A quartette party-three
violins and a ’cello-sat in summer
evening weather in a garden. This garden was
full of bloom and odor, and was shut in by high walls
of ripe old brick. Here and there were large-sized
plaster casts-Venus, Minerva, Mercury, a
goat-hoofed Pan with his pipes, a Silence with a finger
at her lips. They were all sylvan green and crumbled
with exposure to the weather, so that, in spite of
cheapness, they gave the place a certain Old-world
and stately aspect to an observer who was disposed
to think so and did not care to look at them too curiously.
A square deal table with bare top and painted legs
was set on the grass-plot beneath a gnarled apple-tree
whose branches were thick with green fruit, and the
quartette party sat about this table, each player
with his music spread out before him on a portable
little folding stand.
Three of the players were old, stout,
gray, and spectacled. The fourth was young and
handsome, with dreamy gray-blue eyes and a mass of
chestnut-colored hair. There was an audience of
two-an old man and a girl. The old
man stood at the back of the chair of the youngest
player, turning his music for him, and beating time
with one foot upon the grass. The girl, with
twined fingers, leaned both palms on the trunk of
the apple-tree, and reposed a clear-colored cheek on
her rounded arm, looking downward with a listening
air. The youngest player never glanced at the
sheets which the old man so assiduously turned for
him, but looked straight forward at the girl, his
eyes brightening or dreaming at the music. The
three seniors ploughed away business-like, with intent
frownings, and the man who played the ’cello
counted beneath his breath, “One, two, three,
four-one, two, three, four,” inhaling
his breath on one set of figures and blowing on the
next.
The movement closed, and the three
seniors looked at each other like men who were satisfied
with themselves and their companions.
“Lads,” said the man with
the ’cello, in a fat and comfortable voice,
“that was proper! He’s a pretty writer,
this here Bee-thoven. Rewben, the hallygro’s
a twister, I can tell thee. Thee hadst better
grease thy elbow afore we start on it. Ruth,
fetch a jug o’ beer, theer’s a good wench.
I’m as dry as Bill Duke. Thee canst do a
drop, ’Saiah, I know.”
“Why, yes,” returned the
second-fiddle. “Theer’s a warmish
bit afore us, and it’s well to have summat to
work on.”
The girl moved away slowly, her fingers
still knitted and her palms turned to the ground.
An inward-looking smile, called up by the music, lingered
in her eyes, which were of a warm, soft brown.
“Reuben,” said the second-fiddle,
“thee hast thy uncle’s method all over.
I could shut my eyes an’ think as I was five-and-twenty
’ear younger, and as he was a-playin’.
Dost note the tone, Sennacherib?”
“Note it?” said the third
senior. “It’s theer to be noted.
Our ’Saiah’s got it drove into him somehow,
as he’s the one in Heydon Hay as God A’mighty’s
gi’en a pair of ears to.”
“An’ our Sennacherib,”
retorted Isaiah, “is the one as carries Natur’s
license t’ offer the rough side of his tongue
to everybody.”
“I know it’s a compliment,”
said the younger man, “to say I have my uncle’s
hand, though I never heard my uncle play.”
“No, lad,” said the old
man who stood behind his chair. “Thee’rt
a finer player than ever I was. If I’d
played as well as thee I might have held on at it,
though even then it ud ha’ gone a bit agen the
grain.”
“Agen the grain?” asked
the ’cello-player, in his cheery voice.
“With a tone like that? Why, I mek bold
to tell you, Mr. Gold, as theer is not a hammer-chewer
on the fiddle, not for thirty or may be forty mile
around, as has a tone to name in the same day with
Rewben.”
“There’s a deal in what
you say, Mr. Fuller,” said the old man, who
had a bearing of sad and gentle dignity, and gave,
in a curious and not easily explainable way, the idea
that he spoke but seldom and was something of a recluse.
