‘Take care! Oh, take care!’
Whisk, swish, click, click, through
the little crowd at Stokesley on a fine April afternoon,
of jocund children just let loose from school, and
mothers emerging from their meeting, collecting their
progeny after the fashion of old ewes with their lambs;
Susan Merrifield in a huge, carefully preserved brown
mushroom hat, with a big basket under one arm, and
a roll of calico under the other; her sister Elizabeth
with a book in one hand, and a packet of ambulance
illustrations; the Vicar, Mr. Doyle, and his sister
likewise loaded, talking to them about the farmer’s
wedding of the morning, for which the bells had been
ringing fitfully all day, and had just burst out again.
Such was the scene, through which, like a flash, spun
a tricycle, from which a tiny curly-haired being in
knickerbockers was barely saved by his mother’s
seizing him by one arm.
‘A tricycle!’ exclaimed the Vicar.
‘A woman! Oh!’ cried
Susan in horror, ’and she’s stopping at
the Gap. Oh!’
‘My dear Susie, you must have
seen ladies on tricycles before,’ whispered
her sister.
’No, indeed, I am thankful to
say I have not! If it should be Miss Arthuret!’
said Susan, with inexpressible tones in her voice.
‘She was bowing right and left,’
said the Vicar, a little maliciously; ’depend
upon it, she thought this was a welcome from the rural
population.’
‘Hark! here’s something coming.’
The Bonchamp fly came rattling up,
loaded with luggage, and with a quiet lady in black
seated in it, which stopped at the same gate.
‘The obedient mother, no doubt,’
said Elizabeth. ’She looks like a lady.’
There had been a good deal of excitement
at Stokesley about the property known by the pleasing
name of the Gap. An old gentleman had lived
there for many years, always in a secluded state, and
latterly imbecile, and on his death in the previous
year no one had for some time appeared as heir; but
it became known that the inheritrix was a young lady,
a great-niece, living with a widowed mother in one
of the large manufacturing towns in the north of England.
Her father had been a clergyman and had died when
she was an infant. That was all that was known,
and as the house had become almost uninhabitable,
the necessary repairs had prevented the heiress from
taking possession all this time. It was not a
very large inheritance, only comprising a small farm,
the substantial village shop, four or five cottages,
and a moderate-sized house and grounds, where the
neglected trees had grown to strange irregular proportions,
equally with the income, which, owing to the outgoings
being small, had increased to about 800 or 900 pounds
a year, and of course it was a subject of much anxiety
with Admiral Merrifield’s family to know what
sort of people the newcomers would prove.
Of the large family only the two eldest
daughters were at home; Susan, now nearly forty, had
never left it, but had been the daughter-of-all-work
at home and lady-of-all-work to the parish ever since
she had emerged from the schoolroom; her apricot complexion
showing hardly any change, and such as there was never
perceived by her parents. The Admiral, still
a light, wiry, hale man, as active as ever, with his
hands full of county, parish, and farming business;
an invalid for many years, but getting into that health
which is La jeunesse de La vieillesse.
Elizabeth had, from twenty-five to
thirty-two, been spared from home by her father to
take care of his stepmother in London, where she had
beguiled her time with a certain amount of authorship
under a nom de Plume, and had been
introduced to some choice society both through her
literary abilities and her family connections.
Four years previous the old lady had
died, leaving her a legacy, which, together with her
gains, would have enabled her to keep such a home
in town as to remain in touch with the world to which
she had been introduced; but she had never lost her
Stokesley heart enough for the temptation to outweigh
the disappointment she would have caused at home,
and the satisfaction and rest of being among her own
people. So she only went up for an occasional
visit, and had become the brightness of the house,
and Susan’s beloved partner in all her works.
Her father, who understood better
than did her mother and sister what she had given
up, had insisted on her having a sitting-room to herself,
which she embellished with the personal possessions
she had accumulated, and where she pursued her own
avocations in the forenoon, often indeed interrupted,
but never showing, and not often feeling, that it
was to her hindrance, and indeed the family looked
on her work sufficiently as a profession, not only
to acquiesce, but to have a certain complacency in
it, though it was a kind of transparent fiction that
Mesa was an anagram of her initials and that
of Stokesley. Her mother at any rate believed
that none of the neighbours guessed at any such thing.
Stokesley was a good deal out of the
world, five miles from the station at Bonchamp, over
hilly, stony roads, so that the cyclist movement had
barely reached it; the neighbourhood was sparse, and
Mrs. Merrifield’s health had not been conducive
to visiting, any more than was her inclination, so
that there was a little agitation about first calls.
The newcomers appeared at church on
Sunday at all the services. A bright-faced girl
of one-and-twenty, with little black eyes like coals
of fire, a tight ulster, like a riding habit, and a
small billycock hat, rather dismayed those who still
held that bonnets ought to be the Sunday gear of all
beyond childhood; but the mother, in rich black silk,
was unexceptionable.
Refusing to be marshalled up the aisle
to the seat which persistent tradition assigned to
the Gap in the aristocratic quarter, daughter and
mother (it was impossible not thus to call them) sat
themselves down on the first vacant place, close to
a surviving white smock-frock, and blind to the bewildered
glances of his much-bent friend in velveteen, who,
hobbling in next after, found himself displaced and
separated alike from his well-thumbed prayer and hymn
book and the companion who found the places for him.
‘It ain’t fitty like,’
said the old man confidentially to Susan, ’nor
the ladies wouldn’t like it when we comes in
with our old coats all of a muck with wet.’
‘The principle is right,’
said Bessie, when this was repeated to her; ’but
practice ought to wait till native manners and customs
are learnt.’
The two sisters offered to save their
mother the first visit leave her card,
or make her excuses; but Mrs. Merrifield held that
a card thus left savoured of deceit, and that the
deed must be womanfully done in person. But
she would not wait till the horses could be spared,
saying that for near village neighbours it was more
friendly to go down in her donkey-chair; and so she
did, Bessie driving her, and the Admiral walking with
them.
The Gap had, ever since Bessie could
remember, been absolutely shrouded in trees, its encircling
wall hidden in ivy bushes, over which laburnums, lilacs,
pink thorns, and horse chestnuts towered; and the
drive from the seldom-opened gate was almost obstructed
by the sweeping arms of laurels and larches.
It was obstructed now, but by these
same limbs lying amputated; and ‘chop, chop!’
was heard in the distance.
‘Oh, the Arbutus!’ sighed Bessie.
‘Clearing was much needed,’
said her father, with a man’s propensity for
the axe.
The donkey, however, thought it uncanny,
’upon the pivot of his skull, turned round his
long left ear,’ and planted his feet firmly.
Mrs. Merrifield, deprecating the struggle by which
her husband would on such occasions enforce discipline,
begged to get out; and while this was going on, the
ulstered young lady, with a small axe in hand, came,
as it were, to the rescue, and, while the donkey was
committed to a small boy, explained hastily, ’So
overgrown, there is nothing to be done but to let
in light and air. My mother is at home,’
she added; ‘she will be happy to see you,’
and, conducting them in with complete self-possession rather,
as it occurred to Bessie, as the Queen might have
led the way to the Duchess of Kent, though there was
a perfect simplicity and evident enjoyment about her
that was very prepossessing, and took off the edge
of the sense of conceit. Besides, the palace
was, to London eyes at least, so little to boast of,
with the narrow little box of a wooden porch, the
odd, one-sided vestibule, and the tiny anteroom with
the worn carpet; but the drawing-room, in spite of
George IV furniture, was really pretty, with French
windows opening on a well-mown lawn, and fresh importations
of knick-knacks, and vases of wild flowers, which
made it look inhabited and pleasant. There was
no one there, and the young lady proceeded to fetch
her mother; and the unguarded voice was caught by
Bessie’s quick ears from the window.
