Summer waned. Already the beech-wood
began to turn red, and the little yellow autumn flowers
to show themselves all over the common, while in the
midst of them looked up the large purple eye of the
ground-thistle. The mornings grew hazy and dewy.
We ceased to take Muriel out with us in our slow
walk along John’s favourite “terrace”
before any one else was stirring. Her father
at first missed her sorely, but always kept repeating
that “early walks were not good for children.”
At last he gave up the walk altogether, and used
to sit with her on his knee in front of the cottage
till breakfast-time.
After that, saying with a kind of
jealousy “that every one of us had more of his
little daughter than he,” he got into a habit
of fetching her down to the mill every day at noon,
and carrying her about in his arms, wherever he went,
during the rest of his work.
Many a time I have seen the rough,
coarse, blue-handed, blue-pinafored women of the mill
stop and look wistfully after “master and little
blind miss.” I often think that the quiet
way in which the Enderley mill people took the introduction
of machinery, and the peaceableness with which they
watched for weeks the setting up of the steam-engine,
was partly owing to their strong impression of Mr.
Halifax’s goodness as a father, and the vague,
almost superstitious interest which attached to the
pale, sweet face of Muriel.
Enderley was growing dreary, and we
began to anticipate the cosy fireside of Longfield.
“The children will all go home
looking better than they came; do you not think so,
Uncle Phineas? especially Muriel?”
To that sentence I had to answer with
a vague assent; after which I was fain to rise and
walk away, thinking how blind love was all
love save mine, which had a gift for seeing the saddest
side of things.
When I came back, I found the mother
and daughter talking mysteriously apart. I guessed
what it was about, for I had overheard Ursula saying
they had better tell the child it would
be “something for her to look forward to something
to amuse her next winter.”
“It is a great secret, mind,”
the mother whispered, after its communication.
“Oh, yes!” The tiny face,
smaller than ever, I thought, flushed brightly.
“But I would much rather have a little sister,
if you please. Only” and the
child suddenly grew earnest “will
she be like me?”
“Possibly; sisters often are alike.”
“No, I don’t mean that;
but you know?” And Muriel touched
her own eyes.
“I cannot tell, my daughter.
In all things else, pray God she may be like you,
Muriel, my darling my child of peace!”
said Ursula, embracing her with tears.
After this confidence, of which Muriel
was very proud, and only condescended, upon gaining
express permission, to re-confide it to me, she talked
incessantly of the sister that was coming, until “little
Maud” the name she chose for her became
an absolute entity in the household.
The dignity and glory of being sole
depositary of this momentous fact, seemed for a time
to put new life bright human life into
this little maid of eleven years old. She grew
quite womanly, as it were; tried to help her mother
in a thousand little ways, and especially by her own
solitary branch of feminine industry poor
darling! She set on a pair of the daintiest
elfin socks that ever were knitted. I found them,
years after one finished, one with the needles
(all rusty) stuck through the fine worsted ball, just
as the child had laid it out of her hand. Ah,
Muriel, Muriel!
The father took great delight in this
change, in her resuming her simple work, and going
about constantly with her mother.
“What a comfort she will be
to Ursula one day an eldest daughter always
is. So will she: will she not, Uncle Phineas?”
I smiled assentingly. Alas!
his burthens were heavy enough! I think I did
right to smile.
“We must take her down with
us to see the steam-engine first worked. I wish
Ursula would have gone home without waiting for to-morrow.
But there is no fear my men are so quiet
and good-humoured. What in most mills has been
a day of outrage and dread, is with us quite a festival.
Boys, shall you like to come? Edwin, my practical
lad, my lad that is to carry on the mills will
you promise to hold fast by Uncle Phineas, if I let
you see the steam-engine work?”
Edwin lifted up from his slate bright,
penetrating eyes. He was quite an old man in
his ways wise even from his babyhood, and
quiet even when Guy snubbed him; but, I noticed, he
did not come to “kiss and make friends”
so soon as Guy. And though Guy was much the naughtiest,
we all loved him best. Poor Guy! he had the
frankest, warmest, tenderest boy-heart, always struggling
to be good, and never able to accomplish it.
“Father,” cried Guy, “I
want to see the steam-engine move, but I’ll not
be a baby like Edwin; I’ll not hold Uncle Phineas’
hand.”
Hereupon ensued one of those summer
storms which sometimes swept across the family horizon,
in the midst of which Muriel and I stole out into
the empty church, where, almost in the dark which
was no dark to her for a long hour she
sat and played. By and by the moon looked in,
showing the great gilt pipes of the organ, and the
little fairy figure sitting below.
Once or twice she stooped from the
organ-loft to ask me where was Brother Anselmo, who
usually met us in the church of evenings, and whom
to-night this last night before the general
household moved back to Longfield we had
fully expected.
