Early the next morning the Squire
was in the parlour standing at the open lattices,
and whistling to a robin on a branch of the cherry-tree
above them. The robin sang, and the Squire whistled,
scattering crumbs as he did so, and it was this kindly
picture which met Kate’s eyes as she opened
the door of the room. To watch and to listen was
natural; and she stood on the threshold doing so until
the Squire came to the last bars of his melody.
Then in a gay voice she took it up, and sang to his
whistling:
“York! York! for
my money!"
“Hello, Kate!” he cried
in his delight as he turned to her; and as joyously
as the birds sing “Spring!” she called,
“Good-morning, Father!”
“God bless thee, Kate!”
and for a moment he let his eyes rest on the vision
of her girlish beauty. For there was none like
Kate Atheling in all the North-Riding; from her sandalled
feet to her shining hair, she was the fairest, sweetest
maid that ever Yorkshire bred,-an adorable
creature of exquisite form and superb colouring; merry
as a bird, with a fine spirit and a most affectionate
heart. As he gazed at her she came close to him,
put her fingers on his big shoulders, and stood on
tiptoes to give him his morning greeting. He
lifted her bodily and kissed her several times; and
she said with a laugh,-
“One kiss for my duty, and one
for my pleasure, and all the rest are stolen.
Put me down, Father; and what will you do for me to-day?”
“What wouldst thou like me to do?”
“May I ride with you?”
“Nay; I can’t take thee
with me to-day. I am going to Squire Ayton’s,
and from there to Rudby’s, and very like as far
as Ormesby and Pickering.”
“Then you will not be home to dinner?”
“Not I. I shall get my dinner somewhere.”
“Can I come and meet you?”
“Thou hadst better not.”
At this moment Mrs. Atheling entered,
and Kate, turning to her, said, “Mother, I am
not to ride with father to-day. He is going a
visiting,-going to get his dinner ‘somewhere,’
and he thinks I had better not come to meet him.”
“Father is right. Father
knows he is not to trust to when he goes ‘somewhere’
for his dinner. For he will call for Ayton, and
they two will get Rudby, and then it will be Ormesby,
and so by dinner-time they may draw rein at Pickering,
and Pickering will start ‘Corn Laws’ and
‘Protection for the Farmers,’ and midnight
will be talked away. Is not that about right,
John?” but she asked the question with a smile
that proved Maude Atheling was once more the wise
and loving “guardian angel” of her husband.
“Thou knowest all about it, Maude.”
“I know enough, any way, to
advise thee to stand by thy own heart, and to say
and do what it counsels thee. Pickering is made
after the meanest model of a Yorkshireman; and when
a Yorkshireman turns out to be a failure, he is a
ruin, and no mistake.”
“What by that? I can’t
quarrel with Pickering. You may kick up a dust
with your neighbour, but, sooner or later, it will
settle on your own door-stone. It is years and
years since I learned that lesson. And as for
Pickering’s ideas, many a good squire holds the
same.”
“I don’t doubt it.
Whatever the Ass says, the asses believe; thou wilt
find that out when thou goest to Parliament.”
“Are you really going to Parliament, Father?”
“Wouldst thou like me to go, Kate?”
“Yes, if I may go to London with you.”
“It isn’t likely I would
go without thee. Did thy mother tell thee, Lord
Exham has come back from Italy to sit for Gaythorne.”
“A long way to come for so little,”
she answered. “Why, Father! there are only
a few hovels in Gaythorne, and all the men worth anything
have gone to Leeds to comb wool. Poor fellows!”
“Why dost thou say ’poor fellows’?”
“Because, when a man has been
brought up to do his day’s work in fields and
barns, among grass, and wheat, and cattle, it is a
big change to sit twelve hours a day in ‘the
Devil’s Hole,’ for Martha Coates told me
that is what the wool-combing room is called.”
“There is no sense in such a name.”
“It is a very good name, I think,
for rooms so hot and crowded, and so sickening with
the smells of soap, and wool, and oil, and steam.
Martha says her lads have turned Radicals and Methodists,
and she doesn’t wonder. Neither do I.”
“Ay; it is as natural as can
be. To do his duty by the land used to be religion
enough for any Yorkshire lad; but when they go to big
towns, they get into bad company; and there couldn’t
be worse company than those weaving chaps of all kinds.
No wonder the Government doesn’t want to hear
from the big towns; they are full of a ranting crowd
of Non-contents.”
“Well, Father, if I was in their
place, and the question of Content, or Non-content,
was put to me, I should very quickly say, ‘Non-content.’”
