We went home, leaving all that was
mortal of our darling sleeping at Enderley, underneath
the snows.
For twelve years after then, we lived
at Longfield; in such unbroken, uneventful peace,
that looking back seems like looking back over a level
sea, whose leagues of tiny ripples make one smooth
glassy plain.
Let me recall as the first
wave that rose, ominous of change a certain
spring evening, when Mrs. Halifax and I were sitting,
as was our wont, under the walnut-tree. The
same old walnut-tree, hardly a bough altered, though
many of its neighbours and kindred had grown from
saplings into trees even as some of us had
grown from children almost into young men.
“Edwin is late home from Norton Bury,”
said Ursula.
“So is his father.”
“No this is just John’s time.
Hark! there are the carriage-wheels!”
For Mr. Halifax, a prosperous man
now, drove daily to and from his mills, in as tasteful
an equipage as any of the country gentry between here
and Enderley.
His wife went down to the stream to
meet him, as usual, and they came up the field-path
together.
Both were changed from the John and
Ursula of whom I last wrote. She, active and
fresh-looking still, but settling into that fair largeness
which is not unbecoming a lady of middle-age, he, inclined
to a slight stoop, with the lines of his face more
sharply defined, and the hair wearing away off his
forehead up to the crown. Though still not a
grey thread was discernible in the crisp locks at
the back, which successively five little ones had
pulled, and played with, and nestled in; not a sign
of age, as yet, in “father’s curls.”
As soon as he had spoken to me, he
looked round as usual for his children, and asked
if the boys and Maud would be home to tea?
“I think Guy and Walter never
do come home in time when they go over to the manor-house.”
“They’re young let
them enjoy themselves,” said the father, smiling.
“And you know, love, of all our ‘fine’
friends, there are none you so heartily approve of
as the Oldtowers.”
These were not of the former race.
Good old Sir Ralph had gone to his rest, and Sir
Herbert reigned in his stead; Sir Herbert, who in his
dignified gratitude never forgot a certain election
day, when he first made the personal acquaintance
of Mr. Halifax. The manor-house family brought
several other “county families” to our
notice, or us to theirs. These, when John’s
fortunes grew rapidly as many another fortune
grew, in the beginning of the thirty years’
peace, when unknown, petty manufacturers first rose
into merchant princes and cotton lords these
gentry made a perceptible distinction, often amusing
enough to us, between John Halifax, the tanner of
Norton Bury, and Mr. Halifax, the prosperous owner
of Enderley Mills. Some of them, too, were clever
enough to discover, what a pleasant and altogether
“visitable” lady was Mrs. Halifax, daughter
of the late Mr. March, a governor in the West Indies,
and cousin of Mr. Brithwood of the Mythe. But
Mrs. Halifax, with quiet tenacity, altogether declined
being visited as anything but Mrs. Halifax, wife of
John Halifax, tanner, or mill-owner, or whatever he
might be. All honours and all civilities that
did not come through him, and with him, were utterly
valueless to her.
To this her peculiarity was added
another of John’s own, namely, that all his
life he had been averse to what is called “society;”
had eschewed “acquaintances,” and but
most men might easily count upon their fingers the
number of those who, during a life-time, are found
worthy of the sacred name of “friend.”
Consequently, our circle of associations was far
more limited than that of many families holding an
equal position with us on which circumstance
our neighbours commented a good deal. But little
we cared; no more than we had cared for the chit-chat
of Norton Bury. Our whole hearts were bound up
within our own home our happy Longfield.
“I do think this place is growing
prettier than ever,” said John, when, tea being
over a rather quiet meal, without a single
child we elders went out again to the walnut-tree
bench. “Certainly, prettier than ever;”
and his eye wandered over the quaint, low house, all
odds and ends for nearly every year something
had been built, or something pulled down; then crossing
the smooth bit of lawn, Jem Watkins’s special
pride, it rested on the sloping field, yellow with
tall buttercups, wavy with growing grass. “Let
me see how long have we lived here?
Phineas, you are the one for remembering dates.
What year was it we came to Longfield?”
