A house there is, and that’s enough,
From whence one fatal morning issues
A brace of warriors, not in buff,
But rustling in their silks and tissues.
The heroines undertook the task;
Thro’ lanes unknown, o’er stiles they
ventured,
Rapped at the door, nor stayed to ask,
But bounce into the parlour entered.
Gray’s
Long Story.
‘No carmine? Nor scarlet lake in powder?’
‘Could procure some, my Lord.’
’Thank you, the actinia would
not live. I must take what I can find. A
lump of gamboge ’
‘If you stay much longer, he
will not retain his senses,’ muttered James
Frost, who was leaning backwards against the counter,
where the bewildered bookseller of the little coast-town
of Bickleypool was bustling, in the vain endeavour
to understand and fulfil the demands of that perplexing
customer, Lord Fitzjocelyn.
’Some drawing-paper. This
is hardly absorbent enough. If you have any
block sketch-books? ’
‘Could procure some, my Lord.’
James looked at his watch, while the
man dived into his innermost recesses. ‘The
tide!’ he said.
‘Never mind, we shall only stick in the mud.’
’How could you expect to find
anything here? A half-crown paint-box is their
wildest dream.’
’Keep quiet, Jem, go and look
out some of those library books, like a wise man.’
‘A wise man would be at a loss
here,’ said James, casting his eye along the
battered purple backs of the circulating-library books.
’Wisdom won’t condescend!
Ah! thank you, this will do nicely. Those colours yes;
and the Seaside Book. I’ll choose one or
two. What is most popular here?’
James began to whistle; but Louis,
taking up a volume, became engrossed beyond the power
of hints, and hardly stepped aside to make way for
some ladies who entered the shop. A peremptory
touch of the arm at length roused him, and holding
up the book to the shopman, he put it into his pocket,
seized his ash-stick, put his arm into his cousin’s,
and hastened into the street.
‘Did you ever see ’ began Jem.
’Most striking. I did
not know you had met with her. What an idea the
false self conjuring up phantoms ’
‘What are you talking of? Did you not
see her?’
‘Elizabeth Barrett. Was she there?’
‘Is that her name? Do you know her?’
‘I had heard of her, but never ’
‘How? where? Who is she?’
‘I only saw her name in the title-page.’
‘What’s all this? You did not see
her?’
‘Who? Did not some ladies come into the
shop?’
‘Some ladies! Is it possible? Why,
I touched you to make you look.’
‘I thought it was your frenzy about the tide.
What now? ’
James made a gesture of despair.
’The loveliest creature I ever saw. You
may see her yet, as she comes out. Come back!’
‘Don’t be so absurd,’
said Fitzjocelyn, laughing, and, with instinctive
dislike of staring, resisting his cousin’s effort
to wheel him round. ‘What, you will?’
withdrawing his arm. ’I shall put off without
you, if you don’t take care.’
And, laughing, he watched Jem hurry
up the sloping street and turn the corner, then turned
to pursue his own way, his steps much less lame and
his looks far more healthful than they had been a month
before. He reached the quay narrow,
slippery, and fishy, but not without beauty, as the
green water lapped against the hewn stones, and rocked
the little boats moored in the wide bay, sheltered
by a richly-wooded promontory. ’Jem in
a fit of romance! Well, whose fault will it be
if we miss the tide? I’ll sit in the boat,
and read that poem again. Oh! here he
comes, out of breath. Well, Jem, did the heroine
drop glove or handkerchief? Or, on a second
view, was she minus an eye?’
‘You were,’ said James, hurrying breathlessly
to unmoor the boat.
‘Let me row,’ said Louis;
’your breath and senses are both lost in the
fair vision.’
‘It is of no use to talk to you ’
’I shall ask no questions till
we are out of the harbour, or you will be running
foul of one of those colliers a tribute
with which the Fair Unknown may dispense.’
The numerous black colliers
and lighters showed that precautions were needful
till they had pushed out far enough to make the little
fishy town look graceful and romantic; and the tide
was ebbing so fast, that Louis deemed it prudent to
spend his strength on rowing rather than on talking.
James first broke silence by exclaiming ’Do
you know where Beauchastel is?’
’On the other side of the promontory.
Don’t you remember the spire rising among the
trees, as we see it from the water?’
’That church must be worth seeing.
I declare I’ll go there next Sunday.’
Another silence, and Louis said ’I
am curious to know whether you saw her.’
’She was getting into the carriage
as I turned the corner; so I went back and asked Bull
who they were.’
‘I hope she was the greengrocer’s third
cousin.’
‘Pshaw! I tell you it was Mrs. Mansell
and her visitors.’
’Oho! No wonder Beauchastel
architecture is so grand. What an impudent fellow
you are, Jem!’
‘The odd thing is,’ said
James, a little ashamed of Louis having put Mansell
and Beauchastel together, as he had not intended, ’that
it seems they asked Bull who we were. I thought
one old lady was staring hard at you, as if she meant
to claim acquaintance, but you shot out of the shop
like a sky-rocket.’
’Luckily there’s no danger
of that. No one will come to molest us here.’
‘Depend on it, they are meditating
a descent on his lordship.’
‘You shall appear in my name, then.’
’Too like a bad novel:
besides, you don’t look respectable enough for
my tutor. And, now I think of it, no doubt she
was asking Bull how he came to let such a disreputable
old shooting-jacket into his shop.’
