Pray,
good shepherd, what
Fair swain is this that dances with your daughter?
He sings several times faster than you’ll
tell money;
he utters them as he had eaten ballads, and
all men’s
ears grow to his tunes.
WINTER’S
tale
It was a glorious day in June, the
sky of pure deep dazzling blue, the sunshine glowing
with brightness, but with cheerful freshness in the
air that took away all sultriness, the sun tending
westward in his long day’s career, and casting
welcome shadows from the tall firs and horse-chestnuts
that shaded the lawn. A long rank of haymakers men
and women proceeded with their rakes, the
white shirt-sleeves, straw bonnets, and ruddy faces,
radiant in the bath of sunshine, while in the shady
end of the field were idler haymakers among the fragrant
piles, Charles half lying on the grass, with his back
against a tall haycock; Mrs. Edmonstone sitting on
another, book in hand; Laura sketching the busy scene,
the sun glancing through the chequered shade on her
glossy curls; Philip stretched out at full length,
hat and neck-tie off, luxuriating in the cool repose
after a dusty walk from Broadstone; and a little way
off, Amabel and Charlotte pretending to make hay, but
really building nests with it, throwing it at each
other, and playing as heartily as the heat would allow.
They talked and laughed, the rest
were too hot, too busy, or too sleepy for conversation,
even Philip being tired into enjoying the “dolce
far niente”; and they basked in the
fresh breezy heat and perfumy hay with only now and
then a word, till a cold, black, damp nose was suddenly
thrust into Charles’s face, a red tongue began
licking him; and at the same moment Charlotte, screaming
‘There he is!’ raced headlong across the
swarths of hay, to meet Guy, who had just ridden into
the field. He threw Deloraine’s rein to
one of the haymakers, and came bounding to meet her,
just in time to pick her up as she put her foot into
a hidden hole, and fell prostrate.
In another moment he was in the midst
of the whole party, who crowded round and welcomed
him as if he had been a boy returning from his first
half-year’s schooling; and never did little school-boy
look more holiday-like than he, with all the sunshine
of that June day reflected, as it were, in his glittering
eyes and glowing face, while Bustle escaping from
Charles’s caressing arm, danced round, wagging
his tail in ecstasy, and claiming his share of the
welcome. Then Guy was on the ground by Charles,
rejoicing to find him out there, and then, some dropping
into their former nests on the hay, some standing round,
they talked fast and eagerly in a confusion of sound
that did not subside for the first ten minutes so
as to allow anything to be clearly heard. The
first distinct sentence was Charlotte’s ’Bustle,
darling old fellow, you are handsomer than ever!’
‘What a delicious day!’
next exclaimed Guy, following Philip’s example,
by throwing off hat and neck-tie.
‘A spontaneous tribute to the
beauty of the day,’ said Charles.
‘Really it is so ultra-splendid
as to deserve notice!’ said Philip, throwing
himself completely back, and looking up.
‘One cannot help revelling in
that deep blue!’ said Laura.
‘Tomorrow’ll be the happiest
time of all the glad new year,’ hummed Guy.
‘Ah you will teach us all now,’
said Laura, ’after your grand singing lessons.’
‘Do you know what is in store
for you, Guy?’ said Amy. ’Oh! haven’t
you heard about Lady Kilcoran’s ball?’
‘You are to go, Guy,’
said Charlotte. ’I am glad I am not.
I hate dancing.’
‘And I know as much about it
as Bustle,’ said Guy, catching the dog by his
forepaws, and causing him to perform an uncouth dance.
‘Never mind, they will soon
teach you,’ said Mrs. Edmonstone.
‘Must I really go?’
‘He begins to think it serious,’ said
Charles.
‘Is Philip going?’ exclaimed
Guy, looking as if he was taken by surprise.
’He is going to say something
about dancing being a healthful recreation for young
people,’ said Charles.
‘You’ll be disappointed,’
said Philip. ‘It is much too hot to moralize.’
‘Apollo unbends his bow,’
exclaimed Charles. ’The captain yields the
field.’
‘Ah! Captain Morville,
I ought to have congratulated you,’ said Guy.
’I must come to Broadstone early enough to see
you on parade.’
‘Come to Broadstone! You
aren’t still bound to Mr. Lascelles,’ said
Charles.
‘If he has time for me,’
said Guy. ’I am too far behind the rest
of the world to afford to be idle this vacation.’
‘That’s right, Guy,’
exclaimed Philip, sitting up, and looking full of
approval. ’With so much perseverance, you
must get on at last. How did you do in collections?’