’Here are Admiral and Mrs. Merrifield,
and one daughter. Come along, little mammy!
Worthy, homely old folks just in your line.’
To Bessie’s relief, she perceived
that this was wholly unheard by her father and mother.
And there was no withstanding the eager, happy, shy
looks of the mother, whose whole face betrayed that
after many storms she had come into a haven of peace,
and that she was proud to owe it to her daughter.
A few words showed that mother and
daughter were absolutely enchanted with Stokesley,
their own situation, and one another the
young lady evidently all the more because she perceived
so much to be done.
‘Everything wants improving.
It is so choked up,’ she said, ’one wants
to let in the light.’
‘There are a good many trees,’
said the Admiral, while Bessie suspected that she
meant figuratively as well as literally; and as the
damsel was evidently burning to be out at her clearing
operations again, and had never parted with her axe,
the Admiral offered to go with her and tell her about
the trees, for, as he observed, she could hardly judge
of those not yet out in leaf.
She accepted him, though Bessie shrewdly
suspected that the advice would be little heeded,
and, not fancying the wet grass and branches, nor
the demolition of old friends, she did not follow the
pair, but effaced herself, and listened with much interest
to the two mothers, who sat on the sofa with their
heads together. Either Mrs. Merrifield was wonderful
in inspiring confidence, or it was only too delightful
to Mrs. Arthuret to find a listener of her own standing
to whom to pour forth her full heart of thankfulness
and delight in her daughter. ‘Oh, it is
too much!’ occurred so often in her talk that,
if it had not been said with liquid eyes, choking
voice, and hands clasped in devout gratitude, it would
have been tedious; but Mrs. Merrifield thoroughly
went along with it, and was deeply touched.
The whole story, as it became known,
partly in these confidences, partly afterwards, was
this. The good lady, who had struck the family
at first as a somewhat elderly mother for so young
a daughter, had been for many years a governess, engaged
all the time to a curate, who only obtained a small
district incumbency in a town, after wear and tear,
waiting and anxiety, had so exhausted him that the
second winter brought on bronchitis, and he scarcely
lived to see his little daughter, Arthurine.
The mother had struggled on upon a pittance eked
out with such music teaching as she could procure,
with her little girl for her sole care, joy, and pride a
child who, as she declared, had never given her one
moment’s pang or uneasiness.
‘Poor mamma, could she say that
of any one of her nine?’ thought Bessie; and
Mrs. Merrifield made no such attempt.
Arthurine had brought home all prizes,
all distinctions at the High School, but here
was the only disappointment of her life a
low fever had prevented her trying for a scholarship
at Girton. In consideration, however, of her
great abilities and high qualities, as well as out
of the great kindness of the committee, she had been
made an assistant to one of the class mistresses, and
had worked on with her own studies, till the wonderful
tidings came of the inheritance that had fallen to
her quite unexpectedly; for since her husband’s
death Mrs. Arthuret had known nothing of his family,
and while he was alive there were too many between
him and the succession for the chance to occur to
him as possible. The relief and blessing were
more than the good lady could utter. All things
are comparative, and to one whose assured income had
been 70 pounds a year, 800 pounds was unbounded wealth;
to one who had spent her life in schoolrooms and lodgings,
the Gap was a lordly demesne.
‘And what do you think was the
first thing my sweet child said?’ added Mrs.
Arthuret, with her eyes glittering through tears.
’Mammy, you shall never hear the scales again,
and you shall have the best Mocha coffee every day
of your life.’
Bessie felt that after this she must
like the sweet child, though sweetness did not seem
to her the predominant feature in Arthurine.
After the pathos to which she had
listened there was somewhat of a comedy to come, for
the ladies had spent the autumn abroad, and had seen
and enjoyed much. ’It was a perfect feast
to see how Arthurine entered into it all,’ said
the mother. ’She was never at a loss,
and explained it all to me. Besides, perhaps
you have seen her article?’
‘I beg your pardon.’
’Her article in the Kensington.
It attracted a great deal of attention, and she has
had many compliments.’
‘Oh! the Kensington magazine,’
said Mrs. Merrifield, rather uneasily, for she was
as anxious that Bessie should not be suspected of
writing in the said periodical as the other mother
was that Arthurine should have the fame of her contributions.
‘Do you take it?’ asked
Mrs. Arthuret, ’for we should be very glad to
lend it to you.’
A whole pile was on the table, and
Mrs. Merrifield looked at them with feeble thanks
and an odd sort of conscious dread, though she could
with perfect truth have denied either ‘taking
it’ or reading it.
Bessie came to her relief. ‘Thank
you,’ she said; ’we do; some of us have
it. Is your daughter’s article signed A.
A., and doesn’t it describe a boarding-house
on the Italian lakes? I thought it very clever
and amusing.’
Mrs. Arthuret’s face lighted
up. ‘Oh yes, my dear,’ slipped out
in her delight. ’And do you know, it all
came of her letter to one of the High School ladies,
who is sister to the sub-editor, such a clever, superior
girl! She read it to the headmistress and all,
and they agreed that it was too good to be lost, and
Arthurine copied it out and added to it, and he Mr.
Jarrett said it was just what he wanted so
full of information and liveliness and she
is writing some more for him.’
Mrs. Merrifield was rather shocked,
but she felt that she herself was in a glass house,
was, in fact, keeping a literary daughter, so she
only committed herself to, ‘She is very young.’
‘Only one-and-twenty,’
returned Mrs. Arthuret triumphantly; ’but then
she has had such advantages, and made such use of them.
Everything seems to come at once, though, perhaps,
it is unthankful to say so. Of course, it is
no object now, but I could not help thinking what
it would have been to us to have discovered this talent
of hers at the time when we could hardly make both
ends meet.’
‘She will find plenty of use
for it,’ said Mrs. Merrifield, who, as the wife
of a country squire and the mother of nine children,
did not find it too easy to make her ends meet upon
a larger income.
’Oh yes! indeed she will, the
generous child. She is full of plans for the
regeneration of the village.’
Poor Mrs. Merrifield! this was quite
too much for her. She thought it irreverent
to apply the word in any save an ecclesiastical sense;
nor did she at all desire to have the parish, which
was considered to be admirably worked by the constituted
authorities, ‘regenerated,’ whatever that
might mean, by a young lady of one-and-twenty.
She rose up and observed to her daughter that she
saw papa out upon the lawn, and she thought it was
time to go home.
