The three weeks’ recess was
full of grave anxiety; and the Squire had many fears
they were to be the last weeks of peace and home before
civil war called him to fulfil the promise he had
made to his working-men. The Birmingham Political
Union declared that if there was any further delay
after Easter, two hundred thousand men would go forth
from their shops and forges, and encamp in the London
squares, till they knew the reason why the Reform
Bill was not passed. The Scots Greys, who were
quartered at Birmingham, had been employed the previous
Sabbath in grinding their swords; and it was asserted
that the Duke of Wellington stood pledged to the Government
to quiet the country in ten days. These facts
sufficiently indicated to the Squire the temper of
the people; and he set himself, as far as he could,
to take all the sweetness out of his home life possible.
The memory of it might have to comfort him for many
days.
With his daughter always by his side,
he rode up and down the lands he loved; unconsciously
giving directions that might be serviceable if he
had to go to a stormier field than the House of Commons.
To Mrs. Atheling he hardly suggested the possibility;
for if he did, she always answered cheerfully, “Nonsense,
John! The Bill will pass; and if it does
not pass, Englishmen have more sense than they had
in the days of Cromwell. They aren’t going
to kill one another for an Act of Parliament.”
But to Kate, as they rode and walked,
he could worry and grumble comfortably. She was
always ready to sympathise with his fears, and to
encourage and suggest any possible hope of peace and
better days. To see her bright face answering
his every thought filled the father’s heart
with a joy that was complete.
“Bless thy dear soul!”
he would frequently say to her. “God’s
best gift to a man is a daughter like thee. Sons
are well enough to carry on the name and the land,
and bring honour to the family; but the man God loves
isn’t left without a daughter to sweeten his
days and keep his heart fresh and tender. Kitty!
Kitty, how I do love thee!” And Kitty knew how
to answer such true and noble affection; for,-
“Down the gulf of his
condoled necessities,
She cast her best: she
flung herself.”
Oh, sweet domestic love! Surely
it is the spiritual world, the abiding kingdom
of heaven, not far from any one of us.
With a heavy heart the Squire went
back to London. Mrs. Atheling took his gloom
for a good sign. “Your father is always
what the Scotch call ‘fay’ before trouble,”
she said to Kate. “The day your sister Edith
died his ways made me angry. You would have thought
some great joy had come to Atheling. He said
he was sure Edith was going to live; and I knew she
was going to die. I am glad he has gone to London
sighing and shaking his head; it is a deal better
sign than if he had gone laughing and shaking his
bridle. He will meet Edgar in London, and Edgar
won’t let him look forward to trouble.”
But the Squire found Edgar was not
in London when he arrived there; and Piers was as
silent and as gloomy a companion as a worrying man
could desire. He came to dine with his friend,
and he listened to all his doleful prognostications;
but his interest was forced and languid. For he
also had lost the convictions that made the contest
possible to him, and there was at the bottom of all
his reasoning that little doubt as to the justice
of his cause which likewise infected the Squire’s
more pronounced opinions.
They were sitting one evening, after
dinner, almost silent, the Squire smoking, Piers apparently
reading the Times, when Edgar, with an almost
boyish demonstrativeness, entered the room. He
drew a chair between them, and sat down, saying, “I
have just returned from the great Newhall Hill meeting.
Father, think of two hundred thousand men gathered
there for one united purpose.”
“I hope I have a few better
thoughts to keep me busy, Edgar.”
Piers looked up with interest.
“It must have been an exciting hour or two,”
he said.
“I hardly knew whether I was
in the body or out of the body,” answered Edgar.
“For a little while, at least, I was not conscious
of the flesh. I had a taste of how the work of
eternity may be done with the soul.”
“The Times admits the
two hundred thousand,” said Piers, “and
also that it was a remarkably orderly meeting.
Who opened it? Was it Mr. O’Connell?”
“The meeting was opened by the
singing of a hymn. There were nine stanzas in
it, and every one was sung with the most enthusiastic
feeling. I remember only the opening lines:
“’Over mountain,
over plain,
Echoing
wide from sea to sea,
Peals-and shall
not peal in vain-
The
trumpet call of Liberty!’
But can you imagine what a majestic
volume of sonorous melody came from those two hundred
thousand hearts? It was heard for miles.
