+the choice of books--"
+
+"No, don't do that. Lion would not like it."
+
+"Your guardian would not like you to have the education common to
+other young ladies?"
+
+"Lion forbade my aunt to teach me much that I rather wished to learn.
+She wanted to do so, but she has given it up at his wish. She only
+now teases me with those horrid French verbs, and that I know is a
+mere make-belief. Of course on Sunday it is different; then I must
+not read anything but the Bible and sermons. I don't care so much for
+the sermons as I ought, but I could read the Bible all day, every
+week-day as well as Sunday; and it is from the Bible that I learn that
+I ought to think less about myself."
+
+Kenelm involuntarily pressed the little hand that lay so innocently on
+his arm.
+
+"Do you know the difference between one kind of poetry and another?"
+asked Lily, abruptly.
+
+"I am not sure. I ought to know when one kind is good and another
+kind is bad. But in that respect I find many people, especially
+professed critics, who prefer the poetry which I call bad to the
+poetry I think good."
+
+"The difference between one kind of poetry and another, supposing them
+both to be good," said Lily, positively, and with an air of triumph,
+"is this,--I know, for Lion explained it to me,--in one kind of poetry
+the writer throws himself entirely out of his existence, he puts
+himself into other existences quite strange to his own. He may be a
+very good man, and he writes his best poetry about very wicked men: he
+would not hurt a fly, but he delights in describing murderers. But in
+the other kind of poetry the writer does not put himself into other
+existences, he expresses his own joys and sorrows, his own individual
+heart and mind. If he could not hurt a fly, he certainly could not
+make himself at home in the cruel heart of a murderer. There, Mr.
+Chillingly, that is the difference between one kind of poetry and
+another."
+
+"Very true," said Kenelm, amused by the girl's critical definitions.
+"The difference between dramatic poetry and lyrical. But may I ask
+what that definition has to do with the subject into which you so
+suddenly introduced it?"
+
+"Much; for when Lion was explaining this to my aunt, he said, 'A
+perfect woman is a poem; but she can never be a poem of the one kind,
+never can make herself at home in the hearts with which she has no
+connection, never feel any sympathy with crime and evil; she must be a
+poem of the other kind, weaving out poetry from her own thoughts and
+fancies.' And, turning to me, he said, smiling, 'That is the poem I
+wish Lily to be. Too many dry books would only spoil the poem.' And
+you now see why I am so ignorant, and so unlike other girls, and why
+Mr. and Mrs. Emlyn look down upon me."
+
+"You wrong at least Mr. Emlyn, for it was he who first said to me,
+'Lily Mordaunt is a poem.'"
+
+"Did he? I shall love him for that. How pleased Lion will be!"
+
+"Mr. Melville seems to have an extraordinary influence over your
+mind," said Kenelm, with a jealous pang.
+
+"Of course. I have neither father nor mother: Lion has been both to
+me. Aunty has often said, 'You cannot be too grateful to your
+guardian; without him I should have no home to shelter you, no bread
+to give you.' He never said that: he would be very angry with aunty
+if he knew she had said it. When he does not call me Fairy he calls
+me Princess. I would not displease him for the world."
+
+"He is very much older than you; old enough to be your father, I
+hear."
+
+"I dare say. But if he were twice as old I could not love him
+better."
+
+Kenelm smiled: the jealousy was gone. Certainly not thus could any
+girl, even Lily, speak of one with whom, however she might love him,
+she was likely to fall in love.
+
+Lily now rose up, rather slowly and wearily. "It is time to go home:
+aunty will be wondering what keeps me away,--come."
+
+They took their way towards the bridge opposite to Cromwell Lodge.
+
+It was not for some minutes that either broke silence. Lily was the
+first to do so, and with one of those abrupt changes of topic which
+were common to the restless play of her secret thoughts.
+
+"You have father and mother still living, Mr. Chillingly?"
+
+"Thank Heaven, yes."
+
+"Which do you love the best?"
+
+"That is scarcely a fair question. I love my mother very much; but my
+father and I understand each other better than--"
+
+"I see: it is so difficult to be understood. No one understands me."
+
+"I think I do."
+
+Lily shook her head with an energetic movement of dissent.
+
+"At least as well as a man can understand a young lady."
+
+"What sort of young lady is Miss Cecilia Travers?"
+
+"Cecilia Travers! When and how did you ever hear that such a person
+existed?"
+
+"That big London man whom they call Sir Thomas mentioned her name the
+day we dined at Braefieldville."
+
+"I remember,--as having been at the Court ball."
+
+"He said she was very handsome."
+
+"So she is."
+
+"Is she a poem too?"
+
+"No; that never struck me."
+
+"Mr. Emlyn, I suppose, would call her perfectly brought up,--well
+educated. He would not raise his eyebrows at her as he does at
+me,--poor me, Cinderella!"
+
+"Ah, Miss Mordaunt, you need not envy her. Again let me say that you
+could very soon educate yourself to the level of any young ladies who
+adorn the Court balls."
+
+"Ay; but then I should not be a poem," said Lily, with a shy, arch
+side-glance at his face.
+
+They were now on the bridge, and before Kenelm could answer Lily
+resumed quickly, "You need not come any farther; it is out of your
+way."
+
+"I cannot be so disdainfully dismissed, Miss Mordaunt; I insist on
+seeing you to at least your garden gate."
+
+Lily made no objection and again spoke,--
+
+"What sort of country do you live in when at home; is it like this?"
+
+"Not so pretty; the features are larger, more hill and dale and
+woodland: yet there is one feature in our grounds which reminds me a
+little of this landscape,--a light stream, somewhat wider, indeed,
+than your brooklet; but here and there the banks are so like those by
+Cromwell Lodge that I sometimes start and fancy myself at home. I
+have a strange love for rivulets and all running waters, and in my
+foot wanderings I find myself magnetically attracted towards them."
+
+Lily listened with interest, and after a short pause said, with a
+half-suppressed sigh, "Your home is much finer than any place here,
+even than Braefieldville, is it not? Mrs. Braefield says your father
+is very rich."
+
+"I doubt if he is richer than Mr. Braefield; and, though his house may
+be larger than Braefieldville, it is not so smartly furnished, and has
+no such luxurious hothouses and conservatories. My father's tastes
+are like mine, very simple. Give him his library, and he would
+scarcely miss his fortune if he lost it. He has in this one immense
+advantage over me."
+
+"You would miss fortune?" said Lily, quickly.
+
+"Not that; but my father is never tired of books. And shall I own it?
+there are days when books tire me almost as much as they do you."
+
+They were now at the garden gate. Lily, with one hand on the latch,
+held out the other to Kenelm, and her smile lit up the dull sky like a
+burst of sunshine, as she looked in his face and vanished.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VII.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+KENELM did not return home till dusk, and just as he was sitting down
+to his solitary meal there was a ring at the bell, and Mrs. Jones
+ushered in Mr. Thomas Bowles.
+
+Though that gentleman had never written to announce the day of his
+arrival, he was not the less welcome.
+
+"Only," said Kenelm, "if you preserve the appetite I have lost, I fear
+you will find meagre fare to-day. Sit down, man."
+
+"Thank you, kindly, but I dined two hours ago in London, and I really
+can eat nothing more."
+
+Kenelm was too well-bred to press unwelcome hospitalities. In a very
+few minutes his frugal repast was ended; the cloth removed, the two
+men were left alone.
+
+"Your room is here, of course, Tom; that was engaged from the day I
+asked you, but you ought to have given me a line to say when to expect
+you, so that I could have put our hostess on her mettle as to dinner
+or supper. You smoke still, of course: light your pipe."
+
+"Thank you, Mr. Chillingly, I seldom smoke now; but if you will excuse
+a cigar," and Tom produced a very smart cigar-case.
+
+"Do as you would at home. I shall send word to Will Somers that you
+and I sup there to-morrow. You forgive me for letting out your
+secret. All straightforward now and henceforth. You come to their
+hearth as a friend, who will grow dearer to them both every year. Ah,
+Tom, this love for woman seems to me a very wonderful thing. It may
+sink a man into such deeps of evil, and lift a man into such heights
+of good."
+
+"I don't know as to the good," said Tom, mournfully, and laying aside
+his cigar.
+
+"Go on smoking: I should like to keep you company; can you spare me
+one of your cigars?"
+
+Tom offered his case. Kenelm extracted a cigar, lighted it, drew a
+few whiffs, and, when he saw that Tom had resumed his own cigar,
+recommenced conversation.
+
+"You don't know as to the good; but tell me honestly, do you think if
+you had not loved Jessie Wiles, you would be as good a man as you are
+now?"
+
+"If I am better than I was, it is not because of my love for the
+girl."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"The loss of her."
+
+Kenelm started, turned very pale, threw aside the cigar, rose, and
+walked the room to and fro with very quick but very irregular strides.
+
+Tom continued quietly. "Suppose I had won Jessie and married her, I
+don't think any idea of improving myself would have entered my head.
+My uncle would have been very much offended at my marrying a
+day-labourer's daughter, and would not have invited me to Luscombe. I
+should have remained at Graveleigh, with no ambition of being more
+than a common farrier, an ignorant, noisy, quarrelsome man; and if I
+could not have made Jessie as fond of me as I wished, I should not
+have broken myself of drinking, and I shudder to think what a brute I
+might have been, when I see in the newspapers an account of some
+drunken wife-beater. How do we know but what that wife-beater loved
+his wife dearly before marriage, and she did not care for him? His
+home was unhappy, and so he took to drink and to wife-beating."
+
+"I was right, then," said Kenelm, halting his strides, when I told you
+it would be a miserable fate to be married to a girl whom you loved to
+distraction, and whose heart you could never warm to you, whose life
+you could never render happy."
+
+"So right!"
+
+"Let us drop that part of the subject at present," said Kenelm,
+reseating himself, "and talk about your wish to travel. Though
+contented that you did not marry Jessie, though you can now, without
+anguish, greet her as the wife of another, still there are some
+lingering thoughts of her that make you restless; and you feel that
+you could more easily wrench yourself from these thoughts in a marked
+change of scene and adventure, that you might bury them altogether in
+the soil of a strange land. Is it so?"
+
+"Ay, something of that, sir."
+
+Then Kenelm roused himself to talk of foreign lands, and to map out a
+plan of travel that might occupy some months. He was pleased to find
+that Tom had already learned enough of French to make himself
+understood at least upon commonplace matters, and still more pleased
+to discover that he had been not only reading the proper guide-books
+or manuals descriptive of the principal places in Europe worth
+visiting, but that he had acquired an interest in the places; interest
+in the fame attached to them by their history in the past, or by the
+treasures of art they contained.
+
+So they talked far into the night; and when Tom retired to his room,
+Kenelm let himself out of the house noiselessly, and walked with slow
+steps towards the old summer-house in which he had sat with Lily. The
+wind had risen, scattering the clouds that had veiled the preceding
+day, so that the stars were seen in far chasms of the sky
+beyond,--seen for a while in one place, and, when the swift clouds
+rolled over them there, shining out elsewhere. Amid the varying
+sounds of the trees, through which swept the night gusts, Kenelm
+fancied he could distinguish the sigh of the willow on the opposite
+lawn of Grasmere.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+KENELM despatched a note to Will Somers early the next morning,
+inviting himself and Mr. Bowles to supper that evening. His tact was
+sufficient to make him aware that in such social meal there would be
+far less restraint for each and all concerned than in a more formal
+visit from Tom during the day-time; and when Jessie, too, was engaged
+with customers to the shop.
+
+But he led Tom through the town and showed him the shop itself, with
+its pretty goods at the plate-glass windows, and its general air of
+prosperous trade; then he carried him off into the lanes and fields of
+the country, drawing out the mind of his companion, and impressed with
+great admiration of its marked improvement in culture, and in the
+trains of thought which culture opens out and enriches.
+
+But throughout all their multiform range of subject Kenelm could
+perceive that Tom was still preoccupied and abstracted: the idea of
+the coming interview with Jessie weighed upon him.
+
+When they left Cromwell Lodge at nightfall, to repair to the supper at
+Will's; Kenelm noticed that Bowles had availed himself of the contents
+of his carpet-bag to make some refined alterations in his dress. The
+alterations became him.
+
+When they entered the parlour, Will rose from his chair with the
+evidence of deep emotion on his face, advanced to Tom, took his hand
+and grasped and dropped it without a word. Jessie saluted both guests
+alike, with drooping eyelids and an elaborate curtsy. The old mother
+alone was perfectly self-possessed and up to the occasion.
+
+"I am heartily glad to see you, Mr. Bowles," said she, "and so all
+three of us are, and ought to be; and if baby was older, there would
+be four."
+
+"And where on earth have you hidden baby?" cried Kenelm. "Surely he
+might have been kept up for me to-night, when I was expected; the last
+time I supped here I took you by surprise, and therefore had no right
+to complain of baby's want of respect to her parents' friends."
+
+Jessie raised the window-curtain, and pointed to the cradle behind it.
+Kenelm linked his arm in Tom's, led him to the cradle, and, leaving
+him alone to gaze on the sleeping inmate, seated himself at the table,
+between old Mrs. Somers and Will. Will's eyes were turned away
+towards the curtain, Jessie holding its folds aside, and the
+formidable Tom, who had been the terror of his neighbourhood, bending
+smiling over the cradle: till at last he laid his large hand on the
+pillow, gently, timidly, careful not to awake the helpless sleeper,
+and his lips moved, doubtless with a blessing; then he, too, came to
+the table, seating himself, and Jessie carried the cradle upstairs.
+
+Will fixed his keen, intelligent eyes on his bygone rival; and
+noticing the changed expression of the once aggressive countenance,
+the changed costume in which, without tinge of rustic foppery, there
+was the token of a certain gravity of station scarcely compatible with
+a return to old loves and old habits in the village world, the last
+shadow of jealousy vanished from the clear surface of Will's
+affectionate nature.
+
+"Mr. Bowles," he exclaimed, impulsively, "you have a kind heart, and a
+good heart, and a generous heart. And your corning here to-night on
+this friendly visit is an honour which--which"--"Which," interrupted
+Kenelm, compassionating Will's embarrassment, "is on the side of us
+single men. In this free country a married man who has a male baby
+may be father to the Lord Chancellor or the Archbishop of Canterbury.
+But--well, my friends, such a meeting as we have to-night does not
+come often; and after supper let us celebrate it with a bowl of punch.
+If we have headaches the next morning none of us will grumble."
+
+Old Mrs. Somers laughed out jovially. "Bless you, sir, I did not
+think of the punch; I will go and see about it," and, baby's socks
+still in her hands, she hastened from the room.
+
+What with the supper, what with the punch, and what with Kenelm's art
+of cheery talk on general subjects, all reserve, all awkwardness, all
+shyness between the convivialists, rapidly disappeared. Jessie
+mingled in the talk; perhaps (excepting only Kenelm) she talked more
+than the others, artlessly, gayly, no vestige of the old coquetry;
+but, now and then, with a touch of genteel finery, indicative of her
+rise in life, and of the contact of the fancy shopkeeper with noble
+customers. It was a pleasant evening; Kenelm had resolved that it
+should be so. Not a hint of the obligations to Mr. Bowles escaped
+until Will, following his visitor to the door, whispered to Tom, "You
+don't want thanks, and I can't express them. But when we say our
+prayers at night, we have always asked God to bless him who brought us
+together, and has since made us so prosperous,--I mean Mr. Chillingly.
+To-night there will be another besides him, for whom we shall pray,
+and for whom baby, when he is older, will pray too."
+
+Therewith Will's voice thickened; and he prudently receded, with no
+unreasonable fear lest the punch might make him too demonstrative of
+emotion if he said more.
+
+Tom was very silent on the return to Cromwell Lodge; it did not seem
+the silence of depressed spirits, but rather of quiet meditation, from
+which Kenelm did not attempt to rouse him.
+
+It was not till they reached the garden pales of Grasmere that Tom,
+stopping short, and turning his face to Kenelm, said, "I am very
+grateful to you for this evening,--very."
+
+"It has revived no painful thoughts then?"
+
+"No; I feel so much calmer in mind than I ever believed I could have
+been, after seeing her again."
+
+"Is it possible!" said Kenelm, to himself. "How should I feel if I
+ever saw in Lily the wife of another man, the mother of his child?"
+At that question he shuddered, and an involuntary groan escaped from
+his lips. Just then having, willingly in those precincts, arrested
+his steps when Tom paused to address him, something softly touched the
+arm which he had rested on the garden pale. He looked, and saw that
+it was Blanche. The creature, impelled by its instincts towards
+night-wanderings, had, somehow or other, escaped from its own bed
+within the house, and hearing a voice that had grown somewhat familiar
+to its ear, crept from among the shrubs behind upon the edge of the
+pale. There it stood, with arched back, purring low as in pleased
+salutation.
+
+Kenelm bent down and covered with kisses the blue ribbon which Lily's
+hand had bound round the favourite's neck. Blanche submitted to the
+caress for a moment, and then catching a slight rustle among the
+shrubs made by some awaking bird, sprang into the thick of the
+quivering leaves and vanished.
+
+Kenelm moved on with a quick impatient stride, and no further words
+were exchanged between him and his companion till they reached their
+lodging and parted for the night.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE next day, towards noon, Kenelm and his visitor, walking together
+along the brook-side, stopped before Izaak Walton's summer-house, and,
+at Kenelm's suggestion, entered therein to rest, and more at their
+ease to continue the conversation they had begun.
+
+"You have just told me," said Kenelm, "that you feel as if a load were
+taken off your heart, now that you have again met Jessie Somers, and
+that you find her so changed that she is no longer the woman you
+loved. As to the change, whatever it be, I own, it seems to me for
+the better, in person, in manners, in character; of course I should
+not say this, if I were not convinced of your perfect sincerity when
+you assured me that you are cured of the old wound. But I feel so
+deeply interested in the question how a fervent love, once entertained
+and enthroned in the heart of a man so earnestly affectionate and so
+warm-blooded as yourself, can be, all of a sudden, at a single
+interview, expelled or transferred into the calm sentiment of
+friendship, that I pray you to explain."
+
+"That is what puzzles me, sir," answered Tom, passing his hand over
+his forehead. "And I don't know if I can explain it.
+
+"Think over it, and try."
+
+Tom mused for some moments and then began. "You see, sir, that I was
+a very different man myself when I fell in love with Jessie Wiles, and
+said, 'Come what may, that girl shall be my wife. Nobody else shall
+have her.'"
+
+"Agreed; go on."
+
+"But while I was becoming a different man, when I thought of her--and
+I was always thinking of her--I still pictured her to myself as the
+same Jessie Wiles; and though, when I did see her again at Graveleigh,
+after she had married--the day--"
+
+"You saved her from the insolence of the Squire."
+
+"She was but very recently married. I did not realize her as married.
+I did not see her husband, and the difference within myself was only
+then beginning. Well, so all the time I was reading and thinking, and
+striving to improve my old self at Luscombe, still Jessie Wiles
+haunted me as the only girl I had ever loved, ever could love; I could
+not believe it possible that I could ever marry any one else. And
+lately I have been much pressed to marry some one else; all my family
+wish it: but the face of Jessie rose up before me, and I said to
+myself, 'I should be a base man if I married one woman, while I could
+not get another woman out of my head.' I must see Jessie once more,
+must learn whether her face is now really the face that haunts me when
+I sit alone; and I have seen her, and it is not that face: it may be
+handsomer, but it is not a girl's face, it is the face of a wife and a
+mother. And, last evening, while she was talking with an
+open-heartedness which I had never found in her before, I became
+strangely conscious of the difference in myself that had been silently
+at work within the last two years or so. Then, sir, when I was but an
+ill-conditioned, uneducated, petty village farrier, there was no
+inequality between me and a peasant girl; or, rather, in all things
+except fortune, the peasant girl was much above me. But last evening
+I asked myself, watching her and listening to her talk, 'If Jessie
+were now free, should I press her to be my wife?' and I answered
+myself, 'No.'"
+
+Kenelm listened with rapt attention, and exclaimed briefly, but
+passionately, "Why?"
+
+"It seems as if I were giving myself airs to say why. But, sir,
+lately I have been thrown among persons, women as well as men, of a
+higher class than I was born in; and in a wife I should want a
+companion up to their mark, and who would keep me up to mine; and ah,
+sir, I don't feel as if I could find that companion in Mrs. Somers."
+
+"I understand you now, Tom. But you are spoiling a silly romance of
+mine. I had fancied the little girl with the flower face would grow
+up to supply the loss of Jessie; and, I am so ignorant of the human
+heart, I did think it would take all the years required for the little
+girl to open into a woman, before the loss of the old love could be
+supplied. I see now that the poor little child with the flower face
+has no chance."
+
+"Chance? Why, Mr. Chillingly," cried Tom, evidently much nettled,
+"Susey is a dear little thing, but she is scarcely more than a mere
+charity girl. Sir, when I last saw you in London you touched on that
+matter as if I were still the village farrier's son, who might marry a
+village labourer's daughter. But," added Tom, softening down his
+irritated tone of voice, "even if Susey were a lady born I think a man
+would make a very great mistake, if he thought he could bring up a
+little girl to regard him as a father; and then, when she grew up,
+expect her to accept him as a lover."
+
+"Ah, you think that!" exclaimed Kenelm, eagerly, and turning eyes that
+sparkled with joy towards the lawn of Grasmere. "You think that; it
+is very sensibly said,--well, and you have been pressed to marry, and
+have hung back till you had seen again Mrs. Somers. Now you will be
+better disposed to such a step; tell me about it?"
+
+"I said, last evening, that one of the principal capitalists at
+Luscombe, the leading corn-merchant, had offered to take me into
+partnership. And, sir, he has an only daughter, she is a very amiable
+girl, has had a first-rate education, and has such pleasant manners
+and way of talk, quite a lady. If I married her I should soon be the
+first man in Luscombe, and Luscombe, as you are no doubt aware,
+returns two members to Parliament; who knows, but that some day the
+farrier's son might be--" Tom stopped abruptly, abashed at the
+aspiring thought which, while speaking, had deepened his hardy colour
+and flashed from his honest eyes.
+
+"Ah!" said Kenelm, almost mournfully, "is it so? must each man in his
+life play many parts? Ambition succeeds to love, the reasoning brain
+to the passionate heart. True, you are changed; my Tom Bowles is
+gone."
+
+"Not gone in his undying gratitude to you, sir," said Tom, with great
+emotion. "Your Tom Bowles would give up all his dreams of wealth or
+of rising in life, and go through fire and water to serve the friend
+who first bid him be a new Tom Bowles! Don't despise me as your own
+work: you said to me that terrible day, when madness was on my brow
+and crime within my heart, 'I will be to you the truest friend man
+ever found in man.' So you have been. You commanded me to read; you
+commanded me to think; you taught me that body should be the servant
+of mind."
+
+"Hush, hush, times are altered; it is you who can teach me now. Teach
+me, teach me; how does ambition replace love? How does the desire to
+rise in life become the all-mastering passion, and, should it prosper,
+the all-atoning consolation of our life? We can never be as happy,
+though we rose to the throne of the Caesars, as we dream that we could
+have been, had Heaven but permitted us to dwell in the obscurest
+village, side by side with the woman we love."
+
+Tom was exceedingly startled by such a burst of irrepressible passion
+from the man who had told him that, though friends were found only
+once in a life, sweethearts were as plentiful as blackberries.
+
+Again he swept his hand over his forehead, and replied hesitatingly: I
+can't pretend to say what maybe the case with others. But to judge by
+my own case, it seems to me this: a young man who, out of his own
+business, has nothing to interest or excite him, finds content,
+interest, and excitement when he falls in love; and then, whether for
+good or ill, he thinks there is nothing like love in the world, he
+don't care a fig for ambition then. Over and over again did my poor
+uncle ask me to come to him at Luscombe, and represent all the worldly
+advantage it would be to me; but I could not leave the village in
+which Jessie lived, and, besides, I felt myself unfit to be anything
+higher than I was. But when I had been some time at Luscombe, and
+gradually got accustomed to another sort of people, and another sort
+of talk, then I began to feel interest in the same objects that
+interested those about me; and when, partly by mixing with better
+educated men, and partly by the pains I took to educate myself, I felt
+that I might now more easily rise above my uncle's rank of life than
+two years ago I could have risen above a farrier's forge, then the
+ambition to rise did stir in me, and grew stronger every day. Sir, I
+don't think you can wake up a man's intellect but what you wake with
+it emulation. And, after all, emulation is ambition."
+
+"Then, I suppose, I have no emulation in me, for certainly I have no
+ambition."
+
+"That I can't believe, sir; other thoughts may cover it over and keep
+it down for a time. But sooner or later, it will force its way to the
+top, as it has done with me. To get on in life, to be respected by
+those who know you, more and more as you grow older, I call that a
+manly desire. I am sure it comes as naturally to an Englishman
+as--as--"
+
+"As the wish to knock down some other Englishman who stands in his way
+does. I perceive now that you were always a very ambitious man, Tom;
+the ambition has only taken another direction. Caesar might have been
+
+
+ "'But the first wrestler on the green.'
+
+
+"And now, I suppose, you abandon the idea of travel: you will return to
+Luscombe, cured of all regret for the loss of Jessie; you will marry
+the young lady you mention, and rise, through progressive steps of
+alderman and mayor, into the rank of member for Luscombe."
+
+"All that may come in good time," answered Tom, not resenting the tone
+of irony in which he was addressed, "but I still intend to travel: a
+year so spent must render me all the more fit for any station I aim
+at. I shall go back to Luscombe to arrange my affairs, come to terms
+with Mr. Leland the corn-merchant, against my return, and--"
+
+"The young lady is to wait till then."
