When I came downstairs the next morning,
I found Lord Erymanth at the hall window, watching
the advance of a great waggon of coal which had stuck
fast in the snow half way up the hill on which the
house stood. Harold, a much more comfortable
figure in his natural costume than he had been when
made up by Eustace, was truly putting his shoulder
to the wheel, with a great lever, so that every effort
aided the struggling horses, and brought the whole
nearer to its destination.
“A grand exhibition of strength,”
said his lordship, as the waggon was at last over
its difficulties, and Harold disappeared with it into
the back-yard; “a magnificent physical development.
I never before saw extraordinary height with proportionate
size and strength.”
I asked if he had ever seen anyone as tall.
“I have seen one or two men
who looked equally tall, but they stooped and were
not well-proportioned, whereas your nephew has a wonderfully
fine natural carriage. What is his measure?”
he added, turning to Eustace.
“Well, really, my lord, I cannot
tell; mine is six feet two and five-sixteenths, and
I much prefer it to anything so out of the way as
his, poor fellow.”
The danger that he would go on to
repeat his tailor’s verdict “that it was
distinguished without being excessive,” was averted
by Harold’s entrance, and Dora interrupted the
greetings by the query to her cousin, how high he
really stood; but he could not tell, and when she
unfraternally pressed to know whether it was not nice
to be so much taller than Eustace, he replied, “Not
on board ship,” and then he gave the intelligence
that it seemed about to thaw.
Lord Erymanth said that if so, he
should try to make his way to Mycening, and he then
paid his renewed compliments on the freedom of the
calendar at the Quarter Sessions from the usual proportion
of evils at Mycening. He understood that Mr.
Alison was making most praiseworthy efforts to impede
the fatal habits of intoxication that were only too
prevalent.
“I shall close five beer-houses
at Christmas,” said Eustace. “I look
on it as my duty, as landlord and man of property.”
“Quite right. I am glad
you see the matter in its right light. Beer-shops
were a well-meaning experiment started some twenty
years ago. I well remember the debate, &c.”
Harold tried with all his might to
listen, though I saw his chest heave with many a suppressed
yawn, and his hand under his beard, tweaking it hard;
but substance could be sifted out of what Lord Erymanth
said, for he had real experience, and his own parish
was in admirable order.
Where there was no power of expulsion,
as he said, there would always be some degraded beings
whose sole amusement was intoxication; but good dwelling-houses
capable of being made cheerful, gardens, innocent
recreations, and instruction had, he could testify
from experience, no small effect in preventing such
habits from being formed in the younger population,
backed, as he was sure (good old man) that he need
not tell his young friends, by an active and efficient
clergyman, who would place the motives for good conduct
on the truest and highest footing, without which all
reformation would only be surface work. I was
glad Harold should hear this from the lips of a layman,
but I am afraid he shirked it as a bit of prosing,
and went back to the cottages.
“They are in a shameful state,” he said.
“They are to be improved,”
exclaimed Eustace, eagerly. “As I told
Bullock, I am quite determined that mine shall be a
model parish. I am ready to make any sacrifices
to do my duty as a landlord, though Bullock says that
no outlay on cottages ever pays, and that the test
of their being habitable is their being let, and that
the people are so ungrateful that they do not deserve
to have anything done for them.”
“You are not led away by such
selfish arguments?” said Lord Erymanth.
“No, assuredly not,” said
Eustace, decidedly; “though I do wish Harold
would not disagree so much with Bullock. He is
a very civil man, and much in earnest in promoting
my interests.”
“That’s not all,” put in Harold.
“And I can’t bear Bullock,”
I said. “‘Our interest’ has been
always his cry, whenever the least thing has been
proposed for the cottage people; and I know how much
worse he let things get than we ever supposed.”
On which Lord Erymanth spoke out his
distinct advice to get rid of Bullock, telling us
how he had been a servant’s orphan whom my father
had intended to apprentice, but, being placed with
our old bailiff for a time, had made himself necessary,
and ingratiated himself with my father so as to succeed
to the situation; and it had been the universal belief,
ever since my mother’s widowhood, that he had
taken advantage of her seclusion and want of knowledge
of business to deal harshly by the tenants, especially
the poor, and to feather his own nest.
It was only what Harold had already
found out for himself, but it disposed of his scruples
about old adherents, and it was well for Eustace to
hear it from such oracular lips as might neutralise
the effect of Bullock’s flattery, for it had
become quite plain to my opened eyes that he was trying
to gain the squire’s ear, and was very jealous
of Harold.
