The young Sennacherib, swaggering
gayly from his unnatural parent’s door, was
aware of something as nearly approaching a flutter
as not often disturbed the picturesque dulness of
the village main street. By some unusual chance
there were half a dozen people in the road, and not
only did these turn to stare at him, but at least half
a dozen others peered at him from behind the curtains
of cottage interiors, or boldly flattened their noses
against the bulbous little panes of glass in the diamonded
windows.
“Theer’s a look of summat
stirrin’ i’ the place, gaffer,” said
Snac to one ancient of the village.
“Why, yis, Mr. Eld, theer is
that sort of a air about the plaeas to-day,”
the old fellow answered, with a fine unconsciousness.
“But then theer mostly is a bit of a
crowd round our town pump.”
The crowd about the town pump consisted
of one slatternly small girl and a puppy.
“Can’t a chap call on
his feyther ‘ithout the Midland counties turnin’
out to look at him?” Snac asked, smilingly.
“Yis,” returned the ancient,
who was conveniently deaf on a sudden. “Theer’s
been no such fine ripenin’ weather for the wheat
sence I wur a lad.”
Snac gave the riding-whip he carried
a burlesque threatening flourish, and the old boy
grinned humorously.
“Sin Joseph Beaker this mornin’, Mr. Eld?”
he asked.
“No,” said Snac. “What about
him?”
“His lordship’s gi’en
him a set o’ togs,” said the old rustic,
“an’ he’s drunker wi’ the
joy on ’em than iver I was with ode ale at harvest-time.”
“Aha!” cried Snac, scenting a jest.
“Wheer is he?”
“Why, theer he is!” said
the rustic, and turning, Snac beheld Joseph Beaker
at that moment shambling round the corner of the graveyard
wall, followed closely by the youth of the village.
The Earl of Barfield had kept his promise, and had
bestowed upon Joseph a laced waistcoat-a
waistcoat which had not been worn since the first decade
of the century, and was old-fashioned even then.
It was of a fine crimson cloth, and had a tarnished
line of lace about the edge and around the flaps of
the pockets. Over this glorious garment Joseph
wore a sky-bine swallow-tail coat of forgotten fashion,
and below it a pair of knee-breeches which, being
much too long for him, were adjusted midway about his
shrunken calves. A pair of hob-nailed bluchers
and a battered straw hat gave a somewhat feeble finish
to these magnificences. As the poor
Joseph aired the splendors of his attire there was
a faint and far-away imitation of the Earl of Barfield
in his gait, and he paused at times after a fashion
his lordship had, and perked his head from side to
side as if in casual observation of the general well-being.
“Good-morning, Lord Barfield,”
cried Snac, as Joseph drew near. “It’s
a sight for sore eyes to see your lordship a-lookin’
so young and lusty.” Joseph beamed at this
public crowning of his loftiest hopes, and would have
gone by with a mere nod of lordly recognition but the
triumph was too much for him and he laughed aloud
for joy. “Well, bless my soul!” said
Snac, in feigned astonishment, “it’s Mister
Beaker. Send I may live if I didn’t tek
him for the Right Honorable th’ Earl o’
Barfield! Thee’st shake hands with an old
friend, Mr. Beaker? That’s right.
Theer’s nothin’ I admire so much as to
see a man as refuses to be carried away with pride.”
Joseph shook hands almost with enthusiasm.
“Theer’s nothin’
o’ that sort about me, Mr. Eld,” he replied.
“That I’m sure on,”
said Snac, with conviction. “But how gay
we be to-day, Mr. Beaker.”
“It was my lord as gi’en
me these,” said Joseph, retiring a pace or two
to display his raiment, and gravely turning round in
the presence of the little crowd that surrounded him
so that each might see the fulness of its beauty.
At this moment Reuben Gold came swinging
along the road with a green baize bag under his arm.
He was on his way to his uncle’s house, and,
unobserved of Snac, took a place on the causeway to
see what might be the reason of this unusual gathering.
“Now,” said Snac, “I
never thought as Lord Barfield ’ud be so mean
as to do things in that half-an’-half manner.
I should ha’ fancied, if Lord Barfield had took
it into his head to set up an extra gentleman in livery,
he’d ha’ done it thorough.”
Joseph’s countenance fell, and
he surveyed his own arms and legs with an air of criticism.
Then he took hold of the gold-laced flaps of the crimson
waistcoat and laughed with a swift and intense approval.
“Ain’t this been done thorough?”
he demanded.
“As far as it goes, Joseph,”
replied the jocular Snac, “it’s noble,
to be sure.” Joseph became critical again,
but again at the sight of the gold-laced waistcoat
his doubts vanished. “But surely, surely,
Joseph, he should ha’ gi’en you a pair
o’ them high collars as he wears, and a cravat,
to go along with a get out like that.”