Mrs. Arthuret came out with them,
and found what Bessie could only regard as a scene
of desolation. Though gentlemen, as a rule, have
no mercy on trees, and ladies are equally inclined
to cry, ’Woodman, spare that tree,’ the
rule was reversed, for Miss Arthuret was cutting,
and ordering cutting all round her ruthlessly with
something of the pleasure of a child in breaking a
new toy to prove that it is his own, scarcely listening
when the Admiral told her what the trees were, and
how beautiful in their season; while even as to the
evergreens, she did not know a yew from a cedar, and
declared that she must get rid of this horrid old laurustinus,
while she lopped away at a Portugal laurel.
Her one idea seemed to be that it was very unwholesome
to live in a house surrounded with trees; and the
united influence of the Merrifields, working on her
mother by representing what would be the absence of
shade in a few months’ time, barely availed
to save the life of the big cedar; while the great
rhododendron, wont to present a mountain of shining
leaves and pale purple blossoms every summer, was hewn
down without remorse as an awful old laurel, and left
a desolate brown patch in its stead.
‘Is it an emblem,’ thought
Bessie, ’of what she would like to do to all
of us poor old obstructions?’
After all, Mrs. Merrifield could not
help liking the gentle mother, by force of sympathy;
and the Admiral was somewhat fascinated by the freshness
and impetuosity of the damsel, as elderly men are wont
to be with young girls who amuse them with what they
are apt to view as an original form of the silliness
common to the whole female world except their own
wives, and perhaps their daughters; and Bessie was
extremely amused, and held her peace, as she had been
used to do in London. Susan was perhaps the
most annoyed and indignant. She was presiding
over seams and button-holes the next afternoon at school,
when the mother and daughter walked in; and the whole
troop started to their feet and curtsied.
’Don’t make them stand!
I hate adulation. Sit down, please. Where’s
the master?’
‘In the boys’ school,
ma’am,’ said the mistress, uncomfortably
indicating the presence of Miss Merrifield, who felt
herself obliged to come forward and shake hands.
‘Oh! so you have separate schools.
Is not that a needless expense?’
‘It has always been so,’ returned Susan
quietly.
’Board? No? Well,
no doubt you are right; but I suppose it is at a sacrifice
of efficiency. Have you cookery classes?’
’We have not apparatus, and
the girls go out too early for it to be of much use.’
‘Ah, that’s a mistake. Drawing?’
‘The boys draw.’
’I shall go and see them.
Not the girls? They look orderly enough; but
are they intelligent? Well, I shall look in and
examine them on their special subjects, if they have
any. I suppose not.’
‘Only class. Grammar and needlework.’
‘I see, the old routine. Quite the village
school.’
‘It is very nice work,’
put in Mrs. Arthuret, who had been looking at it.
’Oh yes, it always is when everything
is sacrificed to it. Good-morning, I shall
see more of you, Mrs. ahem.’
‘Please, ma’am, should
I tell her that she is not a school manager?’
inquired the mistress, somewhat indignantly, when the
two ladies had departed.
‘You had better ask the Vicar
what to do,’ responded Susan.
The schoolmaster, on his side, seemed
to have had so much advice and offers of assistance
in lessons on history, geography, and physical science,
that he had been obliged to refer her to the managers,
and explain that till the next inspection he was bound
to abide by the time-table.
‘Ah, well, I will be one of
the managers another year.’
So she told the Vicar, who smiled,
and said, ‘We must elect you.’
’I am sure much ought to be
done. It is mere waste to have two separate
schools, when a master can bring the children on so
much better in the higher subjects.’
’Mrs. Merrifield and the rest
of us are inclined to think that what stands highest
of all with us is endangered by mixed schools,’
said Mr. Doyle.
‘Oh!’ Arthurine opened
her eyes; ‘but education does all THAT!’
’Education does, but knowledge
is not wisdom. Susan Merrifield’s influence
has done more for our young women than the best class
teaching could do.’
’Oh, but the Merrifields are
all so Bornes and homely; they stand in the way
of all culture.’
‘Indeed,’ said the Vicar,
who had in his pocket a very favourable review of
MESA’s new historical essay.
’Surely an old-fashioned squire
and Lady Bountiful and their very narrow daughters
should not be allowed to prevent improvement, pauperise
the place, and keep it in its old grooves.’
’Well, we shall see what you
think by the time you have lived here long enough
to be eligible for what?’
‘School manager, guardian of
the poor!’ cried Arthurine.
‘We shall see,’ repeated the Vicar.
‘Good-morning.’
He asked Bessie’s leave to disclose who Mesa
was.
‘Oh, don’t!’ she
cried, ’it would spoil the fun! Besides,
mamma would not like it, which is a better reason.’
There were plenty of books, old and
new, in Bessie’s room, magazines and reviews,
but they did not come about the house much, unless
any of the Rockstone cousins or the younger generation
were staying there, or her brother David had come
for a rest of mind and body. Between housekeeping,
gardening, parish work, and pottering, Mrs. Merrifield
and Susan never had time for reading, except that Susan
thought it her duty to keep something improving in
hand, which generally lasted her six weeks on a moderate
average. The Admiral found quite reading enough
in the newspapers, pamphlets, and business publications;
and their neighbours, the Greville family, were chiefly
devoted to hunting and lawn tennis, so that there was
some reason in Mrs. Arthuret’s lamentation to
the Vicar that dear Arthurine did so miss intellectual
society, such as she had been used to with the High
School mistresses two of whom had actually
been at Girton!
‘Does she not get on with Bessie
Merrifield?’ he asked.
’Miss Bessie has a very sweet
face; Arthurine did say she seemed well informed and
more intelligent than her sister. Perhaps Arthurine
might take her up. It would be such an advantage
to the poor girl.’
‘Which?’ was on Mr. Doyle’s
tongue, but he restrained it, and only observed that
Bessie had lived for a good many years in London.
‘So I understood,’ said
Arthurine, ’but with an old grandmother, and
that is quite as bad as if it was in the country; but
I will see about it. I might get up a debating
society, or one for studying German.’
In the meantime Arthurine decided
on improving and embellishing the parish with a drinking
fountain, and meeting Bessie one afternoon in the
village, she started the idea.
‘But,’ said Bessie, ’there
is a very good supply. Papa saw that good water
was accessible to all the houses in the village street
ten years ago, and the outlying ones have wells, and
there’s the brook for the cattle.’
’I am sure every village should
have a fountain and a trough, and I shall have it
here instead of this dirty corner.’
‘Can you get the ground?’
‘Oh, any one would give ground for such a purpose!
Whose is it?’
‘Mr. Grice’s, at Butter End.’
The next time Susan and Bessie encountered Arthurine,
she began
’Can you or Admiral Merrifield
do nothing with that horrid old Grice! Never
was any one so pigheaded and stupid.’
‘What? He won’t part with the land
you want?’
’No; I wrote to him and got
no answer. Then I wrote again, and I got a peaked-hand
sort of note that his wife wrote, I should think.
“Mr. Grice presented his compliments” (compliments
indeed!), “and had no intention of parting with
any part of Spragg’s portion.” Well,
then I called to represent what a benefit it would
be to the parish and his own cattle, and what do you
think the old brute said? that “there
was a great deal too much done for the parish already,
and he wouldn’t have no hand in setting up the
labourers, who were quite impudent enough already.”
