INITIAL CHAPTER.
Containing Mr. CAXTON’s
unavailing caution not to be
dull.
“I hope, Pisistratus,”
said my father, “that you do not intend to be
dull?”
“Heaven forbid, sir! What
could make you ask such a question? Intend!
No! if I am dull it is from innocence.”
“A very long discourse upon
knowledge!” said my father; “very long!
I should cut it out.”
I looked upon my father as a Byzantian
sage might have looked on a Vandal. “Cut
it out!”
“Stops the action, sir!” said my father,
dogmatically.
“Action! But a novel is not a drama.”
“No; it is a great deal longer, twenty
times as long, I dare say,” replied Mr. Caxton,
with a sigh.
“Well, sir, well! I think
my Discourse upon Knowledge has much to do with the
subject, is vitally essential to the subject; does
not stop the action, only explains and
elucidates the action. And I am astonished, sir,
that you, a scholar, and a cultivator of knowledge ”
“There, there!” cried
my father, deprecatingly. “I yield, I yield!
What better could I expect when I set up for a critic?
What author ever lived that did not fly into a passion,
even with his own father, if his father presumed to
say, ’Cut out’!”
Mrs. Caxton. “My
dear Austin, I am sure Pisistratus did not mean to
offend you, and I have no doubt he will take your ”
Pisistratus (hastily). “Advice
for the future, certainly. I will quicken the
action, and ”
“Go on with the Novel,”
whispered Roland, looking up from his eternal account-book.
“We have lost L200 by our barley!”
Therewith I plunged my pen into the
ink, and my thoughts into the “Fair Shadowland.”
CHAPTER II.
“Halt, cried a voice; and
not a little surprised was Leonard when the stranger
who had accosted him the preceding evening got into
the chaise.
“Well,” said Richard,
“I am not the sort of man you expected, eh?
Take time to recover yourself.” And with
these words Richard drew forth a book from his pocket,
threw himself back, and began to read. Leonard
stole many a glance at the acute, hardy, handsome face
of his companion, and gradually recognized a family
likeness to poor John, in whom, despite age and infirmity,
the traces of no common share of physical beauty were
still evident. And, with that quick link in ideas
which mathematical aptitude bestows, the young student
at once conjectured that he saw before him his uncle
Richard. He had the discretion, however, to leave
that gentleman free to choose his own time for introducing
himself, and silently revolved the new thoughts produced
by the novelty of his situation. Mr. Richard read
with notable quickness, sometimes cutting
the leaves of the book with his penknife, sometimes
tearing them open with his forefinger, sometimes skipping
whole pages altogether. Thus he galloped to the
end of the volume, flung it aside, lighted his cigar,
and began to talk. He put many questions to Leonard
relative to his rearing, and especially to the mode
by which he had acquired his education; and Leonard,
confirmed in the idea that he was replying to a kinsman,
answered frankly.
Richard did not think it strange that
Leonard should have acquired so much instruction with
so little direct tuition. Richard Avenel himself
had been tutor to himself. He had lived too long
with our go-ahead brethren who stride the world on
the other side the Atlantic with the seven-leagued
boots of the Giant-killer, not to have caught their
glorious fever for reading. But it was for a reading
wholly different from that which was familiar to Leonard.
The books he read must be new; to read old books would
have seemed to him going back in the world. He
fancied that new books necessarily contained new ideas, a
common mistake, and our lucky adventurer
was the man of his day.
Tired with talking, he at length chucked
the book he had run through to Leonard, and taking
out a pocket-book and pencil, amused himself with
calculations on some detail of his business, after
which he fell into an absorbed train of thought, part
pecuniary, part ambitious.
Leonard found the book interesting:
it was one of the numerous works, half-statistic,
half-declamatory, relating to the condition of the
working classes, which peculiarly distinguish our century,
and ought to bind together rich and poor, by proving
the grave attention which modern society bestows upon
all that can affect the welfare of the last.
“Dull stuff! theory! claptrap!”
said Richard, rousing himself from his revery at last;
“it can’t interest you.”
“All books interest me, I think,”
said Leonard, “and this especially; for it relates
to the working class, and I am one of them.”
“You were yesterday, but you
mayn’t be to-morrow,” answered Richard,
good-humouredly, and patting him on the shoulder.
“You see, my lad, that it is the middle class
which ought to govern the country. What the book
says about the ignorance of country magistrates is
very good; but the man writes pretty considerable
trash when he wants to regulate the number of hours
a free-born boy should work at a factory, only
ten hours a day pooh! and so lose two hours
to the nation! Labour is wealth; and if we could
get men to work twenty-four hours a day, we should
be just twice as rich. If the march of civilization
is to proceed,” continued Richard, loftily,
“men, and boys too, must not lie a bed doing
nothing, all night, sir.” Then, with a complacent
tone, “We shall get to the twenty-four hours
at last; and, by gad, we must, or we sha’n’t
flog the Europeans as we do now.”
On arriving at the inn at which Richard
had first made acquaintance with Mr. Dale, the coach
by which he had intended to perform the rest of the
journey was found to be full. Richard continued
to perform the journey in postchaises, not without
some grumbling at the expense, and incessant orders
to the post-boys to make the best of the way.
“Slow country this in spite of all its brag,”
said he, “very slow. Time is
money they know that in the States; for
why? they are all men of business there. Always
slow in a country where a parcel of lazy, idle lords
and dukes and baronets seem to think ‘time is
pleasure.’”
Towards evening the chaise approached
the confines of a very large town, and Richard began
to grow fidgety. His easy, cavalier air was abandoned.
He withdrew his legs from the window, out of which
they had been luxuriously dangling, pulled down his
waistcoat, buckled more tightly his stock; it was
clear that he was resuming the decorous dignity that
belongs to state. He was like a monarch who, after
travelling happy and incognito, returns to his capital.
Leonard divined at once that they were nearing their
journey’s end.
Humble foot-passengers now looked
at the chaise, and touched their hats. Richard
returned the salutation with a nod, a nod
less gracious than condescending. The chaise
turned rapidly to the left, and stopped before a small
lodge, very new, very white, adorned with two Doric
columns in stucco, and flanked by a large pair of
gates. “Hollo!” cried the post-boy,
and cracked his whip.
Two children were playing before the
lodge, and some clothes were hanging out to dry on
the shrubs and pales round the neat little building.
“Hang those brats! they are
actually playing,” growled Dick. “As
I live, the jade has been washing again! Stop,
boy!” During this soliloquy, a good-looking
young woman had rushed from the door, slapped the children
as, catching sight of the chaise, they ran towards
the house, opened the gates, and dropping a courtesy
to the ground, seemed to wish that she could drop
into it altogether; so frightened and so trembling
seemed she to shrink from the wrathful face which
the master now put out of the window.
“Did I tell you, or did I not,”
said Dick, “that I would not have those horrid,
disreputable cubs of yours playing just before my lodge
gates?”
“Please, sir ”
“Don’t answer me.
And did I tell you, or did I not, that the next time
I saw you making a drying-ground of my lilacs, you
should go out, neck and crop ”
“Oh, please, sir ”
“You leave my lodge next Saturday!
drive on, boy. The ingratitude and insolence
of those common people are disgraceful to human nature,”
muttered Richard, with an accent of the bitterest misanthropy.