“He might ha’ done that,
to be sure,” said Joseph, tentatively.
“Might ha’ done it!”
cried Snac, with a voice of honest scorn. “Ah!
and would ha’ done it if he’d been half
a man, let alone a peer of the realm. For that’s
what he is, Joseph-a peer of the realm.”
“So he is,” said the poor
Joseph, who was rapidly sliding into the trap which
was set for him. “You would have expected
a peer of the realm to do it thorough, wouldn’t
you?”
“Look here, Joseph,” continued
Snac, opening his trap wide, “you go and tell
him. ‘My lord,’ says you-a-speakin’
like a man, Joseph, and a-lookin’ his lordship
i’ the face as a man in a suit of clothes like
them has got a right to do-’my lord,’
you says, ’you’re as mean as you’re
high,’ says you. ‘What for?’
says he. ‘Why,’ says you, ’for
settin’ a man out i’ this half-an’-half
mode for the folks to laugh at. Give me a collar
and a cravat this minute, you says,’ or else
be ashamed o’ thyself. Be ayther a man
or a mouse.’ That’s the way to talk
to ’em, Joseph.”
“Think so?” asked Joseph,
with an air half martial and half doubtful.
“To be sure,” cried Snac;
and with one exception everybody in the little crowd
echoed “To be sure!”
“I’ll goo an’ do
it,” said Joseph, thus fortified, “this
instant minute.”
“Wait a bit Joseph,” said
Reuben Gold, “I’m going that way.
We’ll go a little of the road together.”
“Now, Mr. Gold,” cried
Snac, in a whisper, recognizing Reuben’s voice
before he turned, “don’t you go an’
spoil sport.”
“Snac, my lad,” responded
Reuben, smiling, “it’s poor sport.”
“He’d go an’ tell
him,” said Snac, with a delighted grin.
“You can mek him say annythin’.”
“That’s why it’s
such poor sport,” said Reuben. “It’s
too easy. It’s sport to stand up for a
bout with the sticks when the other man’s a bit
better than you are, but it’s no fun to beat
a baby.”
“I like it better,” Snac
replied, with candor, “when th’ odds is
on t’other side. I like to be a bit better
than t’other chap.”
“You like to win? That’s
natural. But you like to deserve a bit of praise
for winning; eh?”
Reuben walked away with the rescued
Joseph at his side. Joseph was as yet unconscious
of his rescue, and was fully bent upon his message
to the earl.
“Theer’s no denyin’
that chap nothin,” said Snac, looking after Reuben’s
retiring figure. “He’s got that form
an’ smilin’ manner as’ll tek
no such thing as a no. An’ lettin’
that alone,” he continued, again relapsing into
candor, “he could punch my head if he wanted
to, though I’m a match for ere another man i’
the parish-and he’d do it too, at
anny given minute, for all so mild as he is.”
“He’s the spit of what
his uncle was,” said the aged rustic. “When
he was a lad he was the best cudgel-player, the best
man of his hands, and the prettiest man of his feet
from here to Castle Barfield.”
“He’s fell off of late ’ears, then,”
said Snac.
“Ah!” quavered the old
fellow, “it’s time as is too many for the
best on us, Mr. Eld. Who’d think as I’d
iver stood again all comers for miles and miles around
for the ten-score yards? I did though!”
“Didst?” cried Snac.
“Then tek a shillin’ and get a drop
o’ good stuff wi’ it, an’ warm up
that old gizzard o’ thine wi’ thinkin’
o’ thy younger days.”
And away he swaggered, carrying his
shilling’s worth with him in the commendations
of the rustic circle. He was a young man who liked
to be well thought of, and to that end did most of
his benefactions in the open air.
In the mean time Reuben had disappeared
with Joseph, and was already engaged in spoiling the
village sport. Joseph was so resolved upon the
collars and the cravat, and his imagination was so
fired by the prospect of those splendid additions
to his toilet, that Reuben was compelled to promise
them from his own stores. Joseph became at once
amenable to reason, and promised to overlook his lordship’s
meanness.
“Are you going to do anything
for his lordship to-day, Joseph?” his protector
asked him.
“No,” said Joseph.
“He’s gi’en me a holiday. I
tode him as ’twarn’t natural to think
as a man ‘ud want to go to work i’ togs
like thesen. The fust day’s wear, and all!”
“Well, if you should care to earn a shilling-”
“I couldn’t undertek a
grimy job,” said Joseph. “Not to-day.
A message now.”
“A message? Could you take
the message in a wheelbarrow, Joseph?”
“A barrer?” Joseph
surveyed his arms and legs, and then took a grip of
the laced waistcoat with both hands.
“A message in a wheelbarrow
for a shilling, and a pair of collars and a black
satin cravat to come I home in, Joseph.”