+
+"Emily--"
+
+"Oh, that is the name? Emily! a much more elegant name than Jessie."
+
+"Emily," continued Tom, with an unruffled placidity,--which,
+considering the aggravating bitterness for which Kenelm had exchanged
+his wonted dulcitudes of indifferentism, was absolutely saintlike,
+"Emily knows that if she were my wife I should be proud of her, and
+will esteem me the more if she feels how resolved I am that she shall
+never be ashamed of me."
+
+"Pardon me, Tom," said Kenelm softened, and laying his hand on his
+friend's shoulder with brotherlike tenderness. "Nature has made you a
+thorough gentleman; and you could not think and speak more nobly if
+you had come into the world as the head of all the Howards."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+TOM went away the next morning. He declined to see Jessie again,
+saying curtly, "I don't wish the impression made on me the other
+evening to incur a chance of being weakened."
+
+Kenelm was in no mood to regret his friend's departure. Despite all
+the improvement in Tom's manners and culture, which raised him so much
+nearer to equality with the polite and instructed heir of the
+Chillinglys, Kenelm would have felt more in sympathy and rapport with
+the old disconsolate fellow-wanderer who had reclined with him on the
+grass, listening to the minstrel's talk or verse, than he did with the
+practical, rising citizen of Luscombe. To the young lover of Lily
+Mordaunt there was a discord, a jar, in the knowledge that the human
+heart admits of such well-reasoned, well-justified transfers of
+allegiance; a Jessie to-day, or an Emily to-morrow; "La reine est
+morte: vive la reine"
+
+An hour or two after Tom had gone, Kenelm found himself almost
+mechanically led towards Braefieldville. He had instinctively divined
+Elsie's secret wish with regard to himself and Lily, however skilfully
+she thought she had concealed it.
+
+At Braefieldville he should hear talk of Lily, and in the scenes where
+Lily had been first beheld.
+
+He found Mrs. Braefield alone in the drawing-room, seated by a table
+covered with flowers, which she was assorting and intermixing for the
+vases to which they were destined.
+
+It struck him that her manner was more reserved than usual and
+somewhat embarrassed; and when, after a few preliminary matters of
+small talk, he rushed boldly /in medias res/ and asked if she had seen
+Mrs. Cameron lately, she replied briefly, "Yes, I called there the
+other day," and immediately changed the conversation to the troubled
+state of the Continent.
+
+Kenelm was resolved not to be so put off, and presently returned to
+the charge.
+
+"The other day you proposed an excursion to the site of the Roman
+villa, and said you would ask Mrs. Cameron to be of the party.
+Perhaps you have forgotten it?"
+
+"No; but Mrs. Cameron declines. We can ask the Emlyns instead. He
+will be an excellent /cicerone/."
+
+"Excellent! Why did Mrs. Cameron decline?"
+
+Elsie hesitated, and then lifted her clear brown eyes to his face,
+with a sudden determination to bring matters to a crisis.
+
+"I cannot say why Mrs. Cameron declined, but in declining she acted
+very wisely and very honourably. Listen to me, Mr. Chillingly. You
+know how highly I esteem, and how cordially I like you, and judging by
+what I felt for some weeks, perhaps longer, after we parted at Tor
+Hadham--" Here again she hesitated, and, with a half laugh and a
+slight blush, again went resolutely on. "If I were Lily's aunt or
+elder sister, I should do as Mrs. Cameron does; decline to let Lily
+see much more of a young gentleman too much above her in wealth and
+station for--"
+
+"Stop," cried Kenelm, haughtily, "I cannot allow that any man's wealth
+or station would warrant his presumption in thinking himself above
+Miss Mordaunt."
+
+"Above her in natural grace and refinement, certainly not. But in the
+world there are other considerations which, perhaps, Sir Peter and
+Lady Chillingly might take into account."
+
+"You did not think of that before you last saw Mrs. Cameron."
+
+"Honestly speaking, I did not. Assured that Miss Mordaunt was a
+gentlewoman by birth, I did not sufficiently reflect upon other
+disparities."
+
+"You know, then, that she is by birth a gentlewoman?"
+
+"I only know it as all here do, by the assurance of Mrs. Cameron, whom
+no one could suppose not to be a lady. But there are different
+degrees of lady and of gentleman, which are little heeded in the
+ordinary intercourse of society, but become very perceptible in
+questions of matrimonial alliance; and Mrs. Cameron herself says very
+plainly that she does not consider her niece to belong to that station
+in life from which Sir Peter and Lady Chillingly would naturally wish
+their son should select his bride. Then (holding out her hand) pardon
+me if I have wounded or offended you. I speak as a true friend to you
+and to Lily both. Earnestly I advise you, if Miss Mordaunt be the
+cause of your lingering here, earnestly I advise you to leave while
+yet in time for her peace of mind and your own."
+
+"Her peace of mind," said Kenelm, in low faltering tones, scarcely
+hearing the rest of Mrs. Braefield's speech. "Her peace of mind? Do
+you sincerely think that she cares for me,--could care for me,--if I
+stayed?"
+
+"I wish I could answer you decidedly. I am not in the secrets of her
+heart. I can but conjecture that it might be dangerous for the peace
+of any young girl to see too much of a man like yourself, to divine
+that he loved her, and not to be aware that he could not, with the
+approval of his family, ask her to become his wife."
+
+Kenelm bent his face down, and covered it with his right hand. He did
+not speak for some moments. Then he rose, the fresh cheek very pale,
+and said,--
+
+"You are right. Miss Mordaunt's peace of mind must be the first
+consideration. Excuse me if I quit you thus abruptly. You have given
+me much to think of, and I can only think of it adequately when
+alone."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+FROM KENELM CHILLINGLY TO SIR PETER CHILLINGLY.
+
+
+MY FATHER, MY DEAR FATHER,--This is no reply to your letters. I know
+not if itself can be called a letter. I cannot yet decide whether it
+be meant to reach your hands. Tired with talking to myself, I sit
+down to talk to you. Often have I reproached myself for not seeing
+every fitting occasion to let you distinctly know how warmly I love,
+how deeply I reverence you; you, O friend, O father. But we
+Chillinglys are not a demonstrative race. I don't remember that you,
+by words, ever expressed to me the truth that you loved your son
+infinitely more than he deserves. Yet, do I not know that you would
+send all your beloved old books to the hammer rather than I should
+pine in vain for some untried, if sinless, delight on which I had set
+my heart? And do you not know equally well, that I would part with
+all my heritage, and turn day-labourer, rather than you should miss
+the beloved old books?
+
+That mutual knowledge is taken for granted in all that my heart yearns
+to pour forth to your own. But, if I divine aright, a day is coming
+when, as between you and me, there must be a sacrifice on the part of
+one to the other. If so, I implore that the sacrifice may come from
+you. How is this? How am I so ungenerous, so egotistical, so
+selfish, so ungratefully unmindful of all I already owe to you, and
+may never repay? I can only answer, "It is fate, it is nature, it is
+love "--
+
+ . . . . . . . . .
+
+Here I must break off. It is midnight, the moon halts opposite to the
+window at which I sit, and on the stream that runs below there is a
+long narrow track on which every wave trembles in her light; on either
+side of the moonlit track all the other waves, running equally to
+their grave in the invisible deep, seem motionless and dark. I can
+write no more.
+
+ . . . . . . . . .
+
+ (Dated two days later.)
+
+They say she is beneath us in wealth and station. Are we, my
+father--we, two well-born gentlemen--coveters of gold or lackeys of
+the great? When I was at college, if there were any there more
+heartily despised than another it was the parasite and the
+tuft-hunter; the man who chose his friends according as their money or
+their rank might be of use to him. If so mean where the choice is so
+little important to the happiness and career of a man who has
+something of manhood in him, how much more mean to be the parasite and
+tuft-hunter in deciding what woman to love, what woman to select as
+the sweetener and ennobler of one's everyday life! Could she be to my
+life that sweetener, that ennobler? I firmly believe it. Already
+life itself has gained a charm that I never even guessed in it before;
+already I begin, though as yet but faintly and vaguely, to recognize
+that interest in the objects and aspirations of my fellow-men which is
+strongest in those whom posterity ranks among its ennoblers. In this
+quiet village it is true that I might find examples enough to prove
+that man is not meant to meditate upon life, but to take active part
+in it, and in that action to find his uses. But I doubt if I should
+have profited by such examples; if I should not have looked on this
+small stage of the world as I have looked on the large one, with the
+indifferent eyes of a spectator on a trite familiar play carried on by
+ordinary actors, had not my whole being suddenly leaped out of
+philosophy into passion, and, at once made warmly human, sympathized
+with humanity wherever it burned and glowed. Ah, is there to be any
+doubt of what station, as mortal bride, is due to her,--her, my
+princess, my fairy? If so, how contented you shall be, my father,
+with the worldly career of your son! how perseveringly he will strive
+(and when did perseverance fail?) to supply all his deficiencies of
+intellect, genius, knowledge, by the energy concentrated on a single
+object which--more than intellect, genius, knowledge, unless they
+attain to equal energy equally concentrated--commands what the world
+calls honours.
+
+Yes, with her, with her as the bearer of my name, with her to whom I,
+whatever I might do of good or of great, could say, "It is thy work,"
+I promise that you shall bless the day when you took to your arms a
+daughter.
+
+ . . . . . . . . .
+
+"Thou art in contact with the beloved in all that thou feelest
+elevated above thee." So it is written by one of those weird Germans
+who search in our bosoms for the seeds of buried truths, and conjure
+them into flowers before we ourselves were even aware of the seeds.
+
+Every thought that associates itself with my beloved seems to me born
+with wings.
+
+ . . . . . . . . .
+
+I have just seen her, just parted from her. Since I had been
+told--kindly, wisely told--that I had no right to hazard her peace of
+mind unless I were privileged to woo and to win her, I promised myself
+that I would shun her presence until I had bared my heart to you, as I
+am doing now, and received that privilege from yourself; for even had
+I never made the promise that binds my honour, your consent and
+blessing must hallow my choice. I do not feel as if I could dare to
+ask one so innocent and fair to wed an ungrateful, disobedient son.
+But this evening I met her, unexpectedly, at the vicar's, an excellent
+man, from whom I have learned much; whose precepts, whose example,
+whose delight in his home, and his life at once active and serene, are
+in harmony with my own dreams when I dream of her.
+
+I will tell you the name of the beloved; hold it as yet a profound
+secret between you and me. But oh for the day when I may hear you
+call her by that name, and print on her forehead the only kiss by man
+of which I should not be jealous.
+
+It is Sunday, and after the evening service it is my friend's custom
+to gather his children round him, and, without any formal sermon or
+discourse, engage their interests in subjects harmonious to
+associations with the sanctity of the day; often not directly bearing
+upon religion; more often, indeed, playfully starting from some little
+incident or some slight story-book which had amused the children in
+the course of the past week, and then gradually winding into reference
+to some sweet moral precept or illustration from some divine example.
+It is a maxim with him that, while much that children must learn they
+can only learn well through conscious labour, and as positive
+task-work, yet Religion should be connected in their minds not with
+labour and task-work, but should become insensibly infused into their
+habits of thought, blending itself with memories and images of peace
+and love; with the indulgent tenderness of the earliest teachers, the
+sinless mirthfulness of the earliest home; with consolation in after
+sorrows, support through after trials, and never parting company with
+its twin sister, Hope.
+
+I entered the vicar's room this evening just as the group had
+collected round him. By the side of his wife sat a lady in whom I
+feel a keen interest. Her face wears that kind of calm which speaks
+of the lassitude bequeathed by sorrow. She is the aunt of my beloved
+one. Lily had nestled herself on a low ottoman, at the good pastor's
+feet, with one of his little girls, round whose shoulder she had wound
+her arm. She is much more fond of the companionship of children than
+that of girls of her own age. The vicar's wife, a very clever woman,
+once, in my hearing, took her to task for this preference, asking her
+why she persisted in grouping herself with mere infants who could
+teach her nothing? Ah! could you have seen the innocent, angel-like
+expression of her face when she answered simply, "I suppose because
+with them I feel safer, I mean nearer to God."
+
+Mr. Emlyn--that is the name of the vicar--deduced his homily this
+evening from a pretty fairy tale which Lily had been telling to his
+children the day before, and which he drew her on to repeat.
+
+Take, in brief, the substance of the story:--
+
+"Once on a time, a king and queen made themselves very unhappy because
+they had no heir to their throne; and they prayed for one; and lo, on
+some bright summer morning, the queen, waking from sleep, saw a cradle
+beside her bed, and in the cradle a beautiful sleeping babe. Great
+day throughout the kingdom! But as the infant grew up, it became very
+wayward and fretful: it lost its beauty; it would not learn its
+lessons; it was as naughty as a child could be. The parents were very
+sorrowful; the heir, so longed for, promised to be a great plague to
+themselves and their subjects. At last one day, to add to their
+trouble, two little bumps appeared on the prince's shoulders. All the
+doctors were consulted as to the cause and the cure of this deformity.
+Of course they tried the effect of back-bands and steel machines,
+which gave the poor little prince great pain, and made him more
+unamiable than ever. The bumps, nevertheless, grew larger, and as
+they increased, so the prince sickened and pined away. At last a
+skilful surgeon proposed, as the only chance of saving the prince's
+life, that the bumps should be cut out; and the next morning was fixed
+for that operation. But at night the queen saw, or dreamed she saw, a
+beautiful shape standing by her bedside. And it said to her
+reproachfully, 'Ungrateful woman! How wouldst thou repay me for the
+precious boon that my favour bestowed on thee! In me behold the Queen
+of the Fairies. For the heir to thy kingdom, I consigned to thy
+charge an infant from Fairyland, to become a blessing to thee and to
+thy people; and thou wouldst inflict upon it a death of torture by the
+surgeon's knife.' And the queen answered, 'Precious indeed thou mayest
+call the boon,--a miserable, sickly, feverish changeling.'
+
+"'Art thou so dull,' said the beautiful visitant, 'as not to
+comprehend that the earliest instincts of the fairy child would be
+those of discontent, at the exile from its native home? and in that
+discontent it would have pined itself to death, or grown up, soured
+and malignant, a fairy still in its power but a fairy of wrath and
+evil, had not the strength of its inborn nature sufficed to develop
+the growth of its wings. That which thy blindness condemns as the
+deformity of the human-born, is to the fairy-born the crowning
+perfection of its beauty. Woe to thee, if thou suffer not the wings
+of the fairy child to grow.'
+
+"And the next morning the queen sent away the surgeon when he came
+with his horrible knife, and removed the back-board and the steel
+machines from the prince's shoulders, though all the doctors predicted
+that the child would die. And from that moment the royal heir began
+to recover bloom and health. And when at last, out of those deforming
+bumps, budded delicately forth the plumage of snow-white wings, the
+wayward peevishness of the prince gave place to sweet temper. Instead
+of scratching his teachers, he became the quickest and most docile of
+pupils, grew up to be the joy of his parents and the pride of their
+people; and people said, 'In him we shall have hereafter such a king
+as we have never yet known.'"
+
+Here ended Lily's tale. I cannot convey to you a notion of the
+pretty, playful manner in which it was told. Then she said, with a
+grave shake of the head, "But you do not seem to know what happened
+afterwards. Do you suppose that the prince never made use of his
+wings? Listen to me. It was discovered by the courtiers who attended
+on His Royal Highness that on certain nights, every week, he
+disappeared. In fact, on these nights, obedient to the instinct of
+the wings, he flew from palace halls into Fairyland; coming back
+thence all the more lovingly disposed towards the human home from
+which he had escaped for a while."
+
+"Oh, my children," interposed the preacher earnestly, "the wings would
+be given to us in vain if we did not obey the instinct which allures
+us to soar; vain, no less, would be the soaring, were it not towards
+the home whence we came, bearing back from its native airs a stronger
+health, and a serener joy; more reconciled to the duties of earth by
+every new flight into heaven."
+
+As he thus completed the moral of Lily's fairy tale, the girl rose
+from her low seat, took his hand, kissed it reverently, and walked
+away towards the window. I could see that she was affected even to
+tears, which she sought to conceal. Later in the evening, when we
+were dispersed on the lawn, for a few minutes before the party broke
+up, Lily came to my side timidly and said, in a low whisper,--
+
+"Are you angry with me? what have I done to displease you?"
+
+"Angry with you; displeased? How can you think of me so unjustly?"
+
+"It is so many days since you have called, since I have seen you," she
+said so artlessly, looking up at me with eyes in which tears still
+seemed to tremble.
+
+Before I could trust myself to reply, her aunt approached, and
+noticing me with a cold and distant "Good-night," led away her niece.
+
+I had calculated on walking back to their home with them, as I
+generally have done when we met at another house. But the aunt had
+probably conjectured I might be at the vicarage that evening, and in
+order to frustrate my intention had engaged a carriage for their
+return. No doubt she has been warned against permitting further
+intimacy with her niece.
+
+My father, I must come to you at once, discharge my promise, and
+receive from your own lips your consent to my choice; for you will
+consent, will you not? But I wish you to be prepared beforehand, and
+I shall therefore put up these disjointed fragments of my commune with
+my own heart and with yours, and post them to-morrow. Expect me to
+follow them after leaving you a day free to consider them
+alone,--alone, my dear father: they are meant for no eye but yours.
+
+K. C.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE next day Kenelm walked into the town, posted his voluminous letter
+to Sir Peter, and then looked in at the shop of Will Somers, meaning
+to make some purchases of basket-work or trifling fancy goods in
+Jessie's pretty store of such articles, that might please the taste of
+his mother.
+
+On entering the shop his heart beat quicker. He saw two young forms
+bending over the counter, examining the contents of a glass case. One
+of these customers was Clemmy; in the other there was no mistaking the
+slight graceful shape of Lily Mordaunt. Clemmy was exclaiming, "Oh,
+it is so pretty, Mrs. Somers! but," turning her eyes from the counter
+to a silk purse in her hand, she added sorrowfully, "I can't buy it.
+I have not got enough, not by a great deal."
+
+"And what is it, Miss Clemmy?" asked Kenelm.
+
+The two girls turned round at his voice, and Clemmy's face brightened.
+
+"Look here," she said, "is it not too lovely?"
+
+The object thus admired and coveted was a little gold locket, enriched
+by a cross composed of small pearls.
+
+"I assure you, miss," said Jessie, who had acquired all the coaxing
+arts of her trade, "it is really a great bargain. Miss Mary Burrows,
+who was here just before you came, bought one not nearly so pretty and
+gave ten shillings more for it."
+
+Miss Mary Burrows was the same age as Miss Clementina Emlyn, and there
+was a rivalry as to smartness between those youthful beauties. "Miss
+Burrows!" sighed Clemmy, very scornfully.
+
+But Kenelm's attention was distracted from Clemmy's locket to a little
+ring which Lily had been persuaded by Mrs. Somers to try on, and which
+she now drew off and returned with a shake of the head. Mrs. Somers,
+who saw that she had small chance of selling the locket to Clemmy, was
+now addressing herself to the elder girl more likely to have
+sufficient pocket-money, and whom, at all events, it was quite safe to
+trust.
+
+"The ring fits you so nicely, Miss Mordaunt, and every young lady of
+your age wears at least one ring; allow me to put it up." She added
+in a lower voice, "Though we only sell the articles in this case on
+commission, it is all the same to us whether we are paid now or at
+Christmas."
+
+"'Tis no use tempting me, Mrs. Somers," said Lily, laughing, and then
+with a grave air, "I promised Lion, I mean my guardian, never to run
+into debt, and I never will."
+
+Lily turned resolutely from the perilous counter, taking up a paper
+that contained a new ribbon she had bought for Blanche, and Clemmy
+reluctantly followed her out of the shop.
+
+Kenelm lingered behind and selected very hastily a few trifles, to be
+sent to him that evening with some specimens of basket-work left to
+Will's tasteful discretion; then purchased the locket on which Clemmy
+had set her heart; but all the while his thoughts were fixed on the
+ring which Lily had tried on. It was no sin against etiquette to give
+the locket to a child like Clemmy, but would it not be a cruel
+impertinence to offer a gift to Lily?
+
+Jessie spoke: "Miss Mordaunt took a great fancy to this ring, Mr.
+Chillingly. I am sure her aunt would like her to have it. I have a
+great mind to put it by on the chance of Mrs. Cameron's calling here.
+It would be a pity if it were bought by some one else."
+
+"I think," said Kenelm, "that I will take the liberty of showing it to
+Mrs. Cameron. No doubt she will buy it for her niece. Add the price
+of it to my bill." He seized the ring and carried it off; a very poor
+little simple ring, with a single stone shaped as a heart, not half
+the price of the locket.
+
+Kenelm rejoined the young ladies just where the path split into two,
+the one leading direct to Grasmere, the other through the churchyard
+to the vicarage. He presented the locket to Clemmy with brief kindly
+words which easily removed any scruple she might have had in accepting
+it; and, delighted with her acquisition, she bounded off to the
+vicarage, impatient to show the prize to her mamma and sisters, and
+more especially to Miss Mary Burrows, who was coming to lunch with
+them.
+
+Kenelm walked on slowly by Lily's side.
+
+"You have a good heart, Mr. Chillingly," said she, somewhat abruptly.
+"How it must please you to give such pleasure! Dear little Clemmy!"
+
+This artless praise, and the perfect absence of envy or thought of
+self evinced by her joy that her friend's wish was gratified, though
+her own was not, enchanted Kenelm.
+
+"If it pleases to give pleasure," said he, "it is your turn to be
+pleased now; you can confer such pleasure upon me."
+
+"How?" she asked, falteringly, and with quick change of colour.
+
+"By conceding to me the same right your little friend has allowed."
+
+And he drew forth the ring.
+
+Lily reared her head with a first impulse of haughtiness. But when
+her eyes met his the head drooped down again, and a slight shiver ran
+through her frame.
+
+"Miss Mordaunt," resumed Kenelm, mastering his passionate longing to
+fall at her feet and say, "But, oh! in this ring it is my love that I
+offer,--it is my troth that I pledge!" "Miss Mordaunt, spare me the
+misery of thinking that I have offended you; least of all would I do
+so on this day, for it may be some little while before I see you
+again. I am going home for a few days upon a matter which may affect
+the happiness of my life, and on which I should be a bad son and an
+unworthy gentleman if I did not consult him who, in all that concerns
+my affections, has trained me to turn to him, the father; in all that
+concerns my honour to him, the gentleman."
+
+A speech more unlike that which any delineator of manners and morals
+in the present day would put into the mouth of a lover, no critic in
+"The Londoner" could ridicule. But, somehow or other, this poor
+little tamer of butterflies and teller of fairy tales comprehended on
+the instant all that this most eccentric of human beings thus frigidly
+left untold. Into her innermost heart it sank more deeply than would
+the most ardent declaration put into the lips of the boobies or the
+scamps in whom delineators of manners in the present day too often
+debase the magnificent chivalry embodied in the name of "lover."
+
+Where these two had, while speaking, halted on the path along the
+brook-side, there was a bench, on which it so happened that they had
+seated themselves weeks before. A few moments later on that bench
+they were seated again.
+
+And the trumpery little ring with its turquoise heart was on Lily's
+finger, and there they continued to sit for nearly half an hour; not
+talking much, but wondrously happy; not a single vow of troth
+interchanged. No, not even a word that could be construed into "I
+love." And yet when they rose from the bench, and went silently along
+the brook-side, each knew that the other was beloved.
+
+When they reached the gate that admitted into the garden of Grasmere,
+Kenelm made a slight start. Mrs. Cameron was leaning over the gate.
+Whatever alarm at the appearance Kenelm might have felt was certainly
+not shared by Lily; she advanced lightly before him, kissed her aunt
+on the cheek, and passed on across the lawn with a bound in her step
+and the carol of a song upon her lips.
+
+Kenelm remained by the gate, face to face with Mrs. Cameron. She
+opened the gate, put her arm in his, and led him back along the
+brook-side.
+
+"I am sure, Mr. Chillingly," she said, "that you will not impute to my
+words any meaning more grave than that which I wish them to convey,
+when I remind you that there is no place too obscure to escape from
+the ill-nature of gossip, and you must own that my niece incurs the
+chance of its notice if she be seen walking alone in these by-paths
+with a man of your age and position, and whose sojourn in the
+neighbourhood, without any ostensible object or motive, has already
+begun to excite conjecture. I do not for a moment assume that you
+regard my niece in any other light than that of an artless child,
+whose originality of tastes or fancy may serve to amuse you; and still
+less do I suppose that she is in danger of misrepresenting any
+attentions on your part. But for her sake I am bound to consider what
+others may say. Excuse me, then, if I add that I think you are also
+bound in honour and in good feeling to do the same. Mr. Chillingly,
+it would give me a great sense of relief if it suited your plans to
+move from the neighbourhood."
+
+"My dear Mrs. Cameron," answered Kenelm, who had listened to this
+speech with imperturbable calm of visage, "I thank you much for your
+candour, and I am glad to have this opportunity of informing you that
+I am about to move from this neighbourhood, with the hope of returning
+to it in a very few days and rectifying your mistake as to the point
+of view in which I regard your niece. In a word," here the expression
+of his countenance and the tone of his voice underwent a sudden
+change, "it is the dearest wish of my heart to be empowered by my
+parents to assure you of the warmth with which they will welcome your
+niece as their daughter, should she deign to listen to my suit and
+intrust me with the charge of her happiness."