I knew, too, that to listen to his
advice was the way to Lord Erymanth’s heart,
and rejoiced to hear Harold begging for the names of
recent books on drainage, and consulting our friend
upon the means of dealing with a certain small farm
in a tiny inclosed valley, on an outlying part of
the property, where the yard and outhouses were in
a permanent state of horrors; but interference was
alike resented by Bullock and the farmer, though the
wife and family were piteous spectacles of ague and
rheumatism, and low fever smouldered every autumn
in the hamlet.
Very sound advice was given and accepted
with pertinent questions, such as I thought must convince
anyone of Harold’s superiority, when he must
needs produce a long blue envelope, and beg Lord Erymanth
to look at it and tell him how to get it presented
to the Secretary of State.
It was graciously received, but no
sooner did the name of Stanislas Prometesky strike
the earl’s eyes than he exclaimed, “That
rascally old demagogue! The author of all the
mischief. It was the greatest error and weakness
not to have had him executed.”
“You have not seen my father’s statement?”
“Statement, sir! I read
statements till I was sick of them, absolutely disgusted
with their reiteration, and what could they say but
that he was a Pole? A Pole!” (the word
uttered with infinite loathing). “As if
the very name were not a sufficient conviction of whatever
is seditious and treasonable, only that people are
sentimental about it, forsooth!”
Certainly it was droll to suspect
sentiment in the great broad giant, who indignantly
made reply, “The Poles have been infamously treated.”
“No more than they deserved,”
said Lord Erymanth, startled for once into brevity.
“A nation who could never govern themselves
decently, and since they have been broken up, as they
richly deserved, though I do not justify the manner ever
since, I say, have been acting the incendiary in every
country where they have set foot. I would as
soon hear of an infernal machine in the country as
a Pole!”
“Poles deserve justice as well
as other men,” said Harold, perhaps the more
doggedly because Eustace laid a restraining hand on
his arm.
“Do you mean to tell me, sir,
that every man has not received justice at the tribunal
of this country?” exclaimed Lord Erymanth.
Perhaps he recollected that he was
speaking to the son of a convict, for there was a
moment’s pause, into which I launched myself.
“Dear Lord Erymanth,” I said, “we
all know that my poor brothers did offend against
the laws and were sentenced according to them.
They said so themselves, and that they were mistaken,
did they not, Harold?”
Harold bent his head.
“And owing to whom?” demanded
Lord Elymanth. “I never thought of blaming
those two poor lads as I did that fellow who led them
astray. I did all I could to save their lives;
if they were alive this moment I would wish nothing
better than to bring them home, but as to asking me
to forward a petition in favour of the hoary old rebel
that perverted them, I should think it a crime.”
“But,” I said, “if
you would only read this, you would see that what
they wanted to explain was that the man who turned
king’s evidence did not show how Count Prometesky
tried to withhold them.”
“Count, indeed! Just like
all women. All those Poles are Counts! All
Thaddeuses of Warsaw!”
“That’s hard,” I
said. “I only called him Count because
it would have shocked you if I had given him no prefix.
Will you not see what poor Ambrose wanted to say
for him?”
“Ah!” said Lord Erymanth,
after a pause, in which he had really glanced over
the paper. “Poor boys! It goes to
my heart to think what fine fellows were lost there,
but compassion for them cannot soften me towards the
man who practised on their generous, unsuspecting youth.
I am quite aware that Prometesky saved life at the
fire, and his punishment was commuted on that account,
contrary to my judgment, for it is a well-known axiom,
that the author of a riot is responsible for all the
outrages committed in it, and it is undeniable that
the whole insurrection was his work. I am quite
aware that the man had amiable, even fascinating qualities,
and great enthusiasm, but here lay the great danger
and seduction to young minds, and though I can perfectly
understand the warm sympathy and generous sentiment
that actuates my young friends, and though I much
regret the being obliged to deny the first request
of one to whom, I may say, I owe my life, I must distinctly
refuse to take any part in relieving Count Stanislas
Prometesky from the penalty he has incurred.”
Harold’s countenance had become
very gloomy during this peroration. He made no
attempt at reply, but gathered up his papers, and,
gnawing his fringe of moustache, walked out of the
room, while Eustace provoked me by volunteering explanations
that Prometesky was no friend of his, only of Harold’s.
His lordship declared himself satisfied, provided
no dangerous opinions had been imbibed, and truly
Eustace might honestly acquit himself of having any
opinions at all.
