’Mid sombre shades
of evening dim
Upon the
rock so lone, so drear,
Scorning weak frame
and sinking limb,
My heart
grows bright and bold of cheer;
Out of the depths of
stormy night
My hope
looks up with cloudless eyes,
And to the one true
deathless light,
Its joyful
pinions swiftly rise:
Thanks to the seraph
shape that beamed
Benign upon
my darkened breast,
So for her service worthy
deemed,
My grateful
heart abounds in rest.
FOUQUE’S
Minstrel Love
’Wrangerton, August 20th.
’You must not be frightened,
dearest Violet Albert is safe; thanks to
that most noble-hearted, admirable Lord St. Erme, and
above all, thanks to Him who directed this dreadful
stroke away from us. I hope you will receive
this before you see the newspaper. Mamma has gone
up with them, to help them to break it to poor Lady
Lucy. May she be supported!
’The history, as far as I can
toll you, is this: The men at the collieries
have been as troublesome and insubordinate as ever,
seeming to think opposition to Lord St. Erme an assertion
of their rights as free-born Englishmen; and at last,
finding it impossible to do anything with them as
long as they did not depend immediately upon himself,
he took the pits into his own hands when Mr. Shoreham
went away, a fortnight ago. It seems that Mr.
Shoreham, knowing that he was going, had let everything
fall into a most neglected state, and the overlookers
brought reports to Albert that there were hardly any
safety-lamps used in the great pit, and that the galleries
were so insufficiently supported that there was great
danger in continuing to work there. However,
the reports were contradictory, and after trying in
vain to settle what was to be done, Lord St. Erme
rode this morning to the collieries, to make a personal
inspection, and insist on the men using the Davy-lamp.
After trying to dissuade him, Albert proposed to go
down with him; but he would not consent he
only smiled, and said there was no need for it.
It did not strike Albert till afterwards that he was
conscious of the risk, and would not allow another
to share it! He was waiting for him, not far
from the shaft, when the earth seemed to give way
under his feet; there was a thundering sound, a great
cry, and he fell. When he recovered his footing,
the mouth of the shaft was gone, the scaffolding prostrate,
the people around in horror and consternation.
The pit had fallen in, and there were at least twenty
men there, besides Lord St. Erme. Oh! how you
will share that shuddering thankfulness and sorrow,
that we felt, when Albert galloped up to the door
and threw himself into the arm-chair, so unnerved by
the shock that he could not at first speak. Happily
his wife was here, so she heard all at once.
He is gone with mamma and papa to tell the poor sister.
Alas! though we think most of her, there are many
other sufferers.
’Three, o’clock. Albert
is come back. He says Lady Lucy met them in the
hall, pale and trembling, as if she had already worked
herself into an agony of fright. She begged them
to tell her at once, and stood quite still, only now
and then moaning to herself, “Oh, St. Erme!
St. Erme!” Mamma took her by the hand, and tried
to speak soothingly; but she did not seem to attend,
and presently looked up, flushed and quivering, though
she had been so still before, and declared that the
whole might not have fallen; she had heard of people
being dug out alive; they must begin at once, and
she would go to the spot. There is no hope, Albert
says; even if not crushed, they must have perished
from the foul air, but the poor girl has caught fast
hold of the idea, and insists on going to Coalworth
at once to urge it on. They cannot prevent her,
and mamma cannot bear that she should be alone, and
means to go with her. The carriage was ordered
when Albert came here! Poor thing, there was never
fonder love between a brother and sister; she hardly
had a thought that did not centre in him. It
breaks my heart to think how often we have seen them
walking arm-in-arm together, and said they might be
taken for a pair of lovers.