+
+Mrs. Cameron stopped short, gazing into his face with a look of
+inexpressible dismay.
+
+"No! Mr. Chillingly," she exclaimed, "this must not be,--cannot be.
+Put out of your mind an idea so wild. A young man's senseless
+romance. Your parents cannot consent to your union with my niece; I
+tell you beforehand they cannot."
+
+"But why?" asked Kenelm, with a slight smile, and not much impressed
+by the vehemence of Mrs. Cameron's adjuration.
+
+"Why?" she repeated passionately; and then recovering something of her
+habitual weariness of quiet. "The why is easily explained. Mr.
+Kenelm Chillingly is the heir of a very ancient house and, I am told,
+of considerable estates. Lily Mordaunt is a nobody, an orphan,
+without fortune, without connection, the ward of a humbly born artist,
+to whom she owes the roof that shelters her; she is without the
+ordinary education of a gentlewoman; she has seen nothing of the world
+in which you move. Your parents have not the right to allow a son so
+young as yourself to throw himself out of his proper sphere by a rash
+and imprudent alliance. And, never would I consent, never would
+Walter Melville consent, to her entering into any family reluctant to
+receive her. There,--that is enough. Dismiss the notion so lightly
+entertained. And farewell."
+
+"Madam," answered Kenelm very earnestly, "believe me, that had I not
+entertained the hope approaching to conviction that the reasons you
+urge against my presumption will not have the weight with my parents
+which you ascribe to them, I should not have spoken to you thus
+frankly. Young though I be, still I might fairly claim the right to
+choose for myself in marriage. But I gave to my father a very binding
+promise that I would not formally propose to any one till I had
+acquainted him with my desire to do so, and obtained his approval of
+my choice; and he is the last man in the world who would withhold that
+approval where my heart is set on it as it is now. I want no fortune
+with a wife, and should I ever care to advance my position in the
+world, no connection would help me like the approving smile of the
+woman I love. There is but one qualification which my parents would
+deem they had the right to exact from my choice of one who is to bear
+our name. I mean that she should have the appearance, the manners,
+the principles, and--my mother at least might add--the birth of a
+gentlewoman. Well, as to appearance and manners, I have seen much of
+fine society from my boyhood, and found no one among the highest born
+who can excel the exquisite refinement of every look, and the inborn
+delicacy of every thought, in her of whom, if mine, I shall be as
+proud as I shall be fond. As to defects in the frippery and tinsel of
+a boarding-school education, they are very soon remedied. Remains
+only the last consideration,--birth. Mrs. Braefield informs me that
+you have assured her that, though circumstances into which as yet I
+have no right to inquire, have made her the ward of a man of humble
+origin, Miss Mordaunt is of gentle birth. Do you deny that?"
+
+"No," said Mrs. Cameron, hesitating, but with a flash of pride in her
+eyes as she went on. "No. I cannot deny that my niece is descended
+from those who, in point of birth, were not unequal to your own
+ancestors. But what of that?" she added, with a bitter despondency of
+tone. "Equality of birth ceases when one falls into poverty,
+obscurity, neglect, nothingness!"
+
+"Really this is a morbid habit on your part. But, since we have thus
+spoken so confidentially, will you not empower me to answer the
+question which will probably be put to me, and the answer to which
+will, I doubt not, remove every obstacle in the way of my happiness?
+Whatever the reasons which might very sufficiently induce you to
+preserve, whilst living so quietly in this place, a discreet silence
+as to the parentage of Miss Mordaunt and your own,--and I am well
+aware that those whom altered circumstances of fortune have compelled
+to altered modes of life may disdain to parade to strangers the
+pretensions to a higher station than that to which they reconcile
+their habits,--whatever, I say, such reasons for silence to strangers,
+should they preclude you from confiding to me, an aspirant to your
+niece's hand, a secret which, after all, cannot be concealed from her
+future husband?"
+
+"From her future husband? of course not," answered Mrs. Cameron. "But
+I decline to be questioned by one whom I may never see again, and of
+whom I know so little. I decline, indeed, to assist in removing any
+obstacle to a union with my niece, which I hold to be in every way
+unsuited to either party. I have no cause even to believe that my
+niece would accept you if you were free to propose to her. You have
+not, I presume, spoken to her as an aspirant to her hand. You have
+not addressed to her any declaration of your attachment, or sought to
+extract from her inexperience any words that warrant you in thinking
+that her heart will break if she never sees you again."
+
+"I do not merit such cruel and taunting questions," said Kenelm,
+indignantly. "But I will say no more now. When we again meet let me
+hope you will treat me less unkindly. Adieu!"
+
+"Stay, sir. A word or two more. You persist in asking your father
+and Lady Chillingly to consent to your proposal to Miss Mordaunt?"
+
+"Certainly I do."
+
+"And you will promise me, on your word as a gentleman, to state fairly
+all the causes which might fairly operate against their consent,--the
+poverty, the humble rearing, the imperfect education of my niece,--so
+that they might not hereafter say you had entrapped their consent, and
+avenge themselves for your deceit by contempt for her?"
+
+"Ah, madam, madam, you really try my patience too far. But take my
+promise, if you can hold that of value from one whom you can suspect
+of deliberate deceit."
+
+"I beg your pardon, Mr. Chillingly. Bear with my rudeness. I have
+been so taken by surprise, I scarcely know what I am saying. But let
+us understand each other completely before we part. If your parents
+withhold their consent you will communicate it to me; me only, not to
+Lily. I repeat I know nothing of the state of her affections. But it
+might embitter any girl's life to be led on to love one whom she could
+not marry."
+
+"It shall be as you say. But if they do consent?"
+
+"Then you will speak to me before you seek an interview with Lily, for
+then comes another question: Will her guardian consent?--and--and--"
+
+"And what?"
+
+"No matter. I rely on your honour in this request, as in all else.
+Good-day."
+
+She turned back with hurried footsteps, muttering to herself, "But
+they will not consent. Heaven grant that they will not consent, or if
+they do, what--what is to be said or done? Oh, that Walter Melville
+were here, or that I knew where to write to him!"
+
+On his way back to Cromwell Lodge, Kenelm was overtaken by the vicar.
+
+"I was coming to you, my dear Mr. Chillingly, first to thank you for
+the very pretty present with which you have gladdened the heart of my
+little Clemmy, and next to ask you to come with me quietly to-day to
+meet Mr. -----, the celebrated antiquarian, who came to Moleswich this
+morning at my request to examine that old Gothic tomb in our
+churchyard. Only think, though he cannot read the inscription any
+better than we can, he knows all about its history. It seems that a
+young knight renowned for feats of valour in the reign of Henry IV.
+married a daughter of one of those great Earls of Montfichet who were
+then the most powerful family in these parts. He was slain in
+defending the church from an assault by some disorderly rioters of the
+Lollard faction; he fell on the very spot where the tomb is now
+placed. That accounts for its situation in the churchyard, not within
+the fabric. Mr. ----- discovered this fact in an old memoir of the
+ancient and once famous family to which the young knight Albert
+belonged, and which came, alas! to so shameful an end, the Fletwodes,
+Barons of Fletwode and Malpas. What a triumph over pretty Lily
+Mordaunt, who always chose to imagine that the tomb must be that of
+some heroine of her own romantic invention! Do come to dinner; Mr.
+----- is a most agreeable man, and full of interesting anecdotes."
+
+"I am so sorry I cannot. I am obliged to return home at once for a
+few days. That old family of Fletwode! I think I see before me,
+while we speak, the gray tower in which they once held sway; and the
+last of the race following Mammon along the Progress of the Age,--a
+convicted felon! What a terrible satire on the pride of birth!"
+
+Kenelm left Cromwell Lodge that evening, but he still kept on his
+apartments there, saying he might be back unexpectedly any day in the
+course of the next week.
+
+He remained two days in London, wishing all that he had communicated
+to Sir Peter in writing to sink into his father's heart before a
+personal appeal to it.
+
+The more he revolved the ungracious manner in which Mrs. Cameron had
+received his confidence, the less importance he attached to it. An
+exaggerated sense of disparities of fortune in a person who appeared
+to him to have the pride so common to those who have known better
+days, coupled with a nervous apprehension lest his family should
+ascribe to her any attempt to ensnare a very young man of considerable
+worldly pretensions into a marriage with a penniless niece, seemed to
+account for much that had at first perplexed and angered him. And if,
+as he conjectured, Mrs. Cameron had once held a much higher position
+in the world than she did now,--a conjecture warranted by a certain
+peculiar conventional undeniable elegance which characterized her
+habitual manner,--and was now, as she implied, actually a dependant on
+the bounty of a painter who had only just acquired some professional
+distinction, she might well shrink from the mortification of becoming
+an object of compassion to her richer neighbours; nor, when he came to
+think of it, had he any more right than those neighbours to any
+confidence as to her own or Lily's parentage, so long as he was not
+formally entitled to claim admission into her privity.
+
+London seemed to him intolerably dull and wearisome. He called
+nowhere except at Lady Glenalvon's; he was glad to hear from the
+servants that she was still at Exmundham. He relied much on the
+influence of the queen of the fashion with his mother, whom he knew
+would be more difficult to persuade than Sir Peter, nor did he doubt
+that he should win to his side that sympathizing and warm-hearted
+queen.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+IT is somewhere about three weeks since the party invited by Sir Peter
+and Lady Chillingly assembled at Exmundham, and they are still there,
+though people invited to a country house have seldom compassion enough
+for the dulness of its owner to stay more than three days. Mr.
+Chillingly Mivers, indeed, had not exceeded that orthodox limit.
+Quietly observant, during his stay, of young Gordon's manner towards
+Cecilia, and hers towards him, he had satisfied himself that there was
+no cause to alarm Sir Peter, or induce the worthy baronet to regret
+the invitation he had given to that clever kinsman. For all the
+visitors remaining Exmundham had a charm.
+
+To Lady Glenalvon, because in the hostess she met her most familiar
+friend when both were young girls, and because it pleased her to note
+the interest which Cecilia Travers took in the place so associated
+with memories of the man to whom it was Lady Glenalvon's hope to see
+her united. To Chillingly Gordon, because no opportunity could be so
+favourable for his own well-concealed designs on the hand and heart of
+the heiress. To the heiress herself the charm needs no explanation.
+
+To Leopold Travers the attractions of Exmundham were unquestionably
+less fascinating. Still even he was well pleased to prolong his stay.
+His active mind found amusement in wandering over an estate the
+acreage of which would have warranted a much larger rental, and
+lecturing Sir Peter on the old-fashioned system of husbandry which
+that good-natured easy proprietor permitted his tenants to adopt, as
+well as on the number of superfluous hands that were employed on the
+pleasure-grounds and in the general management of the estate, such as
+carpenters, sawyers, woodmen, bricklayers, and smiths.
+
+When the Squire said, "You could do just as well with a third of those
+costly dependants," Sir Peter, unconsciously plagiarizing the answer
+of the old French grand seigneur, replied, "Very likely. But the
+question is, could the rest do just as well without me?"
+
+Exmundham, indeed, was a very expensive place to keep up. The house,
+built by some ambitious Chillingly three centuries ago, would have
+been large for an owner of thrice the revenues; and though the
+flower-garden was smaller than that at Braefieldville, there were
+paths and drives through miles of young plantations and old woodlands
+that furnished lazy occupation to an army of labourers. No wonder
+that, despite his nominal ten thousand a year, Sir Peter was far from
+being a rich man. Exmundham devoured at least half the rental. The
+active mind of Leopold Travers also found ample occupation in the
+stores of his host's extensive library.
+
+Travers, never much of a reader, was by no means a despiser of
+learning, and he soon took to historical and archaeological researches
+with the ardour of a man who must always throw energy into any pursuit
+that occasion presents as an escape from indolence. Indolent Leopold
+Travers never could be. But, more than either of these resources of
+occupation, the companionship of Chillingly Gordon excited his
+interest and quickened the current of his thoughts. Always fond of
+renewing his own youth in the society of the young, and of the
+sympathizing temperament which belongs to cordial natures, he had, as
+we have seen, entered very heartily into the ambition of George
+Belvoir, and reconciled himself very pliably to the humours of Kenelm
+Chillingly. But the first of these two was a little too commonplace,
+the second a little too eccentric, to enlist the complete
+good-fellowship which, being alike very clever and very practical,
+Leopold Travers established with that very clever and very practical
+representative of the rising generation, Chillingly Gordon. Between
+them there was this meeting-ground, political and worldly, a great
+contempt for innocuous old-fashioned notions; added to which, in the
+mind of Leopold Travers, was a contempt--which would have been
+complete, but that the contempt admitted dread--of harmful
+new-fashioned notions which, interpreted by his thoughts, threatened
+ruin to his country and downfall to the follies of existent society,
+and which, interpreted by his language, tamed itself into the man of
+the world's phrase, "Going too far for me." Notions which, by the
+much more cultivated intellect and the immeasurably more soaring
+ambition of Chillingly Gordon, might be viewed and criticised thus:
+"Could I accept these doctrines? I don't see my way to being Prime
+Minister of a country in which religion and capital are still powers
+to be consulted. And, putting aside religion and capital, I don't see
+how, if these doctrines passed into law, with a good coat on my back I
+should not be a sufferer. Either I, as having a good coat, should
+have it torn off my back as a capitalist, or, if I remonstrated in the
+name of moral honesty, be put to death as a religionist."
+
+Therefore when Leopold Travers said, "Of course we must go on,"
+Chillingly Gordon smiled and answered, "Certainly, go on." And when
+Leopold Travers added, "But we may go too far," Chillingly Gordon
+shook his dead, and replied, "How true that is! Certainly too far."
+
+Apart from the congeniality of political sentiment, there were other
+points of friendly contact between the older and younger man. Each
+was an exceedingly pleasant man of the world; and, though Leopold
+Travers could not have plumbed certain deeps in Chillingly Gordon's
+nature,--and in every man's nature there are deeps which his ablest
+observer cannot fathom,--yet he was not wrong when he said to himself,
+"Gordon is a gentleman."
+
+Utterly would my readers misconceive that very clever young man, if
+they held him to be a hypocrite like Blifil or Joseph Surface.
+Chillingly Gordon, in every private sense of the word, was a
+gentleman. If he had staked his whole fortune on a rubber at whist,
+and an undetected glance at his adversary's hand would have made the
+difference between loss and gain, he would have turned away his head
+and said, "Hold up your cards." Neither, as I have had occasion to
+explain before, was he actuated by any motive in common with the
+vulgar fortune-hunter in his secret resolve to win the hand of the
+heiress. He recognized no inequality of worldly gifts between them.
+He said to himself, "Whatever she may give me in money, I shall amply
+repay in worldly position if I succeed, and succeed I certainly shall.
+If I were as rich as Lord Westminster, and still cared about being
+Prime Minister, I should select her as the most fitting woman I have
+seen for a Prime Minister's wife."
+
+It must be acknowledged that this sort of self-commune, if not that of
+a very ardent lover, is very much that of a sensible man setting high
+value on himself, bent on achieving the prizes of a public career, and
+desirous of securing in his wife a woman who would adorn the station
+to which he confidently aspired. In fact, no one so able as
+Chillingly Gordon would ever have conceived the ambition of being
+Minister of England if in all that in private life constitutes the
+English gentleman he could be fairly subject to reproach.
+
+He was but in public life what many a gentleman honest in private life
+has been before him, an ambitious, resolute egotist, by no means
+without personal affections, but holding them all subordinate to the
+objects of personal ambition, and with no more of other principle than
+that of expediency in reference to his own career than would cover a
+silver penny. But expediency in itself he deemed the statesman's only
+rational principle. And to the consideration of expediency he brought
+a very unprejudiced intellect, quite fitted to decide whether the
+public opinion of a free and enlightened people was for turning St.
+Paul's Cathedral into an Agapemone or not.
+
+During the summer weeks he had thus vouchsafed to the turfs and groves
+of Exmundham, Leopold Travers was not the only person whose good
+opinion Chillingly Gordon had ingratiated. He had won the warmest
+approbation from Mrs. Campion. His conversation reminded her of that
+which she had enjoyed in the house of her departed spouse. In talking
+with Cecilia she was fond of contrasting him to Kenelm, not to the
+favour of the latter, whose humours she utterly failed to understand,
+and whom she pertinaciously described as "so affected." "A most
+superior young man Mr. Gordon, so well informed, so sensible,--above
+all, so natural." Such was her judgment upon the unavowed candidate
+to Cecilia's hand; and Mrs. Campion required no avowal to divine the
+candidature. Even Lady Glenalvon had begun to take friendly interest
+in the fortunes of this promising young man. Most women can
+sympathize with youthful ambition. He impressed her with a deep
+conviction of his abilities, and still more with respect for their
+concentration upon practical objects of power and renown. She too,
+like Mrs. Campion, began to draw comparisons unfavourable to Kenelm
+between the two cousins: the one seemed so slothfully determined to
+hide his candle under a bushel, the other so honestly disposed to set
+his light before men. She felt also annoyed and angry that Kenelm was
+thus absenting himself from the paternal home at the very time of her
+first visit to it, and when he had so felicitous an opportunity of
+seeing more of the girl in whom he knew that Lady Glenalvon deemed he
+might win, if he would properly woo, the wife that would best suit
+him. So that when one day Mrs. Campion, walking through the gardens
+alone with Lady Glenalvon while from the gardens into the park went
+Chillingly Gordon, arm-in-arm with Leopold Travers, abruptly asked,
+"Don't you think that Mr. Gordon is smitten with Cecilia, though he,
+with his moderate fortune, does not dare to say so? And don't you
+think that any girl, if she were as rich as Cecilia will be, would be
+more proud of such a husband as Chillingly Gordon than of some silly
+earl?"
+
+Lady Glenalvon answered curtly, but somewhat sorrowfully, "Yes."
+
+After a pause she added, "There is a man with whom I did once think
+she would have been happier than with any other. One man who ought to
+be dearer to me than Mr. Gordon, for he saved the life of my son, and
+who, though perhaps less clever than Mr. Gordon, still has a great
+deal of talent within him, which might come forth and make him--what
+shall I say?--a useful and distinguished member of society, if married
+to a girl so sure of raising any man she marries as Cecilia Travers.
+But if I am to renounce that hope, and look through the range of young
+men brought under my notice, I don't know one, putting aside
+consideration of rank and fortune, I should prefer for a clever
+daughter who went heart and soul with the ambition of a clever man.
+But, Mrs. Campion, I have not yet quite renounced my hope; and, unless
+I do, I yet think there is one man to whom I would rather give
+Cecilia, if she were my daughter."
+
+Therewith Lady Glenalvon so decidedly broke off the subject of
+conversation that Mrs. Campion could not have renewed it without such
+a breach of the female etiquette of good breeding as Mrs. Campion was
+the last person to adventure.
+
+Lady Chillingly could not help being pleased with Gordon. He was
+light in hand, served to amuse her guests, and made up a rubber of
+whist in case of need.
+
+There were two persons, however, with whom Gordon made no ground;
+namely, Parson John and Sir Peter. When Travers praised him one day
+for the solidity of his parts and the soundness of his judgment, the
+Parson replied snappishly, "Yes, solid and sound as one of those
+tables you buy at a broker's; the thickness of the varnish hides the
+defects in the joints: the whole framework is rickety." But when the
+Parson was indignantly urged to state the reason by which he arrived
+at so harsh a conclusion, he could only reply by an assertion which
+seemed to his questioner a declamatory burst of parsonic intolerance.
+
+"Because," said Parson John, "he has no love for man, and no reverence
+for God. And no character is sound and solid which enlarges its
+surface at the expense of its supports."
+
+On the other hand, the favour with which Sir Peter had at first
+regarded Gordon gradually vanished, in proportion as, acting on the
+hint Mivers had originally thrown out but did not deem it necessary to
+repeat, he watched the pains which the young man took to insinuate
+himself into the good graces of Mr. Travers and Mrs. Campion, and the
+artful and half-suppressed gallantry of his manner to the heiress.
+
+Perhaps Gordon had not ventured thus "to feel his way" till after
+Mivers had departed; or perhaps Sir Peter's parental anxiety rendered
+him, in this instance, a shrewder observer than was the man of the
+world, whose natural acuteness was, in matters of affection, not
+unfrequently rendered languid by his acquired philosophy of
+indifferentism.
+
+More and more every day, every hour, of her sojourn beneath his roof,
+did Cecilia become dearer to Sir Peter, and stronger and stronger
+became his wish to secure her for his daughter-in-law. He was
+inexpressibly flattered by her preference for his company: ever at
+hand to share his customary walks, his kindly visits to the cottages
+of peasants or the homesteads of petty tenants; wherein both were sure
+to hear many a simple anecdote of Master Kenelm in his childhood,
+anecdotes of whim or good-nature, of considerate pity or reckless
+courage.
+
+Throughout all these varieties of thought or feeling in the social
+circle around her, Lady Chillingly preserved the unmoved calm of her
+dignified position. A very good woman certainly, and very ladylike.
+No one could detect a flaw in her character, or a fold awry in her
+flounce. She was only, like the gods of Epicurus, too good to trouble
+her serene existence with the cares of us simple mortals. Not that
+she was without a placid satisfaction in the tribute which the world
+laid upon her altars; nor was she so supremely goddess-like as to soar
+above the household affections which humanity entails on the dwellers
+and denizens of earth. She liked her husband as much as most elderly
+wives like their elderly husbands. She bestowed upon Kenelm a liking
+somewhat more warm, and mingled with compassion. His eccentricities
+would have puzzled her, if she had allowed herself to be puzzled: it
+troubled her less to pity them. She did not share her husband's
+desire for his union with Cecilia. She thought that her son would
+have a higher place in the county if he married Lady Jane, the Duke of
+Clanville's daughter; and "that is what he ought to do," said Lady
+Chillingly to herself. She entertained none of the fear that had
+induced Sir Peter to extract from Kenelm the promise not to pledge his
+hand before he had received his father's consent. That the son of
+Lady Chillingly should make a /mesalliance/, however crotchety he
+might be in other respects, was a thought that it would have so
+disturbed her to admit that she did not admit it.
+
+Such was the condition of things at Exmundham when the lengthy
+communication of Kenelm reached Sir Peter's hands.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VIII.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+NEVER in his whole life had the mind of Sir Peter been so agitated as
+it was during and after the perusal of Kenelm's flighty composition.
+He had received it at the breakfast-table, and, opening it eagerly,
+ran his eye hastily over the contents, till he very soon arrived at
+sentences which appalled him. Lady Chillingly, who was fortunately
+busied at the tea-urn, did not observe the dismay on his countenance.
+It was visible only to Cecilia and to Gordon. Neither guessed who
+that letter was from.
+
+"No bad news, I hope," said Cecilia, softly.
+
+"Bad news," echoed Sir Peter. "No, my dear, no; a letter on business.
+It seems terribly long," and he thrust the packet into his pocket,
+muttering, "see to it by and by."
+
+"That slovenly farmer of yours, Mr. Nostock, has failed, I suppose,"
+said Mr. Travers, looking up and observing a quiver on his host's lip.
+"I told you he would,--a fine farm too. Let me choose you another
+tenant."
+
+Sir Peter shook his head with a wan smile.
+
+"Nostock will not fail. There have been six generations of Nostocks
+on the farm."
+
+"So I should guess," said Travers, dryly.
+
+"And--and," faltered Sir Peter, "if the last of the race fails, he
+must lean upon me, and--if one of the two break down--it shall not
+be--"
+
+"Shall not be that cross-cropping blockhead, my dear Sir Peter. This
+is carrying benevolence too far."
+
+Here the tact and /savoir vivre/ of Chillingly Gordon came to the
+rescue of the host. Possessing himself of the "Times" newspaper, he
+uttered an exclamation of surprise, genuine or simulated, and read
+aloud an extract from the leading article, announcing an impending
+change in the Cabinet.
+
+As soon as he could quit the breakfast-table, Sir Peter hurried into
+his library and there gave himself up to the study of Kenelm's
+unwelcome communication. The task took him long, for he stopped at
+intervals, overcome by the struggle of his heart, now melted into
+sympathy with the passionate eloquence of a son hitherto so free from
+amorous romance, and now sorrowing for the ruin of his own cherished
+hopes. This uneducated country girl would never be such a helpmate to
+a man like Kenelm as would have been Cecilia Travers. At length,
+having finished the letter, he buried his head between his clasped
+hands, and tried hard to realize the situation that placed the father
+and son into such direct antagonism.
+
+"But," he murmured, "after all it is the boy's happiness that must be
+consulted. If he will not be happy in my way, what right have I to
+say that he shall not be happy in his?"
+
+Just then Cecilia came softly into the room. She had acquired the
+privilege of entering his library at will; sometimes to choose a book
+of his recommendation, sometimes to direct and seal his letters,--Sir
+Peter was grateful to any one who saved him an extra trouble,--and
+sometimes, especially at this hour, to decoy him forth into his wonted
+constitutional walk.
+
+He lifted his face at the sound of her approaching tread and her
+winning voice, and the face was so sad that the tears rushed to her
+eyes on seeing it. She laid her hand on his shoulder, and said
+pleadingly, "Dear Sir Peter, what is it,--what is it?"
+
+"Ah--ah, my dear," said Sir Peter, gathering up the scattered sheets
+of Kenelm's effusion with hurried, trembling hands. "Don't
+ask,--don't talk of it; 'tis but one of the disappointments that all
+of us must undergo, when we invest our hopes in the uncertain will of
+others."