“Eighteen hundred and twelve. Thirteen
years ago.”
“Ah, so long!”
“Not too long,” said Mrs.
Halifax, earnestly. “I hope we may end
our days here. Do not you, John?”
He paused a little before answering.
“Yes, I wish it; but I am not sure how far
it would be right to do it.”
“We will not open that subject
again,” said the mother, uneasily. “I
thought we had all made up our minds that little Longfield
was a thousand times pleasanter than Beechwood, grand
as it is. But John thinks he never can do enough
for his people at Enderley.”
“Not that alone, love.
Other reasons combined. Do you know, Phineas,”
he continued, musingly, as he watched the sun set over
Leckington Hill “sometimes I fancy
my life is too easy that I am not a wise
steward of the riches that have multiplied so fast.
By fifty, a man so blest as I have been, ought to
have done really something of use in the world and
I am forty-five. Once, I hoped to have done wonderful
things ere I was forty-five. But somehow the
desire faded.”
His wife and I were silent.
We both knew the truth; that calm as had flowed his
outer existence, in which was omitted not one actual
duty, still, for these twelve years, all the high
aims which make the glory and charm of life as duties
make its strength, all the active energies and noble
ambitions which especially belong to the prime of manhood,
in him had been, not dead perhaps, but sleeping.
Sleeping, beyond the power of any human voice to
waken them, under the daisies of a child’s grave
at Enderley.
I know not if this was right but
it was scarcely unnatural. In that heart, which
loved as few men love, and remembered as few men remember,
so deep a wound could never be thoroughly healed.
A certain something in him seemed different ever
after, as if a portion of the father’s own life
had been taken away with Muriel, and lay buried in
the little dead bosom of his first-born, his dearest
child.
“You forget,” said Mrs.
Halifax, tenderly “you forget, John,
how much you have been doing, and intend to do.
What with your improvements at Enderley, and your
Catholic Emancipation your Abolition of
Slavery and your Parliamentary Reform why,
there is hardly any scheme for good, public or private,
to which you do not lend a helping hand.”
“A helping purse, perhaps, which
is an easier thing, much.”
“I will not have you blaming
yourself. Ask Phineas, there our
household Solomon.”
“Thank you, Ursula,” said
I, submitting to the not rare fortune of being loved
and laughed at.
“Uncle Phineas, what better
could John have done in all these years, than look
after his mills and educate his three sons?”
“Have them educated, rather,”
corrected he, sensitive over his own painfully-gained
and limited acquirements. Yet this feeling had
made him doubly careful to give his boys every possible
advantage of study, short of sending them from home,
to which he had an invincible objection. And
three finer lads, or better educated, there could not
be found in the whole country.
“I think, John, Guy has quite
got over his fancy of going to Cambridge with Ralph
Oldtower.”
“Yes; college life would not
have done for Guy,” said the father thoughtfully.
“Hush! we must not talk about
them, for here come the children.”
It was now a mere figure of speech
to call them so, though in their home-taught, loving
simplicity, they would neither have been ashamed nor
annoyed at the epithet these two tall lads,
who in the dusk looked as man-like as their father.
“Where is your sister, boys?”
“Maud stopped at the stream
with Edwin,” answered Guy, rather carelessly.
His heart had kept its childish faith; the youngest,
pet as she was, was never anything to him but “little
Maud.” One whom the boys still
talked of, softly and tenderly, in fireside evening
talks, when the winter winds came and the snow was
falling one only was ever spoken of by
Guy as “sister.”
Maud, or Miss Halifax, as from the
first she was naturally called as naturally
as our lost darling was never called anything else
than Muriel came up, hanging on Edwin’s
arm, which she was fond of doing, both because it
happened to be the only arm low enough to suit her
childish stature, and because she was more especially
“Edwin’s girl,” and had been so
always. She had grown out of the likeness that
we longed for in her cradle days, or else we had grown
out of the perception of it; for though the external
resemblance in hair and complexion still remained,
nothing could be more unlike in spirit than this sprightly
elf, at once the plague and pet of the family to
our Muriel.
