Skimping’s Farm was the unlucky
name of the place, and Fulk would allow of no modification his
resolution was to accept it all entirely. Now
I love no spot on earth so well. It was very
different then.
The farm-house lay on the slope of
the hill, in the parish of Trevorsham, but with the
park lying between it and the main village. The
ground sloped sharply down to the little river, which,
about two miles lower down, blends with the Avon,
being, in fact, a creek out of Shinglebay. Beneath
the house the stream is clear and rocky, but then
comes a flat of salt marsh, excellent for cattle; and
then, again, the river becomes tidal, and reaches
at high water to the steep banks, sometimes covered
with wood, sometimes with pasture or corn.
Then under the little promontory comes
the hamlet of fisherfolk at Quay Trevor; and then
the coast sweeps away to Shinglebay town, as anyone
may see by the map.
Ours is an old farm, and had an orchard
of old apple-trees sloping down to the river as
also did the home field, only divided by a low stone
wall from the little strip of flower-garden before
the house, which in those days had nothing in it but
two tamarisks, a tea-tree, and a rose with lovely
buds and flowers that always had green hearts.
There was a good-sized kitchen-garden
behind, and the farm-yard was at the side by the back
door. The house is old and therefore was handsome
outside, even then, but the chief of the lower story
was comprised in one big room, a “keeping-room,”
as it was called, with an open chimney, screened by
a settle, and with a long polished table, with a bench
on either side. Into this room the front porch a
deep one, with seats opened. At one
end was a charming little sitting-room, parted off;
at the other, the real kitchen for cooking, and the
dairy and all the rest of the farm offices.
Up-stairs the stairs are
dark oak, and come down at one end of the big kitchen there
is one beautiful large room, made the larger by a grand
oriel window under the gable, one opening out of it,
and four more over the offices; then a step-ladder
and a great cheese-room, and a perfect wilderness
of odd nooks up in the roof.
As to furniture, Fulk had bought that
with the stock and everything else belonging to the
farm for a round sum; and the Chancery people told
us that we might take anything for ourselves from home
that had been bought by ourselves, had belonged to
our mother, or been given to us individually.
So the furniture of Fulk’s rooms
in London most of which he had had at Oxford my
own piano, our books, and various little worktables,
chairs, pictures, and knicknacks appertained to us;
also, we brought what belonged to the little one’s
nursery, and put him in the large room. His grand
nurse Earl though he was could
not stand the change; but old Blake, who was retiring
into a public house, as he could do nothing else for
us, suggested his youngest sister, who became the comfort
of my life, for she was the widow of a small farmer,
and could give me plenty of sound counsel as to how
much pork to provide for the labourers, and how much
small beer would keep them in good heart, and not
make them too merry. And she had too much good
sense to get into rivalry with Susan Sisson, the hind’s
wife, who lived in a kind of lean-to cottage opening
into the farm-yard, and was the chief (real) manager
of the dairy and poultry though such was
not Jaquetta’s view of the case by any manner
of means.
What a help it was to have one creature
who did enjoy it all from the very first!
The parting with Bertram was sore,
and one’s heart will ache after him still at
times, though he is prosperous and happy with his wife
and fine family at the new Trevorsham. Fulk
went through it all in a grave set way, as if he knew
he never should be happy again, and accepted everything
in silence, as a matter of course, not wanting to sadden
us, but often grieving me more by his steady silence
than if he had complained.
One thing he was resolved on, that
he would be a farmer out and out not a
gentleman farmer, as he said; but though he only wore
broadcloth in the evening and on Sundays, I can’t
say he ever succeeded in not looking more of the gentleman.
We fitted up the little parlour with
our prettiest things, and it was our morning room,
and we put a screen across the big keeping-room, which
made it snug for a family gathering place. But
those were the days when everyone was abusing the
farmers for not living with their labourers in the
house, and Fulk was determined to try it, at least
the first year, either for the sake of consistency,
or because he was resolved to keep our expenses as
low as possible. “Failure would be ruin,”
he impressed on us, and he thought we ought to live
on the profits of the farm, except what was directly
spent on the boy, and to save the income of the agency.
(Taking one year with another, we did so.)