+
+Then, observing that the tears were trickling down the girl's fair,
+pale cheeks, he took her hand in both his, kissed her forehead, and
+said, whisperingly, "Pretty one, how good you have been to me! Heaven
+bless you. What a wife you will be to some man!"
+
+Thus saying, he shambled out of the room through the open casement.
+She followed him impulsively, wonderingly; but before she reached his
+side he turned round, waved his hand with a gently repelling gesture,
+and went his way alone through dense fir-groves which had been planted
+in honour of Kenelm's birth.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+KENELM arrived at Exmundham just in time to dress for dinner. His
+arrival was not unexpected, for the morning after his father had
+received his communication, Sir Peter had said to Lady
+Chillingly--"that he had heard from Kenelm to the effect that he might
+be down any day."
+
+"Quite time he should come," said Lady Chillingly. "Have you his
+letter about you?"
+
+"No, my dear Caroline. Of course he sends you his kindest love, poor
+fellow."
+
+"Why poor fellow? Has he been ill?"
+
+"No; but there seems to be something on his mind. If so we must do
+what we can to relieve it. He is the best of sons, Caroline."
+
+"I am sure I have nothing to say against him, except," added her
+Ladyship, reflectively, "that I do wish he were a little more like
+other young men."
+
+"Hum--like Chillingly Gordon, for instance?"
+
+"Well, yes; Mr. Gordon is a remarkably well-bred, sensible young man.
+How different from that disagreeable, bearish father of his, who went
+to law with you!"
+
+"Very different indeed, but with just as much of the Chillingly blood
+in him. How the Chillinglys ever gave birth to a Kenelm is a question
+much more puzzling."
+
+"Oh, my dear Sir Peter, don't be metaphysical. You know how I hate
+puzzles."
+
+"And yet, Caroline, I have to thank you for a puzzle which I can never
+interpret by my brain. There are a great many puzzles in human nature
+which can only be interpreted by the heart."
+
+"Very true," said Lady Chillingly. "I suppose Kenelm is to have his
+old room, just opposite to Mr. Gordon's."
+
+"Ay--ay, just opposite. Opposite they will be all their lives. Only
+think, Caroline, I have made a discovery!"
+
+"Dear me! I hope not. Your discoveries are generally very expensive,
+and bring us in contact with such very odd people."
+
+"This discovery shall not cost us a penny, and I don't know any people
+so odd as not to comprehend it. Briefly it is this: To genius the
+first requisite is heart; it is no requisite at all to talent. My
+dear Caroline, Gordon has as much talent as any young man I know, but
+he wants the first requisite of genius. I am not by any means sure
+that Kenelm has genius, but there is no doubt that he has the first
+requisite of genius,--heart. Heart is a very perplexing, wayward,
+irrational thing; and that perhaps accounts for the general incapacity
+to comprehend genius, while any fool can comprehend talent. My dear
+Caroline, you know that it is very seldom, not more than once in three
+years, that I presume to have a will of my own against a will of
+yours; but should there come a question in which our son's heart is
+concerned, then (speaking between ourselves) my will must govern
+yours."
+
+"Sir Peter is growing more odd every day," said Lady Chillingly to
+herself when left alone. "But he does not mean ill, and there are
+worse husbands in the world."
+
+Therewith she rang for her maid, gave requisite orders for the
+preparing of Kenelm's room, which had not been slept in for many
+months, and then consulted that functionary as to the adaptation of
+some dress of hers, too costly to be laid aside, to the style of some
+dress less costly which Lady Glenalvon had imported from Paris as /la
+derniere mode/.
+
+On the very day on which Kenelm arrived at Exmundham, Chillingly
+Gordon had received this letter from Mr. Gerald Danvers.
+
+
+DEAR GORDON,--In the ministerial changes announced as rumour in the
+public papers, and which you may accept as certain, that sweet little
+cherub--is to be sent to sit up aloft and pray there for the life of
+poor Jack; namely, of the government he leaves below. In accepting
+the peerage, which I persuaded him to do,--creates a vacancy for the
+borough of -----, just the place for you, far better in every way than
+Saxborough. ----- promises to recommend you to his committee. Come to
+town at once. Yours, etc.
+
+ G. DANVERS.
+
+
+Gordon showed this letter to Mr. Travers, and, on receiving the hearty
+good-wishes of that gentleman, said, with emotion partly genuine,
+partly assumed, "You cannot guess all that the realization of your
+good-wishes would be. Once in the House of Commons, and my motives
+for action are so strong that--do not think me very conceited if I
+count upon Parliamentary success."
+
+"My clear Gordon, I am as certain of your success as I am of my own
+existence."
+
+"Should I succeed,--should the great prizes of public life be within
+my reach,--should I lift myself into a position that would warrant my
+presumption, do you think I could come to you and say, 'There is an
+object of ambition dearer to me than power and office,--the hope of
+attaining which was the strongest of all my motives of action? And in
+that hope shall I also have the good-wishes of the father of Cecilia
+Travers?"
+
+"My dear fellow, give me your hand; you speak manfully and candidly as
+a gentleman should speak. I answer in the same spirit. I don't
+pretend to say that I have not entertained views for Cecilia which
+included hereditary rank and established fortune in a suitor to her
+hand, though I never should have made them imperative conditions. I
+am neither potentate nor /parvenu/ enough for that; and I can never
+forget" (here every muscle in the man's face twitched) "that I myself
+married for love, and was so happy. How happy Heaven only knows!
+Still, if you had thus spoken a few weeks ago, I should not have
+replied very favourably to your question. But now that I have seen so
+much of you, my answer is this: If you lose your election,--if you
+don't come into Parliament at all, you have my good-wishes all the
+same. If you win my daughter's heart, there is no man on whom I would
+more willingly bestow her hand. There she is, by herself too, in the
+garden. Go and talk to her."
+
+Gordon hesitated. He knew too well that he had not won her heart,
+though he had no suspicion that it was given to another. And he was
+much too clever not to know also how much he hazards who, in affairs
+of courtship, is premature.
+
+"Ah!" he said, "I cannot express my gratitude for words so generous,
+encouragement so cheering. But I have never yet dared to utter to
+Miss Travers a word that would prepare her even to harbour a thought
+of me as a suitor. And I scarcely think I should have the courage to
+go through this election with the grief of her rejection on my heart."
+
+"Well, go in and win the election first; meanwhile, at all events,
+take leave of Cecilia."
+
+Gordon left his friend, and joined Miss Travers, resolved not indeed
+to risk a formal declaration, but to sound his way to his chances of
+acceptance.
+
+The interview was very brief. He did sound his way skilfully, and
+felt it very unsafe for his footsteps. The advantage of having gained
+the approval of the father was too great to be lost altogether, by one
+of those decided answers on the part of the daughter which allow of no
+appeal, especially to a poor gentleman who wooes an heiress.
+
+He returned to Travers, and said simply, "I bear with me her
+good-wishes as well as yours. That is all. I leave myself in your
+kind hands."
+
+Then he hurried away to take leave of his host and hostess, say a few
+significant words to the ally he had already gained in Mrs. Campion,
+and within an hour was on his road to London, passing on his way the
+train that bore Kenelm to Exmundham. Gordon was in high spirits. At
+least he felt as certain of winning Cecilia as he did of winning his
+election.
+
+"I have never yet failed in what I desired," said he to himself,
+"because I have ever taken pains not to fail."
+
+The cause of Gordon's sudden departure created a great excitement in
+that quiet circle, shared by all except Cecilia and Sir Peter.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+KENELM did not see either father or mother till he appeared at dinner.
+Then he was seated next to Cecilia. There was but little conversation
+between the two; in fact, the prevalent subject of talk was general
+and engrossing, the interest in Chillingly Gordon's election;
+predictions of his success, of what he would do in Parliament.
+"Where," said Lady Glenalvon, "there is such a dearth of rising young
+men, that if he were only half as clever as he is he would be a gain."
+
+"A gain to what?" asked Sir Peter, testily. "To his country? about
+which I don't believe he cares a brass button."
+
+To this assertion Leopold Travers replied warmly, and was not less
+warmly backed by Mrs. Campion.
+
+"For my part," said Lady Glenalvon, in conciliatory accents, "I think
+every able man in Parliament is a gain to the country; and he may not
+serve his country less effectively because he does not boast of his
+love for it. The politicians I dread most are those so rampant in
+France nowadays, the bawling patriots. When Sir Robert Walpole said,
+'All those men have their price,' he pointed to the men who called
+themselves 'patriots.'"
+
+"Bravo!" cried Travers.
+
+"Sir Robert Walpole showed his love for his country by corrupting it.
+There are many ways besides bribing for corrupting a country," said
+Kenelm, mildly, and that was Kenelm's sole contribution to the general
+conversation.
+
+It was not till the rest of the party had retired to rest that the
+conference, longed for by Kenelm, dreaded by Sir Peter, took place in
+the library. It lasted deep into the night; both parted with
+lightened hearts and a fonder affection for each other. Kenelm had
+drawn so charming a picture of the Fairy, and so thoroughly convinced
+Sir Peter that his own feelings towards her were those of no passing
+youthful fancy, but of that love which has its roots in the innermost
+heart, that though it was still with a sigh, a deep sigh, that he
+dismissed the thought of Cecilia, Sir Peter did dismiss it; and,
+taking comfort at last from the positive assurance that Lily was of
+gentle birth, and the fact that her name of Mordaunt was that of
+ancient and illustrious houses, said, with half a smile, "It might
+have been worse, my dear boy. I began to be afraid that, in spite of
+the teachings of Mivers and Welby, it was 'The Miller's Daughter,'
+after all. But we still have a difficult task to persuade your poor
+mother. In covering your first flight from our roof I unluckily put
+into her head the notion of Lady Jane, a duke's daughter, and the
+notion has never got out of it. That comes of fibbing."
+
+"I count on Lady Glenalvon's influence on my mother in support of your
+own," said Kenelm. "If so accepted an oracle in the great world
+pronounce in my favour, and promise to present my wife at Court and
+bring her into fashion, I think that my mother will consent to allow
+us to reset the old family diamonds for her next reappearance in
+London. And then, too, you can tell her that I will stand for the
+county. I will go into Parliament, and if I meet there our clever
+cousin, and find that he does not care a brass button for the country,
+take my word for it, I will lick him more easily than I licked Tom
+Bowles."
+
+"Tom Bowles! who is he?--ah! I remember some letter of yours in which
+you spoke of a Bowles, whose favourite study was mankind, a moral
+philosopher."
+
+"Moral philosophers," answered Kenelm, "have so muddled their brains
+with the alcohol of new ideas that their moral legs have become shaky,
+and the humane would rather help them to bed than give them a licking.
+My Tom Bowles is a muscular Christian, who became no less muscular,
+but much more Christian, after he was licked."
+
+And in this pleasant manner these two oddities settled their
+conference, and went up to bed with arms wrapped round each other's
+shoulder.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+KENELM found it a much harder matter to win Lady Glenalvon to his side
+than he had anticipated. With the strong interest she had taken in
+Kenelm's future, she could not but revolt from the idea of his union
+with an obscure portionless girl whom he had only known a few weeks,
+and of whose very parentage he seemed to know nothing, save an
+assurance that she was his equal in birth. And, with the desire,
+which she had cherished almost as fondly as Sir Peter, that Kenelm
+might win a bride in every way so worthy of his choice as Cecilia
+Travers, she felt not less indignant than regretful at the overthrow
+of her plans.
+
+At first, indeed, she was so provoked that she would not listen to his
+pleadings. She broke away from him with a rudeness she had never
+exhibited to any one before, refused to grant him another interview in
+order to re-discuss the matter, and said that, so far from using her
+influence in favour of his romantic folly, she would remonstrate well
+with Lady Chillingly and Sir Peter against yielding their assent to
+his "thus throwing himself away."
+
+It was not till the third day after his arrival that, touched by the
+grave but haughty mournfulness of his countenance, she yielded to the
+arguments of Sir Peter in the course of a private conversation with
+that worthy baronet. Still it was reluctantly (she did not fulfil her
+threat of remonstrance with Lady Chillingly) that she conceded the
+point, that a son who, succeeding to the absolute fee-simple of an
+estate, had volunteered the resettlement of it on terms singularly
+generous to both his parents, was entitled to some sacrifice of their
+inclinations on a question in which he deemed his happiness vitally
+concerned; and that he was of age to choose for himself independently
+of their consent, but for a previous promise extracted from him by his
+father, a promise which, rigidly construed, was not extended to Lady
+Chillingly, but confined to Sir Peter as the head of the family and
+master of the household. The father's consent was already given, and,
+if in his reverence for both parents Kenelm could not dispense with
+his mother's approval, surely it was the part of a true friend to
+remove every scruple from his conscience, and smooth away every
+obstacle to a love not to be condemned because it was disinterested.
+
+After this conversation, Lady Glenalvon sought Kenelm, found him
+gloomily musing on the banks of the trout-stream, took his arm, led
+him into the sombre glades of the fir-grove, and listened patiently to
+all he had to say. Even then her woman's heart was not won to his
+reasonings, until he said pathetically, "You thanked me once for
+saving your son's life: you said then that you could never repay me;
+you can repay me tenfold. Could your son, who is now, we trust, in
+heaven, look down and judge between us, do you think he would approve
+you if you refuse?"
+
+Then Lady Glenalvon wept, and took his hand, kissed his forehead as a
+mother might kiss it, and said, "You triumph; I will go to Lady
+Chillingly at once. Marry her whom you so love, on one condition:
+marry her from my house."
+
+Lady Glenalvon was not one of those women who serve a friend by
+halves. She knew well how to propitiate and reason down the apathetic
+temperament of Lady Chillingly; she did not cease till that lady
+herself came into Kenelm's room, and said very quietly,--
+
+"So you are going to propose to Miss Mordaunt, the Warwickshire
+Mordaunts I suppose? Lady Glenalvon says she is a very lovely girl,
+and will stay with her before the wedding. And as the young lady is
+an orphan Lady Glenalvon's uncle the Duke, who is connected with the
+eldest branch of the Mordaunts, will give her away. It will be a very
+brilliant affair. I am sure I wish you happy; it is time you should
+have sown your wild oats."
+
+Two days after the consent thus formally given, Kenelm quitted
+Exmundham. Sir Peter would have accompanied him to pay his respects
+to the intended, but the agitation he had gone through brought on a
+sharp twinge of the gout, which consigned his feet to flannels.
+
+After Kenelm had gone, Lady Glenalvon went into Cecilia's room.
+Cecilia was seated very desolately by the open window. She had
+detected that something of an anxious and painful nature had been
+weighing upon the minds of father and son, and had connected it with
+the letter which had so disturbed the even mind of Sir Peter; but she
+did not divine what the something was, and if mortified by a certain
+reserve, more distant than heretofore, which had characterized
+Kenelm's manner towards herself, the mortification was less sensibly
+felt than a tender sympathy for the sadness she had observed on his
+face and yearned to soothe. His reserve had, however, made her own
+manner more reserved than of old, for which she was now rather chiding
+herself than reproaching him.
+
+Lady Glenalvon put her arms round Cecilia's neck and kissed her,
+whispering, "That man has so disappointed me: he is so unworthy of the
+happiness I had once hoped for him!"
+
+"Whom do you speak of?" murmured Cecilia, turning very pale.
+
+"Kenelm Chillingly. It seems that he has conceived a fancy for some
+penniless girl whom he has met in his wanderings, has come here to get
+the consent of his parents to propose to her, has obtained their
+consent, and is gone to propose."
+
+Cecilia remained silent for a moment with her eyes closed, then she
+said, "He is worthy of all happiness, and he would never make an
+unworthy choice. Heaven bless him--and--and--" She would have added,
+"his bride," but her lips refused to utter the word bride.
+
+"Cousin Gordon is worth ten of him," cried Lady Glenalvon,
+indignantly.
+
+She had served Kenelm, but she had not forgiven him.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+KENELM slept in London that night, and, the next day, being singularly
+fine for an English summer, he resolved to go to Moleswich on foot.
+He had no need this time to encumber himself with a knapsack; he had
+left sufficient change of dress in his lodgings at Cromwell Lodge.
+
+It was towards the evening when he found himself in one of the
+prettiest rural villages by which
+
+
+ "Wanders the hoary Thames along
+ His silver-winding way."
+
+
+It was not in the direct road from London to Moleswich, but it was a
+pleasanter way for a pedestrian. And when, quitting the long street
+of the sultry village, he came to the shelving margin of the river, he
+was glad to rest a while, enjoy the cool of the rippling waters, and
+listen to their placid murmurs amid the rushes in the bordering
+shallows. He had ample time before him. His rambles while at
+Cromwell Lodge had made him familiar with the district for miles round
+Moleswich, and he knew that a footpath through the fields at the right
+would lead him, in less than an hour, to the side of the tributary
+brook on which Cromwell Lodge was placed, opposite the wooden bridge
+which conducted to Grasmere and Moleswich.
+
+To one who loves the romance of history, English history, the whole
+course of the Thames is full of charm. Ah! could I go back to the
+days in which younger generations than that of Kenelm Chillingly were
+unborn, when every wave of the Rhine spoke of history and romance to
+me, what fairies should meet on thy banks, O thou our own Father
+Thames! Perhaps some day a German pilgrim may repay tenfold to thee
+the tribute rendered by the English kinsman to the Father Rhine.
+
+Listening to the whispers of the reeds, Kenelm Chillingly felt the
+haunting influence of the legendary stream. Many a poetic incident or
+tradition in antique chronicle, many a votive rhyme in song, dear to
+forefathers whose very names have become a poetry to us, thronged
+dimly and confusedly back to his memory, which had little cared to
+retain such graceful trinkets in the treasure-house of love. But
+everything that, from childhood upward, connects itself with romance,
+revives with yet fresher bloom in the memories of him who loves.
+
+And to this man, through the first perilous season of youth, so
+abnormally safe from youth's most wonted peril,--to this would-be
+pupil of realism, this learned adept in the schools of a Welby or a
+Mivers,--to this man, love came at last as with the fatal powers of
+the fabled Cytherea; and with that love all the realisms of life
+became ideals, all the stern lines of our commonplace destinies
+undulated into curves of beauty, all the trite sounds of our every-day
+life attuned into delicacies of song. How full of sanguine yet dreamy
+bliss was his heart--and seemed his future--in the gentle breeze and
+the softened glow of that summer eve! He should see Lily the next
+morn, and his lips were now free to say all that they had as yet
+suppressed.
+
+Suddenly he was roused from the half-awake, half-asleep happiness that
+belongs to the moments in which we transport ourselves into Elysium,
+by the carol of a voice more loudly joyous than that of his own
+heart--
+
+
+ "Singing, singing,
+ Lustily singing,
+ Down the road, with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Nierestein."
+
+
+Kenelm turned his head so quickly that he frightened Max, who had for
+the last minute been standing behind him inquisitively with one paw
+raised, and sniffing, in some doubt whether he recognized an old
+acquaintance; but at Kenelm's quick movement the animal broke into a
+nervous bark, and ran back to his master.
+
+The minstrel, little heeding the figure reclined on the bank, would
+have passed on with his light tread and his cheery carol, but Kenelm
+rose to his feet, and holding out his hand, said, "I hope you don't
+share Max's alarm at meeting me again?"
+
+"Ah, my young philosopher, is it indeed you?"
+
+"If I am to be designated a philosopher it is certainly not I. And,
+honestly speaking, I am not the same. I, who spent that pleasant day
+with you among the fields round Luscombe two years ago--"
+
+"Or who advised me at Tor Hadham to string my lyre to the praise of a
+beefsteak. I, too, am not quite the same,--I, whose dog presented you
+with the begging-tray."
+
+"Yet you still go through the world singing."
+
+"Even that vagrant singing time is pretty well over. But I disturbed
+you from your repose; I would rather share it. You are probably not
+going my way, and as I am in no hurry, I should not like to lose the
+opportunity chance has so happily given me of renewing acquaintance
+with one who has often been present to my thoughts since we last met."
+Thus saying, the minstrel stretched himself at ease on the bank, and
+Kenelm followed his example.
+
+There certainly was a change in the owner of the dog with the
+begging-tray, a change in costume, in countenance, in that
+indescribable self-evidence which we call "manner." The costume was
+not that Bohemian attire in which Kenelm had first encountered the
+wandering minstrel, nor the studied, more graceful garb, which so well
+became his shapely form during his visit to Luscombe. It was now
+neatly simple, the cool and quiet summer dress any English gentleman
+might adopt in a long rural walk. And as he uncovered his head to
+court the cooling breeze, there was a graver dignity in the man's
+handsome Rubens-like face, a line of more concentrated thought in the
+spacious forehead, a thread or two of gray shimmering here and there
+through the thick auburn curls of hair and beard. And in his manner,
+though still very frank, there was just perceptible a sort of
+self-assertion, not offensive, but manly; such as does not misbecome
+one of maturer years, and of some established position, addressing
+another man much younger than himself, who in all probability has
+achieved no position at all beyond that which the accident of birth
+might assign to him.
+
+"Yes," said the minstrel, with a half-suppressed sigh, "the last year
+of my vagrant holidays has come to its close. I recollect that the
+first day we met by the road-side fountain, I advised you to do like
+me, seek amusement and adventure as a foot-traveller. Now, seeing
+you, evidently a gentleman by education and birth, still a
+foot-traveller, I feel as if I ought to say, 'You have had enough of
+such experience: vagabond life has its perils as well as charms; cease
+it, and settle down.'"
+
+"I think of doing so," replied Kenelm, laconically.
+
+"In a profession?--army, law, medicine?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Ah, in marriage then. Right; give me your hand on that. So a
+petticoat indeed has at last found its charm for you in the actual
+world as well as on the canvas of a picture?"
+
+"I conclude," said Kenelm, evading any direct notice of that playful
+taunt, "I conclude from your remark that it is in marriage /you/ are
+about to settle down."
+
+"Ay, could I have done so before I should have been saved from many
+errors, and been many years nearer to the goal which dazzled my sight
+through the haze of my boyish dreams."
+
+"What is that goal,--the grave?"
+
+"The grave! That which allows of no grave,--fame."
+
+"I see--despite of what you just now said--you still mean to go
+through the world seeking a poet's fame."
+
+"Alas! I resign that fancy," said the minstrel, with another
+half-sigh. "It was not indeed wholly, but in great part the hope
+of the poet's fame that made me a truant in the way to that which
+destiny, and such few gifts as Nature conceded to me, marked
+out for my proper and only goal. But what a strange, delusive
+Will-o'-the-Wisp the love of verse-making is! How rarely a man of
+good sense deceives himself as to other things for which he is fitted,
+in which he can succeed; but let him once drink into his being the
+charm of verse-making, how the glamour of the charm bewitches his
+understanding! how long it is before he can believe that the world
+will not take his word for it, when he cries out to sun, moon, and
+stars, 'I, too, am a poet.' And with what agonies, as if at the wrench
+of soul from life, he resigns himself at last to the conviction that
+whether he or the world be right, it comes to the same thing. Who can
+plead his cause before a court that will not give him a hearing?"
+
+It was with an emotion so passionately strong, and so intensely
+painful, that the owner of the dog with the begging-tray thus spoke,
+that Kenelm felt, through sympathy, as if he himself were torn asunder
+by the wrench of life from soul. But then Kenelm was a mortal so
+eccentric that, if a single acute suffering endured by a fellow mortal
+could be brought before the evidence of his senses, I doubt whether he
+would not have suffered as much as that fellow-mortal. So that,
+though if there were a thing in the world which Kenelm Chillingly
+would care not to do, it was verse-making, his mind involuntarily
+hastened to the arguments by which he could best mitigate the pang of
+the verse-maker.
+
+Quoth he: "According to my very scanty reading, you share the love of
+verse-making with men the most illustrious in careers which have
+achieved the goal of fame. It must, then, be a very noble love:
+Augustus, Pollio, Varius, Maecenas,--the greatest statesmen of their
+day,--they were verse-makers. Cardinal Richelieu was a verse-maker;
+Walter Raleigh and Philip Sidney, Fox, Burke, Sheridan, Warren
+Hastings, Canning, even the grave William Pitt,--all were
+verse-makers. Verse-making did not retard--no doubt the qualities
+essential to verse-making accelerated--their race to the goal of fame.
+What great painters have been verse-makers! Michael Angelo, Leonardo
+da Vinci, Salvator Rosa"--and Heaven knows how may other great names
+Kenelm Chillingly might have proceeded to add to his list, if the
+minstrel had not here interposed.
+
+"What! all those mighty painters were verse-makers?"
+
+"Verse-makers so good, especially Michael Angelo,--the greatest
+painter of all,--that they would have had the fame of poets, if,
+unfortunately for that goal of fame, their glory in the sister art of
+painting did not outshine it. But when you give to your gift of song
+the modest title of verse-making, permit me to observe that your gift
+is perfectly distinct from that of the verse-maker. Your gift,
+whatever it may be, could not exist without some sympathy with the non
+verse-making human heart. No doubt in your foot travels, you have
+acquired not only observant intimacy with external Nature in the
+shifting hues at each hour of a distant mountain, in the lengthening
+shadows which yon sunset casts on the waters at our feet, in the
+habits of the thrush dropped fearlessly close beside me, in that turf
+moistened by its neighbourhood to those dripping rushes, all of which
+I could describe no less accurately than you,--as a Peter Bell might
+describe them no less accurately than a William Wordsworth. But in
+such songs of yours as you have permitted me to hear, you seem to have
+escaped out of that elementary accidence of the poet's art, and to
+touch, no matter how slightly, on the only lasting interest which the
+universal heart of man can have in the song of the poet; namely, in
+the sound which the poet's individual sympathy draws forth from the
+latent chords in that universal heart. As for what you call 'the
+world,' what is it more than the fashion of the present day? How far
+the judgment of that is worth a poet's pain I can't pretend to say.