The chaise wheeled along the smoothest
and freshest of gravel roads, and through fields of
the finest land, in the highest state of cultivation.
Rapid as was Leonard’s survey, his rural eye
detected the signs of a master in the art agronomial.
Hitherto he had considered the squire’s model
farm as the nearest approach to good husbandry he had
seen; for Jackeymo’s finer skill was developed
rather on the minute scale of market-gardening than
what can fairly be called husbandry. But the
squire’s farm was degraded by many old-fashioned
notions, and concessions to the whim of the eye, which
would not be found in model farms nowadays, large
tangled hedgerows, which, though they constitute one
of the beauties most picturesque in old England, make
sad deductions from produce; great trees, overshadowing
the corn and harbouring the birds; little patches
of rough sward left to waste; and angles of woodland
running into fields, exposing them to rabbits and blocking
out the sun. These and such like blots on a gentleman-farmer’s
agriculture, common-sense and Giacomo had made clear
to the acute comprehension of Leonard. No such
faults were perceptible in Richard Avenel’s domain.
The fields lay in broad divisions, the hedges were
clipped and narrowed into their proper destination
of mere boundaries. Not a blade of wheat withered
under the cold shade of a tree; not a yard of land
lay waste; not a weed was to be seen, not a thistle
to waft its baleful seed through the air: some
young plantations were placed, not where the artist
would put them, but just where the farmer wanted a
fence from the wind. Was there no beauty in this?
Yes, there was beauty of its kind, beauty
at once recognizable to the initiated, beauty of use
and profit, beauty that could bear a monstrous high
rent. And Leonard uttered a cry of admiration
which thrilled through the heart of Richard Avenel.
“This is farming!” said the villager.
“Well, I guess it is,”
answered Richard, all his ill-humour vanishing.
“You should have seen the land when I bought
it. But we new men, as they call us (damn their
impertinence!) are the new blood of this country.”
Richard Avenel never said anything
more true. Long may the new blood circulate through
the veins of the mighty giantess; but let the grand
heart be the same as it has beat for proud ages.
The chaise now passed through a pretty
shrubbery, and the house came into gradual view, a
house with a portico, all the offices carefully thrust
out of sight.
The postboy dismounted and rang the bell.
“I almost think they are going
to keep me waiting,” said Mr. Richard, well-nigh
in the very words of Louis XIV. But the fear was
not realized, the door opened; a well-fed
servant out of livery presented himself. There
was no hearty welcoming smile on his face, but he opened
the chaise-door with demure and taciturn respect.
“Where’s George?
Why does he not come to the door?” asked Richard;
descending from the chaise slowly, and leaning on the
servant’s outstretched arm with as much precaution
as if he had had the gout.
Fortunately, George here came into
sight, settling himself hastily into his livery coat.
“See to the things, both of
you,” said Richard, as he paid the postboy.
Leonard stood on the gravel sweep,
gazing at the square white house.
“Handsome elevation classical,
I take it, eh?” said Richard, joining him.
“But you should see the offices.”
He then, with familiar kindness, took Leonard by the
arm, and drew him within. He showed him the hall,
with a carved mahogany stand for hats; he showed him
the drawing-room, and pointed out all its beauties;
though it was summer, the drawing-room looked cold,
as will look rooms newly furnished, with walls newly
papered, in houses newly built. The furniture
was handsome, and suited to the rank of a rich trader.
There was no pretence about it, and therefore no vulgarity,
which is more than can be said for the houses of many
an Honourable Mrs. Somebody in Mayfair, with rooms
twelve feet square, ebokeful of buhl, that would have
had its proper place in the Tuileries. Then Richard
showed him the library, with mahogany book-cases,
and plate glass, and the fashionable authors handsomely
bound. Your new men are much better friends to
living authors than your old families who live in
the country, and at most subscribe to a book-club.
Then Richard took him up-stairs, and led him through
the bedrooms, all very clean and comfortable,
and with every modern convenience; and pausing in
a very pretty single gentleman’s chamber, said,
“This is your den. And now, can you guess
who I am?”
“No one but my uncle Richard
could be so kind,” answered Leonard.
But the compliment did not flatter
Richard. He was extremely disconcerted and disappointed.
He had hoped that he should be taken for a lord at
least, forgetful of all that he had said in disparagement
of lords.
“Fish!” said he at last,
biting his lip, “so you don’t think that
I look like a gentleman? Come, now, speak honestly.”
Leonard, wonderingly, saw he had given
pain, and with the good breeding which comes instinctively
from good nature, replied, “I judge you by your
heart, sir, and your likeness to my grandfather, otherwise
I should never have presumed to fancy we could be
relations.”
“Hum!” answered Richard.
“You can just wash your hands, and then come
down to dinner; you will hear the gong in ten ininutes.
There’s the bell, ring for what you
want.” With that, he turned on his heel;
and descending the stairs, gave a look into the dining-room,
and admired the plated salver on the sideboard, and
the king’s pattern spoons and silver on the
table. Then he walked to the looking-glass over
the mantelpiece; and, wishing to survey the whole
effect of his form, mounted a chair. He was just
getting into an attitude which he thought imposing,
when the butler entered, and, being London bred, had
the discretion to try to escape unseen; but Richard
caught sight of him in the looking-glass, and coloured
up to the temples.
“Jarvis,” said he, mildly,
“Jarvis, put me in mind to have these inexpressibles
altered.”
CHAPTER III.
A propos of the inexpressibles, Mr.
Richard did not forget to provide his nephew with
a much larger wardrobe than could have been thrust
into Dr. Riccabocca’s knapsack. There was
a very good tailor in the town, and the clothes were
very well made. And, but for an air more ingenuous,
and a cheek that, despite study and night vigils, retained
much of the sunburned bloom of the rustic, Leonard
Fairfield might now have almost passed, without disparaging
comment, by the bow-window at White’s.
Richard burst into an immoderate fit of laughter when
he first saw the watch which the poor Italian had
bestowed upon Leonard; but to atone for the laughter,
he made him a present of a very pretty substitute,
and bade him “lock up his turnip.”
Leonard was more hurt by the jeer at his old patron’s
gift than pleased by his uncle’s. But Richard
Avenel had no conception of sentiment. It was
not for many days that Leonard could reconcile himself
to his uncle’s manner. Not that the peasant
could pretend to judge of its mere conventional defects;
but there is an ill breeding to which, whatever our
rank and nurture, we are almost equally sensitive, the
ill breeding that comes from want of consideration
for others. Now, the squire was as homely in
his way as Richard Avenel, but the squire’s
bluntness rarely hurt the feelings; and when it did
so, the squire perceived and hastened to repair his
blunder. But Mr. Richard, whether kind or cross,
was always wounding you in some little delicate fibre, not
from malice, but from the absence of any little delicate
fibres of his own. He was really, in many respects,
a most excellent man, and certainly a very valuable
citizen ; but his merits wanted the fine
tints and fluent curves that constitute beauty of character.