“Gaffer,” said Joseph, “it’s
a bargain.”
Reuben’s message was Ezra Gold’s
musical library, and the volumes having been carefully
built up in a roomy wheelbarrow, Joseph set out with
them at a leisurely pace towards his patron’s
home. Reuben on first entering his uncle’s
house had laid the green baize bag upon the table.
When the books were all arranged, and Joseph had started
away with them, Reuben re-entered.
“I’ve brought the old lady back again,
uncle,” he said.
“You’ve eased her down,
I hope, lad,” said the old man, untying the bag
and drawing forth the violin. “That’s
right. As for bringing her back again, you remember
what used to be the sayin’ when you was a child,
‘Give a thing and take a thing, that’s
the devil’s plaything.’ I meant thee
to keep her, lad. It’s a sin an’ a
shame as such a voice should be silent.”
“Uncle,” said Reuben,
stammering somewhat, “I scarcely like to take
her. It seems like-like trespassing
on your goodness.”
“I won’t demean th’
old lady,” returned Ezra. “Her comes
o’ the right breed to have all the virtues of
her kind. Her’s a Stradivarius, Reuben,
and my grandfather gi’en fifty guineas for her
in the year seventeen hundred an’ sixty-one.
A king might mek a present of her to a king. And
that’s why in the natural selfishness of a man’s
heart I kep’ her all these ‘ears hangin’
dumb and idle on the wall here. I take some shame
to myself as I acted so, for you might ha’ had
her half a dozen years ago, and ha’ done her
no less than as much justice as I could iver ha’
done her myself at the best days of my life.
Her’s yourn, my lad, and I only mek one bargain.
If you should marry and have children of your own,
and one of ’em should be a player, he can have
her, but if not, I ask you to will her to somebody
as’ll know her value, and handle her as her
deserves.”
Reuben was embarrassed by the gift.
“To tell the truth, uncle,”
he said, “I should take her the more readily
if I’d coveted her less.”
“Bring her out into the gardin,
lad,” returned his uncle. “Let’s
hear the ‘Last Rose’ again.”
Reuben followed the old man’s
lead. His uncle’s house-keeper carried
chairs to the grass-plot, and there the old man and
the young one sat down together in the summer air,
and Reuben, drawing a little pitch-pipe from his pocket,
sounded its note, adjusted the violin, and played.
Ezra set his elbows upon his knees and chin in his
hands, and sat to listen.
“Lend her to me, lad,”
he said, when his nephew laid the instrument across
his knees. “I don’t know-I
wonder-Let’s see if there is any of
the old skill left.” His face was gray and
his hands shook as he held them out. “Theer’s
almost a fear upon me,” he said, as he took the
fiddle and tucked it beneath his chin. “No,
no, I dar’ not. I doubt the poor thing
’ud shriek at me.”
“Nonsense, uncle,” answered
Reuben, with a swift and subtle movement of the fingers
of the left hand, such as only a violin-player could
accomplish. “I doubt if there is such a
thing as forgetting when once you have played.
Try.”
“No,” said the old man,
handing back the fiddle. “I dar’
not. I haven’t the courage for it.
It’s a poor folly, maybe, for a man o’
my years to talk o’ breakin’ his heart
over a toy like that, and yet, if the tone wasn’t
to come after all! That ’nd be a bitter
pill, Reuben. No, no. It’s a thousand
to one the power’s left me, but theer’s
just a chance it hasn’t. I feel it theer.”
The gaunt left-hand fingers made just such a strenuous
swift and subtle motion as Reuben’s had made
a minute earlier. “And yet it mightn’t
be.” Reuben reached out the violin towards
him, but he recoiled from it and arose. “No,
no. I dar’n’t fail,” he said,
with a gray smile. “I darn’t risk
it. Take her away, lad. No, lend her here.
A man as hasn’t pluck enow in his inwards for
a thing o’ that kind-Lend her here!”
He seized the instrument, tucked it
once more beneath his chin, and with closed eyes laid
the bow upon the strings. His left foot, stretched
firmly out in advance of the right, beat noiselessly
upon the turf, as if it marked the movement of a prelude
inaudible except to him. Then the bow gripped
the strings, and sounded one soft, long-drawn, melancholy
note. A little movement of the brows, a scarcely
discernible nod of the head marked his approval of
the tone, and after marking anew the cadence of that
airy prelude he began to play. For a minute or
more his resolve and excitement carried him along,
but suddenly a note sounded false and he stopped.
“Ah-h-h!” he cried, shaking
his head as if to banish the sound from his ears,
“take her, Reuben, take her. Give her a
sweet note or two to take the taste o’ that
out of her mouth. Poor thing! Strike up,
lad-anything. Strike up!”