+But of one thing I am sure, that while I could as easily square the
+circle as compose a simple couplet addressed to the heart of a simple
+audience with sufficient felicity to decoy their praises into Max's
+begging-tray, I could spin out by the yard the sort of verse-making
+which characterizes the fashion of the present day."
+
+Much flattered, and not a little amused, the wandering minstrel turned
+his bright countenance, no longer dimmed by a cloud, towards that of
+his lazily reclined consoler, and answered gayly,--
+
+"You say that you could spin out by the yard verses in the fashion of
+the present day. I wish you would give me a specimen of your skill in
+that handiwork."
+
+"Very well; on one condition, that you will repay my trouble by a
+specimen of your own verses, not in the fashion of the present
+day,--something which I can construe. I defy you to construe mine."
+
+"Agreed."
+
+"Well, then, let us take it for granted that this is the Augustan age
+of English poetry, and that the English language is dead, like the
+Latin. Suppose I am writing for a prize-medal in English, as I wrote
+at college for a prize-medal in Latin: of course, I shall be
+successful in proportion as I introduce the verbal elegances peculiar
+to our Augustan age, and also catch the prevailing poetic
+characteristic of that classical epoch.
+
+"Now I think that every observant critic will admit that the striking
+distinctions of the poetry most in the fashion of the present day,
+namely, of the Augustan age, are,--first, a selection of such verbal
+elegances as would have been most repulsive to the barbaric taste of
+the preceding century; and, secondly, a very lofty disdain of all
+prosaic condescensions to common-sense, and an elaborate cultivation
+of that element of the sublime which Mr. Burke defines under the head
+of obscurity.
+
+"These premises conceded, I will only ask you to choose the metre.
+Blank verse is very much in fashion just now."
+
+"Pooh! blank verse indeed! I am not going so to free your experiment
+from the difficulties of rhyme."
+
+"It is all one to me," said Kenelm, yawning; "rhyme be it: heroic or
+lyrical?"
+
+"Heroics are old-fashioned; but the Chaucer couplet, as brought to
+perfection by our modern poets, I think the best adapted to dainty
+leaves and uncrackable nuts. I accept the modern Chaucerian. The
+subject?"
+
+"Oh, never trouble yourself about that. By whatever title your
+Augustan verse-maker labels his poem, his genius, like Pindar's,
+disdains to be cramped by the subject. Listen, and don't suffer Max
+to howl, if he can help it. Here goes."
+
+And in an affected but emphatic sing-song Kenelm began:--
+
+
+ "In Attica the gentle Pythias dwelt.
+ Youthful he was, and passing rich: he felt
+ As if nor youth nor riches could suffice
+ For bliss. Dark-eyed Sophronia was a nice
+ Girl: and one summer day, when Neptune drove
+ His sea-car slowly, and the olive grove
+ That skirts Ilissus, to thy shell, Harmonia,
+ Rippled, he said 'I love thee' to Sophronia.
+ Crocus and iris, when they heard him, wagged
+ Their pretty heads in glee: the honey-bagged
+ Bees became altars: and the forest dove
+ Her plumage smoothed. Such is the charm of love.
+ Of this sweet story do ye long for more?
+ Wait till I publish it in volumes four;
+ Which certain critics, my good friends, will cry
+ Up beyond Chaucer. Take their word for 't. I
+ Say 'Trust them, but not read,--or you'll not buy.'"
+
+
+"You have certainly kept your word," said the minstrel, laughing; "and
+if this be the Augustan age, and the English were a dead language, you
+deserve to win the prize-medal."
+
+"You flatter me," said Kenelm, modestly. "But if I, who never before
+strung two rhymes together, can improvise so readily in the style of
+the present day, why should not a practical rhymester like yourself
+dash off at a sitting a volume or so in the same style; disguising
+completely the verbal elegances borrowed, adding to the delicacies of
+the rhyme by the frequent introduction of a line that will not scan,
+and towering yet more into the sublime by becoming yet more
+unintelligible? Do that, and I promise you the most glowing panegyric
+in 'The Londoner,' for I will write it myself."
+
+"'The Londoner'!" exclaimed the minstrel, with an angry flush on his
+cheek and brow, "my bitter, relentless enemy."
+
+"I fear, then, you have as little studied the critical press
+of the Augustan age as you have imbued your muse with the classical
+spirit of its verse. For the art of writing a man must cultivate
+himself. The art of being reviewed consists in cultivating the
+acquaintance of reviewers. In the Augustan age criticism is cliquism.
+Belong to a clique and you are Horace or Tibullus. Belong to no
+clique and, of course, you are Bavius or Maevius. 'The Londoner' is
+the enemy of no man: it holds all men in equal contempt. But as, in
+order to amuse, it must abuse, it compensates the praise it is
+compelled to bestow upon the members of its clique by heaping
+additional scorn upon all who are cliqueless. Hit him hard: he has no
+friends."
+
+"Ah," said the minstrel, "I believe that there is much truth in what
+you say. I never had a friend among the cliques. And Heaven knows
+with what pertinacity those from whom I, in utter ignorance of the
+rules which govern so-called organs of opinion, had hoped, in my time
+of struggle, for a little sympathy, a kindly encouragement, have
+combined to crush me down. They succeeded long. But at last I
+venture to hope that I am beating them. Happily, Nature endowed me
+with a sanguine, joyous, elastic temperament. He who never despairs
+seldom completely fails."
+
+This speech rather perplexed Kenelm, for had not the minstrel declared
+that his singing days were over, that he had decided on the
+renunciation of verse-making? What other path to fame, from which the
+critics had not been able to exclude his steps, was he, then, now
+pursuing,--he whom Kenelm had assumed to belong to some commercial
+moneymaking firm? No doubt some less difficult prose-track, probably
+a novel. Everybody writes novels nowadays, and as the public will
+read novels without being told to do so, and will not read poetry
+unless they are told that they ought, possibly novels are not quite so
+much at the mercy of cliques as are the poems of our Augustan age.
+
+However, Kenelm did not think of seeking for further confidence on
+that score. His mind at that moment, not unnaturally, wandered from
+books and critics to love and wedlock.
+
+"Our talk," said he, "has digressed into fretful courses; permit me to
+return to the starting-point. You are going to settle down into the
+peace of home. A peaceful home is like a good conscience. The rains
+without do not pierce its roof, the winds without do not shake its
+walls. If not an impertinent question, is it long since you have
+known your intended bride?"
+
+"Yes, very long."
+
+"And always loved her?"
+
+"Always, from her infancy. Out of all womankind, she was designed to
+be my life's playmate and my soul's purifier. I know not what might
+have become of me, if the thought of her had not walked beside me as
+my guardian angel. For, like many vagrants from the beaten high roads
+of the world, there is in my nature something of that lawlessness
+which belongs to high animal spirits, to the zest of adventure, and
+the warm blood that runs into song, chiefly because song is the voice
+of a joy. And no doubt, when I look back on the past years I must own
+that I have too often been led astray from the objects set before my
+reason, and cherished at my heart, by erring impulse or wanton fancy."
+
+"Petticoat interest, I presume," interposed Kenelm, dryly.
+
+"I wish I could honestly answer 'No,'" said the minstrel, colouring
+high. "But from the worst, from all that would have permanently
+blasted the career to which I intrust my fortunes, all that would have
+rendered me unworthy of the pure love that now, I trust, awaits and
+crowns my dreams of happiness, I have been saved by the haunting smile
+in a sinless infantine face. Only once was I in great peril,--that
+hour of peril I recall with a shudder. It was at Luscombe."
+
+"At Luscombe!"
+
+"In the temptation of a terrible crime I thought I heard a voice say,
+'Mischief! Remember the little child.' In that supervention which is
+so readily accepted as a divine warning, when the imagination is
+morbidly excited, and when the conscience, though lulled asleep for a
+moment, is still asleep so lightly that the sigh of a breeze, the fall
+of a leaf, can awake it with a start of terror, I took the voice for
+that of my guardian angel. Thinking it over later, and coupling the
+voice with the moral of those weird lines you repeated to ine so
+appositely the next day, I conclude that I am not mistaken when I say
+it was from your lips that the voice which preserved me came."
+
+"I confess the impertinence: you pardon it?"
+
+The minstrel seized Kenelm's hand and pressed it earnestly.
+
+"Pardon it! Oh, could you but guess what cause I have to be grateful,
+everlastingly grateful! That sudden cry, the remorse and horror of my
+own self that it struck into me,--deepened by those rugged lines which
+the next day made me shrink in dismay from 'the face of my darling
+sin'! Then came the turning-point of my life. From that day, the
+lawless vagabond within me was killed. I mean not, indeed, the love
+of Nature and of song which had first allured the vagabond, but the
+hatred of steadfast habits and of serious work,--/that/ was killed. I
+no longer trifled with my calling: I took to it as a serious duty.
+And when I saw her, whom fate has reserved and reared for my bride,
+her face was no longer in my eyes that of the playful child; the soul
+of the woman was dawning into it. It is but two years since that day,
+to me so eventful. Yet my fortunes are now secured. And if fame be
+not established, I am at last in a position which warrants my saying
+to her I love, 'The time has come when, without fear for thy future, I
+can ask thee to be mine.'"
+
+The man spoke with so fervent a passion that Kenelm silently left him
+to recover his wonted self-possession,--not unwilling to be
+silent,--not unwilling, in the softness of the hour, passing from
+roseate sunset into starry twilight, to murmur to himself, "And the
+time, too, has come for me!"
+
+After a few moments the minstrel resumed lightly and cheerily,--
+
+"Sir, your turn: pray have you long known--judging by our former
+conversation you cannot have long loved--the lady whom you have wooed
+and won?"
+
+As Kenelm had neither as yet wooed nor won the lady in question, and
+did not deem it necessary to enter into any details on the subject of
+love particular to himself, he replied by a general observation,--
+
+"It seems to me that the coming of love is like the coming of spring:
+the date is not to be reckoned by the calendar. It may be slow and
+gradual; it may be quick and sudden. But in the morning, when we wake
+and recognize a change in the world without, verdure on the trees,
+blossoms on the sward, warmth in the sunshine, music in the air, then
+we say Spring has come!"
+
+"I like your illustration. And if it be an idle question to ask a
+lover how long he has known the beloved one, so it is almost as idle
+to ask if she be not beautiful. He cannot but see in her face the
+beauty she has given to the world without."
+
+"True; and that thought is poetic enough to make me remind you that I
+favoured you with the maiden specimen of my verse-making on condition
+that you repaid me by a specimen of your own practical skill in the
+art. And I claim the right to suggest the theme. Let it be--"
+
+"Of a beefsteak?"
+
+"Tush, you have worn out that tasteless joke at my expense. The theme
+must be of love, and if you could improvise a stanza or two expressive
+of the idea you just uttered I shall listen with yet more pleased
+attention."
+
+"Alas! I am no /improvisatore/. Yet I will avenge myself on your
+former neglect of my craft by chanting to you a trifle somewhat in
+unison with the thought you ask me to versify, but which you would not
+stay to hear at Tor Hadham (though you did drop a shilling into Max's
+tray); it was one of the songs I sang that evening, and it was not
+ill-received by my humble audience.
+
+
+ "THE BEAUTY OF THE MISTRESS IS IN THE LOVER'S EYE.
+
+ "Is she not pretty, my Mabel May?
+ Nobody ever yet called her so.
+ Are not her lineaments faultless, say?
+ If I must answer you plainly, No.
+
+ "Joy to believe that the maid I love
+ None but myself as she is can see;
+ Joy that she steals from her heaven above,
+ And is only revealed on this earth to me!"
+
+
+As soon as he had finished this very artless ditty, the minstrel rose
+and said,--
+
+"Now I must bid you good-by. My way lies through those meadows, and
+yours no doubt along the high road."
+
+"Not so. Permit me to accompany you. I have a lodging not far from
+hence, to which the path through the fields is the shortest way."
+
+The minstrel turned a somewhat surprised and somewhat inquisitive look
+towards Kenelm. But feeling, perhaps, that having withheld from his
+fellow-traveller all confidence as to his own name and attributes, he
+had no right to ask any confidence from that gentleman not voluntarily
+made to him, he courteously said "that he wished the way were longer,
+since it would be so pleasantly halved," and strode forth at a brisk
+pace.
+
+The twilight was now closing into the brightness of a starry summer
+night, and the solitude of the fields was unbroken. Both these men,
+walking side by side, felt supremely happy. But happiness is like
+wine; its effect differing with the differing temperaments on which it
+acts. In this case garrulous and somewhat vaunting with the one man,
+warm-coloured, sensuous, impressionable to the influences of external
+Nature, as an Aeolian harp to the rise or fall of a passing wind; and,
+with the other man, taciturn and somewhat modestly expressed,
+saturnine, meditative, not indeed dull to the influences of external
+Nature, but deeming them of no value, save where they passed out of
+the domain of the sensuous into that of the intellectual, and the soul
+of man dictated to the soulless Nature its own questions and its own
+replies.
+
+The minstrel took the talk on himself, and the talk charmed his
+listener. It became so really eloquent in the tones of its utterance,
+in the frank play of its delivery, that I could no more adequately
+describe it than a reporter, however faithful to every word a true
+orator may say, can describe that which, apart from all words, belongs
+to the presence of the orator himself.
+
+Not, then, venturing to report the language of this singular
+itinerant, I content myself with saying that the substance of it was
+of the nature on which it is said most men can be eloquent: it was
+personal to himself. He spoke of aspirations towards the achievement
+of a name, dating back to the dawn of memory; of early obstacles in
+lowly birth, stinted fortunes; of a sudden opening to his ambition
+while yet in boyhood, through the generous favour of a rich man, who
+said, "The child has genius: I will give it the discipline of culture;
+one day it shall repay to the world what it owes to me;" of studies
+passionately begun, earnestly pursued, and mournfully suspended in
+early youth. He did not say how or wherefore: he rushed on to dwell
+upon the struggles for a livelihood for himself and those dependent on
+him; how in such struggles he was compelled to divert toil and energy
+from the systematic pursuit of the object he had once set before him;
+the necessities for money were too urgent to be postponed to the
+visions of fame. "But even," he exclaimed, passionately, "even in
+such hasty and crude manifestations of what is within me, as
+circumstances limited my powers, I know that I ought to have found
+from those who profess to be authoritative judges the encouragement of
+praise. How much better, then, I should have done if I had found it!
+How a little praise warms out of a man the good that is in him, and
+the sneer of a contempt which he feels to be unjust chills the ardour
+to excel! However, I forced my way, so far as was then most essential
+to me, the sufficing breadmaker for those I loved; and in my holidays
+of song and ramble I found a delight that atoned for all the rest.
+But still the desire of fame, once conceived in childhood, once
+nourished through youth, never dies but in our grave. Foot and hoof
+may tread it down, bud, leaf, stalk; its root is too deep below the
+surface for them to reach, and year after year stalk and leaf and bud
+re-emerge. Love may depart from our mortal life: we console
+ourselves; the beloved will be reunited to us in the life to come.
+But if he who sets his heart on fame loses it in this life, what can
+console him?"
+
+"Did you not say a little while ago that fame allowed of no grave?"
+
+"True; but if we do not achieve it before we ourselves are in the
+grave, what comfort can it give to us? Love ascends to heaven, to
+which we hope ourselves to ascend; but fame remains on the earth,
+which we shall never again revisit. And it is because fame is
+earth-born that the desire for it is the most lasting, the regret for
+the want of it the most bitter, to the child of earth. But I shall
+achieve it now; it is already in my grasp."
+
+By this time the travellers had arrived at the brook, facing the
+wooden bridge beside Cromwell Lodge.
+
+Here the minstrel halted; and Kenelm with a certain tremble in his
+voice, said, "Is it not time that we should make ourselves known to
+each other by name? I have no longer any cause to conceal mine,
+indeed I never had any cause stronger than whim,--Kenelm Chillingly,
+the only son of Sir Peter, of Exmundham, -----shire."
+
+"I wish your father joy of so clever a son," said the minstrel with
+his wonted urbanity. "You already know enough of me to be aware that
+I am of much humbler birth and station than you; but if you chance to
+have visited the exhibition of the Royal Academy this year--ah! I
+understand that start--you might have recognized a picture of which
+you have seen the rudimentary sketch, 'The Girl with the Flower-ball,'
+one of three pictures very severely handled by 'The Londoner,' but, in
+spite of that potent enemy, insuring fortune and promising fame to the
+wandering minstrel, whose name, if the sight of the pictures had
+induced you to inquire into that, you would have found to be Walter
+Melville. Next January I hope, thanks to that picture, to add,
+'Associate of the Royal Academy.' The public will not let them keep
+me out of it, in spite of 'The Londoner.' You are probably an
+expected guest at one of the more imposing villas from which we see
+the distant lights. I am going to a very humble cottage, in which
+henceforth I hope to find my established home. I am there now only
+for a few days, but pray let me welcome you there before I leave. The
+cottage is called Grasmere."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE minstrel gave a cordial parting shake of the hand to the
+fellow-traveller whom he had advised to settle down, not noticing how
+very cold had become the hand in his own genial grasp. Lightly he
+passed over the wooden bridge, preceded by Max, and merrily, when he
+had gained the other side of the bridge, came upon Kenelm's ear,
+through the hush of the luminous night, the verse of the uncompleted
+love-song,--
+
+
+ "Singing, singing,
+ Lustily singing,
+ Down the road, with his dogs before,
+ Came the Ritter of Nierestein."
+
+
+Love-song, uncompleted; why uncompleted? It was not given to Kenelm
+to divine the why. It was a love-song versifying one of the prettiest
+fairy tales in the world, which was a great favourite with Lily, and
+which Lion had promised Lily to versify, but only to complete it in
+her presence and to her perfect satisfaction.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+IF I could not venture to place upon paper the exact words of an
+eloquent coveter of fame, the earth-born, still less can I dare to
+place upon paper all that passed through the voiceless heart of a
+coveter of love, the heaven-born.
+
+From the hour in which Kenelm Chillingly had parted from Walter
+Melville until somewhere between sunrise and noon the next day, the
+summer joyousness of that external Nature which does now and then,
+though, for the most part, deceitfully, address to the soul of man
+questions and answers all her soulless own, laughed away the gloom of
+his misgivings.
+
+No doubt this Walter Melville was the beloved guardian of Lily; no
+doubt it was Lily whom he designated as reserved and reared to become
+his bride. But on that question Lily herself had the sovereign voice.
+It remained yet to be seen whether Kenelm had deceived himself in the
+belief that had made the world so beautiful to him since the hour of
+their last parting. At all events it was due to her, due even to his
+rival, to assert his own claim to her choice. And the more he
+recalled all that Lily had ever said to him of her guardian, so
+openly, so frankly, proclaiming affection, admiration, gratitude, the
+more convincingly his reasonings allayed his fears, whispering, "So
+might a child speak of a parent: not so does the maiden speak of the
+man she loves; she can scarcely trust herself to praise."
+
+In fine, it was not in despondent mood, nor with dejected looks, that,
+a little before noon, Kenelm crossed the bridge and re-entered the
+enchanted land of Grasmere. In answer to his inquiries, the servant
+who opened the door said that neither Mr. Melville nor Miss Mordaunt
+were at home; they had but just gone out together for a walk. He was
+about to turn back, when Mrs. Cameron came into the hall, and, rather
+by gesture than words, invited him to enter. Kenelm followed her into
+the drawing-room, taking his seat beside her. He was about to speak,
+when she interrupted him in a tone of voice so unlike its usual
+languor, so keen, so sharp, that it sounded like a cry of distress.
+
+"I was just about to come to you. Happily, however, you find me
+alone, and what may pass between us will be soon over. But first tell
+me: you have seen your parents; you have asked their consent to wed a
+girl such as I described; tell me, oh tell me that that consent is
+refused!"
+
+"On the contrary, I am here with their full permission to ask the hand
+of your niece."
+
+Mrs. Cameron sank back in her chair, rocking herself to and fro in the
+posture of a person in great pain.
+
+"I feared that. Walter said he had met you last evening; that you,
+like himself, entertained the thought of marriage. You, of course
+when you learned his name, must have known with whom his thought was
+connected. Happily, he could not divine what was the choice to which
+your youthful fancy had been so blindly led."
+
+"My dear Mrs. Cameron," said Kenelm, very mildly, but very firmly,
+"you were aware of the purpose for which I left Moleswich a few days
+ago, and it seems to me that you might have forestalled my intention,
+the intention which brings me; thus early to your house. I come to
+say to Miss Mordaunt's guardian, 'I ask the hand of your ward. If you
+also woo her, I have a very noble rival. With both of us no
+consideration for our own happiness can be comparable to the duty of
+consulting hers. Let her choose between the two.'"
+
+"Impossible!" exclaimed Mrs. Cameron; "impossible. You know not what
+you say; know not, guess not, how sacred are the claims of Walter
+Melville to all that the orphan whom he has protected from her very
+birth can give him in return. She has no right to a preference for
+another: her heart is too grateful to admit of one. If the choice
+were given to her between him and you, it is he whom she would choose.
+Solemnly I assure you of this. Do not, then, subject her to the pain
+of such a choice. Suppose, if you will, that you had attracted her
+fancy, and that now you proclaimed your love and urged your suit, she
+would not, must not, the less reject your hand, but you might cloud
+her happiness in accepting Melville's. Be generous. Conquer your own
+fancy; it can be but a passing one. Speak not to her, nor to Mr.
+Melville, of a wish which can never be realized. Go hence, silently,
+and at once."
+
+The words and the manner of the pale imploring woman struck a vague
+awe into the heart of her listener. But he did not the less
+resolutely answer, "I cannot obey you. It seems to me that my honour
+commands me to prove to your niece that, if I mistook the nature of
+her feelings towards me, I did not, by word or look, lead her to
+believe mine towards herself were less in earnest than they are; and
+it seems scarcely less honourable towards my worthy rival to endanger
+his own future happiness, should he discover later that his bride
+would have been happier with another. Why be so mysteriously
+apprehensive? If, as you say, with such apparent conviction, there is
+no doubt of your niece's preference for another, at a word from her
+own lips I depart, and you will see me no more. But that word must be
+said by her; and if you will not permit me to ask for it in your own
+house, I will take my chance of finding her now, on her walk with Mr.
+Melville; and, could he deny me the right to speak to her alone, that
+which I would say can be said in his presence. Ah! madam, have you no
+mercy for the heart that you so needlessly torture? If I must bear
+the worst, let me learn it, and at once."
+
+"Learn it, then, from my lips," said Mrs. Cameron, speaking with voice
+unnaturally calm, and features rigidly set into stern composure. "And
+I place the secret you wring from me under the seal of that honour
+which you so vauntingly make your excuse for imperilling the peace of
+the home I ought never to have suffered you to enter. An honest
+couple, of humble station and narrow means, had an only son, who
+evinced in early childhood talents so remarkable that they attracted
+the notice of the father's employer, a rich man of very benevolent
+heart and very cultivated taste. He sent the child, at his expense,
+to a first-rate commercial school, meaning to provide for him later in
+his own firm. The rich man was the head partner of an eminent bank;
+but very infirm health, and tastes much estranged from business, had
+induced him to retire from all active share in the firm, the
+management of which was confined to a son whom he idolized. But the
+talents of the protege he had sent to school took there so passionate
+a direction towards art and estranged from trade, and his designs in
+drawing when shown to connoisseurs were deemed so promising of future
+excellence, that the patron changed his original intention, entered
+him as a pupil in the studio of a distinguished French painter, and
+afterwards bade him perfect his taste by the study of Italian and
+Flemish masterpieces.
+
+"He was still abroad, when--" here Mrs. Cameron stopped, with visible
+effort, suppressed a sob, and went on, whisperingly, through teeth
+clenched together--"when a thunderbolt fell on the house of the
+patron, shattering his fortunes, blasting his name. The son, unknown
+to the father, had been decoyed into speculations which proved
+unfortunate: the loss might have been easily retrieved in the first
+instance; unhappily he took the wrong course to retrieve it, and
+launched into new hazards. I must be brief. One day the world was
+startled by the news that a firm, famed for its supposed wealth and
+solidity, was bankrupt. Dishonesty was alleged, was proved, not
+against the father,--he went forth from the trial, censured indeed for
+neglect, not condemned for fraud, but a penniless pauper. The--son,
+the son, the idolized son, was removed from the prisoner's dock, a
+convicted felon, sentenced to penal servitude; escaped that sentence
+by--by--you guess--you guess. How could he escape except through
+death?--death by his own guilty deed?"
+
+Almost as much overpowered by emotion as Mrs. Cameron herself, Kenelm
+covered his bended face with one hand, stretching out the other
+blindly to clasp her own, but she would not take it.
+
+A dreary foreboding. Again before his eyes rose the old gray
+tower,--again in his ears thrilled the tragic tale of the Fletwodes.
+What was yet left untold held the young man in spell-bound silence.