That afternoon he drove Lord Erymanth
to Mycening, whence the railway was now open.
Harold could nowhere be found, and kind messages were
left for him, for which he was scarcely grateful when
he came in late in the evening, calling Lord Erymanth
intolerably vindictive, to bear malice for five-and-twenty
years.
I could not get him to see that it
was entirely judicial indignation, and desire for
the good of the country, not in the least personal
feeling; but Harold had not yet the perception of the
legislative sentiment that actuates men of station
in England. His strong inclination was not to
go near the old man or his house again, but this was
no small distress to Eustace, who, in spite of all
his vaunting, dreaded new scenes without a protector,
and I set myself to persuade him that it was due to
his cousin not to hide himself, and avoid society
so as to give a colour to evil report.
“It might be best to separate
myself from him altogether and go back.”
On this, Eustace cried out with horror and dismay,
and Harold answered, “Never fear, old chap;
I’m not going yet. Not till I have seen
you in good hands.”
“And you’ll accept the
invitation,” said Eustace, taking up one of the
coroneted notes that invited us each for two nights
to the castle.
“Very well.”
“And you’ll come up to town, and have
a proper suit.”
“As you please.”
Eustace went off to the library to
find some crested paper and envelopes worthy to bear
the acceptance, and Harold stood musing. “A
good agent and a good wife would set him on his feet
to go alone,” he said.
“Meantime he cannot do without you.”
“Not in some ways.”
“And even this acquaintance is your achievement,
not his.”
“Such as it is.”
I pointed out that though Lord Erymanth
refused to assist Prometesky, his introduction might
lead to those who might do so, while isolation was
a sort of helplessness. To this he agreed, saying,
“I must free him before I go back.”
“And do you really want to go
back?” said I, fearing he was growing restless.
His face worked, and he said, “When
I feel like a stone round Eustace’s neck.”
“Why should you feel so? You are a lever
to lift him.”
“Am I? The longer I live
with you, the more true it seems to me that I had
no business to come into a world with such people in
it as you and Miss Tracy.”
Eustace came back, fidgeting to get
a pen mended, an operation beyond him, but patiently
performed by the stronger fingers. We said no
more, but I had had a glimpse which made me hope that
the pilgrim was beginning to feel the burthen on his
back.
Not that he had much time for thought.
He was out all day, looking after the potteries,
where orders were coming in fast, and workmen increasing,
and likewise toiling in the fields at Ogden’s
farm, making measurements and experiments on the substrata
and the waterfall, on which to base his plans for
drainage according to the books Lord Erymanth had
lent him.
After the second day he came home
half-laughing. Farmer Ogden had warned him off
and refused to listen to any explanation, though he
must have known whom he was expelling yes,
like a very village Hampden, he had thrust the unwelcome
surveyor out at his gate with such a trembling, testy,
rheumatic arm, that Harold had felt obliged to obey
it.
Eustace, angered at the treatment
of his cousin, volunteered to come and “tell
the ass, Ogden, to mind what he was about,” and
Harold added, “If you would come, Lucy, you
might help to make his wife understand.”
I came, as I was desired, where I
had never been before, for we had always rested in
the belief that the Alfy Valley was a nasty, damp,
unhealthy place, with “something always about,”
and had contented ourselves with sending broth to
the cottages whenever we heard of any unusual amount
of disease. If we had ever been there!
We rode the two miles, as I do not
think Dora and I would ever have floundered through
the mud and torrents that ran down the lanes.
It was just as if the farm had been built in the
lower circle, and the cottages in Malebolge itself,
where the poor little Alfy, so pure when it started
from Kalydon Moor, brought down to them all the leakage
of that farmyard. Oh! that yard, I never beheld,
imagined, or made my way through the like, though
there was a little causeway near the boundary wall,
where it was possible to creep along on the stones,
rousing up a sleeping pig or a dreamy donkey here
and there, and barked at in volleys by dogs stationed
on all the higher islets in the unsavoury lake.
If Dora had not been a colonial child, and if I could
have feared for myself with Harold by my side, I don’t
think we should ever have arrived, but Farmer Ogden
and his son came out, and a man and boy or two; and
when Eustace was recognised, they made what way they
could for us, and we were landed at last in a scrupulously
clean kitchen with peat fire and a limeash floor,
where, alas! we were not suffered to remain, but were
taken into a horrid little parlour, with a newly-lighted,
smoking fire, a big Bible, and a ploughing-cup.