“Nobody is going to put the
question to thee. Thy mother has not managed
to bring up a daughter any better than herself, I see
that. Kate, my little maid, Lord Exham will be
here to-day; see that thou art civil enough to him;
it may make a lot of difference both to thee and me.”
“John Atheling!” cried
his wife, “what a blunderer thou art! Why
can’t thou let women and their ways alone?”
When they rose from the breakfast-table,
the Squire called for his horse, and his favourite
dogs, and bustled about until he had Mrs. Atheling
and half-a-dozen men and women waiting upon him.
But there was much good temper in all his authoritative
brusqueness, and he went away in a little flurry of
eclat, his wife and daughter, his men and maid-servants,
all watching him down the avenue with a loving and
proud allegiance. He was so physically the expression
of his place and surroundings that not a soul in Atheling
ever doubted that the Squire was in the exact place
to which God Almighty had called him.
On this morning he was dressed in
a riding suit of dark blue broadcloth trimmed with
gilt buttons; his vest was white, his cravat white,
and his hat of black beaver. As he galloped away,
he swept it from his brow to his stirrups in an adieu
to his wife and daughter; but the men and women-servants
took their share in the courtesy, and it was easy to
feel the cheer of admiration, only expressed by their
broad smiles and sympathetic glances. As soon
as “the Master” was out of sight, they
turned away, each to his or her daily task; and Kate
looked at her mother inquiringly. There was an
instant understanding, and very few words were needed.
“Thou hadst better lose no time.
He might get away early.”
“He will not leave until he
sees us, Mother. That is what he came to Atheling
for,-I’ll warrant it,-and
if I don’t go to the village, he will come here;
I know he will.”
“Kitty, I can’t, I can’t
trust to that-and you promised.”
“I am going to keep my promise,
Mother. Have my mare at the door in ten minutes,
and I will be ready.”
Mrs. Atheling had attended to this
necessity before breakfast, and the mare was immediately
waiting. She was a creature worthy of the Beauty
she had to carry,-dark chestnut in colour,
with wide haunches and deep oblique shoulders.
Her mane was fine, her ears tremulous, her nostrils
thin as parchment, her eyes human in intelligence,
her skin like tissue-paper, showing the warm blood
pressing against it, and the veins standing clearly
out. Waiting fretted her, and she pawed the garden
gravel impatiently with her round, dark, shining hoofs
until Kate appeared. Then she uttered a low whinny
of pleasure, and bent her head for the girl to lay
her face against it.
A light leap from the groom’s
hand put Kate in her seat, and a lovelier woman never
gathered reins in hand. In those days also, the
riding dress of women did not disfigure them; it was
a garb that gave to Kate Atheling’s loveliness
grace and dignity, an air of discreet freedom, and
of sweet supremacy,-a close-fitting habit
of fine cloth, falling far below her feet in graceful
folds, and a low beaver hat, crowned with drooping
plumes, shadowing her smiling face. One word to
the mare was sufficient; she needed no whip, and Kate
would not have insulted her friend and companion by
carrying one.
For a little while they went swiftly,
then Kate bent and patted the mare’s neck, and
she instantly obeyed the signal for a slower pace.
For Kate had seen before them a young man sitting
on a stile, and teaching two dogs to leap over the
whip which he held in his hand. She felt sure
this was the person she had to interview; yet she passed
him without a look, and went forward towards the village.
After riding half-a-mile she took herself to task
for her cowardice, and turned back again. The
stranger was still sitting on the stile, and as she
approached him she heard a hearty laugh, evoked doubtless
by some antic or mistake of the dogs he was playing
with. She now walked her mare toward him, and
the young man instantly rose, uncovered his head, and,
pushing the dogs away, bowed-not ungracefully-to
her. Yet he did not immediately speak, and Kate
felt that she must open the conversation.
“Do you-do you want
to find any place?” she asked. “I
think you are a stranger-and I am at home
here.”
He smiled brightly and answered, “Thank
you. I want to find Atheling Manor-house.
I have a message for Mrs. and Miss Atheling.”
“I am Miss Atheling; and I am
now returning to the house. I suppose that you
are the Wrestler and Orator of last night. My
father told us about the contest. Mother wishes
to talk with you-we have heard that you
know my brother Edgar-we are very unhappy
about Edgar. Do you know anything of him?
Will you come and see mother-now-she
is very anxious?”
These questions and remarks fell stumblingly
from her lips, one after the other; she was excited
and trembling at her own temerity, and yet all the
time conscious she was Squire Atheling’s daughter
and in her father’s Manor, having a kind of
right to assume a little authority and ask questions.