He was honest, but sharp in his practice, and with
a keen eye to his interests. He was just, but
as a matter of business. He made no allowances,
and did not leave to his justice the large margin
of tenderness and mercy. He was generous, but
rather from an idea of what was due to himself than
with much thought of the pleasure he gave to others;
and he even regarded generosity as a capital put out
to interest. He expected a great deal of gratitude
in return, and, when he obliged a man, considered
that he had bought a slave. Every needy voter
knew where to come, if he wanted relief or a loan;
but woe to him if he had ventured to express hesitation
when Mr. Avenel told him how he must vote.
In this town Richard had settled after
his return from America, in which country he had enriched
himself, first, by spirit and industry,
lastly, by bold speculation and good luck. He
invested his fortune in business, became
a partner in a large brewery, soon bought out his
associates, and then took a principal share in a flourishing
corn-mill. He prospered rapidly, bought
a property of some two or three hundred acres, built
a house, and resolved to enjoy himself, and make a
figure. He had now become the leading man of
the town, and the boast to Audley Egerton that he
could return one of the members, perhaps both, was
by no means an exaggerated estimate of his power.
Nor was his proposition, according to his own views,
so unprincipled as it appeared to the statesman.
He had taken a great dislike to both the sitting members, a
dislike natural to a sensible man of moderate politics,
who had something to lose. For Mr. Slappe, the
active member, who was head-over-ears in debt, was
one of the furious democrats rare before
the Reform Bill, and whose opinions were
held dangerous even by the mass of a Liberal constituency;
while Mr. Sleekie, the gentleman member who laid by
L5000 every year from his dividends in the Funds, was
one of those men whom Richard justly pronounced to
be “humbugs,” men who curry
favour with the extreme party by voting for measures
sure not to be carried; while if there was the least
probability of coming to a decision that would lower
the money market. Mr. Sleekie was seized with
a well-timed influenza. Those politicians are
common enough now. Propose to march to the Millennium,
and they are your men. Ask them to march a quarter
of a mile, and they fall to feeling their pockets,
and trembling for fear of the footpads. They
are never so joyful as when there is no chance of
a victory. Did they beat the minister, they would
be carried out of the House in a fit.
Richard Avenel despising
both these gentlemen, and not taking kindly to the
Whigs since the great Whig leaders were lords had
looked with a friendly eye to the government as it
then existed, and especially to Audley Egerton, the
enlightened representative of commerce. But in
giving Audley and his colleagues the benefit of his
influence, through conscience, he thought it all fair
and right to have a quid pro quo, and, as he had so
frankly confessed, it was his whim to rise up “Sir
Richard.” For this worthy citizen abused
the aristocracy much on the same principle as the
fair Olivia depreciated Squire Thornhill, he
had a sneaking affection for what he abused.
The society of Screwstown was, like most provincial
capitals, composed of two classes, the commercial
and the exclusive. These last dwelt chiefly apart,
around the ruins of an old abbey; they affected its
antiquity in their pedigrees, and had much of
its ruin in their finances. Widows of rural thanes
in the neighbourhood, genteel spinsters, officers
retired on half-pay, younger sons of rich squires,
who had now become old bachelors, in short,
a very respectable, proud, aristocratic set, who thought
more of themselves than do all the Gowers and Howards,
Courtenays and Seymours, put together. It had
early been the ambition of Richard Avenel to be admitted
into this sublime coterie; and, strange to say, he
had partially succeeded. He was never more happy
than when he was asked to their card-parties, and
never more unhappy than when he was actually there.
Various circumstances combined to raise Mr. Avenel
into this elevated society. First, he was unmarried,
still very handsome, and in that society there was
a large proportion of unwedded females. Secondly,
he was the only rich trader in Screwstown who kept
a good cook, and professed to give dinners, and the
half-pay captains and colonels swallowed the host
for the sake of the venison. Thirdly, and principally,
all these exclusives abhorred the two sitting
members, and “idem nolle idem
velle de república, ea firma
amicitia est;” that is, congeniality
in politics pieces porcelain and crockery together
better than the best diamond cement. The sturdy
Richard Avenel, who valued himself on American independence,
held these ladies and gentlemen in an awe that was
truly Brahminical. Whether it was that, in England,
all notions, even of liberty, are mixed up historically,
traditionally, socially, with that fine and subtle
element of aristocracy which, like the press, is the
air we breathe; or whether Richard imagined that he
really became magnetically imbued with the virtues
of these silver pennies and gold seven-shilling pieces,
distinct from the vulgar coinage in popular use, it
is hard to say. But the truth must be told, Richard
Avenel was a notable tuft-hunter. He had a great
longing to marry out of this society; but he had not
yet seen any one sufficiently high-born and high-bred
to satisfy his aspirations. In the meanwhile,
he had convinced himself that his way would be smooth
could he offer to make his ultimate choice “My
Lady;” and he felt that it would be a proud hour
in his life when he could walk before stiff Colonel
Pompley to the sound of “Sir Richard.”
Still, however disappointed at the ill-success of his
bluff diplomacy with Mr. Egerton, and however yet cherishing
the most vindictive resentment against that individual,
he did not, as many would have done, throw up his
political convictions out of personal spite.
He reserved his private grudge for some special occasion,
and continued still to support the Administration,
and to hate one of the ministers.
But, duly to appreciate the value
of Richard Avenel, and in just counterpoise to all
his foibles, one ought to have seen what he had effected
for the town. Well might he boast of “new
blood;” he had done as much for the town as
he had for his fields. His energy, his quick
comprehension of public utility, backed by his wealth
and bold, bullying, imperious character, had sped
the work of civilization as if with the celerity and
force of a steam-engine.
If the town were so well paved and
so well lighted, if half-a-dozen squalid lanes had
been transformed into a stately street, if half the
town no longer depended on tanks for their water, if
the poor-rates were reduced one-third, praise to the
brisk new blood which Richard Avenel had infused into
vestry and corporation. And his example itself
was so contagious!
“There was not a plate-glass
window in the town when I came into it,” said
Richard Avenel; “and now look down the High Street!”
He took the credit to himself, and justly; for though
his own business did not require windows of plate-glass,
he had awakened the spirit of enterprise which adorns
a whole city.
Mr. Avenel did not present Leonard
to his friends for more than a fortnight. He
allowed him to wear off his rust. He then gave
a grand dinner, at which his nephew was formally introduced,
and, to his great wrath and disappointment, never
opened his lips. How could he, poor youth, when
Miss Clarina Mowbray only talked upon high life, till
proud Colonel Pompley went in state through the history
of the Siege of Seringapatam?
CHAPTER IV.
While Leonard accustoms himself gradually
to the splendours that surround him, and often turns
with a sigh to the remembrance of his mother’s
cottage and the sparkling fount in the Italian’s
flowery garden, we will make with thee, O reader,
a rapid flight to the metropolis, and drop ourselves
amidst the gay groups that loiter along the dusty
ground or loll over the roadside palings of Hyde Park.
The season is still at its height; but the short day
of fashionable London life, which commences two hours
after noon, is in its decline.