The young men worked up an absurd
romance between them, as merrily they crossed the
estuary, and rowed up a narrow creek, with a whitewashed
village on one side, and on the other a solitary house,
the garden sloping to the water, and very nautical the
vane, a union-jack waved by a brilliant little sailor
on the top of a mast, and the arbour, half a boat
set on end; whence, as James steered up to the stone
steps that were one by one appearing, there emerged
an old, grizzly, weather-beaten sailor, who took his
pipe from his mouth, and caught hold of the boat.
‘Thank you, Captain!’
cried Fitzjocelyn. ’I’ve brought
home the boat safe, you see, by my own superhuman
exertions no thanks to Mr. Frost, there!’
‘That’s his way, Captain,’
retorted Jem, leaping out, and helping his cousin:
’you may thank me for getting him home at all!
But for me, he would have his back against the counter,
and his head in a book, this very moment.’
‘Ask him what he was after,’ returned
Louis.
‘Which of us d’ye think
most likely to lag, Captain Hannaford?’ cried
Jem, preventing the question.
‘Which would you choose to have on board?’
‘Ye’d both of ye make
more mischief than work,’ said the old seaman,
who had been looking from one to the other of the young
men, as if they were performing a comedy for his special
diversion.
‘So you would not enter us on
board the Eliza Priscilla?’ cried Louis.
‘No, no,’ said the old
man, shrewdly, and with an air of holding something
back; whereupon they both pressed him, and obtained
for answer, ’No, no, I wouldn’t sail with
you’ signing towards Fitzjocelyn ’in
my crew: ye’d be more trouble than ye’re
worth. And as to you, sir, if I wouldn’t
sail with ye, I’d like still less to sail under
you.’
He finished with a droll, deprecating
glance, and Louis laughed heartily; but James was
silent, and as soon as they had entered the little
parlour, declared that it would not do to encourage
that old skipper he was waylaying them
like the Ancient Mariner, and was actually growing
impudent.
‘An old man’s opinion
of two youngsters is not what I call impudence,’
began Louis, with an emphasis that made Jem divert
his attack.
Those two cousins had never spent
a happier month than in these small lodgings, built
by the old retired merchant-seaman evidently on the
model of that pride of his heart, the Eliza Priscilla,
his little coasting trader, now the charge of his
only surviving son; for this was a family where drowning
was like a natural death, and old Captain Hannaford
looked on the probability of sleeping in Ebbscreek
churchyard, much as Bayard did at the prospect of dying
in his bed. His old deaf wife kept the little
cabin-like rooms most exquisitely neat; and the twelve-years-old
Priscilla, the orphan of one of the lost sons, waited
on the gentlemen with an old-fashioned, womanly deportment
and staid countenance that, in the absence of all
other grounds of distress, Louis declared was quite
a pain to him.
The novelty of the place, the absence
of restraint, the easy life, and, above all, the freshness
of returning health, rendered his spirits exceedingly
high, and he had never been more light-hearted and
full of mirth. James, elated at his rapid improvement,
was scarcely less full of liveliness and frolic, enjoying
to the utmost the holiday, which perhaps both secretly
felt might be the farewell to the perfect carelessness
of boyish relaxation. Bathing, boating, fishing,
dabbling, were the order of the day, and withal just
enough quarrelling and teasing to add a little spice
to their pleasures. Louis was over head and ears
in maritime natural history; but Jem, backed by Mrs.
Hannaford, prohibited his ‘messes’ from
making a permanent settlement in the parlour; though
festoons of seaweed trellised the porch, ammonites
heaped the grass-plat, tubs of sea-water flanked the
approach to the front door; and more than one bowl,
with inmates of a suspicious nature, was often deposited
even on the parlour table.
On the afternoon following the expedition
to Bickleypool, Louis was seated, with an earthenware
pan before him, coaxing an actinia with raw beef to
expand her blossom, to be copied for Miss Faithfull.
Another bowl stood near, containing some feathery
serpulas; and the weeds were heaped on the locker
of the window behind him, and on the back of the chair
which supported his lame foot. The third and
only remaining chair accommodated James, with a book
placed on the table; and a semicircle swept round
it, within which nothing marine might extend.
Louis was by turns drawing, enticing
his refractory sitter, exhorting her to bloom, and
complimenting her delicate beauty, until James, with
a groan, exclaimed, ’Is silence impossible to
you, Fitzjocelyn? I would go into the garden,
but that I should be beset by the intolerable old
skipper!’
‘I beg your pardon I
thought you never heard nor heeded me.’
’I don’t in general, but
this requires attention; and it is past all bearing
to hear how you go on to that Jelly!’
’Read aloud, then: it will answer two purposes.
‘This is Divinity Hooker,’
said James, sighing wearily.
’So much the better. I
read some once; I wish I had been obliged to go on.’
’You are the oddest fellow! After
all, I believe you have a craving after my profession.’
‘Is that a discovery?’
said Louis, washing the colour out of his brush.
‘The only person I envy is a country curate except
a town one.’
‘Don’t talk like affectation!’ growled
James.
‘Do you know, Jem,’ said
Louis, leaning back, and drawing the brush between
his lips, ’I am persuaded that something will
turn up to prevent it from being your profession.’
‘Your persuasions are wrong, then!’
‘That fabulous uncle in the Indies ’
’You know I am determined to
accept nothing from my uncle, were he to lay it at
my feet which he never will.’
‘Literally or metaphorically?’ asked Louis,
softly.
‘Pshaw!’
’You Dynevors don’t resemble
my sea-pink. See how she stretches her elegant
fringes for this very unpleasant bit of meat!