The majority of the singers believed, with all their
souls, that it was heard in heaven.”
“Well, I never before heard
of singing a hymn to open a political meeting,”
said the Squire. “It does not seem natural.”
“But, Father, you are used to
political meetings opened by prayer, for the House
has its chaplain. The Rev. Hugh Hutton prayed
after the hymn.”
“I never heard of the Rev. Hugh Hutton.”
“I dare say not, Father.
He is an Unitarian minister; for it is only the Unitarians
that will pray with, or pray for, Radicals. I
should not quite say that. There is a Roman Catholic
priest who is a member of the Birmingham Union,-a
splendid-looking man, a fine orator, and full of the
noblest public spirit; but a Birmingham meeting would
never think of asking him to pray. They would
not believe a Catholic could get a blessing down from
heaven if he tried."
“What of O’Connell?”
said the Squire; “he interests me most.”
“O’Connell outdid himself.
About four hundred women in one body had been allowed
to stand near the platform, and the moment his eyes
rested on them his quick instinct decided the opening
sentence of his address. He bowed to them, and
said, ’Surrounded as I am by the fair, the good,
and the gentle.’ They cheered at these words;
and then the men behind them cheered, and the crowds
behind cheered, because the crowds before cheered;
and then he launched into such an arraignment of the
English Government as human words never before compassed.
And in it he was guilty of one delightful bull.
It was in this way. Among other grave charges,
he referred to the fact that births had decreased
in Dublin five thousand every year for the last four
years, and then passionately exclaimed, ’I charge
the British Government with the murder of those twenty
thousand infants!’ and really, for a few moments,
the audience did not see the delightful absurdity.”
“Twenty thousand infants who
were never born,” laughed the Squire. “That
is worthy of O’Connell. It is worthy of
Ireland.”
“And did he really manage that
immense crowd?” asked Piers. “I see
the Times gives him this credit.”
“Sir Bulwer Lytton in a few
lines has painted him for all generations at this
meeting. Listen!” and Edgar took out of
his pocket a slip of paper, and read them:-
“’Once to my sight
the giant thus was given-
Walled by wide air, and roofed
by boundless heaven;
Methought, no clarion could
have sent its sound
Even to the centre of the
hosts around.
And as I thought, rose the
sonorous swell
As from some church tower
swings the silver bell.
Aloft and clear, from airy
tide to tide,
It glided easy as a bird may
glide,
To the last verge of that
vast audience.’”
“After O’Connell, who
would try to manage such a crowd?” asked Piers.
“They behaved splendidly whoever
spoke; and finally Mr. Salt stood forward, and, uncovering
his head, bid them all uncover, and raise their right
hands to heaven while they repeated, after him, the
comprehensive obligation which had been given in printed
form to all of them:
“’With unbroken
faith, through every peril, through every
privation, we here devote
ourselves, and our children, to our
country’s cause!’
And while those two hundred thousand
men were taking that oath together, I find the House
of Lords was going into Committee on the Reform Bill.
This time it must pass.”
“It will not pass,”
said Piers, “without the most extreme measures
are resorted to.”
“You mean that the King will
be compelled to create as many new peers as will carry
it through the House of Lords.”
“Yes; but can the King be ’compelled’?”
“He will find that out.”
“Now, Edgar, that is as far as I am going to
listen.”
Then Piers put down his paper, and
said, “The House was in session, and would the
Squire go down to it?” And the Squire said, “No.
If there is to be any ‘compelling’ of
His Majesty, I will keep out of it.”
The stress of this compulsion came
the very next day. Lord Lyndhurst began the usual
policy by proposing important clauses of the Bill
should be postponed; and the Cabinet at once decided
to ask the King to create more peers. Sydney
Smith had written to Lady Grey that he was, “For
forty, in order to make sure;” but the number
was not stipulated. The King promptly refused.
The Reform Ministry tendered their resignation, and
it was accepted. For a whole week the nation
was left to its fears, its anger, and its despair.
It was, however, almost insanely active. In Manchester
twenty-five thousand people, in the space of three
hours, signed a petition to the King, telling him in
it that “the whole North of England was in a
state of indignation impossible to be described.”