’Five o’clock. Annette
begs me to conclude her letter. My father has
returned home, and fetched her to Coalworth, to be
with my mother, and the poor young lady (already,
I fear, Countess of St. Erme), who, he tells us, continues
buoyed up by the delusion that her brother may yet
be found alive, and is calling on all around to use
the utmost exertions for his recovery. I regret
that I cannot go in Annette’s stead; but I cannot
leave home in mamma’s absence, as poor Louisa
is much affected by Albert’s peril, and in so
nervous a state that she will not hear of my quitting
her for a moment. We have indeed received a lesson,
that no rank, however exalted, can protect from the
strokes of Providence, or the uncertainties of human
life. But the postman calls. Adieu.
’Your affectionate sister,
‘Matilda Moss.’
(The last moral sentiment, be it observed, readied Miss Martindale,
rendered illegible by scrawls of ink from Violet’s hand.)
’Coalworth, August 21st.
’Dearest Violet, Matilda
told you how I was sent for to come here. They
are working on, relays relieving each other
day and night; but no one but poor Lady Lucy thinks
there is any hope. Mr. Alder, the engineer, says
Lord St. Erme must have been in the farthest gallery,
and they cannot reach it in less than a week, so that
if the other perils should be escaped, there would
be starvation. The real number lost is fourteen,
besides Lord St. Erme. It was a strange scene
when I arrived at about seven o’clock yesterday
evening. The moor looking so quiet, and like
itself, with the heath and furze glowing in the setting
sun, as if they had no sympathy for us, till, when
we came near the black heaps of coal, we saw the crowd
standing round, then getting into the midst,
there was the great broken down piece of blackened
soil and the black strong-armed men working away with
that life-and-death earnestness. By the ruins
of a shed that had been thrown down, there was a little
group, Lady Lucy, looking so fair and delicate, so
unlike everything around, standing by an old woman
in a red cloak, whom she had placed in the chair that
had been brought for herself, the mother of one of
the other sufferers. Mamma and papa were with
her; but nothing seems to comfort her so much as going
from one to the other of the women and children in
the same trouble with herself. She talks to them,
and tries to get them to be hopeful, and nurses the
babies, and especially makes much of the old woman.
The younger ones look cheered when she tells them that
history which she dwells on so much, and seem as if
they must believe her, but the poor old dame has no
hope, and tells her so. “’Tis the will
of God, my lady, don’t ye take on so now.
It will be all one when we come to heaven, though
I would have liked to have seen Willy again; but ’tis
the cross the Lord sends, so don’t ye take on,”
and then Lady Lucy sits down on the ground, and looks
up in her face, as if her plain words did her more
good than anything we can say, or even the clergyman,
who is constantly going from one to the other.
Whenever the men come to work, or go away, tired out,
Lady Lucy thanks them from the bottom of her heart;
and a look at her serves to inspirit and force them
on to wonderful exertions. But alas! what it
must end in! We are at the house that was Mr.
Shoreham’s, the nearest to the spot. It
was hard work to get poor Lady Lucy to come in last
night. She stood there till long after dark,
when the stars were all out, and mamma could only get
her away by telling her, that her brother would be
vexed, and that, if she made herself ill, she would
not be able to nurse him. She did not sleep all
night, and this morning she was out again with daylight,
and we were obliged to bring her out some breakfast,
which she shared with the fellow-sufferers round her,
and would have taken nothing herself if the old dame
had not coaxed her, and petted her, calling her “My
pretty lady,” and going back to her lecture
on its being a sin to fret at His will. Mamma
and I take turns to be with her. When I came in,
she was sitting by the old woman, reading to her the
Psalms, and the good old creature saying at the end
of each, “Yes, yes, He knows what is good for
them. Glory be to Him.”
’Aund. As before.
They have tried if they can open a way from the old
shaft, but cannot do it with safety. Lady Lucy
still the same, but paler and more worn, I think,
less hopeful; I hope, more resigned.
’Aurd. Poor
Lucy was really tired out, and slept for two whole
hours in the heat of the noon, sitting on the ground
by old Betty, fairly overpowered. It was a touching
sight; the old woman watching her so sedulously, and
all the rough people keeping such strict silence, and
driving off all that could disturb her. The pitmen
look at her with such compassionate reverence!
