For all men live and
judge amiss
Whose talents jump not
just with his. Hudibras
Comfortable moles, whom
what they do
Teaches the limit of
the just and true.
(And for such doing
they require not eyes). Matthew Arnold
One bright afternoon about a week
after this, Erica found herself actually in the train,
and on her way to Greyshot. At first she had
disliked the idea, but her father had evidently wished
her to accept the invitation, and a hope of uniting
again the two families would have stimulated her to
a much more formidable undertaking than a visit of
a few weeks to perfect strangers. She knew nothing
of the proposal made to her father; her own letter
had been most kind, and after all, though she did
not like the actual leaving home, she could not but
look forward to a rest and change after the long summer
months in town. Moreover, Aunt Jean had just
returned, after a brief holiday, and the home atmosphere
for the last two or three days had been very trying;
she felt as if a change would make her better able
to bear the small daily frets and annoyances, and
not unnaturally looked forward to the delicious rest
of unity. A Christian home ought to be delightful;
she had never stayed in one, and had a high ideal.
It was about six o’clock by
the time she reached her journey’s end, and,
waiting for her on the platform, she had no difficulty
in recognizing her aunt, a taller and fairer edition
of Mrs. Craigie, who received her with a kind, nervous
diffident greeting, and seemed very anxious indeed
about her luggage, which was speedily brought to light
by the footman, and safely conveyed to the carriage.
Erica, used to complete independence, felt as if she
were being transformed into a sort of grown-up baby,
as she was relieved of her bag and umbrella and guided
down the steps, and assisted into the open landau,
and carefully tucked in with a carriage rug.
“I hope you are not overtired
with the journey?” inquired her aunt with an
air of the kindest and most anxious solicitude.
Accustomed to a really hard life in
London, Erica almost laughed at the idea of being
overtired by such a short journey.
“Oh, I have enjoyed it, thank
you,” she replied. “What a lovely
line it is!”
“Is it?” said her aunt,
a little surprised. “I didn’t know
it was considered specially pretty, and I myself am
never able to look much at the scenery in traveling;
it always gives me a headache.”
“What a pity!” said Erica.
“It is such a treat, I think. In fact, it
is the only way in which I have seen what people call
scenery. I never stayed in the country in my
life.”
“My dear, is it possible,”
exclaimed Mrs. Fane-Smith, in a horrified voice.
“Yet you do not look pale. Do you mean that
you have spent your whole life in town?”
“I was at Paris for two years,”
said Erica; “and twice I have spent a little
time at the sea-side; and, years and years ago, father
was once taken ill at Southampton, and we went to
him there that was almost like the country I mean,
one could get country walks. It was delightful;
there was a splendid avenue, you know, and oh, such
a common! It was in the spring time. I shall
never forget the yellow gorse and the hawthorns, and
such beautiful velvety grass.”
Her enthusiasm pleased her aunt; moreover,
it was a great relief to find the unknown niece well-bred
and companionable, and not overburdened with shyness.
Already Mrs. Fane-Smith loved her, and felt that the
invitation, which she had given really from a strong
sense of duty, was likely to give her pleasure instead
of discomfort. All the way home, while Erica
admired the Greyshot streets, and asked questions about
the various buildings, Mrs. Fane-Smith was rejoicing
that so fair a “brand,” as she mentally
expressed it, had been “plucked from the burning,”
and resolving that she would adopt her as a second
daughter, and, if possible, induce her to take their
name and drop the notorious “Raeburn.”
The relief was great, for on the way to the station,
Mrs. Fane-Smith had been revolving the unpleasant
thought in her mind that “really there was no
knowing, Erica might be ‘anything’ since
her mother was a ‘nobody.’”
At last they drew up before a large
house in the most fashionable of the Greyshot squares,
the windows and balconies of which were gay with flowers.
“We shall find Rose at home,
I expect,” said Mrs. Fane-Smith, leading Erica
across a marble-paved hall, and even as she spoke a
merry voice came from the staircase, and down ran
a fair-haired girl, with a charmingly eager and naïve
manner.
Erica had guessed what she must be
from the quaint and kindly meant letter which she
had sent her years before, and though five years in
society had somewhat artificialized Rose, she still
retained much of her childishness and impetuous honesty.
She slipped her arm into her cousin’s, and took
her off to her room at once.