Meanwhile, the Duke of Wellington had failed to form
a Cabinet, and Peel had refused; and the King was
compelled to recall Lord Grey to power, and to consent
to any measures necessary to pass the Reform Bill.
It was evident, even to royalty, that it had at length
become-The Bill or The Crown. For His
Majesty was now aware that he was denounced from one
end of England to the other; and several painful experiences
convinced him that his carriage could not appear in
London without being surrounded by an indignant, hooting,
shrieking crowd.
Yet it was in a very wrathful mood
he sent for Grey and Brougham, so wrathful that he
kept them standing during the whole audience, although
this attitude was contrary to usage. “My
people are gone mad,” he said, “and must
be humoured like mad people. They will have Reform.
Very well. I give you my royal assent to create
a sufficient number of new peers to carry Reform through
the House of Lords. It is an insult to my loyal
and sensible peers; but they will excuse the circumstances
that force me to such a measure.” His manner
was extremely sullen, and became indignantly so when
Lord Brougham requested this permission to be given
them in the King’s handwriting. The request
was, however, necessary, and was reluctantly granted.
With the King’s concession,
the great struggle virtually ended. For the creation
of new peers was not necessary. A private message
from the King to the House of Lords effected what
the long-continued protestations and entreaties of
the whole nation had failed to effect. Led by
the Duke of Wellington, those Lords who were determined
not to vote for Reform left the House until
the Bill was passed; and thus a decided majority for
its success was assured. They felt it to be better
for their order to retire to their castles, than to
suffer the “swamping of the House of Lords”
by a force of new peers pledged to Reform, and sure
to control all their future deliberations. Consequently,
in about two weeks, the famous Bill was triumphantly
carried by a majority of eighty-four; and three days
afterwards it received the royal assent.
The long struggle was over; and the
tremendous strain on the feelings of the nation relieved
itself by an universal and unbounded rejoicing.
All night long, the church bells answered one another
from city to city, and from hamlet to hamlet.
It was said to be impossible to escape, from one end
of the country to the other, the tin-tan-tabula
of their jubilation. Illuminations must have
made the Island at night a blaze of light; the people
went about singing and congratulating each other; and
for a few hours the tie of humanity was a tie of brotherhood,
even when men and women were perfect strangers.
The Duke of Richmoor retired with
the majority of his peers, and shut himself up in
his Yorkshire Castle, a victim to the most absurd but
yet the most sincere despondency. The Squire applied
for the Chiltern Hundreds, and returned to Atheling
as soon as possible. Edgar remained in the House
until its dissolution in August. As for Piers,
he had taken the turn of affairs with a composure
that had produced decided differences between the
Duke and himself; and he lingered in London until
he heard of the Squire’s departure for the North.
Then he sought him with a definite purpose. “Squire,”
he said, “may I go back to Exham in your company?”
“I’ll be glad if you do, Piers,”
was the answer.
The young man laid his hand on the
Squire’s hand, and looked at him steadily and
entreatingly. “Squire, I am going away from
England. Let me see Kate before I go.”
“You are asking me to break my word, Piers.”
“The law of kindness may sometimes
be greater than the law of truth; the greatest of
these is charity-is love. I love her
so! I love her so that I am only half alive without
her. I do entreat you to have pity on me-on
us both! She loves me!” and Piers pleaded
until the Squire’s eyes were full of tears.
He could not resist words so hot from a true and loving
heart; and he finally said,-
“It may be that my word, and
my pride in my word, are of less consequence than
the trouble of two suffering human hearts; Piers,
right or wrong, you may see Kitty. I am not sure
I am doing right, but I will risk the uncertainty-this
time.”
However, if the Squire had any qualms
of conscience on the subject, they were driven away
by Kitty’s gratitude and delight. He arrived
at Atheling about the noon hour, and Kitty was the
first to see and to welcome him. She had been
gathering cherries, and was coming through the garden
with her basket full of the crimson drupes, when
he entered the gates. She set the fruit on the
ground, and ran to meet him, and took him proudly
in to her mother, and fussed over his many little comforts
to his heart’s content and delight.
Nothing was said about Piers until
after dinner, which was hurried forward at the Squire’s
request; but afterwards, when he sat at the open casement
smoking, he called Kate to him. He took her on
his knee and whispered, “Kate, there is somebody
coming this afternoon.”