“Edwin’s girl” stole
away with him, merrily chattering. Guy sat down
beside his mother, and slipped his arm round her waist.
They still fondled her with a child-like simplicity these
her almost grown-up sons; who had never been sent
to school for a day, and had never learned from other
sons of far different mothers, that a young man’s
chief manliness ought to consist in despising the tender
charities of home.
“Guy, you foolish boy!”
as she took his cap off and pushed back his hair,
trying not to look proud of his handsome face, “what
have you been doing all day?”
“Making myself agreeable, of course, mother.”
“That he has,” corroborated
Walter, whose great object of hero-worship was his
eldest brother. “He talked with Lady Oldtower,
and he sang with Miss Oldtower and Miss Grace.
Never was there such a fellow as our Guy.”
“Nonsense!” said his mother,
while Guy only laughed, too accustomed to this family
admiration to be much disconcerted or harmed thereby.
“When does Ralph return to Cambridge?”
“Not at all. He is going
to leave college, and be off to help the Greeks.
Father, do you know everybody is joining the Greeks?
Even Lord Byron is off with the rest. I only
wish I were.”
“Heaven forbid!” muttered the mother.
“Why not? I should have
made a capital soldier, and liked it too, better than
anything.”
“Better than being my right
hand at the mills, and your mother’s at home? Better
than growing up to be our eldest son, our comfort and
our hope? I think not, Guy.”
“You are right, father,”
was the answer, with an uneasy look. For this
description seemed less what Guy was than what we desired
him to be. With his easy, happy temper, generous
but uncertain, and his showy, brilliant parts, he
was not nearly so much to be depended on as the grave
Edwin, who was already a thorough man of business,
and plodded between Enderley mills and a smaller one
which had taken the place of the flour mill at Norton
Bury, with indomitable perseverance.
Guy fell into a brown study, not unnoticed
by those anxious eyes, which lingered oftener upon
his face than on that of any of her sons. Mrs.
Halifax said, in her quick, decisive way, that it was
“time to go in.”
So the sunset picture outside changed
to the home-group within; the mother sitting at her
little table, where the tall silver candlestick shed
a subdued light on her work-basket, that never was
empty, and her busy fingers, that never were still.
The father sat beside her; he kept his old habit
of liking to have her close to him; ay, even though
he was falling into the middle-aged comforts of an
arm-chair and newspaper. There he sat, sometimes
reading aloud, or talking; sometimes lazily watching
her, with silent, loving eyes, that saw beauty in
his old wife still.
The young folk scattered themselves
about the room. Guy and Walter at the unshuttered
window we had a habit of never hiding our
home-light were looking at the moon, and
laying bets, sotto voce, upon how many minutes
she would be in climbing over the oak on the top of
One-tree Hill. Edwin sat, reading hard his
shoulders up to his ears, and his fingers stuck through
his hair, developing the whole of his broad, knobbed,
knotted forehead, where, Maud declared, the wrinkles
had already begun to show. For Mistress Maud
herself, she flitted about in all directions, interrupting
everything, and doing nothing.
“Maud,” said her father,
at last, “I am afraid you give a great deal of
trouble to Uncle Phineas.”
Uncle Phineas tried to soften the
fact, but the little lady was certainly the most trying
of his pupils. Her mother she had long escaped
from, for the advantage of both. For, to tell
the truth, while in the invisible atmosphere of moral
training the mother’s influence was invaluable,
in the minor branch of lesson-learning there might
have been found many a better teacher than Ursula
Halifax. So the children’s education was
chiefly left to me; other tutors succeeding as was
necessary; and it had just begun to be considered whether
a lady governess ought not to “finish”
the education of Miss Halifax. But always at
home. Not for all the knowledge and all the accomplishments
in the world would these parents have suffered either
son or daughter living souls intrusted
them by the Divine Father to be brought
up anywhere out of their own sight, out of the shelter
and safeguard of their own natural home.
“Love, when I was waiting to-day in Jessop’s
bank ”
(Ah! that was another change, to which
we were even yet not familiar, the passing away of
our good doctor and his wife, and his brother and
heir turning the old dining-room into a “County
Bank open from ten till four.”)