‘Tolerably, thank you.’
‘You must be able to enter into
the thing now,’ proceeded Philip. ’What
are you reading?’
‘Thucydides.’
‘Have you come to Pericles’
oration? I must show you some notes that I have
on that. Don’t you get into the spirit of
it now?’
‘Up-hill work still,’
answered Guy, disentangling some cinders from the
silky curls of Bustle’s ear.
‘Which do you like best that
or the ball?’ asked Charles.
‘The hay-field best of all,’
said Guy, releasing Bustle, and blinding him with
a heap of hay.
‘Of course!’ said Charlotte,
’who would not like hay-making better than that
stupid ball?’
‘Poor Charlotte!’ said
Mrs. Edmonstone; commiseration which irritated Charlotte
into standing up and protesting,
‘Mamma, you know I don’t want to go.’
‘No more do I, Charlotte,’
said her brother, in a mock consoling tone. ‘You
and I know what is good for us, and despise sublunary
vanities.’
‘But you will go, Guy,’
said Laura; ‘Philip is really going.’
’In spite of Lord Kilcoran’s
folly in going to such an expense as either taking
Allonby or giving the ball,’ said Charles.
’I don’t think it is my
business to bring Lord Kilcoran to a sense of his
folly,’ said Philip. ’I made all my
protests to Maurice when first he started the notion,
but if his father chose to take the matter up, it
is no concern of mine.’
‘You will understand, Guy,’
said Charles, ’that this ball is specially got
up by Maurice for Laura’s benefit.’
‘Believe as little as you please
of that speech, Guy,’ said Laura; ’the
truth is that Lord Kilcoran is very good-natured, and
Eveleen was very much shocked to hear that Amy had
never been to any ball, and I to only one, and so
it ended in their giving one.’
‘When is it to be?’
‘On Thursday week,’ said
Amy. ’I wonder if you will think Eveleen
as pretty as we do!’
‘She is Laura’s great friend, is not she?’
’I like her very much; I have
known her all my life, and she has much more depth
than those would think who only know her manner.’
And Laura looked pleadingly at Philip as she spoke.
‘Are there any others of the family at home?’
said Guy.
‘The two younger girls, Mabel
and Helen, and the little boys,’ said Amy.
‘Lord de Courcy is in Ireland, and all the others
are away.’
’Lord de Courcy is the wisest
man of the family, and sets his face against absenteeism,’
said Philip, ‘so he is never visible here.’
‘But you aren’t going
to despise it, I hope, Guy,’ said Amy, earnestly;
’it will be so delightful! And what fun
we shall have in teaching you to dance!’
Guy stretched himself, and gave a quaint grunt.
‘Never mind, Guy,’ said
Philip, ’very little is required. You may
easily pass in the crowd. I never learnt.’
‘Your ear will guide you,’ said Laura.
‘And no one can stay at home,
since Mary Ross is going,’ said Amy. ’Eveleen
was always so fond of her, that she came and forced
a promise from her by telling her she should come
with mamma, and have no trouble.’
‘You have not seen Allonby,’
said Laura. ’There are such Vandykes, and
among them, such a King Charles!’
‘Is not that the picture,’
said Charles, ‘before which Amy ’
‘O don’t, Charlie!’
‘Was found dissolved in tears?’
‘I could not help it,’ murmured Amy, blushing
crimson.
‘There is all Charles’s
fate in his face,’ said Philip, ’earnest,
melancholy, beautiful! It would stir the feelings were
it an unknown portrait. No, Amy, you need not
be ashamed of your tears.’
But Amy turned away, doubly ashamed.
‘I hope it is not in the ball-room,’ said
Guy.
’No said Laura, ‘it is in the library.’
Charlotte, whose absence had become
perceptible from the general quietness, here ran up
with two envelopes, which she put into Guy’s
hands. One contained Lady Kilcoran’s genuine
card of invitation for Sir Guy Morville, the other
Charlotte had scribbled in haste for Mr. Bustle.
This put an end to all rationality.
Guy rose with a growl and a roar, and hunted her over
half the field, till she was caught, and came back
out of breath and screaming, ‘We never had such
a haymaking!’
‘So I think the haymakers will
say!’ answered her mother, rising to go indoors.
‘What ruin of haycocks!’
‘Oh, I’ll set all that
to rights,’ said Guy, seizing a hay-fork.
‘Stop, stop, take care!’
cried Charles. ’I don’t want to be
built up in the rick, and by and by, when my disconsolate
family have had all the ponds dragged for me, Deloraine
will be heard to complain that they give him very
odd animal food.’