“Yes,” she said, “we
have sent word to Annie. She will be here.”
“I was not thinking of Annie.
I was thinking of thee, my little maid. There
is somebody coming to see thee.”
“You can’t mean Piers? Oh, Father,
do you mean Piers?”
“I do.”
Then she laid her cheek against his
cheek. She kissed him over and over, answering
in low, soft speech, “Oh, my good Father!
Oh, my dear Father! Oh, Father, how I love you!”
“Well, Kitty,” he answered,
“thou dost not throw thy love away. I love
thee, God knows it. Now run upstairs and don thy
prettiest frock.”
“White or blue, Father?”
“Well, Kitty,” he answered,
with a thoughtful smile, “I should say white,
and a red rose or two to match thy cheeks, and a few
forget-me-nots to match thy eyes. Bless my heart,
Kitty! thou art lovely enough any way. Stay with
me.”
“No, Father, I will go away
and come again still lovelier;” and she sped
like a bird upstairs. “It may be all wrong,”
muttered the Squire; “but if it is, then I must
say, wrong can make itself very agreeable.”
“Piers is coming!”
That was the song in Kitty’s heart, the refrain
to which her hands and feet kept busy until she stood
before her glass lovelier than words can paint, her
exquisite form robed in white lawn, her cheeks as
fresh and blooming as the roses at her girdle, her
eyes as blue as the forget-me-nots in her hair, her
whole heart in every movement, glance, and word, thrilling
with the delight of expectation, and shining with
the joy of loving.
So Piers found her in the garden watching
for his approach. And on this happy afternoon,
Nature was in a charming mood; she had made the garden
a Paradise for their meeting. The birds sang softly
in the green trees above them; the flowers perfumed
the warm air they breathed; and an atmosphere of inexpressible
serenity encompassed them. After such long absence,
oh, how heavenly was this interview without fear, or
secrecy, or self-reproach, or suspicion of wrong-doing!
How heavenly was the long, sweet afternoon, and the
social pleasure of the tea hour, and the soft starlight
night under the drooping gold of the laburnums and
the fragrant clusters of the damask roses! Even
parting under such circumstances was robbed of its
sting; it was only “such sweet sorrow.”
It was glorified by its trust and hope, and was without
the shadow of tears.
Kitty came to her father when it was
over; and her eyes were shining, and there was a little
sob in her heart; but she said only happy words.
With her arms around his neck she whispered, “Thank
you, dear!” And he answered, “Thou art
gladly welcome! Right or wrong, thou art welcome,
Kitty. My dear little Kitty! He will come
back; I know he will. A girl that puts honour
and duty before love, crowns them with love in the
end-always so, dear. That is sure.
When will he be back?”
“When the Duke and Duchess want
him more than they want their own way. He says
disputing will do harm, and not good; but that if a
difference is left to the heart, the heart in the
long run will get the best of the argument. I
am sure he is right. Father, he is going to send
you and mother long letters, and so I shall know where
he is; and with the joy of this meeting to keep in
my memory, I am not going to fret and be miserable.”
“That is right. That is
the way to take a disappointment. Good things
are worth waiting for, eh, Kitty?”
“And we shall have so much to
interest us, Father. There is Edgar’s marriage
coming; and it would not do to have two weddings in
one year, would it? Father, you like Piers?
I am sure you do.”
“I would not have let him put
a foot in Atheling to-day if I had not liked him.
He has been very good company for me in London, very
good company indeed-thoughtful and respectful.
Yes, I like Piers.”
“Because-now listen,
Father-because, much as I love Piers, I
would not be his wife for all England if you and mother
did not like him.”
“Bless my heart, Kitty! Is not that saying
a deal?”
“No. It would be no more
than justice. If you should force on me a husband
whom I despised or disliked, would I not think it very
wicked and cruel? Then would it not be just as
wicked and cruel if I should force on you a son-in-law
whom you despised and disliked? There is not
one law of kindness for the parents, and another law,
less kind, for the daughter, is there?”
“Thou art quite right, Kitty.
The laws of the Home and the Family are equal
laws. God bless thee for a good child.”
And, oh, how sweet were Kitty’s
slumbers that night! It is out of earth’s
delightful things we form our visions of the world
to come; and Kate understood, because of her own pure,
true, hopeful love, how “God is love,”
and how, therefore, He would deny her any good thing.