“I am so glad you have come!”
she exclaimed. “I have been longing to
see you for years and years. Mamma has been talking
so much about your cleverness and my stupidity that
just at the last I felt quite in a fright lest you
should be too dreadfully ‘blue.’ I
looked out of the drawing room window for you, and
if you had been very forbidding I should have received
you in state in the drawing room, but you were so
charmingly pretty that I was obliged to rush down headlong
to meet you.”
Erica laughed and blushed, not being
used to such broad compliments. In the meantime,
they had traversed several flights of stairs, and Rose,
opening a door, showed her into a spacious bedroom,
most luxuriously fitted up.
“This great big room for me!” exclaimed
Erica.
“It isn’t at all ghostly,”
said Rose, reassuringly. “Will you be afraid
if you have a night light?”
Erica laughed at the idea of being
afraid; she was merely amused to think of herself
established in such a palatial bedroom, such a contrast
to the little book-lined room at home. There was
a dainty little book case here, however, with some
beautifully bound books, and in another minute she
was delightedly scanning their titles, and, with a
joyous exclamation, had caught up Browning’s
“Christmas-eve and Easter-day,” when a
sound of dismay from her cousin made her laughingly
put it down again.
“Oh, dear me!” said Rose,
in a despairing voice, “I am afraid, after all,
you are dreadfully blue. Fancy snatching up a
Browning like that!”
Erica began to unlock her trunk.
“Do you want your things out?”
said Rose. “I’ll ring for Gemma; she’ll
unpack for you.”
“Oh, thank you,” said
Erica, “I would much rather do it myself.”
“But it is nearly dinner time,
we are dining early this evening, and you will want
Gemma to help you to dress.”
“Oh, no,” said Erica,
laughing, “I never had a maid in my life.”
“How funny,” said Rose,
“I shouldn’t know what to do without one.
Gemma does everything for me, at least everything
that Elspeth will let her.”
“Is she Italian?” asked Erica.
“Oh, no, her name is really
Jemima; but that was quite too dreadfully ugly, you
know, and she is such a pretty girl.”
She chattered on while Erica unpacked
and put on her white serge, then they went down to
the drawing room where Erica was introduced to her
host, a small elderly man, who looked as if the Indian
sun had partially frizzled him. He received her
kindly, but with a sort of ceremonious stiffness which
made her feel less perfectly at her east than before,
and after the usual remarks about the length of the
journey, and the beauty of the weather, he relapsed
into silence, surveying every one from his arm chair
as though he were passing mental judgments on every
foolish or trifling remark uttered. In reality,
he was taking in every particular about Erica.
He looked at her broad forehead, overshadowed by the
thick smooth waves of short auburn hair, observed her
golden-brown eyes which were just now as clear as
amber; noted the creamy whiteness and delicate coloring
of her complexion, which indeed defied criticism even
the criticism of such a critical man as Mr. Fane-Smith.
The nose was perhaps a trifle too long, the chin too
prominent, for ideal beauty, but greater regularity
of feature could but have rendered less quaint, less
powerful, and less attractive the strangely winsome
face. It was only the mouth which he did not
feel satisfied with it added character to the face,
but he somehow felt that it betokened a nature not
easily led, not so gentle and pliable as he could
have wished. It shut so very firmly and the under
lip was a little thinner and straighter than the other
and receded a little from it, giving the impression
that Erica had borne much suffering, and had exercised
great self-restraint.
Mrs. Fane-Smith saw in her a sort
of miniature and feminine edition of the Luke Raeburn
whom she remembered eight-and-twenty years before in
their Scottish home. When Rose had gone into the
back drawing room to fetch her crewels, she drew Erica
toward her, and kissing her again, said in a low,
almost frightened voice:
“You are very like what your father was.”
But just at that moment Mr. Fane-Smith
asked some sudden question, and his wife, starting
and coloring, as though she had been detected in wrong-doing,
hurriedly and nervously devoted herself to what seemed
to Erica a distractingly round-about answer. By
the time it was fairly ended, dinner was announced,
and the strangeness of the atmosphere of this new
home struck more and more upon Erica and chilled her
a little. The massive grandeur of the old oak
furniture, the huge oil paintings, which she wanted
really to study, the great silver candelabra, even
the two footmen and the solemn old butler seemed to
oppress her. The luxury was almost burdensome.