‘Who could resist such a piteous
appeal!’ said Guy, helping him to rise, and
conducting him to his wheeled chair. The others
followed, and when, shortly after, Laura looked out
at her window, she saw Guy, with his coat off, toiling
like a real haymaker, to build up the cocks in all
their neat fairness and height, whistling meantime
the ’Queen of the May,’ and now and then
singing a line. She watched the old cowman come
up, touching his hat, and looking less cross than usual;
she saw Guy’s ready greeting, and perceived
they were comparing the forks and rakes, the pooks
and cocks of their counties; and, finally, she beheld
her father ride into the field, and Guy spring to
meet him.
No one could have so returned to what
was in effect a home, unless his time had been properly
spent; and, in fact, all that Mr. Edmonstone or Philip
could hear of him, was so satisfactory, that Philip
pronounced that the first stage of the trial had been
passed irreproachably, and Laura felt and looked delighted
at this sanction to the high estimation in which she
held him.
His own account of himself to Mrs.
Edmonstone would not have been equally satisfactory
if she had not had something else to check it with.
It was given by degrees, and at many different times,
chiefly as they walked round the garden in the twilight
of the summer evenings, talking over the many subjects
mentioned in the letters which had passed constantly.
It seemed as if there were very few to whom Guy would
ever give his confidence; but that once bestowed,
it was with hardly any reserve, and that was his great
relief and satisfaction to pour out his whole mind,
where he was sure of sympathy.
To her, then, he confided how much
provoked he was with himself, his ‘first term,’
he said, ’having only shown him what an intolerable
fool he had to keep in order.’ By his account,
he could do nothing ’without turning his own
head, except study, and that stupefied it.’
’Never was there a more idle fellow; he could
work himself for a given time, but his sense would
not second him; and was it not most absurd in him to
take so little pleasure in what was his duty, and enjoy
only what was bad for him?’
He had tried boating, but it had distracted
him from his work; so he had been obliged to give
it up, and had done so in a hasty vehement manner,
which had caused offence, and for which he blamed himself.
It had been the same with other things, till he had
left himself no regular recreation but walking and
music. ‘The last,’ he said, ’might
engross him in the same way; but he thought (here
he hesitated a little) there were higher ends for
music, which made it come under Mrs. Edmonstone’s
rule, of a thing to be used guardedly, not disused.’
He had resumed light reading, too, which he had nearly
discontinued before he went to Oxford. ‘One
wants something,’ he said, ’by way of refreshment,
where there is no sea nor rock to look at, and no
Laura and Amy to talk to.’
He had made one friend, a scholar
of his own college, of the name of Wellwood.
This name had been his attraction; Guy was bent on
friendship with him; if, as he tried to make him out
to be, he was the son of that Captain Wellwood whose
death had weighed so heavily on his grandfather’s
conscience, feeling almost as if it were his duty to
ask forgiveness in his grandfather’s name, yet
scarcely knowing how to venture on advances to one
to whom his name had such associations. However,
they had gradually drawn together, and at length entered
on the subject, and Guy then found he was the nephew,
not the son of Captain Wellwood; indeed, his former
belief was founded on a miscalculation, as the duel
had taken place twenty-eight years ago. He now
heard all his grandfather had wished to know of the
family. There were two unmarried daughters, and
their cousin spoke in the highest terms of their self-devoted
life, promising what Guy much wished, that they should
hear what deep repentance had followed the crime which
had made them fatherless. He was to be a clergyman,
and Guy admired him extremely, saying, however, that
he was so shy and retiring, it was hard to know him
well.
From not having been at school, and
from other causes, Guy had made few acquaintance;
indeed, he amused Mrs. Edmonstone by fearing he had
been morose. She was ready to tell him he was
an ingenious self-tormentor; but she saw that the
struggle to do right was the main spring of the happiness
that beamed round him, in spite of his self-reproach,
heart-felt as it was. She doubted whether persons
more contented with themselves were as truly joyous,
and was convinced that, while thus combating lesser
temptations, the very shadow of what are generally
alone considered as real temptations would hardly come
near him.
If it had not been for these talks,
and now and then a thoughtful look, she would have
believed him one of the most light-hearted and merriest
of beings. He was more full of glee and high spirits
than she had ever seen him; he seemed to fill the
whole house with mirth, and keep every one alive by
his fun and frolic, as blithe and untiring as Maurice
de Courcy himself, though not so wild.
Very pleasant were those summer days reading,
walking, music, gardening. Did not they all work
like very labourers at the new arbour in the midst
of the laurels, where Charles might sit and see the
spires of Broadstone? Work they did, indeed!