So the summer went its way, peacefully
and happily. In the last days of August, Edgar
was married with great pomp and splendour; and afterwards
the gates of Gisbourne stood wide-open, and there were
many signs and promises of wonderful improvements
and innovations. For the young man was a born
leader and organiser. He loved to control, and
soon devised means to secure what was so necessary
to his happiness. The Curzons had made their
money in manufactures; and Annie approved of such
use of money. So very soon, at the upper end of
Gisbourne, a great mill, and a fine new village of
cottages for its hands, arose as if by magic,-a
village that was to example and carry out all the ideas
of Reform.
“Edgar is making a lot of trouble
ready for himself,” said the Squire to his wife;
“but Edgar can’t live without a fight on
hand. I’ll warrant that he gets more fighting
than he bargains for; a few hundreds of those Lancashire
and Yorkshire operatives aren’t as easy to manage
as he seems to think. They have ‘reformed’
their lawgivers; and they are bound to ‘reform’
their masters next.”
The Squire had said little about this
new influx into his peaceful neighbourhood, but it
had grieved his very soul; and his wife wondered at
his reticence, and one day she told him so.
“Well, Maude,” he answered,
“when Edgar was one of my household, I had the
right to say this and that about his words and ways;
but Edgar is now Squire, and married man, and Member
of Parliament. He is a Reformer too, and bound
to carry out his ideas; and, I dare say, his wife keeps
the bit in his mouth hard enough, without me pulling
on it too. I have taken notice, Maude, that these
sweet little women are often very masterful.”
“I am sure his grandfather Belward
would never have suffered that mill chimney in his
sight for any money.”
“Perhaps he could not have helped it.”
“Thou knowest different.
My father always made everything go as he wanted it.
The Belwards know no other road but their own way.”
“I should think thou needest
not tell me that. I have been learning it for
a quarter of a century.”
“Now, John! When I changed
my name, I changed my way also. I have been Atheling,
and gone Atheling, ever since I was thy wife.”
“Pretty nearly, Maude.
But Edgar’s little, innocent-faced, gentle wife
will lead Edgar, Curzon way. She has done it already.
Fancy an Atheling, land lords for a thousand years,
turning into a loom lord. Maude, it hurts me;
but then, it is a bit of Reform, I suppose.”
For all this interior dissatisfaction,
the Squire and his son were good friends and neighbours;
and, in a kind of a way, the father approved the changes
made around him. They came gradually, and he did
not have to swallow the whole dose at once. Besides
he had his daughter. And Kitty never put him
behind Gisbourne or any other cause. They were
constant companions. They threw their lines in
the trout streams together through the summer mornings;
and in the winter, she was with him in every hunting
field. About the house, he heard her light foot
and her happy voice; and in the evenings, she read
the papers to him, and helped forward his grumble
at Peel, or his anger at Cobbett.
At not very long intervals there came
letters to the Squire, or to Mrs. Atheling, which
made sunshine in the house for many days afterwards,-letters
from Boston, New York, Baltimore, Washington, New
Orleans, and finally from an outlandish place called
Texas. Here Piers seemed to have found the life
he had been unconsciously longing for. “The
people were fighting,” he said, “for Liberty:
a handful of Americans against the whole power of
Mexico; fighting, not in words-he was weary
to death of words-but with the clang of
iron on iron, and the clash of steel against steel,
as in the old world battles.” And he filled
pages with glowing encomiums of General Houston, and
Colonels Bowie and Crockett, and their wonderful courage
and deeds. “And, oh, what a Paradise the
land was! What sunshine! What moonshine!
What wealth of every good thing necessary for human
existence!”
When such letters as these arrived,
it was holiday at Atheling; it was holiday in every
heart there; and they were read, and re-read, and
discussed, till their far-away, wild life became part
and parcel of the calm, homely existence of this insular
English manor. So the years went by; and Kate
grew to a glorious womanhood. All the promise
of her beauteous girlhood was amply redeemed.