“There’s a deal in what you say, Mr. Fuller,
but the fiddle is not a thing as can be played like
any ordinary instryment. A fiddle’s like
a wife, in a way of speaking. You must offer her
all you’ve got. If she catches you going
about after other women-”
“It’s woe betide you!” Sennacherib
interrupted.
“You drive her heart away,”
the old man pursued. “The fiddle’s
jealouser than a woman. It wants the whole of
a man. If Reuben was to settle down to it twelve
hours a day, I make no doubt he’d be a player
in a few years’ time.”
“Twelve hours a day!”
cried Sennacherib. “D’ye think as
life was gi’en to us to pass it all away a scrapin’
catgut?”
“Why, no, Mr. Eld,” the
old man answered, smilingly. “But to my
mind there’s only two or three men in the world
at any particular space o’ given time as has
the power gi’en ’em by Nature to be fiddlers;
that is to say, as has all the qualities to be masters
of the instryment. It is so ordered as the best
of qualities must be practised to be perfect, and
howsoever a man may be qualified to begin with, he
must work hour by hour and day by day for years afore
he plays the fiddle.”
“I look upon any such doctrine
as a sinful crime,” said Sennacherib. “The
fiddle is a recrehation, and was gi’en us for
that end. So, in a way, for them as likes it,
is skittles. So is marvils, or kite-flyin’,
or kiss-i’-the-ring. But to talk of a man
sittin’ on his hinder end, and draggin’
rosined hosshair across catgut hour by hour and day
by day for ’ears, is a doctrine as I should
like to hear Parson Hales’s opinion on, if ever
it was to get broached afore him.”
“Ruth,” called the ’cello-player,
as the girl reappeared, bearing a tray with a huge
jug and glasses, “come along with the beer.
And when we’ve had a drink, lads, well have
a cut at the hallygro. It’s marked ‘vivaysy,’
Reuben, an’ it’ll tek thee all thy
time to get the twirls and twiddles i’ the right
placen.”
Ruth poured out a glass of beer for
each of the players, and, having set the tray and
jug upon the grass, took up her former place and position
by the apple-tree.
“Wheer’s your rosin, ’Saiah?”
asked Sennacherib.
“I forgot to bring it wi’
me,” said Isaiah. “I took it out of
the case last night, and was that neglectful as I
forgot to put it back again.”
“My blessid!” cried Sennacherib,
“I niver see such a man!”
“Well, well!” said the
‘cello-player, “here’s a bit.
You seem to ha’ forgot your own.”
“What’s that got to do
wi’ it?” Sennacherib demanded. “I
shall live to learn as two blacks mek a white by-an’-by,
I reckon. There niver was a party o’ four
but there was three wooden heads among ’em.”
The girl glanced over her arm, and looked with dancing
eyes at the youngest of the party. He, feeling
Sennacherib’s eye upon him, contrived to keep
a grave face. The host gave the word and the four
set to work, Reuben playing with genuine fire, and
his companions sawing away with a dogged precision
which made them agreeable enough to listen to, but
droll to look at. Ruth, with her chin upon her
dimpled arm, watched Reuben as he played. He
had tossed back his chestnut mane of hair rather proudly
as he tucked his violin beneath his chin, and had
looked round on his three seniors with the air of
a master as he held his bow poised in readiness to
descend upon the strings. His short upper lip
and full lower lip came together firmly, his brows
straightened, and his nostrils contracted a little.
Ruth admired him demurely, and he gave her ample opportunity,
for this time he kept his eyes upon the text.
She watched him to the last stroke of the bow, and
then, shifting her glance, met the grave, fixed look
of the old man who stood behind his chair. At
this, conscious of the fashion in which her last five
minutes had been passed, she blushed, and to carry
this off with as good a grace as might be, she began
to applaud with both hands.
“Bravo, father! bravo! Capital, Mr. Eld!
capital!”