Reuben dashed into “The Wind
that Shakes the Barley!” and Ezra, with his
gaunt hands folded behind him, walked twice or thrice
the length of the grass-plot.
“Theer’s no fool like
an old fool,” he said, when he paused at his
nephew’s side. “Theer’s nothing
as is longed for like that as can niver be got at.
Good-day, lad. Tek her away and niver let
anybody maul her i’ that fashion again, poor
thing. I’ll rest a while. Good-day,
Reuben.”
Reuben thus dismissed shook hands
and went his way, bearing his uncle’s gift with
him. His way took him to Fuller’s house,
and finding Ruth alone there he displayed his treasure
and spent an hour in talk. If he had said then
and there what he wanted to say, the historic Muse
must needs have rested with him. But since, in
spite of the promptings of his own desire, the favorableness
of the time, and the delightful confusions of silence
which overcame both Ruth and himself in the course
of his visit, he said no more than any enthusiast
in music might have said to any pretty girl who was
disposed to listen to him, the historic Muse is free
to follow Joseph Beaker, with whom she has present
business.
In the ordinary course of things Joseph
would have taken the shortest cut to his patron’s
house, but to-day neither the weight of the barrow-load,
which was considerable, nor Joseph’s objection
to labor, which was strongly rooted, could prevent
him from taking the lengthier route, which lay along
the village main street, and therefore took him where
he had most chance of being observed. He made
but slow progress, being constantly stopped by his
admirers, and making a practice of sitting down outside
any house the doors of which happened to be closed,
and there waiting to be observed. Despite the
lingering character of his journey he had already
passed the last house but one-Miss Blythe’s
cottage-and was forecasting in the dim twilight
of his mind the impression he would make upon its
inmate, when the little old maid herself went by without
a glance.
“Arternoon, mum,” said
Joseph, setting down the wheelbarrow, and spitting
upon his hands to show how little he was conscious
of the glory of his own appearance.
“Good-afternoon,” said
the old maid. “Ah! Joseph Beaker?”
To Joseph’s great disappointment she took no
notice of his attire, but her eye happening to alight
upon the books, she approached and turned one of them
over. Poor Joseph was not accustomed to read the
signs of emotion, or he might have noticed that the
hand that turned the leaves trembled curiously.
“What are these?” she asked. “Where
are you taking them?”
“These be Mr. Ezra Gold’s
music-books,” he answered. “He’s
gi’en ’em to his nevew, and I’m
a-wheelin’ of ’em home for him. Look
here-see what his lordship’s gi’en
to me.”
But Miss Blythe was busily taking
book after book, and was turning over the leaves as
if she sought for something. Her hands were trembling
more and more, and even Joseph thought it odd that
so precise and neat a personage should have let her
parasol tumble and lie unregarded in the dust.
“Wheel them to my house, Joseph
Beaker,” she said at last, with a covert eagerness.
“I want to look at them; I should like to look
at them.”
“My orders was to wheel ’em
straight home,” returned Joseph. “I
worn’t told to let nobody handle ’em,
but it stands to rayson as they hadn’t ought
to be handled.”
“Wheel them to my door,”
said the little old maid, stooping for her fallen
sunshade. “I will give you sixpence.”
“That’s another matter,”
said Joseph, sagely. “If a lady wants to
look at ’em theer can’t be nothin’
again that, I should think.”
The barrow was wheeled to Miss Blythe’s
door, and Miss Blythe in the open air, without waiting
to remove bonnet, gloves, or mantle, began to turn
over the leaves of the books, taking one systematically
after the other, and racing through them as if her
life depended on the task. Rapidly as she went
to work at this singular task, it occupied an hour,
and when it was all over the prim, starched old lady
actually sat down upon her own door-step with lax
hands, and crushed her best new bonnet against the
door-post in a very abandonment of lassitude and fatigue.
“Done?” said Joseph, who
had been sitting on the handle of the wheelbarrow,
occasionally nodding and dozing in the pleasant sunlight.
Miss Blythe arose languidly and gave him the promised
sixpence. “You’m a wonner to read,
you be, mum,” he said, as he pocketed the coin.
“I niver seed none on ’em goo at sich
a pace as that. Sometimes my lord ’ll look
at one side of a noospaper for a hour together.
I’ve sin him do it.”
Receiving no reply, he spat upon his
hands again, and started on the final course of his
journey. Rachel closed the gate behind him, and
walked automatically into her own sitting-room.
“There is no fool like an old
fool,” she said, mournfully. Then, with
sudden fire, “I have known the man to be a villain
these six-and-twenty years. Why should I doubt
it now?”
And then, her starched dignity and
her anger alike deserting her, she fell into a chair
and cried so long and so heartily that at last, worn
out with her grief, she fell asleep.