The crowd in Rotten Row begins to
thin. Near the statue of Achilles, and apart
from all other loungers, a gentleman, with one hand
thrust into his waistcoat, and the other resting on
his cane, gazed listlessly on the horsemen and carriages
in the brilliant ring. He was still in the prime
of life, at the age when man is usually the most social, when
the acquaintances of youth have ripened into friendships,
and a personage of some rank and fortune has become
a well-known feature in the mobile face of society.
But though, when his contemporaries were boys scarce
at college, this gentleman had blazed foremost amongst
the princes of fashion, and though he had all the
qualities of nature and circumstance which either
retain fashion to the last, or exchange its false celebrity
for a graver repute, he stood as a stranger in that
throng of his countrymen. Beauties whirled by
to the toilet, statesmen passed on to the senate,
dandies took flight to the clubs; and neither nods,
nor becks, nor wreathed smiles said to the solitary
spectator, “Follow us, thou art one
of our set.” Now and then some middle-aged
beau, nearing the post of the loiterer, turned round
to look again; but the second glance seemed to dissipate
the recognition of the first, and the beau silently
continued his way.
“By the tomb of my fathers!”
said the solitary to himself, “I know now what
a dead man might feel if he came to life again, and
took a peep at the living.”
Time passed on, the evening
shades descended fast. Our stranger in London
had well-nigh the Park to himself. He seemed to
breathe more freely as he saw that the space was so
clear.
“There’s oxygen in the
atmosphere now,” said he, half aloud; “and
I can walk without breathing in the gaseous fumes
of the multitude. Oh, those chemists what
dolts they are! They tell us that crowds taint
the air, but they never guess why! Pah, it is
not the lungs that poison the element, it
is the reek of bad hearts. When a periwigpated
fellow breathes on me, I swallow a mouthful of care.
Allons! my friend Nero; now for a stroll.”
He touched with his cane a large Newfoundland dog,
who lay stretched near his feet, and dog and man went
slow through the growing twilight, and over the brown
dry turf. At length our solitary paused, and
threw himself on a bench under a tree. “Half-past
eight!” said he, looking at his watch, “one
may smoke one’s cigar without shocking the world.”
He took out his cigar-case, struck
a light, and in another moment reclined at length
on the bench, seemed absorbed in regarding the smoke,
that scarce coloured ere it vanished into air.
“It is the most barefaced lie
in the world, my Nero,” said he, addressing
his dog, “this boasted liberty of man! Now,
here am I, a free-born Englishman, a citizen of the
world, caring I often say to myself caring
not a jot for Kaiser or Mob; and yet I no more dare
smoke this cigar in the Park at half-past six, when
all the world is abroad, than I dare pick my Lord
Chancellor’s pocket, or hit the Archbishop of
Canterbury a thump on the nose. Yet no law in
England forbids me my cigar, Nero! What is law
at half-past eight was not crime at six and a half!
Britannia says, ’Man, thou art free, and she
lies like a commonplace woman. O Nero, Nero!
you enviable dog! you serve but from liking.
No thought of the world costs you one wag of the tail.
Your big heart and true instinct suffice you for reason
and law. You would want nothing to your felicity,
if in these moments of ennui you would but smoke a
cigar. Try it, Nero! try it!”
And, rising from his incumbent posture, he sought
to force the end of the weed between the teeth of the
dog.
While thus gravely engaged, two figures
had approached the place. The one was a man who
seemed weak and sickly. His threadbare coat was
buttoned to the chin, but hung large on his shrunken
breast. The other was a girl, who might be from
twelve to fourteen, on whose arm he leaned heavily.
Her cheek was wan, and there was a patient, sad look
on her face, which seemed so settled that you would
think she could never have known the mirthfulness
of childhood.
“Pray rest here, Papa,”
said the child, softly; and she pointed to the bench,
without taking heed of its pre-occupant, who now, indeed,
confined to one corner of the seat, was almost hidden
by the shadow of the tree.
The man sat down, with a feeble sigh,
and then, observing the stranger, raised his hat,
and said, in that tone of voice which betrays the usages
of polished society, “Forgive me if I intrude
on you, sir.”
The stranger looked up from his dog,
and seeing that the girl was standing, rose at once,
as if to make room for her on the bench.
But still the girl did not heed him.
She hung over her father, and wiped his brow tenderly
with a little kerchief which she took from her own
neck for the purpose.
Nero, delighted to escape the cigar,
had taken to some unwieldy curvets and gambols, to
vent the excitement into which he had been thrown;
and now returning, approached the bench with a low
growl of surprise, and sniffed at the intruders of
his master’s privacy.
“Come here, sir,” said
the master. “You need not fear him,”
he added, addressing himself to the girl.
But the girl, without turning round
to him, cried in a voice rather of anguish than alarm,
“He has fainted! Father! Father!”
The stranger kicked aside his dog,
which was in the way, and loosened the poor man’s
stiff military stock. While thus charitably engaged,
the moon broke out, and the light fell full on the
pale, careworn face of the unconscious sufferer.
“This face seems not unfamiliar
to me, though sadly changed,” said the stranger
to himself; and bending towards the girl, who had sunk
on her knees, and was chafing her father’s hand,
he asked, “My child, what is your father’s
name?”
The child continued her task, too absorbed to answer.
The stranger put his hand on her shoulder, and repeated
the question.
“Digby,” answered the
child, almost unconsciously; and as she spoke the
man’s senses began to return. In a few minutes
more he had sufficiently recovered to falter forth
his thanks to the stranger. But the last took
his hand, and said, in a voice at once tremulous and
soothing, “Is it possible that I see once more
an old brother in arms? Algernon Digby, I do
not forget you; but it seems England has forgotten.”
A hectic flush spread over the soldier’s
face, and he looked away from the speaker as he answered,
“My name is Digby, it is true,
sir; but I do not think we have met before. Come,
Helen, I am well now, we will go home.”
“Try and play with that great
dog, my child,” said the stranger, “I
want to talk with your father.”
The child bowed her submissive head,
and moved away; but she did not play with the dog.
“I must reintroduce myself formally,
I see,” quoth the stranger. “You
were in the same regiment with myself, and my name
is L’Estrange.”
“My Lord,” said the soldier, rising, “forgive
me that ”
“I don’t think that it
was the fashion to call me ‘my lord’ at
the mess-table. Come, what has happened to you? on
half-pay?”
Mr. Digby shook his head mournfully.
“Digby, old fellow, can you
lend me L100?” said Lord L’Estrange, clapping
his ci-devant brother-officer on the shoulder,
and in a tone of voice that seemed like a boy’s,
so impudent was it, and devil-me-Garish. “No!
Well, that’s lucky, for I can lend it to you.”
Mr. Digby burst into tears.
Lord L’Estrange did not seem
to observe the emotion, but went on carelessly,
“Perhaps you don’t know
that, besides being heir to a father who is not only
very rich, but very liberal, I inherited, on coming
of age, from a maternal relation, a fortune so large
that it would bore me to death if I were obliged to
live up to it. But in the days of our old acquaintance,
I fear we were both sad extravagant fellows, and I
dare say I borrowed of you pretty freely.”
“Me! Oh, Lord L’Estrange!”
“You have married since then,
and reformed, I suppose. Tell me, old friend,
all about it.”
