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+<!DOCTYPE html>
+<html lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
+ <title>Lady Bell, Volume 2 (of 3) | Project Gutenberg</title>
+ <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover">
+ <style>
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+ </head>
+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78326 ***</div>
+
+<div>
+ <h1 class='c000'><span class='xxlarge'>LADY BELL</span><br> <br><span class='xlarge'>VOL. II.</span></h1>
+</div>
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001 chapter x-ebookmaker-drop'>
+<figure class="figcenter illowp50" id="cover" style="max-width: 157.625em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Book Cover: Lady Bell Volume II by Sarah Tytler" data-role="presentation">
+</figure>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb c001'>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001 chapter'>
+<figure class="figcenter illowp46" id="ititle" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/ititle.jpg" alt="Title page: Lady Bell, A story of Last Century" data-role="presentation">
+</figure>
+</div>
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1 chapter'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><span class='xxlarge'>LADY BELL</span></div>
+ <div class='c001'><span class='large'>A Story of Last Century</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'>BY THE AUTHOR OF “CITOYENNE JACQUELINE”</div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='large'>IN THREE VOLS.—II.</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='large'>STRAHAN &#38; CO.</span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'>56, LUDGATE HILL, LONDON</span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'>1873</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='large'>LONDON:</span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'>PRINTED BY VIRTUE AND CO.,</span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'>CITY ROAD.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1 chapter'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <h2><span class='large'>CONTENTS OF VOL. II.</span></h2>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth15'>
+<col class='colwidth75'>
+<col class='colwidth10'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c003'>CHAP.</th>
+ <th class='c004'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='c005'>PAGE</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>I.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>A MESSAGE OUT OF THE PAST</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch01'>1</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>II.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>FREED BY THE VISITATION OF GOD</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch02'>15</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>III.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>KEEPING HOUSE TOGETHER</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch03'>28</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>IV.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>FRIENDS IN NEED</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch04'>41</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>V.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>BOW BELLS AND THE FAMILY IN CLEVELAND COURT</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch05'>58</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>VI.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>A GAY YOUNG MADAM</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch06'>71</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>VII.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>MAKING AN ACQUAINTANCE AT THE PANTHEON</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch07'>82</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>VIII.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>OPINIONS DIFFER</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch08'>95</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>IX.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>BOULTON’S COINS AND WEDGWOOD’S DISHES</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch09'>106</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>X.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>A PARTY ON THE WATER</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch10'>124</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>XI.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>DISCORD</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch11'>135</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>XII.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>THE LITTLE DINNER AT HAMPTON, WITH MUSIC ON THE WATER</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch12'>149</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>XIII.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>A VISIT TO LEICESTER FIELDS</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch13'>162</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>XIV.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>SIR JOSHUA AT HOME</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch14'>174</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>XV.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>THE MASQUED BALL IN PROSPECT</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch15'>185</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>XVI.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>THE MASQUED BALL AS IT BEGAN IN REALITY</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch16'>198</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>XVII.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>THE “COMMON DOMINO”</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch17'>210</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>XVIII.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>ROMEO AND JULIET ON THE STAGE, AND IN LADY BELL TREVOR AND MISS GREATHEAD’S BOX</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch18'>222</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>XIX.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>THE MEETING ON THE MALL</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch19'>240</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>XX.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>TO TIE OR NOT TO TIE THE KNOT?</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch20'>251</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>XXI.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>ISLINGTON CHURCH EARLY ONE MARCH MORNING</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch21'>264</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c003'>XXII.</td>
+ <td class='c004'>BACK AT SUMMERHILL</td>
+ <td class='c005'><a href='#ch22'>276</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb c001'>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
+ <h2 id='ch01' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER I.</span><br> <br>A MESSAGE OUT OF THE PAST.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>One hot day in the latter end of June,
+Lady Bell was sitting in the orchard,
+with Mrs. Sundon’s child in her lap, cooing
+to it, tickling it, tossing it, decking it with
+daisies, pretending to herself and to it, that
+the not-many-weeks-old child noticed and
+appreciated its floral finery.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The long, flower-besprinkled grass grew
+all round, beneath the bending, leafy boughs,
+through the shadows of which came perpetually
+shifting chequers of sunshine. There
+could just be seen, down a vista, the quaint,
+grey house of Nutfield, with the last year’s
+yellow corn-stacks beyond the orchard, mellowing
+and warming the green and grey
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>tints under the blue and white cloud-flecked
+sky.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Sundon with her fine figure and face,
+in one of her white wrappers and close caps,
+came slowly up between the interlacing
+boughs; she stopped beside Lady Bell and
+the child, looking down upon them. The
+group was very sweet and graceful, and
+wanted only a St. Joseph and a little St.
+John to make it stand for one of the old
+Italian “Riposos.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Look here, Lady Bell,” said Mrs. Sundon,
+putting her finger on a paragraph in a newspaper
+which she held in her hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell started and rose up in vague
+perturbation. For precaution’s sake Mrs.
+Sundon had abstained from giving her friend,
+even in private, that friend’s name and title,
+since Mrs. Sundon had discovered Lady Bell
+at Nutfield. What had surprised the compromising
+words from Mrs. Sundon now?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell took the newspaper and looked
+at the place indicated. Her hand was shaking,
+her breath was coming fast, her eyes
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>were dazzled; but the intimation was so
+plain and direct that she took in its meaning
+at a glance. There was no ambiguity there
+to prevent the message reaching its destination
+and doing its work. “If Lady Bell
+Trevor wish to see her husband in life, let
+her return at once to Trevor Court.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A mist passed before Lady Bell’s eyes;
+the sunny June orchard, with the soft, fair
+child whom Mrs. Sundon had taken into her
+arms, and Mrs. Sundon herself, all grew in
+a moment blurred and dark, as if the very
+dews of death and remorse had fallen on
+them.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, Mrs. Sundon, what shall I do?”
+cried Lady Bell, wringing her hands. “I
+did not love him, I had no cause to love
+him; but I was his wife, who was yet no
+wife to him, and he is a dying man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Go back to him immediately,” advised
+Mrs. Sundon, “while there is still time to
+wipe out your offence to him—it was light
+compared with his to you. But it is ill
+having an unsettled score with the dead.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>This would hang like a millstone round your
+neck, and weigh you down all your days.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I’ll go back if you counsel it,” submitted
+Lady Bell desperately, setting off in nervous
+haste to the house. “But how am I to face
+him? if he have strength left to lift his hand
+still, will he strike me as I have seen him
+strike his man? Or, if he is gone, must I
+stay in the house with the dead, I who
+never saw anybody die but Lady Lucie,
+who died blessing me? Would that I had
+minded her precepts better; she would not
+have had me leave the worst of husbands.
+And how many miles will it be to post cross
+country, Mrs. Sundon? you have a good
+head and may guess. Can you tell me if I
+shall be as long in going as I was in coming
+here? only I did not come straight! Oh!
+will you be so kind as to lend me the money
+you think I shall need, for I have only three
+crowns in my purse?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“My dear, I shall take you,” said Mrs.
+Sundon quietly. “Do you think I would
+send you off on such an errand alone?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>“Oh, I am so thankful,” Lady Bell admitted
+in her relief, “now I may do my
+duty at last; no, I don’t mean that,” she
+checked herself the next moment, “I cannot
+hear of you doing such a thing. How could
+you leave your baby? You are too delicate
+yet for such a journey—and to go to that
+neighbourhood above all others. It is vastly
+generous of you to propose it, just what
+I should have expected from you; but, of
+course, I cannot consent; I shall manage by
+myself, somehow.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Say no more, Lady Bell,” Mrs. Sundon
+put an end to the discussion, “I am going
+with you. The child will do very well with
+her nurse. Do you think I would put my
+child, any more than myself, between me
+and my duty and privilege? I should call
+that treating my child very ill, paying her a
+poor compliment, for which I should hope
+she would never thank me. I am abler for
+the journey than I was for coming here. I
+need not fear to go near Chevely, which has
+been sold, as I dare say you’ve heard. You
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>cannot tell what I can do without harm to
+my health,” declared Mrs. Sundon, with a
+little bitterness. “I travelled from what
+had been my home, handed into the carriage
+by a bailiff on starting, and went out of
+town when my child was no more than ten
+days old. I could not have slept another
+night under that roof. But even if I had
+been a weaker woman, I should not have
+shrunk from this poor effort, and you would
+not have refused me my right.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell had no longer the heart, any
+more than the will, to decline Mrs. Sundon’s
+support in the emergency. If Mrs. Sundon’s
+presence made Mr. Trevor mad—should he
+regard it as another act of wilful disobedience
+even when Lady Bell was pretending
+to obey him—it would be time enough then
+to undertake the ungracious task of refusing
+the elder woman’s countenance.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The great news that Mrs. Sundon and
+Mrs. Barlowe were to set off on horseback
+within the hour, availing themselves, by
+permission, of Miss Kingscote’s and Master
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>Charles’s horses, in order to reach Lumley,
+where they were to hire a chaise to proceed
+on a journey of indefinite duration, fell flat.
+It was as nothing compared to the stunning
+shock inflicted on Miss Kingscote when Mrs.
+Sundon saw fit to communicate to the hostess
+the real rank and history of her companion.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Lud! lud! a Lady Bell all the time,
+and I to have gone and found fault with
+her, and kept her pottering about my business,
+mending lace, and cleaning silver, lud-a-mercy,
+what shall I do, brother? Mayn’t
+I be took up by the King or the Lords, like
+the ‘torney was, whom I’ve heard tell of, no
+farther gone than father and mother’s day,
+afore we came down in the world, and I
+were a mite of a child—he gave a warrant
+to arrest a fine lady in her coach in the
+street, at the suit of a tradesman, and he
+himself was had up before the justices—I
+mean afore the Lords, for an insult to the
+quality. Mayn’t I be had up and put in
+prison, though I never knowed, nor meant
+it, and I’ll beg her pardon over and over
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>again, and she was a right-down pleasant
+lass, madam—Lud! I’m losing my head—lady,
+save when she was in the tantrums.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Nonsense, Deb,” exclaimed Master
+Charles impatiently; “you did her a kindness,
+and helped her in her end. As it
+proves,” he continued a little sarcastically;
+“whether Miss or Madam, she has been all
+along far beyond our flight, and will never
+waste another thought on us, now that she
+has found birds of her own feather, and is
+ready to go off with them to her own
+perch.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“She were a runaway wife all the same,”
+reflected Miss Kingscote sapiently, “though
+she were ten times a Lady Bell, and she had
+left her man as must have been hers in the
+face of day, which made the leaving a heap
+bolder in my madam—nay, my lady. I
+vow I as good as telled her she was no
+match for the Kingscotes of Nutfield.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You had nothing to do to say anything
+of the kind, even though this Lady Bell
+had been a simple waiting-maid or scullion.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>I don’t care which,” Master Charles was
+provoked into telling his sister, as his good-humoured
+indulgence gave way. “The
+Kingscotes have not kept their own in the
+world without loss, and they can ill afford
+to despise the humblest—I say that, if I am
+supposed to have anything to do with the
+future matching of the Kingscotes,” declared
+the young gentleman loftily, “and they’ll
+be long enough of being matched for me,
+since I could bring a mate to little better
+than a farm-house, and a farmer’s kin. I’ll
+thank you, Deb, not to meddle in the
+matter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“There, I’ve given offence to Master
+Charles,” Miss Kingscote reflected glumly
+after she was alone. “He’s taken to hurting
+my feelings by twitting me with what
+we’ve lost, as if the worsest loss weren’t
+mine! not that I show it neither, for I’m
+sure I’m a powerful fine woman, considering
+my lack of education. And so she’s Lady
+Bell, and if she had bidden still, I mun
+have said my lady every blessed word, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>run at her heels as I’ve never made her
+run at mine. But if this Squire Trevor, as
+she has given leg-bail to, had not come on
+the carpet, first and foremost, ere we set
+eyes on her, mightn’t she have been my
+Lady Bell Kingscote! That do sound fine!
+prodigious fine! But if there had never
+been no Squire Trevor, there would never
+have been no bolting, banding with the
+players, turning up at Nutfield, and making
+friends with Master Charles, so there is an
+end on’t. My Master Charles mun go to
+the wars, and risk a sabre’s cut spoiling his
+bonnie face,” mused Miss Kingscote, whimpering
+at the very thought, “afore he fill
+his chimney-corner, and bring home his lady
+to sit down cheek by jowl with him, while
+I’ll be right glad to retire to mother’s room,
+save when they want my company, for I
+ain’t teethy or prideful—I never were.
+That mun be the order of the day, as Master
+Charles ought to know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Even before the parting, Master Charles
+had cause to renounce his mortified conviction
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>of how little he and his sister were
+to Lady Bell Trevor, and of how she had
+done with them from this day.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She was grateful for the assistance and
+escort as far as Lumley, which he offered
+so soon as he ascertained that the offer would
+be agreeable to her and Madam Sundon.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell put her head out of the chaise
+window at the last. Her scared eyes looked
+with almost timid beseeching into his face.
+She told him, without any sign of haughtiness,
+but with many tokens of a retentive
+memory for the smallest act of consideration
+and kindness, of contrition for having
+played a part to him and his sister, and for
+not having trusted them in full, that she
+had been very well off and happy at Nutfield.
+She hoped that his colours would
+arrive soon, that he would see a campaign
+to his wish, and return safe and sound to
+cheer his sister’s heart.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell sent Miss Kingscote her grateful
+duty. Lady Bell trusted they would
+meet again, when she would be able to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>finish her chair-covers. In the meantime,
+she would not forget to procure patterns for
+Miss Kingscote. Miss Kingscote must be
+especially kind to Lady Bell’s brood of
+chicks—the first brood she had seen set,
+seen hatched, and fed every day with her
+own hands.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It was plain that for the moment, in place
+of being eager to resume her cast-off rank
+and state, Lady Bell had forgotten where
+and why she was going, and everything
+about Squire Trevor and his danger. It
+was only when the chaise rolled off, and she
+sank back in her corner, that she withdrew
+into herself to face the grim record of the
+bond she had broken, and the forfeit she
+was called on to pay.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It was on a fresh summer morning, when,
+having started early to accomplish the last
+stage of their journey, Lady Bell and
+Mrs. Sundon came in sight of Trevor
+Court.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The gates were standing open; early as
+it was, the lodge seemed deserted, so that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>the chaise entered without parley. The dew
+was lying like pearls on the grass by the
+drive, and silvering the yews on the terrace.
+The spirals of smoke from the red chimney-stacks
+were rising straight in the clear air.
+A gush of birds’ song sounded far and wide.
+There was something light, bright, and exhilarating
+in the air, and in the aspect of
+nature, which lent a peculiar charm to what
+was imposing in the pile of building and its
+grounds.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I have not seen Trevor Court before,
+save from a distance,” Mrs. Sundon let fall
+the remark. “You never told me, Lady
+Bell, what a fine old place it was.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I don’t think I ever noticed it till the
+last time I saw it,” Lady Bell replied almost
+in a whisper; she recalled vividly that last
+time sitting on the September morning in
+the travelling chariot beside its master, who
+lingered in taking a short leave of his
+treasure.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The next moment Lady Bell gave a
+shriek and put her hands before her face.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>The chaise had turned into the sweep before
+the house, where, in sombre contrast to the
+summer morning, the windows were all
+shrouded, and the hatchment was up.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>
+ <h2 id='ch02' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER II.</span><br> <br>FREED BY THE VISITATION OF GOD.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was as a quailing widow, and not as
+a reluctant wife, that Lady Bell re-entered
+the old oak parlour, where she still
+trembled lest she should hear her husband’s
+loud, rough accents stuttering with rage,
+and his stick, when gout confined him to
+his chair, savagely beating the floor.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Walsh, in her towering cap and
+starched frill, received Lady Bell, and spoke
+to the point, without softening or reservation.
+“Yes, it is all over, Lady Bell, the
+Squire died last night at ten o’clock. He
+was took with a jaundice on Wednesday
+se’en night; but no danger was apprehended
+till five days ago, when Mr. Walsh writ the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>notice for the papers—to no purpose, so far
+as the Squire’s desiring to see and speak
+with you once more was concerned. You
+and he will not see and speak with each
+other on this side of the judgment day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, Mrs. Walsh, I came as fast as ever
+I could.” Lady Bell humbled herself in
+the dust before her ancient enemy. “I
+know now I was a bad, bad wife. I would
+give all I have in the world to be able to
+live the last year over again, and do my
+duty by your cousin, who is lying stiff and
+cold in one of these rooms, where I shall
+never hear him say that he forgives me,
+that he makes allowance at last for my
+youth, my wounded pride—what had a
+sinful creature to do with pride?—my forced
+inclinations. Oh! tell me he did not lay
+his curse upon me with his last breath?”
+implored Lady Bell, ready to sink down
+with grief and terror, while she clasped her
+hands and looked up, her distended eyes
+brimming over with scalding tears, in Mrs.
+Walsh’s inflexible face.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>“Yes, Lady Bell, you were a bad wife,
+and you would not take a telling while it
+was in your power,” declared the uncompromising
+woman, standing bolt upright,
+her very mittens bristling with her righteous
+protest.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Madam,” interposed Mrs. Sundon with
+rising indignation, “it is monstrous to reproach
+this poor child at such a time. She
+is sufficiently crushed by the nature of the
+event which has taken place, following on
+her rashness. She will not be likely to
+forget it, even without your accusations to
+embitter the blow. I vouch for Lady Bell’s
+having lived in safety and honour since she
+quitted her husband. Madam, you will not
+refuse my voucher?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Madam, I have not heard your honesty
+questioned, therefore I grant that Lady Bell
+has come back in honest company,” acknowledged
+Mrs. Walsh stiffly, “which is more
+than might have been hoped, from her
+flying in the face of law and duty, and
+exposing herself to the worst perils.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>“Though you are the late Mr. Trevor’s
+kinswoman, you must know,” said Mrs.
+Sundon, “that Lady Bell Trevor has been
+more sinned against than sinning.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I know that she is not too young or fair
+or fine to be accountable for her errors to a
+Power before which the most wilful lady
+will not dare to plead her daintiness,” maintained
+Mrs. Walsh doggedly. “But I
+know, too, that you were sinned against,
+Lady Bell,” she added candidly, turning to
+the overwhelmed offender. “So far as that
+goes, Squire Trevor did not deserve your
+duty. But you had the will of a higher
+than my poor cousin to consider, and where
+should we all be, if we got our due, and
+no more? It was on the Squire’s mind
+at the last that he had wronged you; and
+he sought to receive, as well as to bestow,
+forgiveness, before he could die in peace.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I did not merit it,” said Lady Bell;
+“but you told him, dear Mrs. Walsh—oh,
+say that you told the old man that I forgave
+him, as I hope to be forgiven?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>“I charged him to repent, and if he had
+done any wrong to a fellow-creature which
+he could atone for, to make amends. Then
+I bade him turn for forgiveness for that,
+and all his sins, to the great God and
+Saviour, against whom he had chiefly sinned,
+but who would never refuse him forgiveness,
+since, in the very act of his seeking
+it, they were pledged for his salvation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, thank God! that he died in peace
+with me,” broke in Lady Bell impetuously.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Rather thank God that he died in peace
+with his Maker, madam,” Mrs. Walsh did
+not fail to rebuke her. “I think he did;
+I am fain to hope he did, though he was
+not able to fulfil his part of the obligation
+here; the will must stand for the deed.
+‘Torney Kenyon, who did all the Squire’s
+business, was from home, at the wedding of
+his son in Bristol. We sent twice, but we
+could not get hold of the man in time. I
+think it is better to tell you at once, Lady
+Bell, what you will hear later.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>“As you will, madam,” replied Lady
+Bell dejectedly.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“The Squire’s will was executed long
+before he ever saw your face, when his
+estate was bequeathed, failing any heir of
+his body, to my eldest son Jack. The
+substance of that will has been repeated
+since you offended the Squire, and it has
+neither been revoked nor altered, as my
+cousin certainly desired it to be altered, in
+his dying moments. But Mr. Walsh and
+me, expecting that you, or some one for
+you, would answer our summons, if you
+were in the country, have made up our
+minds, and will answer for Jack at his
+college, to take your wishes on the matter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I have no wishes, Mrs. Walsh,” exclaimed
+Lady Bell hastily.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“We shall let you have whatever compensation
+you desire,” went on Mrs. Walsh,
+paying no heed to the demur, “being well
+aware that such were Squire Trevor’s intentions
+while he was yet in the body, and in
+his right mind, so that you are indebted to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>no bounty, but to bare justice for your share
+of the worldly inheritance that our cousin
+has left behind him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Madam, this honourable conduct does
+you and Mr. Walsh infinite credit.” Mrs.
+Sundon could not refrain from awarding
+her hearty approbation to her late antagonist.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Mrs. Sundon, I repeat that ‘tis but
+justice,” argued Mrs. Walsh with a stateliness
+of her own, winding up with her own
+favourite axiom, “The world and I have
+shaken hands long ago.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You are all a great deal too kind to
+me,” wept Lady Bell, “a rebel who deserted
+my post. But indeed I had liefer, if you
+do not think it an impertinence in me to
+make an objection, that Mr. Trevor’s goods
+went to you and your son Jack, his friends.
+I am sure I have no right to a single
+sixpence.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Beware of pride and sauciness still
+under the garb of disinterestedness, Lady
+Bell,” Mrs. Walsh said severely.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>“Nay, I’ll do whatever you will,” Lady
+Bell hastened to amend her statement, quite
+subdued, and feeling sadly as if she would
+never have the heart to have a will of her
+own again.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Madam, a second time everything shall
+be as you will, and as your friends—such
+as Madam Sundon and your man of business,
+if you will please to name him—may
+decide for you,” Mrs. Walsh laid down
+the law.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell knew that she was not and
+never would be mistress of Trevor Court.
+Not that she desired it; she even recoiled
+from it as from a sacrilege.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>After the funeral, when the two ladies
+happened to be alone together, Mrs. Sundon
+said to Lady Bell—</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“They are good people, these Walshes,
+my dear. I should think very good people
+to deal with and to raise a country parish
+sunk in rude ignorance and gross transgression.
+That was not your case exactly,
+but I think you might have got on with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>them, and been the better and not the
+worse for them. To be plain with you,
+I cannot help saying, though it may be
+presumptuous, that I think I could have
+got on with them. I could acquire a great
+regard for that woman, and I fancy I might
+have a still greater for her good man. As
+for Sally, I should have sought to soften
+her brusqueness; yet brusqueness is not so
+great a fault when it comes to weighing
+faults. But you were too young, and you
+were petulant between youth and hard
+usage.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I shall get on with them now,” said
+Lady Bell wistfully, looking incredibly
+young and very fair in the weeds which
+had been provided for her, and which she
+had hastened to put on with her trembling
+frightened fingers, as a mark of respect for
+the dead, doing it the more eagerly because
+she had failed in respect for the living.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I see the servants look sourly on me,
+and no wonder,” confided Lady Bell to her
+friend, “for they stood by their master,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>whom his wife left. But I’ll bear it, and
+try to bring them to think better of me,
+though Trevor Court is not mine, and I
+cannot stay here, and keep the old people
+and ask them to serve me. Mrs. Walsh
+will see to her cousin’s household, that is
+my comfort. I will do everything Mrs.
+Walsh bids me from this time. I’ll be
+good, Mrs. Sundon,” promised Lady Bell,
+with a faint smile at her own childishness.
+“But seriously, Mrs. Walsh took my place,
+and saved me from a grievous reflection
+which would have haunted my death-bed.
+She will teach me to be a self-denying,
+devoted Christian woman like herself. I
+believe I did not judge Sally Walsh justly,”
+Lady Bell finished with a little sigh of
+compunction and doubt. “I dare say she
+was not so pert and rude as I thought her.
+I know she was far more dutiful than I
+have been.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Sundon said nothing more at the
+time; but she determined that she would
+not leave Lady Bell with the Walshes,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>though Mrs. Sundon was able to do them
+justice. “They were never the people,
+however good their intentions, to have the
+guidance of Lady Bell,” reflected the lady.
+“Now that Lady Bell’s spirit is broke and
+her conscience burdened, she would become
+their slave. I had almost as soon put her
+into a nunnery, where in the present state
+of her feelings, she would be content to take
+refuge, but where in time she would be
+driven either into fanaticism or hypocrisy,
+my generous, tender Lady Bell! Just when
+she is freed too, by the judgment of God,
+from her cruel gaoler (God forgive him!)
+and restored to hope and happiness. Why,
+there is a bright life before Lady Bell which
+nothing has come to spoil beyond recall. So
+help me, I will make it bright and safe for
+her as I would make it for my little Caro,
+since Lady Bell came forward of her own
+sweet will and did what she could to keep
+me in Paradise. Oh! it is well for Lady
+Bell that with all her early trials she has
+not taken forbidden fruit into her mouth,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>and found it turn to dust and ashes between
+her teeth. There is no great good under
+the sun, but I will pursue the lesser good
+for my Lady Bell when she begins to look
+up and smile again. Bless the child! what
+is the loss by honest death of such a husband
+as Squire Trevor, though she was
+desperate enough to run away from him,
+compared to what some women have to
+bear? I will keep the knowledge of evil
+from her, as I would keep it from Caro.
+She shall not fail to be, so far as I can help
+her, a devoted Christian woman; but it
+shall be after her own kind. ‘Wisdom
+shall be justified of all her children.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The Squire’s funeral sermon was preached.
+It was not without its unvarnished allusions,
+even though they were in the mouth of
+Mrs. Walsh’s mild spouse, and not of the
+most redoubtable champion of truth in the
+parish, to the evils of stout spirits, stormy
+passions, and family discord. It was
+listened to with penitent humiliation and
+meekness.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>A decent interval passed, and the arrangements
+were completed, by which Lady Bell
+was put into possession of a moderate jointure,
+in addition to her marriage settlement,
+from her deceased husband’s estate.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Then Mrs. Sundon hurried her friend just
+a little on the plea of the necessity of Mrs.
+Sundon’s return to her child, and carried
+Lady Bell back to Nutfield in the first
+place.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>
+ <h2 id='ch03' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER III.</span><br> <br>KEEPING HOUSE TOGETHER.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Lady Bell and Mrs. Sundon were so
+well pleased with each other, that they
+agreed finally to take up house together.
+They liked the air and aspect of Nutfield so
+well, that they fixed on dwelling in the
+neighbourhood, though no longer under the
+wing of Miss Kingscote.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The two ladies rented one of the cottages
+<i>ornés</i> which were beginning to be built
+between the town of Lumley and Nutfield.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Summerhill had for its nucleus a one-storeyed
+erection of black and white timber,
+to which a wooden verandah had been added
+all round. The whole was set in a large
+enough garden and paddock to afford room
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>for ingenuity to propose and execute a
+number of wonderful performances in the
+shape of winding walks, mounds, grottos,
+bowers, even a dovecot and a dairy.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The house was unfurnished, so that the
+tenants had another gain in fitting it up
+according to their tastes. Everything that
+Lady Bell and Mrs. Sundon ordered for
+their use was bright and tasteful. There
+was a good deal of white painted wood and
+white dimity, relieved by warm, deep-coloured
+carpet-work and rich embroidery.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The ladies gave evidence in the decorations
+of their house of ability and refinement,
+according to the standard of their
+day. There were home-manufactured
+brackets, sconces, card-baskets, and music-trays
+in abundance. These things supplied
+Lady Bell with endless employment, and
+were sources of pride and delight to her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell had thought to herself, first
+when she became a widow, that she should
+go softly mourning for her sins and her
+strife with Squire Trevor all her days. She
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>was perfectly sincere then, as well as afterwards,
+and she did not cease to be sorry
+for having done wrong; but to her surprise,
+and a little to her shame, not only did her
+youthful spirits soon recover their elasticity
+and throw off the load of contrition and
+melancholy reflections; but in addition she
+was very happy—happier than she had ever
+been in her life before, not even excepting
+her early days with Lady Lucie Penruddock.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was not merely like one of
+those graceful creatures of the air which,
+casting the slough of the chrysalis, rises
+buoyant in its elegance and beauty. She
+had found a true mate, a companion and
+friend, a natural equal and ally.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Eventful as the last year had been, and
+calculated to develop her nature, Lady
+Bell was not past the age when girls like
+her have the strongest tendency to contract
+friendship with members of their own sex,
+and when indeed for the most part the
+closest, firmest, womanly friendships are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>formed. And that was the generation of
+women’s friendships, crowned by the sacrifice
+of the world for each other, made by
+the two ladies of <span lang="cy">Llangollen</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There was just the amount of superiority
+in years, experience, and acquirements on
+Mrs. Sundon’s part, and the kind of
+essential difference between the young
+women to confirm Lady Bell’s romantic
+admiration for her friend, without preventing
+a free and full interchange of sentiment
+and opinion.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell resumed gladly and with grateful
+acknowledgment of the support which
+she received from Mrs. Sundon, all Lady
+Bell’s native pursuits, which had been so
+continually interrupted and baulked.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A modern girl commanding a thousand
+modes of cultivation, until she is oppressed
+by them, will find it hard to comprehend
+the self-respect and satisfaction with which
+Lady Bell returned to her studies; her
+French—in which Mrs. Sundon was a better
+qualified assistant, so far as speaking went,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>than Mr. Greenwood at St. Bevis’s—her
+thrumming on a spinet, her warbling
+of “Hark, the lark,” and “Waft her,
+angels.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Sundon kept up her connection with
+town and the world, and had not only
+fashions, but newspapers and parcels of
+books forwarded to her by the carrier and
+the bookseller in Lumley.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The ladies were abreast of their times
+(in which the war with America was taking
+more and more serious proportions), and of
+the literature of the day.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Sir Charles Grandison” was becoming
+an oldish book, and “Evelina” had not
+yet come out. But Mr. Brooke’s “Fool of
+Quality” was making its mark, and was
+warmly welcomed as a step in the right
+direction by all good men and women,
+including Mrs. Sundon and Lady Bell. In
+sermons the ladies read Porteous or Blair.