There! I won’t torment you any more;
read, and stop my mouth!’
‘You are in earnest?’
’You seem to think that if a
man cannot be a clergyman, he is not to be a Christian.’
‘Then don’t break in with your actinias
and stuff!’
‘Certainly not,’ said Louis, gravely.
The first interruption came from James
himself. Leaping to his feet with a sudden bound,
he exclaimed, ‘There they are!’ and stood
transfixed in a gaze of ecstasy.
‘You have made me smudge my
lake,’ said Louis, in the mild tone of ‘Diamond,
Diamond!’
‘I tell you, there they are!’
cried James, rushing into wild activity.
‘One would think it the Fair
Unknown,’ said Louis, not troubling himself
to look round, nor desisting from washing out his smudge.
’It is! it is! it
is all of them! Here they come, I tell you, and
the place is a very merman’s cave!’
‘Take care the serpula don’t!’
as James hurriedly opened the door leading to the
stairs disposed of the raw meat on one step
and the serpulas on another, and hurled after them
the heap of seaweed, all but one trailing festoon
of ‘Luckie Minnie’s lines,’ which,
while his back was turned, Louis by one dexterous
motion wreathed round the crown of his straw hat;
otherwise never stirring, but washing quietly on, until
he rose as little Priscilla opened the door, and stood
aside, mutely overawed at the stream of flounced ladies
that flowed past, and seemed to fill up the entire
room. It was almost a surprise to find that,
after all, there were only three of them!
‘I knew I was not mistaken,’
said a very engaging, affectionate voice. ‘It
is quite shocking to have to introduce myself to you Lady
Conway ’
‘My aunt!’ cried Louis,
with eager delight ’and my cousin!’
he added, turning with a slight blush towards the
maiden, whom he felt, rather than saw, to be the worthy
object of yesterday’s rapture.
‘Not quite,’ she answered,
not avoiding the grasp of his hand, but returning
it with calm, distant politeness.
‘Not quite,’ repeated
Lady Conway. ’Your real cousins are no
farther off than Beauchastel ’
‘Where you must come and see
them,’ added the third lady a portly,
cordial, goodnatured dame, whom Lady Conway introduced
as Mrs. Mansell, who had known his mother well; and
Louis making a kind of presentation of his cousin
James, the two elder ladies were located on two of
the chairs: the younger one, as if trying to
be out of the way, placed herself on the locker.
Jem stood leaning on the back of the other chair;
and Louis stood over his aunt, in an ecstasy at the
meeting at the kind, warm manner and pleasant
face of his aunt and above all, at the
indescribable pleasure imparted by the mere presence
of the beautiful girl, though he hardly dared even
to look at her; and she was the only person whose
voice was silent in the chorus of congratulation,
on the wonderful chance that had brought the aunt and
nephew together. The one had been a fortnight
at Beauchastel, the other a month at Ebbscreek, without
guessing at each other’s neighbourhood, until
Lady Conway’s attention had been attracted at
the library by Louis’s remarkable resemblance
to her sister, and making inquiries, she had learnt
that he was no other than Lord Fitzjocelyn. She
was enchanted with the likeness, declaring that all
she wished was to see him look less delicate, and
adding her entreaties to those of Mrs. Mansell, that
the two young men would come at once to Beauchastel.
Louis looked with wistful doubt at
James, who, he knew, could not brook going to fine
places in the character of tutor; but, to his surprise
and pleasure, James was willing and eager, and made
no demur, except that Fitzjocelyn could not walk so
far, and the boat was gone out. Mrs. Mansell
then proposed the ensuing Monday, when, she said, she
and Mr. Mansell should be delighted to have them to
meet a party of shooting gentlemen of course
they were sportsmen. Louis answered at once for
James; but for himself, he could not walk, nor even
ride the offered shooting-pony; and thereupon ensued
more minute questions whether his ankle were still
painful.
’Not more than so as to be a
useful barometer. I have been testing it by
the sea-weeds. If I am good for nothing else,
I shall be a walking weather-glass, as well as a standing
warning against man-traps.’
‘You don’t mean that you
fell into a man-trap!’ exclaimed Mrs. Mansell,
in horror. ’That will be a warning for
Mr. Mansell! I have such a dread of the frightful
things!’
‘A trap ingeniously set by myself,’
said Louis. ’I was only too glad no poor
poacher fell into it.’
‘Your father told me that it
was a fall down a steep bank,’ exclaimed Lady
Conway.
’Exactly so; but I suppose he
thought it for my credit to conceal that my trap consisted
of a flight of stone stops, very solid and permanent,
with the trifling exception of cement.’
‘If the truth were known,’
said James, ’I believe that a certain scamp
of a boy was at the bottom of those steps.’
‘I’m the last person to
deny it,’ said Louis, quietly, though not without
rising colour, ’there was a scamp of a boy at
the bottom of the steps, and very unpleasant he found
it though not without the best consequences,
and among them the present ’ And he
turned to Lady Conway with a pretty mixture of gracefulness
and affection, enough to win the heart of any aunt.
Mrs. Mansell presently fell into raptures
at the sight of the drawing materials, which must,
she was sure, delight Isabel, but she was rather discomfited
by the sight of the ’subject,’ called
it an odious creature, then good-humouredly laughed
at herself, but would not sit down again, evidently
wishing to escape from close quarters with such monsters.