“While waiting there I heard
of a lady who struck me as likely to be an excellent
governess for Maud.”
“Indeed!” said Mrs. Halifax,
not over-enthusiastically. Maud became eager
to know “what the lady was like?” I at
the same time inquiring “who she was?”
“Who? I really did not
ask,” John answered, smiling. “But
of what she is, Jessop gave me first-rate evidence a
good daughter, who teaches in Norton Bury anybody’s
children for any sort of pay, in order to maintain
an ailing mother. Ursula, you would let her teach
our Maud, I know?”
“Is she an Englishwoman?” For
Mrs. Halifax, prejudiced by a certain French lady
who had for a few months completely upset the peace
of the manor-house, and even slightly tainted her
own favourite, pretty Grace Oldtower, had received
coldly this governess plan from the beginning.
“Would she have to live with us?”
“I think so, decidedly.”
“Then it can’t be.
The house will not accommodate her. It will
hardly hold even ourselves. No, we cannot take
in anybody else at Longfield.”
“But we may have to leave Longfield.”
The boys here turned to listen; for
this question had already been mooted, as all family
questions were. In our house we had no secrets:
the young folk, being trusted, were ever trustworthy;
and the parents, clean-handed and pure-hearted, had
nothing that they were afraid to tell their children.
“Leave Longfield!” repeated
Mrs. Halifax; “surely surely ”
But glancing at her husband, her tone of impatience
ceased.
He sat gazing into the fire with an anxious air.
“Don’t let us discuss
that question at least, not to-night.
It troubles you, John. Put it off till to-morrow.”
No, that was never his habit.
He was one of the very few who, a thing being to
be done, will not trust it to uncertain “to-morrows.”
His wife saw that he wanted to talk to her, and listened.
“Yes, the question does trouble
me a good deal. Whether, now that our children
are growing up, and our income is doubling and trebling
year by year, we ought to widen our circle of usefulness,
or close it up permanently within the quiet bound
of little Longfield. Love, which say you?”
“The latter, the latter because it
is far the happiest.”
“I am afraid, not the latter, because it
is the happiest.”
He spoke gently, laying his hand on
his wife’s shoulder, and looking down on her
with that peculiar look which he always had when telling
her things that he knew were sore to hear. I
never saw that look on any living face save John’s;
but I have seen it once in a picture of
two Huguenot lovers. The woman is trying to fasten
round the man’s neck the white badge that will
save him from the massacre (of St. Bartholomew) he,
clasping her the while, gently puts it aside not
stern, but smiling. That quiet, tender smile,
firmer than any frown, will, you feel sure, soon control
the woman’s anguish, so that she will sob out any
faithful woman would “Go, die!
Dearer to me than even thyself are thy honour and
thy duty!”
When I saw this noble picture, it
touched to the core this old heart of mine for
the painter, in that rare expression, might have caught
John’s. Just as in a few crises of his
life I have seen it, and especially in this one, when
he first told to his wife that determination which
he had slowly come to that it was both right
and expedient for us to quit Longfield, our happy
home for so many years, of which the mother loved
every flower in the garden, every nook and stone in
the walls.
“Leave Longfield!” she
repeated again, with a bitter sigh.
“Leave Longfield!” echoed
the children, first the youngest, then the eldest,
but rather in curiosity than regret. Edwin’s
keen, bright eyes were just lifted from his book,
and fell again; he was not a lad of much speech, or
much demonstration of any kind.
“Boys, come and let us talk over the matter.”
They came at once and joined in the
circle; respectfully, yet with entire freedom, they
looked towards their father these, the sons
of his youth, to whom he had been from their birth,
not only parent and head, but companion, guide, and
familiar friend. They honoured him, they trusted
him, they loved him; not, perhaps, in the exact way
that they loved their mother; for it often seems Nature’s
own ordinance, that a mother’s influence should
be strongest over her sons, while the father’s
is greatest over his daughters. But even a stranger
could not glance from each to each of those attentive
faces, so different, yet with a curious “family
look” running through them all, without seeing
in what deep, reverent affection, such as naturally
takes the place of childish fondness, these youths
held their father.