So he gave up his own dear old Cid,
and only used the same horses that had sufficed for
our predecessor a most real loss and deprivation and
he chose to take meals at the long table in the keeping-room
with the farm servants. He said we girls might
dine in our little parlour apart, but there was no
bearing that, and the whole household dined and supped
together. Breakfast was at such uncertain times
that we left that for the back kitchen, and had our
own little round table by the fire, or in the parlour,
at half-past seven; and so we took care to have a
good cup of coffee for Fulk when he came in about five
or six; but the half-past twelve dinner and eight
o’clock supper were at the long table, our three
selves and Baby at the top Baby between
me and Mrs. Rowe ("Ally’s Rowe,” as he
called her), then George and Susan Sisson opposite
each other, the under nurse, the two maids, the hind,
and the three lads.
I believe it was a very awful penance
to them at first. We used to hear them splashing
away at the pump and puffing like porpoises; and they
came in with shining faces and lank hair in wet rats’
tails, the foremost of which they pulled on all occasions
of sitting down, getting up, or being offered food.
But they always behaved very well,
and the habit of the animal at feeding-time is so
silent that I believe the restraint was compensated
by the honour; and it did civilise them, thanks, perhaps,
to Susan’s lectures on manners, which we sometimes
overheard.
Fulk made spasmodic attempts to talk
to Sisson; but the chief conversation was Jaquetta’s.
She went on merrily all dinner-time, asking about
ten thousand things, and hazarding opinions that elicited
amusement in spite of ourselves: as when she asked,
what sheep did with their other two legs, or suggested
growing canary seed, as sure to be a profitable crop.
Indeed, I think she had a little speculation in it
on her own account in the kitchen garden only
the sparrows were too many for her and
what they left would not ripen.
But the child was always full of some
new and rare device, rattling on anyhow, not for want
of sense, but just to force a smile out of Fulk and
keep us all alive, as she called it. She knew
every bird and beast on the farm, fed the chickens,
collected the eggs, nursed tender chicks or orphan
lambs and weaning calves, and was in and out with the
dogs all day, really as happy as ten queens, with
the freedom and homely usefulness of the life tripping
daintily about in the tall pattens of farm life in
those days, and making fresh enjoyment and fun of
everything.
I used to be half vexed to see her
grieve so little over all we had lost; but Fulk said,
“I suppose it is very hard to break down a creature
at that age.”
And even I was cheered by the wonderful
start of health Alured took from the time Mrs. Rowe
had him. He grew fat and rosy, and learnt to
walk; and Dr. Hart was quite astonished at his progress,
and said he was nearly safe from any more attacks
of that fearful water on the brain till he was six
or seven years old, and that, till that time, we must
let him be as much as possible in the open air, and
with the animals, and not stimulate his brain neither
teach, nor excite, nor contradict him, nor let him
cry. The farm life was evidently the very thing
he wanted.
What a reprieve it was, even though
it should be only a reprieve!
He was already three years old, and
was very clever and observant.
We were glad that he was too young
to take heed of the change, or to see what was implied
by his change from “baby,” to “my
lord,” and we always called him by his Christian
name. Mrs. Rowe felt far too much for us to
gossip to him, and he was always with her or with me,
though I do believe he liked Ben the great,
rough, hind better than anyone else; would
lead Mrs. Rowe long dances after him, to see him milk
the cows, and would hold forth to him at dinner, in
a way as diverting to us as it was embarrassing to
poor Ben, who used to blurt out at intervals, “Yoi,
my lord,” and “Noa, my lord,” while
the two maids tried to swallow their tittering.
The farmers at market used to call Fulk, “my
lord,” by mistake, and then colour up to their
eyes through their red faces.
I believe, indeed, it was their name
for him among themselves, and that they watched him
with a certain contemptuous compassion, in the full
belief that he would ruin himself.
And he declares he should if he had
lived a bit more luxuriously, or if he had not had
the agency salary to help him through the years of
buying experience and the bad season with which he
began.
Nor was it till he had for some years
introduced that capital breed which thrives so well
in the salt marshes, and twice following showed up
the prize ox at the county show, that they began to
believe in “Farmer Torwood,” or think
his “advanced opinions” in agriculture
anything but a gentleman’s whimsies.
As to friends and acquaintance, I
am afraid we showed a great deal of pride and stiffness.
They were kinder than we deserved, but we thought
it prying and patronage, and would not accept what
we could not return.
It is not fair to say we. It
was only myself Jaquetta never saw anything
but kindness, and took it pleasantly, and Fulk was
too busy and too unhappy to be concerned about our
visiting matters. If I saw anyone coming to
call I hid myself in the orchard, or if I was taken
by surprise I was stiffness itself; and then I wrote
a set of cards (Miss Torwood and Miss Jaquetta Torwood),
and drove round in the queer old-fashioned gig to
leave them, and there was an end of it; for I would
accept no invitations, though Jaquetta looked at me
wistfully. And thus I daunted all but old Miss
Prior. Poor old thing! All her pleasures
had oozed down from our house in old times to her;
and her gratitude was indomitable, and stood all imaginable
rebuffs that courtesy permitted me. I believe
she only pitied and loved me the more, and persevered
in the dreadful kindness that has no tact.