Lady Conway likewise rose, and looked into the basin,
exclaiming, in her turn, ’Ah! I see you
understand these things! Yes, they are very
interesting! Virginia will be delighted; she
has been begging me for an aquarium wherever we go.
You must tell her how to manage it. Look, Isabel,
would not she be in ecstasies?’
Miss Conway looked, but did not seem
to partake in the admiration. ’I am perverse
enough never to like what is the fashion,’ she
said.
‘I tried to disgust Fitzjocelyn
with his pets on that very ground,’ said James;
‘but their charms were too strong for him.’
‘Fashion is the very testimony
to them,’ said Louis. ’I think I
could convince you.’
He would perhaps have produced his
lovely serpula blossoms, but he was forced to pass
on to his aunt and Mrs. Mansell, who had found something
safer for their admiration, in the shape of a great
Cornu ammonis in the garden.
‘He can throw himself into any
pursuit,’ said James, as he paused at the door
with Miss Conway; but suddenly becoming aware of the
slimy entanglement round his hat, he exclaimed, ‘Absurd
fellow!’ and pulled it off rather petulantly,
adding, with a little constraint, ’Recovery
does put people into mad spirits! I fancy the
honest folks here look on in amaze.’
Miss Conway gave a very pretty smile
of sympathy and consolation, that shone like a sunbeam
on her beautiful pensive features and dark, soft eyes.
Then she began to admire the view, as they stood on
the turf, beside Captain Hannaford’s two small
cannon, overlooking the water towards Bickleypool,
with a purple hill rising behind it. A yacht
was sailing into the harbour, and James ran indoors
to fetch a spy-glass, while Lady Conway seized the
occasion of asking her nephew his tutor’s name.
Louis, who had fancied she must necessarily
understand all his kindred, was glad to guard against
shocks to Jem’s sensitive pride, and eagerly
explained the disproportion between his birth and fortune,
and his gallant efforts to relieve his grandmother
from her burthens. He was pleased to find that
he had touched all his auditors, and to hear kind-hearted
Mrs. Mansell repeat her special invitation to Mr. Frost
Dynevor with double cordiality.
‘If you must play practical
jokes,’ said James, as they watched the carriage
drive off, ‘I wish you would choose better moments
for them.’
‘I thought you would be more
in character as a merman brave,’ said Louis.
‘I wonder what character you thought you appeared
in?’
’I never meant you to discover
it while they were here, nor would you, if you were
not so careful of your complexion. Come, throw
it at my head now, as you would have done naturally,
and we shall have fair weather again!’
‘I am only concerned at the impression you have
made.’
’Too late now, is it?
You don’t mean to be bad company for the rest
of the day. It is too bad, after such a presence
as has been here. She is a poem in herself.
It is like a vision to see her move in that calm,
gliding way. Such eyes, so deep, so tranquil,
revealing the sphere apart where she dwells!
An ideal! How can you be savage after sitting
in the same room, and hearing that sweet, low voice?’
Meantime the young lady sat back in
the carriage, dreamily hearing, and sometimes answering,
the conversation of her two elders, as they returned
through pretty forest-drives into the park of Beauchastel,
and up to the handsome, well-kept house; where, after
a few words from Mrs. Mansell, she ascended the stairs.
‘Isabel!’ cried a bright
voice, and a girl of fourteen came skating along the
polished oak corridor. ’Come and have some
tea in the school-room, and tell us your adventures!’
And so saying, she dragged the dignified Isabel into
an old-fashioned sitting-room, where a little pale
child, two years younger, sprang up, and, with a cry
of joy, clung round the elder sister.
‘My white bind-weed,’
said Isabel, fondly caressing her, ’have you
been out on the pony?’
‘Oh I yes, we wanted only you. Sit down
there.’
And as Isabel obeyed, the little Louisa
placed herself on her lap, with one arm round her
neck, and looked with proud glee at the kind, sensible-faced
governess who was pouring out the tea.
‘The reconnoitring party!’ eagerly cried
Virginia.
‘Did you find the cousin?’
‘Yes, we did.’
‘Oh! Then what is he like?’
‘You will see when he comes on Monday.’
‘Coming oh! And is he so very
handsome?’
‘I can see how pretty a woman your Aunt Louisa
must have been.’
‘News!’ laughed Virginia;
’when mamma is always preaching to me to be
like her!’
‘Is he goodnatured?’ asked Louisa.
‘I had not full means of judging,’
said Isabel, more thoughtfully than seemed justified
by the childish question. ‘His cousin is
coming too,’ she added; ‘Mr. Frost Dynevor.’
‘Another cousin!’ exclaimed Virginia.
’No; a relation of Lord Ormersfield a
person to be much respected. He is heir to a
lost estate, and of a very grand old family.
Lord Fitzjocelyn says that he is exerting himself
to the very utmost for his grandmother and orphan
sister; denying himself everything. He is to
be a clergyman. There was a book of divinity
open on the table.’
‘He must be very good!’
said Louisa, in a low, impressed voice, and fondling
her sister’s hand. ‘Will he be as
good as Sir Roland?’
‘Oh! I am glad he is coming!’
cried Virginia. ’We have so wished to
see somebody very good!’
A bell rang a signal that
Lady Conway would be in her room, where she liked
her two girls to come to her while she was dressing.
Louisa reluctantly detached herself from her sister,
and Virginia lingered to say, ’Dress quickly,
please, please, Isabel. I know there is a new
bit of Sir Roland done! Oh! I hope Mr.
Dynevor is like him!’