“Yes, I am afraid, after much
serious thought on the matter, and much consultation
with your mother here, that we ought to
leave Longfield.”
“So I think,” said Mistress
Maud, from her footstool; which putting forward of
her important opinion shook us all from gravity to
merriment, that compelled even Mrs. Halifax to join.
Then, laying aside her work, and with it the saddened
air with which she had bent over it, she drew her
chair closer to her husband, slipping her hand in
his, and leaning against his shoulder. Upon which
Guy, who had at first watched his mother anxiously,
doubtful whether or no his father’s plan had
her approval, and therefore ought to be assented to, relapsed
into satisfied, undivided attention.
“I have again been over Beechwood
Hall. You all remember Beechwood?”
Yes. It was the “great
house” at Enderley, just on the slope of the
hill, below Rose Cottage. The beech-wood itself
was part of its pleasure ground, and from its gardens
honest James Tod, who had them in keeping, had brought
many a pocketful of pears for the boys, many a sweet-scented
nosegay for Muriel.
“Beechwood has been empty a
great many years, father? Would it be a safe
investment to buy it?”
“I think so, Edwin, my practical
lad,” answered the father, smiling. “What
say you, children? Would you like living there?”
Each one made his or her comment.
Guy’s countenance brightened at the notion
of “lots of shooting and fishing” about
Enderley, especially at Luxmore; and Maud counted
on the numerous visitors that would come to John Halifax,
Esquire, of Beechwood Hall.
“Neither of which excellent
reasons happen to be your father’s,” said
Mrs. Halifax, shortly. But John, often tenderer
over youthful frivolities than she, answered:
“I will tell you, boys, what
are my reasons. When I was a young man, before
your mother and I were married, indeed before I had
ever seen her, I had strongly impressed on my mind
the wish to gain influence in the world riches
if I could but at all events, influence.
I thought I could use it well, better than most men;
those can best help the poor who understand the poor.
And I can; since, you know, when Uncle Phineas found
me, I was ”
“Father,” said Guy, flushing
scarlet, “we may as well pass over that fact.
We are gentlefolks now.”
“We always were, my son.”
The rebuke, out of its very mildness,
cut the youth to the heart. He dropped his eyes,
colouring now with a different and a holier shame.
“I know that. Please will you go on, father.”
“And now,” the father
continued, speaking as much out of his own thoughts
as aloud to his children “now, twenty-five
years of labour have won for me the position I desired.
That is, I might have it for the claiming.
I might take my place among the men who have lately
risen from the people, to guide and help the people the
Cannings, Huskissons, Peels.”
“Would you enter parliament?
Sir Herbert asked me to-day if you ever intended
it. He said there was nothing you might not attain
to if you would give yourself up entirely to politics.”
“No, Guy, no. Wisdom,
like charity, begins at home. Let me learn to
rule in my own valley, among my own people, before
I attempt to guide the state. And that brings
me back again to the pros and cons about Beechwood
Hall.”
“Tell them, John; tell all out plainly to the
children.”
The reasons were first,
the advantage of the boys themselves; for John Halifax
was not one of those philanthropists who would benefit
all the world except their own household and their
own kin. He wished since the higher
a man rises, the wider and nobler grows his sphere
of usefulness not only to lift himself,
but his sons after him; lift them high enough to help
on the ever-advancing tide of human improvement, among
their own people first, and thence extending outward
in the world whithersoever their talents or circumstances
might call them.
“I understand,” cried
the eldest son, his eyes sparkling; “you want
to found a family. And so it shall be we
will settle at Beechwood Hall; all coming generations
shall live to the honour and glory of your name our
name ”
“My boy, there is only one Name
to whose honour we should all live. One Name
‘in whom all the generations of the earth are
blessed.’ In thus far only do I wish to
‘found a family,’ as you call it, that
our light may shine before men that we
may be a city set on a hill that we may
say plainly unto all that ask us, ’For me and
my house, we will serve the Lord.’”