At last he came, sat down by me, and
listened. She was playing a fragment of one
of his Catholic masses. When it ended, he called
“Muriel!”
Her soft, glad answer came down from the gallery.
“Child, play the ‘Miserere’ I taught
you.”
She obeyed, making the organ wail
like a tormented soul. Truly, no tales I ever
heard of young Wesley and the infant Mozart ever surpassed
the wonderful playing of our blind child.
“Now, the ’Dies Irae.’ It
will come,” he muttered, “to us all.”
The child struck a few notes, heavy
and dolorous, filling the church like a thunder-cloud,
then suddenly left off, and opening the flute-stop,
burst into altogether different music.
“That is Handel ’I know that
my Redeemer liveth.’”
Exquisitely she played it, the clear
treble notes seemed to utter like a human voice the
very words:
“I know that my Redeemer
liveth, and He shall stand
at
the latter day upon the earth.
And though worms destroy
this body, yet in my flesh
shall
I see God.”
With that she ceased.
“More, more!” we both cried.
“Not now no more now.”
And we heard her shutting up the stops and closing
the organ lid.
“But my little Muriel has not finished her tune?”
“She will, some day,” said the child.
So she came down from the organ-loft,
feeling her way along the aisles; and we all went
out together, locking the church-door.
Lord Ravenel was rather sad that night;
he was going away from Luxmore for some time.
We guessed why because the earl was coming.
Bidding us good-bye, he said, mournfully, to his little
pet, “I wish I were not leaving you. Will
you remember me, Muriel?”
“Stoop down; I want to see you.”
This was her phrase for a way she
had of passing her extremely sensitive fingers over
the faces of those she liked. After which she
always said she “saw” them.
“Yes; I shall remember you.”
“And love me?”
“And love you, Brother Anselmo.”
He kissed, not her cheek or mouth,
but her little child-hands, reverently, as if she
had been the saint he worshipped, or, perhaps, the
woman whom afterwards he would learn to adore.
Then he went away.
“Truly,” said the mother,
in an amused aside to me, as with a kind of motherly
pride she watched him walk hastily down between those
chestnut-trees, known of old “truly,
time flies fast. Things begin to look serious eh,
father? Five years hence we shall have that young
man falling in love with Muriel.”
But John and I looked at the still,
soft face, half a child’s and half an angel’s.
“Hush!” he said, as if
Ursula’s fancy were profanity; then eagerly
snatched it up and laughed, confessing how angry he
should be if anybody dared to “fall in love”
with Muriel.
Next day was the one fixed for the
trial of the new steam-engine; which trial being successful,
we were to start at once in a post-chaise for Longfield;
for the mother longed to be at home, and so did we
all.
There was rather a dolorous good-bye,
and much lamenting from good Mrs. Tod, who, her own
bairns grown up, thought there were no children worthy
to compare with our children. And truly, as the
three boys scampered down the road their
few regrets soon over, eager for anything new three
finer lads could not be seen in the whole country.
Mrs. Halifax looked after them proudly mother-like,
she gloried in her sons; while John, walking slowly,
and assuring Mrs. Tod over and over again that we
should all come back next summer, went down the steep
hill, carrying, hidden under many wraps and nestled
close to his warm shoulder, his little frail winter-rose his
only daughter.
In front of the mill we found a considerable
crowd; for the time being ripe, Mr. Halifax had made
public the fact that he meant to work his looms by
steam, the only way in which he could carry on the
mill at all. The announcement had been received
with great surprise and remarkable quietness, both
by his own work-people and all along Enderley valley.
Still there was the usual amount of contemptuous
scepticism, incident on any new experiment. Men
were peering about the locked door of the engine-room
with a surly curiosity; and one village oracle, to
prove how impossible it was that such a thing as steam
could work anything, had taken the trouble to light
a fire in the yard and set thereon his wife’s
best tea-kettle, which, as she snatched angrily away,
scalded him slightly, and caused him to limp away swearing,
a painful illustration of the adage, that “a
little knowledge is a dangerous thing.”
“Make way, my good people,”
said Mr. Halifax; and he crossed the mill-yard, his
wife on his arm, followed by an involuntary murmur
of respect.
“He be a fine fellow, the master;
he sticks at nothing,” was the comment heard
made upon him by one of his people, and probably it
expressed the feeling of the rest. There are
few things which give a man more power over his fellows
than the thoroughly English quality of daring.
Perhaps this was the secret why John
had as yet passed safely through the crisis which
had been the destruction of so many mill-owners, namely,
the introduction of a power which the mill-people were
convinced would ruin hand-labour. Or else the
folk in our valley, out of their very primitiveness,
had more faith in the master; for certainly, as John
passed through the small crowd, there was only one
present who raised the old fatal cry of “Down
with machinery!”