‘Not quite,’ said Isabel,
smiling as they ran away. ’Poor children,
I am afraid they will be disappointed; but long may
their craving be to see ‘somebody very good!’
‘I am very glad they should
meet any one answering the description,’ said
the governess. ’I don’t gather that
you are much delighted with the object of the expedition.’
’A pretty boy very
pretty. It quite explains all I have ever heard
of his mother.’
‘As you told the children.’
’More than I told the children.
Their aunt never by description seemed to me my ideal,
as you know. I would rather have seen a likeness
to Lord Ormersfield, who though I don’t
like him has something striking in the
curt, dry, melancholy dignity of his manner.’
‘And how has Lord Fitzjocelyn displeased you?’
’Perhaps there is no harm in
him he may not have character enough for
that; but talk, attitudes, everything betrays that
he is used to be worshipped takes it as
a matter of course, and believes nothing so interesting
as himself.’
‘Don’t you think you may
have gone with your mind made up?’
’If you mean that I thought
myself uncalled for, and heartily detested the expedition,
you are right; but I saw what I did not expect.’
‘Was it very bad?’
’A very idle practical joke,
such as I dislike particularly. A quantity of
wet sea-weed wound round Mr. Dynevor’s hat.’
Miss King laughed. ’Really,
my dear, I don’t think you know what young men
like from each other.’
‘Mr. Dynevor did not like it,’
said Isabel, ’though he tried to pass it off
lightly as the spirits of recovery. Those spirits I
am afraid he has too much to suffer from them.
There is something so ungenerous in practical wit,
especially from a prosperous man to one unprosperous!’
’Well, Isabel, I won’t
contradict, but I should imagine that such things
often showed people to be on the best of terms.’
Isabel shook her head, and left the
room, to have her dark hair braided, with little heed
from herself, as she sat dreamily over a book.
Before the last bracelet was clasped, she was claimed
by her two little sisters, who gave her no peace till
her desk was opened, and a manuscript drawn forth,
that they might hear the two new pages of her morning’s
work. It was a Fouque-like tale, relieving and
giving expression to the yearnings for holiness and
loftiness that had grown up within Isabel Conway in
the cramped round of her existence. The story
went back to the troubadour days of Provence, where
a knight, the heir of a line of shattered fortunes,
was betrothed to the heiress of the oppressors, that
thus all wrongs might be redressed. They had
learnt to love, when Sir Roland discovered that the
lands in dispute had been won by sacrilege.
He met Adeline at a chapel in a little valley, to
tell the whole. They agreed to sacrifice themselves,
that restitution should be made; the knight to go
as a crusader to the Holy Land; the lady, after waiting
awhile to tend her aged father, to enter a convent,
and restore her dower to the church. Twice had
Isabel written that parting, pouring out her heart
in the high-souled tender devotion of Roland and his
Adeline; and both feeling and description were beautiful
and poetical, though unequal. Louisa used to
cry whenever she heard it, yet only wished to hear
it again and again, and when Virginia insisted on
reading it to Miss King, tears had actually been surprised
in the governess’s eyes. Yet she liked
still better Adeline’s meek and patient temper,
where breathed the feeling Isabel herself would fain
cherish the deep, earnest, spiritual life
and high consecrated purpose that were with the Provencal
maiden through all her enforced round of gay festivals,
light minstrelsy, tourneys, and Courts of Love.
Thus far had the story gone. Isabel had been
writing a wild, mysterious ballad, reverting to that
higher love and the true spirit of self-sacrifice,
which was to thrill strangely on the ears of the thoughtless
at a contention for the Golden Violet, and which she
had adapted to a favourite air, to the extreme delight
of the two girls. To them the Chapel in the valley,
Roland and his Adeline, were very nearly real, and
were the hidden joy of their hearts, all
the more because their existence was a precious secret
between the three sisters and Miss King, who viewed
it as such an influence on the young ones, that, with
more meaning than she could have explained, she called
it their Telemaque. The following-up of the
teaching of Isabel and Miss King might lead to results
as little suspected by Lady Conway as Fenelon’s
philosophy was by Louis XIV.
Lady Conway was several years older
than her beautiful sister, and had married much later.
Perhaps she had aimed too high, and had met with
disappointments unavowed; for she had finally contented
herself with becoming the second wife of Sir Walter
Conway, and was now his serene, goodnatured, prosperous
widow. Disliking his estate and neighbourhood,
and thinking the daughters wanted London society and
London masters, she shut up the house until her son
should be of age, and spent the season in Lowndes-square,
the autumn either abroad, in visits, or at watering-places.
Beauchastel was an annual resort of
the family. Isabel was more slenderly portioned
than her half-sisters; and she was one of the nearest
surviving relations of her mother’s cousin, Mr.
Mansell, whose large comfortable house was always
hospitable; and whose wife, a great dealer in goodnatured
confidential gossip, used to throw out hints to her
great friend Lady Conway, that much depended on Isabel’s
marriage that Mr. Mansell had been annoyed
at connexions formed by others of his relations but
though he had decided on nothing, the dear girl’s
choice might make a great difference.
Nothing could be more passive than
Miss Conway. She could not remember her mother,
but her childhood had been passed under an admirable
governess; and though her own Miss Longman had left
her, Miss King, the successor, was a person worthy
of her chief confidence. At two-and-twenty,
the school-room was still the home of her affections,
and her ardent love was lavished on her little sisters
and her brother Walter.