“Theer,” said Sennacherib,
ignoring the compliment, and scowling in a sort of
dogged triumph at the placid old man behind Reuben’s
chair, “d’ye think as that could
be beat if we spent forty ’ear at it? Theer
wa’n’t a fause note from start to finish,
and time was kep’ like a clock.”
“It’s a warmish bit o’
work, that hallygro,” said old Fuller, in milder
self-gratulation, as he disposed his ’cello between
his knees, and mopped his bald forehead. “A
warmish bit o’ work it is.”
“Come, now,” said Sennacherib,
“d’ye think as it could be beat? A
civil answer to a civil question is no more than a
beggar’s rights, and no less than a king’s
obligingness.”
“It was wonderful well played,
Mr. Eld,” the old man answered.
“Beat!” said Isaiah.
“Why it stands to natur’ as it could be
beat. D’ye think Paganyni couldn’t
play a better second fiddle than I can?”
“Ought to play second fiddle
pretty well thyself,” returned Sennacherib.
“Hast been at it all thy life. Ever since
thee was married, annyway.”
“Come, come, come,” said
the fat ’cello-player. “Harmony, lads,
harmony! How was it, Mr. Gold, as you come to
give up the music. Theer’s them as is entitled
to speak, and has lived i’ the parish longer
than I have, as holds you up to have been a real noble
player.”
“There’s them,”
the old man answered, “as would think the parish
church the finest buildin’ i’ the king-dom.
But they wouldn’t be them as had seen the glories
of Lichfield cathedral.”
“I’m speakin’ after
them as thinks they have a right to talk,” said
the other.
“I might at my best day have
come pretty nigh to Reuben,” the old man allowed,
“though I never was his equal. But as for
a real noble player-”
“Well, well,” said Fuller,
“it ain’t a hammer-chewer in a county as
plays like Reuben. Give Mr. Gold a chair, Ruth.
I should like to hear what might ha’ made a
man throw it over as had iver got as far.”
“I heard Paganini,” the
old man answered. “I was up in London rather
better than six-and-twenty year ago, and I heard Paganini.”
“Well?” asked Fuller.
“That’s all the story,”
said the old man, seating himself in the chair the
girl had brought him. “I never cared to
touch a bow again.”
“I don’t seem to follow you, Mr. Gold.”
“I have never been a wine-drinker,”
said Gold, “but I may speak of wine to make
clear my mean-in’. If you had been drinkin’
a wonderful fine glass of port or sherry wine, you
wouldn’t try to take the taste out of your mouth
with varjuice.”
“I’ve tasted both,”
said the ’cello-player, “but they niver
sp’iled my mouth for a glass of honest beer.”
“I can listen to middlin’-class
music now,” said Gold, “and find a pleasure
in it. But for a time I could not bring myself
to take any sort of joy in music. You think it
foolish? Well, perhaps it was. I am not
careful to defend it, gentlemen, and it may happen
that I might not if I tried. But that was how
I came to give up the fiddle. He was a wonder
of the world, was Paganini. He was no more like
a common man than his fiddlin’ was like common
fiddlin’. There was things he played that
made the blood run cold all down the back, and laid
a sort of terror on you.”
“I felt like that at the ‘Hallelujah’
first time I heerd it,” said Isaiah. “Band
an’ chorus of a hundred. It was when they
opened the big Wesley Chapel at Barfield twenty ’ear
ago.”
“We’ll tek a turn
at Haydn now, lads,” said the host, genially.
“I’m sorry to break the
party up so soon,” Reuben answered, “but
I must go. There are people come to tea at father’s,
and I was blamed for coming away at all. I promised
to get back early and give them a tune or two.”
He arose, and, taking his violin-case from the grass,
wiped it carefully all over with his pocket-handkerchief.
“I was bade to ask you, sir, if Miss Ruth might
come and pass an hour or two. My mother would
be particularly pleased to see her, I was to say.”
The young fellow was blushing fierily
as he spoke, but no one noticed this except the girl.