+Mrs. Cameron resumed,--
+
+"I said the father was a penniless pauper; he died lingeringly
+bedridden. But one faithful friend did not desert that bed,--the
+youth to whose genius his wealth had ministered. He had come from
+abroad with some modest savings from the sale of copies or sketches
+made in Florence. These savings kept a roof over the heads of the old
+man and the two helpless, broken-hearted women,--paupers like
+himself,--his own daughter and his son's widow. When the savings were
+gone, the young man stooped from his destined calling, found
+employment somehow, no matter how alien to his tastes, and these three
+whom his toil supported never wanted a home or food. Well, a few
+weeks after her husband's terrible death, his young widow (they had
+not been a year married) gave birth to a child,--a girl. She did not
+survive the exhaustion of her confinement many days. The shock of her
+death snapped the feeble thread of the poor father's life. Both were
+borne to the grave on the same day. Before they died, both made the
+same prayer to their sole two mourners, the felon's sister, the old
+man's young benefactor. The prayer was this, that the new-born infant
+should be reared, however humbly, in ignorance of her birth, of a
+father's guilt and shame. She was not to pass a suppliant for charity
+to rich and high-born kinsfolk, who had vouchsafed no word even of
+pity to the felon's guiltless father and as guiltless wife. That
+promise has been kept till now. I am that daughter. The name I bear,
+and the name which I gave to my niece, are not ours, save as we may
+indirectly claim them through alliances centuries ago. I have never
+married. I was to have been a bride, bringing to the representative
+of no ignoble house what was to have been a princely dower; the
+wedding day was fixed, when the bolt fell. I have never again seen my
+betrothed. He went abroad and died there. I think he loved me; he
+knew I loved him. Who can blame him for deserting me? Who could
+marry the felon's sister? Who would marry the felon's child? Who but
+one? The man who knows her secret, and will guard it; the man who,
+caring little for other education, has helped to instil into her
+spotless childhood so steadfast a love of truth, so exquisite a pride
+of honour, that did she know such ignominy rested on her birth she
+would pine herself away."
+
+"Is there only one man on earth," cried Kenelm, suddenly, rearing his
+face,--till then concealed and downcast,--and with a loftiness of
+pride on its aspect, new to its wonted mildness, "is there only one
+man who would deem the virgin at whose feet he desires to kneel and
+say, 'Deign to be the queen of my life,' not far too noble in herself
+to be debased by the sins of others before she was even born; is there
+only one man who does not think that the love of truth and the pride
+of honour are most royal attributes of woman or of man, no matter
+whether the fathers of the woman or the man were pirates as lawless as
+the fathers of Norman kings, or liars as unscrupulous, where their own
+interests were concerned, as have been the crowned representatives of
+lines as deservedly famous as Caesars and Bourbons, Tudors and
+Stuarts? Nobility, like genius, is inborn. One man alone guard /her/
+secret!--guard a secret that if made known could trouble a heart that
+recoils from shame! Ah, madam, we Chillinglys are a very obscure,
+undistinguished race, but for more than a thousand years we have been
+English gentlemen. Guard her secret rather than risk the chance of
+discovery that could give her a pang! I would pass my whole life by
+her side in Kamtchatka, and even there I would not snatch a glimpse of
+the secret itself with mine own eyes: it should be so closely muffled
+and wrapped round by the folds of reverence and worship."
+
+This burst of passion seemed to Mrs. Cameron the senseless declamation
+of an inexperienced, hot-headed young man; and putting it aside, much
+as a great lawyer dismisses as balderdash the florid rhetoric of some
+junior counsel, rhetoric in which the great lawyer had once indulged,
+or as a woman for whom romance is over dismisses as idle verbiage some
+romantic sentiment that befools her young daughter, Mrs. Cameron
+simply replied, "All this is hollow talk, Mr. Chillingly; let us come
+to the point. After all I have said, do you mean to persist in your
+suit to my niece?"
+
+"I persist."
+
+"What!" she cried, this time indignantly, and with generous
+indignation; "what, even were it possible that you could win your
+parents' consent to marry the child of a man condemned to penal
+servitude, or, consistently with the duties a son owes to parents,
+conceal that fact from them, could you, born to a station on which
+every gossip will ask, 'Who and what is the name of the future Lady
+Chillingly?' believe that the who and the what will never be
+discovered! Have you, a mere stranger, unknown to us a few weeks ago,
+a right to say to Walter Melville, 'Resign to me that which is your
+sole reward for the sublime sacrifices, for the loyal devotion, for
+the watchful tenderness of patient years'?"
+
+"Surely, madam," cried Kenelm, more startled, more shaken in soul by
+this appeal, than by the previous revelations, "surely, when we last
+parted, when I confided to you my love for your niece, when you
+consented to my proposal to return home and obtain my father's
+approval of my suit,--surely then was the time to say, 'No; a suitor
+with claims paramount and irresistible has come before you.'"
+
+"I did not then know, Heaven is my witness, I did not then even
+suspect, that Walter Melville ever dreamed of seeking a wife in the
+child who had grown up under his eyes. You must own, indeed, how much
+I discouraged your suit; I could not discourage it more without
+revealing the secret of her birth, only to be revealed as an extreme
+necessity. But my persuasion was that your father would not consent
+to your alliance with one so far beneath the expectations he was
+entitled to form, and the refusal of that consent would terminate all
+further acquaintance between you and Lily, leaving her secret
+undisclosed. It was not till you had left, only indeed two days ago,
+that I received a letter from Walter Melville,--a letter which told me
+what I had never before conjectured. Here is the letter, read it, and
+then say if you have the heart to force yourself into rivalry,
+with--with--" She broke off, choked by her exertion, thrust the
+letter into his hands, and with keen, eager, hungry stare watched his
+countenance while he read.
+
+
+
+ ----- STREET, BLOOMSBURY.
+
+MY DEAR FRIEND,--Joy and triumph! My picture is completed, the
+picture on which for so many months I have worked night and day in
+this den of a studio, without a glimpse of the green fields,
+concealing my address from every one, even from you, lest I might be
+tempted to suspend my labours. The picture is completed: it is sold;
+guess the price! Fifteen hundred guineas, and to a dealer,--a dealer!
+Think of that! It is to be carried about the country exhibited by
+itself. You remember those three little landscapes of mine which two
+years ago I would gladly have sold for ten pounds, only neither Lily
+nor you would let me. My good friend and earliest patron, the German
+merchant at Luscombe, who called on me yesterday, offered to cover
+them with guineas thrice piled over the canvas. Imagine how happy I
+felt when I forced him to accept them as a present. What a leap in a
+man's life it is when he can afford to say, "I give!" Now then, at
+last, at last I am in a position which justifies the utterance of the
+hope which has for eighteen years been my solace, my support; been the
+sunbeam that ever shone through the gloom when my fate was at the
+darkest; been the melody that buoyed me aloft as in the song of the
+skylark, when in the voices of men I heard but the laugh of scorn. Do
+you remember the night on which Lily's mother besought us to bring up
+her child in ignorance of her parentage, not even to communicate to
+unkind and disdainful relatives that such a child was born? Do you
+remember how plaintively, and yet how proudly, she, so nobly born, so
+luxuriously nurtured, clasping my hand when I ventured to remonstrate,
+and say that her own family could not condemn her child because of the
+father's guilt,--she, the proudest woman I ever knew, she whose smile
+I can at rare moments detect in Lily, raised her head from her pillow,
+and gasped forth,--
+
+"I am dying: the last words of the dying are commands. I command you
+to see that my child's lot is not that of a felon's daughter
+transported to the hearth of nobles. To be happy, her lot must be
+humble: no roof too humble to shelter, no husband too humble to wed,
+the felon's daughter."
+
+From that hour I formed a resolve that I would keep hand and heart
+free, that when the grandchild of my princely benefactor grew up into
+womanhood I might say to her, "I am humbly born, but thy mother would
+have given thee to me." The newborn, consigned to our charge, has now
+ripened into woman, and I have now so assured my fortune that it is no
+longer poverty and struggle that I should ask her to share. I am
+conscious that, were her fate not so exceptional, this hope of mine
+would be a vain presumption,--conscious that I am but the creature of
+her grandsire's bounty, and that from it springs all I ever can
+be,--conscious of the disparity in years,-conscious of many a past
+error and present fault. But, as fate so ordains, such considerations
+are trivial; I am her rightful choice. What other choice, compatible
+with these necessities which weigh, dear and honoured friend,
+immeasurably more on your sense of honour than they do upon mine? and
+yet mine is not dull. Granting, then, that you, her nearest and most
+responsible relative, do not contemn me for presumption, all else
+seems to me clear. Lily's childlike affection for me is too deep and
+too fond not to warm into a wife's love. Happily, too, she has not
+been reared in the stereotyped boarding-school shallowness of
+knowledge and vulgarities of gentility; but educated, like myself, by
+the free influences of Nature, longing for no halls and palaces save
+those that we build as we list, in fairyland; educated to comprehend
+and share the fancies which are more than booklore to the worshipper
+of art and song. In a day or two, perhaps the day after you receive
+this, I shall be able to escape from London, and most likely shall
+come on foot as usual. How I long to see once more the woodbine on
+the hedgerows, the green blades of the cornfields, the sunny lapse of
+the river, and dearer still the tiny falls of our own little noisy
+rill! Meanwhile I entreat you, dearest, gentlest, most honored of
+such few friends as my life has hitherto won to itself, to consider
+well the direct purport of this letter. If you, born in a grade so
+much higher than mine, feel that it is unwarrantable insolence in me
+to aspire to the hand of my patron's grandchild, say so plainly; and I
+remain not less grateful for your friendship than I was to your
+goodness when dining for the first time at your father's palace. Shy
+and sensitive and young, I felt that his grand guests wondered why I
+was invited to the same board as themselves. You, then courted,
+admired, you had sympathetic compassion on the raw, sullen boy; left
+those, who then seemed to me like the gods and goddesses of a heathen
+Pantheon, to come and sit beside your father's protege and cheeringly
+whisper to him such words as make a low-born ambitious lad go home
+light-hearted, saying to himself, "Some day or other." And what it is
+to an ambitious lad, fancying himself lifted by the gods and goddesses
+of a Pantheon, to go home light-hearted muttering to himself, "Some
+day or other," I doubt if even you can divine.
+
+But should you be as kind to the presumptuous man as you were to the
+bashful boy, and say, "Realized be the dream, fulfilled be the object
+of your life! take from me as her next of kin, the last descendant of
+your benefactor," then I venture to address to you this request. You
+are in the place of mother to your sister's child, act for her as a
+keeper now, to prepare her mind and heart for the coming change in the
+relations between her and me. When I last saw her, six months ago,
+she was still so playfully infantine that it half seems to me I should
+be sinning against the reverence due to a child, if I said too
+abruptly, "You are woman, and I love you not as child but as woman."
+And yet, time is not allowed to me for long, cautious, and gradual
+slide from the relationship of friend into that of lover. I now
+understand what the great master of my art once said to me, "A career
+is a destiny." By one of those merchant princes who now at
+Manchester, as they did once at Genoa or Venice, reign alike over
+those two civilizers of the world which to dull eyes seem
+antagonistic, Art and Commerce, an offer is made to me for a picture
+on a subject which strikes his fancy: an offer so magnificently
+liberal that his commerce must command my art; and the nature of the
+subject compels me to seek the banks of the Rhine as soon as may be.
+I must have all the hues of the foliage in the meridian glories of
+summer. I can but stay at Grasmere a very few days; but before I
+leave I must know this, am I going to work for Lily or am I not? On
+the answer to that question depends all. If not to work for her,
+there would be no glory in the summer, no triumph in art to me: I
+refuse the offer. If she says, "Yes; it is for me you work," then she
+becomes my destiny. She assures my career. Here I speak as an
+artist: nobody who is not an artist can guess how sovereign over even
+his moral being, at a certain critical epoch in his career of artist
+or his life of man, is the success or the failure of a single work.
+But I go on to speak as man. My love for Lily is such for the last
+six months that, though if she rejected me I should still serve art,
+still yearn for fame, it would be as an old man might do either. The
+youth of my life would be gone.
+
+As man I say, all my thoughts, all my dreams of happiness, distinct
+from Art and fame, are summed up in the one question, "Is Lily to be
+my wife or not?"
+
+ Yours affectionately,
+
+ W. M.
+
+
+Kenelm returned the letter without a word.
+
+Enraged by his silence, Mrs. Cameron exclaimed, "Now, sir, what say
+you? You have scarcely known Lily five weeks. What is the feverish
+fancy of five weeks' growth to the lifelong devotion of a man like
+this? Do you now dare to say, 'I persist'?"
+
+Kenelm waved his hand very quietly, as if to dismiss all conception of
+taunt and insult and said with his soft melancholy eyes fixed upon the
+working features of Lily's aunt, "This man is more worthy of her than
+I. He prays you, in his letter, to prepare your niece for that change
+of relationship which he dreads too abruptly to break to her himself.
+Have you done so?"
+
+"I have; the night I got the letter."
+
+"And--you hesitate; speak truthfully, I implore. And she--"
+
+"She," answered Mrs. Cameron, feeling herself involuntarily compelled
+to obey the voice of that prayer--"she seemed stunned at first,
+muttering, 'This is a dream: it cannot be true,--cannot! I Lion's
+wife--I--I! I, his destiny! In me his happiness!' And then she
+laughed her pretty child's laugh, and put her arms round my neck, and
+said, 'You are jesting, aunty. He could not write thus!' So I put
+that part of his letter under her eyes; and when she had convinced
+herself, her face became very grave, more like a woman's face than I
+ever saw it; and after a pause she cried out passionately, 'Can you
+think me--can I think myself--so bad, so ungrateful, as to doubt what
+I should answer, if Lion asked me whether I would willingly say or do
+anything that made him unhappy? If there be such a doubt in my heart,
+I would tear it out by the roots, heart and all!' Oh, Mr. Chillingly!
+There would be no happiness for her with another, knowing that she had
+blighted the life of him to whom she owes so much, though she never
+will learn how much more she owes." Kenelm not replying to this
+remark, Mrs. Cameron resumed, "I will be perfectly frank with you, Mr.
+Chillingly. I was not quite satisfied with Lily's manner and looks
+the next morning, that is, yesterday. I did fear there might be some
+struggle in her mind in which there entered a thought of yourself.
+And when Walter, on his arrival here in the evening, spoke of you as
+one he had met before in his rural excursions, but whose name he only
+learned on parting at the bridge by Cromwell Lodge, I saw that Lily
+turned pale, and shortly afterwards went to her own room for the
+night. Fearing that any interview with you, though it would not alter
+her resolve, might lessen her happiness on the only choice she can and
+ought to adopt, I resolved to visit you this morning, and make that
+appeal to your reason and your heart which I have done now,--not, I am
+sure, in vain. Hush! I hear his voice!"
+
+Melville entered the room, Lily leaning on his arm. The artist's
+comely face was radiant with ineffable joyousness. Leaving Lily, he
+reached Kenelm's side as with a single bound, shook him heartily by
+the hand, saying, "I find that you have already been a welcomed
+visitor in this house. Long may you be so, so say I, so (I answer for
+her) says my fair betrothed, to whom I need not present you."
+
+Lily advanced, and held out her hand very timidly. Kenelm touched
+rather than clasped it. His own strong hand trembled like a leaf. He
+ventured but one glance at her face. All the bloom had died out of
+it, but the expression seemed to him wondrously, cruelly tranquil.
+
+"Your betrothed! your future bride!" he said to the artist, with a
+mastery over his emotion rendered less difficult by the single glance
+at that tranquil face. "I wish you joy. All happiness to you, Miss
+Mordaunt. You have made a noble choice."
+
+He looked round for his hat; it lay at his feet, but he did not see
+it; his eyes wandering away with uncertain vision, like those of a
+sleep-walker.
+
+Mrs. Cameron picked up the hat and gave it to him.
+
+"Thank you," he said meekly; then with a smile half sweet, half
+bitter, "I have so much to thank you for, Mrs. Cameron."
+
+"But you are not going already,--just as I enter too. Hold! Mrs.
+Cameron tells me you are lodging with my old friend Jones. Come and
+stop a couple of days with us: we can find you a room; the room over
+your butterfly cage, eh, Fairy?"
+
+"Thank you too. Thank you all. No; I must be in London by the first
+train."
+
+Speaking thus, he had found his way to the door, bowed with the quiet
+grace that characterized all his movements, and was gone.
+
+"Pardon his abruptness, Lily; he too loves; he too is impatient to
+find a betrothed," said the artist gayly: "but now he knows my dearest
+secret, I think I have a right to know his; and I will try."
+
+He had scarcely uttered the words before he too had quitted the room
+and overtaken Kenelm just at the threshold.
+
+"If you are going back to Cromwell Lodge,--to pack up, I suppose,--let
+me walk with you as far as the bridge."
+
+Kenelm inclined his head assentingly and tacitly as they passed
+through the garden-gate, winding backwards through the lane which
+skirted the garden pales; when, at the very spot in which the day
+after their first and only quarrel Lily's face had been seen
+brightening through the evergreen, that day on which the old woman,
+quitting her, said, "God bless you!" and on which the vicar, walking
+with Kenelm, spoke of her fairy charms; well, just in that spot Lily's
+face appeared again, not this time brightening through the evergreens,
+unless the palest gleam of the palest moon can be said to brighten.
+Kenelm saw, started, halted. His companion, then in the rush of a
+gladsome talk, of which Kenelm had not heard a word, neither saw nor
+halted; he walked on mechanically, gladsome, and talking.
+
+Lily stretched forth her hand through the evergreens. Kenelm took it
+reverentially. This time it was not his hand that trembled.
+
+"Good-by," she said in a whisper, "good-by forever in this world. You
+understand,--you do understand me. Say that you do."
+
+"I understand. Noble child! noble choice! God bless you! God
+comfort me!" murmured Kenelm. Their eyes met. Oh, the sadness; and,
+alas! oh the love in the eyes of both!
+
+Kenelm passed on.
+
+All said in an instant. How many Alls are said in an instant!
+Melville was in the midst of some glowing sentence, begun when Kenelm
+dropped from his side, and the end of the sentence was this:
+
+"Words cannot say how fair seems life; how easy seems conquest of
+fame, dating from this day--this day"--and in his turn he halted,
+looked round on the sunlit landscape, and breathed deep, as if to
+drink into his soul all of the earth's joy and beauty which his gaze
+could compass and the arch of the horizon bound.
+
+"They who knew her even the best," resumed the artist, striding on,
+"even her aunt, never could guess how serious and earnest, under all
+her infantine prettiness of fancy, is that girl's real nature. We
+were walking along the brook-side, when I began to tell how solitary
+the world would be to me if I could not win her to my side; while I
+spoke she had turned aside from the path we had taken, and it was not
+till we were under the shadow of the church in which we shall be
+married that she uttered the word that gives to every cloud in my fate
+the silver lining; implying thus how solemnly connected in her mind
+was the thought of love with the sanctity of religion."
+
+Kenelm shuddered,--the church, the burial-ground, the old Gothic tomb,
+the flowers round the infant's grave!
+
+"But I am talking a great deal too much about myself," resumed the
+artist. "Lovers are the most consummate of all egotists, and the most
+garrulous of all gossips. You have wished me joy on my destined
+nuptials, when shall I wish you joy on yours? Since we have begun to
+confide in each other, you are in my debt as to a confidence."
+
+They had now gained the bridge. Kenelm turned round abruptly,
+"Good-day; let us part here. I have nothing to confide to you that
+might not seem to your ears a mockery when I wish you joy." So
+saying, so obeying in spite of himself the anguish of his heart,
+Kenelm wrung his companion's hand with the force of an uncontrollable
+agony, and speeded over the bridge before Melville recovered his
+surprise.
+
+The artist would have small claim to the essential attribute of
+genius--namely, the intuitive sympathy of passion with passion--if
+that secret of Kenelm's which he had so lightly said "he had acquired
+the right to learn," was not revealed to him as by an electric flash.
+"Poor fellow!" he said to himself pityingly; "how natural that he
+should fall in love with Fairy! but happily he is so young, and such a
+philosopher, that it is but one of those trials through which, at
+least ten times a year, I have gone with wounds that leave not a
+scar."
+
+Thus soliloquizing, the warm-blooded worshipper of Nature returned
+homeward, too blest in the triumph of his own love to feel more than a
+kindly compassion for the wounded heart, consigned with no doubt of
+the healing result to the fickleness of youth and the consolations of
+philosophy. Not for a moment did the happier rival suspect that
+Kenelm's love was returned; that an atom in the heart of the girl who
+had promised to be his bride could take its light or shadow from any
+love but his own. Yet, more from delicacy of respect to the rival so
+suddenly self-betrayed than from any more prudential motive, he did
+not speak even to Mrs. Cameron of Kenelm's secret and sorrow; and
+certainly neither she nor Lily was disposed to ask any question that
+concerned the departed visitor.
+
+In fact the name of Kenelm Chillingly was scarcely, if at all,
+mentioned in that household during the few days which elapsed before
+Walter Melville quitted Grasmere for the banks of the Rhine, not to
+return till the autumn, when his marriage with Lily was to take place.
+During those days Lily was calm and seemingly cheerful; her manner
+towards her betrothed, if more subdued, not less affectionate than of
+old. Mrs. Cameron congratulated herself on having so successfully got
+rid of Kenelm Chillingly.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+SO, then, but for that officious warning, uttered under the balcony at
+Luscombe, Kenelm Chillingly might never have had a rival in Walter
+Melville. But ill would any reader construe the character of Kenelm,
+did he think that such a thought increased the bitterness of his
+sorrow. No sorrow in the thought that a noble nature had been saved
+from the temptation to a great sin.
+
+The good man does good merely by living. And the good he does may
+often mar the plans he formed for his own happiness. But he cannot
+regret that Heaven has permitted him to do good.
+
+What Kenelm did feel is perhaps best explained in the letter to Sir
+Peter, which is here subjoined:--
+
+
+"MY DEAREST FATHER,--Never till my dying day shall I forget that
+tender desire for my happiness with which, overcoming all worldly
+considerations, no matter at what disappointment to your own cherished
+plans or ambition for the heir to your name and race, you sent me away
+from your roof, these words ringing in my ear like the sound of
+joy-bells, 'Choose as you will, with my blessing on your choice. I
+open my heart to admit another child: your wife shall be my daughter.'
+It is such an unspeakable comfort to me to recall those words now. Of
+all human affections gratitude is surely the holiest; and it blends
+itself with the sweetness of religion when it is gratitude to a
+father. And, therefore, do not grieve too much for me, when I tell
+you that the hopes which enchanted me when we parted are not to be
+fulfilled. Her hand is pledged to another,--another with claims upon
+her preference to which mine cannot be compared; and he is himself,
+putting aside the accidents of birth and fortune, immeasurably my
+superior. In that thought--I mean the thought that the man she
+selects deserves her more than I do, and that in his happiness she
+will blend her own--I shall find comfort, so soon as I can fairly
+reason down the first all-engrossing selfishness that follows the
+sense of unexpected and irremediable loss. Meanwhile you will think
+it not unnatural that I resort to such aids for change of heart as are
+afforded by change of scene. I start for the Continent to-night, and
+shall not rest till I reach Venice, which I have not yet seen. I feel
+irresistibly attracted towards still canals and gliding gondolas. I
+will write to you and to my dear mother the day I arrive. And I trust
+to write cheerfully, with full accounts of all I see and encounter.
+Do not, dearest father, in your letters to me, revert or allude to
+that grief which even the tenderest word from your own tender self
+might but chafe into pain more sensitive. After all, a disappointed
+love is a very common lot. And we meet every day, men--ay, and women
+too--who have known it, and are thoroughly cured. The manliest of our
+modern lyrical poets has said very nobly, and, no doubt, very justly,
+
+
+ "To bear is to conquer our fate.
+
+
+ "Ever your loving son,
+
+ "K. C."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+NEARLY a year and a half has elapsed since the date of my last
+chapter. Two Englishmen were--the one seated, the other reclined at
+length--on one of the mounds that furrow the ascent of Posilippo.
+Before them spread the noiseless sea, basking in the sunshine, without
+visible ripple; to the left there was a distant glimpse through gaps
+of brushwood of the public gardens and white water of the Chiaja.
+They were friends who had chanced to meet abroad unexpectedly, joined
+company, and travelled together for many months, chiefly in the East.
+They had been but a few days in Naples. The elder of the two had
+important affairs in England which ought to have summoned him back
+long since. But he did not let his friend know this; his affairs
+seemed to him less important than the duties he owed to one for whom
+he entertained that deep and noble love which is something stronger
+than brotherly, for with brotherly affection it combines gratitude and
+reverence. He knew, too, that his friend was oppressed by a haunting
+sorrow, of which the cause was divined by one, not revealed by the
+other.
+
+To leave him, so beloved, alone with that sorrow in strange lands, was
+a thought not to be cherished by a friend so tender; for in the
+friendship of this man there was that sort of tenderness which
+completes a nature, thoroughly manlike, by giving it a touch of the
+woman's.
+
+It was a day which in our northern climates is that of winter: in the
+southern clime of Naples it was mild as an English summer day,
+lingering on the brink of autumn; the sun sloping towards the west,
+and already gathering around it roseate and purple fleeces; elsewhere
+the deep blue sky was without a cloudlet.
+
+Both had been for some minutes silent; at length the man reclining on
+the grass--it was the younger man--said suddenly, and with no previous
+hint of the subject introduced, "Lay your hand on your heart, Tom, and
+answer me truly. Are your thoughts as clear from regrets as the
+heavens above us are from a cloud? Man takes regret from tears that
+have ceased to flow, as the heavens take clouds from the rains that
+have ceased to fall."