Charles looking on from his wheeled chair, laughing
to see Guy sawing as if for his living and Amy hammering
gallantly, and Laura weaving osiers, and Charlotte
flying about with messages.
One day, they were startled by an
exclamation from Charles. ’Ah, ha!
Paddy, is that you?’ and beheld the tall figure
of a girl, advancing with a rapid, springing step,
holding up her riding habit with one hand, with the
other whisking her coral-handled whip. There was
something distinguished in her air, and her features,
though less fine than Laura’s, were very pretty,
by the help of laughing dark blue eyes, and very black
hair, under her broad hat and little waving feather.
She threatened Charles with her whip, calling out ’Aunt
Edmonstone said I should find you here. What
is the fun now?’
‘Arbour building,’ said
Charles; ‘don’t you see the head carpenter!’
‘Sir Guy?’ whispered she
to Laura, looking up at him, where he was mounted
on the roof, thatching it with reed, the sunshine full
on his glowing face and white shirt sleeves.
‘Here!’ said Charles,
as Guy swung himself down with a bound, his face much
redder than sun and work had already made it, ’here’s
another wild Irisher for you.’
‘Sir Guy Morville Lady
Eveleen de Courcy,’ began Laura; but Lady Eveleen
cut her short, frankly holding out her hand, and saying,
’You are almost a cousin, you know. Oh,
don’t leave off. Do give me something to
do. That hammer, Amy, pray Laura, don’t
you remember how dearly I always loved hammering?’
‘How did you come?’ said Laura.
’With papa ’tis
his visit to Sir Guy. ‘No, don’t go,’
as Guy began to look for his coat; ’he is only
impending. He is gone on to Broadstone, but he
dropped me here, and will pick me up on his way back.
Can’t you give me something to do on the top
of that ladder? I should like it mightily; it
looks so cool and airy.’
‘How can you, Eva?’ whispered
Laura, reprovingly; but Lady Eveleen only shook her
head at her, and declaring she saw a dangerous nail
sticking out, began to hammer it in with such good
will, that Charles stopped his ears, and told her
it was worse than her tongue. ’Go on about
the ball, do.’
‘Oh,’ said she earnestly,
’do you think there is any hope of Captain Morville’s
coming?’
‘Oh yes,’ said Laura.
’I am so glad! That is
what papa is gone to Broadstone about. Maurice
said he had given him such a lecture, that he would
not be the one to think of asking him, and papa must
do it himself; for if he sets his face against it,
it will spoil it all.’
‘You may make your mind easy,’
said Charles, ’the captain is lenient, and looks
on the ball as a mere development of Irish nature.
He has been consoling Guy on the difficulties of dancing.’
‘Can’t you dance?’
said Lady Eveleen, looking at him with compassion.
‘Such is my melancholy ignorance,’ said
Guy.
‘We have been talking of teaching him,’
said Laura.
‘Talk! will that do it?’
cried Lady Eveleen, springing up. ’We will
begin this moment. Come out on the lawn.
Here, Charles,’ wheeling him along, ‘No,
thank you, I like it,’ as Guy was going to help
her. ’There, Charles, be fiddler go on,
tum-tum, tee! that’ll do. Amy, Laura, be
ladies. I’m the other gentleman,’
and she stuck on her hat in military style, giving
it a cock. She actually set them quadrilling in
spite of adverse circumstances, dancing better, in
her habit, than most people without one, till Lord
Kilcoran arrived.
While he was making his visit, she
walked a little apart, arm-in-arm with Laura.
‘I like him very much,’ she said; ’he
looks up to anything. I had heard so much of
his steadiness, that it is a great relief to my mind
to see him so unlike his cousin.’
‘Eveleen!’
’No disparagement to the captain,
only I am so dreadfully afraid of him. I am sure
he thinks me such an unmitigated goose. Now, doesn’t
he?’
’If you would but take the right
way to make him think otherwise, dear Eva, and show
the sense you really have.’
’That is just what my fear of
him won’t let me do. I would not for the
world let him guess it, so there is nothing for it
but sauciness to cover one’s weakness.
I can’t be sensible with those that won’t
give me credit for it. But you’ll mind
and teach Sir Guy to dance; he has so much spring
in him, he deserves to be an Irishman.’
In compliance with this injunction,
there used to be a clearance every evening; Charles
turned into the bay window out of the way, Mrs. Edmonstone
at the piano, and the rest figuring away, the partnerless
one, called ‘puss in the corner’, being
generally Amabel, while Charlotte, disdaining them
all the time, used to try to make them imitate her
dancing-master’s graces, causing her father to
perform such caricatures of them, as to overpower
all with laughing.