Mrs. Ogden was a dissenter, so we had really no acquaintance,
and, poor thing, had long been unable to go anywhere.
She was a pale trembling creature, most neat and clean,
but with the dreadful sallow complexion given by perpetual
ague. She was very civil, and gave us cake and
wine, to the former of which Dora did ample justice,
but oh! the impracticability of those people!
The men had it all out of doors, but
when I tried my eloquence on Mrs. Ogden I found her
firmly persuaded not only that her own ill health and
the sickness in the hamlet were “the will of
the Lord,” but in her religious fatalism, that
it was absolutely profane to think that cleansing
and drainage would amend them; and she adduced texts
which poor uninstructed I was unable to answer, even
while I knew they were a perversion; and, provoked
as I was, I felt that her meek patience and resignation
might be higher virtues than any to which I had yet
attained.
Her husband, who, I should explain,
was but one remove above a smock-frock farmer, took
a different line. He had unsavoury proverbs
in which he put deep faith. “Muck was the
mother of money,” and also “Muck was the
farmer’s nosegay.” He viewed it as
an absolute effeminacy to object to its odorous savours;
and as to the poor people, “they were an ungrateful
lot, and had a great deal too much done for them,”
the small farmer’s usual creed. Mr. Alison
could do as he liked, of course, but his lease had
five years yet to run, and he would not consent to
pay no more rent, not for what he didn’t ask
for, nor didn’t want, and Mr. Bullock didn’t
approve of that he would not, not if Mr.
Alison took the law of him.
His landlord do it at his own expense?
That made him look knowing. He was evidently
certain that it was a trick for raising the rent at
the end of the lease, if not before, upon him, whose
fathers had been tenants of Alfy Vale even before
the Alisons came to Arghouse; and, with the rude obstinacy
of his race, he was as uncivil to Harold as he durst
in Eustace’s presence. “He had no
mind to have his fields cut up just to sell the young
gentleman’s drain-pipes, as wouldn’t go
off at them potteries.”
“Well, but all this stuff would
be doing much more good upon your fields than here,”
Eustace said. “I I really must
insist on this farmyard being cleansed.”
“You’ll not find that
in the covenant, sir,” said the farmer with a
grin.
“But, father,” began the
son, a more intelligent-looking man, though with the
prevailing sickly tint.
“Hold your tongue, Phil,”
said Ogden. “It’s easy to talk of
cleaning out the yard; I’d like to see the gentleman
set about it, or you either, for that matter.”
“Would you?” said Harold. “Then
you shall.”
Farmer Ogden gaped. “I
won’t have no strange labourers about the place.”
“No more you shall,” said
Harold. “If your son and I clean out this
place with our own hands in the course of a couple
of days, putting the manure in any field you may appoint,
will you let the drainage plans be carried out without
opposition?”
“It ain’t a bet?”
said the farmer; “for my missus’s conscience
is against bets.”
“No, certainly not.”
“Nor a trick?” he said, looking from one
to another.
“No. It is to be honest
work. I am a farmer, and know what work is,
and have done it too.”
Farmer Ogden, to a certain extent,
gave in, and we departed. His son held the gate
open for us, with a keen look at Harold, full of wonder
and inquiry.
“You’ll stand by me?” said Harold,
lingering with him.
“Yes, sir,” said Phil
Ogden; “but I doubt if we can do it. Father
says it is a week’s work for five men, if you
could get them to do it.”
“Never fear,” said Harold.
“We’ll save your mother’s life yet
against her will, and make you all as healthy as if
you’d been born in New South Wales.”
This was Friday, and Phil had an engagement
on the Monday, so that Tuesday was fixed, much to
Eustace’s displeasure, for he did not like Harold’s
condescending to work which labourers would hardly
undertake; and besides, he would make his hands, if
not himself, absolutely unfit for the entertainment
on Thursday. On which Harold asked if there were
no such thing as water. Eustace implored him
to give it up and send half-a-dozen unemployed men,
but to this he answered, “I should be ashamed.”
And when we went home he rode on into
Mycening, to see about his equipment, he said, setting
Eustace despairing, lest he, after all, meant to avoid
the London tailor, and to patronise Mycening; but the
equipment turned out to be a great smock-frock.
And something very different came home with him namely,
a little dainty flower-pot and pan, with an Etruscan
pattern, the very best things that had been turned
out of the pottery, adorned with a design in black
and white, representing a charming little Greek nymph
watering her flowers.