Going out with Lady Conway was mere
matter of duty and submission. She had not such
high animal spirits as to find enjoyment in her gaieties,
and her grave, pensive character only attained to walking
through her part; she had seen little but the more
frivolous samples of society, scorned and disliked
all that was worldly and manoeuvring, and hung back
from levity and coquetry with utter distaste.
Removed from her natural home, where she would have
found duties and seen various aspects of life, she
had little to interest or occupy her in her unsettled
wanderings; and to her the sap of life was in books,
in dreams, in the love of her brother and sisters,
and in discussions with Miss King; her favourite vision
for the future, the going to live with Walter at Thornton
Conway when he should be of age. But Walter was
younger than Louisa, and it was a very distant prospect.
Her characteristic was a calm, serene
indifference, in which her stepmother acquiesced,
as lovers of peace do in what they cannot help; and
the more willingly, that her tranquil dignity and pensive
grace exactly suited the style of her tall queenly
figure, delicate features, dark soft languid eyes,
and clear olive complexion, just tinged with rosebud
pink.
What Louis said of her to his tutor
on the Monday night of their arrival was beyond the
bounds of all reason; and it was even more memorable
that Jem was neither satirical nor disputatious, assented
to all, and if he sighed, it was after his door was
shut.
A felicitous day ensued, spent by
James in shooting, by Fitzjocelyn, in the drawing-room;
whither Mrs. Mansell had requested Isabel’s presence,
as a favour to herself. The young lady sat at
work, seldom raising her eyes, but this was enough
for him; his intense admiration and pleasure in her
presence so exhilarated him, that he rattled away to
the utmost. Louisa was at first the excuse.
In no further doubt of his good-nature, she spent
an hour in the morning in giving him anagrams to guess;
and after she had repaired to the schoolroom, he went
on inventing fresh ones, and transposing the ivory
letters, rambling on in his usual style of pensive
drollery. Happiness never set him off to advantage,
and either there was more froth than ordinary, or it
appeared unusually ridiculous to an audience who did
not detect the under-current of reflection.
His father would have been in despair, Mrs. Ponsonby
or Mary would have interposed; but the ladies of Beauchastel
laughed and encouraged him, all but Isabel,
who sat in the window, and thought of Adeline, ‘spighted
and angered both,’ by a Navarrese coxcomb, with
sleeves down to his heels, and shoes turned up to
his knees. She gave herself great credit for
having already created him a Viscount.
In the afternoon, Louis drove out
lionizing with his aunt; but though the ponies stopped
of themselves at all the notable views; sea, hill,
and river were lost on him. Lady Conway could
have drawn out a far less accessible person, and her
outpouring of his own sentiments made him regard her
as perfect.
She consulted him about her winter’s
resort. Louisa required peculiar care, and she
had thought of trying mineral baths what
was thought of Northwold? what kind of houses were
there? The Northwold faculty themselves might
have taken a lesson from Fitzjocelyn’s eloquent
analysis of the chemical properties of the waters,
and all old Mr. Frost’s spirit would seem to
have descended on him when he dilated on the House
Beautiful. Lodgers for Miss Faithfull! what jubilee
they would cause! And such lodgers! No
wonder he was in ecstasy. All the evening the
sound of his low, deliberate voice was unceasing, and
his calm announcements to his two little cousins were
each one more startling than the last; while James,
to whom it was likewise all sunshine, was full of
vivacity, and a shrewd piquancy of manner that gave
zest to all he said, and wonderfully enlivened the
often rather dull circle at Beauchastel.
Morning came; and when the ladies
descended to breakfast, it was found that Lord Fitzjocelyn
had gone out with the sportsmen. The children
lamented, and their elders pronounced a young gentleman’s
passion for shooting to be quite incalculable.
When, late in the day, the party returned, it was
reported that he did not appear to care much for the
sport; but had walked beside Mr. Mansell’s shooting-pony,
and had finally gone with him to see his model farm.
This was a sure road to the old squire’s heart,
and no one was more delighted with the guest.
For Aunt Catharine’s sake, Louis was always attracted
by old age, and his attentive manners had won Mr.
Mansell’s heart, even before his inquiries about
his hobby had completed the charm. To expound
and to listen to histories of agricultural experiments
that really answered, was highly satisfactory to both,
and all the evening they were eager over the great
account-book which was the pride of the squire’s
heart; while Virginia and Louisa grumbled or looked
imploring, and Isabel marvelled at there being any
interest for any one in old Mr. Mansell’s conversation.
‘What is the meaning of this?’
asked James, as they went up stairs.
Louis shrugged like a Frenchman, looked
débonnaire, and said ‘Good-night.’
Again he came down; prepared for shooting,
though both pale and lame; but he quietly put aside
all expostulations, walking on until, about fifty
yards from the house, a pebble, turning under the injured
foot, caused such severe pain that he could but just
stagger to a tree and sit down.
There was much battling before Mr.
Mansell would consent to leave him, or he to allow
James to help him back to the house, before going on
to overtake the party.
Very irate was Jem, at folly that
seemed to have undone the benefits of the last month,
and at changeableness that was a desertion of the queen
to whom all homage was due. He was astonished
that Louis turned into the study, a room little inhabited
in general, and said, ’Make haste you
will catch the others; don’t fall in with the
ladies.’
‘I mean to send your aunt to you.’
’Pray don’t. Can’t
you suppose that peace is grateful after having counted
every mortal hour last night?’
’Was that the reason you were
going to walk ten miles without a leg to stand upon?