Mr. Edmonstone was half Irish.
His mother, Lady Mabel Edmonstone, had never thoroughly
taken root in England, and on his marriage, had gone
with her daughter to live near her old home in Ireland.
The present Earl of Kilcoran was her nephew, and a
very close intercourse had always been kept up between
the families, Mr. and Mrs. Edmonstone being adopted
by their younger cousins as uncle and aunt, and always
so called.
The house at Allonby was in such confusion,
that the family there expected to dine nowhere on
the day of the ball, and the Hollywell party thought
it prudent to secure their dinner at home, with Philip
and Mary Ross, who were to go with them.
By special desire, Philip wore his
uniform; and while the sisters were dressing Charlotte
gave him a thorough examination, which led to a talk
between him and Mary on accoutrements and weapons in
general; but while deep in some points of chivalrous
armour, Mary’s waist was pinched by two mischievous
hands, and a little fluttering white figure danced
around her.
‘O Amy! what do you want with me?’
‘Come and be trimmed up,’ said Amy.
‘I thought you told me I was
to have no trouble. I am dressed,’ said
Mary, looking complacently at her full folds of white
muslin.
‘No more you shall; but you
promised to do as you were told.’ And Amy
fluttered away with her.
‘Do you remember,’ said
Philip, ’the comparison of Rose Flammock dragging
off her father, to a little carved cherub trying to
uplift a solid monumental hero?’
‘O, I must tell Mary!’
cried Charlotte; but Philip stopped her, with orders
not to be a silly child.
‘It is a pity Amy should not
have her share,’ said Charles.
‘The comparison to a Dutch cherub?’ asked
Guy.
’She is more after the pattern
of the little things on little wings, in your blotting-book,’
said Charles; ’certain lines in the predicament
of the cherubs of painters heads “et
proeterea nihil".’
’O Guy, do you write verses? cried Charlotte.
‘Some nonsense,’ muttered
Guy, out of countenance; ’I thought I had made
away with that rubbish; where is it?’
‘In the blotting-book in my
room,’ said Charles. ’I must explain
that the book is my property, and was put into your
room when mamma was beautifying it for you, as new
and strange company. On its return to me, at
your departure, I discovered a great accession of blots
and sailing vessels, beside the aforesaid little things.’
‘I shall resume my own property,’
said Guy, departing in haste.
Charlotte ran after him, to beg for
a sight of it; and Philip asked Charles what it was
like.
‘A romantic incident,’
said Charles, ’just fit for a novel. A Petrarch
leaving his poems about in blotting-books.’
Charles used the word Petrarch to
stand for a poet, not thinking what lady’s name
he suggested; and he was surprised at the severity
of Philip’s tone as he inquired, ‘Do you
mean anything, or do you not?’
Perceiving with delight that he had
perplexed and teased, he rejoiced in keeping up the
mystery:
‘Eh? is it a tender subject with you, too?’
Philip rose, and standing over him, said, in a low
but impressive tone:
’I cannot tell whether you are
trifling or not; but you are no boy now, and can surely
see that this is no subject to be played with.
If you are concealing anything you have discovered,
you have a great deal to answer for. I can hardly
imagine anything more unfortunate than that he should
become attached to either of your sisters.’
‘Et pourquoi?’ asked Charles,
coolly.
‘I see,’ said Philip,
retreating to his chair, and speaking with great composure,
‘I did you injustice by speaking seriously.’
Then, as his uncle came into the room, he asked some
indifferent question, without betraying a shade of
annoyance.
Charles meanwhile congratulated himself
on his valour in keeping his counsel, in spite of
so tall a man in scarlet; but he was much nettled
at the last speech, for if a real attachment to his
sister had been in question, he would never have trifled
about it. Keenly alive to his cousin’s
injustice, he rejoiced in having provoked and mystified
the impassable, though he little knew the storm he
had raised beneath that serene exterior of perfect
self-command.
The carriages were announced, and
Mr. Edmonstone began to call the ladies, adding tenfold
to the confusion in the dressing-room. There was
Laura being completed by the lady’s maid, Amabel
embellishing Mary, Mrs. Edmonstone with her arm loaded
with shawls, Charlotte flourishing about. Poor
Mary it was much against her will but
she had no heart to refuse the wreath of geraniums
that Amy’s own hands had woven for her; and
there she sat, passive as a doll, though in despair
at their all waiting for her. For Laura’s
toilette was finished, and every one began dressing
her at once; while Charlotte, to make it better, screamed
over the balusters that all were ready but Mary.