The look and word she gives them are ten thousand
times more to them, I am sure, than the high pay they
get for every hour they work! Next Wednesday
is the first day they can hope to come to anything.
This waiting is dreadful. Would that I could call
it suspense!
’Auth, Sunday. She
has been to church this morning. I did not think
she could, but at the sound of the bell, she looked
up, and the old woman too, they seemed to understand
each other without a word, and went together.
The service was almost more than one could bear, but
she was composed, except at the references in the
sermon to our state of intense anxiety, and the need
of submission. At the special mention in the
Litany of those in danger, I heard from beneath her
hands clasped over her face, that low moan of “O,
brother, brother!” Still I think when the worst
comes, she will bear it better and be supported.
’Five o’clock. These
is hope! O Violet! We went
to church again this afternoon. The way leads
past the old shaft. As we came by it in returning,
Lady Lucy stood still, and said she heard a sound.
We could hear nothing, but one of the wives said,
“Yes, some one was working, and calling down
there.” I flew to the main shaft, and called
Mr. Alder. He was incredulous, but Lady Lucy
insisted. A man went down, and the sound was
certain. No words can be made out. They are
working to meet them. Lucy burst into tears,
and threw her arms round my neck as soon as she heard
this man’s report; but oh! thankful as we are,
it is more cruel than ever not to know who is saved,
and this letter must go to-night without waiting for
more.
’25th. He is alive,
they say, but whether he can rally is most uncertain.
All night they worked on, not till six o’clock
this morning was any possibility of communication
opened. Then questions were asked, “How
many were there?” “Fifteen, all living,
but one much crushed.” Oh! the suspense,
the heart-beating as those answers were sent up from
the depths of the tomb a living tomb indeed;
and how Lady Lucy pressed the women’s hard hands,
and shed her tears of joy with them. But there
was a damp to her gladness. Next message was
that Lord St. Erme bad fainted they could
not tell whether he lived he could not hold
out any longer! Then it was that she gave way,
and indeed it was too agonizing, but the old woman
seemed better able to calm her than we could.
Terrible moments indeed! and in the midst there was
sent up a folded paper that had been handed out at
the small aperture on the point of a tool, when the
poor things had first been able to see the lights of
their rescuers. It was to Lady Lucy; her brother
had written it on the leaf of a pocket-book, before
their single lamp went out, and had given it in charge
to one of the men when he found his strength failing.
She was too dizzy and trembling to make out the pencil,
and gave it to me to read to her. I hope I am
not doing wrong, for I must tell you how beautiful
and resigned a farewell it was. He said, in case
this note ever came to her, she must not grieve at
the manner of his death it was a comfort
to him to be taken, while trying to repair the negligence
of earlier years; they were a brave determined set
of men who were with him, and she must provide for
their widows and children. There was much fond
thought for her, and things to console her, and one
sentence you must have “If ever you
meet with the “hoch-beseeltes Mädchen”,
let her know that her knight thanks and blesses her
in his last hour for having roused him and sent him
forth to the battlefield. I would rather be here
now than what I was when she awoke me. Perhaps
she will now be a friend and comforter to you.”
’I think those were the words.
I could not help writing them. Poor Lucy cried
over the note, and we lowered down baskets of nourishment
to be handed in, but we heard only of Lord St. Erme’s
continued swoon, and it was a weary while before the
opening could be widened enough to help the sufferers
out. They were exhausted, and could work no more
on their side. But for him, it seems they would
have done nothing; he was the only one who kept his
presence of mind when the crash came. One lamp
was not extinguished, and he made them at once consider,
while the light lasted, whether they could help themselves.