+In poetry they studied Mason’s “Flower
+Garden” and Goldsmith’s “Deserted Village,”
+while in travels, Pennant’s “Tour”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>seemed to them to have extended to the extremity
+of the civilised world.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The absence, except at short intervals, of
+even a provincial theatre, which figured so
+largely as an intellectual influence at the
+close of the last century, was supplied in
+a degree to Mrs. Sundon and Lady Bell.
+They had the vigorous notices and criticisms
+of the most popular plays and players in the
+town newspapers; so that even while living
+at a distance, the ladies could enjoy at
+second-hand the heroics of “Douglas” and
+the nonsense of “Polly Honeycomb.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell made many charming new
+attainments, and that season at Summerhill
+was, after all, in the fullest sense, the
+spring-time of her life, when she was learning
+something new every day, and was fast
+budding into fresh promise.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>All Lady Bell’s fine-lady gifts and graces
+had been originally overmuch of the town,
+townish. But Mrs. Sundon had been a fine
+lady of the country, as well as of the town,
+and could lead Lady Bell into elegant
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>rurality, and even inoculate the girl with
+a true love of the country and of country
+life.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Under Mrs. Sundon’s superintendence,
+Lady Bell became a lady gardener, and
+advanced with rapid strides from an apprentice
+to a journeyman, until, in addition
+to her old power of embroidering facsimiles
+of leaves and flowers, she could make carpets
+and canopies of the plants themselves, hang
+the verandah with them, and grow living
+orange-trees in the window alcove of the
+sitting-room. She laid carnations and
+budded roses, and was as intent on getting
+seeds of Canterbury bells and slips of geraniums,
+as ever she had been on procuring
+patterns for aprons and chair-covers.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell and Mrs. Sundon had a kitchen
+as well as a flower-garden. They had a
+white cow in the paddock in summer for
+their own and their baby’s use, and they
+borrowed a brood of chickens from Miss
+Kingscote, that they might be sure of new-laid
+eggs for breakfast.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>The ladies did not commit these acquisitions
+to their establishment entirely to the
+care of their modest retinue of two maids
+and a man.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell learnt, and did not dream that
+the learning was derogatory to her, to pull
+peas and pick gooseberries—actually to milk
+the cow (in a perfunctory and not very
+effectual manner, it must be confessed), so
+that she could aver from her personal knowledge
+that the syllabub, which she had also
+made with her own hands, was compounded
+as it ought to have been, of milk warm from
+the cow. She made gooseberry-fool, as well
+as syllabub, and was very conceited about
+the deed and its success.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Had poor Squire Trevor been alive and at
+Summerhill, his flighty young wife could
+even have supplied him with his desiderated
+tansy pudding, at this higher stage of her
+education, and in her greater wisdom.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Sundon and Lady Bell dabbled in
+all sorts of washes, balsams, simples, hot
+drinks, blackberry cheeses, and sticks of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>saffron. Not being godless selfish unbelievers,
+and having ignorant and helpless
+poor neighbours, the two ladies became in
+their own way unquestionable Christian
+Ladies Bountiful—clothing the naked, feeding
+the hungry, tending the sick, and
+softening the rude, so far as their light and
+power went.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell and Mrs. Sundon were the two
+women of highest rank and polish for a considerable
+circuit of miles, but they were not
+on that account disdainful and unsocial in
+their intercourse with their middle-class
+neighbours, such as the Vicar and Mayor
+of Lumley, the retired military or naval
+officers and their families, who occupied
+good houses in the town, and cottages
+similar to Summerhill on the outskirts. On
+the contrary, the two ladies were rightly
+judged models of urbanity, a reputation
+which no doubt they enjoyed, being gracious
+where nobody presumed on their graciousness,
+while they countenanced the Lumley
+weddings, house-warmings, and christenings.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>Mrs. Sundon and Lady Bell had a hay-making
+on their own lawn, to which the
+whole population, so far as the Summerhill
+grounds would hold them, were invited,
+and came and went in ecstasies with the
+entertainment.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Sundon and Lady Bell became the
+reigning toasts of the neighbourhood.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It does not follow that the old world and
+the old town were sycophantish; consider
+the women and their circumstances.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell Trevor, the daughter of Lord
+Etheredge and the widow of Squire Trevor,
+of Trevor Court, in the adjoining shire,
+was a beautiful, graceful, intelligent young
+woman of seventeen.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Sundon was not more than four years
+older, at twenty-one very handsome, with
+an air of command, which had been born
+with her—command too well assured to
+be other than simple and self-denying, or to
+require haughtiness and arrogance to back
+its claims.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Sundon was a woman living in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>separation from her husband, it is true, but
+by an act quite different from poor Lady
+Bell’s hushed-up escapade. Mrs. Sundon’s
+separation from Gregory Sundon did not
+affect her social position in the least—in
+effect rather elevated it.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It was perfectly well understood through
+the Mayor that the details did the greatest
+honour to Mrs. Sundon’s dignity and discretion.
+And dignity and discretion were
+qualities very highly, but not unjustly,
+valued in a generation liable to run into
+extravagant flights and excesses.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Sundon showed the same appreciable
+discretion in refraining from accusing her
+husband, and in adopting, along with a
+chosen friend, a life of retirement as well
+as of virtue in the flower of her youth, and
+in bringing up her little girl—as it was
+quite understood Mrs. Sundon was bringing
+up the child, when Caro was not yet
+three months old—in the most meritorious
+manner.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The very peculiarity of the two ladies’
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>position with the union of their forces, gave
+them a freedom and weight in the society in
+which they moved that they could not have
+commanded had they been single women,
+that they could hardly have possessed had
+they been separate, though each had dwelt
+in the house of her husband.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>With Nutfield Lady Bell and Mrs. Sundon
+maintained the most kindly, cheerful
+relations, long after use and wont had
+hardened Miss Kingscote to the sound of
+“my lady.” When the ladies of Summerhill
+wished a little variety in their domestic
+routine, they had only to stroll over to Nutfield
+to bask in its homely cordiality, and
+to get a little permissible fun out of Miss
+Kingscote’s uncouth whimsicalities.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell and Mrs. Sundon could not
+have managed for themselves without
+Master Charles to act the part of a brother
+to them.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In those days, when walking on country
+roads was not always safe for ladies, when
+they could not attend a single public place
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>with propriety, unless they were supported
+by male attendance, a gentleman who was a
+privileged friend proved indispensable in
+every household of women.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sometimes the friendships thus entertained
+were of a peculiarly gentle and
+chivalrous character, which the very scandal-loving
+world admitted and respected. Thus
+it saw no objection—not even that of age—in
+the intimate association of a young man
+like Master Charles with two charming
+young women only a little above him in
+rank, since the one was a wife and the other
+a widow, and both were deprived of their
+natural protectors.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>
+ <h2 id='ch04' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER IV.</span><br> <br>FRIENDS IN NEED.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Only once was there an interruption
+threatened to the brother and sister
+relations between Master Charles and the
+ladies of Summerhill, and that began and
+ended among themselves, and had nothing
+to do with on-lookers.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Master Charles called on his friends one
+day in a moody frame of mind. He looked
+over some debatable accounts which belonged
+to Mrs. Sundon’s department of the
+joint housekeeping. He undertook to see
+and settle with the offending tradesman,
+and bring him to reason. He agreed to
+stay to the three-o’clock dinner, and relieve
+Lady Bell from the chicken carving. Still
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>his mind was not lightened, so that his
+friends felt it necessary to press him to
+make a clean breast of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The young man admitted that he had
+been with a party of gentlemen on the previous
+evening, when horse-racing had been
+discussed, and bets had been freely given
+and taken over the wine.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He had been flushed and excited like the
+rest, and he had made such a book as
+he feared, without the greatest good luck,
+would be ruinous to him, when he had not
+yet got his property into his own hands,
+and any disgrace in money matters would
+put a stop to the exertions of the friends
+who were seeking to procure for him a pair
+of colours.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He was mad with himself, for he was by
+no means without sense and shrewdness as
+well as principle. He heartily wished that
+he had joined the army as a volunteer,
+sailed for Quebec or Boston in the first
+transport, and been taken prisoner by the
+Indians, before worse happened to him, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>before he baulked the expectations of all
+who had taken an interest in so foolish a
+fellow. He hung his head as he made the
+confession.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Worse shall not happen,” Mrs. Sundon
+interposed with decision. “You are right
+in consenting to confide in us; indeed, we
+value your confidence, sir, and women are
+not always the worst councillors. I shall
+speak to the Mayor to come forward and
+help you, if the worst come to the worst;
+he will do something for my sake, as well
+as for yours. I shall have a little loan at
+your service.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“And I shall club every shilling I can
+muster with Mrs. Sundon’s,” proposed Lady
+Bell eagerly; “so pray don’t be down-hearted,
+Master Charles.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The young man only hung his head
+lower. He hated to lay women under contribution
+to pay for his recklessness, while
+he dared not, were it but for the sake of
+another woman—his sister Deb—decline the
+assistance offered to him in case of necessity.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>The ready generosity of his friends
+melted him, so that he faltered with feeling,
+in place of declaiming glibly in the
+expression of his thanks.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Don’t speak of it,” Mrs. Sundon forbade
+him; “only let this be a lesson to you
+in the future,” she added with soft earnestness.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The young man went away subdued in
+his gratitude, but when the crisis was over,
+he presented himself in a state of riotous
+glee, to free the ladies from their promises,
+and demand their congratulations.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Master Charles’s three to one and five to
+two had turned out, after all, on the winning
+side. He had had amazing pieces of
+luck.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“By George! you ladies must wish me
+joy, and allow me the honour and felicity,
+as the town sparks say, of treating you
+to whatever takes your fancy, a prince’s
+plume, my Lady Bell, a lace apron, Madam
+Sundon; sure you richly deserve it, and I
+can afford to please myself for once in my
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>life, since in place of coming to grief by
+this little transaction, I vow I have made a
+very good thing of it,” and he thrust his
+hands braggingly into the pockets of his
+frock coat.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Yes, I claim my right to a return for
+my willingness to befriend you, Master
+Charles,” cried Mrs. Sundon, before Lady
+Bell could speak. “I thought you were to
+have a lesson, but I find it to be a snare.
+I want no lace aprons, though I shall be
+happy to take one from you, if you like to
+grant what I ask. Promise me solemnly,
+sir, on the word of a gentleman, that you
+will both now and after you have entered
+the army, do your best to resist betting on
+cards and horses, at least round a supper-table
+in the heat of conviviality.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“But—but, Mrs. Sundon,” objected
+Master Charles, taken aback, becoming immediately
+crest-fallen, and colouring violently.
+“No fellow of spirit could be expected
+to give and keep such a promise. I
+am not soft in these matters, I think for a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>novice I have shown myself as sharp as
+my neighbours,” he drew himself up and
+laughed, though the laugh was a little
+forced. “I think—I beg your pardon, but
+I do think you take advantage of your
+kindness—I own it was very great, to
+seek to bind me, as no man not a Molly
+Coddle and a nincompoop would be bound
+in the circumstances.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, Master Charles, think of Henry,
+Earl of Morland, in the ‘Fool of Quality,’”
+implored Lady Bell, “and how you were of
+opinion he was a fine character, and ought
+to be imitated in this dissipated world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Such conduct is very fine in a book and
+in theory, but it won’t do for bloods in
+real life and in practice,” he put her off
+impatiently.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Master Charles, I trust you will know
+that there are brave men and gallant
+soldiers too, that no man would dare call
+Molly Coddles and nincompoops, who yet
+set their faces against the indiscriminate
+betting and gambling of this gambling
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>age,” Mrs. Sundon told him plainly; but
+that was not all. “Charles Kingscote,”
+she said, appealing to him, face to face
+and soul to soul, as it were, when she
+addressed him thus by his Christian name
+and surname, and with her own fine pale
+face working with emotion and the anguish
+of remembrance. “If you only knew the
+misery and degradation wrought by this
+curse of gambling—what generous natures
+have been undone, what happy homes have
+been cast down in ruins, never to be built
+up again. Shall I lay bare the sorrows of
+my life to enlighten you and save you, if I
+can?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No, Mrs. Sundon,” declared the young
+man quickly, and with pain in his moodiness.
+“I shall not allow such sacrilege for
+my fancied needs, and I should be an ingrate
+to deny your request as you put it,
+however difficult it may seem to me. I
+give you my word, as you desire, without
+farther parley—and now you will permit
+me to take my leave.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>The moment he was gone, Lady Bell
+asked with a puzzled, pensive, rather scared
+anxiety, “Will he keep his word, think
+you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I hope and trust he will,” replied Mrs.
+Sundon, looking troubled still; “granting
+that it will cost him a great effort, he is
+manly and honourable enough in his youth
+to make such an effort; and he has not seen
+much bad company, that is a blessing, to
+corrupt him from the beginning. Poor
+boy! he was so happy when he came in,
+and we disappointed and mortified him.
+Do you know how he will regard me from
+this hour, Bell?” Mrs. Sundon inquired
+abruptly, with a certain wistfulness and
+piteousness for herself thrilling through
+her tones. “He is not bumptious or quarrelsome,
+he is a fine, warm-hearted, good-natured
+lad, but he will begin to hate the
+sight of me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No, no,” exclaimed Lady Bell energetically.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Yes, yes,” contradicted Mrs. Sundon
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>quietly, shaking her head, “I know all
+about it. A man pretends sometimes to
+call a woman his mistress, but he cannot
+forgive her, if she ever really play the part.
+He will excuse almost any error in a woman
+sooner than her finding him wrong, and
+telling him so. She has humbled him then
+in his own eyes, and he cares for that still
+more than being humbled in hers. She
+becomes irksome to him, and he half fears
+her, half strives to deceive her, himself
+sinking lower and lower till he ends by
+hating her outright. When you marry
+again, Bell, if your main object be to preserve
+your husband’s love, fondle and defer
+to him, and never admit by word or look
+that you recognise he has forfeited your
+esteem, as well as that of every honest man
+and woman, and is on the high road to
+destruction, carrying you and your unborn
+child along with him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I shall do nothing of the kind,” protested
+Lady Bell, half crying at the idea.
+“I shall speak the truth and clear my conscience,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>whether I shame the devil or no.
+But on second thoughts, I shall not need,
+for I shall never think of marrying again
+and leaving you and little Caro, and ending
+our happy life here, dear,” declared
+Lady Bell, turning eagerly to caress her
+friend.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You will not think of it perhaps, but
+you will do it all the same,” said Mrs.
+Sundon as she gave back the caress;
+“however, we may let sleeping dogs lie
+and not anticipate evil. To return to Master
+Charles; see if he do not avoid me from
+this day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>For several weeks it seemed as if Mrs.
+Sundon’s prognostications were to prove
+correct. It was not that Master Charles
+intermitted his visits to Summerhill, and he
+was even punctilious in his continued offers
+of service to the ladies; but somehow there
+was a change in the nature of the intercourse,
+and there was a dryness approaching
+to sullenness in the young gentleman’s
+manner to Mrs. Sundon.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>But at the close of these weeks Master
+Charles thought better of it, and came
+looking shame-faced, yet, but frank and
+ingenuous as ever, and told Mrs. Sundon,
+“I have been compelled to be a little more
+particular in my company since the promise
+you made me give you, which, of course, I
+was resolved to keep, come what like of it.
+But I have reaped the benefit of it already,
+I have discovered that there are plenty of
+gentlemen of parts and spirit, good judges
+of horse-flesh besides, who will not play at
+higher than half-crown points, and will not
+lay a wager on a horse, or a dog, unless it
+be so trifling a one that they have no
+anxiety about it, and have all their minds
+to bestow on their proper affairs. They are
+ready to welcome me to their company when
+they see that I prefer it. You were quite
+right, Mrs. Sundon, I add my poor testimony
+to my promise.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The dryness and sullenness disappeared
+from that day.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was jubilant at the issue, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>the restoration of their comrade, and disposed
+to crow over Mrs. Sundon.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh! he is a good sort, as Miss Kingscote
+says,” confessed the authority, “he is
+more generous than his brethren. I am
+thankful to have been of use to him.” This
+was all that Mrs. Sundon said to Lady Bell,
+but in her own mind she reflected with
+apparent incoherence, “I could wish that
+he had been higher in rank, and Miss
+Kingscote more presentable. I don’t think
+that his being a little countrified would
+have mattered to her else.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>As a supplement to all other interests
+and entertainments, Mrs. Sundon and Lady
+Bell had little Caro to play with—to plan
+for with the deepest seriousness, to build
+castles in the air for with the highest hopefulness.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Mrs. Sundon was different from many
+mothers. Mrs. Sundon not only did not
+expect Lady Bell to be engrossed with her
+little daughter, Mrs. Sundon herself would
+have thought it exceedingly ill-judged and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>ill-bred to bring forward the child, and
+cause her to fill the first place in the circle,
+forcing every other interest and satisfaction
+to give way to Caro’s interest and satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>No, little Caro, while she was dearly
+prized and petted, was kept quite in her
+proper and purely subordinate sphere, and
+that under wholesome discipline, and was
+decidedly a happier as well as a more modest
+and artless child then and afterwards in
+consequence of her mother’s public spirit in
+combination with her common sense.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Sundon would not permit Caro,
+unless it were absolutely unavoidable, to
+interfere with a single study or pursuit,
+though the mother cared for the child incessantly,
+and spared no thought or pains
+upon her, from consecrating to Miss Caro’s
+wardrobe Mrs. Sundon’s most exquisite
+needlework, to being the child’s first teacher
+in health, and nurse in sickness. Mrs.
+Sundon would not allow Caro’s presence in
+the morning-room—the company-room of
+the house, except at stated and limited
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>intervals. Mrs. Sundon put an interdict on
+Caro and her nurse being a drag on walking
+and riding excursions.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Sundon did not carry Caro to any
+public place whatever, but did not on that
+account withdraw from public places. Mrs.
+Sundon had an old-fashioned notion that
+society and her friends had a claim upon
+her, just as Caro had a claim, and though
+Caro’s claim, as her mother delighted to
+acknowledge, was the greater, Mrs. Sundon
+did not conceive that it ought on that
+account to swallow up the smaller. Mrs.
+Sundon sent Caro to bed betimes, and would
+not suffer this, or other excellent rules to
+be infringed on any pretence.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The desirable result was twofold, Caro
+from her earliest infancy was one of the
+healthiest, most natural, and “prettily behaved”
+of children. Mrs. Sundon had the
+reward of being assured that the child was
+regarded by all the friends of the family as
+a boon to be welcomed, and not as a bore
+or plague to be endured.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>So summer suns and winter moons rose
+and set on the house at Summerhill, and
+the two friends were “Bell” and “Sunny,”
+like sisters to each other.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, Bell, this peaceful, rational, God-fearing
+time is good after the distractions
+of passion and the storms of life,” Mrs.
+Sundon would say, stifling all yearning in
+her voice, and setting her strong will to
+make the best of the alleviations of her lot.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Yes, Sunny,” Lady Bell would answer
+brightly. “I get a better gardener every
+month. Our place will be a spectacle next
+year, only the French honeysuckle don’t
+smell like our common honeysuckle, exactly
+as lupins are not sweet as blossoming beans.
+I am improving in my drawing. I propose
+to try painting when the weather will allow.
+Mayne in Lumley is to come out and give
+me open-air lessons. I shall paint our Caro
+nursing her foot in its red shoe under an
+apple-tree—you shall see what you shall
+see. But now I must tie on my hood, and
+run down the lane to Goody Amos’s, with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>the plaster for her burn. Don’t forget that
+there is a puppet-show in the town-hall,
+which we promised to attend this afternoon,
+before drinking a dish of tea, and staying
+for a bit of supper with Captain Craddock
+and his wife.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Very busy was Lady Bell—the true
+secret of happiness. Yet, walking home
+that same evening, escorted by the gallant
+Captain and the Summerhill man with a
+lantern, Lady Bell fell behind Mrs. Sundon
+and her cavalier, and began dreaming under
+the stars.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The dreams were not in the style of Dr.
+Young, though Lady Bell had been lately
+reading his “Night Thoughts,” and admiring
+them greatly, as everybody admired
+them then.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The dreams implied rather a vague sense
+of waiting and of want, and of stirring in
+the unfathomable depths even of a girl’s
+nature. Was unruffled tranquillity, after
+all, the secret of life’s best fulfilment?—whether
+was it worse to have been torn by
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>warring passions like Mrs. Sundon, or that
+passion should never be awakened in the
+dead calm within? Might not the last be
+a greater loss to Lady Bell than the first
+had proved to her friend?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Was Lady Bell to pass through life and
+have adventures, be sad and glad, poor and
+in comparative affluence, friendless and with
+many friends, a wife and a widow, and her
+heart still remain void of a history?</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>
+ <h2 id='ch05' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER V.</span><br> <br>BOW BELLS AND THE FAMILY IN CLEVELAND COURT.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Bell,” said Mrs. Sundon one morning,
+looking up from a letter which she had
+been reading, “here is something for you.
+The Sundons of Sundon Green, who have
+always been on good terms with me, write
+to invite us to pay them a visit in town, as
+they have taken a house in Cleveland Court,
+St. James’s, for the winter and spring.
+What have I to do with town sights and
+gaieties till Caro is a finished young lady?
+But your day is only beginning. This invitation
+is the very thing for you, since I hate
+to think of you being moped up here continually.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>Lady Bell protested that she did not pine
+for change, and that to spend her life with
+her beloved, excellent, agreeable Sunny
+ought to be more than enough for her, as it
+would at one time have been beyond her
+wildest wishes.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Mrs. Sundon was bent on the change
+for Lady Bell. “You have no friends of
+your own to take you out,” Mrs. Sundon
+pursued the theme, “but Lady Sundon will
+be quite pleased and proud to usher into the
+great world a young lady of title above
+that of a country baronet’s wife. She is a
+worthy, cordial soul, in spite of weakness
+for rank, and will be really kind to you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell tried to look indifferent, but her
+eyes sparkled, and Mrs. Sundon was resolute
+in carrying out the proposal. Nevertheless,
+Lady Bell was sentimental and almost
+rueful the night before she was to start for
+town, to which happily the Mayor of Lumley
+was bound in order to figure in a deputation,
+and Lady Bell with a young waiting-woman
+who was to be about her person, was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>to make the journey with the Mayor in his
+semi-official capacity.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Caro will have forgotten me in three
+months,” reflected Lady Bell a little disconsolately
+as she sat idle, for a wonder, in
+the bright, pleasant room. “Goody Martin
+may have been carried off to a better world
+with her cough and rheumatism. Master
+Charles may have got his colours, and have
+marched to t’other end of this world, and been
+engaged in an ‘affair,’ as the newspapers
+call it, like the one at Lexington which we
+were reading of. Your imitation Japan
+screens will be finished, but I shan’t have
+seen every stage of the process.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You won’t miss much there, Bell,” said
+Mrs. Sundon.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell continued her catalogue. “You
+will have read out Plutarch’s Lives, and I
+shall not have had the advantage of hearing
+your remarks as you went along. The
+spring will have come back, and be well
+established, but I shall have taken a leap
+over the first snowdrops, crocuses, primroses,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>and violets. I wonder if I shall gain enough
+to make up for the loss? I begin to wonder
+even if I shall be permitted to come back,
+and find everything as I left it here, after I
+have been so mad as to quit, of my own free
+will, our dear, sweet home?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It is not in that you need fear change,”
+asserted Mrs. Sundon cheerfully, “if you
+come back to us unchanged yourself, Bell,
+that is the question.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, as to that there is no fear,” declared
+Lady Bell confidently, recovering her spirit.
+“I must ever be true to Summerhill. But
+ah, Sunny!” she relapsed the next moment,
+“we have been so happy here—so much
+happier than I ever was before. Does it
+not seem doubtful whether the same happiness
+can be again in this troublous world?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“If not the same, then let us trust that
+there may be happiness of another kind to
+supply the place of the past happiness,”
+Mrs. Sundon encouraged the girl. “Come,
+Bell, I will not have you low on this our
+last night.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>Lady Bell forgot all her forebodings when
+she found herself drawing near to London
+again.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A hundred years ago, when communication
+was slow and difficult, and knowledge
+little spread, the civilisation of the country
+centered peculiarly in the capital. It was
+the source of every public movement, the
+winter seat of the court, the high place of
+noble and splendid society, the chosen resort
+of wisdom, wit, learning, and accomplishments
+under every guise. It had its gross
+evils, no doubt, but so great were its counterbalancing
+advantages and its general irresistible
+fascination, that even the most
+modest and sober moralists and philosophers,
+of all ages and both sexes, sighed longingly
+to enjoy the benefits and charms of town
+life.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>And Lady Bell was town bred. The
+very smoke smelt sweet, and the cries
+sounded melodious to her ears.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, sir!” she addressed the Mayor as
+they were drawing near the great city,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>while she was unable to resist putting her
+head out of the coach windows. “Let us
+try to catch the first sound of Bow bells;
+let us make my woman Rogers hear them.
+They do jingle so tunefully, one cannot
+wonder that they caused Whittington to
+return, even without the cat.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell’s arrant native propensity for
+the life, the stir, and the variety of the
+town, had only been subdued into a grateful,
+intelligent acknowledgment that the country
+also had its charms, it was not routed out of
+her. She was inclined to return to her first
+love.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Then, to add to the gladness of Lady
+Bell’s return, she was coming back under
+different and happier auspices. Instead of
+the helpless, penniless child, driven off to
+the cold welcome of St. Bevis’s, Lady Bell
+was an independent woman; and though
+she was not a rich young widow, as Mrs.
+Greenwood and Sneyd had once hoped for
+her, she was a young widow, with a modest
+but sufficient jointure, going to her friend’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>friends, who were to consider it a credit and
+satisfaction to entertain her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The members of the Sundon family, who
+were in Cleveland Court, St. James’s, were
+Sir Peter and Lady Sundon and her two
+step-daughters. The only son of the family
+was a boy at school.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sir Peter was sixty-four, lank and lantern-jawed,
+and ailing, as his appearance betokened.
+He had come up to town to be
+under some of the medical faculty there.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Sundon was fifty-five, as hale as
+Sir Peter was the reverse, one of those
+hearty, brisk women who did not require
+rouge, she was so rosy in her matronly
+roundness of cheek; and did not want a
+stick, or the page’s arm, she was still so
+active in her fulness of figure.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The Misses Sundon were between twenty
+and thirty, daughters of Sir Peter by a
+former marriage; while the son and heir
+was Lady Sundon’s only child. The Misses
+Sundon were young women to whom it
+seemed a matter of necessity to wear the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>highest heads and heels of the period, in
+order to lend distinction to their poverty of
+form and general colourlessness.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You’ll be after the sights, Lady Bell,”
+said Sir Peter at supper. “Ah! they ain’t
+worth the trouble and fatigue they give
+you,” he ended, shaking his head, as he
+called the grapes sour which he could no
+longer reach.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Bother! Sir Peter,” cried Lady Sundon,
+“to go and daunt my Lady Bell, and
+she as fresh as a daisy, and as nimble as a
+young colt. I’ll warrant she’ll be up to
+all the racketing, from the Queen’s caudle-drinking
+to the opening of Ranelagh, which
+we can cram into the next two or three
+months.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Not so bad as that, Lady Sundon,” said
+Lady Bell; “but though I’ve seen the
+sights, save it may be the newest, I confess
+I’ve come up to try a taste of town gaieties
+again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“And do you think such a fine young
+woman as you are will be let off with a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>taste, even if that were to content you,
+when every maccaroni left will be wild to
+make you take your fill of pleasure.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“La! Lady Sundon,” interposed Miss
+Lyddy Sundon, who, in company with her
+sister, was as die-away as her stepmother
+was jolly, that they might thus establish a
+claim to refinement and a presumptive case
+of superficial grievance, against Lady Sundon.
+For somebody had impressed upon
+the young women, that there must be hardships
+where there were step-relations, and
+Miss Lyddy and her sister had languidly
+taken up the idea as a source of interest
+which could not otherwise be found in their
+ordinary persons, characters, and prosperous
+lot. “Who would care for such rude
+draughts? Only a milkmaid or a ploughman
+could stand them. Polite people like
+Lady Bell soon have enough.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“A fig for your philosophy, Lyddy,” protested
+the elder woman; “I never saw you
+abstemious in your draughts, and sure I
+never stint you. As for milkmaids, young
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>women are very much alike, whether they
+be milkmaids or countesses, I take it—no
+offence, Lady Bell. I do love a noble name
+and a title, all the same.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“There is no offence,” Lady Bell replied
+with a smile.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>While Miss Lyddy insinuated a word of
+hurt feelings—“I wish your ladyship would
+explain what you mean by not seeing me
+abstemious in my draughts. I hope I know
+what a delicate woman owes to her nerves.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Sister,”—Miss Sundon soothed the injured
+fine lady solemnly,—“Lady Sundon
+does not mean to speak unkind. She knows
+that we take after our papa, and have not
+her rude health and high spirits, which make
+her love her joke to the degree that she
+may certainly mislead Lady Bell Trevor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh dear, no,” denied Lady Sundon with
+careless candour, “Lady Bell can see for
+herself that you are two poor creatures not
+able for much, though after all you are fit
+for more than you think for, only you have
+got it into your heads that it is not tonish
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>to be natural and merry as grigs, which I
+was when I was like you. But it is all
+fudge, and you are clean out there, as Lady
+Bell can tell you, and as I could have told
+you myself if you would have listened to
+me. Ain’t the great ladies madder than the
+country lasses? Han’t I seen, since I came
+to town, when I had ridden out to Twickenham,
+her Grace of Devonshire marching in
+regimentals at the head of a company of
+fencibles? Now, I ain’t so bad as that, Sir
+Peter,” Lady Sundon challenged her valetudinarian
+husband.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No, nor need be, my lady, so long as
+my bridle is on your neck,” retorted Sir
+Peter dryly.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You must have mistook,” maintained
+the two Misses Sundon in a breath; “her
+Grace could never have done anything half
+so shocking. What! march miles on a filthy
+miry road, in the company of hundreds of
+common men, followed up by the rag, tag
+and bob-tail of their wives and children;
+having no rest and refreshment, unless she
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>could swig her can of ale with the fellows
+at the ale-house doors!”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I ain’t mistaken—I can credit my own
+eyes,”—Lady Sundon kept her point,—“and
+to march in regimentals, with a regiment
+of common men as honest as their
+betters, was none so shocking, after the
+stories I have heard told of card-playing on
+Sunday evenings, Sir Peter, of masquerading,
+of appointments in Belsize Park, of
+Fleet marriages—Parliament hath forbidden
+the last—you have lost that chance,
+girls.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Madam, would you ever liken us to it?”