Well, I saw it was of no use to talk to an old wretch
like that about social movements and equal rights,
so I only put the question whether having pure water
easily accessible would not tend to make them better
behaved and less impudent as he called it, upon which
he broke out into a tirade. “He didn’t
hold with cold water and teetotal, not he. Why,
it had come to THAT that there was
no such thing as getting a fair day’s work out
of a labouring man with their temperance, and their
lectures, and their schools, and their county councils
and what not!” Really I had read of such people,
but I hardly believed they still existed.’
‘Grice is very old, and the
regular old sort of farmer,’ said Bessie.
‘But could not the Admiral persuade
him, or Mr. Doyle?’
‘Oh no,’ said Susan, ’it
would be of no use. He was just as bad about
a playground for the boys, though it would have prevented
their being troublesome elsewhere.’
‘Besides,’ added Bessie,
’I am sure papa would say that there is no necessity.
He had the water analysed, and it is quite good, and
plenty of it.’
‘Well, I shall see what can be done.’
‘She thinks us as bad as old
Grice,’ said Susan, as they saw her walking
away in a determined manner.
The next thing that was heard was
the Admiral coming in from the servants’ hall,
whither he had been summoned by ’Please, sir,
James Hodd wishes to speak to you.’
‘What is this friend of yours about, Bessie?’
‘What friend, papa?’
‘Why, this Miss Arthur what
d’ye call her?’ said the Admiral (who
on the whole was much more attracted by her than were
his daughters). ’Here’s a deputation
from her tenant, James Hodd, with “Please, sir,
I wants to know if ’tis allowed to turn folks
out of their houses as they’ve paid rent for
reg’lar with a week’s notice, when they
pays by the year."’
‘You don’t mean it!’ exclaimed Mrs.
Merrifield and Susan together.
‘Poor old Mrs. West,’ said the mother.
‘And all the Tibbinses!’
exclaimed Susan. ’She can’t do it,
can she, papa?’
’Certainly not, without the
proper notice, and so I told James, and that the notice
she had sent down to him was so much waste-paper.’
‘So at least she has created
a village Hampden,’ said Bessie, ’though,
depend upon it, she little supposes herself to be the
petty tyrant.’
‘I must go and explain to her,
I suppose, to-morrow morning,’ said the Admiral.
However, he had scarcely reached his
own gate before the ulstered form was seen rushing
up to him.
‘Oh! Admiral Merrifield,
good-morning; I was coming to ask you ’
‘And I was coming to you.’
’Oh! Admiral, is it really
so as that impudent man told me that
those horrid people can’t be got out of those
awful tumbledown, unhealthy places for all that immense
time?’
’Surely he was not impudent
to you? He was only asserting his right.
The cottages were taken by the year, and you have
no choice but to give six months’ notice.
I hope he was not disrespectful.’
’Well, no I can’t
say that he was, though I don’t care for those
cap-in-hand ways of your people here. But at
any rate, he says he won’t go no,
not any of them, though I offered to pay them up to
the end of the time, and now I must put off my beautiful
plans. I was drawing them all yesterday morning two
model cottages on each side, and the drinking fountain
in the middle. I brought them up to show you.
Could you get the people to move out? I would
promise them to return after the rebuilding.’
‘Very nice drawings. Yes yes very
kind intentions.’
‘Then can’t you persuade them?’
’But, my dear young lady, have
you thought what is to become of them in the meantime?’
’Why, live somewhere else!
People in Smokeland were always shifting about.’
’Yes those poor little
town tenements are generally let on short terms and
are numerous enough. But here where
are the vacant cottages for your four families?
Hodd with his five children, Tibbins with eight or
nine, Mrs. West and her widow daughter and three children,
and the Porters with a bedridden father?’
‘They are dreadfully overcrowded.
Is there really no place?’
’Probably not nearer than those
trumpery new tenements at Bonchamp. That would
be eight miles to be tramped to the men’s work,
and the Wests would lose the washing and charing that
maintains them.’
’Then do you think it can never
be done? See how nice my plans are!’
‘Oh yes! very pretty drawings,
but you don’t allow much outlet.’
’I thought you had allotments,
and that they would do, and I mean to get rid of the
pig-sties.’
‘A most unpopular proceeding, I warn you.’
‘There’s nothing more unsanitary than
a pig-sty.’
’That depends on how it is kept.
And may I ask, do you mean also to dispense with
staircases?’
’Oh! I forgot. But
do you really mean to say that I can never carry out
my improvements, and that these people must live all
herded together till everybody is dead?’
‘Not quite that,’ said
the Admiral, laughing; ’but most improvements
require patience and a little experience of the temper
and habits of the people. There are cottages
worse than these. I think two of them have four
rooms, and the Wests and Porters do not require so
much. If you built one or two elsewhere, and
moved the people into them, or waited for a vacant
one, you might carry out some of your plans gradually.’
‘And my fountain?’
’I am not quite sure, but I
am afraid your cottages are on that stratum where
you could not bring the water without great expense.’
Arthurine controlled herself enough
for a civil ‘Good-morning!’ but she shed
tears as she walked home and told her pitying mother
that she was thwarted on every side, and that nobody
could comprehend her.
The meetings for German reading were,
however, contrived chiefly little as Arthurine
guessed it by the influence of Bessie Merrifield.
The two Greville girls and Mr. Doyle’s sister,
together with the doctor’s young wife, two damsels
from the next parish, and a friend or two that the
Arthurets had made at Bonchamp, formed an imposing
circle to begin.
‘Oh, not on Wilhelm tell!’
cried Arthurine. ’It might as well be
the alphabet at once.’
However, the difficulties in the way
of books, and consideration for general incompetency,
reduced her to Wilhelm tell, and she began
with a lecture first on Schiller, and then upon Switzerland,
and on the legend; but when Bessie Merrifield put
in a word of such history and criticisms as were not
in the High School Manual, she was sure everything
else must be wrong ’Fräulein
Blumenbach never said so, and she was an admirable
German scholar.’
Miss Doyle went so far as to declare
she should not go again to see Bessie Merrifield so
silenced, sitting by after the first saying nothing,
but only with a little laugh in her eyes.
‘But,’ said Bessie, ’it
is such fun to see any person having it so entirely
her own way like Macaulay, so cock-sure
of everything and to see those Bonchamp
girls Mytton is their name so
entirely adoring her.’
‘I am sorry she has taken up
with those Myttons,’ said Miss Doyle.
‘So am I,’ answered Susan.
‘You too, Susie!’ exclaimed
Bessie ’you, who never have a word
to say against any one!’
‘I daresay they are very good
girls,’ said Susan; ‘but they are ’
‘Underbred,’ put in Miss
Doyle in the pause. ’And how they flatter!’
‘I think the raptures are genuine
gush,’ said Bessie; ’but that is so much
the worse for Arthurine. Is there any positive
harm in the family beyond the second-rate tone?’
‘It was while you were away,’
said Susan; ’but their father somehow behaved
very ill about old Colonel Mytton’s will at
least papa thought so, and never wished us to visit
them.’
‘He was thought to have used
unfair influence on the old gentleman,’ said
Miss Doyle; ’but the daughters are so young that
probably they had no part in it. Only it gives
a general distrust of the family; and the sons are
certainly very undesirable young men.’
‘It is unlucky,’ said
Bessie, ’that we can do nothing but inflict a
course of snubbing, in contrast with a course of admiration.’