One of the hewers knew that they were not far from
this old shaft, and happily Lord St. Erme had a little
compass hung to his watch, which he used to carry in
his wanderings abroad; this decided the direction,
and he set them to work, and encouraged them to persevere
most manfully. He did not work himself indeed,
the close air oppressed him much more than it did the
pitmen, and he had little hope for his own life, however
it might end, but he sat the whole time, supporting
the head of the man who was hurt, and keeping up the
resolution of the others, putting them in mind of
the only hope in their dire distress, and guiding them
to prayer and repentance, such as might fit them for
life or death. “He was more than ten preachers,
and did more good than forty discourses,” said
one man. But he had much less bodily strength
than they, though more energy and fortitude, and he
was scarcely sensible when the first hope of rescue
came. It seemed as if he had just kept up to sustain
them till then, and when they no longer depended on
him for encouragement, he sank. The moment came
at last. He was drawn up perfectly insensible,
together with a great brawny-armed hewer, a vehement
Chartist, and hitherto his great enemy, but who now
held him in his arms like a baby, so tenderly and
anxiously. As soon as he saw Lady Lucy, he called
out, “Here he is, Miss, I hope ye’ll be
able to bring him to. If all lords were like he
now!” and then his wife had hold of him, quite
beside herself with joy; but he shook her off with
a sort of kind rudeness, and, exhausted as he was,
would not hear of being helped to his home, till he
had heard the doctors (who were all in waiting) say
that Lord St. Erme was alive. Lady Lucy was hanging
over him in a sort of agony of ecstasy, and yet of
grief; but still she looked up, and put her little
white hand into the collier’s big black one,
and said, “Thank you,” and then he fairly
burst out crying, and so his wife led him away.
I saw Lord St. Erme for one moment, and never was
anything more death-like, such ghastly white, except
where grimed with coal-dust. They are in his room
now, trying to restore animation. He has shown
some degree of consciousness, and pressed his sister’s
hand, but all power of swallowing seems to be gone,
and the doctors are in great alarm. The others
are doing well the people come in swarms
to the door to ask for him.
’26th. Comfort at
last. He has been getting better all night, and
this morning the doctors say all danger is over.
Mamma says she can hardly keep from tears as she watches
the happy placid looks of the brother and sister,
as he lies there so pale and shadowy, and she hangs
over him, as if she could never gaze at him enough.
Several of the men, who were with him, came to inquire
for him early this morning; none of them suffered
half so much as he did. I went down to speak to
them, and I am glad I did; it is beautiful to see
how he has won all their hearts, and to hear their
appreciation of his conduct. They say he tended
the man who was hurt as if he had been his mother,
and never uttered one word of complaint. “He
told us,” said one man, “God could hear
us out of the depth, as well as when we said our prayers
in church; and whenever our hearts were failing us,
there was his voice speaking somewhat good to cheer
us up, or help us to mind that there was One who knew
where we were, and would have a care for us and our
wives and children.” “Bless him,”
said another, “he has been the saving of our
lives;” “Bless him;” and they touched
their hats and said Amen. I wish his sister could
have seen them!
’Five o’clock. Mrs.
Delaval is come, and there is no room nor need for
us, so we are going home. It is best, for mamma
was nursing him all night, and is tired out.
He has improved much in the course of the day, and
they hope that he may soon be moved home. The
pitmen want to carry him back on his mattress on their
shoulders. He has made himself king of their
hearts! He has been able to inquire after them,
and Lady Lucy, who forgets no one, has been down-stairs
to see the old Betty. “Ah! my pretty lady,”
she said, “you are not sorry now that you tried
to take the Lord’s Cross patiently, and now,
you see, your sorrow is turned into joy.”
And then Lady Lucy would not have it called patience,
and said she had had no submission in her, and Betty
answered her, “Ah! well, you are young yet,
and He fits the burden to the shoulder.”
How an adventure like this brings out the truth of
every character, as one never would have known it
otherwise. Who would have dreamt of that pattern
of saintly resignation in the Coalworth heath, or
that Lady Lucy Delaval would have found a poor old
woman her truest and best comforter? and this without
the least forwardness on the old woman’s part.