“Who said that?”
At the master’s voice at
the flash of the master’s eye the
little knot of work-people drew back, and the malcontent,
whoever he was, shrunk into silence.
Mr. Halifax walked past them, entered
his mill, and unlocked the door of the room which
he had turned into an engine-room, and where, along
with the two men he had brought from Manchester, he
had been busy almost night and day for this week past
in setting up his machinery. They worked as
the Manchester fellows said they had often been obliged
to work under lock and key.
“Your folk be queer ’uns,
Mr. Halifax. They say there’s six devils
inside on her, theer.”
And the man pointed to the great boiler
which had been built up in an out-house adjoining.
“Six devils, say they? Well,
I’ll be Maister Michael Scot eh,
Phineas? and make my devils work hard.”
He laughed, but he was much excited.
He went over, piece by piece, the complicated but
delicate machinery; rubbed here and there at the brass-work,
which shone as bright as a mirror; then stepped back,
and eyed it with pride, almost with affection.
“Isn’t it a pretty thing? If
only I have set it up right if it will
but work.”
His hands shook his cheeks
were burning little Edwin came peering
about at his knee; but he pushed the child hastily
away; then he found some slight fault with the machinery,
and while the workmen rectified it stood watching
them, breathless with anxiety. His wife came
to his side.
“Don’t speak to me, don’t,
Ursula. If it fails I am ruined.”
“John!” she
just whispered his name, and the soft, firm fold of
her fingers closed round his, strengthening, cheering.
Her husband faintly smiled.
“Here!” He
unlocked the door, and called to the people outside.
“Come in, two of you fellows, and see how my
devils work. Now then! Boys, keep out of
the way; my little girl” his voice
softened “my pet will not be frightened?
Now, my men ready?”
He opened the valve.
With a strange noise, that made the
two Enderley men spring back as if the six devils
were really let loose upon them, the steam came rushing
into the cylinder. There was a slight motion
of the piston-rod.
“All’s right! it will work?”
No, it stopped.
John drew a deep breath.
It went on again, beginning to move
slowly up and down, like the strong right arm of some
automaton giant. Greater and lesser cog-wheels
caught up the motive power, revolving slowly and majestically,
and with steady, regular rotation, or whirling round
so fast you could hardly see that they stirred at
all. Of a sudden a soul had been put into that
wonderful creature of man’s making, that inert
mass of wood and metal, mysteriously combined.
The monster was alive!
Speechless, John stood watching it.
Their trial over, his energies collapsed; he sat
down by his wife’s side, and taking Muriel on
his knee, bent his head over hers.
“Is all right, father?” the child whispered.
“All quite right, my own.”
“You said you could do it, and
you have done it,” cried his wife, her eyes
glowing with triumph, her head erect and proud.
John dropped his lower, lower still. “Yes,”
he murmured; “yes, thank
God.”
Then he opened the door, and let all
the people in to see the wondrous sight.
They crowded in by dozens, staring
about in blank wonder, gaping curiosity, ill-disguised
alarm. John took pains to explain the machinery,
stage by stage, till some of the more intelligent caught
up the principle, and made merry at the notion of
“devils.” But they all looked with
great awe at the master, as if he were something more
than man. They listened open-mouthed to every
word he uttered, cramming the small engine-room till
it was scarcely possible to breathe, but keeping at
a respectful distance from the iron-armed monster,
that went working, working on, as if ready and able
to work on to everlasting.
John took his wife and children out
into the open air. Muriel, who had stood for
the last few minutes by her father’s side, listening
with a pleasing look to the monotonous regular sound,
like the breathing of the demon, was unwilling to
go.
“I am very glad I was with you
to-day, very glad, father,” she kept
saying.
He said, as often twice
as often that next summer, when he came
back to Enderley, she should be with him at the mills
every day, and all day over, if she liked.
There was now nothing to be done but
to hasten as quickly and as merrily as possible to
our well-beloved Longfield.
Waiting for the post-chaise, Mrs.
Halifax and the boys sat down on the bridge over the
defunct and silenced water-fall, on the muddy steps
of which, where the stream used to dash musically
over, weeds and long grasses, mingled with the drooping
water-fern, were already beginning to grow.
“It looks desolate, but we need
not mind that now,” said Mrs. Halifax.
“No,” her husband answered.
“Steam power once obtained, I can apply it
in any way I choose. My people will not hinder;
they trust me, they like me.”
“And, perhaps, are just a little
afraid of you. No matter, it is wholesome fear.
I should not like to have married a man whom nobody
was afraid of.”