She was the pride of her county, and the joy of all
the hearts that knew her. And if she had hours
of restlessness and doubt, or any fears for Piers’s
safety, no one was made unhappy by them. She
never spoke of Piers but with hope, and with the certainty
of his return. She declared she was “glad
that he should have the experience of such a glorious
warfare, one in which he had made noble friends, and
done valiant deeds. Her lover was growing in
such a struggle to his full stature.” And,
undoubtedly, the habit of talking hopefully induces
the habit of feeling hopefully; so there were no signs
of the love-lorn maiden about Kate Atheling, nor any
fears for her final happiness in Atheling Manor House.
The fears and doubts and wretchedness
were all in the gloomy castle of Richmoor, where the
Duke and Duchess lived only to bewail the dangers
of the country, and their deprivation of their son’s
society,-a calamity they attributed also
to Reform. Else, why would Piers have gone straight
to a wild land where outlawed men were also fighting
against legitimate authority.
One evening, nearly four years after
Piers had left England, the Duke was crossing Belward
Bents, and he met the Squire and his daughter, leisurely
riding together in the summer gloaming. He touched
his hat, and said, “Good-evening, Miss Atheling!
Good-evening, Squire!” And the Squire responded
cheerfully, and Kate gave him a ravishing smile,-for
he was the father of Piers, accordingly she already
loved him. There was nothing further said, but
each was affected by the interview; the Duke especially
so. When he reached his castle he found the Duchess
walking softly up and down the dim drawing-room, and
she was weeping. His heart ached for her.
He said tenderly, as he took her hand,-
“Is it Piers, Julia?”
“I am dying to see him,”
she answered, “to hear him speak, to have him
come in and out as he used to do. I want to feel
the clasp of his hand, and the touch of his lips.
Oh, Richard, Richard, bring back my boy! A word
from you will do it.”
“My dear Julia, I have just
met Squire Atheling and his daughter. The girl
has grown to a wonder of beauty. She is marvellous;
I simply never saw such a face. Last week I watched
her in the hunting field at Ashley. She rode
like an Amazon; she was peerless among all the beauties
there. I begin to understand that Piers, having
loved her, could love no other woman; and I think
we might learn to love her for Piers’s sake.
What do you say, my dear? The house is terribly
lonely. I miss my son in business matters continually;
and if he does not marry, the children of my brother
Henry come after him. He is in constant danger;
he is in a land where he must go armed day and night.
Think of our son living in a place like that!
And his last letters have had such a tone of home-sickness
in them. Shall I see Squire Atheling, and ask
him for his daughter?”
“Let him come and see you.”
“He will never do it.”
“Then see him, Richard.
Anything, anything, that will give Piers back to me.”
The next day the Duke was at Atheling,
and what took place at that interview, the Squire
never quite divulged, even to his wife. “It
was very humbling to him,” he said, “and
I am not the man to brag about it.” To
Kate nothing whatever was said. “Who knows
just where Piers is? and who can tell what might happen
before he learns of the change that has taken place?”
asked the Squire. “Why should we toss Kitty’s
mind hither and thither till Piers is here to quiet
it?”
In fact the Squire’s idea was
far truer than he had any conception of. Piers
was actually in London when the Duke’s fatherly
letter sent to recall his self-banished son left for
Texas. Indeed he was on his way to Richmoor the
very day that the letter was written. He came
to it one afternoon just before dinner. The Duchess
was dressed and waiting for the Duke and the daily
ceremony of the hour. She stood at the window,
looking into the dripping garden, but really seeing
nothing, not even the plashed roses before her eyes.
Her thoughts were in a country far off; and she was
wondering how long it would take Piers to answer their
loving letter. The door opened softly. She
supposed it was the Duke, and said, fretfully, “This
climate is detestable, Duke. It has rained for
a week.”
“Mother! Mother! Oh, my dear Mother!”
Then, with a cry of joy that rung
through the lofty room, she turned, and was immediately
folded in the arms she longed for. And before
her rapture had time to express itself, the Duke came
in and shared it. They were not an emotional
family; and high culture had relegated any expression
of feeling far below the tide of their daily life;
but, for once, Nature had her way with the usually
undemonstrative woman. She wept, and laughed,
and talked, and exclaimed as no one had ever seen
or heard her since the days of her early girlhood.