’Just going! Lady Lucy
so warm-hearted and grateful and Lord St.
Erme himself wished mamma good-bye in such a kind
cordial manner, thanking her for all she had done
for his sister. I am sorry to go, so as not to
be in the way of seeing anything more of them, but
it is time, for mamma is quite overcome. So I
must close up this last letter from Coalworth, a far
happier one than I thought to end with.
’Your most affectionate,
A. M.
’P. S. Is he
not a hero, equal to his “hoch-beseeltes
Mädchen”? I am ashamed of having written
to you what was never meant for other eyes, but it
will be safe with you. If you had seen how he
used to waylay us, and ask for our tidings from you
after the fire, you would see I cannot doubt who the
“madchen” is. Is there no hope for
him? The other affair was so long ago, and who
could help longing to have such minstrel-love rewarded?’
That postscript did not go on to Brogden,
though Annette’s betrayal of confidence had
been suffered to meet the eye of the high-souled maiden.
The accounts of Lord St. Erme continued
to improve, though his recovery was but slow.
To talk the adventure over was a never-failing interest
to Lady Martindale, who, though Theodora suppressed
Annette’s quotation, was much of the opinion
expressed in the postscript, and made some quiet lamentations
that Theodora had rejected him.
‘No, we were not fit for each other,’
she answered.
‘You would not say so now,’
said Lady Martindale. ’He has done things
as great as yourself, my dear.’
‘I am fit for no one now,’ said Theodora,
bluntly.
’Ah, my dear! But
I don’t know why I should wish you to marry;
I could never do without you.’
‘That’s the most sensible
thing you have said yet, mamma.’
But Theodora wished herself less necessary
at home, when, in a few weeks more, she had to gather
that matters were going on well from the large round-hand
note, with nursery spelling and folding, in which Johnnie
announced that he had a little brother.
An interval of peace to Violet ensued.
Arthur did not nurse her as in old times; but he was
gentle and kind, and was the more with her as the
cough, which had never been entirely removed, was renewed
by a chill in the first cold of September. All
went well till the babe was a week old, when Arthur
suddenly announced his intention of asking for a fortnight’s
leave, as he was obliged to go to Boulogne on business.
Here was a fresh thunderbolt.
Violet guessed that Mr. Gardner was there, and was
convinced that, whatever might be Arthur’s present
designs, he would come back having taken a house at
Boulogne. He answered her imploring look by telling
her not to worry herself; he hoped to get ‘quit
of the concern,’ and, at any rate, could not
help going. She suggested that his cough would
bear no liberties; he said, change of air would take
it off, and scouted her entreaty that he would consult
Mr. Harding. Another morning, a kind careless
farewell, he was gone!
Poor Violet drew the coverlet over
her head; her heart failed her, and she craved that
her throbbing sinking weakness and feverish anxiety
might bring her to her final rest. When she glanced
over the future, her husband deteriorating, and his
love closed up from her; her children led astray by
evil influences of a foreign soil; Johnnie, perhaps,
only saved by separation Johnnie, her precious
comforter; herself far from every friend, every support,
without security of church ordinances all
looked so utterly wretched that, as her pulses beat,
and every sensation of illness was aggravated, she
almost rejoiced in the danger she felt approaching.
Nothing but her infant’s voice
could have recalled her to a calmer mind, and brought
back the sense that she was bound to earth by her children.
She repented as of impatience and selfishness, called
back her resolution, and sought for soothing.
It came. She had taught herself the dominion
over her mind in which she had once been so deficient.
Vexing cares and restless imaginings were driven back
by echoes of hymns and psalms and faithful promises,
as she lay calm and resigned, in her weakness and
solitude, and her babe slept tranquilly in her bosom,
and Johnnie brought his books and histories of his
sisters; and she could smile in thankfulness at their
loveliness of to-day, only in prayer concerning herself
for the morrow. She was content patiently to abide
the Lord.