The stranger listened gravely till Kate ceased speaking,
then he said,-
“My name is Cecil North.
I know Edgar Atheling very well. I am ready to
do now whatever you wish.”
“Then, Mr. North, I wish you
would come with me. It is but a short walk to
the house; Candace will take little steps, and I will
show you the way.”
“Thank you.”
He said only these two words, but
they broke up his face as if there was music in them;
for he smiled with his lips and his eyes at the same
time. Kate glanced down at him as he walked by
her side. She saw that he was tall, finely formed,
and had a handsome face; that he was well dressed,
and had an air of distinction; and yet she divined
in some occult way that this animal young beauty was
only the husk of his being. After a few moments’
silence, he began that commonplace chat about horses
which in Yorkshire takes the place that weather does
in other localities. He praised the beauty and
docility of Candace, and Kate hoped she was walking
slowly enough; and then Cecil North admired her feet
and her step, and asked if she ever stumbled or tripped.
This question brought forth an eager denial of any
such fault, and an opinion that the rider was to blame
when such an accident happened.
“In a general way, you are right,
Miss Atheling,” answered North. “If
the rider sits just and upright, then any sudden jerk
forward throws the shoulders backward; and in that
case, if a horse thinks proper to fall, he
will be the sufferer. He may cut his forehead,
or hurt his nose, or bark his knees, but he will be
a buffer to his rider.”
“Candace has never tripped with
me. I have had her four years. I will never
part with her.”
“That is right. Don’t
keep a horse you dislike, and don’t part with
one that suits you.”
“Do you love horses?”
“Yes. A few years ago I
was all for horses. I could sit anything.
I could jump everything, right and left. I had
a horse then that was made to measure, and foaled
to order. No one borrowed him twice. He had
a way of coming home without a rider. But I have
something better than horses to care for now; and
all I need is a good roadster.”
“My father likes an Irish cob for that purpose.”
“Nothing better. I have
one in the village that beats all. He can trot
fourteen miles an hour, and take a six-foot wall at
the end of it.”
“Do you ride much?”
“I ride all over England.”
She looked curiously at him, but asked
no questions; and North continued the conversation
by pointing out to her the several points which made
Candace so valuable. “In the first place,”
he said, “her colour is good,-that
dark chestnut shaded with black usually denotes speed.
She has all the signs of a thoroughbred; do you know
them?”
“No; but I should like to.”
“They are three things long,-long
ears, long neck, and long forelegs. Three things
short,-short dock, short back, and short
hindlegs. Three things broad,-broad
forehead, broad chest, and broad croup. Three
things clean,-clean skin, clean eyes, and
clean hoofs. Then the nostrils must be quite
black. If there had been any white in the nostrils
of Candace, I would have ranked her only ‘middling.’”
Kate laughed pleasantly, and said
over several times the long, short, broad, and clean
points that went to the making of a thoroughbred;
and, by the time the lesson was learned, they were
at the door of the Manor-house. Mrs. Atheling
stood just within it, and when Kate said,-
“Mother, this is Edgar’s
friend, Mr. Cecil North,” she gave him her hand
and answered:
“Come in! Come in!
Indeed I am fain and glad to see you!” and all
the way through the great hall, and into her parlour,
she was beaming and uttering welcomes. “First
of all, you must have a bit of eating and drinking,”
she said, “and then you will tell me about my
boy.”
“Thank you. I will take
a glass of ale, if it will please you.”
“It will please me beyond everything.
You shall have it from the Squire’s special
tap: ale smooth as oil, sweet as milk, clear as
amber, fourteen years old next twenty-ninth of March.
And so you know my son Edgar?”
“I know him, and I love him
with all my heart. He is as good as gold, and
as true as steel.”
“To be sure, he is. I’m
his mother, and I ought to know him; and that is what
I say. How did you come together?”
“We met first at Cambridge;
but we were not in the same college or set, so that
I only knew him slightly there. Fortune had appointed
a nobler introduction for us. I was in Glasgow
nearly a year ago, and I wandered down to the Green,
and was soon aware that the crowd was streaming to
one point. Edgar was talking to this crowd.
Have you ever heard him talk to a crowd?”
The mother shook her head, and Kate
said softly: “We have never heard him.”
She had taken off her hat, and her face was full of
interest and happy expectation.