Sir Guy was heard playing the ‘Harmonious Blacksmith,’
and Captain Morville’s step was heard, fast and
firm. At last, when a long chain was put round
her neck, she cried out, ‘I have submitted to
everything so far; I can bear no more!’ jumped
up, caught hold of her shawl, and was putting it on,
when there was a general outcry that they must exhibit
themselves to Charles.
They all ran down, and Amy, flying
up to her brother, made a splendid sweeping curtsey,
and twirled round in a pirouette.
‘Got up, regardless of expense!’
cried Charles; ‘display yourselves.’
The young ladies ranged themselves
in imitation of the book of fashions. The sisters
were in white, with wreaths of starry jessamine.
It was particularly becoming to Laura’s bella-donna
lily complexion, rich brown curls, and classical features,
and her brother exclaimed:
’Laura is exactly like Apollo
playing the lyre, outside mamma’s old manuscript
book of music.’
‘Has not Amy made beautiful
wreaths?’ said Laura. ’She stripped
the tree, and Guy had to fetch the ladder, to gather
the sprays on the top of the wall.’
‘Do you see your bit of myrtle,
Guy,’ said Amy, pointing to it, on Laura’s
head, ‘that you tried to persuade me would pass
for jessamine?’
‘Ah! it should have been all myrtle,’
said Guy.
Philip leant meantime against the
door. Laura only once glanced towards him, thinking
all this too trifling for him, and never imagining
the intense interest with which he gave a meaning
to each word and look.
‘Well done, Mary!’ cried
Charles, ’they have furbished you up handsomely.’
Mary made a face, and said she should
wonder who was the fashionable young lady she should
meet in the pier-glasses at Allonby. Then Mr.
Edmonstone hurried them away, and they arrived in due
time.
The saloon at Allonby was a beautiful
room, one end opening into a conservatory, full of
coloured lamps, fresh green leaves, and hot-house
plants. There they found as yet only the home
party, the good-natured, merry Lord Kilcoran, his
quiet English wife, who had bad health, and looked
hardly equal to the confusion of the evening; Maurice,
and two younger boys; Eveleen, and her two little
sisters, Mabel and Helen.
‘This makes it hard on Charlotte,’
thought Amy, while the two girls dragged her off to
show her the lamps in the conservatory; and the rest
attacked Mrs. Edmonstone for not having brought Charlotte,
reproaching her with hardness of heart of which they
had never believed her capable Lady Eveleen,
in especial, talking with that exaggeration of her
ordinary manner which her dread of Captain Morville
made her assume. Little he recked of her; he
was absorbed in observing how far Laura’s conduct
coincided with Charles’s hints. On the first
opportunity, he asked her to dance, and was satisfied
with her pleased acquiescence; but the next moment
Guy came up, and in an eager manner made the same
request.
‘I am engaged,’ said she,
with a bright, proud glance at Philip; and Guy pursued
Amabel into the conservatory, where he met with better
success. Mr. Edmonstone gallantly asked Mary
if he was too old a partner, and was soon dancing
with the step and spring that had once made him the
best dancer in the county.
Mrs. Edmonstone watched her flock,
proud and pleased, thinking how well they looked and
that, in especial, she had never been sensible how
much Laura’s and Philip’s good looks excelled
the rest of the world. They were much alike in
the remarkable symmetry both of figure and feature,
the colour of the deep blue eye, and fairness of complexion.
‘It is curious,’ thought
Mrs. Edmonstone, ’that, so very handsome as
Philip is, it is never the first thing remarked about
him, just as his height never is observed till he
is compared with other people. The fact is, that
his superior sense carries off a degree of beauty which
would be a misfortune to most men. It is that
sedate expression and distinguished air that make
the impression. How happy Laura looks, how gracefully
she moves. No, it is not being foolish to think
no one equal to Laura. My other pair!’
and she smiled much more; ’you happy young things,
I would not wish to see anything pleasanter than your
merry faces. Little Amy looks almost as pretty
as Laura, now she is lighted up by blush and smile,
and her dancing is very nice, it is just like her
laughing, so quiet, and yet so full of glee. I
don’t think she is less graceful than her sister,
but the complete enjoyment strikes one more.
And as to enjoyment there are those bright
eyes of her partner’s perfectly sparkling with
delight; he looks as if it was a world of enchantment
to him. Never had any one a greater capacity for
happiness than Guy.’