“Don’t you think, Lucy,
Miss Tracy being a shareholder, and it being her birthday,
the chairman might present this?” he inquired.
I agreed heartily, but Eustace, with
a twist of his cat’s-whisker moustache, opined
that they were scarcely elegant enough for Miss Tracy;
and on the Monday, when he did drag Harold up to the
tailor’s, he brought down a fragile little bouquet
of porcelain violets, very Parisian, and in the latest
fashion, which he flattered himself was the newest
thing extant, and a much more appropriate offering.
The violets could be made by a pinch below to squirt
out perfume!
“Never mind, Harold,”
I said, “you can give your flower-pot all the
same.”
“You may,” said Harold.
“Why should not you?”
He shook his head. “I’ve no business,”
he said; “Eustace is chairman.”
I said no more, and I hardly saw Harold
the two following days, for he was gone in the twilight
of the January morning and worked as long as light
would allow, and fortunately the moon was in a favourable
quarter; and Phil, to whom the lighter part of the
task was allotted, confided to his companion that
he had been wishing to get father to see things in
this light for a long time, but he was that slow to
move; and since Harold had been looking about, Mr.
Bullock had advised him not to give in, for it would
be sure to end in the raising of his rent, and young
gentlemen had new-fangled notions that only led to
expense and nonsense, and it was safest in the long
run to trust to the agent.
However, the sight of genuine, unflinching
toil, with nothing of the amateur about it, had an
eloquence of its own. Farmer Ogden looked on
grimly and ironically for the first two hours, having
only been surprised into consent in the belief that
any man, let alone a gentleman, must find out the
impracticability of the undertaking, and be absolutely
sickened. Then he brought out some bread and
cheese and cider, and was inclined to be huffy when
Harold declined the latter, and looked satirical when
he repaired to wash his hands at the pump before touching
the former. When he saw two more hours go by
in work of which he could judge, his furrowed old
brow grew less puckered, and he came out again to
request Mr. Harold to partake of the mid-day meal.
I fancy Harold’s going up to Phil’s room,
to make himself respectable for Mrs. Ogden’s
society, was as strange to the farmer as were to the
Australian the good wife’s excuses for making
him sit down with the family in the kitchen; but I
believe that during the meal he showed himself practical
farmer enough to win their respect; and when he worked
harder than ever all the afternoon, even till the last
moment it was possible to see, and came back with
the light the next morning, he had won his cause;
above all, when the hunt swept by without disturbing
the labour.
The farmer not only turned in his
scanty supply of men to help to finish off the labour,
and seconded contrivances which the day before he
would have scouted, but he gave his own bowed back
to the work. A pavement of the court which had
not seen the day for forty years was brought to light;
and by a series of drain tiles, for which a messenger
was dispatched to the pottery, streams were conducted
from the river to wash these up; and at last, when
Harold appeared, after Eustace had insisted on waiting
no longer for dinner, he replied to our eager questions,
“Yes, it is done.”
“And Ogden?”
“He thanked me, shook hands with me, and said
I was a man.”
Which we knew meant infinitely more than a gentleman.
Harold wanted to spend Thursday in
banking up the pond in the centre of the yard, but
the idea seemed to drive Eustace to distraction.
Such work before going to that sublime region at Erymanth!
He laid hold of Harold’s hands shapely
hands, and with that look of latent strength one sees
in some animals, but scarred with many a seam, and
horny within the fingers and compared them
with those he had nursed into dainty delicacy of whiteness,
till Harold could not help saying, “I wouldn’t
have a lady’s fingers.”
“I would not have a clown’s,” said
Eustace.
“Keep your gloves on, Harold,
and do not make them any worse. If you go out
to that place to-day, they won’t even be as presentable
as they are.”
“I shall wash them.”
“Wash! As if oceans of
Eau-de-Cologne would make them fit for society!”
said Eustace, with infinite disgust, only equalled
by the “Faugh!” with which Harold heard
of the perfume. In fact, Eustace was dreadfully
afraid the other hunters had seen and recognised those
shoulders, even under the smock-frock, as plainly as
he did, and he had been wretched about it ever since.
“You talk of not wanting to
do me harm,” he said, “and then you go
and grub in such work as any decent labourer would
despise.”
So miserable was he, that Harold,
who never saw the foolery in Eustace that he would
have derided in others, yielded to him so far as only
to give directions to Bullock for sending down the
materials wanted for the pond, and likewise for mending
the roof of a cottage where a rheumatic old woman
was habitually obliged to sleep under a crazy umbrella.