It was not often that John Halifax
spoke thus; adopting solemnly the literal language
of the Book his and our life’s guide,
no word of which was ever used lightly in our family.
We all listened, as in his earnestness he rose, and,
standing upright in the firelight, spoke on.
“I believe, with His blessing,
that one may ‘serve the Lord’ as well in
wealth as in poverty, in a great house as in a cottage
like this. I am not doubtful, even though my
possessions are increased. I am not afraid of
being a rich man. Nor a great man neither, if
I were called to such a destiny.”
“It may be who knows?” said
Ursula, softly.
John caught his wife’s eyes, and smiled.
“Love, you were a true prophet
once, with a certain ‘Yes, you will,’
but now Children, you know when I married
your mother I had nothing, and she gave up everything
for me. I said I would yet make her as high
as any lady in the land, in fortune I then
meant, thinking it would make her happier; but she
and I are wiser now. We know that we never can
be happier than we were in the old house at Norton
Bury, or in this little Longfield. By making
her lady of Beechwood I should double her responsibilities
and treble her cares; give her an infinitude of new
duties, and no pleasures half so sweet as those we
leave behind. Still, of herself and for herself,
my wife shall decide.”
Ursula looked up at him; tears stood
in her eyes, though through them shone all the steadfastness
of faithful love. “Thank you, John.
I have decided. If you wish it, if you think
it right, we will leave Longfield and go to Beechwood.”
He stooped and kissed her forehead,
saying only: “We will go.”
Guy looked up, half-reproachfully,
as if the father were exacting a sacrifice; but I
question whether the greater sacrifice were not his
who took rather than hers who gave.
So all was settled we were
to leave beloved Longfield. It was to be let,
not sold; let to a person we knew, who would take jealous
care of all that was ours, and we might come back
and see it continually; but it would be ours our
own home no more.
Very sad sadder even than
I had thought was the leaving all the familiar
things; the orchard and the flower-garden, the meadow
and the stream, the woody hills beyond, every line
and wave of which was pleasant and dear almost as
our children’s faces. Ay, almost as that
face which for a year one little year, had
lived in sight of, but never beheld, their beauty;
the child who one spring day had gone away merrily
out of the white gate with her three brothers, and
never came back to Longfield any more.
Perhaps this circumstance, that her
fading away and her departure happened away from home,
was the cause why her memory the memory
of our living Muriel, in her human childhood afterwards
clung more especially about the house at Longfield.
The other children altered, imperceptibly, yet so
swiftly, that from year to year we half forgot their
old likenesses. But Muriel’s never changed.
Her image, only a shade, yet often more real than
any of these living children, seemed perpetually among
us. It crept through the house at dusk; in winter
fire-light it sat smiling in dim corners; in spring
mornings it moved about the garden borders, with tiny
soft footsteps neither seen nor heard. The others
grew up would be men and women shortly but
the one child that “was not,” remained
to us always a child.
I thought, even the last evening the
very last evening that John returned from Enderley,
and his wife went down to the stream to meet him,
and they came up the field together, as they had done
so for many, many years; ay, even then
I thought I saw his eyes turn to the spot where a
little pale figure used to sit on the door-sill, listening
and waiting for him, with her dove in her bosom.
We never kept doves now.
And the same night, when all the household
was in bed even the mother, who had gone
about with a restless activity, trying to persuade
herself that there would be at least no possibility
of accomplishing the flitting to-morrow the
last night, when John went as usual to fasten the
house-door, he stood a long time outside, looking down
the valley.
“How quiet everything is.
You can almost hear the tinkle of the stream.
Poor old Longfield!” And I sighed, thinking
we should never again have such another home.
John did not answer. He had
been mechanically bending aside and training into
its place a long shoot of wild clematis virgin’s
bower, which Guy and Muriel had brought in from the
fields and planted, a tiny root; it covered the whole
front of the house now. Then he came and leaned
beside me over the wicket-gate, looking fixedly up
into the moon-light blue.
“I wonder if she knows we are leaving Longfield?”
“Who?” said I; for a moment forgetting.
“The child.”