+gasped the step-daughters.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Polly, your tongue wags too freely,”
+remonstrated her husband, “and I won’t
+have you run Lady Bell and the girls off
+their feet. Besides, what is to become of
+me?” he asked in a dolorous tone; “am I
+to be left to Jebb’s gallipots and James’s
+powders, while you are frisking about all
+day and all night? Is that what you call
+acting the part of a good wife, and training
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>up these daughters of ours in the way they
+should go?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, no fears—no fears of you, above all,
+my dear,” Sir Peter’s lively helpmate reassured
+him. “You’ll be seen to, whatever
+comes of it. Were you ever forgotten?
+Indeed, to suppose so, is the unkindest cut
+you’ve given me and the girls this age.”
+And then, failing to be cut by the cut,
+Lady Sundon proceeded to plan a party of
+pleasure.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>
+ <h2 id='ch06' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER VI.</span><br> <br>A GAY YOUNG MADAM.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>With so light-hearted a head of the
+house, just held in check by the mild
+selfishness of Sir Peter and the mild grumbling
+of his daughters, Lady Bell could not
+have a dull time of it during her stay in
+town.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>No doubt there were the drawbacks which
+are inevitable in life, and which make the
+realisation of our dearest wishes fall short of
+the expectation.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There was the tender pang with which
+Lady Bell, having hurried to the spot on
+the first opportunity, looked on the outside
+of her old home, Lady Lucie’s lodgings in
+Bruton Street, occupied by strangers.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>There was the pensive wonder and regret
+with which, forgetting the changes in herself,
+Lady Bell found that even a few years
+had been able to make havoc in Lady Lucie’s
+circle; so many of the members were old,
+like Lady Lucie, and had soon followed her
+in death; while the younger individuals,
+engrossed with their personal cares, had all
+but forgotten little Lady Bell, who had so
+faithfully remembered them, and met her
+again with the indifference of exhausted
+acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Strange moving vicissitudes had overtaken
+some of the old familiar figures.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But though they startled and affected
+Lady Bell for the moment, the victims had
+not been so much to her, that their memory
+should continue to weigh upon her mind,
+and the blanks which their absence made, at
+first, were soon amply supplied.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In like manner, if the very topics of conversation
+were changed, and nobody seemed
+to remember the old Princess of Wales’s
+death, or the failure of Fordyce’s Bank,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>Lady Bell could catch the new cue and
+speak of the American war with the best.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The Sundons, of Sundon Green, were
+people of good account in their own county.
+Sir Peter, invalided though he was, had
+considerable political influence in the heat
+of the strife raging between Tory and Whig.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Sundon was generally popular, even
+among more fastidious and exacting people.
+Her good-humoured blitheness, dashed with
+coarseness and worldly-mindedness, had the
+manifest advantage that it did not rank high
+enough among the virtues to form a reproach
+to the halting virtue of anybody.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Lady Bell possessed in herself, independent
+of her host and hostess, almost all
+the elements calculated to insure a season’s
+success. She was a complete novelty, appearing
+at her age, after years of rustication.
+She had the benefit of acknowledged birth
+and breeding, to which Lady Sundon led
+the way, in paying open, honest enough
+homage, as she frankly confessed herself
+Lady Bell’s social inferior, while she displayed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>as frankly her pride in taking Lady
+Bell about. Above all, Lady Bell was
+lovely, with a dainty, arch loveliness, which
+her youthful widowhood rendered peculiarly
+piquant.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The presence of the Misses Sundon in
+Lady Bell’s company was simply the putting
+of two foils beside the little lady, while the
+foils were useful in dividing responsibility
+with her, and in rendering her security
+doubly secure.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was not rich to bribe suitors,
+but she was so far well off as to make the
+pursuit of her, regarding her merely as an
+object of attraction and fashion, comparatively
+safe to the gallant fops, wits, and idle
+men of wealth and rank lounging or rioting
+through the hours, and ever ready to welcome
+a fresh interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>As it happened, just at that moment, a
+belle’s throne was vacant, after the conjoint
+reign of the three great belles of late
+seasons.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Mary Somerset was swiftly paying
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>the penalty of a “wasp waist,” and sickening
+to death under the burden of the honours
+of the Marchioness of Granby.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Harriet Stanhope had become Lady
+Harriet Foley, and was on the way with her
+husband to Newmarket and ruin.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Of Lady Betty Compton, whose style and
+title remained unchanged, it might be
+alleged, much as it was said with regard
+to Aristides the Just, that the fashionable
+world had waxed weary of the name and
+fame of Lady Betty Compton.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Foolish Lady Betty! she ought to have
+inaugurated a change of some kind betimes,
+and married or died after the example of her
+sister queens, for there is nothing so mercurial
+as the wind of opinion which brings
+about the installation or deposition of such
+an airy sovereign.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>And now Lady Bell Trevor grew the rage
+until she was as universal a toast in town
+as she had been in humble provincial circles.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There is no denying that Lady Bell enjoyed
+her success, and the writing of it to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>Mrs. Sundon, in the most off-hand, unsophisticated
+manner.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The pleasures of the town, which might
+be vapid and worse—tainted to more thoughtful,
+experienced people, were very fresh and
+sparkling to Lady Bell; she found a thousand
+things to engage and delight her at the
+opera, the play-houses, the Court revisited,
+the ridottos, the private assemblies. It was
+no trouble and distress, but great pleasure to
+her to pay visits, attend auctions, and go
+a-shopping three mornings out of four. It
+was so entire a change, though it was like
+native air, that she returned to it with renewed
+zest. She might, probably she would,
+tire of it after a time, but she could not tire
+of it very soon.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>And Lady Bell found it highly agreeable
+to be followed, besieged, even persecuted
+by the attentions of those men, some of
+them distinguished—whether for good or
+evil, or both, as elegant scholars, as daring
+travellers, as dead shots (when the game
+was not shy partridges or timid deer, but
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>fellow-men, scowling in deadly enmity,
+pistol in hand, at twelve paces distance), as
+bold riders, and betters, and three-bottle
+men who, drunk or sober, could remain
+masters of the situation, and make themselves
+listened to in the House, and out of
+it, compared to the least brilliant of whom
+Master Charles of Nutfield was but a
+comely, kindly rustic and ignoramus.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The great proportion of these men were
+little in earnest in their adulation; but
+Lady Bell was quite aware of the fact, and
+did not mind it. Her own heart was not
+touched; she could meet her admirers on
+equal terms, and like a child playing with
+fire, she feared no danger. She liked,
+though it meant next to nothing, to be
+besieged for her hand in a minuette or a
+cotillon, for the honour of serving her with
+tea in the box of a coffee-room after the
+opera or the theatre, or of handing her to
+Lady Sundon’s coach. She did not object
+to being spoken to, albeit the terms were
+exaggerated, of the felicity of being in her
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>presence, and the despair of feeling her
+absence. She did not believe it, of course,
+but it was a little intoxicating at the same
+time.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Sundon, who had not enjoyed any
+reflected triumphs on her step-daughters’
+account, was in the greatest glee at being
+chaperon to so favoured a young lady.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Sundon, who had been brought up
+to the contemplation of these triumphs, considered
+them quite legitimate, and viewed
+them as the necessary finish to the rearing
+of a woman of quality, and the mode by
+which her future was most frequently
+rounded off and settled.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell could have got into almost any
+set. Though she had no claims to dabbling
+in literature, she would have been granted
+admittance to the assemblies of the blues—in
+the drawing-rooms of Lady Charleville,
+Mrs. Boscawen, and the great Mrs. Montague.
+But the truth was that Lady Bell
+did not altogether appreciate classical poses
+and coquettings with the muse, and did not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>care for the fine gentlemen who were so
+sensitive about her reading their poems, and
+the great ladies who were so fond of hearing
+themselves speak.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell had once taken a prominent
+part in an election, yet she was as guileless
+as most young women of eighteen of comprehending
+or caring for politics, unless,
+indeed, they bore on such sentimental,
+sensational questions as the imprisonment of
+the Queen of Denmark—the marriage of the
+Pretender—or Lord Mansfield’s decision
+that no slave could be sent back from England
+to the chain and the lash of a taskmaster.
+Still, that trifling deficiency might
+not have prevented her from entering the
+ranks of the fair enthusiasts, who, in the
+vacancy or the usurped possession of heart
+and mind, and in the craving for excitement
+which circumstances fostered, were
+already short-sighted partisans and reckless
+agitators for and against American independence,
+in sympathy with or in hostility to
+French philosophers. Lady Bell would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>have proved an invaluable acquisition even
+to the sisters Devonshire and Duncannon
+and to Mrs. Crew, who would have opened
+their exclusive arms to her, for they forgot
+to be rivals in their fervent worship at the
+one shrine of their half-splendid, half-brutified
+idol, who could guide alike a steed
+and a state.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Lady Bell shrank from the wild devotion
+to the buff and the blue, or to any
+other colour of the rainbow. She contented
+herself with marvelling at Anne, Duchess
+of Northumberland, haranguing the populace
+from a window in Covent Garden, on
+the election of her brother-in-law, Lord
+Percy, and with freely owning that this
+performance far surpassed any of her, Lady
+Bell Trevor’s, election achievements.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was too young, too pretty, and
+at once too rich and too poor, to take to the
+card-tables, which were still more enthralling
+than the hustings to their votaries, and
+which were the conspicuous accompaniments
+of every entertainment. She might
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>have had gambling in her blood, through
+her relationship to Squire Godwin, but her
+life at St. Bevis’s and Mrs. Sundon’s experience
+had destroyed the constitutional
+predilection.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was instinctively wise in not
+allying herself so closely to any circle as to
+shut herself out from others, and in preferring
+to shine as a charming visitor to
+each in turn. By this species of discretion,
+as much as by her graces, Lady Bell won
+the approbation of the master of assemblies
+to aristocratic London, whose notice was
+honour, and his approbation the seal of
+taste. The exquisite, rattling-boned,
+grimacing Mr. Walpole condescended to
+commend her, asked to be presented to her,
+found out she was his cousin a hundred
+times removed, and graciously invited her
+to the next theatrical representations at
+Strawberry Hill.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>
+ <h2 id='ch07' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER VII.</span><br> <br>MAKING AN ACQUAINTANCE AT THE PANTHEON.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Lady Bell was with the Sundons at
+the Pantheon, which was in winter
+what “dear delightful Ranelagh” was in
+its season, to every town letter-writer of
+the generation.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Here, too, was to be met a considerable
+amount of picturesqueness, variety, and
+freedom in an age which alternated between
+excessive ceremonial and bursts of licence.
+All the world could go to the Pantheon as
+to Ranelagh, and, if in consequence there
+were, on the one hand, greater openings to
+folly and vice, there were, on the other,
+better provisions for rational and innocent
+pleasure, than in more private and restricted
+places of entertainment.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>The women who groaned under the barbarous
+encumbrances and entanglements of
+ruffled sacques, and immensely high and
+extravagant dressed “heads,” at other
+fashionable gatherings, could come in an
+elegant undress to the Pantheon as well as
+to Ranelagh, walk about, listen to concerts,
+and form little social parties in the underground
+tea-room. There was a charming
+demi-toilette for such places, of gowns with
+worked neckerchiefs, and little hats over
+the hair, hanging down in curls upon the
+shoulders. While the use of this privilege
+at a resort rendered so brilliant, was not
+held to preclude distinctive touches of gay
+knots of ribands, fans, and sparkling jewels.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The gentlemen were not permitted the
+same relaxation in their obligations. They
+must have the triangular hats mostly carried
+under the arm when the hair was fully
+powdered, the silk stockings, and the lace
+cravats. None save defiant bucks of high
+rank ventured to violate the traditions of
+the Pantheon or Ranelagh by presenting
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>themselves in morning buckskins and short
+coats.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell and the Sundons had arrived
+too early, Lady Sundon having a country
+mania for being in time at public places,
+to have collected any stray members of what
+Lady Sundon called Lady Bell’s “pack.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The party with their single male attendant,
+a hobble-de-hoy nephew of Sir
+Peter’s, had gone down-stairs to pass the
+interval in drinking tea, till the main body
+of the company should arrive, and the
+tuning of the musical instruments end. As
+other first-comers followed the Sundons’
+example, Lady Sundon kept on the out-look
+to hail acquaintances.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was resting and anticipating,
+with lips apart and a flickering smile, what
+hero of her train would turn up soonest.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Miss Sundon was pensively helping Miss
+Lyddy Sundon to the last macaroon, on
+which the hobble-de-hoy squire had cast a
+covetous eye, and remarking with a sigh,
+“Sister, we need not have been so hurried
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>as to take away the little appetites we have,
+scarcely a soul is to be seen. I understand
+it is the correct thing not to come till near
+ten o’clock. But you and I must do as we
+are bidden.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“And a good thing for you too, girls,”
+proclaimed Lady Sundon, in her slightly
+view-halloo voice. “What! wait till near
+ten and miss all the company coming, the
+best part of the pleasure, and the half of
+the concert—though I can’t say I care for
+their Italian squalling; give me one of
+Lady Bell’s lessons on the spinet, or a
+good English chorus. But my likings are
+neither here nor there. And no, say I, I
+shan’t be cheated of half my treat, such as
+it is. There is somebody I ought to know.
+Heyday! it is my own cousin, Harry Fane,
+come up from his ship at Portsmouth.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Sundon whisked off her seat, unimpeded
+by her size or her years, as if she had
+been a girl of sixteen, and favoured by the
+thinness of the company, succeeded in overtaking
+and tapping with her fan the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>shoulder of a gentleman in blue and white
+uniform, whom she arrested in his course,
+and brought back with her, as a reward of
+virtue and early habits.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“See what I’ve got by coming betimes,
+girls; sure, we might never have set eyes
+on each other if the rooms had been full,”
+Lady Sundon cried exultingly, and then
+she rattled on in one long sentence, with
+breaks for breath. “You know my step-daughters,
+Harry, and this is Lady Bell
+Trevor, a friend of Mrs. Sundon, of Chevely
+(at least, she used to be of Chevely, poor
+soul! before Greg Sundon went all to the
+dogs), who does us the honour of being
+with us this winter. All agog Lady Bell
+keeps us, I can tell you, so that neither she,
+nor we, can get peace for you men.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Pray don’t give me so bad a character,
+madam,” objected Lady Bell demurely.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It has been the same tune,” maintained
+Lady Sundon, “since she was Lady Bell
+Etheredge, Earl Etheredge’s daughter (I
+hope you are up in your peerage, Harry);
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>she had to marry old Squire Trevor, for
+peace, when she was a chit of fifteen, but he
+is dead, and she is as bad as ever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Do you mean to fright your cousin, till
+he refuse to be presented to me, Lady
+Sundon?” Lady Bell cut short the tale of
+her conquests.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“He ain’t such a lubberly coward as to
+deprive himself of what blue jackets, as well
+as red coats, are fighting for; if he were, he
+should get no harbour from me. Lady Bell
+Trevor, Captain Fane of the <i>Thunderbomb</i>.
+He may pull a long face at our frivolity,
+and pretend to find fault with us for being
+children playing with toys, but he is not
+such a bad fellow at bottom—as some of
+these misanthropes—misogynists, what-d’ye
+call-‘ems.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I am obliged to you for the character of
+a sage, cousin,” replied the gentleman with
+perfect gravity, “Lady Bell Trevor, will
+you permit me, so soon after being introduced,
+to take the liberty of pitying you, if
+my cousin is serious in her account.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>“A humorist,” Lady Bell commented to
+herself under her breath, “an animal that
+I detest, though I understand my dear
+Mrs. Sundon has rather a fancy for the
+species—there is no accounting for tastes—neither
+is the specimen handsome to excuse
+him for any form of conceit. I dare say he
+is clever in some dry disagreeable way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane of the <i>Thunderbomb</i>, thus
+apostrophized and reviewed by bright keen
+eyes, was a young man of twenty-eight
+years. Although he was not strictly handsome,
+he had a good figure, which his naval
+uniform set off, and his face—with a thick
+cogitative nose, a wrinkle between the eyebrows,
+and a tendency to squareness in the
+jaws—was lit up by a pair of fine eyes, and
+a pleasantness in his smile when he did
+smile, which was rather too seldom.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane accepted Lady Sundon’s
+invitation to join her party; he was on very
+good terms with his cousin, though she
+announced to Lady Bell, “he takes me off
+at no allowance,” and in accordance with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>this communication Lady Sundon was continually
+nodding her head, and snapping
+her fan in mock agreement with, or smart
+protest at, Captain Fane’s strictures.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The gentleman was indemnifying himself
+for his concession to kindred feminine influence
+by the private reflection, “Here is a
+fine lady of fashion whom my ‘merry wife’
+of a cousin has bagged by some chance. I’d
+better improve the opportunity of studying
+the latest shore and town follies, grafted
+on a woman’s wilfulness and caprice.
+Heartless young dowager (why, she looks
+little more than a child!) to have married
+an ‘old Squire Trevor’ and buried him to
+boot, and to be looking out for his successor,
+I warrant, with what she’s been cunning
+enough to secure of the defunct Squire’s
+goods. It is a bad, as well as a mad world,
+my masters; but of all things I can’t abide
+an artful young woman, and this one looks
+so artless (which makes the art much worse)
+in the middle of her airs and graces.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Harry don’t think we women have a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>pinch of sense,” Lady Sundon was saying,
+“besides the five senses we can’t help
+having. As for him, I tell him that except
+that he’s as sober as a judge (and he a
+sailor!), and is fond of books and instruments,
+having his cabin fitted up with them
+like a pedagogue’s den, he’s a regular chip
+of some of the horrid old woman-hating
+admirals. You are a woman of spirit, Lady
+Bell. I do wish that you would serve it
+out to him, or take him in hand and do
+something to improve him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Pardon me, Lady Sundon, I have
+neither time nor talent in that way,” Lady
+Bell excused herself with one of her airs,
+not approving of this proposal on so short
+an acquaintance, to the cynical, saucy
+fellow’s face.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“And I should not be worth the trouble,
+Lady Bell,” the gentleman hastened to
+explain; “I am afraid that I am incorrigible
+to any fair, fine lady’s pains.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Though neither of them exactly meant it,
+they were both so disdainful, that it was a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>good deal like flinging down gauntlets on
+the first brush of their introduction—a
+mutual challenge, which was so far owing
+to Lady Sundon’s blundering cordiality.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh! not so bad as that, Harry,”
+exclaimed the good lady, who really liked
+her cousin, as she liked pickles or the
+preserved ginger, with regard to which he
+had once been so mindful as to bring her a
+jar from the West Indies. “I am quite
+convinced, Lady Bell, that he needs only to
+be smiled and frowned upon by one of our
+sex, and to hang on our smiles and tremble
+at our frowns, to be properly humbled, and
+made a mighty agreeable fellow of.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Indeed, ma’am,” answered Lady Bell,
+in a tone which sounded very much as if
+she had said, “He may, or he may not; I
+am sure I don’t care.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You are wrong, cousin,” replied Captain
+Fane quickly, “I don’t pretend to be worse
+or better than my neighbours, certainly;
+but I do profess that where neither my
+judgment nor my conscience is addressed, I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>am not particularly susceptible to the wiles
+either of smiles or frowns, or for that matter
+of tears.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, you wretch!” cried out even the
+Misses Sundon.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Why, what would you have?” remonstrated
+Captain Fane; “you ladies must
+submit to the fact that there are some ill-conditioned
+rebels against the rule of
+blandishments, while sea-horses of all horses
+are the worst to tame. However, a truce
+to me and my nature, a monstrously uninteresting
+subject to introduce, Lady Sundon;
+what have you been doing with yourself
+lately?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, we have been doing what we could
+when Sir Peter would spare us, so as to
+make the town and society the better even
+for my blowsy phiz; but I’ve had my day,
+Harry, I’ve had my day. We’ve seen
+Mr. Garrick take leave of the stage in the
+<i>Wonder</i>, and the new Italian singer—what’s-his-name—make
+his first appearance in
+<i>Artaxerxes</i>. We’ve heard Dr. Dodd preach
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>in aid of the society for the recovery of the
+drowned, and been present at one of Madam
+Montague’s dinners to the chimney-sweeps.
+We’ve walked in the Mall and Kensington
+Gardens whenever the sun would keep us in
+countenance, which was not too often, when
+the sulky rogue let the Thames be froze at
+Mortlake during the late fall of snow. We’ve
+been both to the Queen’s House and the
+Mansion House, and to ever so many dinners
+and routs. We’ve even had our share of
+the new sickness, the influenza, which is all
+the vogue, though we could have dispensed
+with that token of fashion. I could not tell
+you all that we’ve been and done, Cousin
+Harry.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I think you’ve told me pretty well,
+Cousin Sundon,” quoth Harry. “I almost
+hesitate to propose that you should take a
+stroll, you must all be so knocked up; no
+wonder that Miss Sundon and Miss Lyddy
+look as if a breath of air would blow them
+away.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“A fiddlestick for their being blown
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>away! They’re quite hearty if they would
+only think it. Lady Bell makes no complaint,
+and she is always as fresh as paint
+when a new pleasure is spoke of. She is
+something like a girl; I have no patience
+with girls being vapoured, sir, it is a
+reproach on you men, if you understood it.
+Girls were different when I was young, and
+I ain’t vapoured now that I am old. If you
+were to cut and shuffle in a hornpipe, like a
+Jack tar on the boards, I could caper the
+steps of ‘Joan Saunderson’ or ‘Nancy Dawson’
+back again. Since you won’t, let us
+go the round, and see and be seen by all
+means; what is life without a bit of
+pleasure?”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>
+ <h2 id='ch08' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER VIII.</span><br> <br>OPINIONS DIFFER.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>As the party went up-stairs, and strolled
+about amongst other animated groups,
+admiring what were reckoned the Gothic
+portions of the Pantheon, listening to the
+rising strains of the orchestra, which still
+admitted the ring of laughing voices—buxom
+Lady Sundon grew radiant. “Now,
+ain’t this nice, Harry?” she demanded
+triumphantly; “ain’t it something to come
+on shore for—worth years of the sloppy,
+draggle-tailed country?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“As to nice, the word is too vague. I’d
+as lief not pledge myself to what you mean
+by niceness,” he told her; “and I own to
+being rather fonder of green fields than
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>filthy streets, after a long tack of blue
+waves.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“But this ain’t filthy streets, Harry.
+Now, I shall think you right down cross
+and contrary, if you refuse to admit that the
+Pantheon, at least, takes your fancy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Then, not to mortify you, madam, the
+Pantheon itself is not half so silly or so bad
+as many places of public and private entertainment
+that I’ve been to in my life. If I
+were to stay on shore, and in London, I
+should not mind coming sometimes to the
+Pantheon.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I dare say you shouldn’t—your humble
+servant, Harry, for the condescension!”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Especially if I were to come across such
+a man as Admiral Byron,” continued Captain
+Fane, bowing low to a bluff, elderly gentleman
+in passing. “He played the man when
+he was no more than a middy, young sir”—Captain
+Fane pointed the application by
+looking over his shoulder and addressing
+Sir Peter’s nephew, walking between the
+Misses Sundon, and instantly beginning to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>swell with wrath because his tender years
+were hinted at—“He was a castaway on a
+South Sea Island, and he managed to survive
+five years of hardship unparalleled in
+our day, among savages. There is somebody
+to look at, worth a hundred of your
+beaux and belles.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“And han’t I stared the man out,” declared
+Lady Sundon, “till he thinks there’s
+a hole in his epaulette, or a paper pinned on
+his back?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It isn’t the luck of every one to be a
+castaway on a South Sea Island, and to learn
+a lesson from savages,” said Lady Bell.
+“Beaux and belles can’t help their want of
+luck. You should be fair, Captain Fane.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I’ll try, Lady Bell,” he promised, “if
+you’ll point out to me one man or woman of
+your fine fashionables—remember, I don’t
+say civilians, I hope I’m not such a swaggering
+fire-eater as to confine merit to one
+or both of the services—who, in his or her
+different circumstances, has shown half the
+ingenuity and energy, not to say resignation,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>which my friend the Admiral was privileged,
+as you put it not incorrectly, to
+display.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, come, sir!” cried Lady Bell with
+spirit, dropping her assumption of meekness,
+“I shall not have far to seek to confute
+your argument, and I shall take a woman in
+order to cover you with confusion. True,
+I don’t say she has kindled a fire with flints,
+or dug up roots with her fingers, or knocked
+down birds with a stick; but I conclude
+that you—an educated gentleman—consider
+ingenuity and energy may be well bestowed
+in other respects than in relieving mere
+gross, bodily wants.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I grant you that, Lady Bell.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Do you see the lady in the silver gauze?—not
+there, and that is not silver gauze,
+that is white brocade, while the wearer is
+only charming Lady Hesketh. No, here,
+the slight young lady in the silver gauze,
+with the fine hair in a wave above her forehead,
+and the high aquiline nose—do you
+know what she is famous for?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>“No; I must admit my ignorance.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Not for her beauty, although you may
+see she is beautiful; not for being gallant
+General Conway’s daughter; not even
+for being wife of my Lord Milton’s son, who
+has the finest wardrobe in London—finer
+even than thirty thousand a year will stand,
+folks swear; for men can be as vain as
+women sometimes, and a great deal more
+reckless in their vanity. But Mrs. Damer
+puts on a mob cap and canvas apron, and
+with those little white hands wields mallet
+and chisel, as well as moulds in wax and
+clay. She hath done groups of animals as
+true as life, and busts of men and women—their
+speaking images. She is a great
+sculptor, sir, such as Mr. Bacon or Mr.
+Nollekens. What do you say to that?”
+Lady Bell wound up her peroration by making
+a profound curtsey.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It is all gospel, Harry,” Lady Sundon
+confirmed the account. “They tell me that
+pretty stylish woman is so far left to herself
+that she likes nothing better than muddling
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>among wet blocks and splinters of stone,
+and hewing away like any stonemason.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I stand corrected,” admitted Harry Fane
+honestly, addressing himself to Lady Bell.
+“I honour the lady both for her capacity
+and determination.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“And I can assure you, sir, she is not
+the only woman who deserves your honour
+for intellect and perseverance,” insisted
+Lady Bell, woman-like, not content with
+the inch conceded, but proceeding to ask a
+yard. “Of course it is not given to many
+women to be endowed like Mrs. Damer, but
+if you knew my dear Mrs. Sundon, down at
+Summerhill, how wise she is, how attentive
+to all her duties, how regular and unwearied
+in her studies—well!” she broke off enthusiastically,
+“she shames me into solidity and
+steadiness. I never have a fit of the gapes,
+and I am in no way flighty when I am with
+her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“That is a great testimony,” said Captain
+Fane with grave abstraction, as if he were
+meditating on the force of the evidence.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>“You provoking man!” Lady Sundon
+reproached him, rapping him across the
+fingers with her fan, while Lady Bell bit
+her lips with pique, and turned away indignant
+at being laughed at, a process to
+which she was not over much accustomed.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was too proud to pout, but she
+had made up her mind that she would
+submit to no more flouting from this impertinent,
+conceited sailor, when all at once he
+begged her pardon, said penitently and
+agreeably that Mrs. Sundon was at least
+fortunate in having such an advocate that
+he could take the unknown lady’s superiority
+on trust.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell felt rewarded for her gallantry
+in fighting the humoursome sailor, when
+she had constrained him to soften his looks
+and tones, and to except not merely Mrs.
+Sundon but herself in his budget of criticism—if
+Lady Sundon had let the man
+alone in leaving him to his better mind, and
+had not, by interfering, spoilt all!</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Mercy on us!” Lady Sundon ejaculated,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>“wonders will never cease; my polar
+bear has paid a compliment!”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Not paid a compliment—told a truth,”
+Captain Fane had condescended to say
+further, quite graciously.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Another, another, Harry! you’re a reformed
+man on the spot—see what a pretty
+woman can do—a bear that has changed its
+skin!” Lady Sundon had leapt too fast to a
+conclusion.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I am afraid I must damp your expectation,
+and shock you once more,” alleged
+Captain Fane, with a perverse twinkle in his
+eyes, “for I was about to add that if your
+Mrs. Sundon is so wondrous wise a woman,
+why did she go ‘in the galley,’ as I have
+understood she did? I mean, why did she
+throw herself away on so dissipated a man
+and so inveterate a gambler as Gregory
+Sundon, of Chevely, whose disgrace had
+been so manifest and black, that he has
+been suffered to drop clean out of this
+corrupt enough gay world, as well as out
+of his wife’s offended sight. If she was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>to be particular, she should have begun
+sooner.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Sir!” replied Lady Bell, with her hot
+young generosity firing up in every word,
+“I do not pretend to justify my friend in
+every act of her life; and for the magnanimous
+faith with which she trusted her
+precious self and her fortune to the unhappy
+husband who failed her, I say nothing, save
+that it ill becomes even so faultless and
+prudent a man, as I do not doubt Captain
+Fane is, to blame her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Well said—as good as a play, Lady
+Bell. Lady Bell, I’m proud of you,” protested
+Lady Sundon. “Hit him hard when
+you’re at it! Yes, indeed, you’re no better
+than a mean scamp, though you are my own
+cousin, Harry; and I did not think it of
+you, for all your droll crustiness and carping
+words, till Lady Bell hath opened my eyes—to
+twit a fine woman with her indiscreet
+tenderness to one of your own ungrateful
+sex—as well kiss and tell. What have you
+to say for yourself?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>“Nothing!” answered Harry, with a
+little shrug of his broad shoulders, “and
+Lady Bell need not hit harder, seeing she
+has hit hard enough to floor me already.