It did not strike me that pleasure
might be good for Jaquetta, or that Fulk’s stern
silent sorrow might have been lightened by variety.
Used as he had been to political life and London society,
it was no small change to have merely the market for
interest, the farm for occupation, and no society
but ourselves; no newspaper but the County Chronicle
once a week; no new books, for Mudie did not exist
then, even if we could have afforded it. We
had dropped out of the guinea country book club, and
Knight’s “Penny Magazine” was our
only fresh literature. However, Jaquetta never
was much of a reader, and was full of business queen
of the poultry, and running after the weakly ones half
the day, supplementing George Sisson’s very inadequate
gardening aye, and his wife’s equally
rough cooking. She found a receipt book, and
turned out excellent dishes. She could not bear,
she said, to see Fulk try to eat grease, and with
an effort at concealment, assisted by the dogs, fall
back upon bread and cheese.
Luckily plain work in the school-room
had not gone out in our day, and I could make and
mend respectably, but I had to keep a volume of Shakespeare,
Scott, or Wordsworth open before me, and learn it by
heart, to keep away thoughts, which might have been
good for me; but no they were working on
their own bitterness.
Sunday was the hardest day of all
to Fulk, for this was the only one on which he could
not be busy enough to tire himself out. We were
a mile from church, and when we got to the worm-eaten
farm pew there was a smell, as Jaquey said, as if
generations of farmers had been eating cheese there,
and generations of mice eating after them; and she
always longed to shut up a cat there.
The old curate was very old, and nothing
seemed alive but the fiddles in the gallery indeed,
after the “Penny Magazine” had made us
acquainted with the Nibelung, Jaquey took to calling
Sisson, Folker the mighty fiddler, so determined were
his strains.
After the great house was shut up,
one service was dropped, and so the latter part of
the day was spent in a visit to all the livestock,
Fulk laden with Alured, and Jaquetta with tit bits
for each and all.
She and Alured really enjoyed it,
and we tried to think we did! And then Fulk
used to stride off on a long solitary walk, or else
sit in the porch with his arms across, in a dumb heavy
silence, till he saw us looking at him; and then he
would shake himself, and go and find Sisson, and discuss
every field and beast with him.
At least we thought we should have
been at peace here; but one afternoon, when Jaquetta
had gone across to the village to see some purchase
at the shop, she came back flushed and breathless,
and said as she sat down by me, “Oh! Ursie,
Ursie, I met Miss Prior; and she has bought
Spinney Lawn.”
She was Hester; it had never
meant anyone else amongst us when it was said in that
voice. Fulk, when we told him, had, it appeared,
known it for some days past. All he said was,
“Well! she has every right.”
And when I exclaimed, “Just
like a harpy, come to watch our poor child!”
he said, “Nonsense.”
But I knew I was right, and sat brooding till
presently he said, “Put that out of your head,
Ursula, or you will not be able to behave properly
to her.”
“I don’t see any good
in behaving properly to her,” said Jaquetta.
“What business has she to come here?”
“I do not choose to regale the
neighbourhood with our family jars” said
Fulk, quietly.
And then such a ridiculous
child as Jaquetta was she burst out laughing,
and cried, “What a feast they would be!
Preserved crabs, I suppose;” and she brought
a tiny curl into the corner of his mouth.
My pride was up, and I remember I
answered, “You are right, Fulk. No one
shall say we are jealous, or shrink from the sight
of her!”
“When Smith told me that he
had no idea who was the bidder, or he would not have
suffered it,” said Fulk, “I told him I
could have no possible objection!”
And so we endured it in our pride and our dignity.
Lady Hester Lea was the heroine of
the neighbourhood. The romance of the disowned
daughter was charming; and I was far too disagreeable
to excite any counterbalancing pity. She was
handsome, and everybody raved about her likeness to
poor papa and the family portraits; and her Montreal
convent had given her manners quite distinct from English
vulgarity; or, maybe, her blood told on her bearing,
for she was immensely admired for her demeanour, quite
as much as for her beauty.
Old Miss Prior whom no
coldness on my part could check in her assiduous kindness,
and nothing would hinder from affectionately telling
us whatever we did not want to hear kept
us constantly informed of the new comer’s triumphs.