It was a treat indeed to see and use beautiful glass
and china, and pleasant to have beautiful fruit and
flowers to look at, but Erica was a bohemian and hated
stiff ceremony Her heart failed her when she thought
of sitting down night after night to such an interminable
meal. Worse still, she had taken a dislike to
her host. Her likes and dislikes were always
characterized by Highland intensity, and something
in her aunt’s husband seemed to rub her the wrong
way. Mr. Fane-Smith was a retired Indian judge,
a man much respected in the religious world, and in
his way a really good man; but undoubtedly his sympathies
were narrow and his creed hard. Closely intwined
with much true and active Christianity, he had allowed
to spring up a choking overgrowth of hard criticism,
of intolerance, of domineering dogmatism. He
was one of those men who go about the world, trying,
not to find points of union with all men, but ferreting
out the most trifling points of divergence. He
did this with the best intentions, no doubt, but as
Erica’s whole view of life, and of Christian
life in particular, was the direct opposite of his,
their natures inevitably jarred.
She knew that it was foolish to expect
every Christian household to be equal to the Osmonds’,
but nevertheless a bitter sense of disappointment
stole over her that evening. Where was the sense
of restful unity which she had looked forward to?
The new atmosphere felt strange, the new order of
life this luxurious easy life was hard to comprehend.
To add to her dislike Mr. Fane-Smith
was something of an epicure and had a most fastidious
palate. Now, Erica’s father thought scarcely
anything about what he ate it was indeed upon record
that he had once in a fit of absence dined upon a
plate of scraps intended for Friskarina, while engaged
in some scientific discussion with the professor.
Mr. Fane-Smith, on the other hand, though convinced
that the motto of all atheists was “Let us eat
and drink for tomorrow we die,” criticized his
food almost as severely as he criticized human beings.
The mulligatawny was not to his taste. The curry
was too not. He was sure the jelly was made with
that detestable stuff gelatine; he wished his wife
would forbid the cook to use it if she had seen old
horses being led into a gelatine manufactory as he
had seen, she would be more particular.
Interspersed between these compliments
was conversation which irritated Erica even more.
It was chiefly about the sayings and doings of people
whom she did not know, and the doings of some clergyman
in a neighboring town seemed to receive severe censure,
for Mr. Fane-Smith stigmatized him as “A most
dangerous man, a Pelagian in disguise.”
However, he seemed to be fond of labeling people with
the names of old hérésies, for, presently, when
Rose said something about Mr. Farrant, her father
replied contemptuously:
Every one knows, my dear, that Mr.
Farrant holds unorthodox views. Why, a few years
ago he was an atheist, and now he’s a mere Photinian.
As no one but Mr. Fane-Smith had the
faintest idea what a “Photinian” meant,
the accusation could neither be understood nor refuted.
Mrs. Fane-Smith looked very uncomfortable, fearing
that her niece might feel hurt at the tone in which
“He was an atheist,” had been spoken; and
indeed Erica’s color did rise.
“Is that Mr. Farrant the member?” she
asked.
“Yes,” replied her aunt, apprehensively.
“Do you know him?”
“Not personally, but I shall
always honor him for the splendid speech he made last
year on religious toleration,” said Erica.
Mr. Fane-Smith raised his eyebrows
for the same speech had made him most indignant.
However, he began to realize that, before Erica could
become a patient recipient of his opinions, like his
wife and daughter, he must root out the false ideas
which evidently still clung to her.
“Mr. Farrant is no doubt a reformed
character now,” he admitted. “But
he is far from orthodox; far from orthodox! At
one time I am told that he was one of the wildest
young fellows in the neighborhood, no decent person
would speak to him, and though no doubt he means well,
yet I could never have confidence in such a man.”
“I have heard a good deal about
him from my friends the Osmonds,” said Erica,
stimulated as usual to side with the abused. “Mr.
Osmond thinks him the finest character he ever knew.”
“Is that the clergyman you told
me of?” interposed Mrs. Fane-Smith, anxious
to turn the conversation.
But her husband threw in a question, too.
“What, Charles Osmond, do you
mean the author of ’Essays on Modern Christianity?”
“Yes,” replied Erica.
“I don’t know that he
is much more orthodox than Mr. Farrant,” said
Mr. Fane-Smith; “I consider that he has Noetian
tendencies.”
Erica’s color rose and her eyes flashed.
“I do not know whether he is
what is called orthodox or not,” she said; “but
I do know that he is the most Christ-like man I ever
met.”
Mr. Fane-Smith looked uncomfortable.
He would name any number of hérésies and heretics,
but, except at grace, it was against his sense of
etiquette to speak the name of Christ at table..
Even Rose looked surprised, and Mrs. Fane-Smith colored,
and at once made the move to go.