+Madam, I was wrong to urge such an inconsistency
+in your friend. It was ill done on
+my part, as you said. I cannot do less than
+make amends to her and to you by saying
+that I am sorry for my unhandsome words.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Again Lady Bell was propitiated by a
+new and rare flattery in finding that she
+could sway and subdue not a willing slave,
+not an indolent, careless adorer, but a restive
+and opinionative man. For here was one
+who might have had the misfortune to be a
+little singular to begin with, and who,
+after having been confined to ship-board
+from childhood, turned up in the smooth,
+accommodating world, all angles, ready-formed
+prepossessions and prejudices.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Under the subtle incense, Lady Bell
+looked at her antagonist more deliberately
+over her fan, and out of a pair of eyes
+analytically inclined.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>She settled that though he was contradictory
+and a little abrupt and harsh in his
+contradictions, otherwise he was not in the
+least ill-mannered or boorish, but had altogether
+the air of a gentleman and a man
+of education, and was thus of the new
+school of naval officers. He looked also a
+man of sense, even of some benevolence,
+when he gave way to her, and was so quick
+and candid in the kind of courage which
+confessed even to so small a shortcoming as
+a mistaken judgment in conversation.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>As Lady Bell arrived at this improved
+verdict, the music in chief began, and the
+party had to take their seats and listen.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>When the concert was ended, Lady Bell
+was accosted and monopolized by one after
+another of her numerous friends, danglers,
+and satellites, until Lady Sundon’s party
+quitted the Pantheon.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>
+ <h2 id='ch09' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER IX.</span><br> <br>BOULTON’S COINS AND WEDGWOOD’S DISHES.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Next morning Captain Fane called for
+his cousins in Cleveland Court, to
+inquire after Sir Peter and propose a party
+which should be a compromise between his
+ideas and theirs.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You seem to have been at so many
+sights,” Captain Fane said, “that there
+are only one or two left for you to see,
+but as you have gone hitherto with the
+multitude, I should not wonder though
+you have, without any blame to your
+judgments, of course, missed some choice
+exhibitions.” He addressed Lady Sundon
+at her fringe-loom and the young ladies
+at their tambour-frames.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>“Now what may they be, Harry? We
+shall be vastly obliged to you for enlightening
+us.” Her ladyship was open to a
+suggestion.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“There are the exhibitions of Mr. Boulton’s
+new coins, medals, and machinery;
+and there is the show of the new Staffordshire
+ware which men of science and taste
+are flocking to.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Dear heart alive, are we men of
+science?” remonstrated Lady Sundon;
+“we’ve been to Cox’s museum, where an
+artificial bird sings, and to the place kept
+by the Swiss in King Street, Covent
+Garden, where the effigy of a boy writes,
+and the effigy of a girl draws, and another
+effigy of a young lady—the marrow of
+Lyddy there—plays the piano; and that
+is enough science for me, if indeed, it
+ain’t the black art, which it is uncommonly
+like. I thought you were going to tell
+of a fresh batch of wild Indians, with their
+paint and war-dances; or of the last caught
+syren, with her gills serving as curls, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>a fin rising on the top of her head for that
+matter instead of our present fashionable
+‘heads’—odd! ain’t it, that the syrens
+should have the fashions at the bottom of
+the sea?—or of a new fortune-teller.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“What could put all these foolish things
+into your head, my lady?” complained
+Captain Fane.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“‘These are the least the man can have
+in his eye,’ I said to myself,” she told
+him for her explanation. “I am extraordinary
+disappointed. No, sir; you are
+a clever dog in your way, and not a bad
+dog at bottom, since your bark is worse
+than your bite, though you have a little
+of the bulldog in you too when your temper
+is fairly roused, but you have no notion
+how to please and divert ladies, that’s
+clear.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Very likely I have not,” answered
+Captain Fane a little glumly, “but sure
+I did you no disparagement when I evened
+you to what delights men of parts.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No, indeed, Captain Fane,” spoke up
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>Lady Bell, her natural and high-bred
+sweetness in a ferment at the reception
+which had been accorded even by good-natured
+Lady Sundon to the young sailor’s
+overture, which was a little too affable in
+its tone, perhaps, but was obliging and
+kindly meant.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Farther Lady Bell hated to think that
+Captain Fane would suppose women in
+general, and she in particular, had not
+minds above the vulgar marvels which
+Lady Sundon had quoted.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“If you will forgive me for saying so,
+Lady Sundon,” Lady Bell gave her opinion,
+“you are in the wrong box. All the first
+people in town, ladies as well as gentlemen,
+are running to look at the medallions and
+vases. They were inspected by their
+majesties in person t’other day, and the
+Queen gave an order for ornaments to the
+chimney-pieces of her private rooms. I
+know my Mrs. Sundon would not forgive
+me if I returned to the country without
+having set eyes on these works. I don’t
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>pretend to be very wise myself, but I hope
+I have no objection to improving my mind,
+and that I have sufficient patriotism to be
+proud of the growing manufactures of my
+country.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Upon my word, Lady Bell, you put
+an old woman to shame,” exclaimed Lady
+Sundon, always ready to admire whatever
+Lady Bell said or did, and yet in earnest
+in her admiration. “Hear her! a young
+modish beauty evening herself to self-improvement
+and patriotism like any
+wizened bookworm. Have your way, child;
+I am sure it is a most creditable way,
+and I am glad Captain Fane has been so
+mindful as to put it in your power. But
+as I am a score and more of years too old
+for improving my mind or patronising my
+country, and my inclination ain’t in that
+line, I shall devote the morning to dancing
+attendance on my Sir Peter. It will help
+to keep the poor soul sweet, and gain
+me liberty for some more enticing occasion.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>“I think we shall be able to get on
+without you, cousin.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Get away with you, fellow. You don’t
+want a chaperon, Lady Bell, you yourself
+are the most charming chaperon in Lon’on;
+while poor Nancy and Lyddy there, that
+are nigh ten years older than you, never
+having had the luck to be married, can’t stir
+abroad without me jogging at their elbows;
+though, gracious me! my office is very
+much a sinecure so far as the men are
+concerned.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Good heavens! Lady Sundon, how can
+you tell such stories about sister’s age and
+mine?” screamed Miss Lyddy. “As for
+men, if we were willing to grin and ogle—”
+she bit her tongue in time to prevent herself
+adding, “and to marry men older than
+our father—”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I don’t know that the grinning would
+do it, Lyddy,” observed the incorrigible
+Lady Sundon, shaking her head; “you
+haven’t teeth for grins, neither you nor
+Nancy, they’re too black. But what do
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>you say, girls, about this morning’s doings?
+Is it to be ‘hey!’ for Lady Bell and cousin
+Harry, with their pots and mugs, or ‘hey!’
+for a dosing and darning match at home.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Gracious, madam,” interposed Miss
+Sundon peevishly, “how can you phrase
+it that we should cry ‘hey!’ for anything;
+though I am certain we are as fond of
+being instructed and entertained as Lady
+Bell or anybody.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I wish you would look sprightlier
+about it then, Nancy,” recommended Lady
+Sundon, “for who would come to the house,
+I should like to know, if they were treated
+to nothing but dismals—from Sir Peter’s
+pains to your and Lyddy’s quarrels with
+the weather for taking your hair out of
+the curl—and not a shade of relief from
+a joke or laugh to shake one’s sides and
+warm one’s blood like a sip of cherry
+brandy?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>When the party set out, Lady Bell took
+care to qualify her support of the expedition
+by turning over Captain Fane to walk with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>one of his cousins, while she walked with
+the other. “I am not going to make the
+man too proud,” reflected Lady Bell, with
+a quiet consciousness that she had it in her
+power to make a man hold up his head
+among his fellows; “he is saucy enough
+without that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The winter weather was passably dry,
+so that the fact of Oxford Street’s not
+being paved did not materially interfere
+with the ladies’ comfort. They saw a man
+in the act of being whipped round Covent
+Garden, but he was not in their way. His
+worship the Mayor’s coach passed them, but
+they were not aware of the circumstance
+that he had been robbed that very morning,
+in sight of his retinue, at Turnham Green,
+by a single highwayman, who swore that
+he would shoot whoever resisted. Though
+the knowledge had travelled fast, it would
+not have inflicted qualms even on the
+Misses Sundon, for they were not going
+out of town.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The walking-party were not so fortunate
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>as to encounter the wild Indians, who
+loomed so largely in Lady Sundon’s imagination
+as one of the sights of London
+this year; but they got a glimpse of Omiah,
+the native of Otaheite brought home by
+Captain Cook. The drawback was that the
+interesting savage was not at the moment in
+South Sea costume, which, perhaps, was not
+exactly suited to a January day in London—on
+the contrary, he formed a dingy representative
+of an Englishman in a frock and
+pantaloons.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In the rooms where were the last clean-cut
+coinage, the casts of figures in metal,
+the ingenious clocks, and the skeleton models
+of larger machines, which were to turn the
+world upside down, Lady Bell did her best
+to be interested and edified. But after all
+she found her greatest fascination in Captain
+Fane’s intelligent satisfaction, which
+stimulated and warmed the whole man,
+so that his incredulity gave way to credulity,
+and in place of sardonic fault-finding,
+he grew, as it sounded, quite extravagant
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>in his praise, and became boyish in his
+animation.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“These are the marvels of creative mind,
+Lady Bell. They are signs of battles won
+over the opposing elements. I’d liefer fight
+with air and water for my fellow-creatures
+than fight my fellow-creatures themselves.
+I’d sooner have been Mr. Boulton, of Birmingham,
+or the grey stooping Scotchman
+his partner, Mr. Watt, who has come up to
+town about a patent, and is standing yonder
+explaining his pistons and valves to a country
+mechanic, than I would have been Admiral
+Rodney or poor Lord Clive.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Nay, but Captain Fane, without our
+Admirals and Generals where would be the
+victories of peace?” objected Lady Bell,
+putting up her little chin shrewdly.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“True, for our comfort,” admitted Captain
+Fane; “and if wishes were horses, beggars
+would ride. It is one thing to command
+even his Majesty’s flag-ship, and nail the
+colours to the mast if need be, and another
+to control the elements. There were many
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>captains in Syracuse, but only one Archimedes.
+That spare stooping man is the
+Archimedes of the modern world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“And he hath the air of a tradesman,”
+said one of the Miss Sundons softly, as if
+resigning herself perforce to the lamentable
+want of style of the modern Archimedes.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Or of an old schoolmaster,” chimed in
+Lady Bell mischievously, with a half inadvertent
+glance of approving contrast at
+Captain Fane’s stalwart, well-carried figure.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It was a “very pretty” manly figure,
+though it was not that of an effeminate
+dandy such as Admiral Rodney had shown
+himself, before his debts drove him to
+France, and although it had not escaped
+the professional rolling gait of the sailor.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Doubtless even so strict and wise a judge
+as Harry Fane was prepared to be, felt propitiated,
+whether he knew it or not, by the
+invidious womanish glance which contrasted
+the person of the great mechanic with that
+of the obscure naval officer, and awarded the
+advantage to the latter.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>“What would you have?” he said,
+smiling. “Sure he has the best to his
+share, and there is an old schoolmaster in
+Bolt Court, at whom we should not dare to
+peep, but whom ladies of quality, I am glad
+to say, have paid with all the coin at their
+command, for his generosity towards them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Ah! you mean the great and good Dr.
+Johnson,” exclaimed Lady Bell eagerly.
+“My Mrs. Sundon and I, we should have
+been proud to wait on him, on our bended
+knees, if we had got the opportunity. But
+I fear his health is failing too much for him
+to appear often in society. I did hope to
+have had a glimpse of him, though I should
+have half died with fear lest he had set me
+down, as he is a little prone to do poor fine
+ladies who do not take his fancy. But you
+would not compare a man of such erudition
+in letters to a mere mechanic, however ingenious
+in his own line?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I should like to hear what the great
+honest man of letters would have to say to
+the imputation of superiority; I should like
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>to hear what posterity will have to say,”
+exclaimed Captain Fane with lively impatience.
+“But I confess I have a natural
+weakness for the science which provides me
+with a compass, and the mechanics which
+build me a ship, so that possibly I am not a
+fair authority on the comparative merits of
+science and literature.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Sir, the very fact of your owning to
+a natural weakness vouches for your impartiality
+as a witness,” Lady Bell declared
+with her quaint graciousness.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Through what was audacious in the commendation
+of so young a lady, there vibrated
+an exquisite under-tone of simplicity and
+nobleness. It contributed to soften still
+further the crude stiffness, essential to the
+naval moralist, not yet thirty, in his bearing
+towards Lady Bell, against whose heartlessness
+and artfulness he had forearmed himself,
+when he first contemplated with unequivocal
+condemnation the inconsistency of
+her position as the youngest and loveliest of
+dowagers.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>When Captain Fane proceeded to escort
+his ladies to the exhibition of Wedgwood
+ware, he found that there was no further
+call for him to point out excellencies, extol
+achievements, and elicit the faint echo of
+his own enthusiasm. Lady Bell especially
+was in unaffected delight. Her whole artistic
+nature was stirred; she was excited to the
+highest enjoyment.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell flew from fountain to statue,
+from plateau to vase. She hung over the
+nymphs, with their garlands, over the
+groups of flowers—herself the most graceful
+nymph and blooming flower that met the
+spectator’s eye.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She was on her own ground. The ware
+of Wedgwood and the designs of Flaxman
+were, indeed, infinitely beyond her poor
+little performances in “composition” for
+seals and patterns for ruffles; but the spirit
+of the two was not so wide apart as to prevent
+Lady Bell’s entering heart and soul
+into the finished work before her, and rejoicing
+in its culmination.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>“If Mr. Watt is a stooping, spectacled
+man, whose grey hair needs no powder, as
+powder will not conceal its weather-worn
+whiteness, what do you say to all these
+elegant forms and materials owing their
+origin to a small-pox-seamed working man,
+wanting a leg?” Captain Fane tried her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She only laughed. “I should say he was
+Vulcan himself, only Vulcan was a smith,
+not a potter. But I was thinking of the
+shield of Achilles, of which I have read in
+Mr. Pope’s ‘Homer.’ I should not mind
+what he was who could shed beauty around
+him. Look at these sky-blues, sea-greens,
+shell lilacs, and pearl-whites. Notice that
+cup on the stalk, Captain Fane; what a
+globe, what delicately-raised birds! I vow
+I can count their feathers in flight along the
+rim. But I am forgetting to thank you,
+sir,” exclaimed Lady Bell, stopping on a
+sudden thought, and turning to her conductor
+with frank gratitude. “You have
+given me a very happy morning. And not
+only that, but on many another morning
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>when I am dabbling feebly enough with my
+box of colours and my embroidery chenilles,
+I shall think of this morning, and recall to
+my profit, sure, as well as to my pleasure,
+Mr. Boulton’s coins and medals, and Mr.
+Wedgwood and Mr. Bentley’s least dish.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Will you make me happy in return,
+Lady Bell, by conferring on me an additional
+favour?” said Harry Fane with an
+impulsive stammer that was directly opposed
+to his usual calmness, and yet was by no
+means unbecoming in the grave young man.
+“Will you do me the honour to accept
+this cup from me, and keep it as a trophy
+of Wedgwood and a memento of what you
+have been so good as to call a happy
+morning?” and the fellow who was known
+for his restiveness and captiousness, spoke
+the words humbly, as if he were addressing
+them to a queen.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“With the greatest pleasure, sir,” answered
+Lady Bell, without a shade of reluctance,
+and with a sigh of pure satisfaction and
+exultation in the promised possession. “I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>have been longing to make a purchase of a
+small sample of the wonders before me, to
+take it home and preserve it as one of my
+cherished treasures. But I feared that my
+shallow purse, already well emptied with
+town requisitions and extravagances, could
+not compass what I desired. I am trespassing
+on your friendliness; but besides being
+yourself a lover of art, you are a kinsman
+of my kind hostess, and I declare, through
+Sir Peter, you are related to my Mrs.
+Sundon.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell slightly impaired the winning
+ingenuousness of her acceptance by thus
+arguing it out, in order to justify it in her
+own eyes. But she atoned for the falling
+off by the evident gratification with which
+she hailed a thread of connection between
+Captain Fane and Mrs. Sundon.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>So agreeably was Lady Bell persuaded of
+the slender link, that she helped the open-handed
+sailor, Miss Sundon and Miss Lyddy,
+to choose a piece of Wedgwood ware for
+Mrs. Sundon, in addition to the pieces for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>Lady Sundon and the girls, and readily
+undertook to take care of the former piece,
+convey and present it to Mrs. Sundon, along
+with the almanack for her friend, and the
+set of flappers for Caro, which Lady Bell
+had in store.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell made no comment, though she
+could hardly have overlooked a circumstance
+which she might attribute, as the
+Sundons attributed it, to her higher rank.
+There was the same characteristic difference
+between Lady Bell’s cup and the plates and
+saucers of the others that there had been
+between Benjamin’s mess and the messes of
+his brethren, as sent them from the hands of
+Joseph, when Jacob’s sons went in and ate
+with the ruler of Egypt. Lady Bell’s piece
+of Wedgwood ware was five times more
+valuable than the other pieces.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>
+ <h2 id='ch10' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER X.</span><br> <br>A PARTY ON THE WATER.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Captain Fane, young wiseacre as he
+was, reckoned foolishly with little knowledge
+of the world, and less knowledge of
+woman’s nature, that the next time he met
+Lady Bell he should take up the acquaintance
+at the very point at which he had left
+it off, on the lucky hit of his introducing
+the ladies to the galleries of science and art.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Far from it, every incident, every influence
+was different. <i>Dramatis personæ</i> had
+entered on the scene who were as new as
+they were distasteful to Harry Fane; but
+they were not new to Lady Bell, and they
+and their fellows were possessed of long
+established claims on her regard.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>True, some weeks had passed, during
+which Captain Fane had been before his
+chiefs of the Admiralty, and kept hard at
+work on his professional business; but a
+few weeks were nothing, in Harry Fane’s
+estimation, to warrant this transformation.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>When Captain Fane employed his next
+disengaged morning, in repairing to his
+cousin’s house in Cleveland Court, he found
+a gay company marshalled there, about to
+take advantage of an unusually fine February
+day to have a party on the water.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Well come, Harry!” cried hearty Lady
+Sundon; “we only lacked a naval man to
+sit in the end of our barge.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“We shall be glad to avail ourselves of
+your experience, sir,” Lady Bell, whose
+party it was specially, was polite enough to
+say; but it was said carelessly, and she did
+not wait for an answer, as both her ears
+were monopolized.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The one ear was filled with the whispers
+of an affected, lisping woman, into whose
+affectation and lisp there could yet be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>infused such a judiciously-mixed spice of
+wit and scandal as very often rendered her
+whispers irresistible to their hearers.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell’s remaining ear was kept fixed
+by the honeyed sharpness of tongue of a
+long, lazy, handsome man, in the lingering
+exquisiteness of costume of a purple-velvet
+coat and breeches and white silk stockings,
+double vest—one white, the other jonquil
+colour—two watch guards, a solitaire, diamond
+buckles, and a little hat.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Beside this full-fledged, fine-hued gentleman,
+Captain Fane, in his plain blue and
+white uniform, looked a very sober, and, in
+his present humour, a somewhat gruff bird;
+but Harry took up his gold-laced hat on the
+amount of encouragement he received, and
+went with the company.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He was the more induced to join the
+party because he was all at once seized with
+a burning wish and necessity to ascertain
+the precise terms on which Lady Bell
+Trevor stood with two of her companions.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Partial and superficial as Captain Fane’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>acquaintance with the fashionable world was,
+the pair were too marked for him not to
+have a chance of being familiar with their
+antecedents.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sir George Waring and Mrs. Lascelles
+were connected by more than an accidental
+association, though they had escaped the
+ignominy of a miserable bond of union.
+The owners of the names were continually
+to be seen together at the same gay parties,
+some of which were of a debatable character.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It was well understood that the couple
+were fast allies, though the nature of the
+alliance remained a mystery. Was it
+friendship among the heartless, as there is
+honour among thieves? Lady Bell honestly
+believed so.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Was it true, as some said, that Sir George
+had bought over Mrs. Lascelles by a large
+debt won from her at piquet, to back him in
+all his endless idle schemes and intrigues,
+and to play into his hand in the fickle, evil
+aims of the life at once of a Sir Fribble
+and a Lovelace?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>Did the solution lie in an unauthorised,
+low-toned love between the wickedly good-natured
+pair, who, with the wisdom of the
+serpent, held the passion in check, and preserved
+their cool, careless mask, trusting
+faintly that death might one day interpose
+in their behalf, and remove Mrs. Lascelles’s
+husband, or waiting deliberately till the
+love rooted in ashes and fed on malignant
+vapours, should be surely and for ever
+extinguished?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>As for Mrs. Lascelles’s husband, he played
+no prominent part in the drama, and put in
+no claim for sympathy. He was as basely
+indifferent as the others; he simply tolerated
+his wife, and accorded her his protection, so
+long as she did not outrage it.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In reality there was no public scandal
+concerning these people; but Harry Fane
+could not endure to see Lady Bell Trevor
+with them, on intimate terms, and she was
+still seated between the two in the barge.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Lascelles wriggled as a serpent
+wriggles its glossy spots, and shot forth
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>unholy green fire, dragon-like, on the right
+of Lady Bell.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>On the left lounged Sir George, as a
+splendid sleek tiger steps stealthily before it
+springs, and even when it is too gorged and
+not greedy enough to spring, bites in wanton
+playfulness.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was so ignorant of the true
+nature of such persons, that she stopped
+short with admiring their orange and sable
+glories; she was tickled and taken with,
+rather than repelled, by the green fire of
+Mrs. Lascelles’s brilliant scandal, and the
+playful biting of Sir George’s half-caressing,
+highly cultivated cynicism,—something altogether
+different from Harry Fane’s wholesome,
+blustering criticism.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In addition to Lady Bell’s ignorance, her
+perceptions were slightly warped, so that
+she was disposed to be but too lenient to the
+hole whence she herself had been dug, and
+the pit from which she had been drawn.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The barge swept along, among other and
+less ornamental barges laden with hay,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>coals, sheep, and pigs, past wharfs and
+piers, under bridges, below balconies and
+projecting stories of buildings, by gables of
+houses—until it left stone and lime behind,
+and reached green banks and lawns, though
+the trees still stretched brown, gnarled, or
+drooping boughs, sharp and unclothed,
+against the blue of the sky. There was just
+the dimly sweet, green budding of a fine
+February to tell that spring was at hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell smiled brightly and chatted
+freely with her chosen companions.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane had no resource but to
+fume secretly, and seek, as he steered, to be
+contented with the companionship of the
+Sundons. There was one safeguard in
+Lady Sundon’s irrepressible good fellowship,
+which was restrained by no extreme
+delicacy or humility, that it combated successfully
+her instinctive homage to rank and
+fashion, and prevented her from being left
+entirely out of any group in her vicinity.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sir George and Mrs. Lascelles’s blandness,—the
+great quality on which they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>prided themselves, in the absence of all
+higher qualities,—might not have remained
+unalloyed with insolence. The gentleman
+and lady might have rebuffed what they
+regarded as offensive intrusion in Lady
+Sundon’s freedom of speech, seeing that the
+pair attached themselves to the Sundons
+solely on Lady Bell’s account. But dear,
+delightful, naïve little Lady Bell had her
+weaknesses, which her friends were quick
+enough to perceive and respect in time.
+One of these weaknesses was, that she
+would not submit to see snubbing administered
+in her presence to the hospitable
+country baronet’s wife and her absurdly
+gawky step-daughters, with whom she had
+the misfortune to be domiciled in town.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Neither would the froward goddess consent
+at present to be rescued, to quit these
+Sundons and put herself under the guardianship
+of Mrs. Lascelles, who, if she and Sir
+George had got their will, would have had
+Lady Bell, without delay, cut the whole connection,
+even so far as her dear Mrs. Sundon.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>Mrs. Sundon was a true woman of quality,
+and of the world, indeed, but she had abandoned
+her sphere, and might live to turn
+queen’s evidence against her old world, any
+day. She was blue, stuck up, and tiresomely
+virtuous for a young woman. Lady
+Bell spoilt herself by quoting and aping this
+model.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Sir George and Mrs. Lascelles must
+set to work cautiously in doing their benevolent
+“possible” to cure Lady Bell of this
+and other defects. Rome was not built in
+one day, and neither in one day would a
+wilful girl’s rampant staunchness and warm-heartedness
+be converted into a conveniently
+faithless and lukewarm state of the affections.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In the meantime, Lady Sundon had
+insisted on drawing everybody’s attention
+to Chelsea, because she had once assisted at
+a “whim” there, when she had gone over
+Chelsea Hospital.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The building had, at this time, its
+wounded soldiers who had been disabled at
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>Bunker’s Hill, and some of whom Captain
+Fane had brought home in his frigate.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There was a little talk of the engagement,
+in which the general company joined. It
+was notable that Sir George, who was a
+carpet knight, treated the resistance as a
+sorry trifle, and always called the men who
+had instituted it, “rebels.” But Captain
+Fane, who had seen service, and fought
+stoutly against the very men, merely named
+them “provincials,” and stated plainly that
+they were right, when they declared that
+they had not lost the battle, since, though
+they were driven out of the entrenchments,
+they had succeeded in no less an achievement
+than that of blockading the English
+army.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell inquired with interest after
+Captain Fane’s own adventures, of which he
+was specially unwilling to speak in such a
+company. But he told what some of his
+messmates had done under fire: how they
+had been lying waiting their turn from the
+surgeons, when red-hot shot had passed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>once and again through the cockpit; notwithstanding,
+it had spared the <i>Thunderbomb’s</i>
+lads, though it was only for them to
+be lodged, by his Majesty’s and the country’s
+kindness, in the other hospital, Greenwich.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I suppose the dear timber-toes prefer
+their beef salt and their tobacco stale for
+the sake of old associations,” suggested Sir
+George mincingly.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Then, I’m sure it is no kindness to
+deny them their sweet tastes,” followed up
+Mrs. Lascelles. “There need not be these
+rows about the Lords of the Admiralty
+helping themselves to the funds. The Lords
+of the Admiralty are always helping themselves
+to something, worse than the Lords
+of the Treasury,—but both lords must live.
+Oh, forgive me, Captain Fane, and don’t
+look so fierce. I dare say it is the shore
+that demoralises your friends.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I dare say it is, madam, if they are
+demoralised, which I, their servant, have
+no business to take for granted,” replied
+Captain Fane angrily.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>
+ <h2 id='ch11' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XI.</span><br> <br>DISCORD.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I know that the shore demoralised my
+friend Lady Kitty Lake,” continued
+Mrs. Lascelles benignly; “she could not
+be prevailed on to leave it after she had
+reached it again. But what do you think
+her Commodore did to her, my dear Lady
+Bell? Kept her under closed hatches—whatever
+these may be—with no more light
+than half a tallow candle to make her head and
+do herself up, whenever the ship had taken
+a prize, and there was an insinuating enemy
+on board. However, she stole a march on
+her tyrant. She amused herself in the
+middle of some shocking sea-fight, by
+getting herself up in an imitation of her
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>husband’s uniform. You must know she
+is a big, imposing-looking woman, and he
+a little ton of a man, as fat as one of the
+pigs in the coops, copper colour in complexion,
+bristling all over with hogs’ hair,
+and in the habit of amusing himself with
+cursing and swearing through a speaking-trumpet.
+I believe he is known as the
+‘Cursing Commodore,’ though how cursing
+should be a means of distinguishing him
+from other commodores, I am at a loss to
+say. Well, the moment the firing ceased,
+Lady Kitty, metamorphosed into a creditable
+officer, ran upon deck, and was in time to
+get the enemy to deliver up to her his
+sword, which she returned with a genteel
+bow. The Commodore was so frightened
+for the trick’s being noised abroad—and he
+laughed at, if not superseded—that he was
+forced to connive at it, and so lost the
+opportunity of behaving with his usual
+brutality.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Allow me to tell you, madam,” interposed
+Captain Fane, very sternly for the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>occasion, “that Commodore Lake has the
+reputation of being a most humane, as well
+as a very gallant officer in his squadron, to
+which I have the honour to belong.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I’m quite easy, sir,” lisped Mrs. Lascelles,
+without a second’s awkwardness in
+the concession; “I tell the story as it was
+told to me. Perhaps you have also the
+pleasure of knowing my friend Lady Kitty.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No, madam; and I conjecture that I
+should not feel myself at all worthy of the
+acquaintance,” growled Harry Fane.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, I don’t know that, sir,” urged Mrs.
+Lascelles blandly. “Lady Kitty makes
+every allowance; particularly when, poor
+soul! she is a prisoner in a hideous den of
+a ship, with none but you amiable tars to
+make eyes at, in order to pass her time.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Now, can’t you be amiable, Harry,”
+said Lady Sundon, in an audible aside, “as
+madam gives you credit for being without
+too much reason? Yes, I assure you,
+madam,” declared Lady Sundon, in a louder
+key, and directly addressing Mrs. Lascelles,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>“if my cousin had been on ship-board with
+your Lady Kitty, he would have been
+mighty proud to be made eyes at by so
+distinguished a lady, and would have done
+his best to entertain her with his books, and
+maps, and specimens. He is a fellow of
+parts, though he don’t do himself justice, or
+lay himself out to be agreeable.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“What a pity!” exclaimed Mrs. Lascelles
+sleepily.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Ain’t it?” responded Lady Sundon,
+with animation. “I often tell him so.
+There! Harry, do you hear that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Captain Fane is obliged to you for telling
+me and the world what he takes such pains
+to hide under a bushel,” remarked Mrs.
+Lascelles; “but Lady Kitty is like myself,—she
+don’t much affect books and maps.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No more do I,” said Lady Sundon
+cordially; “and I wish Harry would throw
+them aside, and cultivate company manners.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“La! you know you don’t practise what
+you preach,” objected Miss Sundon, who
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>had been engrossed with admiration of Mrs.