‘I am sure I don’t want
to snub her,’ said good-natured Susan.
’Only when she does want to do such queer things,
how can it be helped?’
It was quite true, Mrs. and Miss Arthuret
had been duly called upon and invited about by the
neighbourhood; but it was a scanty one, and they had
not wealth and position enough to compensate for the
girl’s self-assertion and literary pretensions.
It was not a superior or intellectual society, and,
as the Rockstone Merrifields laughingly declared,
it was fifty years behindhand, and where Bessie Merrifield,
for the sake of the old stock and her meek bearing
of her success nay, her total ignoring
of her literary honours would be accepted.
Arthurine, half her age, and a newcomer, was disliked
for the pretensions which her mother innocently pressed
on the world. Simplicity and complacency were
taken for arrogance, and the mother and daughter were
kept upon formal terms of civility by all but the
Merrifields, who were driven into discussion and opposition
by the young lady’s attempts at reformations
in the parish.
It was the less wonder that they made
friends where their intimacy was sought and appreciated.
There was nothing underbred about themselves; both
were ladies ingrain, though Arthurine was abrupt and
sometimes obtrusive, but they had not lived a life
such as to render them sensitive to the lack of fine
edges in others, and were quite ready to be courted
by those who gave the meed of appreciation that both
regarded as Arthurine’s just portion.
Mr. Mytton had been in India, and
had come back to look after an old relation; to whom
he and his wife had paid assiduous attention, and
had been so rewarded as to excite the suspicion and
displeasure of the rest of the family. The prize
had not been a great one, and the prosperity of the
family was further diminished by the continual failures
of the ne’er-do-well sons, so that they had to
make the best of the dull, respectable old house they
had inherited, in the dull, respectable old street
of the dull, respectable old town. Daisy and
Pansy Mytton were, however, bright girls, and to them
Arthurine Arthuret was a sort of realised dream of
romance, raised suddenly to the pinnacle of all to
which they had ever durst aspire.
After meeting her at a great omnium
GATHERUM garden party, the acquaintance flourished.
Arthurine was delighted to give the intense pleasure
that the freedom of a country visit afforded to the
sisters, and found in them the contemporaries her girl
nature had missed.
They were not stupid, though they
had been poorly educated, and were quite willing to
be instructed by her and to read all she told them.
In fact, she was their idol, and a very gracious one.
Deeply did they sympathise in all her sufferings
from the impediments cast in her way at Stokesley.
Indeed, the ladies there did not meet
her so often on their own ground for some time, and
were principally disturbed by reports of her doings
at Bonchamp, where she played at cricket, and at hockey,
gave a course of lectures on physiology, presided at
a fancy-dress bazaar for the schools as Lady Jane
Grey, and was on two or three committees. She
travelled by preference on her tricycle, though she
had a carriage, chiefly for the sake of her mother,
who was still in a state of fervent admiration, even
though perhaps a little worried at times by being
hurried past her sober paces.
The next shock that descended on Stokesley
was that, in great indignation, a cousin sent the
Merrifields one of those American magazines which
are read and contributed to by a large proportion of
English. It contained an article called ’The
Bide-as-we-bes and parish of Stick-stodge-cum-Cadgerley,’
and written with the same sort of clever, flippant
irony as the description of the mixed company in the
boarding-house on the Lago Maggiore.
There was the parish embowered, or
rather choked, in trees, the orderly mechanical routine,
the perfect self-satisfaction of all parties, and
their imperviousness to progress, the two
squires, one a fox-hunter, the other a general reposing
on his laurels, the school where everything
was subordinated to learning to behave oneself lowly
and reverently to all one’s betters, and to do
one’s duty in that state of life to which it
HAS pleased Heaven to call one, the
horror at her tricycle, the impossibility of improvement,
the predilection for farmyard odours, the adherence
to tumbledown dwellings, the contempt of drinking
fountains, all had their meed of exaggeration
not without drollery.
The two ancient spinsters, daughters
to the general, with their pudding-baskets, buttonholes,
and catechisms, had their full share dragooning
the parish into discipline, the younger
having so far marched with the century as to have
indited a few little tracts of the Goody Two-Shoes
order, and therefore being mentioned by her friends
with bated breath as something formidable, ‘who
writes,’ although, when brought to the test,
her cultivation was of the vaguest, most discursive
order. Finally, there was a sketch of the heavy
dinner party which had welcomed the strangers, and
of the ponderous county magnates and their wives who
had been invited, and the awe that their broad and
expansive ladies expected to impress, and how one
set talked of their babies, and the other of G.F.S.
girls, and the gentlemen seemed to be chiefly occupied
in abusing their M.P. and his politics. Altogether,
it was given as a lesson to Americans of the still
feudal and stationary state of country districts in
poor old England.
‘What do you think of this,
Bessie?’ exclaimed Admiral Merrifield.
‘We seem to have got a young firebrand in the
midst of us.’
‘Oh, papa! have you got that thing? What
a pity!’
‘You don’t mean that you have seen it
before?’
‘Yes; one of my acquaintances in London sent
it to me.’
‘And you kept it to yourself?’
‘I thought it would only vex you and mamma.
Who sent it to you?’
’Anne did, with all the passages
marked. What a horrid little treacherous baggage!’
’I daresay we are very tempting.
For once we see ourselves as others see us!
And you see ‘tis American.’
’All the worse, holding us,
who have done our best to welcome her hospitably,
up to the derision of the Yankees!’
‘But you won’t take any notice.’
’Certainly not, ridiculous little
puss, except to steer as clear of her as possible
for fear she should be taking her observations.
“Bide as we be”; why, ’tis the best
we can do. She can’t pick a hole in your
mother though, Bess. It would have been hard
to have forgiven her that! You’re not
such an aged spinster.’
‘It is very funny, though,’
said Bessie; ’just enough exaggeration to give
it point! Here is her interview with James Hodd.’
Whereat the Admiral could not help
laughing heartily, and then he picked himself out
as the general, laughed again, and said: ’Naughty
girl! Bess, I’m glad that is not your line.
Little tracts Goody Two-Shoes! Why,
what did that paper say of your essay, Miss Bess?
That it might stand a comparison with Helps, wasn’t
it?’
’And I wish I was likely to
enjoy such lasting fame as Goody Two-Shoes,’
laughed Bessie, in a state of secret exultation at
this bit of testimony from her father.
Mrs. Merrifield, though unscathed,
was much more hurt and annoyed than either her husband
or her daughter, especially at Susan and Bessie being
termed old maids. She DID think it very
ungrateful, and wondered how Mrs. Arthuret could have
suffered such a thing to be done. Only the poor
woman was quite foolish about her daughter
could have had no more authority than a cat.
’So much for modern education.’
But it was not pleasant to see the
numbers of the magazine on the counters at Bonchamp,
and to know there were extracts in the local papers,
and still less to be indignantly condoled with by neighbours
who expressed their intention of ‘cutting’
the impertinent girl. They were exactly the ‘old
fogies’ Arthurine cared for the least, yet whose
acquaintance was the most creditable, and the home
party at Stokesley were unanimous in entreating others
to ignore the whole and treat the newcomers as if
nothing had happened.