Fitzjocelyn! is this systematic?’
‘What is?’ said Louis, wearily.
‘Your treatment of your aunt.’
‘On what system should aunts be treated?’
’Of all moments to choose for
caprice! Exactly when I thought even you were
fixed!’
‘Pur troppo,’ sighed Louis.
‘Ha!’ cried Jem, ’you
have not gone and precipitated matters! I thought
you could never amaze me again; but even you might
have felt she was a being to merit rather more time
and respect!’
‘Even I am not devoid of the organ of veneration.’
His meek tone was a further provocation;
and with uplifted chin, hair ruffled like the crest
of a Shetland pony, flashing eyes, and distinct enunciation,
James exclaimed, ’You will excuse me for not
understanding you. You come here; you devote
yourself to your aunt and cousins you seem
strongly attracted; then, all on a sudden, you rush
out shooting an exercise for which you
don’t care, and when you can’t walk:
you show the most pointed neglect. And after
being done-up yesterday, you repeat the experiment
to-day, as if for the mere object of laming yourself
for life. I could understand pique or temper,
but you have not the ’
‘The sense,’ said Louis; ‘no, nor
anything to be piqued at.’
‘If there be a motive,’
said James, ’I have a right to demand not to
be trifled with any longer.’
’I wish you could be content
to shoot your birds, and leave me in peace: you
will only have your fun spoilt, like mine, and go into
a fury. The fact is, that my father writes in
a state of perturbation. He says, I might have
understood, from the tenor of his conduct, that he
did not wish me to be intimate with my aunt’s
family! He cannot know anything about them,
for it is all one warning against fashion and frivolity.
He does not blame us especially not you.’
‘I wish he did.’
’But he desires that our intercourse
should be no more than propriety demands, and plunges
into a discourse against first impressions, beauty,
and the like.’
‘So that’s the counterblast!’
‘You ought to help me, Jem,’ said Louis,
dejectedly.
‘I’ll help you with all my heart to combat
your father’s prejudices.’
’An hour’s unrestrained
intercourse with these people would best destroy them,’
said Louis; ’but, in the mean time I
wonder what he means.’
‘He means that he is in terror for his darling
scheme.’
‘Mrs. Ponsonby was very right,’ sighed
Louis.
’Ay! A pretty condition
you would be in, if she had not had too much principle
to let you be a victim to submission. That’s
what you’ll come to, though! You will
never know the meaning of passion; you will escape
something by it, though you will be twisted round his
lordship’s finger, and marry his choice.
I hope she will have red hair!’
‘Negative and positive obedience
stand on different grounds,’ said Louis, with
such calmness as often fretted James, but saved their
friendship. ’Besides, till I had this letter,
I had no notion of any such thing.’
James’s indignation resulted
in fierce stammering; while Louis deliberately continued
a viva voce self-examination, with his own
quaint naïveté, betraying emotion only by the burning
colour of cheek and brow.
’No; I had no such notion.
I only felt that her presence had the gladdening,
inspiriting, calming effect of moonlight or starlight.
I reverenced her as a dream of poetry walking the
earth. Ha! now one hears the sound of it that
is like it! I did not think it was such a confirmed
case. I should have gone on in peace but for
this letter, and never thought about it at all.’
‘So much the better for you!’
’My father is too just and candid
not to own his error, and be thankful.’
‘And you expect her to bear
with your alternations in the mean time?’
’Towards her I have not alternated.
When I have made giggle with Clara under the influence
of the starry sky, did you suppose me giggling with
Lyra or the Pleiades! I should dread to see the
statue descend; it seemed irreverence even to gaze.
The lofty serenity keeps me aloof. I like to
believe in a creature too bright and good for human
nature’s daily food. Our profane squinting
through telescopes at the Lady Moon reveals nothing
but worn-out volcanoes and dry oceans, black gulfs
and scorched desolation; but verily that may not be
Lady Moon’s fault only that of our
base inventions. So I would be content to mark
her Isabel, I mean queenly, moonlike
name! walk in beauty and tranquillity unruffled,
without distorting my vision by personal aims at bringing
her down to my level. There don’t
laugh at me, Jem.’
‘No, I am too sorry for you.’
‘Why!’ he exclaimed, impatient
of compassion; ’do you think it desperate?’
’I see your affection given
to a most worthy object, and I know what your notions
of submission will end in.’
‘Once for all, Jem,’ said
Fitzjocelyn, ’do you know how you are using
my father? No; Isabel Conway may be the happiness
or the disappointment of my life I cannot
tell. I am sure my father is mistaken, and I
believe he may be convinced; but I am bound not to
fly in the face of his direct commands, and, till
we can come to an understanding, I must do the best
I can, and trust to ’
The last word was lost, as he turned
to nurse his ankle, and presently to entreat James
to join the sportsmen; but Jem was in a mood to do
nothing pleasing to himself nor to any one else.
A sacrifice is usually irritating to the spectators,
who remonstrate rather than listen to self-reproach;
and Louis had been guilty of three great offences being
in the right, making himself ridiculous, and submitting
tamely besides the high-treason to Isabel’s
beauty. It was well that the Earl was safe out
of the way of the son of the Pendragons!