+Lascelles and Sir George, but who felt that
+it was time to vindicate the superior delicacy
+of herself and her sister from any suspicion
+of complicity with Lady Sundon’s breezy
+vigour. “You are always professing to
+sister and me, Lady Sundon, when we try
+to hold you again, to get you to be quiet,
+and to adopt that repose which is so necessary
+and becoming to a delicate female—that
+you despise company manners.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Because I ain’t a delicate female, child,
+and I am your father’s wife, the mistress of
+you and Lyddy and the whole house, as I
+can tell all concerned,” said Lady Sundon
+a little indignantly. “If I were a bad
+mistress of Sir Peter’s family you would not
+venture to speak so to me; therefore, I can
+well afford to let your foolish tongue wag
+without minding it,” continued Lady Sundon,
+rapidly cooling down and recovering
+her habitual good humour. “Besides, can’t
+you see that I am too old to learn company
+manners, as I am too old to improve my
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>mind, which I was telling you t’other day,
+Lady Bell?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Don’t learn anything that is foreign to
+you, dear Lady Sundon.” Lady Bell forbade
+any change. “Be always yourself,
+your best self.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“And I shall crave leave, without any
+permission granted,” spoke up Captain
+Fane, “to remain myself, even my worst
+self, rather than take a leaf out of another
+man’s book, say Sir George Waring’s.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Sir, I am honoured by figuring as your
+example.” Sir George nodded slightly, and
+took snuff.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was vexed by the turn the
+conversation was taking, and the utter want
+of harmony in her company. Of what good
+the clear, curling water, the precocious
+spring weather, the delightful gliding motion
+of the boat which the rowers were
+sending along so smoothly to green Richmond
+and Hampton—if quarrelling were
+the order of the day?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Lascelles might not dislike it at the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>expense of Lady Bell and her host’s family,
+because it would form a tit-bit of conversation
+to retail, well spiced and served hot, in
+the next party which Mrs. Lascelles should
+enter.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sir George might not mind. This
+fashionable goddess and god were somewhat
+above human feeling, and could take their
+sport out of the discomfiture of others.
+But these others were troubled, and showed
+themselves in their worst colours, and unreasonable
+Lady Bell blamed Captain Fane
+as the cause. Why was he so stern in
+contradicting Mrs. Lascelles’s incredible
+story of Lady Kitty Lake? Where was
+the use of contradicting it at all, when
+nobody believed it, and when it was not
+meant to be believed? Why was he so
+rude to Sir George Waring?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell tried to make a diversion in
+the conversation as the boat was approaching
+Richmond. She began to remark upon
+the houses and their occupants.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Then the attention of Sir George and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>Mrs. Lascelles became concentrated on a
+white house in the background, while they
+expatiated on the merits and misfortunes of
+its owner.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It is enough to make a fellow doubt all
+good,” protested Sir George, with something
+like melancholy energy, “to think of
+the fate of poor dear Lady Di, consigned
+from the tender mercies of a fool only to
+those of a brute!”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“And she so clever to be twice taken
+in,” protested Lady Bell, with soft wonder.
+“She is another Mrs. Damer, Captain
+Fane.” She turned to Harry in explanation,
+thinking to propitiate the bear, and
+seeking to allay a little twinge of conscience
+where her sweeping censure of that gentleman
+was concerned.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Had he not been attentive and kind to
+her on a recent occasion? By whose fault
+after all had he been suffered to fall into
+neglect, or to be twitted and tormented that
+day, until he had assumed an attitude of
+marked hostility to those around him?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>“We are speaking of Lady Di Beauclerk,
+who can paint like a Breughel or a Sneyders,”
+finished Lady Bell.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I dare say, sir”—Mrs. Lascelles came
+between the couple with her affectation of
+artlessness—“you prefer a simpler, shorter
+road to excellence. You think Lady Di
+would have been better employed if she had
+been tossing pancakes, or hemming dish-clouts.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I don’t know about simpler, shorter
+roads,” cried Captain Fane defiantly, “but
+I confess I prefer straight lines, and I have
+no pity to waste on crooked ones. I do
+think that your paragon, Lady Di, would
+have been a vast deal better employed in
+bearing—ay, even in seeking to better the
+enormities of one sinner, than in making a
+trial, for a change, by the aid of the law of
+divorce, how she should like the enormities
+of another. And when she finds that she
+cannot abide the second any more than the
+first, she raises a precious pother, forsooth!
+because she is properly punished.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>Lady Bell was aggrieved, even shocked,
+by this plain speaking. Lady Di had been
+so heavily punished for her errors, that she
+had arrived at their being condoned, and
+had come to be treated herself as a sort of
+cherished pet, not by her own set alone,
+but by wiser men and women.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Who or what was this sailor, that he
+should roughly rend social veils, tear
+asunder well-bred illusions, and sit in judgment
+on his fellow-creatures, whose fearful
+stumbling-blocks and torturing temptations
+he could never fathom?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell would have nothing more to
+say to Captain Fane. She bestowed her
+entire regard on Sir George and Mrs.
+Lascelles. When the party landed and
+walked up to Hampton Court, Lady Bell
+went with her particular allies without
+looking over her shoulder. She suffered
+them to lead her through the rooms which
+ambition, in its ostentation and prodigality,
+had built, and she lingered especially in the
+“Beauty-room.” She made as if she were
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>absorbed by the meretricious, un-English
+seeming beauties, and the unedifying traditions
+which they had left behind them in
+the gossip of Gramont, quoted aptly and
+with adroit reticence by Sir George.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She paid no heed on this occasion to the
+Dutch garden, the long alleys, the goodly
+boughs, the bridge across the river, with
+the pure blue sky over all—she treated
+these as if they might be left out of the
+count, and as if they did not deserve her
+notice.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Sir George took her into the “Maze,”
+and it was on Sir George that she called,
+when she was weary of bewilderment, to
+unravel the labyrinth, and find her a mode
+of exit.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sir George finally conducted Lady Bell
+to the village inn, where the party were to
+dine, and seated her at the head of the
+table, in the rustic tea-room, as the queen
+of the feast.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell allowed the particularity of
+this homage. She received it all—either as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>if she were indifferent to what it ought to
+tend, or as if she had never heard that Sir
+George was a notorious breaker of women’s
+hearts, a hardened Lothario, whose wings
+no woman had been able to clip, though he
+had been fluttering round women from his
+whelpdom to his somewhat jaded prime of
+puppydom.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In that prime Sir George was still slightly
+Harry Fane’s junior, while Sir George was
+far nearer an Adonis by nature, with every
+personal point immeasurably better brought
+out by art. But though Sir George had
+not faced a bronzing climate or a battering
+service, the high-pressure atmosphere of
+fashionable dissipation in which he had
+flourished, was more telling than either
+alternative. In spite of his baptismal
+register, Sir George in all his elegance
+looked not half so fresh and hardly so young
+as Captain Fane. Manliness took some indemnification,
+but such indemnification has
+not always been valued. There have been
+women to whom such a world-worn hero as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>Sir George is irresistibly attractive. There
+are women to this day, if their qualified
+annalists do not lie, who prize such a reputation
+as Sir George Waring’s.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>This was not the reputation of an honest
+fellow, a true friend, a brave worker, a
+gallant gentleman, a reverent and sincere
+Christian, even in sorry days, for the most
+part, where Christianity was concerned.
+But it was the reputation of a man gnawed
+to the core by the rust of selfishness and
+self-conceit, who could sneer with the
+finished grace of a cold-hearted man of the
+world, pluming himself on having ate of the
+tree of the knowledge of good and evil—on
+the evil side alone, having summarily rejected
+the good as unworthy of his consideration.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Did Lady Bell belong to the order of
+women who admire such men? It looked
+as if this man were to her taste; and to
+give the devil his due, your fine gentleman,
+when he had everything his own way,
+could be pleasant—few pleasanter among
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>the best of good people. The very absence
+of feeling, and presence of heartless good
+nature, invested Sir George with a kind of
+airy agreeability and versatility.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>
+ <h2 id='ch12' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XII.</span><br> <br>THE LITTLE DINNER AT HAMPTON, WITH MUSIC ON THE WATER.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the course of the little dinner in the
+Hampton tea-room, Sir George would
+not only not sit down till the rest of the
+party were seated, but he would supersede
+a regular waiter to wait upon his companions.
+It might have been for the
+peculiar satisfaction of waiting on Lady
+Bell, but certainly he did not confine his
+cares to that quarter of the table. He, the
+finest gentleman in the room, but that was
+saying little, did the whole waiting. He
+changed plates and placed glasses, and
+brought round sauces, so neatly and so
+comically, with such cleverness, taste, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>devotion, making amends to everybody, as
+it were, for all his previous shortcomings—not
+caring, though his own meal were cold,
+or though he had not a meal at all—that it
+was hard, before so patent a proof, not to
+think him unselfish as well as delightful.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Upon my word,” mumbled Lady Sundon,
+with her mouth full of cutlet, “Sir
+George is the charmingest man going—he
+beats the women out and out, even you,
+Lady Bell. I don’t wonder that nobody
+can say nay to him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Lascelles did not appear so bent on
+redeeming her character; she still made
+wry faces and turned up her nose at the
+pickled walnuts and the cherry pie.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Lady Bell was in her element. “I
+wonder if there are any cows here,” she
+cried, peeping out of the window behind
+her. “If there had been such a Whitefoot
+as we have at Summerhill, I might have
+run out and milked her and whipped you a
+syllabub in no time. Yes, I can whip
+syllabubs, Mrs. Lascelles, you need not look
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>incredulous, and strain gooseberry fool too,
+only this is not the season of the year for
+gooseberries.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Ain’t it?” inquired Mrs. Lascelles with
+languid innocence.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Gracious, madam! did you not know
+that we hadn’t gooseberries in February?”
+questioned Lady Sundon, staring goggle-eyed
+at this curious piece of ignorance.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell went on without paying any
+heed to Mrs. Lascelles’ affectation. “If
+my Mrs. Sundon or Master Charles were
+here they would bear out my story.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“By bribery and corruption, only too
+excusable in such a court,” argued Sir
+George. “But who may Master Charles be
+when he is at home? An overgrown baby,
+as his name would imply, or a wild man
+of the woods, eh, Lady Bell?” asked Sir
+George with privileged freedom, while preparing
+to make his own dinner, like the
+most frugal of hermits, on bread and milk.
+“No, don’t press any grosser fare upon me,”
+he waved off the eagerness of his friends
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>to repay his benefits. “I do enjoy an
+Arcadian meal at times, when I have not
+only the felicity of being in Arcady, but
+of being with nymphs in Arcady,” Sir
+George bowed, with his hand on his heart.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It is fine to have the command of such
+language,” said Lady Sundon, holding up
+her hands.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“But about this Master Charles,” Sir
+George returned to the subject; “can he,
+after partaking of such syllabubs and gooseberry
+fools, be still a ruddy youth, with
+great hands and feet?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell laughed, blushed, and winced
+a little for her friend. Beside Sir George
+Master Charles would appear ruddy, and
+his Lumley-bought gloves and boots did
+not tend to diminish the natural size of his
+hands and feet; but where was the harm—in
+the ruddiness especially, unless she had
+learnt to despise rude health, like the Misses
+Sundon? They had been putting severe
+restraint on themselves, that they might
+not taste more than a morsel, after being
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>hours on the water, not so much to bear
+Sir George company, for they had not foreseen
+his temperance, as to display their
+own ethereal appetites.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Harry Fane had watched Lady Bell
+narrowly. “She is not only of the world
+worldly, she is as heartless as the others,”
+was his scornful conclusion. “She is
+ashamed of the mere recollection of some
+poor befooled country fellow, whatever he
+may be, better than this mocking jackanapes;
+but what does it matter to me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“A penny for your thoughts, Harry,”
+cried Lady Sundon, “or if you won’t give
+us them, propose a toast, do something for
+the good of the company.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I drink to you, then, cousin, since you
+have started the idea,” replied Captain
+Fane, so soberly that it was almost gloomily,
+after he found that he could not escape, and
+that the attention of the party was directed
+to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“A plague on the lad! to give an old
+married woman who might be his mother,”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>remonstrated Lady Sundon, “but if you
+are all so kind, thanks to you,” and Lady
+Sundon beamed radiantly on the raised
+glasses.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Now, Lady Bell, I’m ready for Master
+Charles,” suggested Sir George, holding up
+his glass of milk.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Nothing of the kind,” said Lady Bell,
+getting nettled. “At least Master Charles
+is not a milksop; supposing you will pledge
+in no better, you must pledge yourself, Sir
+George. I give ‘Sir George Waring,’ and
+I couple my toast with a sentiment: ‘May
+we persevere in and profit by simplicity.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I respond to your toast with the humblest
+gratitude, and I drink your sentiment
+with all the pleasure in life, for have I not
+profited by simplicity already this day?”
+rejoined Sir George, with perfect good-humour,
+looking not a whit annoyed, but
+rather gratified, by Lady Bell’s poor little
+wit being spent upon him—a cheerful nonchalance
+which put Lady Bell to shame.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Affronted with herself, Lady Bell began
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>hastily to talk of the cockle-shells which
+had been found by the bushel under one of
+the floors of Somerset House; and that led
+to a discussion of the exchange which the
+Queen had made in giving up Somerset
+House for Buckingham House.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The discussion paved the way for Mrs.
+Lascelles descanting on the petition of the
+maids of honour that they might get a
+compensation in lieu of supper, which was
+worth seventy pounds more salary.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>When the party went back to the boat,
+the day was terminating in the rosiest sunset
+which ever breathed of spring, youth,
+and promise.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I vow we must be in Arcady,” repeated
+Sir George. With all his pretence at fine
+language, he had just the tiniest spark of
+the soul of a lover of nature. Yet the glow
+which blushed on the water and shone on all
+the faces, and was only the brighter and the
+gladder for the chill bleakness of winter
+scarcely forsaken, awoke some small response
+even in his artificial nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>As for Captain Fane, he sat with his cap
+in his hand, letting the breeze blow in his
+hair, looking down the river towards the
+open sea, wishing he were away in his
+ship. Life was bad enough on ship-board
+sometimes, in the depths of tyranny, ignorance,
+profanity, and mutiny; but there the
+mass of men, even at their worst, were toilsome
+men in rough earnest. There, in the
+night-watches, a man could be alone with
+sea and sky, until he forgot the very existence
+of heartless fine ladies and expert
+actors of fine gentlemen.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“We want only music to make the hour
+complete,” said Sir George. “Lady Bell,
+might I beg—?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell hesitated, then yielding to the
+spirit of the hour, commenced to sing an air
+from the popular opera.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sir George struck in with a mellow
+second, singing being one of this fine gentleman’s
+accomplishments, as well as playing
+on the flute and the flageolet.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The song was warmly applauded by all
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>save Captain Fane. Even Lady Sundon
+praised, while she frankly admitted that she
+did not comprehend a word of the jargon,
+“but nevertheless do let us have some more
+of it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“We shall have these boats following us,
+Lady Sundon,” objected Harry Fane, looking
+round sharply from where he was steering,
+and indicating, among the work-a-day
+barges, two boats filled with company, that
+had been attracted like themselves to a row
+on the river by a day borrowed from April
+and set in the end of February. These
+boats had already been drawn into the wake
+of the first by the singing.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“What though the boats do follow, they
+ain’t going to run us down,” stout Lady
+Sundon made light of the demur; “you
+are becoming quite a kill-joy, Harry
+Fane.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It was an extraordinary sensation for Lady
+Bell to have the propriety of her behaviour
+doubted by a man—a sailor—before these
+pinks of fashion, Sir George and Mrs.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>Lascelles, who had been contributing to put
+Lady Bell at her ease.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She disliked the ruggedness of Captain
+Fane as much as she liked the suavity of
+Sir George, which no sauciness of hers
+could disturb, for she had been saucy in
+substituting Sir George’s own name as a
+toast which he might drink in milk.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell looked Harry Fane in the face
+and challenged Sir George to accompany
+her in something which Lady Sundon would
+approve—“Begone, dull care,” or “Pray
+Goody, cease,” a challenge which Sir George
+accepted, nothing loth.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But before the first song was concluded,
+one of the boats in the rear shot across
+the bow of the Sundons’ boat, and three
+or four excited men, in white vests and
+rich coats like Sir George’s, threatened to
+upset both of the craft as they gesticulated
+violently, while they shouted—</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Heyday! Waring, hold on! What
+little opera-girl have you got there? Here,
+pitch her over to us, that she may tip us
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>a stave. We’ve been dining at Kew, and
+we’ll engage to troll, among us, as good
+an accompaniment as you can contrive with
+your single pipe, sweet though it be.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Hold off! Annesley, Gower; mind
+what you’re about. You’re absurdly wrong,
+I tell you, and if you don’t set yourselves
+right, by heavens! I’ll have to take the
+correcting of you into my own hands,”
+called back Sir George, frowning blackly
+for once in his life.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It is true, confound him!” cried one
+of the strange gentlemen, letting his boat
+fall off. “He’s in other company; yonder
+is Mrs. Lascelles—who would have thought
+it?—and there is an avenging fury of a
+naval officer porting helm. Good afternoon,
+Sir George, good afternoon to you,” dropped
+more faintly over the water.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Lady Bell had shrunk into herself
+abashed, recalled to her senses, and deeply
+wounded alike in her self-respect and her
+pride.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Not all the solicitations and excuses of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>Sir George and Mrs. Lascelles could make
+Lady Bell immediately forget the indignity
+to which she had exposed herself, or forgive
+them for promoting the exposure, though
+she was silent on her feelings, and as willing
+as the others to welcome a diversion.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The day was so complete in its spring
+character, that at sundown a little cloud of
+midges seemed to start into life and hover
+in the air.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“How short their day is!” said Lady
+Bell regretfully for the ephemera. “I
+know they are only creatures of a day, but
+to come and go so soon,—if they had waited
+for a few more months, they might have
+danced through a few more hours, and not
+been pinched by so sharp a death. Who
+knows?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“My dear creature,—forgive me; my
+best Lady Bell,” Sir George corrected
+himself, “the midges have been highly
+honoured, even before you condescended
+to pity them. They have more than served
+their purpose,—they have helped to furnish
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>an illusion for us, that this February day
+by the calendar, is in the merry month of
+May by our experience, and that Hampton
+is Arcady. Now, here we are past Chelsea,
+fast coming back to the coarse dissipation
+of the garish town and the cold winds of
+March; what should remain to the midges,
+but to be swept aside with the illusion?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell turned away her head and
+shut her eyes for a moment, she did not
+wish to see even the midges swept aside.
+She did not like the philosophy of which
+she and hers formed always the centre.
+She had not consented to view life as a
+rainbow-hued but hollow mockery, a mere
+series of convenient, spangled illusions.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>
+ <h2 id='ch13' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XIII.</span><br> <br>A VISIT TO LEICESTER FIELDS.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Captain Fane, of his own free will,
+would not have paid another visit to
+Cleveland Court, before he returned to his
+ship. So far as it rested with him, he had
+made up his mind—a great deal too tartly
+for perfect indifference—to have nothing
+more to do with fine ladies, and to turn
+his back on fine ladies’ entertainers, so
+long as they were cumbered with such
+troublesome guests.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Captain Fane had business with Sir
+Peter, who was, indeed, about to appoint
+Harry Fane one of the guardians to his
+young son, and so punctilious and conscientious
+a young man as Harry Fane
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>could not see it his duty to renounce this
+trust because circumstances had rendered
+it distasteful to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Thus it happened, that while Captain
+Fane felt scandalised by the manner in
+which Lady Bell Trevor had suffered herself
+to float doubly with the tide, in the
+water-party, while he kept telling himself
+caustically that he need not have expected
+anything else, and continued setting his
+face, more like a flint than ever, against
+fashionable frivolity and levity—he yet
+found himself on the steps of Sir Peter
+Sundon’s house.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>And at that moment Lady Bell, attended
+by her maid, tripped out in her calèche
+and with her hands clasped in her muff,
+clearly starting on an expedition.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell distanced and dumbfounded
+Captain Fane, who was unfamiliar with the
+changes of mind and revolutions in tactics
+of even the staidest and most demure of
+womankind.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She stopped him as he was about to pass
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>her with a formally low bow, by holding
+out a friendly little hand, and bestowing
+on him the unsolicited information, that
+she was bound for the great painter in
+Leicester Fields, who had made so fine a
+picture of Commodore Keppel.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She was not a sitter herself, but she had
+made interest to see the paintings which
+Sir Joshua Reynolds had on hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She knew that she should never be able
+to look upon her daubs after this morning,
+but, woman-like, she must go and meet her
+fate, though it were her demolition.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sir Joshua’s pictures were works of
+genius in his line, equal to Mr. Boulton’s
+and Mr. Wedgwood’s exhibitions; therefore,
+she ventured to offer Captain Fane
+the benefit of her ticket, as a poor return
+for his former kindness.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She was all alone, save her maid, Rogers,
+because Lady Sundon was engaged with
+Sir Peter, and the Misses Sundon could
+not stand the smell of paint without the
+risk of incurring megrim or vertigo. She
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>was more fortunate—but then she had
+always dabbled in paints, and so was used
+to the odour.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Before Captain Fane knew what he was
+about, he had turned, and was walking
+away by her side in acceptance of her invitation.
+Neither did he detest or despise
+himself for his weakness, as might have
+been expected.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell had succeeded, without a
+word of confession or acknowledgment, by
+the shy, wistful appeal of her eyes as she
+prattled to him, in making him comprehend
+that she had seen that he was right and
+she was wrong in their respective opinions
+of much that had happened at the water-party.
+She implied that she was sorry for
+having offended and alienated him; that
+she had resolved on following, in future,
+rational pursuits, instead of mere idle
+pleasure-hunting,—witness her early homage
+to art this morning.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane could not even accuse himself
+of meddling in a matter which was none
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>of his, far less could he accuse himself of
+madly foolish motives.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Was it not in some measure the business
+of every honourable, kindly man to encourage
+a girl like Lady Bell, in any intelligent
+interest that might help to educate her, and
+raise her above the giddy vacant crowd of
+fashionables, with whom idleness was the
+fruitful parent of mischief?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Ought he not to alter his arrangements,
+and put himself a little out of his way for
+one morning, to see that she did not fall
+into company like that of the hateful Sir
+George Waring, when she was walking
+abroad with no better protection than her
+maid’s?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>True, it was broad day, and with that it
+was also betimes in the forenoon, doubtless
+an age before Sir George was up holding his
+levee, in his brocade nightgown, as he sipped
+his chocolate, and pencilled his daily note to
+Mrs. Lascelles.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But people could not be too careful, under
+some conditions. Lady Sundon was certainly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>as fearless and heedless, as Lady Bell
+was guileless and thoughtless. It became
+Captain Fane’s part to supplement the absence
+of some of the proper qualities of a
+guardian in his cousin.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>If Lady Sundon was lax, the strictness
+and zeal of Captain Fane on Lady Bell’s
+behalf might, if the persons principally concerned
+had given themselves time to think
+about it, have astonished even them. But
+this young couple, after the questionable
+fashion of young couples, did not pause to
+weigh their relations—they took them for
+granted.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell had even so pleasing a trust in
+the sedately fault-finding young sea-captain,
+that she had not the slightest qualm when
+he at once did her bidding and consented to
+be elected her escort, such as she would
+have had with almost any other of the gay
+danglers about her, and notably with the
+agreeable Sir George. “Captain Fane is
+such a manly, true young spark,” she took
+it upon her to decide, for her private satisfaction,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>though how she had arrived at the
+strong conclusion after one or two bantering,
+bickering interviews, unless from information
+derived from Lady Sundon, to whose
+judgment Lady Bell was not wont to pin
+her faith, it puzzles one to guess. “He is
+a little prejudiced and hard,” continued
+Lady Bell, mentally taking stock of her
+companion, “but I can melt him” (there
+was the triumph!). “I think I know how
+he would look boarding a ship, and how I
+could make him drop his sword,” which was
+a purely imaginative vision.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>As Lady Bell and Captain Fane passed
+along the streets, they became eye-witnesses
+to a curious political contradiction. At one
+thoroughfare, men were stationed with handbills,
+to be distributed to respectable and
+influential persons, especially to members
+of parliament, praying them to stop the
+shedding of their American brethren’s blood.
+At another thoroughfare, the pedestrians
+had to thread their way through a crowd—the
+centre of which was the common hangman
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>in the act of burning, to the accompaniment
+of tumultuous applause, copies of
+a pamphlet entitled “The Present Crisis
+with respect to America,” which had been
+condemned by both Houses, as a flagrant
+insult to the King.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane informed Lady Bell that
+this difference of opinion had even penetrated
+to the services. He brought forward
+the instance of Lord Viscount Pitt, son to
+my Lord Chatham, having asked leave to
+resign his commission, since he was determined
+not to serve in a war between the
+mother country and her colony.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“And what do you say, sir?” inquired
+Lady Bell.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I say that it is too late to stop a fratricidal
+war, save by fighting it out as quickly
+as may be, and that even if it were not so,
+it is for me to obey, not to issue, orders,”
+he replied with decision.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>At Leicester Fields Lady Bell’s ticket
+procured the admission of the lady and her
+friend, first into the parlour, where an untidy,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>abrupt, cordial elderly woman, was
+herself painting a miniature and hurriedly
+sopping up her spilt paint, when she heard
+the steps of visitors.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>This was Mrs. Frances Reynolds, who
+painted “The grimly ghost of Johnson,”
+and wrote the “Essay on Taste”—printed
+but never published. She was soon on
+familiar terms with the intruders.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“My brother will be certain to spare
+time for you,” Miss Reynolds assured Lady
+Bell, “he is like the rest of the geniuses,
+not above the flattery of such a visit. Bah!
+haven’t I known them all, Burke, Goldy,
+Dr. Johnson, who has wished my tea-pot
+might never run dry, and yet hurried off
+to help himself with his own spoon out of a
+Countess’s sugar-bason, and been put down—to
+put her down in turn in the presence
+of her grand company? Ah! well, I have
+never wished the great Doctor would stay
+by his own fire-side, though he has forced
+Joshua to rise and take his hat, if he
+would not sit on into the small hours, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>have us all winking with sleep as the only
+hint to our visitor to be gone. I don’t
+know that we think ourselves so enviable.
+You’ll be sent for to the painting-room
+presently, Lady Bell—no, you need not
+look at my baby faces—child’s play to the
+doings of my brother,—the man in Cavendish
+Square can never come near them,
+though I should not say it. But first you
+must let me have a look at you, for even we
+poor artists hear of the belles of the season,
+with other public matters, in the conversation
+of sitters, and when we are bidden to
+look in at a <span lang="it">conversazione</span>, or a rout, now
+and then.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, pray, Miss Reynolds, don’t make
+me public property,” cried Lady Bell, in
+laughing objection.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“If my brother seek to paint you, as he
+has painted so many of your sisterhood, you
+will become public property, whether you
+like it or no,” boasted the sister, “you cannot
+help it, madam, it is a tax you owe to
+the country, like the tax on powder or
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>armorial bearings. But who is this gentleman?
+I did not catch his name. Oh! my
+brother has done many naval men, and for
+my part, I like his Lord Mount Edgcumbe
+and Commodore Keppel, as well as any face
+which he has put through his hands. My
+Lord Mount Edgcumbe is a Devonshire
+man, and for Commodore Keppel he gave
+Joshua his first lift, and we may well love a
+dog with the name of ‘Keppel,’ as Dr. Johnson
+could love a dog if it were called
+‘Hervey.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The garrulous inquisitive lady was interrupted
+by her little niece, as quiet as the
+aunt was a rattle, and as shy and attentive
+to the proprieties as Miss Reynolds was impetuous
+and eccentric. This young girl was
+Sir Joshua’s Offy Palmer, whom he was to
+immortalise, reading “Clarissa,” and who
+was to be Mrs. Gwatkin, while her sister
+was to be the heiress of the largest fortune
+acquired by the prosecution of art in this
+inartistic England, and to marry the Marquis
+of Thomond. She brought a message
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>that her uncle was free from a sitter then,
+and for the next half hour, and that he was
+coming himself to take Lady Bell Trevor
+and Captain Fane to his painting-room,
+where he would shew them the pictures in
+his possession.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>
+ <h2 id='ch14' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XIV.</span><br> <br>SIR JOSHUA AT HOME.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>In another instant there entered a fresh,
+almost chubby-faced gentleman, with a
+dint in his nether lip, and an ear-trumpet in
+his hand. He was not without a certain
+dapperness in the unexceptionable brown
+coat and spotless ruffles, which he had substituted
+for his painting-coat and plain
+cuffs.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He was the briskest of gentlemen, the
+most obliging of geniuses who ever kept
+sitters in good humour and under control,
+by the very ease of his dignity in bearing
+with their airs and oddities.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The contemporary of the glorious, careless
+good-fellow Gainsborough, of Romney in his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>arrogant, one-sided power, and later of Opie,
+the most self-taught and the most self-asserting
+painter among them—Sir Joshua beat
+them all.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It may be true that his art was pervaded
+with an artificial, aristocratic flavour, and
+that he made a little lady of his strawberry
+girl, and modern English my lords of every
+historical personage who passed under his
+pencil.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Painters may feel it their duty, from their
+watch-tower of technical knowledge, to impress
+on the world their grieved conviction,
+that the president of the old Academy, so
+widely cultivated, so full of sense and
+acumen, in addition to his professional
+ability, and to the industry which “never
+passed a day and lost a line,” the chosen
+friend of the most public-spirited men of
+his time—yet painted deliberately for a
+single generation.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He was, according to his brethren, wilful
+and regardless of the destructive nature of
+the pigment which he used, so that they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>produced a certain effect to last his time.
+His accusers point in proof of their charge
+to the fading lines and cracking canvas of
+the very works of which all Englishmen are
+proud.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>So be it, if it must be so; we have still
+the poetry (let some hold it fantastic) of the
+Tragic Muse, the gallant heroism of Keppel,
+the thoughtful benevolence of Johnson, the
+broad archness of Nelly O’Brien; and we
+have following on the dainty playfulness of
+“Pick-a-back” a long train of fresh and
+delicate, lovely and stately, English maids
+and matrons, with Sir Joshua’s quaint sweet
+children bringing up the rear.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In Lady Bell’s day there was no thought,
+unless it were among the chemically skilled,
+that these softly glowing, wonderfully
+blended colours would wane, or the fine
+surface give way. Sir Joshua was regarded
+as the quintessence of inspired and courtly
+painters, treading in the footsteps of Van-dyck.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sir Joshua had only a few of his paintings
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>to show the eager, intelligent young lady,
+whose grace was so winning to his eye, and
+her eloquence so grateful to his ear—through
+his trumpet—as it reached him. There were
+fair ladies sacrificing to the graces and to
+the muses, very interesting to Lady Bell.