They themselves shook hands, and exchanged
casual remarks as if nothing were amiss, nor was the
subject mentioned, except that Mrs. Arthuret contrived
to get a private interview with Mrs. Merrifield.
’Oh! dear Mrs. Merrifield, I
am so grieved, and so is Arthurine. We were
told that the Admiral was so excessively angry, and
he is so kind. I could not bear for him to think
Arthurine meant anything personal.’
‘Indeed,’ said Mrs. Merrifield, rather
astonished.
‘But is he so very angry? for it
is all a mistake.’
‘He laughs, and so does Bessie,’ said
the mother.
’Laughs! Does he?
But I do assure you Arthurine never meant any place
in particular; she only intended to describe the way
things go on in country districts, don’t you
understand? She was talking one day at the Myttons,
and they were all so much amused that they wanted
her to write it down. She read it one evening
when they were with us, and they declared it was too
good not to be published and almost before
she knew it, Fred Mytton’s literary friend got
hold of it and took it to the agency of this paper.
But indeed, indeed, she never thought of its being
considered personal, and is as vexed as possible at
the way in which it has been taken up. She has
every feeling about your kindness to us, and she was
so shocked when Pansy Mytton told us that the Admiral
was furious.’
’Whoever told Miss Mytton so
made a great mistake. The Admiral only is is amused as
you know gentlemen will be at young girls’ little little
scrapes,’ returned Mrs. Merrifield, longing to
say ‘impertinences,’ but refraining, and
scarcely believing what nevertheless was true, that
Arthurine did not know how personal she had been,
although her mother said it all over again twice.
Bessie, however, did believe it, from experience
of resemblances where she had never intended direct
portraiture; and when there was a somewhat earnest
invitation to a garden party at the Gap, the Merrifields
not only accepted for themselves, but persuaded as
many of their neighbours as they could to countenance
the poor girl. ’There is something solid
at the bottom in spite of all the effervescence,’
said Bessie.
It was late in the year for a garden
party, being on the 2d of October, but weather and
other matters had caused delays, and the Indian summer
had begun with warm sun and exquisite tints.
’What would not the maple and the liquid amber
have been by this time,’ thought the sisters,
‘if they had been spared.’ Some of
the PETITE NOBLESSE, however, repented of their condescension
when they saw how little it was appreciated.
Mrs. Arthuret, indeed, was making herself the best
hostess that a lady who had served no apprenticeship
could be to all alike, but Arthurine or ‘Atty,’
as Daisy and Pansy were heard shouting to her all
in white flannels, a man all but the petticoats seemed
to be absorbed in a little court of the second-rate
people of Bonchamp, some whom, as Mrs. Greville and
Lady Smithson agreed, they had never expected to meet.
She was laughing and talking eagerly, and by and
by ran up to Bessie, exclaiming in a patronising tone
’Oh! my dear Miss Bessie, let
me introduce you to Mr. Foxholm such a
clever literary man. He knows everybody all
about everybody and everything. It would be
such an advantage! And he has actually made
me give him my autograph! Only think of that!’
Bessie thought of her own good luck
in being anonymous, but did not express it, only saying,
’Autograph-hunters are a great nuisance.
I know several people who find them so.’
’Yes, he said it was one of
the penalties of fame that one must submit to,’
returned Miss Arthuret, with a delighted laugh of
consciousness.
Bessie rejoiced that none of her own
people were near to see the patronising manner in
which Arthurine introduced her to Mr. Foxholm, a heavily-bearded
man, whose eyes she did not at all like, and who began
by telling her that he felt as if he had crossed the
Rubicon, and entering an Arcadia, had found a Parnassus.
Bessie looked to see whether the highly-educated
young lady detected the malaprop for the Helicon,
but Arthurine was either too well-bred or too much
exalted to notice either small slips, or even bad taste,
and she stood smiling and blushing complacently.
However, just then Susan hurried up. ’Bessie,
you are wanted. Here’s a card. The
gentleman sent it in, and papa asked me to find you.’
Bessie opened her eyes. The
card belonged to the editor of one of the most noted
magazines of the day, but one whose principles she
did not entirely approve. What could be coming?
Her father was waiting for her.
‘Well, Miss Bessie,’ he
said, laughing, ’Jane said the gentleman was
very urgent in wanting to know when you would be in.
An offer, eh?’
‘Perhaps it is an offer, but
not of THAT sort,’ said Bessie, and she
explained what the unliterary Admiral had not understood.
He answered with a whistle.
‘Shall you do it, Bessie?’
‘I think not,’ she said quietly.
The editor was found waiting for her,
with many apologies for bringing her home, and the
Admiral was so delighted with his agreeableness as
hardly to be able to tear himself away to bring home
his wife.
The offer was, as Bessie expected,
of excellent terms for a serial story terms
that proved to her what was her own value, and in which
she saw education for her sister Anne’s eldest
boy.
‘Of course, there would be a
certain adaptation to our readers.’
She knew what that meant, and there
was that in her face which drew forth the assurance.
’Of course nothing you would
not wish to say would be required, but it would be
better not to press certain subjects.’
‘I understand,’ said Bessie. ‘I
doubt ’
‘Perhaps you will think it over.’
Bessie’s first thought was,
’If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, then let my
right hand forget her cunning.’ That had
been the inward motto of her life. Her second
was, ‘Little Sam! David’s mission
room!’ There was no necessity to answer at once,
and she knew the periodical rather by report than
by reading, so she accepted the two numbers that were
left with her, and promised to reply in a week.
It was a question on which to take counsel with her
father, and with her own higher conscience and heavenly
Guide.
The Admiral, though not much given
to reading for its own sake, and perhaps inclined
to think ephemeral literature the more trifling because
his little daughter was a great light there, was anything
but a dull man, and had an excellent judgment.
So Bessie, with all the comfort of a woman still
with a wise father’s head over her, decided
to commit the matter to him. He was somewhat
disappointed at finding her agreeable guest gone,
and wished that dinner and bed had been offered.
Mrs. Merrifield and Susan were still
a good deal excited about Arthurine’s complimentary
friend, who they said seemed to belong to Fred Mytton,
of whom some of the ladies had been telling most unpleasant
reports, and there was much lamentation over the set
into which their young neighbour had thrown herself.
‘Such a dress too!’ sighed Mrs. Merrifield.
‘And her headmistress has just
arrived,’ said Susan, ’to make her worse
than ever!’
’How comes a headmistress to
be running about the country at this time of year?’
asked Bessie.
‘She has been very ill,’
said Mrs. Merrifield, ’and they wrote to her
to come down as soon as she could move. There
was a telegram this morning, and she drove up in the
midst of the party, and was taken to her room at once
to rest. That was the reason Miss Arthuret was
away so long. I thought it nice in her.’
‘Perhaps she will do good,’ said Bessie.
Dinner was just over, and the Admiral
had settled down with his shaded lamp to read and
judge of the article that Bessie had given him as
a specimen, when in came the message, ’Mrs. Rudden
wishes to speak to you, sir.’
Mrs. Rudden was the prosperous widow
who continued the business in the village shop, conjointly
with the little farm belonging to the Gap property.
She was a shrewd woman, had been able to do very well
by her family, and was much esteemed, paying a rent
which was a considerable item in the Gap means.
The ladies wondered together at the summons.