Fitzjocelyn was in pain and discomfort
enough to make James unwilling to leave him; though
his good-will did not prevent him from keeping up
such a stream of earplugs and sinister auguries, that
it was almost the climax of good-temper that enabled
Louis to lie still, trying to read a great quarto
Park’s Travels, and abstaining from any reply
that could aggravate matters. As the one would
not go to luncheon, the other would not; and after
watching the sound of the ladies’ setting out
for their drive, Louis said that he would go and lie
on the turf; but at that moment the door was thrown
open, and in ran Virginia. Explanations were
quickly exchanged how she had come to find
Vertot’s Malta for Isabel, and how he had been
sent in by hurting his foot.
‘Were you going to stay in all
day?’ said Virginia. ’Oh, come with
us! We have the pony-carriage; and we are going
to a dear old ruin, walking and driving by turns.
Do, pray, come; there’s plenty of room.’
There could be no objection to the
school-room party, and it was no small relief to escape
from James and hope he was amused; so Fitzjocelyn
allowed himself to be dragged off in triumph, and James
was acceding to his entreaty that he would go in search
of the shooting-party, when, as they reached the hall-door,
they beheld Miss Conway waiting on the steps.
There was no receding for her any
more than for Louis, so she could only make a private
resolution against the pony-carriage, and dedicate
herself to the unexceptionable company of little sister,
governess and tutor; for James had resigned the shooting,
and attached himself to the expedition. It was
an excellent opportunity of smoothing his cousin’s
way, and showing that all was not caprice that might
so appear: so he began to tell of his most advantageous
traits of character, and to explain away his whimsical
conduct, with great ardour and ingenuity. He
thought he should be perfectly satisfied if he could
win but one smile of approbation from that gravely
beautiful mouth; and it came at last, when he told
of Fitzjocelyn’s devoted affection to Mrs. Frost
and his unceasing kindness to the old ladies of Dynevor
Terrace. Thus gratified, he let himself be led
into abstract questions of principle, a
style of discussion frequent between Miss King and
Isabel, but on which the latter had never seen the
light of a man’s mind thrown except through
books. The gentlemen whom she had met were seldom
either deep or earnest, except those too much beyond
her reach; and she had avoided anything like confidence
or intimacy: but Mr. Dynevor could enlighten
and vivify her perplexed reflections, answer her inquiries,
confirm her opinion of books, and enter into all that
she ventured with diffidence to express. He was
enchanted to find that no closer approach could dim
the lustre of Louis’s moon, and honoured her
doubly for what she had made herself in frivolous society.
He felt sure that his testimony would gain credit
where Fitzjocelyn’s would be regarded as love-blinded,
and already beheld himself forcing full proof of her
merits on the reluctant Earl, beholding Louis happy,
and Isabel emancipated from constraint.
A five miles’ walk gave full
time for such blissful discoveries; for Miss Conway
was resolute against entering the pony-carriage, and
walked on, protesting against ever being fatigued;
while Louis was obliged to occupy his seat in the
carriage, with a constant change of companions.
‘I think, my dear,’ said
Miss King, when the younger girls had gone to their
mother’s toilette, ‘that you will have
to forgive me.’
‘Meaning,’ said Isabel,
’that you are bitten too! Ah! Miss
King, you could not withstand the smile with which
he handed you in!’
’Could you withstand such an
affectionate account of your cruel, tyrannical practical
joker?’
’Facts are stubborn things.
Do you know what Mr. Dynevor is doing at this moment?
I met him in the gallery, hurrying off to Ebbscreek
for some lotion for Lord Fitzjocelyn’s ankle.
I begged him to let Mrs. Mansell send; but no-no
one but himself could find it, and his cousin could
not bear strangers to disarrange his room. If
anything were wanting, it would be enough to see how
simply and earnestly such a man has been brought to
pamper nay, to justify, almost to adore,
the whims and follies of this youth.’
‘If anything were wanting to what? To
your dislike.’
‘It would not be so active as
dislike, unless ’ Isabel spoke with
drooping head, and Miss King did not ask her to finish,
but said, ’He has not given you much cause for
alarm.’
’So; he is at least a thorough
gentleman. It may be conceit, or wrong self-consciousness,
but from the moment the poor boy was spied in the
shop, I had a perception that mamma and Mrs. Mansell
marked him down. Personally he would be innocent,
but, through all his chatter, I cannot shake off the
fancy that I am watched, or that decided indifference
is not needed to keep him at a distance.’
‘I wish you could have seen him without knowing
him!’
’In vain, dear Miss King!
I can’t bear handsome men. I see his
frivolity and shallowness; and for amiability, what
do you think of keeping his cousin all the morning
from shooting for such a mere nothing, and then sending
him off for a ten miles’ walk?
’For my part, I confess that
I was struck with the good sense and kindness he showed
in our tete-a-tete I thought it justified
Mr. Dynevor’s description.’
’Yes, I have no doubt that there
is some good in him. He might have done very
well, if he had not always been an idol.’
Isabel was the more provoked with
Lord Fitzjocelyn, when, by-and-by, he appeared in
the drawing-room, and related the result of his cousin’s
mission. Jem, who would know better than himself
where to find his property, had not chosen to believe
his description of the spot where he had left the
lotion, and, in the twilight, Louis had found his foot
coiled about by the feelers and claws of a formidable
monster no other than a bottled scorpion,
a recent present from Captain Hannaford. He
did not say how emblematic the scorpion lotion was
of that which Jem had been administering to his wounded
spirit all the morning, but he put the story in so
ludicrous a light that Isabel decided that Mr. Dynevor
was ungenerously and ungratefully treated as a butt;
and she turned away in displeasure from the group
whom the recital was amusing, to offer her sympathy
to the tutor, and renew the morning’s conversation.