Especially she would dwell upon the sensation that
Lady Hester produced, and all that the gentlemen said
of her. Her name stood as lady patroness to all
the balls and fancy fairs, and archery, that Shinglebay
produced; and there was no going to shop there without
her barouche coming clattering down the street with
the two prancing greys, and poor little Trevor inside,
with a looped-up hat and ostrich feather exactly like
Alured’s; for by some intention she always dressed
him in the exact likeness of his little uncle’s.
I used to think Miss Prior told her, and sedulously
prevented her ever seeing his lordship out of his
brown holland pinafores, but the same rule still held
good.
What tender enquiries poor Miss Prior
used to make after “the dear little lord,”
as she called him. My asseverations of his health
and intelligence generally eliciting that it was current
among Lady Hester’s friends that he could neither
stand nor speak, and was so imbecile that it was a
mercy that he could not live to be eight years old.
Of course that was what Hester was
waiting for. And no small pleasure was it when
Alured would come pattering in with a shout of “Ursa,
Ursa,” and as soon as he saw a lady, would stop,
and pull off his hat from his chestnut curls like
the little gentleman he always was.
Spinney Lawn was bought before Joel
Lea came to England. If he had seen where it
was I doubt whether he would have consented to the
purchase; but Perrault managed it all, and then, with
what he had made out of the case, bought himself a
share in Meakin’s office at Shinglebay, and
constituted himself Lady Hester’s legal adviser.
Mr. Lea, after vainly trying to get
his wife to return to Sault St. Pierre, thought it
wrong to be apart from her and his son, and came to
England.
Fulk went at once to call on him,
expecting to be disgusted with Yankeeisms; but came
home, saying he had found a more unlucky man than
himself!
Fancy a great, big, plain, hard-working
back-woodsman, bred only to the axe and rifle, with
illimitable forests to range in, happy in toil and
homely plenty, and a little king to himself, set down
in an English villa, with a trim garden and paddock,
and servants everywhere to deprive him of the very
semblance to occupation!
Poor man! he had not even the alleviation
of being proud of it, and trying to live up to it.
Puritan to the bone of his broad back, he thought
everything as wicked as it was wearisome and foolish;
and lived like Faithful in “Vanity Fair,”
solely enduring it for the sake of his wife and son.
I suppose he could not have carried her off, or altered
her course without the strong hand; for she was a determined
woman, all the more resolute because she acted for
her child.
He was a staunch Dissenter, and would
not go to church with Lady Hester, who did so as a
needful part of the belonging of her station, or,
perhaps, to watch over us, but trudged two miles every
Sunday to the meeting-house at Shinglebay, where he
was a great light, and spent all that she allowed
him on the minister and the Sunday school.
As to society, he abhorred it on principle,
and kept out of the way when his wife gave her parties.
If she had an old affection for him in the depths
of her heart, it was swallowed up in vexation and
provocation; and no wonder, for the verdict of society,
as Miss Prior reported it, was “How
sad that such a woman as Lady Hester should have been
thrown away on a mere common man not a bit
better than a labourer.”
I detested him like all the rest;
but Fulk declared he was sublime in passive endurance,
and used to make opportunities of consulting him about
cattle or farming, just to interest him.
Fulk and the dissenting minister were
the only friends the poor man had, and the latter
Hester would not let into her house. As to Perrault,
he loathed and shrank from him as the real destroyer
of all his peace, and still the most dangerous influence
about his wife. He never said so, but we felt
it.
I think the poor man’s happiest
hours were spent here; and, now and then in a press
of work, or to show how a thing ought to be done, he
put his own hand to axe, lever, or hay-fork, and toiled
with that cruelly-wasted alert strength.
Fulk always says there never was anyone
who taught him so much as Joel Lea, and he means deeper
things than farming.
Sometimes Mr. Lea brought his little
boy. I was vexed at first; but Alured, who had
hardly spoken to a child before, was in ecstasies,
as if a new existence had come upon him; and Trevor
Lea was really a very nice little boy. He was
only half a year the elder; and they were so much
alike that strangers did not know them apart, dressed
alike, as they were; or they were taken for twins,
and it made people laugh to find they were uncle and
nephew.
And I must allow the nephew was the
best behaved, though it made me savage to hear Fulk
say so. But our Ally’s was not real naughtiness only
the consequence of our not being able to keep up discipline,
while we lived in dread of that seventh year that
might rob us of our darling always sweet
and loving.