“Well,” continued North,
“he was standing on a platform of rough boards
that had been hastily put together, and I remembered
instantly his tall, strong, graceful figure, and his
bright, purposeful face. He was tanned to the
temples, his cheeks were flushed, the wind was in
his hair, the sunlight in his eyes; and, with fiery
precipitance of assailing words, he was explaining
to men mad with hunger and injustice the source of
all their woes and the remedy to be applied. I
became a man as I listened to him. That hour
I put self behind me and vowed my life, and all I
have, to the cause of Reform; because he showed me
plainly that Parliamentary Reform included the righting
of every social wrong and cruelty.”
“Do you really think so?” asked Kate.
“Indeed, I am sure of it.
A Parliament that represented the great middle and
working classes of England would quickly do away with
both black and white slavery,-would repeal
those infamous Corn Laws which have starved the working-man
to make rich the farmer; would open our ports freely
to the trade of all the world; would educate the poor;
give much shorter hours of labour, and wages that
a man could live on. Can I ever forget that hour?
Never! I was born again in it!”
“That was the kind of talk that
he angered his father with,” said Mrs. Atheling,
between tears and smiles. “You see it was
all against the land and the land-owners; and Edgar
would not be quiet, no matter what I said to him.”
“He could not be quiet.
He had no right to be quiet. Why! he sent
every man and woman home that night with hope in their
hearts and a purpose in their wretched lives.
Oh, if you could have seen those sad, cold faces light
and brighten as they listened to him.”
“Was there no one there that didn’t think
as he did?”
“I heard only one dissenting
voice. It came from a Minister. He called
out, ’Lads and lasses, take no heed of what this
fellow says to you. He is nothing but a Dreamer.’
Instantly Edgar took up the word. ’A Dreamer!’
he cried joyfully. ’So be it! What
says the old Hebrew prophet? Look to your Bible,
sir. Let him that hath a dream tell it.
Dreamers have been the creators, the leaders, the saviours
of the world. And we will go on dreaming until
our dream comes true!’ The crowd answered him
with a sob and a shout-and, oh, I wish you
had been there!”
Kate uttered involuntarily a low,
sympathetic cry that she could not control, and Mrs.
Atheling wept and smiled; and when North added, in
a lower voice full of feeling, “There is no
one like Edgar, and I love him as Jonathan loved David!”
she went straight to the speaker, took both his hands
in hers, and kissed him.
“Thou art the same as a son
to me,” she said, “and thou mayst count
on my love as long as ever thou livest.”
And in this cry from her heart she forgot her company
pronoun, and fell naturally into the familiar and
affectionate “thou.”
Fortunately at this point of intense
emotion a servant entered with a flagon of the famous
ale, and some bread and cheese; and the little interruption
enabled all to bring themselves to a normal state of
feeling. Then the mother thought of Edgar’s
clothing, and asked North if he could take it to him.
North smiled. “He is a little of a dandy
already,” he answered. “I saw him
last week at Lady Durham’s, and he was the best
dressed man in her saloon.”
“Now then!” said Mrs.
Atheling, “thou art joking a bit. Whatever
would Edgar be doing at Lady Durham’s?”
“He had every right there, as
he is one of Lord Durham’s confidential secretaries.”
“Art thou telling me some romance?”
“I am telling you the simple truth.”
“Then thou must tell me how such a thing came
about.”
“Very naturally. I told
Lord Grey and his son-in-law, Lord Durham, about Edgar-and
I persuaded Edgar to come and speak to the spur and
saddle-makers at Ripon Cross; and the two lords heard
him with delight, and took him, there and then, to
Studley Royal, where they were staying; and it was
in those glorious gardens, and among the ruins of
Fountains Abbey, they planned together the Reform Campaign
for the next Parliament.”
“The Squire thinks little of Lord Grey,”
said Mrs. Atheling.
“That is not to be wondered
at,” answered North. “Lord Grey is
the head and heart of Reform. When he was Mr.
Charles Grey, and the pupil of Fox, he presented to
Parliament the famous Prayer, from the Society of
Friends, for Reform. That was thirty-seven years
ago, but he has never since lost sight of his object.
By the side of such leaders as Burke, and Fox, and
Sheridan, his lofty eloquence has charmed the House
until the morning sun shone on its ancient tapestries.
He and his son-in-law, Lord Durham, have the confidence
of every honest man in England. And he is brave
as he is true. More than once he has had the courage
to tell the King to his face what it was his duty
to do.”
“And what of Lord Durham?” asked Kate.
“He is a masterful man,-a
bolder Radical than most Radicals. All over the
country he is known as Radical Jack. He has a
strong, resolute will, but during the last half-year
he has leaned in all executive matters upon ‘Mr.