Susan hoped ‘that girl’ did not want to
evict her, and Bessie suggested that a co-operative
store was a more probable peril. Presently the
Admiral came back. ’Do any of you know
Miss Arthuret’s writing?’ he said.
‘Bessie knows it best,’ said Susan.
He showed a letter. ‘That
is hers the signature,’ said Bessie.
’I are not sure about the rest. Why what
does it mean?’
For she read
’The Gap, 2D OCT.
’MRS. RUDDEN, You
are requested to pay over to the bearer, Mr. Foxholm,
fifty pounds of the rent you were about to bring me
to-morrow. I remain, etc.,
‘ARTHURINE ARTHURET.’
‘What does it mean?’ asked
Bessie again. ’That’s just what Mrs.
Rudden has come up to me to ask,’ said the Admiral.
’This fellow presented it in her shop about
a quarter of an hour ago. The good woman smelt
a rat. What do you think she did? She looked
at it and him, asked him to wait a bit, whipped out
at her back door, luckily met the policeman starting
on his rounds, bade him have an eye to the customer
in her shop, and came off to show it to me. That
young woman is demented enough for anything, and is
quite capable of doing it for some absurd
scheme. But do you think it is hers, or a swindle?’
‘Didn’t she say she had given her autograph?’
exclaimed Susan.
‘And see here,’ said Bessie,
’her signature is at the top of the sheet of
note-paper small paper. And as she
always writes very large, it would be easy to fill
up the rest, changing the first side over.’
‘I must take it up to her at
once,’ said the Admiral. ’Even if
it be genuine, she may just as well see that it is
a queer thing to have done, and not exactly the way
to treat her tenants.’
’It is strange too that this
man should have known anything about Mrs. Rudden,’
said Mrs. Merrifield.
’Mrs. Rudden says she had a
message this morning, when she had come up with her
rent and accounts, to say that Miss Arthuret was very
much engaged, and would be glad if she would come to-morrow!
Could this fellow have been about then?’
No one knew, but Bessie breathed the
word, ’Was not that young Mytton there?’
It was not taken up, for no one liked
to pronounce the obvious inference. Besides,
the Admiral was in haste, not thinking it well that
Mr. Foxholm should be longer kept under surveillance
in the shop, among the bread, bacon, cheeses, shoes,
and tins of potted meat.
He was then called for; and on his
loudly exclaiming that he had been very strangely
treated, the Admiral quietly told him that Mrs. Rudden
had been disturbed at so unusual a way of demanding
her rent, and had come for advice on the subject;
and to satisfy their minds that all was right, Mr.
Foxholm would, no doubt, consent to wait till the
young lady could be referred to. Mr. Foxholm
did very decidedly object; he said no one had any
right to detain him when the lady’s signature
was plain, and Admiral Merrifield had seen him in
her society, and he began an account of the philanthropical
purpose for which he said the money had been intended,
but he was cut short.
‘You must be aware,’ said
the Admiral, ’that this is not an ordinary way
of acting, and whatever be your purpose, Mrs. Rudden
must ascertain your authority more fully before paying
over so large a sum. I give you your choice,
therefore, either of accompanying us to the Gap, or
of remaining in Mrs. Rudden’s parlour till we
return.’
The furtive eye glanced about, and
the parlour was chosen. Did he know that the
policeman stationed himself in the shop outside?
The dinner at the Gap was over, and
Miss Elmore, the headmistress, was established in
an arm-chair, listening to the outpouring of her former
pupil and the happy mother about all the felicities
and glories of their present life, the only drawback
being the dullness and obstructiveness of the immediate
neighbours. ’I thought Miss Merrifield
was your neighbour Mesa?’
’Oh no quite impossible!
These are Merrifields, but the daughters are two
regular old goodies, wrapped up in Sunday schools and
penny clubs.’
’Well, that is odd! The
editor of the – came down in the
train with me, and said he was going to see Mesa Miss
Elizabeth Merrifield.’
‘I do think it is very unfair,’
began Arthurine; but at that moment the door-bell
rang. ‘How strange at this time!’
‘Oh! perhaps the editor is coming
here!’ cried Arthurine. ’Did you
tell him I lived here, Miss Elmore?’
‘Admiral Merrifield,’ announced the parlour-maid.
He had resolved not to summon the
young lady in private, as he thought there was more
chance of common-sense in the mother.
‘You are surprised to see me
at this time,’ he said; ’but Mrs. Rudden
is perplexed by a communication from you.’
‘Mrs. Rudden!’ exclaimed
Arthurine. ’Why, I only sent her word that
I was too busy to go through her accounts to-day, and
asked her to come to-morrow. That isn’t
against the laws of the Medes and Persians, is it?’
‘Then did you send her this letter?’
‘I?’ said Arthurine, staring
at it, with her eyes at their fullest extent.
‘I! fifty pounds! Mr. Foxholm! What
does it mean?’
‘Then you never wrote that order?’
‘No! no! How should I?’
‘That is not your writing?’
‘No, not that.’
‘Look at the signature.’
’Oh! oh! oh!’ and
she dropped into a chair. ’The horrible
man! That’s the autograph I gave him this
afternoon.’
‘You are sure?’
’Quite; for my pen spluttered
in the slope of the A. Has she gone and given it
to him?’
‘No. She brought it to me, and set the
policeman to watch him.’
’What a dear, good woman!
Shall you send him to prison, Admiral Merrifield?
What can be done to him?’ said Arthurine, not
looking at all as if she would like to abrogate capital
punishment.
‘Well, I had been thinking,’
said the Admiral. ’You see he did not
get it, and though I could commit him for endeavouring
to obtain money on false pretences, I very much doubt
whether the prosecution would not be worse for you
than for him.’
‘That is very kind of you, Admiral!’
exclaimed the mother. ’It would be terribly
awkward for dear Arthurine to stand up and say he
cajoled her into giving her autograph. It might
always be remembered against her!’
‘Exactly so,’ said the
Admiral; ’and perhaps there may be another reason
for not pushing the matter to extremity. The
man is a stranger here, I believe.’
‘He has been staying at Bonchamp,’
said Mrs. Arthuret. ’It was young Mr.
Mytton who brought him over this afternoon.’
’Just so. And how did
he come to be aware that Mrs. Rudden owed you any
money?’
There was a pause, then Arthurine broke out
’Oh, Daisy and Pansy can’t
have done anything; but they were all three there
helping me mark the tennis-courts when the message
came.’
‘Including the brother?’
‘Yes.’
’He is a bad fellow, and I would
not wish to shield him in any way, but that such a
plot should be proved against him would be a grievous
disgrace to the family.’
‘I can’t ever feel about
them as I have done,’ said Arthurine, in tears.
’Daisy and Pansy said so much about poor dear
Fred, and every one being hard on him, and his feeling
my good influence and all the time he was
plotting this against me, with my chalk in his hand
marking my grass,’ and she broke down in child-like
sobs.
The mortification was terrible of
finding her pinnacle of fame the mere delusion of
a sharper, and the shock of shame seemed to overwhelm
the poor girl.
‘Oh, Admiral!’ cried her
mother, ’she cannot bear it. I know you
will be good, and manage it so as to distress her as
little as possible, and not have any publicity.’