Mr. Digby, who by this time had succeeded
in restoring some calm to his shattered nerves, now
rose, and said in brief sentences, but clear, firm
tones,
“My Lord, it is idle to talk
of me, useless to help me. I am fast
dying. But my child there, my only child”
(he paused for an instant, and went on rapidly).
“I have relations in a distant county, if I could
but get to them; I think they would, at least, provide
for her. This has been for weeks my hope, my
dream, my prayer. I cannot afford the journey
except by your help. I have begged without shame
for myself; shall I be ashamed, then, to beg for her?”
“Digby,” said L’Estrange,
with some grave alteration of manner, “talk
neither of dying nor begging. You were nearer
death when the balls whistled round you at Waterloo.
If soldier meets soldier and says ‘Friend, thy
purse,’ it is not begging, but brotherhood.
Ashamed! By the soul of Belisarius! if I needed
money, I would stand at a crossing with my Waterloo
medal over my breast, and say to each sleek citizen
I had helped to save from the sword of the Frenchman,
’It is your shame if I starve.’ Now,
lean upon me; I see you should be at home: which
way?”
The poor soldier pointed his hand
towards Oxford Street, and reluctantly accepted the
proffered arm.
“And when you return from your
relations, you will call on me? What hesitate?
Come, promise.”
“I will.”
“On your honour.”
“If I live, on my honour.”
“I am staying at present at
Knightsbridge, with my father; but you will always
hear of my address at No. , Grosvenor Square,
Mr. Egerton’s. So you have a long journey
before you?”
“Very long.”
“Do not fatigue yourself, travel
slowly. Ho, you foolish child! I see you
are jealous of me. Your father has another arm
to spare you.”
Thus talking, and getting but short
answers, Lord L’Estrange continued to exhibit
those whimsical peculiarities of character, which had
obtained for him the repute of heartlessness in the
world. Perhaps the reader may think the world
was not in the right; but if ever the world does judge
rightly of the character of a man who does not live
for the world nor talk of the world nor feel with
the world, it will be centuries after the soul of
Harley L’Estrange has done with this planet.
CHAPTER V.
Lord L’Estrange parted company
with Mr. Digby at the entrance of Oxford Street.
The father and child there took a cabriolet. Mr.
Digby directed the driver to go down the Edgware Road.
He refused to tell L’Estrange his address, and
this with such evident pain, from the sores of pride,
that L’Estrange could not press the point.
Reminding the soldier of his promise to call, Harley
thrust a pocket-book into his hand, and walked off
hastily towards Grosvenor Square.
He reached Audley Egerton’s
door just as that gentleman was getting out of his
carriage; and the two friends entered the house together.
“Does the nation take a nap
to-night?” asked L’Estrange. “Poor
old lady! She hears so much of her affairs, that
she may well boast of her constitution: it must
be of iron.”
“The House is still sitting,”
answered Audley, seriously, and with small heed of
his friend’s witticism. “But it is
not a Government motion, and the division will be
late, so I came home; and if I had not found you here,
I should have gone into the Park to look for you.”
“Yes; one always knows where
to find me at this hour, nine o’clock P.M.,
cigar, Hyde Park. There is not a man in England
so regular in his habits.”
Here the friends reached a drawing-room
in which the member of parliament seldom sat, for
his private apartments were all on the ground-floor.
“But it is the strangest whim of yours, Harley,”
said he.
“What?”
“To affect detestation of ground-floors.”
“Affect! O sophisticated
man, of the earth, earthy! Affect! nothing
less natural to the human soul than a ground-floor.
We are quite far enough from Heaven, mount as many
stairs as we will, without grovelling by preference.”
“According to that symbolical
view of the case,” said Audley, “you should
lodge in an attic.”
“So I would, but that I abhor
new slippers. As for hairbrushes, I am indifferent.”
“What have slippers and hair-brushes to do with
attics?”
“Try! Make your bed in
an attic, and the next morning you will have neither
slippers nor hair-brushes!”
“What shall I have done with them?”
“Shied them at the cats!”
“What odd things you say, Harley!”
“Odd! By Apollo and his
nine spinsters! there is no human being who has so
little imagination as a distinguished member of parliament.
Answer me this, thou solemn Right Honourable, Hast
thou climbed to the heights of august contemplation?
Hast thou gazed on the stars with the rapt eye of
song? Hast thou dreamed of a love known to the
angels, or sought to seize in the Infinite the mystery
of life?”
“Not I indeed, my poor Harley.”
“Then no wonder, poor Audley,
that you cannot conjecture why he who makes his bed
in an attic, disturbed by base catterwauls, shies his
slippers at cats. Bring a chair into the balcony.
Nero spoiled my cigar to-night. I am going to
smoke now. You never smoke. You can look
on the shrubs in the square.”
Audley slightly shrugged his shoulders,
but he followed his friend’s counsel and example,
and brought his chair into the balcony. Nero came
too, but at sight and smell of the cigar prudently
retreated, and took refuge under the table.
“Audley Egerton, I want something from Government.”
“I am delighted to hear it.”
“There was a cornet in my regiment,
who would have done better not to have come into it.
We were, for the most part of us, puppies and fops.”
“You all fought well, however.”
“Puppies and fops do fight well.
Vanity and valour generally go together. CAesar,
who scratched his head with due care of his scanty
curls, and even in dying thought of the folds in his
toga; Walter Raleigh, who could not walk twenty yards
because of the gems in his shoes; Alcibiades, who
lounged into the Agora with doves in his bosom, and
an apple in his hand; Murat, bedizened in gold lace
and furs; and Demetrius, the City-Taker, who made
himself up like a French marquise, were all pretty
good fellows at fighting. A slovenly hero like
Cromwell is a paradox in nature, and a marvel in history.
But to return to my cornet. We were rich; he
was poor. When the pot of clay swims down the
stream with the brass-pots, it is sure of a smash.
Men said Digby was stingy; I saw he was extravagant.
But every one, I fear, would be rather thought stingy
than poor. Bref I left the army, and
saw him no more till to-night. There was never
shabby poor gentleman on the stage more awfully shabby,
more pathetically gentleman. But, look ye, this
man has fought for England. It was no child’s
play at Waterloo, let me tell you, Mr. Egerton; and,
but for such men, you would be at best a sous
préfet, and your parliament a Provincial Assembly.
You must do something for Digby. What shall it
be?”
“Why, really, my dear Harley,
this man was no great friend of yours, eh?”
“If he were, he would not want
the Government to help him, he would not
be ashamed of taking money from me.”
“That is all very fine, Harley;
but there are so many poor officers, and so little
to give. It is the most difficult thing in the
world that which you ask me. Indeed, I know nothing
can be done: he has his half-pay?”
“I think not; or, if he has
it, no doubt it all goes on his debts. That’s
nothing to us: the man and his child are starving.”
“But if it is his own fault, if he
has been imprudent?”
“Ah, well, well; where the devil is Nero?”
“I am so sorry I can’t oblige you.
If it were anything else ”
“There is something else.
My valet I can’t turn him adrift-excellent
fellow, but gets drunk now and then. Will you
find him a place in the Stamp Office?”