Mrs. Edmonstone might well retain
her opinion when, after the quadrille, Guy came to
tell her that he had never seen anything so delightful;
and he entertained Mary Ross with his fresh, joyous
pleasure, through the next dance.
‘Laura,’ whispered Eveleen,
’I’ve one ambition. Do you guess it?
Don’t tell him; but if he would, I should have
a better opinion of myself ever after. I’m
afraid he’ll depreciate me to his friend; and
really with Mr. Thorndale, I was no more foolish than
a ball requires.’
Lady Eveleen hoped in vain. Captain
Morville danced with little Lady Helen, a child of
eleven, who was enchanted at having so tall a partner;
then, after standing still for some time, chose his
cousin Amabel.
‘You are a good partner and
neighbour,’ said he, giving her his arm, ‘you
don’t want young lady talk.’
’Should you not have asked Mary?
She has been sitting down this long time.’
‘Do you think she cares for such a sport as
dancing?’
Amy made no answer.
‘You have been well off. You were dancing
with Thorndale just now.’
’Yes. It was refreshing
to have an old acquaintance among so many strangers.
And he is so delighted with Eveleen; but what is more,
Philip, that Mr. Vernon, who is dancing with Laura,
told Maurice he thought her the prettiest and most
elegant person here.’
‘Laura might have higher praise,’
said Philip, ’for hers is beauty of countenance
even more than of feature. If only ’
‘If?’ said Amy.
’Look round, Amy, and you will
see many a face which speaks of intellect wasted,
or, if cultivated, turned aside from its true purpose,
like the double blossom, which bears leaves alone.’
’Ah! you forget you are talking
to silly little Amy. I can’t see all that.
I had rather think people as happy and good as they
look.’
‘Keep your child-like temper
as long as you can all your life,’
perhaps, for this is one of the points where it is
folly to be wise.’
‘Then you only meant things
in general? Nothing about Laura?’
‘Things in general,’ repeated
Philip; ’bright promises blighted or thrown
away ’
But he spoke absently, and his eye
was following Laura. Amy thought he was thinking
of his sister, and was sorry for him. He spoke
no more, but she did not regret it, for she could
not moralize in such a scene, and the sight and the
dancing were pleasure enough.
Guy, in the meantime, had met an Oxford
acquaintance, who introduced him to his sisters pretty
girls whose father Mr. Edmonstone knew,
but who was rather out of the Hollywell visiting distance.
They fell into conversation quickly, and the Miss
Alstons asked him with some interest, ‘Which
was the pretty Miss Edmonstone?’ Guy looked for
the sisters, as if to make up his mind, for the fact
was, that when he first knew Laura and Amy, the idea
of criticising beauty had not entered his mind, and
to compare them was quite a new notion. ‘Nay,’
said he at last, ’if you cannot discover for
yourselves when they are both before your eyes, I
will do nothing so invidious as to say which is the
pretty one. I’ll tell which is the eldest
and which the youngest, but the rest you must decide
for yourself.’
‘I should like to know them,’
said Miss Alston. ’Oh! they are both very
nice-looking girls.’
‘There, that is Laura Miss
Edmonstone,’ said Guy, ’that tall young
lady, with the beautiful hair and jessamine wreath.’
He spoke as if he was proud of her,
and had a property in her. The tone did not escape
Philip, who at that moment was close to them, with
Amy on his arm; and, knowing the Alstons slightly,
stopped and spoke, and introduced his cousin, Miss
Amabel Edmonstone. At the same time Guy took
one of the Miss Alstons away to get some tea.
‘So you knew my cousin at Oxford?’
said Philip, to the brother.
‘Yes, slightly. What an amusing fellow
he is!’
‘There is something very bright,
very unlike other people about him,’ said Miss
Alston.
‘How does he get on? Is he liked?’
’Why, yes, I should say so,
on the whole; but it is rather as my sister says,
he is not like other people.’
‘In what respect?’
’Oh I can hardly tell.
He is a very pleasant person, but he ought to have
been at school. He is a man of crotchets.’
‘Hard-working?’
’Very; he makes everything give
way to that. He is a capital companion when he
is to be had, but he lives very much to himself.
He is a man of one friend, and I don’t see much
of him.’
Another dance began, Mr. Alston went
to look for his partner, Philip and Amy moved on in
search of ice. ‘Hum!’ said Philip
to himself, causing Amy to gaze up at him, but he
was musing too intently for her to venture on a remark.