‘1 will do my best,’ said
the Admiral. ’I will try and get a confession
out of him, and send him off, though it is a pity that
such a fellow should get off scot-free.’
’Oh, never mind, so that my
poor Arthurine’s name is not brought forward!
We can never be grateful enough for your kindness.’
It was so late that the Admiral did
not come back that night, and the ladies were at breakfast
when he appeared again. Foxholm had, on finding
there was no escape, confessed the fraud, but threw
most of the blame on Fred Mytton, who was in debt,
not only to him but to others. Foxholm himself
seemed to have been an adventurer, who preyed on young
men at the billiard-table, and had there been in some
collusion with Fred, though the Admiral had little
doubt as to which was the greater villain. He
had been introduced to the Mytton family, who were
not particular; indeed, Mr. Mytton had no objection
to increasing his pocket-money by a little wary, profitable
betting and gambling on his own account. However,
the associates had no doubt brought Bonchamp to the
point of being too hot to hold them, and Fred, overhearing
the arrangement with Mrs. Rudden, had communicated
it to him whence the autograph trick.
Foxholm was gone, and in the course of the day it
was known that young Mytton was also gone.
The Admiral promised that none of
his family should mention the matter, and that he
would do his best to silence Mrs. Rudden, who for
that matter probably believed the whole letter to have
been forged, and would not enter into the enthusiasm
of autographs.
‘Oh, thank you! It is
so kind,’ said the mother; and Arthurine, who
looked as if she had not slept all night, and was ready
to burst into tears on the least provocation, murmured
something to the same effect, which the Admiral answered,
half hearing
’Never mind, my dear, you will
be wiser another time; young people will be inexperienced.’
‘Is that the cruellest cut of
all?’ thought Miss Elmore, as she beheld her
former pupil scarcely restraining herself enough for
the farewell civilities, and then breaking down into
a flood of tears.
Her mother hovered over her with,
’What is it? Oh! my dear child, you need
not be afraid; he is so kind!’
‘I hate people to be kind, that
is the very thing,’ said Arthurine,
’Oh! Miss Elmore, don’t go! while
he is meaning all the time that I have made such a
fool of myself! And he is glad, I know he is,
he and his hateful, stupid, stolid daughters.’
‘My dear! my dear!’ exclaimed her mother.
’Well, haven’t they done
nothing but thwart me, whatever I wanted to do, and
aren’t they triumphing now in this abominable
man’s treachery, and my being taken in?
I shall go away, and sell the place, and never come
back again.’
’I should think that was the
most decided way of confessing a failure,’ said
Miss Elmore; and as Mrs. Arthuret was called away by
the imperative summons to the butcher, she spoke more
freely. ’Your mother looks terrified at
being so routed up again.’
’Oh, mother will be happy anywhere;
and how can I stay with these stick-in-the-mud people,
just like what I have read about?’
’And have gibbeted! Really,
Arthurine, I should call them very generous!’
‘It is their thick skins,’
muttered she; ’at least so the Myttons said;
but, indeed, I did not mean to be so personal as it
was thought.’
‘But tell me. Why did you not get on with
Mesa?’
’That was a regular take-in.
Not to tell one! When I began my German class,
she put me out with useless explanations.’
‘What kind of explanations?’
’Oh, about the Swiss being under
the Empire, or something, and she WOULD go
into parallels of Saxon words, and English poetry,
such as our Fräulein never troubled us with.
But I showed her it would not DO.’
’So instead of learning what
you had not sense to appreciate, you wanted to teach
your old routine.’
’But, indeed, she could not
pronounce at all well, and she looked ever so long
at difficult bits, and then she even tried to correct
ME.’
‘Did she go on coming after you silenced her?’
‘Yes, and never tried to interfere again.’
‘I am afraid she drew her own conclusions about
High Schools.’
’Oh, Miss Elmore, you used to
like us to be thorough and not discursive, and how
could anybody brought up in this stultifying place,
ages ago, know what will tell in an exam?’
’Oh! Arthurine. How
often have I told you that examinations are not education.
I never saw so plainly that I have not educated you.’
’I wanted to prepare Daisy and
Pansy, and they didn’t care about her prosing
when we wanted to get on with the book.’
’Which would have been the best
education for them, poor girls, an example of courtesy,
patience, and humility, or GETTING ON, as you
call it?’
’Oh! Miss Elmore, you are
very hard on me, when I have just been so cruelly
disappointed.’
’My dear child, it is only because
I want you to discover why you have been so cruelly
disappointed.’
It would be wearisome to relate all
that Arthurine finally told of those thwartings by
the Merrifields which had thrown her into the arms
of the Mytton family, nor how Miss Elmore brought her
to confess that each scheme was either impracticable,
or might have been injurious, and that a little grain
of humility might have made her see things very differently.
Yet it must be owned that the good lady felt rather
like bending a bow that would spring back again.
Bessie Merrifield had, like her family,
been inclined to conclude that all was the fault of
High Schools. She did not see Miss Elmore at
first, thinking the Arthurets not likely to wish to
be intruded upon, and having besides a good deal to
think over. For she and her father had talked
over the proposal, which pecuniarily was so tempting,
and he, without prejudice, but on principle, had concurred
with her in deciding that it was her duty not to add
one touch of attractiveness to aught which supported
a cause contrary to their strongest convictions.
Her father’s approbation was the crowning pleasure,
though she felt the external testimony to her abilities,
quite enough to sympathise with such intoxication of
success as to make any compliment seem possible.
Miss Elmore had one long talk with her, beginning
by saying
‘I wish to consult you about my poor, foolish
child.’
‘Ah! I am afraid we have
not helped her enough!’ said Bessie. ’If
we had been more sympathetic she might have trusted
us more.’
’Then you are good enough to
believe that it was not all folly and presumption.’
‘I am sure it was not,’
said Bessie. ’None of us ever thought it
more than inexperience and a little exaltation, with
immense good intention at the bottom. Of course,
our dear old habits did look dull, coming from life
and activity, and we rather resented her contempt
for them; but I am quite sure that after a little while,
every one will forget all about this, or only recollect
it as one does a girlish scrape.’
’Yes. To suppose all the
neighbourhood occupied in laughing at her is only
another phase of self-importance. You see, the
poor child necessarily lived in a very narrow world,
where examinations came, whatever I could do, to seem
everything, and she only knew things beyond by books.
She had success enough there to turn her head, and
not going to Cambridge, never had fair measure of her
abilities. Then came prosperity ’
‘Quite enough to upset any one’s
balance,’ said Bessie. ’In fact,
only a very sober, not to say stolid, nature would
have stood it.’
’Poor things! They were
so happy so open-hearted. I did long
to caution them. “Pull cup, steady hand."’
‘It will all come right now,’
said Bessie. ’Mrs Arthuret spoke of their
going away for the winter; I do not think it will be
a bad plan, for then we can start quite fresh with
them; and the intimacy with the Myttons will be broken,
though I am sorry for the poor girls. They have
no harm in them, and Arthurine was doing them good.’
’A whisper to you, Miss Merrifield they
are going back with me, to be prepared for governesses
at Arthurine’s expense. It is the only
thing for them in the crash that young man has brought
on the family.’
’Dear, good Arthurine!
She only needed to learn how to carry her cup.’