+
+"Regrets? Ah, I understand, for the loss of the girl I once loved to
+distraction! No; surely I made that clear to you many, many, many
+months ago, when I was your guest at Moleswich."
+
+"Ay, but I have never, since then, spoken to you on that subject. I
+did not dare. It seems to me so natural that a man, in the earlier
+struggle between love and reason, should say, 'Reason shall conquer,
+and has conquered;' and yet--and yet--as time glides on, feel that the
+conquerors who cannot put down rebellion have a very uneasy reign.
+Answer me not as at Moleswich, during the first struggle, but now, in
+the after-day, when reaction from struggle comes."
+
+"Upon my honour," answered the friend, "I have had no reaction at all.
+I was cured entirely, when I had once seen Jessie again, another man's
+wife, mother to his child, happy in her marriage; and, whether she was
+changed or not,--very different from the sort of wife I should like to
+marry, now that I am no longer a village farrier."
+
+"And, I remember, you spoke of some other girl whom it would suit you
+to marry. You have been long abroad from her. Do you ever think of
+her,--think of her still as your future wife? Can you love her? Can
+you, who have once loved so faithfully, love again?"
+
+"I am sure of that. I love Emily better than I did when I left
+England. We correspond. She writes such nice letters." Tom
+hesitated, blushed, and continued timidly, "I should like to show you
+one of her letters."
+
+"Do."
+
+Tom drew forth the last of such letters from his breast-pocket.
+
+Kenelm raised himself from the grass, took the letter, and read
+slowly, carefully, while Tom watched in vain for some approving smile
+to brighten up the dark beauty of that melancholy face.
+
+Certainly it was the letter a man in love might show with pride to a
+friend: the letter of a lady, well educated, well brought up, evincing
+affection modestly, intelligence modestly too; the sort of letter in
+which a mother who loved her daughter, and approved the daughter's
+choice, could not have suggested a correction.
+
+As Kenelm gave back the letter, his eyes met his friend's. Those were
+eager eyes,--eyes hungering for praise. Kenelm's heart smote him for
+that worst of sins in friendship,--want of sympathy; and that uneasy
+heart forced to his lips congratulations, not perhaps quite sincere,
+but which amply satisfied the lover. In uttering them, Kenelm rose to
+his feet, threw his arm round his friend's shoulder, and said, "Are
+you not tired of this place, Tom? I am. Let us go back to England
+to-morrow." Tom's honest face brightened vividly. "How selfish and
+egotistical I have been!" continued Kenelm; "I ought to have thought
+more of you, your career, your marriage,--pardon me--"
+
+"Pardon you,--pardon! Don't I owe to you all,--owe to you Emily
+herself? If you had never come to Graveleigh, never said, 'Be my
+friend,' what should I have been now? what--what?"
+
+The next day the two friends quitted Naples /en route/ for England,
+not exchanging many words by the way. The old loquacious crotchety
+humour of Kenelm had deserted him. A duller companion than he was you
+could not have conceived. He might have been the hero of a young
+lady's novel. It was only when they parted in London, that Kenelm
+evinced more secret purpose, more external emotion than one of his
+heraldic Daces shifting from the bed to the surface of a waveless
+pond.
+
+"If I have rightly understood you, Tom, all this change in you,
+all this cure of torturing regret, was wrought, wrought
+lastingly,--wrought so as to leave you heart-free for the world's
+actions and a home's peace, on that eve when you saw her whose face
+till then had haunted you, another man's happy wife, and in so seeing
+her, either her face was changed or your heart became so."
+
+"Quite true. I might express it otherwise, but the fact remains the
+same."
+
+"God bless you, Tom; bless you in your career without, in your home
+within," said Kenelm, wringing his friend's hand at the door of the
+carriage that was to whirl to love and wealth and station the whilom
+bully of a village, along the iron groove of that contrivance which,
+though now the tritest of prosaic realities, seemed once too poetical
+for a poet's wildest visions.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+A WINTER'S evening at Moleswich. Very different from a winter sunset
+at Naples. It is intensely cold. There has been a slight fall of
+snow, accompanied with severe, bright, clean frost, a thin sprinkling
+of white on the pavements. Kenelm Chillingly entered the town on
+foot, no longer a knapsack on his back. Passing through the main
+street, he paused a moment at the door of Will Somers. The shop was
+closed. No, he would not stay there to ask in a roundabout way for
+news. He would go in straightforwardly and manfully to Grasmere. He
+would take the inmates there by surprise. The sooner he could bring
+Tom's experience home to himself, the better. He had schooled his
+heart to rely on that experience, and it brought him back the old
+elasticity of his stride. In his lofty carriage and buoyant face were
+again visible the old haughtiness of the indifferentism that keeps
+itself aloof from the turbulent emotions and conventional frivolities
+of those whom its philosophy pities and scorns.
+
+"Ha! ha!" laughed he who like Swift never laughed aloud, and often
+laughed inaudibly. "Ha! ha! I shall exorcise the ghost of my grief.
+I shall never be haunted again. If that stormy creature whom love
+might have maddened into crime, if he were cured of love at once by a
+single visit to the home of her whose face was changed to him,--for
+the smiles and the tears of it had become the property of another
+man,--how much more should I be left without a scar! I, the heir of
+the Chillinglys! I, the kinsman of a Mivers! I, the pupil of a
+Welby! I--I, Kenelm Chillingly, to be thus--thus--" Here, in the
+midst of his boastful soliloquy, the well-remembered brook rushed
+suddenly upon eye and ear, gleaming and moaning under the wintry moon.
+Kenelm Chillingly stopped, covered his face with his hands, and burst
+into a passion of tears.
+
+Recovering himself slowly, he went on along the path, every step of
+which was haunted by the form of Lily. He reached the garden gate of
+Grasmere, lifted the latch, and entered. As he did so, a man,
+touching his hat, rushed beside, and advanced before him,--the village
+postman. Kenelm drew back, allowing the man to pass to the door, and
+as he thus drew back, he caught a side view of lighted windows looking
+on the lawn,--the windows of the pleasant drawing-room in which he had
+first heard Lily speak of her guardian.
+
+The postman left his letters, and regained the garden gate, while
+Kenelm still stood wistfully gazing on those lighted windows. He had,
+meanwhile, advanced along the whitened sward to the light, saying to
+himself, "Let me just see her and her happiness, and then I will knock
+boldly at the door, and say, 'Good-evening, Mrs. Melville.'"
+
+So Kenelm stole across the lawn, and, stationing himself at the angle
+of the wall, looked into the window.
+
+Melville, in dressing-robe and slippers, was seated alone by the
+fireside. His dog was lazily stretched on the hearth rug. One by one
+the features of the room, as the scene of his vanished happiness, grew
+out from its stillness; the delicately tinted walls, the dwarf
+bookcase, with its feminine ornaments on the upper shelf; the piano
+standing in the same place. Lily's own small low chair; that was not
+in its old place, but thrust into a remote angle, as if it had passed
+into disuse. Melville was reading a letter, no doubt one of those
+which the postman had left. Surely the contents were pleasant, for
+his fair face, always frankly expressive of emotion, brightened
+wonderfully as he read on. Then he rose with a quick, brisk movement,
+and pulled the bell hastily.
+
+A neat maid-servant entered,--a strange face to Kenelm. Melville gave
+her some brief message. "He has had joyous news," thought Kenelm.
+"He has sent for his wife that she may share his joy." Presently the
+door opened, and entered not Lily, but Mrs. Cameron.
+
+She looked changed. Her natural quietude of mien and movement the
+same, indeed, but with more languor in it. Her hair had become gray.
+Melville was standing by the table as she approached him. He put the
+letter into her hands with a gay, proud smile, and looked over her
+shoulder while she read it, pointing with his finger as to some lines
+that should more emphatically claim her attention.
+
+When she had finished her face reflected his smile. They exchanged a
+hearty shake of the hand, as if in congratulation.
+
+"Ah," thought Kenelm, "the letter is from Lily. She is abroad.
+Perhaps the birth of a first-born."
+
+Just then Blanche, who had not been visible before, emerged from under
+the table, and as Melville reseated himself by the fireside, sprang
+into his lap, rubbing herself against his breast. The expression of
+his face changed; he uttered some low exclamation. Mrs. Cameron took
+the creature from his lap, stroking it quietly, carried it across the
+room, and put it outside the door. Then she seated herself beside the
+artist, placing her hand in his, and they conversed in low tones, till
+Melville's face again grew bright, and again he took up the letter.
+
+A few minutes later the maid-servant entered with the tea-things, and
+after arranging them on the table approached the window. Kenelm
+retreated into the shade, the servant closed the shutters and drew the
+curtains; that scene of quiet home comfort vanished from the eyes of
+the looker-on.
+
+Kenelm felt strangely perplexed. What had become of Lily? was she
+indeed absent from her home? Had he conjectured rightly that the
+letter which had evidently so gladdened Melville was from her, or was
+it possible--here a thought of joy seized his heart and held him
+breathless--was it possible that, after all, she had not married her
+guardian; had found a home elsewhere,--was free? He moved on farther
+down the lawn, towards the water, that he might better bring before
+his sight that part of the irregular building in which Lily formerly
+had her sleeping-chamber, and her "own-own room."
+
+All was dark there; the shutters inexorably closed. The place with
+which the childlike girl had associated her most childlike fancies,
+taming and tending the honey-drinkers destined to pass into fairies,
+that fragile tenement was not closed against the winds and snows; its
+doors were drearily open; gaps in the delicate wire-work; of its
+dainty draperies a few tattered shreds hanging here and there; and on
+the depopulated floor the moonbeams resting cold and ghostly. No
+spray from the tiny fountain; its basin chipped and mouldering; the
+scanty waters therein frozen. Of all the pretty wild ones that Lily
+fancied she could tame, not one. Ah! yes, there was one, probably not
+of the old familiar number; a stranger that might have crept in for
+shelter from the first blasts of winter, and now clung to an angle in
+the farther wall, its wings folded,--asleep, not dead. But Kenelm saw
+it not; he noticed only the general desolation of the spot.
+
+"Natural enough," thought he. "She has outgrown all such pretty
+silliness. A wife cannot remain a child. Still, if she had belonged
+to me--" The thought choked even his inward, unspoken utterance. He
+turned away, paused a moment under the leafless boughs of the great
+willow still dipping into the brook, and then with impatient steps
+strode back towards the garden gate.
+
+"No,--no,--no. I cannot now enter that house and ask for Mrs.
+Melville. Trial enough for one night to stand on the old ground. I
+will return to the town. I will call at Jessie's, and there I can
+learn if she indeed be happy."
+
+So he went on by the path along the brook-side, the night momently
+colder and colder, and momently clearer and clearer, while the moon
+noiselessly glided into loftier heights. Wrapped in his abstracted
+thoughts, when he came to the spot in which the path split in twain,
+he did not take that which led more directly to the town. His steps,
+naturally enough following the train of his thoughts, led him along
+the path with which the object of his thoughts was associated. He
+found himself on the burial-ground, and in front of the old ruined
+tomb with the effaced inscription.
+
+"Ah! child! child!" he murmured almost audibly, "what depths of woman
+tenderness lay concealed in thee! In what loving sympathy with the
+past--sympathy only vouchsafed to the tenderest women and the highest
+poets--didst thou lay thy flowers on the tomb, to which thou didst
+give a poet's history interpreted by a woman's heart, little dreaming
+that beneath the stone slept a hero of thine own fallen race."
+
+He passed beneath the shadow of the yews, whose leaves no winter wind
+can strew, and paused at the ruined tomb,--no flower now on its stone,
+only a sprinkling of snow at the foot of it,--sprinklings of snow at
+the foot of each humbler grave-mound. Motionless in the frosty air
+rested the pointed church-spire, and through the frosty air, higher
+and higher up the arch of heaven, soared the unpausing moon. Around
+and below and above her, the stars which no science can number; yet
+not less difficult to number are the thoughts, desires, aspirations
+which, in a space of time briefer than a winter's night, can pass
+through the infinite deeps of a human soul.
+
+From his stand by the Gothic tomb, Kenelm looked along the churchyard
+for the infant's grave which Lily's pious care had bordered with
+votive flowers. Yes, in that direction there was still a gleam of
+colour; could it be of flowers in that biting winter time?--the moon
+is so deceptive, it silvers into the hue of the jessamines the green
+of the everlastings.
+
+He passed towards the white grave-mound. His sight had duped him; no
+pale flower, no green "everlasting" on its neglected border,--only
+brown mould, withered stalks, streaks of snow.
+
+"And yet," he said sadly, "she told me she had never broken a promise;
+and she had given a promise to the dying child. Ah! she is too happy
+now to think of the dead."
+
+So murmuring, he was about to turn towards the town, when close by
+that child's grave he saw another. Round that other there were pale
+"everlastings," dwarfed blossoms of the laurestinus; at the four
+angles the drooping bud of a Christmas rose; at the head of the grave
+was a white stone, its sharp edges cutting into the starlit air; and
+on the head, in fresh letters, were inscribed these words:--
+
+
+ To the Memory of
+ L. M.
+ Aged 17,
+ Died October 29, A. D. 18--,
+ This stone, above the grave to which her mortal
+ remains are consigned, beside that of an infant not
+ more sinless, is consecrated by those who
+ most mourn and miss her,
+ ISABEL CAMERON,
+ WALTER MELVILLE.
+ "Suffer the little children to come unto me."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE next morning Mr. Emlyn, passing from his garden to the town of
+Moleswich, descried a human form stretched on the burial-ground,
+stirring restlessly but very slightly, as if with an involuntary
+shiver, and uttering broken sounds, very faintly heard, like the moans
+that a man in pain strives to suppress and cannot.
+
+The rector hastened to the spot. The man was lying, his face
+downward, on a grave-mound, not dead, not asleep.
+
+"Poor fellow overtaken by drink, I fear," thought the gentle pastor;
+and as it was the habit of his mind to compassionate error even more
+than grief, he accosted the supposed sinner in very soothing
+tones--trying to raise him from the ground--and with very kindly
+words.
+
+Then the man lifted his face from its pillow on the grave-mound,
+looked round him dreamily into the gray, blank air of the cheerless
+morn, and rose to his feet quietly and slowly. The vicar was
+startled; he recognized the face of him he had last seen in the
+magnificent affluence of health and strength. But the character of
+the face was changed,--so changed! its old serenity of expression, at
+once grave and sweet, succeeded by a wild trouble in the heavy eyelids
+and trembling lips.
+
+"Mr. Chillingly,--you! Is it possible?"
+
+"Varus, Varus," exclaimed Kenelm, passionately, "what hast thou done
+with my legions?"
+
+At that quotation of the well-known greeting of Augustus to his
+unfortunate general, the scholar recoiled. Had his young friend's
+mind deserted him,--dazed, perhaps, by over-study?
+
+He was soon reassured; Kenelm's face settled back into calm, though a
+dreary calm, like that of the wintry day.
+
+"I beg pardon, Mr. Emlyn; I had not quite shaken off the hold of a
+strange dream. I dreamed that I was worse off than Augustus: he did
+not lose the world when the legions he had trusted to another vanished
+into a grave."
+
+Here Kenelm linked his arm in that of the rector,--on which he leaned
+rather heavily,--and drew him on from the burial-ground into the open
+space where the two paths met.
+
+"But how long have you returned to Moleswich?" asked Emlyn; "and how
+came you to choose so damp a bed for your morning slumbers?"
+
+"The wintry cold crept into my veins when I stood in the
+burial-ground, and I was very weary; I had no sleep at night. Do not
+let me take you out of your way; I am going on to Grasmere. So I see,
+by the record on a gravestone, that it is more than a year ago since
+Mr. Melville lost his wife."
+
+"Wife? He never married."
+
+"What!" cried Kenelm. "Whose, then, is that gravestone,--'L. M.'?"
+
+"Alas! it is our poor Lily's."
+
+"And she died unmarried?"
+
+As Kenelm said this he looked up, and the sun broke out from the
+gloomy haze of the morning. "I may claim thee, then," he thought
+within himself, "claim thee as mine when we meet again."
+
+"Unmarried,--yes," resumed the vicar. "She was indeed betrothed to
+her guardian; they were to have been married in the autumn, on his
+return from the Rhine. He went there to paint on the spot itself his
+great picture, which is now so famous,--'Roland, the Hermit Knight,
+looking towards the convent lattice for a sight of the Holy Nun.'
+Melville had scarcely gone before the symptoms of the disease which
+proved fatal to poor Lily betrayed themselves; they baffled all
+medical skill,--rapid decline. She was always very delicate, but no
+one detected in her the seeds of consumption. Melville only returned
+a day or two before her death. Dear childlike Lily! how we all
+mourned for her!--not least the poor, who believed in her fairy
+charms."
+
+"And least of all, it appears, the man she was to have married."
+
+"He?--Melville? How can you wrong him so? His grief was
+intense--overpowering--for the time."
+
+"For the time! what time?" muttered Kenelm, in tones too low for the
+pastor's ear.
+
+They moved on silently. Mr. Emlyn resumed,--
+
+"You noticed the text on Lily's gravestone--'Suffer the little
+children to come unto me'? She dictated it herself the day before she
+died. I was with her then, so I was at the last."
+
+"Were you--were you--at the last--the last? Good-day, Mr. Emlyn; we
+are just in sight of the garden gate. And--excuse me--I wish to see
+Mr. Melville alone."
+
+"Well, then, good-day; but if you are making any stay in the
+neighbourhood, will you not be our guest? We have a room at your
+service."
+
+"I thank you gratefully; but I return to London in an hour or so.
+Hold, a moment. You were with her at the last? She was resigned to
+die?"
+
+"Resigned! that is scarcely the word. The smile left upon her lips
+was not that of human resignation: it was the smile of a divine joy."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+"YES, sir, Mr. Melville is at home in his studio."
+
+Kenelm followed the maid across the hall into a room not built at the
+date of Kenelm's former visits to the house: the artist, making
+Grasmere his chief residence after Lily's death, had added it at the
+back of the neglected place wherein Lily had encaged "the souls of
+infants unbaptized."
+
+A lofty room, with a casement partially darkened, to the bleak north;
+various sketches on the walls; gaunt specimens of antique furniture,
+and of gorgeous Italian silks, scattered about in confused disorder;
+one large picture on its easel curtained; another as large, and half
+finished, before which stood the painter. He turned quickly, as
+Kenelm entered the room unannounced, let fall brush and palette, came
+up to him eagerly, grasped his hand, drooped his head on Kenelm's
+shoulder, and said, in a voice struggling with evident and strong
+emotion,--
+
+"Since we parted, such grief! such a loss!"
+
+"I know it; I have seen her grave. Let us not speak of it. Why so
+needlessly revive your sorrow? So--so--your sanguine hopes are
+fulfilled: the world at last has done you justice? Emlyn tells me
+that you have painted a very famous picture."
+
+Kenelm had seated himself as he thus spoke. The painter still stood
+with dejected attitude on the middle of the floor, and brushed his
+hand over his moistened eyes once or twice before he answered, "Yes,
+wait a moment, don't talk of fame yet. Bear with me. The sudden
+sight of you unnerved me."
+
+The artist here seated himself also on an old worm-eaten Gothic chest,
+rumpling and chafing the golden or tinselled threads of the
+embroidered silk, so rare and so time-worn, flung over the Gothic
+chest, so rare also, and so worm-eaten.
+
+Kenelm looked through half-closed lids at the artist, and his lips,
+before slightly curved with a secret scorn, became gravely compressed.
+In Melville's struggle to conceal emotion the strong man recognized a
+strong man,--recognized, and yet only wondered; wondered how such a
+man, to whom Lily had pledged her hand, could so soon after the loss
+of Lily go on painting pictures, and care for any praise bestowed on a
+yard of canvas.
+
+In a very few minutes Melville recommenced conversation,--no more
+reference to Lily than if she had never existed. "Yes, my last
+picture has been indeed a success,--a reward complete, if tardy, for
+all the bitterness of former struggles made in vain, for the galling
+sense of injustice, the anguish of which only an artist knows, when
+unworthy rivals are ranked before him.
+
+
+ "'Foes quick to blame, and friends afraid to praise.'
+
+
+"True that I have still much to encounter; the cliques still seek to
+disparage me, but between me and the cliques there stands at last the
+giant form of the public, and at last critics of graver weight than
+the cliques have deigned to accord to me a higher rank than even the
+public yet acknowledge. Ah, Mr. Chillingly, you do not profess to be
+a judge of paintings, but, excuse me, just look at this letter. I
+received it only last night from the greatest connoisseur of my art,
+certainly in England, perhaps in Europe." Here Melville drew, from
+the side-pocket of his picturesque /moyen age/ surtout, a letter
+signed by a name authoritative to all who, being painters themselves,
+acknowledge authority in one who could no more paint a picture himself
+than Addison, the ablest critic of the greatest poem modern Europe has
+produced, could have written ten lines of the "Paradise Lost," and
+thrust the letter into Kenelm's hand. Kenelm read it listlessly, with
+an increased contempt for an artist who could so find in gratified
+vanity consolation for the life gone from earth. But, listlessly as
+he read the letter, the sincere and fervent enthusiasm of the
+laudatory contents impressed him, and the preeminent authority of the
+signature could not be denied.
+
+The letter was written on the occasion of Melville's recent election
+to the dignity of R. A., successor to a very great artist whose death
+had created a vacancy in the Academy. He returned the letter to
+Melville, saying, "This is the letter I saw you reading last night as
+I looked in at your window. Indeed, for a man who cares for the
+opinion of other men, this letter is very flattering; and for the
+painter who cares for money, it must be very pleasant to know by how
+many guineas every inch of his canvas may be covered." Unable longer
+to control his passions of rage, of scorn, of agonizing grief, Kenelm
+then burst forth: "Man, man, whom I once accepted as a teacher on
+human life,--a teacher to warm, to brighten, to exalt mine own
+indifferent, dreamy, slow-pulsed self! has not the one woman whom thou
+didst select out of this overcrowded world to be bone of thy bone,
+flesh of thy flesh, vanished evermore from the earth,--little more
+than a year since her voice was silenced, her heart ceased to beat?
+But how slight is such loss to thy life compared to the worth of a
+compliment that flatters thy vanity!"
+
+The artist rose to his feet with an indignant impulse. But the angry
+flush faded from his cheek as he looked on the countenance of his
+rebuker. He walked up to him, and attempted to take his hand, but
+Kenelm snatched it scornfully from his grasp.
+
+"Poor friend," said Melville, sadly and soothingly, "I did not think
+you loved her thus deeply. Pardon me." He drew a chair close to
+Kenelm's, and after a brief pause went on thus, in very earnest tones,
+"I am not so heartless, not so forgetful of my loss as you suppose.
+But reflect, you have but just learned of her death, you are under the
+first shock of grief. More than a year has been given to me for
+gradual submission to the decree of Heaven. Now listen to me, and try
+to listen calmly. I am many years older than you: I ought to know
+better the conditions on which man holds the tenure of life. Life is
+composite, many-sided: nature does not permit it to be lastingly
+monopolized by a single passion, or while yet in the prime of its
+strength to be lastingly blighted by a single sorrow. Survey the
+great mass of our common race, engaged in the various callings, some
+the humblest, some the loftiest, by which the business of the world is
+carried on,--can you justly despise as heartless the poor trader, or
+the great statesman, when it may be but a few days after the loss of
+some one nearest and dearest to his heart, the trader reopens his
+shop, the statesman reappears in his office? But in me, the votary of
+art, in me you behold but the weakness of gratified vanity; if I feel
+joy in the hope that my art may triumph, and my country may add my
+name to the list of those who contribute to her renown, where and when
+ever lived an artist not sustained by that hope, in privation, in
+sickness, in the sorrows he must share with his kind? Nor is this
+hope that of a feminine vanity, a sicklier craving for applause; it
+identifies itself with glorious services to our land, to our race, to
+the children of all after time. Our art cannot triumph, our name
+cannot live, unless we achieve a something that tends to beautify or
+ennoble the world in which we accept the common heritage of toil and
+of sorrow, in order therefrom to work out for successive multitudes a
+recreation and a joy."
+
+While the artist thus spoke Kenelm lifted towards his face eyes
+charged with suppressed tears. And the face, kindling as the artist
+vindicated himself from the young man's bitter charge, became
+touchingly sweet in its grave expression at the close of the not
+ignoble defence.
+
+"Enough," said Kenelm, rising. "There is a ring of truth in what you
+say. I can conceive the artist's, the poet's escape from this world,
+when all therein is death and winter, into the world he creates and
+colours at his will with the hues of summer. So, too, I can conceive
+how the man whose life is sternly fitted into the grooves of a
+trader's calling, or a statesman's duties, is borne on by the force of
+custom, afar from such brief halting-spot as a grave. But I am no
+poet, no artist, no trader, no statesman; I have no calling, my life
+is fixed into no grooves. Adieu."
+
+"Hold a moment. Not now, but somewhat later, ask yourself whether any
+life can be permitted to wander in space, a monad detached from the
+lives of others. Into some groove or other, sooner or later, it must
+settle, and be borne on obedient to the laws of Nature and the
+responsibility to God."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+KENELM went back alone, and with downcast looks, through the desolate,
+flowerless garden, when at the other side of the gate a light touch
+was laid on his arm. He looked up, and recognized Mrs. Cameron.
+
+"I saw you," she said, "from my window coming to the house, and I have
+been waiting for you here. I wished to speak to you alone. Allow me
+to walk beside you."'
+
+Kenelm inclined his head assentingly, but made no answer. They were
+nearly midway between the cottage and the burial-ground when Mrs.