In the happy privacy of the evening
hours, Piers told them over again the wild, exciting
story he had been living; and the Duke acknowledged
that to have aided in any measure such an heroic struggle
was an event to dignify life. “But now,
Piers,” he said, “now you will remain in
your own home. If you still wish to marry Miss
Atheling, your mother and I are pleased that you should
do so. We will express this pleasure as soon
as you desire us. I wrote you to this effect;
but you cannot have received my letter, since it only
left for Texas yesterday.”
“I am glad I have not received
it,” answered Piers. “I came home
at the call of my mother. It is true. I
was sitting one night thinking of many things.
It was long past midnight, but the moonlight was so
clear I had been reading by it, and the mocking birds
were thrilling the air, far and wide, with melody.
But far clearer, far sweeter, far more pervading,
I heard my mother’s voice calling me. And
I immediately answered, ‘I am coming, Mother!’
Here I am. What must I do, now and forever, to
please you?”
And she said, “Stay near me.
Marry Miss Atheling, if you wish. I will love
her for your sake.”
And Piers kissed his answer on her
lips, and then put his hand in his father’s
hand. It was but a simple act; but it promised
all that fatherly affection could ask, and all that
filial affection could give.
Who that has seen in England a sunny
morning after a long rain-storm can ever forget the
ineffable sweetness and freshness of the woods and
hills and fields? The world seemed as if it was
just made over when Piers left Richmoor for Atheling.
A thousand vagrant perfumes from the spruce and fir
woods, from the moors and fields and gardens, wandered
over the earth. A gentle west wind was blowing;
the sense of rejoicing was in every living thing.
The Squire and Kate had been early abroad. They
had had a long gallop, and were coming slowly through
Atheling lane, talking of Piers, though both of them
believed Piers to be thousands of miles away.
They were just at the spot where he had passed them
that miserable night when his cry of “Kate!
Kate! Kate!” had nearly broken the
girl’s heart for awhile. She never saw the
place without remembering her lover, and sending her
thoughts to find him out, wherever he might be.
And thus, at this place, there was always a little
silence; and the Squire comprehended, and respected
the circumstance.
This morning the silence, usually
so perfect, was broken by the sound of an approaching
horseman; but neither the Squire nor Kate turned.
They simply withdrew to their side of the road, and
went leisurely forward.
“Kate! Kate! Kate!”
The same words, but how different!
They were full of impatient joy, of triumphant hope
and love. Both father and daughter faced round
in the moment, and then they saw Piers coming like
the wind towards them. It was a miracle.
It was such a moment as could not come twice in any
life-time. It was such a meeting as defies the
power of words; because our diviner part has emotions
that we have not yet got the speech and language to
declare.
Imagine the joy in Atheling Manor
House that night! The Squire had to go apart
for a little while; and tears of delight were in the
good mother’s eyes as she took out her beautiful
Derby china for the welcoming feast. As for Kate
and Piers, they were at last in earth’s Paradise.
Their lives had suddenly come to flower; and there
was no canker in any of the blossoms. They had
waited their full hour. And if the angels in
heaven rejoice over a sinner repenting, how much more
must they rejoice in our happiness, and sympathise
in our innocent love! Surely the guardian angels
of Piers and Kate were satisfied. Their dear
charges had shown a noble restraint, and were now reaping
the joy of it. Do angels talk in heaven of what
happens among the sons and daughters of men whom they
are sent to minister unto, to guide, and to guard?
If so, they must have talked of these lovers, so dutiful
and so true, and rejoiced in the joy of their renewed
espousals.
Their marriage quickly followed.
In a few weeks Piers had made Exham Hall a palace
of splendour and beauty for his bride, and Kate’s
wedding garments were all ready. And far and
wide there was a most unusual interest taken in these
lovers, so that all the great county families desired
and sought for invitations to the marriage ceremony,
and the little church of Atheling could hardly contain
the guests. Even to this day it is remembered
that nearly one hundred gentlemen of the North Riding
escorted the bride from Atheling to Exham.
But at last every social duty had
been fulfilled, and they sat alone in the gloaming,
with their great love, and their great joy. And
as they spoke of the days when this love first began,
Kate reminded Piers of the swing in the laurel walk,
and her girlish rhyming,-
“It may so happen, it
may so fall,
That I shall be Lady of Exham
Hall.”
And Piers drew her beautiful head
closer to his own, and added,-
“Weary wishing, and
waiting past,
Lady of Exham Hall
at last!”