+There was Dr. Beattie in his gown as an
+Oxford Doctor of Laws, with his book on
+“The Immutability of Truth” under his
+arm, and the Angel of Truth going before
+him, beating down the gruesome figures of
+Sophistry, Scepticism, and Infidelity, said to
+personify Voltaire, Gibbon, and Hume, which
+was carefully studied by Captain Fane.
+There was the doom of Count Ugolino and
+his sons, which enchained with the fascination
+of horror both of the gazers. There
+was the portrait of a plump little woman,
+sprightly even on canvas, her high-dressed
+hair wreathed with pearls, a shawl girdle
+binding loosely the short waist and bodice,
+which Sir Joshua strove to paint into fashion—a
+great improvement on the earlier
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>elongated steel-bound waist and laced-up
+bodice.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>As Sir Joshua was about to name the
+original, the real lady ran unushered, in
+her hat and cloak, into the room.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The new-comer had not a moment to stay
+to be introduced to Lady Bell Trevor and
+Captain Fane. She was in haste to tell Sir
+Joshua that she had just come down from
+the Burgh, where she had left her master at
+his place of business, but nearly as ailing as
+the Doctor (good lack, what a load she had
+on her head and shoulders!). She wished to
+know whether Sir Joshua had done the re-touching
+which he had taken it into his
+head to throw away on a barn-door face
+beyond improvement. Give her joy on the
+audacity of complimenting herself; but she
+did not mean to compliment—not that she
+was not well enough pleased with her own,
+she would never deny it. She would like
+the picture packed and sent out without loss
+of time. Queeney and the rest of the young
+fry might care to look at it one day, when it
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>was all that was left of their mother. Good
+day to him and to all.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You are in luck, Lady Bell,” announced
+Sir Joshua, returning, briskly rubbing his
+hands, from seeing the lady to her coach,
+“if you have not had a previous opportunity
+of meeting my friend. That is Mrs. Thrale,
+the wife of the great brewer, who is himself
+an exceedingly liberal gentleman and well-read
+scholar; but his wife excels him in the
+classics.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“She was one of the west country
+Lynches,” said Lady Bell, showing her
+acquaintance with the lady’s antecedents.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It is she who has made a home for the
+great Doctor at that pattern of country
+houses, Streatham,” continued Sir Joshua.
+“She has preserved an invaluable life,
+madam, years longer to the country, by
+taking Dr. Johnson’s health under her care,
+as she has often told us, and by nursing him
+out of some of his worst attacks and most
+injurious habits. Would to God her efforts
+could continue successful, both with him and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>Mr. Thrale, who is, I fear, in a bad way, and
+on the brink of an apoplexy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“She deserves all honour,” said Lady
+Bell warmly.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“The more so that her cares seem to sit
+lightly on her.” Captain Fane could not
+resist the sly hit.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell flashed a little reproach upon
+him from her eyes, which looked as if she
+were condescending to take his manners, as
+Mrs. Thrale had taken Dr. Johnson’s health,
+under her special superintendence.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“A matter of temperament,” pronounced
+the genially philosophic painter.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sir Joshua, who enjoyed his own reputation
+as an urbane and accomplished man of
+the world, as he enjoyed most things in the
+pleasantly prosperous places in which his
+lines were cast, began to talk to Captain
+Fane of Captain Cook, with whom the
+painter’s friend, Dr. Burney’s son, had
+made a voyage round the world; and of
+Sir Joseph Banks’s collection of objects of
+natural history, which Captain Fane had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>seen under the care of young Mr. Jenner,
+the favourite pupil of Dr. Hunter.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sir Joshua had made a happy choice of
+subjects to which Captain Fane was alive,
+and in which he was well informed. The
+gentlemen talked like kindred spirits, while
+Lady Bell, to her credit, was content to remain
+in the background, and listen with
+deference and delight. She was innocently
+proud of her companion.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>How very different was the figure which
+Captain Fane cut to-day, in company with a
+genius who was at the same time a finished
+gentleman of any school, from the figure
+which Captain Fane had presented at the
+sailing-party!</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>What other male friend of Lady Bell’s
+could have stood so severe a test, and come
+out of it so splendidly? Not Sir George
+Waring, in spite of his elegance and his
+musical talents, any more than Master
+Charles. Lady Bell was deeply impressed
+by Captain Fane’s gifts, which he was really
+in the habit of hiding under a bushel. She
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>was almost provoked when Sir Joshua remembered
+his duty to her, not guessing
+how well pleased she was that he should
+forget it, and began to tell her of the one
+lady who belonged to the Royal Society of
+Artists, Mrs. Angelica Kauffman.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It was not a difficult process to make a
+digression to those ladies who were amateur
+artists, and to render Lady Bell, in spite
+of her <i>savoir faire</i>, bashfully grateful, by
+deigning to drop a hint for her benefit on the
+mixing and laying-on of colours, and on the
+drawing of such slight designs as Sir Joshua
+had himself afforded to Poggi for his fans.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I thought t’other morning we spent
+together was very happy,” Lady Bell
+spoke out of the fulness of her heart to
+her squire when they were in the square,
+and he was looking out for a chair that
+she might get home in time to keep an
+appointment with her mantua-maker; “but
+I shall be always recalling this day and
+its lessons when I am busiest and happiest
+at Summerhill.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>“Don’t you think I shall recall it, Lady
+Bell,” asked Harry Fane, “when for a
+studio in which to busy myself, I shall
+be reduced to ‘between decks,’ and for
+my fine arts shall be setting men to rig
+spars and haul in sails, varied by pointing
+a gun instead of a telescope, and submitting
+to be carried down into the cockpit?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, no; you won’t be carried there!”
+cried Lady Bell, with impetuous haste.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“At least I did not mean to crave pity
+from you,” protested Harry with unconscious
+tenderness shaking his firm voice.
+“A grumpy, hulking fellow who has been
+so much at sea that he has lost the manœuvre
+of giving a wide berth to what displeases
+his crotchets on shore, is of no
+good save to shout orders in a storm, or
+to keep a look-out against the national
+enemy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell did not contradict him, but
+she looked in his face, somewhat set and
+lined for a man of his age, but an honest
+and manly face, which had looked its
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>kindest on her, the hardness in which she
+could melt, as she had said, like the melting
+of a block of ice before a meridian sun.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She gave him a parting look as the chair-men
+lifted her chair, which raised a mighty
+commotion, for which Lady Bell was decidedly
+answerable, in the blue-coated breast
+of the young man—thought so long-headed
+and calm-hearted, so rational, discreet, and
+obdurate, that he could be let cast stones at
+all the follies and extravagancies of his time.
+Lady Bell’s look said, “You are good for
+all that is cleverest, truest, bravest—not to
+the world, perhaps, for you know, none
+better, that the world is a giddy, vicious,
+Vanity Fair—but to me. You need not
+tell others that I say so, but I say it; and
+you need not forget that I said it, in the
+long days during which I am mixing with
+people whom you justly despise, or have
+taken refuge at Summerhill; and when you
+are sailing on the high seas, doing your duty
+like a man, guarding our shores, and fighting
+our foes.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>
+ <h2 id='ch15' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XV.</span><br> <br>THE MASQUED BALL IN PROSPECT.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Captain Fane, though he <i>was</i> rational,
+and had a regard for consequences, was
+fallible, and did not cease to frequent his
+cousin’s house in Cleveland Court, because
+of that very inconsiderate look of Lady
+Bell’s.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>On the contrary, he who was no dangler
+in drawing-rooms, and was wont to improve
+his time in town by going afresh over the
+libraries and museums, and by attending
+every gathering and discussion of scientific
+men, began to haunt Lady Sundon’s rooms,
+until even that hospitably-disposed kinswoman
+could not refrain from an uneasy
+private comment, “Something’s going to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>happen to Harry Fane; he is turning up
+for ever, like a new farthing. He used to
+make himself as scarce and hard to find as a
+gold guinea, but now he has become dirt-cheap,
+and is always lying about in everybody’s
+way. Lady Bell, Lady Bell, I hope
+you understand that I only bade you sort
+my cousin in jest. I hope that you have
+not to answer for a brave sailor’s undoing.
+He has enough of knocking about in the
+open sea, without being run down in the
+harbour; and I consider Harry like a son of
+my own, since his own folk are all dead and
+gone.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell bore the unspoken charge as if
+she were perfectly innocent, save that even
+a more brilliant bloom than she had shown
+lately, glowed in her cheeks and was reflected
+in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was full of a gaiety of the
+season in which she was about to take a
+part, and which was novel to her. “I dare
+say I shall soon have had enough of the gay
+world—my fling, as you call it, Lady Sundon—but
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>I have not yet been to a masquerade,”
+explained Lady Bell; “I confess that I am
+dying with curiosity to see what it is like.
+Only fancy one’s ordinary neighbours and
+friends as sultanas and chimney-sweeps,
+Queen Elizabeths and Richard the Thirds.
+Oh! I think it must be charmingly romantic
+and diverting—that fun of finding
+people out, and of baffling their curiosity,
+while you may be as witty as you please
+and can.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“All very fine, my dear; but Cornely’s
+masquerades were not exactly the place for
+seeing proper company”—Lady Sundon
+played the monitor for once—“and at the
+old Pantheon masquerades, Covent-Garden
+women and highwaymen used to mix with
+the regular guests. How could it be otherwise,
+when nobody could tell who was
+who?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Yet you all went to these places, my
+dear Lady Sundon,” Lady Bell coaxed her
+friend, “and riots have gone out of fashion.
+Besides, this masquerade is to be given
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>by the gentlemen of White’s. They are to
+have lady patronesses. At an hour fixed
+upon, each lady and gentleman is to unmask,
+so that one could not be safer in a private
+house. Indeed I am very glad that the
+gentlemen of White’s are to be prodigiously
+gallant, and give a masquerade ball this
+year, when I happen to be in town. Tickets
+must be procured for you and Nancy and
+Lyddy, Lady Sundon; of course they must.
+I’ll never rest till the deficiency is supplied;
+I’ll not stir a foot, or order a costume, without
+you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell referred to the circumstance
+that in consequence of the run on masquerade
+tickets, and the ultra exclusiveness of
+the set issuing them, only one ticket to Lady
+Bell Trevor had found its way to Cleveland
+Court. “So Nancy and Lyddy are down in
+the mouth,” Lady Sundon said; “and for
+myself, I own I’m an old fool; but if the
+affair is to be above board, I’d give my two
+ears yet to see the play.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There was less difficulty for gentlemen in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>getting admittance, and when Lady Bell,
+the moment the club masquerade was announced,
+raised her eager voice in its favour,
+Captain Fane had only to speak to a brother
+officer, who was a member of the club, in
+order to have a ticket. Harry Fane made
+a specious excuse to Lady Sundon for his
+haste to countenance this vanity.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It is not that I approve of such an
+entertainment; I have heard from yourself
+that it is one of the most lax and perilous
+in an age of ridottos and public gardens—the
+more reason why as many sober and
+virtuous people as can make an entrance,
+should use their right to confront the foolish
+and vicious, and protect the innocent and
+unwary.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Harry, don’t draw scores before my
+nose,” objected Lady Sundon emphatically,
+and when the gentleman moved away discomfited,
+she concluded her remark for her
+own benefit, “as if you would have been
+in such a case to act as a bodyguard even
+to me and Nancy and Lyddy! The grand
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>passion has much to answer for, in playing
+such pranks with a staid, sensible fellow,
+who has very little patrimony besides his pay,
+and ought to know he is not a fit match
+for my Lady Bell. I meant that his comb
+should be cut, for he carried it over high;
+but I’m frighted that it is done only too
+closely. And he’s my own flesh and blood,
+though Lady Bell is a charming young
+woman, and I could eat her, I have taken
+to her so hugely. Besides, it is a credit
+and pleasure to show her about in town,
+which is in the habit of thinking naught of
+the wares of a country body like me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell’s influence would have gained
+the tickets which were wanting, but, in the
+interval before the ball, there came the
+threat of a family calamity that effectually
+prevented the Sundons’ attendance, and very
+nearly put a stop to Lady Bell’s making
+acquaintance with the delights of a masquerade.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Word arrived that Lady Sundon’s only
+child, the son and heir of the family, had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>met with a dangerous accident, by a fall
+from a tree, in one of the meadows near his
+grammar school, a week before. He had
+not recovered his senses when the letter was
+written, though the chances were, from the
+number of days which had elapsed, that the
+hurt must have yielded, so far, to medical
+skill. A fatal termination would have
+caused the despatch of a special messenger,
+who would have reached London and preceded
+the announcement of the accident in
+the slow course of post.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But great was the flurry and distress.
+Poor Lady Sundon prepared to set out
+instantly for the scene of the accident, to
+nurse her son, should she find him alive to
+be nursed by her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The Misses Sundon, who had been wont
+to utter, as loudly as the plaintiveness of
+their reproaches would permit, charges of
+undue preference on the part of Sir Peter
+for his boy over his girls, and of gross
+indulgence and spoiling on the part of
+the boy’s mother, were sufficiently kindly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>women, in spite of their follies, to be cut up
+by their half-brother’s danger, and to forget
+altogether, in their roused and alarmed
+affection, that they had insisted on electing
+themselves the young master’s rivals.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lyddy Sundon, who was the more energetic
+of the sisters, would not hear of any
+other arrangement than that she should
+accompany Lady Sundon in her journey,
+and remain with her, to assist in nursing
+the little lad.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Sundon, whose rosy, elderly face
+was purple with subdued excitement, while
+she could not keep the moisture out of her
+eyes by the repeated furtive movement of
+her hand across her face, did not fail to be
+touched by the token of respect and regard.
+“I’m sure it’s very good of you, Lyddy,”
+the mother said, with all her heart. “I
+ain’t likely to forget it, no, nor your father
+neither; and I trust my Ned will remember
+it when he is a man, for, by God’s mercy, he
+may live to see us out yet.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Nancy Sundon undertook to devote herself,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>in his wife’s absence, to the care of Sir
+Peter, naturally suffering more than ever,
+though he was driven for the moment to
+forget his own sufferings.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“But our trouble, which may end well,
+for all that is come and gone, please God, is
+not your trouble, Lady Bell, so go to your
+masquerade yourself, my dear,” the good-natured
+woman told Lady Bell at parting.
+“I’ll take ‘The Cries of London’ to amuse
+Neddy, as you wish, and thank you heartily
+for the thought. But I am sure it would
+vex any child of mine on his bed, as it
+would vex me, if he could know that he
+was keeping you, who have nothing to do
+with him, poor boy, save in your good will,
+from a grand treat. Go when it is your
+day, and enjoy yourself with the best, Lady
+Bell, bless you! We don’t grudge you the
+enjoyment, though we have come to grief.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Sure, you don’t; but never think of me,
+my dear Lady Sundon; may a blessing and
+the best of luck go with you. I hope and
+pray that you will find your boy a great deal
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>better than you expect, and that we shall
+all have such a merry meeting again that
+the finest masquerade will be thrown into
+the shade.” And Lady Bell fully meant
+to give up the masquerade.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But scarcely had Lady Sundon and Lyddy
+set out, when another deliberate post letter
+arrived in Cleveland Court, with the cheering
+tidings that the sufferer was doing well,
+and was likely to recover without sustaining
+any material and permanent injury from his
+fall.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The chief source of anxiety was removed,
+and Lady Bell was free to resume her intention
+of being present at the ball, and was
+not reduced to eclipse its splendour by being
+absent, as a throng of the givers of the feast
+were ready to profess. Miss Sundon might
+have accompanied Lady Bell, but the former
+preferred, on the whole, after the late shock
+to her nerves, to remain a martyr to her
+new responsibility, and to relapse into luxuriating
+tenderly over the last grievance.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell, in her widowed dignity, could
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>dispense with a companion. She knew,
+moreover, with an idle, exultant throb, that
+in addition to her many admirers, more or
+less fervent, and more or less men of many
+ties, with their hearts split into segments,
+and distributed pretty equally over a select
+circle of fashionable belles, there was one
+man who would only see her in the motley
+company, who was in it for her sake, who,
+crusty, cantankerous sailor as she had
+judged him at first, needed but a wave of
+her hand, and a glance of her eye, to be at
+her side, at her feet.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell, whether she confessed it to
+herself or not, went on to draw conclusions
+from the significant circumstance that Captain
+Fane, of his own free will, departed
+from his rule and put himself about to be
+one in a scene so unpalatable to his tastes as
+this masquerade.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell did more. She looked within,
+and she recognised with a breathless flutter
+of mingled wonder, trepidation, and bliss,
+an astounding fact. The chief glory of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>masquerade to her would be the presence of
+this quondam growling and grave young
+officer.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was perfectly aware that Harry
+Fane, though well-born, was poor, and that—while
+she believed he was an excellent
+officer, and while she had heard him speak
+like a natural philosopher to a man of
+genius—he was a fellow of no mark in her
+fashionable world. His very profession was
+against him in some respects.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell well knew that Captain Fane
+would be reckoned a most unsuitable match,
+the poorest <i>parti</i> for a beauty, a Lady Bell,
+a young widow who had begun her career
+of worldly prosperity very fairly, and had
+then taken the world by storm. Was she
+to end by wantonly squandering her advantages,
+for which she had paid dearly enough
+in her day; was she to slight the great
+matches that might be in store for her, the
+coronets, the amorous squires, richer than
+Trevor of Trevor Court, the exquisite beaux
+like Sir George Waring, for so sober and in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>the world’s eye so insignificant a figure?
+Was she, as a lovely widow, rather to copy
+the example of the Duchess of Manchester
+with her Irishman, of whom all the world
+had talked, or that of the Duchess of Leinster
+with her Scotchman, of whom all the world
+was talking, in stooping to confer grace, than
+follow the lead of Lady Waldegrave in aiming
+as high as the gusty neighbourhood of a
+throne? Lady Bell laughed in mockery of
+herself a little hysterically. She made a
+feint of trying to find time and heart to
+scold herself, and at the same time she
+blushed like a rose at the mere thought,
+and trembled with a newly-discovered happiness.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>
+ <h2 id='ch16' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XVI.</span><br> <br>THE MASQUED BALL AS IT BEGAN IN REALITY.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Lady Bell was coy. She was provoking,
+she was wilful, and she was perverse,
+in the strange gladness which was so
+dashed with emotion, but of which she
+strove hard, and almost succeeded, to show
+only the frolicksome side.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I shan’t tell you what I am going to
+wear, Captain Fane,” Lady Bell said, “and
+you are not to tell whether you are to be a
+peasant or a prince. I shall put my fingers
+in my ears if you do. I mean to keep my
+secret. I tell you all the fun will be in
+finding each other out—as if I could not
+find him out among a thousand,” she said
+to herself, while her glance fell beneath his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>reproachful gaze, “and if he should be too
+stupid to guess me under a disguise,” she
+added—always for her own satisfaction—“why
+I can take off my mask and enlighten
+him at any moment.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane was forced to submit, thinking
+in some measure, as his mistress thought,
+“Well, the information beforehand would
+only be a precaution to save time. However
+crowded the rooms may be, she can
+never elude me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But neither Lady Bell nor Captain Fane
+had ever been at a masquerade ball. On
+the lady and gentleman’s separate arrivals,
+after a way had been made through the
+excited crowd which pressed about the
+doors and pushed into the lobby of the club
+itself, and was driven back by watchmen, in
+order to witness the spectacle of the season,
+the scene which presented itself was one of
+wild disorder.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A great assemblage of pretentious and
+grotesque figures, who for the most part could
+do little else to assume foreign and cast-off
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>native characters, strutted, stalked, shambled,
+stamped, bawled, growled, and squeaked
+amidst a chorus of loud remarks, shouts of
+laughter, and roars of derision. Communication
+between all save the initiated was
+next to impossible.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell and Captain Fane lost themselves,
+and what was worse, could not find
+each other, incontinently, and in spite of
+the magnet which each formed for the other,
+and the conclusive test which each believed
+he or she could apply to the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“This is the very paradise of fools,”
+thought the not very tolerant sailor, as he
+elbowed his way along, and doggedly resisted
+the audacious attack on his notice
+made in very wantonness, or on mistaken
+premises.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No, I won’t ogle that intolerable shepherdess,
+Lady Bell never perpetrated such a
+crook.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“If Columbus keep raking me with his
+glass, as if I sailed in command of his ship’s
+consort, I’ll be tempted to give him a knock
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>on the head with his own telescope. He
+sail a carvel or discover new lands! He is
+only fit for the tub of that Diogenes which
+Dick Turpin has kicked over!</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“What a game for grown men and
+women! All the rank, wealth, and intelligence
+of England engaged in it, as the news
+prints will have it to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Where on earth can Lady Bell be? She
+is not that fair one with the locks of gold—borrowed
+locks clearly—over her own dark
+hair. No, this lady is several inches too
+tall, and she walks like a stork, instead of
+footing it like a fairy.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Crossing the line is a joke to this. The
+Jack Tars have more point in their gambols.
+Avast! Yonder goes Neptune with his
+trident, summoned by my words from the
+vasty deep. But I’ll have none of him. I
+have enough of him on his own element, to
+be let off from the contact here.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Lady Bell is not walking in the minuet.
+What does she mean by thus giving me the
+slip? How do I know what harm she may
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>be running into in the confounded freedom
+of this masquerade? All the rage is for
+adventures, pleasant or unpleasant. I suppose
+every pretty woman will be mortally
+disappointed if she do not have her share.
+Oh heavens! the folly of women, and oh
+heavens! the folly of men—of a pretended
+Timon in a shabby blue jacket for thinking
+to mend them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Captain Fane was not there in a blue
+jacket, shabby or otherwise, else he might
+not have sought far and wide in vain. He
+had, between ignorance and a spice of spite
+at Lady Bell, because she would not afford
+him a clue to her character for the evening,
+taken no more distinctive disguise than one
+of the abounding black dominoes or loose
+cloaks, of which there were scores in the
+room, worn by lazy, shy, or proud men and
+women, many of the former of much the
+same height as Captain Fane.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>After all the domino, as proved by continental
+patronage, and by its invariable use
+on the part of those who had covert designs
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>to prosecute at this or any other masquerade,
+was the one sufficient and safe disguise in
+which men and women could glide here and
+there, and appear and disappear miraculously
+in the crowd.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But wearers of dominoes who wished to
+be known, must wait for the late hour when
+every guest was to remove his or her mask,
+and step forth in proper identity.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane’s temper was not his strong
+point, and his disposition was not accommodating.
+He was too ruffled and piqued to
+receive any comfort from the prospect of a
+humiliating confession of defeat, and a petition
+for mercy.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In the meantime, if her vexed partner
+could have known it, poor Lady Bell was
+not enjoying this masquerade, to which she
+had looked forward with keen, girlish zest
+and a softer interest. She had the sore
+humiliation—granted it was by her own
+fault—to be recognised by a multitude of
+her set, of Mrs. Lascelles’ friends and of
+Lady Bell’s danglers, and yet to remain
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>unrecognised by the one man whose recognition
+she craved.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell had dressed herself as a gipsy
+fortune-teller, in a remarkably respectable
+rustic gown—for a gipsy, in the authentic
+red cloak and kerchief over her head, with
+a pack of incorrectly clean cards. But,
+unfortunately, fortune-telling, though not
+so plentiful as blackberries or dominoes,
+abounded to the degree that Captain Fane,
+himself undistinguished, passed at a little
+distance without eliciting a spark of the
+magnetic influence, the very woman who
+was swaying him in spite of his reason, and
+almost of his conscience, who was filling
+him with a strong, untrained heart’s concentrated
+love, which in contrast with the
+calculating spent loves of the jaded hearts
+around, was fit to work like madness in the
+brain.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was greatly chagrined, half
+angry with Captain Fane for being horribly,
+unaccountably stupid, half doubtful, with a
+pang, if he who continued hidden from her,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>as she from him, was really in the room.
+Something might have happened, a sudden
+appointment to a ship, an accident—his
+being stopped, and wounded as well as
+robbed, on his way to the ball—or a malicious
+story heard to her discredit, for he
+was precise in his notions, and stern in upholding
+them, as she knew from her experience
+at the water-party.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sailors had two standing-points from
+which they regarded women. The one
+standing-point was that of coarser salt-water
+Lovelaces and Lotharios, to whom no
+woman was sacred, and who trusted none.
+The other was that of Turks, who locked up
+their women in western harems, and exacted
+from the women the meekest domesticity.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Harry Fane was no profligate Lovelace,
+Lady Bell was sure; but she was not equally
+certain that he might not develop into a
+rigid, caustic captain of his own household.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell had murmured loudly at the
+moroseness of poor old Squire Trevor, when
+she, as a silly child, had tried his patience;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>should she not be a fool indeed to put herself,
+as a woman, in the power of another
+master?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>And this would not be a fine gentleman
+who might neglect and be unfaithful to her,
+and still be suave and tolerant to her faults,
+having consideration of his own grievous
+sins.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>This would be another sour and savage
+man, rendered a hundred times more formidable
+in his prime by the weapons which
+her love and his would put into his hands
+to pierce both their hearts.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Yet she was old and wise enough to know
+that infinitely worse might befall her. What
+a poor chance there was for women of her
+class and culture in life! Humbler women
+might be more stolid, less alive to their
+injuries, abler to keep their own.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>These were sad reflections to qualify the
+noisy nonsense of a masquerade. Lady Bell
+was very sorry for herself, and soon grew
+weary of the amusement. She discovered
+that it was rarely dependent on the lively
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>cleverness which could enter into the spirit
+of the game and play it out well. The ball
+was kept up rather by the impudence and
+effrontery which could break through every
+restraint, and could administer and endorse,
+without flinching, the rudest rebuffs.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The Troubadours, King Alfreds, and Friar
+Tucks, the Abbesses, Beggar Girls, and
+Sapphos, aimed more frequently at outraging
+than at expressing their <i>rôles</i>. It was
+regarded as the best joke when the Troubadour
+flung away his guitar, King Alfred
+hobnobbed with Captain Macheath, and
+Friar Tuck swam, sauntered, and sniffed at
+a vinaigrette. In like manner fair applause
+was won by the Abbess entering into an
+open flirtation with a soldier of fortune; by
+the Beggar Girl complaining peevishly of
+the liberties taken by a courtier, who had
+trodden on her beggar’s trappings; and by
+Sappho, while oppressed with a “snivelling
+cold,” and beset by a most pronounced
+Devonshire dialect, indulging in entirely
+prosaic and matter-of-fact remarks.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>No doubt, the abuse of the characters
+adopted, was a great deal more easily
+attained than the use would have been, and,
+making allowance for the average limits
+of human intellect, the people were wise
+in their generation. But the effect was
+disappointing to an enthusiastic young
+Lady Bell.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The affair did not stop at a brilliant
+burlesque—it went as far as an earlier
+screaming farce.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell began to grow timid and
+nervous as the mirth grew faster and more
+furious. She clung to the support of any
+acquaintance such as Mrs. Lascelles—who,
+the wish being father to the thought,
+possibly, personated the widow loved by
+Sir Roger de Coverley—in passing through
+the heaving, changing groups.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane was wrong in one suspicion:
+Lady Bell did not seek adventures. On
+the contrary, when she saw the bold licence
+to which they tended, she shrank back
+from them; she had very soon ceased to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>play the rustic fortune-teller, as she had
+begun to play it with innocent spirit and
+pains. She was ashamed of thinking of
+acting where hardly any one else acted.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>
+ <h2 id='ch17' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XVII.</span><br> <br>THE “COMMON DOMINO.”</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Lady Bell continued, however, to
+pay the penalty for the choice of a
+character, by being accosted on the part
+of numerous Indian conjurers, sailors, and
+Roman emperors, all uniting in the demand
+that she should tell them their fortunes.
+Neither was the demand made in formal
+histrionic phrase, but in free and easy
+modern language, spoken by voices teasingly
+familiar to her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Lady Bell was so bewildered and
+vexed because all her boasted penetration
+had failed her, that not having succeeded
+in detecting the one, she would not take
+the trouble to identify the many. She
+guessed that some of these masquers were
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>Sir George Waring, Lord Boscobel, Colonel
+Selby; but she did not care to come to a
+decision. What was it to her who they
+were?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The gentlemen were not so indifferent or
+irresolute about the secret of the graceful
+little fortune-teller. Fine gentlemen though
+they were, and at their own ball, they were
+importunate and aggressive, until their
+advances became irksome and offensive to
+Lady Bell. She grew sick of them, and
+the whole riotous company, and wished
+herself with all her heart well out of it—out
+of town—back to her peaceful Summerhill,
+with her calm, beneficent Mrs. Sundon.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell absolutely declined doing any
+more palmistry, and put off the pressing
+claimants on her powers with as much
+determination as she could summon to her
+aid on the spur of the moment.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No, no, sirs, the stars are not in the
+ascendant,” she said, with a very sincere
+sigh, “the cards won’t shuffle. You must
+go to another fortune-teller.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>“To no other, most unpropitious Sybil,”
+asserted one voice.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Let me shuffle your cards,” suggested
+another, offering to take the tools of Lady
+Bell’s trade for the night out of her hands.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I’ll cross your hand with gold, my
+girl,” said a third, and at the same time
+presumed to seize Lady Bell’s disengaged
+hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was roused to a more energetic
+renunciation of her character.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I won’t be bribed. See here!” she
+cried.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>And raising the spread-out pack of cards,
+she scattered them far and near.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Her action was partly misunderstood, and
+some of her followers stopped to pick up the
+cards, as Lady Bell had hoped they would.