“With pleasure.”
“No, now I think of it, the
man knows my ways: I must keep him. But my
old wine-merchant civil man, never dunned is
a bankrupt. I am under great obligations to him,
and he has a very pretty daughter. Do you think
you could thrust him into some small place in the Colonies,
or make him a King’s Messenger, or something
of the sort?”
“If you very much wish it, no doubt I can.”
“My dear Audley, I am but feeling
my way: the fact is, I want something for myself.”
“Ah, that indeed gives me pleasure!” cried
Egerton, with animation.
“The mission to Florence will
soon be vacant, I know it privately.
The place would quite suit me. Pleasant city;
the best figs in Italy; very little to do. You
could sound Lord on the subject.”
“I will answer beforehand.
Lord would be enchanted to secure to the
public service a man so accomplished as yourself, and
the son of a peer like Lord Lansmere.”
Harley L’Estrange sprang to
his feet, and flung his cigar in the face of a stately
policeman who was looking up at the balcony.
“Infamous and bloodless official!”
cried Harley L’Estrange; “so you could
provide for a pimple-nosed lackey, for a wine-merchant
who has been poisoning the king’s subjects with
white lead, or sloe-juice, for
an idle sybarite, who would complain of a crumpled
rose-leaf; and nothing, in all the vast patronage
of England, for a broken-down soldier, whose dauntless
breast was her rampart?”
“Harley,” said the member
of parliament, with his calm, sensible smile, “this
would be a very good claptrap at a small theatre; but
there is nothing in which parliament demands such
rigid economy as the military branch of the public
service; and no man for whom it is so hard to effect
what we must plainly call a job as a subaltern officer
who has done nothing more than his duty, and
all military men do that. Still, as you take
it so earnestly, I will use what interest I can at
the War Office, and get him, perhaps, the mastership
of a barrack.”
“You had better; for, if you
do not, I swear I will turn Radical, and come down
to your own city to oppose you, with Hunt and Cobbett
to canvass for me.”
“I should be very glad to see
you come into parliament, even as a Radical, and at
my expense,” said Audley, with great kindness;
“but the air is growing cold, and you are not
accustomed to our climate. Nay, if you are too
poetic for catarrhs and rheums, I’m not, come
in.”
CHAPTER VI.
Lord L’Estrange threw himself
on a sofa, and leaned his cheek on his hand thoughtfully.
Audley Egerton sat near him, with his arms folded,
and gazed on his friend’s face with a soft expression
of aspect, which was very unusual to the firm outline
of his handsome features. The two men were as
dissimilar in person as the reader will have divined
that they were in character. All about Egerton
was so rigid, all about L’Estrange so easy.
In every posture of Harley’s there was the unconscious
grace of a child. The very fashion of his garments
showed his abhorrence of restraint. His clothes
were wide and loose; his neckcloth, tied carelessly,
left his throat half bare. You could see that
he had lived much in warm and southern lands, and contracted
a contempt for conventionalities; there was as little
in his dress as in his talk of the formal precision
of the North. He was three or four years younger
than Audley, but he looked at least twelve years younger.
In fact, he was one of those men to whom old age seems
impossible; voice, look, figure, had all the charm
of youth: and perhaps it was from this gracious
youthfulness at all events, it was characteristic
of the kind of love he inspired that neither
his parents, nor the few friends admitted into his
intimacy, ever called him, in their habitual intercourse,
by the name of his title. He was not L’Estrange
with them, he was Harley; and by that familiar baptismal
I will usually designate him. He was not one
of those men whom author or reader wish to view at
a distance, and remember as “my Lord” it
was so rarely that he remembered it himself.
For the rest, it had been said of him by a shrewd wit,
“He is so natural that every one calls him affected.”
Harley L’Estrange was not so critically handsome
as Audley Egerton; to a commonplace observer, he was
only rather good-looking than otherwise. But women
said that he had “a beautiful countenance,”
and they were not wrong. He wore his hair, which
was of a fair chestnut, long, and in loose curls;
and instead of the Englishman’s whiskers, indulged
in the foreigner’s mustache. His complexion
was delicate, though not effeminate: it was rather
the delicacy of a student than of a woman. But
in his clear gray eye there was a wonderful vigour
of life. A skilful physiologist, looking only
into that eye, would have recognized rare stamina of
constitution, a nature so rich that, while
easily disturbed, it would require all the effects
of time, or all the fell combinations of passion and
grief, to exhaust it. Even now, though so thoughtful,
and even so sad, the rays of that eye were as concentrated
and steadfast as the light of the diamond.
“You were only, then, in jest,”
said Audley, after a long silence, “when you
spoke of this mission to Florence. You have still
no idea of entering into public life?”
“None.”
“I had hoped better things when
I got your promise to pass one season in London; but,
indeed, you have kept your promise to the ear to break
it to the spirit. I could not presuppose that
you would shun all society, and be as much of a hermit
here as under the vines of Como.”
“I have sat in the Strangers’
Gallery, and heard your great speakers; I have been
in the pit of the opera, and seen your fine ladies;
I have walked your streets; I have lounged in your
parks, and I say that I can’t fall in love with
a faded dowager, because she fills up her wrinkles
with rouge.”
“Of what dowager do you speak?”
asked the matter-of-fact Audley.
“She has a great many titles.
Some people call her Fashion, you busy men, Politics:
it is all one, tricked out and artificial.
I mean London Life. No, I can’t fall in
love with her, fawning old harridan!”
“I wish you could fall in love with something.”
“I wish I could, with all my heart.”
“But you are so blaze.”
“On the contrary, I am so fresh.
Look out of the window what do you see?”
“Nothing!”
“Nothing?”
“Nothing but houses and dusty
lilacs, my coachman dozing on his box, and two women
in pattens crossing the kennel.”
“I see not those where I lie
on the sofa. I see but the stars. And I
feel for them as I did when I was a schoolboy at Eton.
It is you who are blaze, not I. Enough of this.
You do not forget my commission with respect to the
exile who has married into your brother’s family?”
“No; but here you set me a task
more difficult than that of saddling your cornet on
the War Office.”
“I know it is difficult, for
the counter influence is vigilant and strong; but,
on the other hand, the enemy is so damnable a traitor
that one must have the Fates and the household gods
on one’s side.”
“Nevertheless,” said the
practical Audley, bending over a book on the table;
“I think that the best plan would be to attempt
a compromise with the traitor.”
“To judge of others by myself,”
answered Harley, with spirit, “it were less
bitter to put up with wrong than to palter with it
for compensation. And such wrong! Compromise
with the open foe that maybe done with
honour; but with the perjured friend that
were to forgive the perjury!”
“You are too vindictive,”
said Egerton; “there may be excuses for the
friend, which palliate even ”
“Hush! Audley, hush! or
I shall think the world has indeed corrupted you.
Excuse for the friend who deceives, who betrays!
No, such is the true outlaw of Humanity; and the Furies
surround him even while he sleeps in the temple.”
The man of the world lifted his eyes
slowly on the animated face of one still natural enough
for the passions. He then once more returned to
his book, and said, after a pause, “It is time
you should marry, Harley.”