She was thinking that she did not wonder that strangers
deemed Guy crotchety, since he was so difficult to
understand; and then she considered whether to take
him to see King Charles, in the library, and concluded
that she would wait, for she felt as if the martyr
king’s face would look on her too gravely to
suit her present tone.
Philip helped her to ice, and brought
her back to her mother’s neighbourhood without
many more words. He then stood thoughtful for
some time, entered into conversation with one of the
elder gentlemen, and, when that was interrupted, turned
to talk to his aunt.
Lady Eveleen and her two cousins were
for a moment together. ’What is the matter,
Eva?’ said Amy, seeing a sort of dissatisfaction
on her bright face.
‘The roc’s egg?’
said Laura, smiling. ’The queen of the evening
can’t be content ’
’No; you are the queen, if the
one thing can make you so the one thing
wanting to me.’
‘How absurd you are, Eva when
you say you are so afraid of him, too.’
’That is the very reason.
I should get a better opinion of myself! Besides,
there is nobody else so handsome. I declare I’ll
make a bold attempt.’
‘Oh! you don’t think of
such a thing,’ cried Laura, very much shocked.
‘Never fear,’ said Eveleen,
‘faint heart, you know.’ And with
a nod, a flourish, of her bouquet, and an arch smile
at her cousin’s horror, she moved on, and presently
they heard her exclaiming, gaily, ’Captain Morville,
I really must scold you. You are setting a shocking
example of laziness! Aunt Edmonstone, how can
you encourage such proceedings! Indolence is
the parent of vice, you know.’
Philip smiled just as much as the
occasion required, and answered, ’I beg your
pardon, I had forgotten my duty. I’ll attend
to my business better in future.’ And turning
to a small, shy damsel, who seldom met with a partner,
he asked her to dance. Eveleen came back to Laura
with a droll disappointed gesture. ‘Insult
to injury,’ said she, disconsolately.
‘Of course,’ said Amy,
’he could not have thought you wanted to dance
with him, or you would not have gone to stir him up.’
‘Well, then, he was very obtuse.’
‘Besides, you are engaged.’
’O yes, to Mr. Thorndale!
But who would be content with the squire when the
knight disdains her?’
Mr. Thorndale came to claim Eveleen
at that moment. It was the second time she had
danced with him, and it did not pass unobserved by
Philip, nor the long walk up and down after the dance
was over. At length his friend came up to him
and said something warm in admiration of her.
‘She is very Irish,’ was Philip’s
answer, with a cold smile, and Mr. Thorndale stood
uncomfortable under the disapprobation, attracted by
Eveleen’s beauty and grace, yet so unused to
trust his own judgment apart from ‘Morville’s,’
as to be in an instant doubtful whether he really
admired or not.
‘You have not been dancing with her?’
he said, presently.
’No: she attracts too many
to need the attention of a nobody like myself.’
That ‘too many,’ seeming
to confound him with the vulgar herd, made Mr. Thorndale
heartily ashamed of having been pleased with her.
Philip was easy about him for the
present, satisfied that admiration had been checked,
which, if it had been allowed to grow into an attachment,
would have been very undesirable.
The suspicions Charles had excited
were so full in Philip’s mind, however, that
he could not as easily set it at rest respecting his
cousin. Guy had three times asked her to dance,
but each time she had been engaged. At last,
just as the clock struck the hour at which the carriage
had been ordered, he came up, and impetuously claimed
her. ’One quadrille we must have, Laura,
if you are not tired?’
‘No! Oh, no! I could dance till this
time to-morrow.’
‘We ought to be going,’ said Mrs. Edmonstone.
‘O pray, Mrs. Edmonstone, this
one more,’ cried Guy, eagerly. ’Laura
owes me this one.’
‘Yes, this one more, mamma,’
said Laura, and they went off together, while Philip
remained, in a reverie, till requested by his aunt
to see if the carriage was ready.
The dance was over, the carriage was
waiting, but Guy and Laura did not appear till, after
two or three minutes spent in wonder and inquiries,
they came quietly walking back from the library, where
they had been looking at King Charles.
All the way home the four ladies in
the carriage never ceased laughing and talking.
The three gentlemen in theirs acted diversely.
Mr. Edmonstone went to sleep, Philip sat in silent
thought, Guy whistled and hummed the tunes, and moved
his foot very much as if he was still dancing.
They met for a moment, and parted
again in the hall at Hollywell, where the daylight
was striving to get in through the closed shutters.
Philip went on to Broadstone, Guy said he could not
go to bed by daylight, called Bustle, and went to
the river to bathe, and the rest crept upstairs to
their rooms. And so ended Lord Kilcoran’s
ball.