John smiled; he was looking at the
horseman riding towards us along the high road.
“I do believe that is Lord Luxmore. I
wonder whether he has heard of my steam-engine.
Love, will you go back into the mill or not?”
“Certainly not.”
The mother seated herself on the bridge, her boys
around her; John avouched, with an air like the mother
of the Gracchi, or like the Highland woman who trained
one son after another to fight and slay their enemy their
father’s murderer.
“Don’t jest,” said
Ursula. She was much more excited than her husband.
Two angry spots burnt on her cheeks when Lord Luxmore
came up, and, in passing, bowed.
Mrs. Halifax returned it, haughtily
enough. But at the moment a loud cheer broke
out from the mill hard by, and “Hurrah for the
master!” “Hurrah for Mr. Halifax!”
was distinctly heard. The mother smiled, right
proudly.
Lord Luxmore turned to his tenant they
might have been on the best terms imaginable from
his bland air.
“What is that rather harsh noise I hear, Mr.
Halifax?”
“It is my men cheering me.”
“Oh, how charming! so grateful
to the feelings. And why do they cheer
you, may I ask?”
John briefly told him, speaking with
perfect courtesy as he was addressed.
“And this steam-engine I
have heard of it before will greatly advantage
your mills?”
“It will, my lord. It
renders me quite independent of your stream, of which
the fountains at Luxmore can now have the full monopoly.”
It would not have been human nature
if a spice of harmless malice even triumph had
not sparkled in John’s eye, as he said this.
He was walking by the horse’s side, as Lord
Luxmore had politely requested him.
They went a little way up the hill
together, out of sight of Mrs. Halifax, who was busy
putting the two younger boys into the chaise.
“I did not quite understand.
Would you do me the favour to repeat your sentence?”
“Merely, my lord, that your
cutting off of the water-course has been to me one
of the greatest advantages I ever had in my life; for
which, whether meant or not, allow me to thank you.”
The earl looked full in John’s
face, without answering; then spurred his horse violently.
The animal started off, full speed.
“The children. Good God the
children!”
Guy was in the ditch-bank, gathering
flowers but Muriel For the first
time in our lives, we had forgotten Muriel.
She stood in the horse’s path the
helpless, blind child. The next instant she
was knocked down.
I never heard a curse on John Halifax’s
lips but once that once. Lord Luxmore
heard it too. The image of the frantic father,
snatching up his darling from under the horse’s
heels, must have haunted the earl’s good memory
for many a day.
He dismounted, saying, anxiously,
“I hope the little girl is not injured?
It was accident you see pure
accident.”
But John did not hear; he would scarcely
have heard heaven’s thunder. He knelt with
the child in his arms by a little runnel in the ditch-bank.
When the water touched her she opened her eyes with
that wide, momentary stare so painful to behold.
“My little darling!”
Muriel smiled, and nestled to him.
“Indeed, I am not hurt, dear father.”
Lord Luxmore, standing by, seemed
much relieved, and again pressed his apologies.
No answer.
“Go away,” sobbed out
Guy, shaking both his fists in the nobleman’s
face. “Go away or I’ll
kill you wicked man! I would have
done it if you had killed my sister.”
Lord Luxmore laughed at the boy’s
fury threw him a guinea, which Guy threw
back at him with all his might, and rode placidly away.
“Guy Guy ”
called the faint, soft voice which had more power over
him than any other, except his mother’s.
“Guy must not be angry. Father, don’t
let him be angry.”
But the father was wholly occupied
in Muriel looking in her face, and feeling
all her little fragile limbs, to make sure that in
no way she was injured.
It appeared not; though the escape
seemed almost miraculous. John recurred, with
a kind of trembling tenacity, to the old saying in
our house, that “nothing ever harmed Muriel.”
“Since it is safe over, and
she can walk you are sure you can, my pet? I
think we will not say anything about this to the mother;
at least not till we reach Longfield.”
But it was too late. There was
no deceiving the mother. Every change in every
face struck her instantaneously. The minute we
rejoined her she said:
“John, something has happened to Muriel.”
Then he told her, making as light
of the accident as he could; as, indeed, for the first
ten minutes we all believed, until alarmed by the
extreme pallor and silence of the child.
Mrs. Halifax sat down by the roadside,
bathed Muriel’s forehead and smoothed her hair;
but still the little curls lay motionless against
the mother’s breast, and still to
every question she only answered “that she was
not hurt.”
All this while the post-chaise was waiting.
“What must be done?” I
inquired of Ursula; for it was no use asking John
anything.
“We must go back again to Enderley,” she
said decidedly.
So, giving Muriel into her father’s
arms, she led the way, and, a melancholy procession,
we again ascended the hill to Rose Cottage door.