“No,” answered L’Estrange,
with a smile at this sudden turn in the conversation,
“not time yet; for my chief objection to that
change in life is, that the women nowadays are too
old for me, or I am too young for them. A few,
indeed, are so infantine that one is ashamed to be
their toy; but most are so knowing that one is afraid
to be their dupe. The first, if they condescend
to love you, love you as the biggest doll they have
yet dandled, and for a doll’s good qualities, your
pretty blue eyes and your exquisite millinery.
The last, if they prudently accept you, do so on algebraical
principles; you are but the X or the Y that represents
a certain aggregate of goods matrimonial, pedigree,
title, rent-roll, diamonds, pin-money, opera-box.
They cast you up with the help of mamma, and you wake
some morning to find that plus wife minus affection
equals the Devil!”
“Nonsense,” said Audley,
with his quiet, grave laugh. “I grant that
it is often the misfortune of a man in your station
to be married rather for what he has than for what
he is; but you are tolerably penetrating, and not
likely to be deceived in the character of the woman
you court.”
“Of the woman I court? No!
But of the woman I marry, very likely indeed!
Woman is a changeable thing, as our Virgil informed
us at school; but her change par excellence is from
the fairy you woo to the brownie you wed. It
is not that she has been a hypocrite, it
is that she is a transmigration. You marry a
girl for her accomplishments. She paints charmingly,
or plays like Saint Cecilia. Clap a ring on her
finger, and she never draws again, except
perhaps your caricature on the back of a letter, and
never opens a piano after the honeymoon. You
marry her for her sweet temper; and next year, her
nerves are so shattered that you can’t contradict
her but you are whirled into a storm of hysterics.
You marry her because she declares she hates balls
and likes quiet; and ten to one but what she becomes
a patroness at Almack’s, or a lady-in-waiting.”
“Yet most men marry, and most men survive the
operation.”
“If it were only necessary to
live, that would be a consolatory and encouraging
reflection. But to live with peace, to live with
dignity, to live with freedom, to live in harmony
with your thoughts, your habits, your aspirations and
this in the perpetual companionship of a person to
whom you have given the power to wound your peace,
to assail your dignity, to cripple your freedom, to
jar on each thought and each habit, and bring you
down to the meanest details of earth, when you invite
her, poor soul, to soar to the spheres that
makes the To Be or Not To Be, which is the question.”
“If I were you, Harley, I would
do as I have heard the author of ‘Sandford and
Merton’ did, choose out a child and
educate her yourself, after your own heart.”
“You have hit it,” answered
Harley, seriously. “That has long been my
idea, a very vague one, I confess.
But I fear I shall be an old man before I find even
the child.”
“Ah!” he continued, yet
more earnestly, while the whole character of his varying
countenance changed again, “ah, if
indeed I could discover what I seek, one
who, with the heart of a child, has the mind of a woman;
one who beholds in nature the variety, the charm, the
never feverish, ever healthful excitement that others
vainly seek in the bastard sentimentalities of a life
false with artificial forms; one who can comprehend,
as by intuition, the rich poetry with which creation
is clothed, poetry so clear to the child
when enraptured with the flower, or when wondering
at the star! If on me such exquisite companionship
were bestowed why, then ”
He paused, sighed deeply, and, covering his face with
his hand, resumed, in faltering accents,
“But once but once
only, did such vision of the Beautiful made Human
rise before me, rise amidst ‘golden
exhalations of the dawn.’ It beggared my
life in vanishing. You know only you
only how how ”
He bowed his head, and the tears forced
themselves through his clenched fingers.
“So long ago!” said Audley,
sharing his friend’s emotion. “Years
so long and so weary, yet still thus tenacious of
a mere boyish memory!”
“Away with it, then!”
cried Harley, springing to his feet, and with a laugh
of strange merriment. “Your carriage still
waits: set me home before you go to the House.”
Then laying his hand lightly on his
friend’s shoulder, he said, “Is it for
you, Audley Egerton, to speak sneeringly of boyish
memories? What else is it that binds us together?
What else warms my heart when I meet you? What
else draws your thoughts from blue-books and beer-bills
to waste them on a vagrant like me? Shake hands.
Oh, friend of my boyhood! recollect the oars that
we plied and the bats that we wielded in the old time,
or the murmured talk on the moss-grown bank, as we
sat together, building in the summer air castles mightier
than Windsor. Ah, they are strong ties, those
boyish memories believe me! I remember, as if
it were yesterday, my translation of that lovely passage
in Persius, beginning let me see ah!
“’Quum
primum pavido custos mihi purpura cernet,’
that passage on friendship which gushes
out so livingly from the stern heart of the satirist.
And when old complimented me on my verses,
my eye sought yours. Verily, I now say as then,
“‘Nescio
quod, certe est quod me tibi temperet
astrum.’”
["What was the star
I know not, but certainly some star
it was that attuned
me unto thee.”]
Audley turned away his head as he
returned the grasp of his friend’s hand; and
while Harley, with his light elastic footstep, descended
the stairs, Egerton lingered behind, and there was
no trace of the worldly man upon his countenance when
he took his place in the carriage by his companion’s
side.
Two hours afterwards, weary cries
of “Question, question!” “Divide,
divide!” sank into reluctant silence as Audley
Egerton rose to conclude the debate, the
man of men to speak late at night, and to impatient
benches: a man who would be heard; whom a Bedlam
broke loose would not have roared down; with a voice
clear and sound as a bell, and a form as firmly set
on the ground as a church-tower. And while, on
the dullest of dull questions, Audley Egerton thus,
not too lively himself, enforced attention, where
was Harley L’Estrange? Standing alone by
the river at Richmond, and murmuring low fantastic
thoughts as he gazed on the moonlit tide.
When Audley left him at home he had
joined his parents, made them gay with his careless
gayety, seen the old-fashioned folks retire to rest,
and then while they, perhaps, deemed him
once more the hero of ball-rooms and the cynosure
of clubs he drove slowly through the soft
summer night, amidst the perfumes of many a garden
and many a gleaming chestnut grove, with no other
aim before him than to reach the loveliest margin
of England’s loveliest river, at the hour when
the moon was fullest and the song of the nightingale
most sweet. And so eccentric a humourist was
this man, that I believe, as he there loitered, no
one near to cry “How affected!” or “How
romantic!” he enjoyed himself more
than if he had been exchanging the politest “how-d’ye-dos”
in the hottest of London drawing-rooms, or betting
his hundreds on the odd trick, with Lord de R------
for his partner.
CHAPTER VII.
Leonard had been about six weeks with
his uncle, and those weeks were well spent. Mr.
Richard had taken him to his counting-house, and initiated
him into business and the mysteries of double entry;
and in return for the young man’s readiness
and zeal in matters which the acute trader instinctively
felt were not exactly to his tastes, Richard engaged
the best master the town afforded to read with his
nephew in the evening. This gentleman was the
head usher of a large school, who had his hours to
himself after eight o’clock, and was pleased
to vary the dull routine of enforced lessons by instructions
to a pupil who took delightedly even to the Latin
grammar. Leonard made rapid strides, and learned
more in those six weeks than many a cleverish boy does
in twice as many months. These hours which Leonard
devoted to study Richard usually spent from home, sometimes
at the houses of his grand acquaintances in the Abbey
Gardens, sometimes in the Reading-Room appropriated
to those aristocrats. If he stayed at home, it
was in company with his head clerk, and for the purpose
of checking his account-books, or looking over the
names of doubtful electors.