+She moved on directly, but in the little
+scuffle she had already been separated from
+her party. For the moment the crowd had
+closed in between them, and Lady Bell
+found herself alone in her disguise, exposed
+to rougher horse-play.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>Any masquer who saw a woman alone
+in the crowd, might regard her, charitably,
+in Captain Fane’s strain, as a lady looking
+out for adventures. Whether so looking
+out, or innocent of such an intention, the
+mere fact of her having foolishly exposed
+herself, constituted her good game for the
+buffoonery of the masquerade.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Yet Lady Bell’s trepidation did not
+amount to panic, and she assured herself
+that it was silly, for she had simply to take
+off her mask, and show that she was Lady
+Bell Trevor, in order to find friends, and
+be freed from molestation. Any woman who
+had ever sustained a serious misadventure
+at a masquerade, like most women who sustained
+misadventures in a wider sphere—the
+world, had only been too willing to
+undergo the infliction, or had yielded to a
+private reason for risking it, and either way
+had themselves to thank for their humiliation.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Lady Bell was certainly unwilling to
+plead helplessness, crave pity, and virtually
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>acknowledge that her natural dignity did
+not stand her in good stead. Moreover, the
+acknowledgment ought not to be required
+of her; for already some who knew her,
+as she was convinced, though it was their
+present cue to conceal their knowledge, were
+there. Sir George Waring and Colonel
+Selby, the first as Sir Roger de Coverley,
+the second as the Lord Chancellor of
+England, had come up with her, holding
+some of her cards in their hands.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was tired, shaken. She could
+think of no other resource than that of
+flying from her persecutors with as much
+speed as she could command, or the crowd
+would allow. While she hurried along she
+held down her head, and tried not to listen
+to besieging addresses, suggesting in her
+attitude something of the aspect of Ferdinand
+seeking vainly to shake off Ariel’s
+tricksy sprites; notwithstanding that Lady
+Bell’s foes were of more solid substance.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The group arrested the attention of a
+domino, who at once made for it, catching
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>up by chance as he did so one of the
+fortune-teller’s cards which dropped from
+a gentleman’s hand. While he joined in
+the pursuit, which was attracting notice,
+he heard bets laid on the race that caused
+his blood to boil, little as bets meant at a
+time when men wagered on drops running
+down a window-pane, on an old woman’s
+hobbling, or on the hours that a sick man
+might live.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The prize might be nothing to Captain
+Fane, for it was possibly a case of mistaken
+identity where he was concerned; and even
+if he were in the right, he was ignorant
+and jealous of Lady Bell’s reason for keeping
+herself hidden from him, as it seemed.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It might very well be that she would
+resent his interference. He could not help
+remembering, though she had sought to
+atone for it, how she had treated his opposition
+at the water-party.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He might reap no thanks, only anger
+and disgust as the result of his officiousness.
+But for her sake he would venture all.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>He scrawled with his pencil on the card
+which he had appropriated. “Do you wish
+to get away and go home without waiting
+for the unmasking? I shall put you into
+a chair—say yes, and I shall be satisfied
+that I am right.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He pushed forward in advance of the
+others and thrust the card into Lady Bell’s
+hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She glanced mechanically at the writing,
+with which she was not sufficiently acquainted
+for it to show the writer. But
+the electric shock was given at last, she
+had not the slightest fear of trusting herself
+with that domino. “Oh yes!” she drew
+a long sigh of relief and joy, standing still
+and speaking in her natural tones.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“A swindle, a cheat, madam,” shouted
+the wildest of her train; “you decline to
+read our fortunes, and you answer the first
+question put to you by an interloper.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Gentlemen,” interposed the domino,
+speaking in cold tones of indisputable
+authority and sober reason, “the lady is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>fatigued with the foolery, and wishes to
+go home. I suppose you do not interfere
+with the inclinations of your guests?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The gentlemen looked at each other and
+paused discomfited.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Sold, by Jove!”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I wish you joy, Sir George, of your
+successful rival.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Devil take him, who can he be? never
+heard that my lady had any troublesome
+appendage—country cousin, parson in disguise,
+former husband come alive again,
+recent husband come to light.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Before the exclamations burst forth, the
+domino was leading the fortune-teller
+through the crowd, compelling a passage
+for her, to the door of the room, out into
+the vestibule, and down the stairs, at the
+foot of which they stopped, and he bade a
+watchman call a chair.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Then Lady Bell took off her mask, and
+he pulled off his, and each smiled forgiving
+and forgiven in the face of the other, while
+the servants and their company thought the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>two a proper couple (though Harry was no
+Adonis), and on plain enough terms.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But the lady and gentleman were not
+bent on one of the clandestine expeditions
+and frantic escapades in which masquerades
+frequently ended, since they would not set
+about it barefaced. Therefore the pair being
+manifestly honest, were left to themselves,
+unmolested by the kind souls that liked to
+look on them at a little distance. For anything
+more Lady Bell and Captain Fane
+were deficient to the apprehension of their
+more or less debased fellow-creatures in
+what are to them essential elements of
+thrilling interest—crime and shame.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I am so glad to get out of it—I shall
+never wish to go to a masquerade again.
+But could you find no better disguise than
+a common domino?” Lady Bell began to
+recover herself, and to pout the least in the
+world. “There were scores of dominoes
+like this,” she hinted regretfully, putting a
+little finger shyly on a fold of the objectionable
+domino.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>“Could my Lady Bell not dress up herself
+more fitly than in the cloak of a gipsy
+fortune-teller, when there were crowns and
+sceptres, wands and wings, in the room?”
+the gentleman reproached his partner with
+delirious fervour, softly grasping a corner of
+the maligned cloak.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I saw no acting,” cried Lady Bell in a
+flurry, to render the conversation less personal.
+“A strolling troop, in a barn, would
+have managed infinitely better. This was
+all fudge and lampooning. I did not ask
+for true acting, but I expected something
+nearer to it from persons of refinement and
+education. I am going to have the real
+thing to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Tell me where, Lady Bell,” he solicited
+directly.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I am going to the play, sir, the veritable
+play; no wonder everybody rushes to
+Covent Garden and Drury Lane; though
+some pretend that there are private theatricals
+worth listening to, I should feel
+inclined to doubt it, after to-night. I am
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>to have a box in company with Miss
+Greathead of Guy’s Cliff, who knows Mrs.
+Siddons—she is taking the Londoners’
+hearts by storm, after they nearly broke
+her heart years ago.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“How do you know that?” he asked for
+the mere sake of hearing her speak and
+detaining her a moment longer.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, I know Mrs. Siddons finely,” she
+sparkled back upon him, enjoying what she
+imagined to be his curiosity, “and perhaps
+some day,” she lowered her voice inadvertently
+and the tell-tale colour leapt up in
+her cheeks, “I shall tell you how she and
+I came to be personal friends. You have
+never seen her? Then you have never seen
+such a genius on the boards. Miss Yates
+is nothing to her; she eclipses Mr. Garrick
+himself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He was not caring for geniuses on the
+boards at that moment, however much he
+might care for them at another. What
+were the stage and its stars to Harry Fane,
+when Lady Bell had availed herself of his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>assistance, had preferred his protection to
+that of any man of her set at the masquerade,
+and when the words, “Some day I
+shall tell you how she and I came to be
+personal friends,” were ringing sweetly in
+his ears?</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>
+ <h2 id='ch18' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XVIII.</span><br> <br>ROMEO AND JULIET ON THE STAGE, AND IN<br>LADY BELL TREVOR AND MISS GREATHEAD’S BOX.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Harry Fane found it easier to join
+Lady Bell in her box with Miss Greathead
+at Covent Garden than at the masquerade
+ball. Notwithstanding that, the
+tide which had turned and was bearing the
+great actress on to fortune, was so full in
+its rush, that the crowd at White’s was
+nothing to the jammed mass filling to suffocation
+the huge theatre.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In the private box Miss Greathead, the
+other “Lady of Quality,” was considerate
+and generous.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She had been telling Lady Bell that she
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>remembered when Miss Kemble came to
+Miss Greathead’s mother’s house in the
+capacity of a waiting gentlewoman. She
+had struck everybody by her commanding
+beauty and her magnificent reading, and she
+had secured the friendship of each member
+of the family, so that though she soon
+quitted Guy’s Cliff to be married to her
+rejected lover, and to return to the boards—her
+true sphere—her friends continued to
+watch her struggles and her progress with
+interest and rejoicing. So long as she and
+they lived, Sarah Siddons would be welcome
+among the Greatheads.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Miss Greathead brought her story to a
+close abruptly, and made room for the young
+officer in naval uniform.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He looked a quiet, reserved, brave man,
+rather than a crowing, bullying cock of
+fashion. At the same time he had been
+indefatigable in scaling banisters and leaping
+partitions in order to reach the door of
+Lady Bell Trevor and Miss Greathead’s
+box. He deserved the seat which he had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>won next Lady Bell, though, poor fellow,
+he might not fill it long—and it might be
+to his loss that he filled it at all.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Miss Greathead in her woman’s heart,
+while she counselled expediency and condemned
+imprudence with the rest of the
+quality, guessed what sitting together for
+an hour or two was to a couple between
+whom there might soon roll the seas which
+divide an old world from a new, and these
+seas alive with transports, frigates, squadrons,
+hastening to meet the tug of war.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The pair were young fools (Miss Greathead
+was shocked at Lady Bell Trevor—the
+daughter of an earl, though a spendthrift
+earl, a jointured widow, though her jointure
+was not great, while the officer by his uniform
+was no more than a Captain, and was
+not a private “fortune,” else he could
+hardly have failed to be known by name
+to Miss Greathead—she could not think
+what Lady Bell meant by thus preparing
+misery for herself and another). But what
+would you have? such fools abounded,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>would not the world be worse if it wanted
+them? Mrs. Siddons was about to play just
+such another fool.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>At least the sailor must fill his seat as a
+silent partner, for Mrs. Siddons’ acting, and
+the pit which hung breathless on her words,
+permitted no chatter in the boxes or elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The play was that of <i>Romeo and Juliet</i>.<a id='rA'></a><a href='#fA' class='c009'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
+<p class='c008'>When Mrs. Siddons took the part of
+Juliet, she ventured on a new and bold
+stroke in the middle of her success. Since
+Lady Bell, a fancy-free childish girl, though
+a fugitive wife, had been stirred to weep
+and smile, and hang breathless over the
+histories of Isabella, Mrs. Beverley, and
+Euphrasia, Mrs. Siddons had risen to a
+much loftier range of characters, to her
+mature masterpieces of Lady Macbeth, Constance,
+and Queen Katherine.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But for that very reason it appeared doubtful
+if she could descend from her height of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>ripe majestic matronhood to the dramatist’s
+idea of a single-hearted love-lorn Italian
+girl. Even Mrs. Siddons’ superbly developed
+personal traits might turn to faults
+and work against her in the attempt to personate
+the slender, tender daughter of the
+Capulets.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But no sooner did the enchantress come
+before her judges and begin to weave her
+spells, than the velvet eyes, with their rich
+lashes, the white pillars of arms with their
+regal sweep, became the fond dreamy eyes,
+the loving, clinging arms inspired by the
+soul of youthful, radiant, all-defying passion
+in Juliet.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>These two—Lady Bell and Captain Fane—looked
+at and listened to their own story.
+True, they were not of sufficiently mighty
+quality to belong to great rival houses,
+but the couple belonged in a measure
+to different classes. Lady Bell might
+aspire to prospects as far ahead of the
+naval captain at her side, though he was
+born and bred in her rank, as were a Vice-Admiral’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>commission, and Westminster
+Abbey.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The circumstance that the difference between
+Lady Bell and Captain Fane was
+comparatively slight, only rendered it more
+cruel if it were to part them, since it did
+anything save prevent the rose from smelling
+as sweet.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>To sit together at such a play interpreted
+by so consummate an actress, and an actor
+who was not immeasurably behind her, was
+to sit like the guilty King and Queen of
+Denmark and witness their crime shadowed
+forth by the players. But whereas it was
+the past which was held up before the
+shrinking eyes of the Royal Danes, it
+seemed a dazzling glimpse of the future
+which was vouchsafed to these lovers.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The secret of Lady Bell and Captain
+Fane, so far as it had remained any secret
+to them, was spoken out in Shakespeare’s
+words and by Siddons’ and Kemble’s voices.
+The true lovers there of whom the others
+were but a vivid realization, sat with heaving
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>breasts, flushed faces, and eyes fixed on
+the stage, and dared not glance at each
+other (did not need to for that matter), each
+to understand what the other felt—save
+once or twice.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>At the masqued ball in the Capulets’
+house, when fortune favoured the brave so
+signally as to find the daring intruder his fit
+partner in the daughter of the house, in a
+trice, Captain Fane and Lady Bell turned
+simultaneously to smile to each other and
+to afford the opportunity for the whisper on
+his part, “That fellow was in luck—he was
+not long in receiving his prize.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>At the first suggestion of a private marriage,
+Captain Fane again sought and received
+a look as by irresistible fascination.
+“Do you mark that?” said the swift meaning
+glance of his eyes, before which Lady
+Bell’s eyes swam and fell as they had
+never swum and fallen before.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There might have been many more pairs
+of lovers in the great crowded house that
+night, taking to themselves, and making a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>personal matter of the play and its playing,
+thus failing to view it in a speculative and
+critical light.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But there was absolutely nobody to whom
+Shakespeare and the Kembles were rant and
+fustian, who was moved to laugh when the
+players wept, or to joke and shrug when
+they raved.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There was something marvellous in the
+unanimity of the sympathy, in the multitude
+swayed like one man by the poet and the
+players, till the old Italian tragedy in its
+passion and its piteousness lived again.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Women clasped their hands and prayed
+for mercy on the young lovers, sobbed as
+Juliet drank the potion and composed herself
+to the semblance—too complete—of death,—and
+shrieked and swooned when Romeo
+met Paris at the tomb—when swords were
+crossed and the boy husband who believed
+himself widowed in the green accomplishment
+of his vows, piercing and pierced, fell
+for ever.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Men drew long breaths, and swore deep
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>oaths, as over their professional contests,
+their tussles in Parliament, their meetings
+at Chalk Farm, their long seats at the green
+board.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We have it on recent record, that in
+one row in the orchestra there sat to see
+Mrs. Siddons play, men whose names are
+not forgotten, no, nor will be, “Reynolds,
+Burke, Gibbon, Sheridan, Windham, Fox.”
+These men were not babies, but “the tears
+were seen running down their dark faces.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The theatre was a power in those days,
+and the excitement which crossed and suspended
+the excitement of gaming tables and
+lottery drawings, was in the main a wholesome
+and saving excitement. Mrs. Siddons
+made a figure in Lady Bell’s history which
+sounds strange nowadays. Not only did
+the actress chance to interfere between the
+girl and imminent destitution, an incident
+which might in itself be passed over like
+any other fortuitous incident, but at the
+crisis of Lady Bell’s history, John Kemble
+and Mrs. Siddons played Romeo and Juliet,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>before Captain Fane and Lady Bell, and the
+players had much to answer for.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A great deal which did come to pass
+might never have been. Human nature
+partially roused might have struggled in
+vain with its swaddling-bands, and sunk
+back into hopeless helplessness, unable to
+compass, within the course of a few days,
+its deliverance by one bold stroke. The
+opportunity once lost might never have
+returned. But in the very striking of the
+clock <i>Romeo and Juliet</i> was played.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>What hearts must have been stirred to
+their depths by the grand acting of the
+grand old players! What moral revolutions
+must have been wrought out, what life and
+death actions compelled—transforming ordinary
+men and women into heroes and
+heroines! It would be curious if it were
+possible to make such a reckoning.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It may be said to the sceptical of such
+influences who have only sought for them
+in the theatre of to-day, what woman shrieks
+and swoons in the theatre now? what man,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>even, is seized with strong hysterics, as
+happened once, among the throng who
+panted, sweated, and quivered to leap on
+the stage, rush to the rescue, or be in at
+the death?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>We live in a hypercritical and cynical
+age, and are proud of the fact. We should
+never have been touched by Dr. Dodd’s
+enunciation of “Mesopotamia”—it is to be
+feared not even by George Whitfield’s
+breathing forth of “amen,” neither by the
+sham nor by the reality.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Besides, we are misled by visions of our
+ancestors taking snuff and looking on at
+executions, and think that they felt very
+little, and that in the wrong place. Whereas
+we are the very same men and women, except
+that we are triply bound by certain
+refinements and restraints, and are pleased
+to hug our bonds.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell had cried with the best, palpitated
+and quaked over Romeo and Juliet.
+She had never once felt disturbed by the
+remembrance, as a modern playgoer would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>have felt disturbed—nay, would have taken
+credit for the feeling, that she had been
+behind the scenes with this Juliet, had
+helped her to nurse her children, add up
+her bills, and eat her prosaic meals.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was not so carping and invidious.
+She was more womanly; she was
+inclined to go to the opposite extreme in
+her reception of the play and in the effect
+which it had upon her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“This Juliet was a sweet victim,” Miss
+Greathead had declared, wiping her eyes
+when all was over. “But one must confess
+she had little more than her deserts. How
+would it be with any girl in our days, who
+could be as disobedient and deceitful and
+monstrously rash as Mistress Juliet showed
+herself?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, Miss Greathead,” protested Lady
+Bell, forgetting everything in the eagerness
+of her argument, “I don’t go in for the
+disobeying and deceiving her parents—only
+they were so mad in their feud, that what
+could she ever hope for from their reason or
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>their duty? They drove her to the climax
+of her disobedience and deceit, and that
+after she had consented to be Romeo’s.
+Why, madam,” Lady Bell paused, clasped
+her hands expressively, and exclaimed irrestrainably,
+“I should have done the
+same.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“What! swallowed that horrid drug, and
+taken the doubtful consequences—the only
+thing certain that she should overwhelm
+her father and mother and whole kindred in
+a horrid waste of grief? Then, when she
+did wake up in the dreadful shadowy tomb,
+because the first glimmer of light proved to
+her that the dangerous stratagem had been
+in vain, and she had lost her lover—— My
+dear, many a woman has to lose her lover,”
+Miss Greathead broke off, and fanned herself,
+while a quiver passed over her features.
+“Think of this American war, and the
+French wars, and the Scotch rebellion, and
+all that they cost. But to count the world
+lost, and refuse to live any longer without
+the one man! It was selfish and cowardly,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>as well as blasphemous, for her to fall on
+his sword, and make an end of it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell shivered.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“There need not have been any use of
+violence,” she said, after a pause, speaking
+from the prompting of her heart—“unless,
+indeed, it was because the young Italian
+girl was too sorry for herself. A living
+death would soon have killed her; and if it
+had not, death in life would have been the
+greater tribute of the two.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Lady Bell,” said Captain Fane in her
+ear, taking her hand and holding it fast
+and tight, as they left the box and wended
+their slow way after Miss Greathead, whom
+a friend was conducting to a coffee-house
+for supper, “I have something to say to
+you, and you know it, while you have not
+the heart to deny me the liberty of saying
+it. I am sure of this much after to-night.
+Oh, the happiness of knowing that your
+heart is on my side! What are the heaviest
+obstacles after that gracious encouragement?
+But I must speak where we shall not be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>interrupted. Will you be my love, and
+will you meet me on the Mall, where I
+shall be walking by nine o’clock to-morrow
+morning, long before there will be any
+company abroad?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell hung her head and trembled,
+and would almost have drawn back, frightened
+at the result which she had helped
+to provoke.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You will not be true to yourself and
+to me if you refuse me such an interview,”
+he put it. “I shan’t detain you a moment
+against your will; do you think I should,
+or wilfully expose you or your good name?
+Ah, never; you know me better than think
+that. But although you have no parents
+to control you, and are even independent
+of guardians, you are so young, my darling,
+that it is such a miserable match for you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Hush, hush,” Lady Bell stopped him.
+“You don’t know how unworthy I am—what
+a vain, pleasure-loving, headstrong
+creature.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You shall have the best, the purest
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>pleasure that I can procure for you,”
+bragged Harry. “But all your friends will
+oppose a marriage between us, especially at
+this time, when I may get orders any day
+to sail for America. Even my friends, Sir
+Peter and Lady Sundon, will be scandalized—as
+if their house had not proved a snare
+to me, and as if they were answerable
+for their pirate of a kinsman snatching at
+the treasure which he came across.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I am my own mistress,” said Lady Bell,
+giving a welcome specimen of the wilfulness
+of which she had spoken. “No one has
+any right to say anything to me against
+my choice—as if I would listen!—unless
+my dear Mrs. Sundon. Oh, I hope she will
+not think that we have been close and sly.
+I have writ and told her that I thought
+one gentleman very different from the rest
+whom I met in town, and that I imagined
+she would like him. Only I made a mistake;
+for I fancied at first that he would
+be more to her taste than mine. But, sir,
+I do not grant that you have any title to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>hear what I write in my private correspondence
+with my friend.” She made a
+faint attempt at playfulness.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Don’t you?” questioned Harry, showing
+that, glum as he had sometimes been
+in Lady Bell’s company, his was not the
+faint heart which could not win a fair lady.
+“What presumption I have been guilty of!
+I leaped to the conclusion that there was
+to be no more secrets between us, and that
+you would write to me myself for my
+consolation in our parting.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>At that word of parting, Lady Bell came
+fluttering down from her proud little perch,
+and nestled to him in an instant.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Harry,” she said, “I shall meet you
+to-morrow if you bid me. But take care
+what you bid me to do, for I trust you
+entirely.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“God do so and more to me, if I fail
+you,” swore Harry Fane.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“And don’t mind any foolish pother
+people make. I shall not mind it much.
+Only I hope that they will not be very
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>rude and disagreeable on your account.
+Here is the coffee-house; and mind, we
+must behave ourselves, unless we would
+have our engagement talked of all over the
+town before it is fairly concluded.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>
+ <h2 id='ch19' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XIX.</span><br> <br>THE MEETING ON THE MALL.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>By nine o’clock next morning a young
+naval officer was pacing the Mall of
+St. James’s under the interlaced boughs of
+the still leafless trees. He formed a conspicuous
+figure among the porters, tradesmen’s
+boys, shopwomen, and message girls—all
+who were then to be seen on the old
+promenade, which had still its fashionable
+frequenters at stated hours later in the day.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But conspicuous or unconspicuous, there
+was no one whose observation was likely
+to signify to the gentleman, or to the lady
+who, taking an early walk, attended by
+her maid, might encounter him, and consent
+to his attendance for the rest of the way.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>The weather, which had been boasting
+that spring was come a fortnight before,
+had reversed its sentence—now that March
+was not only coursing in the blood and in
+the sap of the trees, but recorded in the
+calendar—and insisted that the season was
+no other than midwinter. A raw, surly east
+wind was blowing; a grey sky was overhead;
+the turf of the park looked pinched;
+the leaflets of the trees stood arrested—their
+green turned to sickly yellow. The
+little birds retained their songs in their
+breasts, and only chirped disconsolately in
+a croaking fashion down in their throats, as
+they hopped from bough to bough to keep
+themselves warm.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane, with his cocked hat pulled
+down to his eyebrows, looked grave and
+almost grim and hard-favoured as he paced
+the Mall.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane’s patience was not tried on
+the occasion. He had not half crossed the
+park when a little figure, guarded from the
+chill morning air and from prying eyes
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>by a furred mantle and a capuchin, came
+towards him.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The figure was followed by a faithful
+maid in her white cap and pattens, walking
+discreetly behind.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The lady advanced, woman fashion, as if
+she did not see the gentleman, but had been
+enticed out by the fineness of the disagreeable
+morning, and by the company on the
+deserted Mall. She looked over her shoulder
+to speak to her maid. She tacked, as she
+picked her steps from side to side of the
+Mall, like one of the ships in Harry Fane’s
+squadron when the wind was chopping
+afresh every minute. The figure, with its
+halting, wavering, but unmistakable progress
+in his direction, quickened the gentleman’s
+steps in accordance with his bounding pulses,
+and sent him straight as a launch to meet it.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane was deeply sensible of the
+boon granted to him; but even as he held
+Lady Bell’s hand in his own, his face continued
+grave and contracted with trouble
+and pain. The first words which he said
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>as he turned and walked by her side, giving,
+not offering his arm, were words of warning
+in breaking bad news.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“It is well that you have been as good
+as your word, dearest, well for your own
+tender heart as for my comfort in remembrance,
+since our first meeting is likely to
+be our last. Orders from the Admiralty
+were waiting my return last night. I did
+not know, but it was just possible that the
+<i>Thunderbomb</i> might be put in dock to lie
+high and dry for months. I had even
+entertained the thought—but that was before
+I saw you and lost my head with my heart—ah!
+sweet Bell, I’ll go bail you have much
+to account for—of seeking to get an appointment
+to another ship, lest I should be kept
+hanging about long on shore. Long! The
+time has passed like a summer day which is
+all but ended. The <i>Thunderbomb</i> is to hold
+itself in readiness to weigh anchor on or
+about the 15th, to sail with a detachment
+of troops for Boston.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell had heard him without interruption
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>till this. “Going away—away
+from me, Harry?” she cried, struck heavily
+by the blow, “to join the ranks of war, and
+dare the stormy seas while these words we
+have spoken are yet on our lips! No, no,
+it cannot be.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“My love, I would I could say no and
+comfort you. Guess, then, what it must be
+for me to leave you,” he appealed to her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Then, don’t leave me,” said Lady Bell
+desperately. “Oh, Harry Fane, I have
+been so lonely all my life, an orphan, a
+loveless wife—I could not help it; I could
+not love poor Mr. Trevor after he had forced
+me, a persecuted child, to marry him—till I
+found Sunny. You need not look disappointed.
+She has been the dearest, best of
+friends and sisters to me; but I am frighted
+I have misled her. I know I would leave
+her for my lover, my true husband. Will
+you leave me after this alone again? Cruel
+Harry! Lady Sundon was right. You are
+a hard, stubborn man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Alas! dear, how can I help it?—I,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>who would give my best chance of promotion—well-nigh
+my life, if—not the
+Admiralty, but the Powers above, would
+suffer me to remain with you only three
+months,” he protested passionately. “It
+may not be, Lady Bell—I cannot even pray
+for it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“And yet you only half approve of this
+American war,” she reminded him pertinaciously.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“That is true,” he owned; “and more
+than I are in the same, or a worse predicament.
+Lord Effingham has followed the
+example of Viscount Pitt, in requesting
+leave to retire from the service; and Captain
+Wilson, an Irishman, who obtained his
+commission by raising a hundred and thirty
+men off his own estate, and who has served
+with the greatest credit for sixteen years,
+has also laid down his sword.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Then why cannot you do the same?”
+she implored him.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Because I do not see it to be my duty,”
+he said firmly. “I don’t approve of every
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>tittle of the laws and their execution. For
+instance, a miserable lad of fifteen was
+hanged t’other day for some petty theft—it
+may have been no more than the filching
+of a sixpence, for which they tell me another
+wretched fellow swung at Tyburn;
+but that is not to say that I am not to
+maintain the laws which are just and good
+in the main. This is no time to pick holes
+in the services, but to build them up with
+our bodies and blood, and let reformation
+follow in due time. For anything else—even
+to be with you, it would be rank
+selfishness.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You are too strong and wise for me,”
+she complained a little bitterly, averting
+her head.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“You would not have me sacrifice honour
+and duty,” he pressed her in his turn, “what
+every true man is bound to maintain in the
+name of God and his fellows, whatever else
+he give up? Remember the line of the song
+you sang the last time I stood by the harpsichord
+in Cleveland Court:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>‘I could not love thee, dear, so well,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Loved I not honour more.’</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sailors, like soldiers, belong specially to
+their king and country. Would you wish
+your sailor to stain his blue jacket?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No, no, I would have you my best of
+men,” yielded Lady Bell, with a great sob;
+“but I doubt my heart is broke, for I cannot
+follow you into danger, and if—if——”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She failed in framing the conclusion, that
+the man she loved, and who had just told
+her his love, standing there in his flower of
+youth, health, and strength, might ere long
+fall on the deck, slippery with blood, never
+to rise again, or sink in the trough of an
+engulphing wave, and be washed far beyond
+the ken of friend or foe.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell broke into piteous tears. She
+had been, as she said, so lonely a young
+creature, constrained, in the measure, to be
+self-sufficing, till she had found a friend,
+and then a love.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He had taught her in the shortest space
+to be prouder of his love than of all else
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>belonging to her. She had been right willing
+to lay down for him her pride of birth
+and beauty and a belle’s worldly expectations.
+She had consented gladly to resign
+that belleship, to affront the great world,
+and, as an anti-climax after her triumphs, to
+make a poor love marriage.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But it was all in vain. No such voluntary
+offering was required of her. Her
+new-found love was snatched from her.
+Her life was emptied of its fulness at the
+fullest, just when she had begun to know
+how rich and rapturous life might be.
+“Would it have been a relief to you,”
+asked Captain Fane slowly, “though I
+would never have consented to your facing
+hardship (‘fore George, to think of my Lady
+Bell being exposed for me!)—if all this had
+occurred months earlier, and in the interval
+we had braved the cold displeasure, or the
+hot wrath, of friends, and were wed, man
+and wife, whom no man, nothing save death,
+could put asunder? Would it have made
+a difference if you could have gone out
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>with me, as some of the civil authorities,
+Mr. Eden and others—ay, some of the
+officers too, have carried out their wives?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, Harry, it would have been heaven
+compared to this!” Lady Bell assured him
+fervently.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“What!” he cried, half with tender
+wonder, half covetous to have the fond
+assurance repeated, “you would cross the
+seas, and rough it among rough sailors on
+board ship, and you so young and dainty.
+You would dwell among strangers, many
+of them hostile—some say with a good
+cause, but it is too late to do aught but
+fight its righteousness or unrighteousness
+now—and we sailors might be called on to
+help to take stores up the country, while
+we were dependent on the fidelity of our
+barbarous allies, the Indians. You were
+never in a foreign country. You never
+even tried living on board ship.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Never, never,” corroborated Lady Bell,
+so heartily, that there was something like
+cheerfulness in her tone. “But I should
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>be with you, and what would I mind
+besides? Do you think I am a coward,
+sir, or a peevish woman, fit for nothing but
+to miss my comforts, and make a moan?