On the plea of fetching some work,
Erica escaped to her own room, and there tried to
cool her cheeks and her temper; but the idea of such
a man as Mr. Fane-Smith sitting in judgment on such
men as Mr. Farrant and Charles Osmond had thoroughly
roused her, and she went down still in a dangerous
state a touch would make her anger blaze up.
“Are you fond of knitting?”
asked her aunt, making room for her on the sofa, and
much relieved to find that her niece was not of the
unfeminine “blue” order.
“I don’t really like any
work,” said Erica, “but, of course, a certain
amount must be done, and I like to knit my father’s
socks.”
Mr. Fane-Smith, who had just joined
them, took note of this answer, and it seemed to surprise
and displease him, though he made no remark.
“Did he think that atheists
didn’t wear socks? Or that their daughters
couldn’t knit?” thought Erica to herself,
with a little resentful inward laugh.
The fact was that Mr. Fane-Smith saw
more and more plainly that the niece whom his wife
was so anxious to adopt was by no means his ideal
of a convert. Of course he was really and honestly
thankful that she had adopted Christianity, but it
chafed him sorely that she had not exactly adopted
his own views. He was a man absolutely convinced
that there is but one form of truth, and an exceedingly
narrow form he made it, for all mankind. He Mr.
Fane-Smith had exactly grasped the whole truth, and
whoever swerved to the right or to the left, if only
by a hair’s breadth, was, he considered, in
a dangerous and lamentable condition. Ah!
He thought to himself, if only he had had from the
beginning the opportunity of influencing Erica, instead
of that dangerously broad Charles Osmond. It
did not strike him that he had had the opportunity
ever since his return to England, but had entirely
declined to admit an atheist to his house. Other
men had labored, and he had entered into the fruit
of their labors, and not finding it quite to his taste,
fancied that he could have managed much better.
There are few sadder things in the
world than to see really good and well-intentioned
men fighting for what they consider the religious cause
with the devil’s weapons. Mr. Fane-Smith
would have been dismayed if any one could have shown
him that all his life he had been struggling to suppress
unbelief by what was infinitely worse than sincere
unbelief denunciation often untrue, always unjust,
invariably uncharitable. He would have been almost
broken-hearted could he ever have known that his hard
intolerance, his narrowness, his domineering injustice
had not deterred one soul from adopting the views
he abhorred, but had, on the contrary, done a great
deal to drive into atheism those who were wavering.
And this evening, even while lamenting that he had
not been able to train up his niece exactly in the
opinions he himself held, he was all the time trying
her faith more severely than a whole regiment of atheists
could have tried it.
The time passed heavily enough.
When two people in the room are unhappy and uncomfortable,
a sense of unrest generally falls upon the other occupants.
Rose yawned, talked fitfully about the gayeties of
the coming week, worked half a leaf on an antimacassar,
and sang three or four silly little coquettish songs
which somehow jarred on every one.
Mrs. Fane-Smith, feeling anxious and
harassed, afraid alike of vexing her husband and offending
her niece, talked kindly and laboriously. Erica
turned the heel of her sock and responded as well as
she could, her sensitiveness recoiling almost as much
from the labored and therefore oppressive kindness,
as from the irritating and narrow censure which Mr.
Fane-Smith dealt out to the world.
Family prayers followed. It was
the first time she had ever been present at such a
household gathering, and the idea seemed to her a very
beautiful one. But the function proved so formal
and lifeless that it chilled her more than anything.
Yet her relations were so very kind to her personally
that she blamed herself for feeling disappointed, and
struggled hard to pierce through the outer shell, which
she knew only concealed their real goodness.
She knew, too, that she had herself to blame in part;
her oversensitiveness, her quick temper, her want of
deep insight had all had their share in making that
evening such a blank failure.
Mrs. Fane-Smith went with her into
her bedroom to see that she had all she wanted.
Though the September evening was mild, a fire blazed
in the grate, much to Erica’s astonishment.
Not on the most freezing of winter nights had she
ever enjoyed such a luxury. Her aunt explained
that the room looked north, and, besides, she thought
a fire was cheerful and home-like.
“You are very kind,” said
Erica, warmly; “but you know I mustn’t
let you spoil me, or I shall not be fit to go back
to the home life, and I want to go home much more
fit for it.”
Something in the spontaneous warmth
and confidence of this speech cheered Mrs. Fane-Smith.