“Go up, my gell, and spend an
hour or two,” said her father. “Reuben
’ll squire thee home again.”
“Wait while I put on my bonnet,”
she said, as she ran past Reuben into the house.
Reuben blushed a little deeper yet, and knelt over
his violin-case on the grass, where he swaddled the
instrument as if it had been a baby, and bestowed
it in its place with unusual care and solicitude.
“Reuben,” said his uncle,
as the young man arose, “that’s a thing
as never should be done.” The young man
looked inquiry. “The poor thing’s
screwed up to pitch,” the old man explained,
almost sternly. “Ease her down, lad, ease
her down. The strain upon a fiddle is a thing
too little thought upon. You get a couple o’
strong men one o’ these days, and make ’em
pull at a set of strings, and see if they’ll
get them up to concert pitch! I doubt if they’d
do it, lad, or anything like. And there’s
all that strain on a frail shell like that. I’ve
ached to think of it, many a time. A man who
carries a weight about all day puts it off to go to
bed.” “Wondrous delicate an’
powerful thing,” said old Fuller. “Reminds
you o’ some o’ them delicate-lookin’
women as’ll goo through wi’ a lot more
in the way o’ pain-bearin’ than iver a
man wool.”
“Rubbidge!” said Sennacherib.
“You’d think the women bear a lot.
They mek a outcry, to be sure, but theer’s a
lot more chatter than work about a woman’s sufferin’,
just as theer is about everythin’ else her does.
Dost remember what the vicar said last Sunday was a
wick? It ’ud be a crime, he said, to think
as the Lord made the things as is lower in the scale
o’ natur’ than we be to feel like us.
The lower the scale the less the feelin’.
Stands to rayson, that does. I mek no manner of
a doubt as he’s got Scripter for it.”
“Lower in the scale of natur’,
Mr. Eld?” said Gold, turning his ascetic face
and mournful eyes upon Sennacherib.
“Theer’s two things,”
returned Sennacherib, “as a man o’ sense
has no particular liking to. He’ll niver
ask to have his cabbage twice b’iled, nor plain
words twice spoke. I said ‘Lower in the
scale o’ na-tur’.’ Mek
the most on it.”
Sennacherib was short but burly, and
between him and Gold there was very much the sort
of contrast which exists between a mastiff and a deer-hound.
“I will not make the most of
it, Mr. Eld,” the old man said, with a transient
smile. “I might think poorlier of you than
I’ve a right to if I did. When a rose is
held lower in the scale of natur’ than a turnip,
or the mastership in music is gi’en in again
the fiddle in favor o’ the hurdy-gurdy, I’ll
begin to think as you and me is better specimens of
natur’s handiwork than this here gracious bit
o’ sweetness as is coming towards us at this
minute. Good-evenin’, Mr. Eld. Good-evenin’,
Isaiah. Good-evenin’, Mr. Fuller.
Good-evenin’, Reuben. No, I’m not
goin’ thy way, lad. Call o’ me to-morrow;
I’ve a thing to speak of. Good-evenin’,
Miss Ruth.”
When he had spoken his last good-by
he folded his gaunt hands behind him and walked away
slowly, his shoulders rounded with an habitual stoop
and his eyes upon the ground. Ruth and Reuben
followed, and the three seniors reseated themselves,
and each with one consent reached out his hand to
his tumbler.
“Theer’s a kind of a mildness
o’ natur’ in Ezra Gold,” said Isaiah,
passing the back of his hand across his lips, “as
gives me a curious sort o’ likin’ for
him.”
“Theer’s a kind of a mildness
o’ natur’ in a crab-apple,” said
Sennacherib, “as sets my teeth on edge.”
“Come, come, lads, harmony!”
said Fuller. He laid hold of his great waistcoat
with the palms of both hands and agitated it gently.
“It beats me,” he said, “to think
of his layin’ by the music in that way, and for
sich a cause.”
“Well,” said Sennacherib,
“I’ll tell thee why he laid by the music.