+Cameron resumed, her tones quick and agitated, contrasting her
+habitual languid quietude,--
+
+"I have a great weight on my mind; it ought not to be remorse. I
+acted as I thought in my conscience for the best. But oh, Mr.
+Chillingly, if I erred,--if I judged wrongly, do say you at least
+forgive me." She seized his hand, pressing it convulsively. Kenelm
+muttered inaudibly: a sort of dreary stupor had succeeded to the
+intense excitement of grief. Mrs. Cameron went on,--
+
+"You could not have married Lily; you know you could not. The secret
+of her birth could not, in honour, have been concealed from your
+parents. They could not have consented to your marriage; and even if
+you had persisted, without that consent and in spite of that secret,
+to press for it,--even had she been yours--"
+
+"Might she not be living now?" cried Kenelm, fiercely.
+
+"No,--no; the secret must have come out. The cruel world would have
+discovered it; it would have reached her ears. The shame of it would
+have killed her. How bitter then would have been her short interval
+of life! As it is, she passed away,--resigned and happy. But I own
+that I did not, could not, understand her, could not believe her
+feeling for you to be so deep. I did think that when she knew her own
+heart she would find that love for her guardian was its strongest
+affection. She assented, apparently without a pang, to become his
+wife; and she seemed always so fond of him, and what girl would not
+be? But I was mistaken, deceived. From the day you saw her last, she
+began to fade away; but then Walter left a few days after, and I
+thought that it was his absence she mourned. She never owned to me
+that it was yours,--never till too late,--too late,--just when my sad
+letter had summoned him back, only three days before she died. Had I
+known earlier, while yet there was hope of recovery, I must have
+written to you, even though the obstacles to your union with her
+remained the same. Oh, again I implore you, say that if I erred you
+forgive me. She did, kissing me so tenderly. She did forgive me.
+Will not you? It would have been her wish."
+
+"Her wish? Do you think I could disobey it? I know not if I have
+anything to forgive. If I have, now could I not forgive one who loved
+her? God comfort us both."
+
+He bent down and kissed Mrs. Cameron's forehead. The poor woman threw
+her arm gratefully, lovingly round him, and burst into tears.
+
+When she had recovered her emotion, she said,--
+
+"And now, it is with so much lighter a heart that I can fulfil her
+commission to you. But, before I place this in your hands, can you
+make me one promise? Never tell Melville how she loved you. She was
+so careful he should never guess that. And if he knew it was the
+thought of union with him which had killed her, he would never smile
+again."
+
+"You would not ask such a promise if you could guess how sacred from
+all the world I hold the secret that you confide to me. By that
+secret the grave is changed into an altar. Our bridals now are only a
+while deferred."
+
+Mrs. Cameron placed a letter in Kenelm's hand, and murmuring in
+accents broken by a sob, "She gave it to me the day before her last,"
+left him, and with quick vacillating steps hurried back towards the
+cottage. She now understood him, at last, too well not to feel that
+on opening that letter he must be alone with the dead.
+
+It is strange that we need have so little practical household
+knowledge of each other to be in love. Never till then had Kenelm's
+eyes rested upon Lily's handwriting. And he now gazed at the formal
+address on the envelope with a sort of awe. Unknown handwriting
+coming to him from an unknown world,--delicate, tremulous
+handwriting,--handwriting not of one grown up, yet not of a child who
+had long to live.
+
+He turned the envelope over and over,--not impatiently, as does the
+lover whose heart beats at the sound of the approaching footstep, but
+lingeringly, timidly. He would not break the seal.
+
+He was now so near the burial-ground. Where should the first letter
+ever received from her--the sole letter he ever could receive--be so
+reverentially, lovingly read, as at her grave?
+
+He walked on to the burial-ground, sat down by the grave, broke the
+envelope; a poor little ring, with a poor little single turquoise,
+rolled out and rested at his feet. The letter contained only these
+words,--
+
+
+The ring comes back to you. I could not live to marry another. I
+never knew how I loved you--till, till I began to pray that you might
+not love me too much. Darling! darling! good-by, darling!
+
+ LILY.
+
+Don't let Lion ever see this, or ever know what it says to you. He is
+so good, and deserves to be so happy. Do you remember the day of the
+ring? Darling! darling!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+SOMEWHAT more than another year has rolled away. It is early spring
+in London. The trees in the park and squares are budding into leaf
+and blossom. Leopold Travers has had a brief but serious conversation
+with his daughter, and now gone forth on horseback. Handsome and
+graceful still, Leopold Travers when in London is pleased to find
+himself scarcely less the fashion with the young than he was when
+himself in youth. He is now riding along the banks of the Serpentine,
+no one better mounted, better dressed, better looking, or talking with
+greater fluency on the topics which interest his companions.
+
+Cecilia is in the smaller drawing-room, which is exclusively
+appropriated to her use, alone with Lady Glenalvon.
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"I own, my dear, dear Cecilia, that I arrange myself
+at last on the side of your father. How earnestly at one time I had
+hoped that Kenelm Chillingly might woo and win the bride that seemed
+to me most fitted to adorn and to cheer his life, I need not say. But
+when at Exmundham he asked me to befriend his choice of another, to
+reconcile his mother to that choice,--evidently not a suitable one,--I
+gave him up. And though that affair is at an end, he seems little
+likely ever to settle down to practical duties and domestic habits, an
+idle wanderer over the face of the earth, only heard of in remote
+places and with strange companions. Perhaps he may never return to
+England."
+
+CECILIA.--"He is in England now, and in London."
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"You amaze me! Who told you so?"
+
+CECILIA.--"His father, who is with him. Sir Peter called yesterday,
+and spoke to me so kindly." Cecilia here turned aside her face to
+conceal the tears that had started to her eyes.
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"Did Mr. Travers see Sir Peter?"
+
+CECILIA.--"Yes; and I think it was something that passed between them
+which made my father speak to me--for the first time--almost sternly."
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"In urging Chillingly Gordon's suit?"
+
+CECILIA.--"Commanding me to reconsider my rejection of it. He has
+contrived to fascinate my father."
+
+LADY GLENALVON.--"So he has me. Of course you might choose among
+other candidates for your hand one of much higher worldly rank, of
+much larger fortune; yet, as you have already rejected them, Gordon's
+merits become still more entitled to a fair hearing. He has already
+leaped into a position that mere rank and mere wealth cannot attain.
+Men of all parties speak highly of his parliamentary abilities. He is
+already marked in public opinion as a coming man,--a future minister
+of the highest grade. He has youth and good looks; his moral
+character is without a blemish: yet his manners are so free from
+affected austerity, so frank, so genial. Any woman might be pleased
+with his companionship; and you, with your intellect, your
+culture,--you, so born for high station,--you of all women might be
+proud to partake the anxieties of his career and the rewards of his
+ambition."
+
+CECILIA (clasping her hands tightly together).--"I cannot, I cannot.
+He may be all you say,--I know nothing against Mr. Chillingly
+Gordon,--but my whole nature is antagonistic to his, and even were it
+not so--"
+
+She stopped abruptly, a deep blush warming up her fair face, and
+retreating to leave it coldly pale.
+
+LADY GLENALVON (tenderly kissing her).--"You have not, then, even yet
+conquered the first maiden fancy; the ungrateful one is still
+remembered?"
+
+Cecilia bowed her head on her friend's breast, and murmured
+imploringly, "Don't speak against him; he has been so unhappy. How
+much he must have loved!"
+
+"But it is not you whom he loved."
+
+"Something here, something at my heart, tells me that he will love me
+yet; and, if not, I am contented to be his friend."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+WHILE the conversation just related took place between Cecilia and
+Lady Glenalvon, Chillingly Gordon was seated alone with Mivers in the
+comfortable apartment of the cynical old bachelor. Gordon had
+breakfasted with his kinsman, but that meal was long over; the two men
+having found much to talk about on matters very interesting to the
+younger, nor without interest to the elder one.
+
+It is true that Chillingly Gordon had, within the very short space of
+time that had elapsed since his entrance into the House of Commons,
+achieved one of those reputations which mark out a man for early
+admission into the progressive career of office,--not a very showy
+reputation, but a very solid one. He had none of the gifts of the
+genuine orator, no enthusiasm, no imagination, no imprudent bursts of
+fiery words from a passionate heart. But he had all the gifts of an
+exceedingly telling speaker,--a clear metallic voice; well-bred,
+appropriate action, not less dignified for being somewhat too quiet;
+readiness for extempore replies; industry and method for prepared
+expositions of principle or fact. But his principal merit with the
+chiefs of the assembly was in the strong good sense and worldly tact
+which made him a safe speaker. For this merit he was largely indebted
+to his frequent conferences with Chillingly Mivers. That gentleman,
+whether owing to his social qualities or to the influence of "The
+Londoner" on public opinion, enjoyed an intimate acquaintance with the
+chiefs of all parties, and was up to his ears in the wisdom of the
+world. "Nothing," he would say, "hurts a young Parliamentary speaker
+like violence in opinion, one way or the other. Shun it. Always
+allow that much may be said on both sides. When the chiefs of your
+own side suddenly adopt a violence, you can go with them or against
+them, according as best suits your own book."
+
+"So," said Mivers, reclined on his sofa, and approaching the end of
+his second Trabuco (he never allowed himself more than two), "so I
+think we have pretty well settled the tone you must take in your
+speech to-night. It is a great occasion."
+
+"True. It is the first time in which the debate has been arranged so
+that I may speak at ten o'clock or later. That in itself is a great
+leap; and it is a Cabinet minister whom I am to answer,--luckily, he
+is a very dull fellow. Do you think I might hazard a joke,--at least
+a witticism?"
+
+"At his expense? Decidedly not. Though his office compels him to
+introduce this measure, he was by no means in its favour when it was
+discussed in the Cabinet; and though, as you say, he is dull, it is
+precisely that sort of dulness which is essential to the formation of
+every respectable Cabinet. Joke at him, indeed! Learn that gentle
+dulness never loves a joke--at its own expense. Vain man! seize the
+occasion which your blame of his measure affords you to secure his
+praise of yourself; compliment him. Enough of politics. It never
+does to think too much over what one has already decided to say.
+Brooding over it, one may become too much in earnest, and commit an
+indiscretion. So Kenelm has come back?"
+
+"Yes. I heard that news last night, at White's, from Travers. Sir
+Peter had called on Travers."
+
+"Travers still favours your suit to the heiress?"
+
+"More, I think, than ever. Success in Parliament has great effect on
+a man who has success in fashion and respects the opinion of clubs.
+But last night he was unusually cordial. Between you and me, I think
+he is a little afraid that Kenelm may yet be my rival. I gathered
+that from a hint he let fall of the unwelcome nature of Sir Peter's
+talk to him."
+
+"Why has Travers conceived a dislike to poor Kenelm? He seemed
+partial enough to him once."
+
+"Ay, but not as a son-in-law, even before I had a chance of becoming
+so. And when, after Kenelm appeared at Exmundham, while Travers was
+staying there, Travers learned, I suppose from Lady Chillingly, that
+Kenelm had fallen in love with and wanted to marry some other girl,
+who it seems rejected him; and still more when he heard that Kenelm
+had been subsequently travelling on the Continent in company with a
+low-lived fellow, the drunken, riotous son of a farrier, you may well
+conceive how so polished and sensible a man as Leopold Travers would
+dislike the idea of giving his daughter to one so little likely to
+make an agreeable son-in-law. Bah! I have no fear of Kenelm. By the
+way, did Sir Peter say if Kenelm had quite recovered his health? He
+was at death's door some eighteen months ago, when Sir Peter and Lady
+Chillingly were summoned to town by the doctors."
+
+"My dear Gordon, I fear there is no chance of your succession to
+Exmundham. Sir Peter says that his wandering Hercules is as stalwart
+as ever, and more equable in temperament, more taciturn and grave,--in
+short, less odd. But when you say you have no fear of Kenelm's
+rivalry, do you mean only as to Cecilia Travers?"
+
+"Neither as to that nor as to anything in life; and as to the
+succession to Exmundham, it is his to leave as he pleases, and I have
+cause to think he would never leave it to me. More likely to Parson
+John or the parson's son,--or why not to yourself? I often think that
+for the prizes immediately set before my ambition I am better off
+without land: land is a great obfuscator."
+
+"Humph, there is some truth in that. Yet the fear of land and
+obfuscation does not seem to operate against your suit to Cecilia
+Travers?"
+
+"Her father is likely enough to live till I maybe contented to 'rest
+and be thankful' in the Upper House; and I should not like to be a
+landless peer."
+
+"You are right there; but I should tell you that, now Kenelm has come
+back, Sir Peter has set his heart on his son's being your rival."
+
+"For Cecilia?"
+
+"Perhaps; but certainly for Parliamentary reputation. The senior
+member for the county means to retire, and Sir Peter has been urged to
+allow his son to be brought forward,--from what I hear, with the
+certainty of success."
+
+"What! in spite of that wonderful speech of his on coming of age?"
+
+"Pooh! that is now understood to have been but a bad joke on the new
+ideas, and their organs, including 'The Londoner.' But if Kenelm does
+come into the House, it will not be on your side of the question; and
+unless I greatly overrate his abilities--which very likely I do--he
+will not be a rival to despise. Except, indeed, that he may have one
+fault which in the present day would be enough to unfit him for public
+life."
+
+"And what is that fault?"
+
+"Treason to the blood of the Chillinglys. This is the age, in
+England, when one cannot be too much of a Chillingly. I fear that if
+Kenelm does become bewildered by a political abstraction,--call it, no
+matter what, say, 'love of his country,' or some such old-fashioned
+crotchet,--I fear, I greatly fear, that he may be--in earnest."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE LAST.
+
+IT was a field night in the House of Commons,--an adjourned debate,
+opened by George Belvoir, who had been, the last two years, very
+slowly creeping on in the favour, or rather the indulgence of the
+House, and more than justifying Kenelm's prediction of his career.
+Heir to a noble name and vast estates, extremely hard-working, very
+well informed, it was impossible that he should not creep on. That
+night he spoke sensibly enough, assisting his memory by frequent
+references to his notes; listened to courteously, and greeted with a
+faint "Hear, hear!" of relief when he had done.
+
+Then the House gradually thinned till nine o'clock, at which hour it
+became very rapidly crowded. A Cabinet minister had solemnly risen,
+deposited on the table before him a formidable array of printed
+papers, including a corpulent blue-book. Leaning his arm on the red
+box, he commenced with this awe-compelling sentence,--
+
+"Sir, I join issue with the right honourable gentleman opposite. He
+says this is not raised as a party question. I deny it. Her
+Majesty's Government are put upon their trial."
+
+Here there were cheers, so loudly, and so rarely greeting a speech
+from that Cabinet minister, that he was put out, and had much to "hum"
+and to "ha," before he could recover the thread of his speech. Then
+he went on, with unbroken but lethargic fluency; read long extracts
+from the public papers, inflicted a whole page from the blue-book,
+wound up with a peroration of respectable platitudes, glanced at the
+clock, saw that he had completed the hour which a Cabinet minister who
+does not profess to be oratorical is expected to speak, but not to
+exceed; and sat down.
+
+Up rose a crowd of eager faces, from which the Speaker, as previously
+arranged with the party whips, selected one,--a young face, hardy,
+intelligent, emotionless.
+
+I need not say that it was the face of Chillingly Gordon. His
+position that night was one that required dexterous management and
+delicate tact. He habitually supported the Government; his speeches
+had been hitherto in their favour. On this occasion he differed from
+the Government. The difference was known to the chiefs of the
+Opposition, and hence the arrangement of the whips, that he should
+speak for the first time after ten o'clock, and for the first time in
+reply to a Cabinet minister. It is a position in which a young party
+man makes or mars his future. Chillingly Gordon spoke from the third
+row behind the Government; he had been duly cautioned by Mivers not to
+affect a conceited independence, or an adhesion to "violence" in
+ultra-liberal opinions, by seating himself below the gangway.
+Speaking thus, amid the rank and file of the Ministerial supporters,
+any opinion at variance with the mouthpieces of the Treasury Bench
+would be sure to produce a more effective sensation than if delivered
+from the ranks of the mutinous Bashi Bazouks divided by the gangway
+from better disciplined forces. His first brief sentences enthralled
+the House, conciliated the Ministerial side, kept the Opposition side
+in suspense. The whole speech was, indeed, felicitously adroit, and
+especially in this, that, while in opposition to the Government as a
+whole, it expressed the opinions of a powerful section of the Cabinet,
+which, though at present a minority, yet being the most enamoured of a
+New Idea, the progress of the age would probably render a safe
+investment for the confidence which honest Gordon reposed in its
+chance of beating its colleagues.
+
+It was not, however, till Gordon had concluded that the cheers of his
+audience--impulsive and hearty as are the cheers of that assembly when
+the evidence of intellect is unmistakable--made manifest to the
+gallery and the reporters the full effect of the speech he had
+delivered. The chief of the Opposition whispered to his next
+neighbour, "I wish we could get that man." The Cabinet minister whom
+Gordon had answered--more pleased with a personal compliment to
+himself than displeased with an attack on the measure his office
+compelled him to advocate--whispered to his chief, "That is a man we
+must not lose."
+
+Two gentlemen in the Speaker's gallery, who had sat there from the
+opening of the debate, now quitted their places. Coming into the
+lobby, they found themselves commingled with a crowd of members who
+had also quitted their seats, after Gordon's speech, in order to
+discuss its merits, as they gathered round the refreshment table for
+oranges or soda-water. Among them was George Belvoir, who, on sight
+of the younger of the two gentlemen issuing from the Speaker's
+gallery, accosted him with friendly greeting,--
+
+"Ha! Chillingly, how are you? Did not know you were in town. Been
+here all the evening? Yes; very good debate. How did you like
+Gordon's speech?"
+
+"I liked yours much better."
+
+"Mine!" cried George, very much flattered and very much surprised.
+"Oh, mine was a mere humdrum affair, a plain statement of the reasons
+for the vote I should give. And Gordon's was anything but that. You
+did not like his opinions?"
+
+"I don't know what his opinions are. But I did not like his ideas."
+
+"I don't quite understand you. What ideas?"
+
+"The new ones; by which it is shown how rapidly a great state can be
+made small."
+
+Here Mr. Belvoir was taken aside by a brother member, on an important
+matter to be brought before the committee on salmon fisheries, on
+which they both served; and Kenelm, with his companion, Sir Peter,
+threaded his way through the crowded lobby and disappeared. Emerging
+into the broad space, with its lofty clock-tower, Sir Peter halted,
+and pointing towards the old Abbey, half in shadow, half in light,
+under the tranquil moonbeams, said,--
+
+"It tells much for the duration of a people when it accords with the
+instinct of immortality in a man; when an honoured tomb is deemed
+recompense for the toils and dangers of a noble life. How much of the
+history of England Nelson summed up in the simple words,--'Victory or
+Westminster Abbey.'"
+
+"Admirably expressed, my dear father," said Kenelm, briefly.
+
+"I agree with your remark, which I overheard, on Gordon's speech,"
+resumed Sir Peter. "It was wonderfully clever; yet I should have been
+sorry to hear you speak it. It is not by such sentiments that Nelsons
+become great. If such sentiments should ever be national, the cry
+will not be 'Victory or Westminster Abbey!' but 'Defeat and the Three
+per Cents!'"
+
+Pleased with his own unwonted animation, and with the sympathizing
+half-smile on his son's taciturn lips, Sir Peter then proceeded more
+immediately to the subjects which pressed upon his heart. Gordon's
+success in Parliament, Gordon's suit to Cecilia Travers, favoured, as
+Sir Peter had learned, by her father, rejected as yet by herself, were
+somehow inseparably mixed up in Sir Peter's mind and his words, as he
+sought to kindle his son's emulation. He dwelt on the obligations
+which a country imposed on its citizens, especially on the young and
+vigorous generation to which the destinies of those to follow were
+intrusted; and with these stern obligations he combined all the
+cheering and tender associations which an English public man connects
+with an English home: the wife with a smile to soothe the cares, and a
+mind to share the aspirations, of a life that must go through labour
+to achieve renown; thus, in all he said, binding together, as if they
+could not be disparted, Ambition and Cecilia.
+
+His son did not interrupt him by a word, Sir Peter in his eagerness
+not noticing that Kenelm had drawn him aside from the direct
+thoroughfare, and had now made halt in the middle of Westminster
+bridge, bending over the massive parapet and gazing abstractedly upon
+the waves of the starlit river. On the right the stately length of
+the people's legislative palace, so new in its date, so elaborately in
+each detail ancient in its form, stretching on towards the lowly and
+jagged roofs of penury and crime. Well might these be so near to the
+halls of a people's legislative palace: near to the heart of every
+legislator for a people must be the mighty problem how to increase a
+people's splendour and its virtue, and how to diminish its penury and
+its crime.
+
+"How strange it is," said Kenelm, still bending over the parapet,
+"that throughout all my desultory wanderings I have ever been
+attracted towards the sight and the sound of running waters, even
+those of the humblest rill! Of what thoughts, of what dreams, of what
+memories, colouring the history of my past, the waves of the humblest
+rill could speak, were the waves themselves not such supreme
+philosophers,--roused indeed on their surface, vexed by a check to
+their own course, but so indifferent to all that makes gloom or death
+to the mortals who think and dream and feel beside their banks."
+
+"Bless me," said Peter to himself, "the boy has got back to his old
+vein of humours and melancholies. He has not heard a word I have been
+saying. Travers is right. He will never do anything in life. Why
+did I christen him Kenelm? he might as well have been christened
+Peter." Still, loth to own that his eloquence had been expended in
+vain and that the wish of his heart was doomed to expire disappointed,
+Sir Peter said aloud, "You have not listened to what I said; Kenelm,
+you grieve me."
+
+"Grieve you! you! do not say that, Father, dear Father. Listen to
+you! Every word you have said has sunk into the deepest deep of my
+heart. Pardon my foolish, purposeless snatch of talk to myself: it is
+but my way, only my way, dear Father!"
+
+"Boy, boy," cried Sir Peter, with tears in his voice, "if you could
+get out of those odd ways of yours I should be so thankful. But if
+you cannot, nothing you can do shall grieve me. Only, let me say
+this; running waters have had a great charm for you. With a humble
+rill you associate thoughts, dreams, memories in your past. But now
+you halt by the stream of the mighty river: before you the senate of
+an empire wider than Alexander's; behind you the market of a commerce
+to which that of Tyre was a pitiful trade. Look farther down, those
+squalid hovels, how much there to redeem or to remedy; and out of
+sight, but not very distant, the nation's Walhalla, 'Victory or
+Westminster Abbey!' The humble rill has witnessed your past. Has the
+mighty river no effect on your future? The rill keeps no record of
+your past: shall the river keep no record of your future? Ah, boy,
+boy, I see you are dreaming still,--no use talking. Let us go home."
+
+"I was not dreaming, I was telling myself that the time had come to
+replace the old Kenelm with the new ideas, by a new Kenelm with the
+Ideas of Old. Ah! perhaps we must,--at whatever cost to
+ourselves,--we must go through the romance of life before we clearly
+detect what is grand in its realities. I can no longer lament that I
+stand estranged from the objects and pursuits of my race. I have
+learned how much I have with them in common. I have known love; I
+have known sorrow."
+
+Kenelm paused a moment, only a moment, then lifted the head which,
+during that pause, had drooped, and stood erect at the full height of
+his stature, startling his father by the change that had passed over
+his face; lip, eye, his whole aspect, eloquent with a resolute
+enthusiasm, too grave to be the flash of a passing moment.
+
+"Ay, ay," he said, "Victory or Westminster Abbey! The world is a
+battle-field in which the worst wounded are the deserters, stricken as
+they seek to fly, and hushing the groans that would betray the secret
+of their inglorious hiding-place. The pain of wounds received in the
+thick of the fight is scarcely felt in the joy of service to some
+honoured cause, and is amply atoned by the reverence for noble scars.
+My choice is made. Not that of deserter, that of soldier in the
+ranks."
+
+"It will not be long before you rise from the ranks, my boy, if you
+hold fast to the Idea of Old, symbolized in the English battle-cry,
+'Victory or Westminster Abbey.'"
+
+So saying, Sir Peter took his son's arm, leaning on it proudly; and
+so, into the crowded thoroughfares, from the halting-place on the
+modern bridge that spans the legendary river, passes the Man of the
+Young Generation to fates beyond the verge of the horizon to which the
+eyes of my generation must limit their wistful gaze.
+
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHILLINGLY, LYTTON, COMPLETE ***
+
+******** This file should be named b086w10.txt or b086w10.zip *********
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, b086w11.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, b086w10a.txt
+
+This eBook was produced by Dagny, dagnypg@yahoo.com
+and David Widger, widger@cecomet.net
+
+Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our Web sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03
+
+Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text
+files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks!
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated):
+
+eBooks Year Month
+
+ 1 1971 July
+ 10 1991 January
+ 100 1994 January
+ 1000 1997 August
+ 1500 1998 October
+ 2000 1999 December
+ 2500 2000 December
+ 3000 2001 November
+ 4000 2001 October/November
+ 6000 2002 December*
+ 9000 2003 November*
+10000 2004 January*
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois,
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts,
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
+
+We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+Donations by check or money order may be sent to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information online at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the eBook (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only
+when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by
+Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be
+they hardware or software or any other related product without
+express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
diff --git a/old/b086w10.zip b/old/b086w10.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c462e4f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/b086w10.zip
Binary files differ