She wished above all things to win her niece’s
love and confidence, and she wisely reserved her proposal
as to the matter of a home for another time.
It was necessary, however, that she should give Erica
a hint as to the topics likely to irritate Mr. Fane-Smith.
“I think, dear,” she began,
“it would be as well if, when my husband and
Rose are present, you are careful not to speak of your
father. You won’t mind my saying this;
but I know it displeases my husband, and I think you
will understand that there are objections, society,
you know, and public opinion; we must consult it a
little.”
Mrs. Fane-Smith grew nervous and incoherent,
threw her arms round her niece’s neck, kissed
her most affectionately, and wished her good night.
When she left the room, Erica’s
repressed indignation blazed up. We fear it must
be recorded that she fairly stamped with anger.
Wounded in her tenderest part, indignant
at the insult to her father, ashamed of her own want
of control, miserably perplexed by her new surroundings,
it was long before she could compose herself.
She paced up and down the richly furnished room, struggling
hard to conquer her anger. At length, by a happy
impulse, she caught up her prayer book, checked her
longing to walk rapidly to and fro, sat down on the
Indian rug before the fire, and read the evening psalm.
It happened to be the thirty-seventh. Nothing
could have calmed her so effectually as its tender
exhortation, its wonderful sympathy with human nature.
“Fret not thyself, else shalt thou be moved
to do evil. Put thou thy trust in the Lord, and
be doing good. Put thy trust in Him, and He will
bring it to pass.”
She closed the book, and sat musing,
her anger quite passed away.
All at once she recollected old Elspeth,
the nurse. Her father had charged her with many
messages to the faithful old servant, and so had her
aunt. She felt ashamed to think that she had been
several hours in the house without delivering them.
Rose’s room was close to hers. She went
out, and knocked softly at the door.
“I just came to see whether
Elspeth was here,” she said, rather dismayed
to find the candles out, and the room only lighted
up by the red glow from the fire.
Rose who had had no temper to conquer,
was already in bed. “Still in your dress!”
she exclaimed. “I believe you’ve been
at that Browning again. But did no one come to
help you? I sent Gemma.”
“I didn’t want help, thank
you,” said Erica. “I only wanted to
see Elspeth because I have a message for her.”
“How conscientious you are!”
said Rose, laughing. “I always make a point
of forgetting messages when I go from home. Well,
you will find Elspeth in the little room on the next
half landing, the work room. She was here not
two minutes ago. Good night! Breakfast is
at nine, you know; and they’ll bring you a cup
of tea when they call you.”
A little shyly, Erica made her way
to the work room where Elspeth was tacking frilling
into one of Rose’s dresses. The old woman
started up with a quick exclamation when she appeared
in the doorway.
“May I come in?” said
Erica, with all the charm of manner which she had
inherited from her father. “’Tis very late,
but I didn’t like to go to bed without seeing
you.”
“I hope missie has everything
she wants?” asked Elspeth, anxiously.
“Yes, indeed!” said Erica.
“All I want is to see you, and to give you my
father’s love, to ask how you are. He and
Aunt Jean have often told me about you. You have
not forgotten them?”
“Forgotten! No, indeed!”
cried old Elspeth. “When I saw you at ‘Takin’
the book,’ and saw you so like your poor father,
I could have cried. You are Mr. Luke’s
bairn, and no mistake, my bonny lassie! Ah, I
mind the day well when he came to my room the auld
nursery in the parsonage, where I had reared him and
told me that master had ordered him out of the house.
I pray God I may never again see a face look as his
looked then!”
Tears started to her eyes at the recollection.
Erica threw her arms round her neck, and kissed her.
“You love him still. I
see you love him!” she exclaimed, all her feeling
of isolation melting in the assurance of the old servant’s
sympathy.
So, after all, Erica had a maid in
attendance, for Elspeth insisted on seeing her to
bed, and, since they talked all the time about the
old Scotch days, she was well content to renounce
her independence for a little while.
But, whether because of the flickering
fire light, or because of the strangeness of the great
brass bedstead, with its silken hangings and many-colored
Indian rezai, Erica slept very little that night.
Perhaps the long talk about her father’s early
days had taken too great a hold of her. At any
rate, she tossed about very restlessly in her luxurious
quarters, and when, for brief intervals, she slept,
it was only to dream of her father taking leave of
his Scottish home, and always he bore that flint-like
face, that look of strong endurance and repressed passion
which Elspeth had described, and which, in times of
trouble and injustice, Erica had learned to know so
well.