+Don’t call the sailors rough, when you are
+a sailor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Then I am delivered from a very great
+temptation,” admitted Harry Fane honestly.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Don’t return thanks for it,” she forbade
+him quickly, “when it is my loss. Oh,
+Harry! I am yours—yours in our hearts;
+but I would I were yours so that no man
+could contradict it, anyhow or anywhere,”
+sighed Lady Bell, clinging to him with a
+creeping quailing foretaste of all the evils
+which might be wrought by distance, time,
+the remonstrances of friends, the misrepresentations
+of enemies.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>
+ <h2 id='ch20' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XX.</span><br> <br>TO TIE OR NOT TO TIE THE KNOT?</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Take care, Lady Bell!” exclaimed Harry,
+in rising agitation, “lest I’m only delivered
+from one temptation to be plunged
+into another.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Ah! temptations have no power for
+you,” proclaimed Lady Bell, with a mixture
+of pride and sorrow; “you are as firm
+as a rock, and as unyielding when you
+think you are in the right.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Don’t be too sure,” said Captain Fane,
+and she saw that he could be nervous with
+all his firmness. “I have let you say how
+you will want me, because it has been marrow
+to my bones and joy to my heart, Bell,
+when God knows I am anxious and sad
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>enough. But at least you do not resign me
+to the importunities of any rival, unless it
+be to the image of Britannia herself,” he
+suggested, with an effort at a jest and a
+smile, “flourishing, as our general figurehead,
+and to the death which she may bear
+in her hand. Think what I must feel to
+leave you, exposed to the cunning wiles of
+all the beaux and bucks and great matches
+who hunt women as men hunt game. These
+men play with women, and have no remorse—for
+not believing in a God in heaven,
+they do not believe in a man or woman on
+earth. They seek to buy women, and
+sooner than be foiled in the base barter
+which they propose, and be forced to confess
+their titles, rent-rolls, money-bags, even
+their pretty persons, disparaged, they will
+try to get the better of women by cruel
+arts. Such men betray women infernally.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He had worked himself up till he was
+pouring forth a torrent of rage, hatred, and
+apprehension. Cold as the morning was,
+he had to wipe his forehead.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>“Why, Harry!” remonstrated Lady Bell,
+startled, but not altogether offended by his
+jealous fury, not unwilling to be roused
+from the dejection into which she was sinking,
+and to be diverted for a moment from
+the gloomy prospect before her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There was no question of the gloom near
+at hand, and to last for many a day. Come
+what liked in the future, Harry Fane was
+going, would go to join his ship in the first
+place, and the war in the second. He might
+be subjected to work, weariness, and privation,
+but he had action and change for his
+portion. As for her, she must abide in her
+place forlorn, with the brightness passed
+from the sky, and the zest gone out of the
+feast. The “Lubin” of the song was indeed
+on the eve of departure, of long uncertain
+tarrying, perhaps till his love’s bloom
+was faded, her heart withered and dry.
+Lady Bell had asked once in very idleness
+and restlessness, that movement, passion,
+even, in its pangs, might ruffle the still
+waters of her heart. They were ruffled
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>with a vengeance, lashed into a piteous
+storm, to heave and swell for many a day,
+ere they settled down again in peace.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Knowing what was hanging over her,
+Lady Bell was fain to forget the knowledge
+for a moment, in the rousing consideration
+that Captain Fane, in spite of her frank
+confession, was half beside himself with
+jealousy.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She did not altogether disapprove of this
+state of matters, for was it not evidence of
+how well the self-controlled sailor loved her?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>She was a little frightened at the strength
+of his passion, nevertheless. Extravagantly
+as she herself had loved him, she did not
+know him fully and closely, after all. One
+of the charms of her love was its mystery.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Lady Bell thought Harry Fane too
+severe in his strictures, and certainly needing
+to be pulled up and taken to task.
+Aching as her heart was, she tried to make
+believe for a brief space that the ache was
+not there, and to do her part in enlightening
+her lover.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>She began to pout with her white face
+and her tearful eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Would I forget you in your absence,
+Harry? Could you ever believe that?
+What effect would all the wicked stratagems
+of the finest gentlemen have on me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“How can I tell?” he answered gloomily.
+“I found a whole hornet’s nest buzzing
+round you when I met you first, and again
+at the masquerade, and you did not seem
+able to put them down.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Why should I put them down? They
+are entitled to live as well as the rest of us,
+even though a busy fellow of a bee looks
+down upon them as drones or butterflies;
+indeed they are rather that than hornets.
+They have never done me harm, and they
+have squired and amused me many a day;
+you ought to be more generous to them, sir,
+and to learn to keep a civil tongue in your
+head.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“We have no time for quarrelling,” cried
+Harry, “you may teach me better manners
+one day, if we are spared and restored to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>each other, and you are still willing to undertake
+the office. But I could not profit
+by the best of lessons, and I submit that it
+would be taking me altogether at a disadvantage
+to begin when I am just about to
+bid you farewell.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Not yet! not yet!” besought Lady
+Bell, dislodged from her poor little temporary
+cranny of arch resistance and coquettish
+teasing, and stretched anew, like
+another Andromeda, on a sheer precipice,
+over a sea of misery, until she fell back into
+her lamentation. “If we had but understood
+each other faster, and been married
+within these few weeks—sailors and soldiers
+must woo and wed in haste—before these
+terrible sailing orders arrived! Then I
+could have sailed with you; I should not
+have been frighted, though we had encountered
+the enemy. I could have kept quiet
+below, with you on deck to run to when the
+guns ceased firing. I might have proved
+how little I cared for any other man by
+following you all over the world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>“You can prove it, dear,” declared Harry
+Fane, hoarse with eagerness, taking her at
+her word, giving the reins to his passion,
+and smothering and trampling down every
+doubt and scruple. “Let us be married
+before I go, and although I cannot take you
+with me, I may send for you to my station.
+Some one of my old messmates and friends
+will be glad to do as he would be done
+by, and bring you out to me in his ship.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was astounded; she had been
+utterly unprepared for this catching up of
+her speech, heartfelt though it was.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Harry Fane rushed on, overwhelming her
+with his special pleading.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“That and that alone would reassure my
+mind, which is on the rack for you, exposed
+on a pinnacle as you are. Don’t be vexed
+with me when I say it, but you are a beautiful
+woman of rank, very young, greatly
+admired, as you well may be, moving in
+gay worldly circles, which unsettle even a
+man’s head, and throw dust in his eyes.
+You have not a near relation whose right it
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>would be to control and guide you, only such
+thoughtless, irresponsible guardians as even
+my good cousin! Oh! my love, how shall
+I leave you thus? for God knows how
+long,” he groaned in anguish, “these six—twelve
+years. This horrid war has long
+been hanging over us. Our American
+brethren are brave and resolute as we are;
+the strife may last while mother country
+and colony hold out. How can I trust your
+constancy exposed to such a test, assailed as
+it will be when I am gone, and you a young
+woman, and therefore weak, without blame
+or shame to you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“I understand,” acknowledged Lady Bell
+piteously. “I am not angry with you for
+distrusting me—how can I be, when I
+remember how weak I was once before?
+How wrong as well as weak, I know by my
+love for you. I was unfair to myself and to
+another. Do I not shrink from looking you
+and every one in the face when I think of
+my marriage? Do I not blush for the
+name I bear, because of the reason for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>bearing it?—that I let myself be sold as a
+chattel or a slave, rather than die free—and
+I was not a loyal slave, Harry, never think
+it; I revolted and fled, like many another
+slave.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>He was hardly listening to her, he was so
+dead set on over-persuading her and himself
+that he might make her his, and that
+by doing so, he would save her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Then do not risk danger again, you are
+not so much older—only a tender girl of
+eighteen—widow though you are. I may
+not even be able to reach you with the poor
+stay of letters when all your friends will be
+against me. I cannot wonder and complain,
+but I must think of myself and my love,
+and of you and yours, for you love me, and
+me only, Lady Bell, your lips have sworn it
+now, over and over.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Ay, and I swear it again,” averred
+Lady Bell, with fond pride.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“No other man will ever be to you what
+I can be. I will say more, cross-grained
+sinner as I am, I honestly believe that I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>shall raise you, Bell, by your love, as you
+will raise me by mine. Are not true lovers
+made for helpmeets as well as mates?
+And, although I have no cause for boasting,
+less at this moment perhaps than at any
+other, still, do you not love me, darling,
+because you think me honest, though plain,
+earnest if harsh, a little wiser in my blundering,
+a little more bent on truth and
+righteousness in my faultiness, than the
+ruck of those heartless triflers and blasphemous
+renouncers of all obligations around
+you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Have I not called you the best of
+men?” boasted Lady Bell, with an immensity
+of faith which might have staggered
+him and opened his eyes. But he only shut
+them harder, while he modestly declined the
+innocent hyperbole.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, no, a prodigiously erring fellow,
+and nearly mad at this moment, I suspect.
+But we should walk through life hand in
+hand, love, and ask to rise to the best that
+nature and grace could make us. For that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>end we should seek to be reverent and
+dutiful, and to turn our backs on vanities,
+follies, and worse. It is not wrong to make
+this end so sure, that if we live it cannot
+be baulked, and that no one can ever more
+come between us to beguile us of our faith
+in God and each other.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“If I could only claim you as my wife,”
+he argued unweariedly, “I should have no
+fear to leave you thus solemnly bound to
+me—thus able by uttering one word to
+dismiss all suitors, or to consign them to
+the tender mercies of a man whom you
+could then call from the ends of the earth—too
+happy to come, as I came to you at the
+masquerade—to give you protection. My
+name alone, when you choose to take it, and
+replace by it the name which you tell me,
+hanging your head (I cannot bear to have
+my love hang her head), it is no pleasure
+or pride for you to wear, would protect
+you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Ah! Harry, shall I ever wear your dear
+name?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>“If you will, Lady Bell; and I venture
+to affirm that it will shelter you as the
+name of the husband of your own free
+choice. In the mean time I shall be doing
+my best to make my name honourable for
+you. But ah, Bell, grant me my reward
+now, during the few short hours which we
+are yet to spend together—while it is in
+your power to grant it, since it is doubtful
+whether I shall ever return to claim
+it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Come back quick, Harry, and you may
+blame me as you will, I shall be too happy
+to be blamed by you, and to do whatever
+you desire,” promised Lady Bell.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Heaven forgive my conceit, it was my
+very wonder and delight, which caused me
+to find fault or fret at every small mote in
+my sun. But I shall not contradict or plague
+you more, very likely you will soon have
+seen the last of a lumpish, captious fellow,
+whose greatest merit that I can see is, that
+he no sooner knew you than he cast his
+quips and cranks, as a misanthropic sailor,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>to the winds, and loved you with his whole
+heart and soul.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“Oh, heavens! seen the last, contradict—plague!
+Harry, while you profess to love
+me, how can you speak so unkind?”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>
+ <h2 id='ch21' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXI.</span><br> <br>ISLINGTON CHURCH EARLY ONE MARCH MORNING.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Harry Fane was convinced of all that
+he had said—to the extremity of the
+situation which appeared to justify a violent
+alternative as the only refuge from their
+trouble. Naturally he succeeded in persuading
+Lady Bell, while he was not even
+guilty of deliberately playing upon her
+feelings. He was tortured with having the
+cup snatched from his lips—with doubt
+and dread, and he groaned out his torture
+audibly, until Lady Bell was brought to
+enter but a faltering futile objection to his
+desperate project.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“How can we get married so soon, nobody
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>knowing, your cousin away, and not a
+preparation made?”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Nothing more easy, as the records of the
+generation showed, and as Lady Bell’s own
+recollection might have told her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Even when a public marriage would be
+attended with difficulties, a private marriage
+could be resorted to, and had been resorted
+to, more than once already by officers hastily
+bound for America. These private marriages
+were, according to convenience, announced
+shortly after the event, or allowed gradually
+to filter out in suspicious rumours, till the
+secret was no secret, by the time it was
+finally disclosed.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Certainly Lady Bab Yelverton, the only
+child of the Earl of Suffolk, whose runaway
+match had been much talked of this season,
+had brought private marriages somewhat
+into disgrace.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But then Lady Bab, by the way a mere
+chit of a girl, two years younger than
+Lady Bell, had defied parental authority in
+the most daring and glaring manner; Lady
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>Bab had gone off from her father and
+mother’s house with Lieutenant Gould, just
+returned from being wounded in America,
+to be worse wounded by Cupid or Plutus
+at home. Lord Suffolk had threatened his
+daughter with his curse, and the cutting
+her off with a shilling.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bab’s gross filial undutifulness was
+regarded as even more reprehensible than
+the Duchess of Leinster’s disregard for
+maternal obligations. The duchess, who was
+the widowed mother of seventeen children,
+as well as “the proudest, most expensive
+woman in town,” had thought fit to marry
+her eldest son’s tutor.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Lady Bell had no father to curse her,
+and cut her off with a shilling, and in place
+of seventeen chicks did not possess one
+whose interest could be affected by the
+acquisition of a stepfather. If Lady Bell
+chose to be very imprudent, she was still
+at liberty to please herself. There was only
+her friend, Mrs. Sundon, whom Lady Bell
+was bound to consult, and, fortunately or
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>unfortunately, Mrs. Sundon was too far
+away in the emergency to be consulted in
+time.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane was his own master, save
+when he was with his squadron. He had
+fewer surviving relatives than Lady Bell
+owned.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Why then should there be any privacy
+thought of in the matter?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Because, although there were no near
+relations, there were many friends, if there
+was no fortune on either side to be thrown
+away, there were sufficient prospects to be
+sacrificed, and penalties to be incurred.
+Lady Bell had been so much the rage,
+been believed to have the refusing of such
+excellent offers, that a host of influential
+people, if they knew the reckless step which
+she proposed to take, would rush in—all
+the faster, that it was no particular business
+of theirs—to try if they could not prevent
+the shocking disaster of an attractive young
+woman of rank committing an unequal love
+marriage.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>Even the Sundons, who had looked on
+and promoted the intimacy between the
+pair, would, as Captain Fane foresaw, take
+blame to themselves when it was too late
+to oppose the grand conclusion of the intimacy.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell for herself, and Captain Fane
+for her, had a natural dislike to the exclamations,
+the expostulations, and the nine
+days’ wonder which they must provoke.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell would have to sustain the
+scorn, to support much that was painful in
+her new position, all alone, as if she were
+still a widow, should she marry Captain
+Fane publicly, and should he join his ship
+immediately and sail on a long voyage with
+sea-fights in the distance.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>On the other hand, Lady Bell and Captain
+Fane might marry as many of their compeers
+married, secretly, keep their own counsel,
+and none be any the wiser, till the gentleman
+returned to make known the marriage
+and claim his wife.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>No doubt that was the line of argument
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>followed and found satisfactory long ago by
+men and women, honourable otherwise, who
+allowed themselves to become involved in
+the compromises, the concealments, the
+double dealings, and the acted lies of private
+marriages, for which the principals were
+not condemned by their contemporaries.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In justice alike to our progenitors and to
+ourselves, we crave leave to remember, that
+just as our grandfathers and grandmothers
+managed to combine in their portly and
+stately persons, along with a foreground of
+magnificence and elegance, a background of
+slipshodness and sluttishness, so, even where
+their virtues were admirable, still their
+manly morals were laxer, and their womanly
+manners less delicate, than the morals and
+manners of the present generation.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There was one obstacle to a private marriage
+in Lady Bell’s case, which nearly
+compelled the couple to brave public clamour
+and indignation. Lady Bell was a minor.
+Captain Fane, in despair at this difficulty,
+hurried like a madman, braving all imputations,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>to the most notorious gaming-houses
+in town where Squire Godwin’s whereabouts
+might be discovered.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The gallant Captain proposed, failing
+every other resource, to make a forlorn
+appeal to Lady Bell’s nearest relations.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The gentleman was luckier than he deserved,
+he stumbled on the very man he
+sought, who was in London unknown to
+Lady Bell, and unencountered by her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane and Squire Godwin had
+an interview, during which the former succeeded
+in coming to an arrangement with
+the latter, but by what representation and
+inducement, by what descent to lower depths
+on the part of the ruined gentleman, and
+by what ill-bestowal of a portion of Harry
+Fane’s last prize-money, never transpired.
+The transaction was not likely to be reported
+by Mr. Godwin, neither was it one on
+which Harry Fane would care to look
+back.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane, however, took the precaution
+of introducing Squire Godwin for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>a few moments to the Sundons’ house in
+Cleveland Court.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell met her uncle for the first time
+since her marriage to Squire Trevor. She
+could not help regarding Squire Godwin as
+a bird of evil omen. His appearance on the
+scene, like a malignant spectre at the critical
+juncture, was a shock to Lady Bell, and
+smote her, while it lasted, with blank confusion
+and consternation.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Mr. Godwin’s stay was short, since
+the master of the house was kept in the
+dark as to the origin of a visit which he
+did not relish, and for bringing about which
+he did not thank Captain Fane.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Sir Peter was ready to shake himself up
+and put a stop to the intrusion, while he
+prevented any attempt which it might imply
+of the resumption of authority by Squire
+Godwin over his niece, Lady Bell Trevor,
+Sir Peter’s honoured guest.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mr. Godwin did not wait to be dismissed,
+he took his leave, giving Lady Bell, in her
+agitation, a dim impression that while his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>air was as distinguished as ever, in the
+studied carelessness—of which the study
+was so perfect, that it became invisible—and
+his dress as irreproachable, every line
+in his handsome person was drawn more
+deeply and sharply. Crows’ toes and furrows
+had multiplied incalculably, till the
+wrinkles of premature old age were shrivelling
+and wizening his face. The once noble
+field was all covered over with cramped,
+contracted, ugly hand-writing.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell could not so much as rally
+breath and courage to inquire for her Aunt
+Die. She was so simple and ignorant, that
+she did not even guess what had brought
+her lover into strange contact and alliance
+with Squire Godwin, or how the latter came
+by the knowledge, the merest whisper of
+which was sufficient to cause her to leap
+from her chair, for Mr. Godwin contrived
+in his brief greetings to say one or two
+pertinent words aside to her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The Squire addressed Lady Bell Trevor
+with a little more consideration than he had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>been wont to bestow on Lady Bell Etheredge,
+but there remained the echo of the
+old contempt in the tone of his speech.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>“So you think to contract a second marriage,
+madam; well, matrimony is honourable,
+though I have not tried it on my own
+account. I am sorry that I cannot say
+much for the wisdom of the step in this
+instance, but I do not presume to advise,
+far less to interfere. It says much for the
+happiness of the last knot (eh! my Lady
+Bell?) that you are so keen to tie another.”</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The one difficulty overcome, the remainder
+of the scheme was even exceptionally practicable,
+and circumstances like cards played
+themselves, as it were, in Captain Fane’s
+and Lady Bell’s hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>A letter arrived from Lady Sundon to
+inform Sir Peter in particular and “all
+friends who were interested,” that her boy
+was in a fair way of recovery, but still
+called for not less than a month’s nursing
+from her and Lyddy.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In the delay, Sir Peter, who was miserable,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>left in town with only Nancy of all
+his family, and who had got all that he could
+expect from the opinion of the medical men,
+resolved to break up his establishment in
+London for the season, return to Sundon
+Green, and await his wife there.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Thus the best pretext was afforded gratis
+to Lady Bell for sincerely assuring Sir Peter,
+with grateful mention of his hospitality,
+that he need not have any hesitation on her
+account. Her visit had already extended
+beyond its proposed limits. Mrs. Sundon
+was anxious for Lady Bell’s return. Lady
+Bell herself was beginning to long to be out
+of the racket which had made a fine change,
+but which she did not affect for a continuance,
+and to be at home again and settled
+down quietly at Summerhill.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But first Lady Bell had to spend a few
+days at the village of Islington, with her
+old nurse at Lady Lucie Penruddock’s.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The nurse’s accommodation was so scanty,
+that Lady Bell could not take her maid.
+Lady Bell would come back to Cleveland
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>Court to fetch the servant, when Sir Peter
+kindly arranged to send his old coachman
+to be their escort to Lumley, before the
+Sundons themselves went into the country.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Nothing could be more proper and obliging.
+In the meantime, Captain Fane had
+taken leave of his friends in town, and
+started for Portsmouth, but he journeyed
+by a roundabout road, and halted on the
+way.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell did think that fate had been
+against her, when she was constrained to
+accomplish a second marriage, shorn like
+the first of all state and splendour. But
+there was no help for it.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>In the parish church of Islington, attended
+by her nurse, and given away by a friend of
+the nurse’s, with the clerk and the pew-opener
+to serve as additional witnesses, early
+one stormy March morning, Lady Bell was
+lawfully married to Harry Fane.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>
+ <h2 id='ch22' class='c006'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXII.</span><br> <br>BACK AT SUMMERHILL.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was like a dream to Lady Bell as she
+travelled back to Summerhill.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There passed in review before her, like
+the shifting scenes of a dream, her London
+season and its triumphs, the love which had
+taken her by storm in the middle of the
+world’s vanities, the declaration of love after
+the play, the announcement on the Mall of
+the arrival of Harry Fane’s sailing orders,
+the visit to Islington, the hasty private marriage,
+and at last the wrench with which
+the bridegroom had torn himself from his
+bride.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Could it all have happened to Lady Bell,
+and was she really a new creature, belonging
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>to another, and bearing another name—his
+precious name, if the truth were known?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Or had she only awakened from a dream?
+The dream might have passed with the
+bleakness and storms, which were over and
+gone, while in their place had come the
+March of daffodils and bluebells ready to
+welcome her back to Summerhill.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Ah! no, Lady Bell was a new creature.
+Her heart was at the sea. These land
+charms had become stale, flat, and unprofitable
+to her, since he was not there to
+share them. She would give them all
+willingly for a taste of the breeze, salt on
+her lips. Her eyes filled with tears, “idle
+tears,” at the sight of a flock of curlews
+hovering over a waste and recalling to her
+sea-gulls skimming the waves. Her whole
+being seemed dissolving in yearning and
+longing for her lover and husband. Existence
+would not be worth having till he was
+restored to her.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But, in the first place, how was Lady
+Bell to present herself to her dear Mrs.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>Sundon?—how account for the transformation
+in her to those penetrating eyes, and
+that wise, experienced heart, unless by confiding
+the truth to Mrs. Sundon? And, in
+that case, how was she to obtain forgiveness
+for the march which she had stolen
+on her friend?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Captain Fane had left Lady Bell free to
+take what friends she chose into the secret.
+It was on her account, rather than on his,
+that a secret had been made.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell had no thought but of telling
+the story to “Sunny” some time—long before
+Captain Fane’s return.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But there was no question that the telling
+would call for an effort on Lady Bell’s
+part, tell when she might. There would be
+more than a breach of confidence to receive
+forgiveness—more, even, than the assertion
+of Lady Bell’s independence—there would
+be her subjugation to the powerful influence
+of another, which had superseded Mrs. Sundon’s
+influence.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The deed was done, yet Lady Bell felt
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>more unequal than ever to the sensation
+that she would create; the remonstrances,
+useless though they must be, which she
+would raise, the reflections that might be
+cast on another, the offence that might be
+taken by a friend to whom she had not
+ceased to be warmly attached. In fact,
+instead of loving her neighbour less, because
+of the one great central human love,
+she seemed to grow specially tender to the
+wrongs and smarts of every human creature,
+all for one mortal man’s dear sake.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Withal, the bashfulness of the acknowledged
+bride was quadrupled in the unacknowledged
+bride. True, Lady Bell had
+been married before, but that marriage had
+been altogether different—such a miserable
+travesty and poor mockery, that Lady Bell
+actually cried over the remembrance of her
+old self, and the dead Squire, for what they
+had defrauded each other of, and been defrauded
+of, many a time, during the first
+weeks of her marriage to Harry Fane.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It felt so strange to see Summerhill again.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>There was the dainty, slightly fantastic
+women’s house and grounds exactly as she
+had left them, but surely with a failure in
+their qualities which she had not distinguished
+before.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The place presented the same want of
+shade and substance which Queen Elizabeth
+had specially requested might be made in
+her picture. And the traits of life at
+Summerhill had corresponded with Queen
+Elizabeth’s idea that she and her maids
+should eat in private of the lightest and
+most refined viands, while the ladies left
+all that was solid and strong to the grosser
+appetites and needs of the gentlemen.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Everything at Summerhill was fresh and
+feminine to a degree; but there was a suspicion
+of flimsiness and make-believe in the
+very delicacy and over-abundance of knick-knacks,
+where two young women had kept
+house together, and sworn unalterable first
+friendship, presuming to turn the course of
+nature, like these sister figures away among
+the Welsh mountains.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>To recognise Summerhill the same as
+she had left it, and yet to look on it with
+different eyes, knowing all the time that
+the difference lay in her own eyes, was a
+singular half-remorseful experience to Lady
+Bell. She was almost glad that Mrs. Sundon
+did not hear the carriage-wheels and run
+out to meet her. There was only Caro in
+her nurse’s arms at the door. It was a
+positive relief to see that Caro, quite in
+the course of nature, had grown by the
+addition of a few more months to her short
+lease of life, until there was some risk at
+her not knowing Caro, in addition to the
+apprehended risk of Caro’s not knowing
+Lady Bell. There was comfort in finding
+that anybody, even Caro, had undergone a
+change, because of the tremendous change
+in Lady Bell, of which she was tremblingly
+conscious. She should be thankful when
+the meeting with her friend was over.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell hurried, stumbling in her
+habit, into the bright little parlour—blindingly
+bright, and at the same time empty
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>it looked, though it had the fine presence
+of Mrs. Sundon advancing to its threshold.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>There were two little cries of “Bell,”
+“Sunny,” which had a rush of old familiar
+affection in their tones that meant kisses—perfectly
+hearty and sincere in their fondness,
+and a little laughter, with twinkled-away
+tears.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>These tears seemed natural enough when
+Lady Bell was weary after an exciting
+journey, and Mrs. Sundon might be wearier
+still with waiting, and with staying all
+alone, having had no cheerful young friend
+at hand to dissipate grievous memories.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>It seemed to Lady Bell as if a cloud of
+anticipated awkwardness and indefinable
+constraint and distress had burst and
+vanished, as such clouds will sometimes
+vanish at the moment of contact. She had
+found again her indulgent, magnanimous
+Mrs. Sundon, on whose favour and generosity
+Lady Bell could throw herself confidently—only
+she would spare both her
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>friend and herself in the first hours of their
+meeting.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>When Lady Bell had composed herself
+to scrutinize and draw conclusions, it struck
+her with quick pain that Sunny was looking
+ill.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Mrs. Sundon wore an exceedingly simple
+muslin dress, with the tight sleeves ending
+in frills at the wrist, and falling over the
+hands, the neckerchief being surmounted
+with the same wide plaited frills, out of
+which rose the fair pillar of the throat, like
+the neck of a white heifer out of a garland.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>But Lady Bell had never seen the grand
+womanly proportions brought nearer to the
+spareness of attenuation, while the face was
+almost wan in its colourlessness.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Clearly Mrs. Sundon had not been flourishing
+on keeping house alone; she had been
+wont to treat “nerves” and “vapours”—regarded
+as bodily complaints, with lofty
+derision and condemnation; yet her own
+nerves were unstrung, for she continued,
+though she did not allow it in words, to be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>agitated by Lady Bell’s arrival. There was
+a stir and quiver of Mrs. Sundon’s features
+as of a rock which had been disturbed and
+shaken, and could not at once regain its
+entire balance and firm quietude.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell could not account for the involuntary
+disturbance and the striving in
+vain to overcome it, in her friend’s expressive
+face, and in her cold passive hand,
+which shook sensibly in Lady Bell’s feverish
+clasp, unless it were that Mrs. Sundon’s
+health had become impaired.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>If that were so, there must be laid to
+Lady Bell’s charge, among other acts of
+wilfulness and indiscretion, an ungracious
+oversight—the friend who had been so good
+to Lady Bell had pined in her absence, and
+had been left to pine.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Or was it simply the disturbance in Lady
+Bell’s own flushed face, the thrilling of her
+own pulses, which her morbid fancy and
+guilty conscience transferred to her poor
+abused friend?</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>No; here was an absent-minded, distrait
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>woman, who had to assume an interest which
+she did not feel, in narratives that ought to
+have been, from her old familiarity with the
+scene, and her sisterly regard for the heroine,
+stimulating and engrossing in their effect
+upon the listener.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell was conscious of this while she
+sat chattering incessantly of all her different
+adventures, at the auctions and the routs,
+and was not once pulled up and brought to
+book by such searching cross-examination
+as the judge, jury, and counsel for the prosecution
+combined in the old Sunny, would
+have known well how to conduct.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Even when Lady Bell forced her tripping
+tongue to speak Captain Fane’s name, while
+her eyes fell convicted, until their lashes
+rested on her cheeks dyed with burning
+blushes, she might have spared herself the
+trepidation and terror of instant discovery.
+Sunny’s mind was wool-gathering, and she
+did not recall her scattered faculties to make
+a single observation.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Lady Bell would have begun to have a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>revulsion of feeling, and, from being chilled,
+would have been mortified had she not been
+alarmed.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>As the day wore on, however, Lady Bell
+talked and talked her friend out of her
+stupor, and procured a measure of response
+in home news. These were but vapid concerns
+now to Lady Bell, but she was not
+going to betray her conviction of their
+vapidness.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Caro had cut ever so many teeth. The
+stubble chickens were ready for killing.
+The Spanish jasmine had survived the
+winter. The mayor and the good people of
+Lumley and Nutfield were all well, and,—oh
+yes, Master Charles had got his colours,
+and was going up to town to practise drill
+with the awkward squad in the reserve of
+his regiment, before he joined the main body
+somewhere in the colonies—Mrs. Sundon
+had forgotten exactly where. No, she could
+not say that she was vastly sorry for Miss
+Kingscote, as the young fellow was fulfilling
+his calling, and going where duty and the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>prospect of promotion, whether it were by
+life or death, called him.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The last words, in answer to Lady Bell’s
+sympathetic inquiry, were spoken so shortly
+as to remind Lady Bell that there was a
+worse end than that of death in Mrs. Sundon’s
+experience.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>END OF VOL II.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><span class='small'>PRINTED BY VIRTUE AND CO., CITY ROAD, LONDON.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+<h2>FOOTNOTE</h2>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='fA'>
+<p class='c008'><span class='label'><a href='#rA'>1</a>.&#160;&#160;</span>This is a double anachronism, Mrs. Siddons did not play
+in town again till later, and did not play Juliet till later still.</p>
+</div>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+
+<div class='tnotes'>
+
+<h2>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</h2>
+<div class='ttext'>
+
+<p class='c008'>Perceived typos have been silently corrected.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.</p>
+
+<p class='c008'>The footnote has been relocated to the end of the text.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78326 ***</div>
+ </body>
+ <!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57i (with regex) on 2026-03-26 22:23:22 GMT -->
+</html>
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