Atheling.’ Indeed, there was enthusiastic
talk last week at Lady Durham’s of sending ‘Mr.
Atheling’ to the next Parliament.”
“My word! But that would
never do!” exclaimed Mr. Atheling’s mother.
“His father is going there for the landed interest;
and if Edgar goes for the people, there will be trouble
between them. They will get to talking back at
each other, and the Squire will pontify and lay down
the law, even if the King and the Law-makers are all
present. He will indeed!”
“It would be an argument worth
hearing, for Edgar would neither lose his temper nor
his cause. Oh, I tell you there will be great
doings in London next winter! The Duke of Wellington
and Mr. Peel will have to go out; and Earl Grey will
surely form a new Government.”
“The Squire says Earl Grey and
Reform will bring us into civil war.”
“On the contrary, only Reform
can prevent civil war. Hitherto, the question
has been, ‘What will the Lords do?’ Now
it is, ’What must be done with the Lords?’
For once, all England is in dead earnest; and the
cry everywhere is, ’The Bill, the whole Bill,
and nothing but The Bill!’ And if we win, as
win we must, we shall remember how Edgar Atheling
has championed the cause. George the Fourth is
on his death-bed,” he added in a lower voice.
“He will leave his kingdom in a worse plight
than any king before him. I, who have been through
the land, may declare so much.”
“The poor are very poor indeed,”
said Mrs. Atheling. “Kate and I do what
we can, but the most is little.”
“The whole story of the poor
is-slow starvation. The best silk weavers
in England are not able to make more than eight or
nine shillings a week. Thousands of men in the
large towns are working for two-pence half-penny a
day; and thousands have no work at all.”
“What do they do?” whispered Kate.
“They die. But I did not
come here to talk on these subjects-only
when the heart is full, the mouth must speak.
I have brought a letter and a remembrance from Edgar,”
and he took from his pocket a letter and two gold
rings, and gave the letter and one ring to Mrs. Atheling,
and the other ring to Kate. “He bid me
tell you,” said North, “that some day
he will set the gold round with diamonds; but now every
penny goes for Reform.”
“And you tell Edgar, sir, that
his mother is prouder of the gold thread than of diamonds.
Tell him, she holds her Reform ring next to her wedding
ring,”-and with the words Mrs. Atheling
drew off her “guard” of rubies, and put
the slender thread of gold her son had sent her next
her wedding ring. At the same moment Kate slipped
upon her “heart finger” the golden token.
Her face shone, her voice was like music: “Tell
Edgar, Mr. North,” she said, “that my love
for him is like this ring: I do not know its
beginning; but I do know it can have no end.”
Then North rose to go, and would not
be detained; and the women walked with him to the
very gates, and there they said “good-bye.”
And all the way through the garden Mrs. Atheling was
sending tender messages to her boy, though at the
last she urged North to warn him against saying anything
“beyond bearing” to his father, if they
should meet on the battle-ground of the House of Commons.
“It is so easy to quarrel on politics,”
she said with all the pathos of reminiscent disputes.
“It has always been an easy
quarrel, I think,” answered North. “Don’t
you remember when Joseph wanted to pick a quarrel with
his brethren, he pretended to think they were a special
commission sent to Egypt to spy out the nakedness
of the land?”
“To be sure! And that is
a long time ago. Good-bye! and God bless thee!
I shall never forget thy visit!”
“And we wish ‘The Cause’ success!”
added Kate.
“Thank you. Success will
come. They who care and dare can
do anything.” With these words he passed
through the gates, and Mrs. Atheling and Kate went
slowly back to the house, both of them turning the
new ring on their fingers. It was dinner-time,
but little dinner was eaten. Edgar’s letter
was to read; Mr. North to speculate about; and if
either of the women remembered Lord Exham’s expected
call, no remark was made about it.
Yet Kate was neither forgetful of
the visit, nor indifferent to it. A sweet trouble
of heart, half-fear and half-hope, flushed her cheeks
and sent a tender light into her star-like eyes.
In the very depths of her being there existed a feeling
she did not understand, and did not investigate.
Was it Memory? Was it Hope? Was it Love?
She asked none of these questions. But she dressed
like a girl in a dream; and just as she was sliding
the silver buckle on her belt, a sudden trick of memory
brought back to her the rhyme of her childhood.
And though she blushed to the remembrance, and would
not for anything repeat the words, her heart sang
softly to itself,-
“It may so happen, it
may so fall,
That I shall be Lady of Exham
Hall.”