I wonder at Gold settlin’ up to git over men
like me with a stoory so onlikely.”
“What was it, then?” asked
Isaiah, bestowing a wink on Fuller.
“It was a wench as did it,”
said Sennacherib. “He was allays a man as
took his time to think about a thing. If he’d
been a farmer he’d ha’ turned the odds
about and about wi’ regards to gettin’
his seed into the ground till somebody ‘ud ha’
told him it ’ud be Christmas-day next Monday.
He behaved i’ that way wi’ regards to matrimony.
He put off thinkin’ on it till he was nigh on
forty-six-an’-thirty he was at the
lowest. Even when he seemed to ha’ made
up what mind he’d got he’d goo and fiddle
to the wench instead o’ courtin’ her like
a Christian, or sometimes the wench ’ud mek
a visit to his mother, and then he’d fiddle
to her at hum. He made eyes at her for all the
parish to see, and the young woman waited most tynacious.
But when her had been fiddled at for three or four
‘ear, her begun to see as her was under no sort
o’ peril o’ losin’ her maiden name
with Ezra. So her walked theer an’ then-made
up her mind an’ walked at once-went
into some foreign part of the country to see if her
couldn’t find somebody theer as’d fancy
a nice-lookin’ wench, and tek less time
to find out what he’d took a likin’ for.”
“Was that it?” asked Isaiah,
with the manner of a man who finds an explanation
for an old puzzle. “That ’ud be Rachel
Blythe.”
“A quick eye our ’Saiah’s
got,” said Sennacherib. “He can see
a hole through a ladder when somebody’s polished
his glasses. Rachel Blythe was the wench’s
name. Her was a little slip of a creator’,
no higher than a well-grown gell o’ twelve,
but pretty in a sort o’ way.”
“Why, Jabez, lad,” cried
Isaiah, “thee lookest like a stuck pig.
What’s the matter?”
The host’s eyes were rounded
with astonishment, and he was staring from one of
his guests to the other with an air of fatuous wonder.
“Why,” said he, with an
emphasis of astonishment which seemed not altogether
in keeping with so simple a discovery, “this
here Rachel Blythe was my first wife’s second
cousin. Our Fanny Jane used to be talkin’
about her constant. Her had offers by the baker’s
dozen, so it seemed, but her could never be brought
to marry. Fanny Jane was a woman as was gi’en
a good deal up to sentiment, and her was used to say
the gell’s heart was fixed on somebody at Heydon
Hay. It ’ud seem to come in wi’ the
probability of things as they might have had a sort
of a shortness betwixt ’em, and parted.”
“Theer was nobody after her
here but Ezra Gold,” said Sennacherib.
“Nobody. I niver heard, howsever, as they
got to be hintimate enough to quarrel. But as
for Paganyni, that’s rubbidge. The man played
regular till Rachel Blythe left the parish, and then
he stopped.”
“Well, well,” said the
host, contemplatively, “it’s too late in
life for both on ’em. Her’s back
again. Made us a visit yesterday. Her’s
took that little cottage o’ Mother Duke’s
on the Barfield Road.”
“Bless my soul!” said
Isaiah. “I seen her yesterday as I was takin’
my walks abroad. But, Jabez, lad, her’s
as withered as a chip! The littlest, wizen-edest,
tiniest little old woman as ever I set eyes on.
Dear me! dear me! To think as six-an’-twenty
’ear should mek such a difference. Her
gi’en me a nod and a smile as I went by, but
I niver guessed as it was Rachel Blythe.”
“Rachel Blythe it was, though,”
returned old Fuller. “Well, well! To
think as her and Mr. Gold should ha’ kep’
single one for another. Here’s a bit of
a treeho, lads, as I bought in Brummagem the day afore
yesterday. It’s by that new chap as wrote
‘Elijah’ for the festival. Let’s
see. What’s his name again? Mendelssohn.
Shall us have a try at it?”