Leonard had naturally wished to communicate
his altered prospects to his old friends, that they,
in turn, might rejoice his mother with such good tidings.
But he had not been two days in the house before Richard
had strictly forbidden all such correspondence.
“Look you,” said he, “at
present we are on an experiment, we must
see if we like each other. Suppose we don’t,
you will only have raised expectations in your mother
which must end in bitter disappointment; and suppose
we do, it will be time enough to write when something
definite is settled.”
“But my mother will be so anxious ”
“Make your mind easy on that
score. I will write regularly to Mr. Dale, and
he can tell her that you are well and thriving.
No more words, my man, when I say a thing,
I say it.” Then, observing that Leonard
looked blank and dissatisfied, Richard added, with
a good-humoured smile, “I have my reasons for
all this you shall know them later.
And I tell you what: if you do as I bid you,
it is my intention to settle something handsome on
your mother; but if you don’t, devil a penny
she’ll get from me.”
With that Richard turned on his heel,
and in a few moments his voice was heard loud in objurgation
with some of his people.
About the fourth week of Leonard’s
residence at Mr. Avenel’s, his host began to
evince a certain change of manner. He was no longer
quite so cordial with Leonard, nor did he take the
same interest in his progress. About the same
period he was frequently caught by the London butler
before the looking-glass. He had always been a
smart man in his dress, but he was now more particular.
He would spoil three white cravats when he went out
of an evening, before he could satisfy himself as to
the tie. He also bought a ‘Peerage,’
and it became his favourite study at odd quarters
of an hour. All these symptoms proceeded from
a cause, and that cause was woman.
CHAPTER VIII.
The first people at Screwstown were
indisputably the Pompleys. Colonel Pompley was
grand, but Mrs. Pompley was grander. The colonel
was stately in right of his military rank and his
services in India; Mrs. Pompley was majestic in right
of her connections. Indeed, Colonel Pompley himself
would have been crushed under the weight of the dignities
which his lady heaped upon him, if he had not been
enabled to prop his position with a “connection”
of his own. He would never have held his own,
nor been permitted to have an independent opinion on
matters aristocratic, but for the well-sounding name
of his relations, “the Digbies.”
Perhaps on the principle that obscurity increases the
natural size of objects and is an element of the sublime,
the colonel did not too accurately define his relations
“the Digbies:” he let it be casually
understood that they were the Digbies to be found in
Debrett. But if some indiscreet Vulgarian (a
favourite word with both the Pompleys) asked point-blank
if he meant “my Lord Digby,” the colonel,
with a lofty air, answered, “The elder branch,
sir.” No one at Screwstown had ever seen
these Digbies: they lay amidst the Far, the Recondite, even
to the wife of Colonel Pompley’s bosom.
Now and then, when the colonel referred to the lapse
of years, and the uncertainty of human affections,
he would say, “When young Digby and I were boys
together,” and then add with a sigh, “but
we shall never meet again in this world. His family
interests secured him a valuable appointment in a
distant part of the British dominions.”
Mrs. Pompley was always rather cowed by the Digbies.
She could not be sceptical as to this connection,
for the colonel’s mother was certainly a Digby,
and the colonel impaled the Digby arms. En revanche,
as the French say, for these marital connections, Mrs.
Pompley had her own favourite affinity, which she
specially selected from all others when she most desired
to produce effect; nay, even upon ordinary occasions
the name rose spontaneously to her lips, the
name of the Honourable Mrs. M’Catchley.
Was the fashion of a gown or cap admired, her cousin,
Mrs. M’Catchley, had just sent to her the pattern
from Paris. Was it a question whether the Ministry
would stand, Mrs. M’Catchley was in the secret,
but Mrs. Pompley had been requested not to say.
Did it freeze, “My cousin, Mrs. M’Catchley,
had written word that the icebergs at the Pole were
supposed to be coming this way.” Did the
sun glow with more than usual fervour, Mrs. M’Catchley
had informed her “that it was Sir Henry Halford’s
decided opinion that it was on account of the cholera.”
The good people knew all that was doing at London,
at court, in this world nay, almost in
the other through the medium of the Honourable
Mrs. M’Catchley. Mrs. M’Catchley was,
moreover, the most elegant of women, the wittiest
creature, the dearest. King George the Fourth
had presumed to admire Mrs. M’Catehley; but Mrs.
M’Catchley, though no prude, let him see that
she was proof against the corruptions of a throne.
So long had the ears of Mrs. Pompley’s friends
been filled with the renown of Mrs. M’Catchley,
that at last Mrs. M’Catchley was secretly supposed
to be a myth, a creature of the elements, a poetic
fiction of Mrs. Pompley’s. Richard Avenel,
however, though by no means a credulous man, was an
implicit believer in Mrs. M’Catchley. He
had learned that she was a widow, and honourable by
birth, and honourable by marriage, living on her handsome
jointure, and refusing offers every day that she so
lived. Somehow or other, whenever Richard Avenel
thought of a wife, he thought of the Honourable Mrs.
M’Catchley. Perhaps that romantic attachment
to the fair invisible preserved him heart-whole amongst
the temptations of Screwstown. Suddenly, to the
astonishment of the Abbey Gardens, Mrs. M’Catchley
proved her identity, and arrived at Colonel Pompley’s
in a handsome travelling-carriage, attended by her
maid and footman. She had come to stay some weeks;
a tea-party was given in her honour. Mr. Avenel
and his nephew were invited. Colonel Pompley,
who kept his head clear in the midst of the greatest
excitement, had a desire to get from the Corporation
a lease of a piece of ground adjoining his garden,
and he no sooner saw Richard Avenel enter than he
caught him by the button, and drew him into a quiet
corner, in order to secure his interest. Leonard,
meanwhile, was borne on by the stream, till his progress
was arrested by a sofa-table at which sat Mrs. M’Catchley
herself, with Mrs. Pompley by her side. For on
this great occasion the hostess had abandoned her
proper post at the entrance, and, whether to show
her respect to Mrs. M’Catchley, or to show Mrs.
M’Catchley her well-bred contempt for the people
of Screwstown, remained in state by her friend, honouring
only the elite of the town with introductions to the
illustrious visitor.
Mrs. M’Catchley was a very fine
woman, a woman who justified Mrs. Pompley’s
pride in her. Her cheek-bones were rather high,
it is true but that proved the purity of her Caledonian
descent; for the rest, she had a brilliant complexion,
heightened by a soupçon of rouge, good eyes and
teeth, a showy figure, and all the ladies of Screwstown
pronounced her dress to be perfect. She might
have arrived at that age at which one intends to stop
for the next ten years, but even a Frenchman would
not have called her passee, that is,
for a widow. For a spinster it would have been
different.
Looking round her with a glass, which
Mrs. Pompley was in the habit of declaring that “Mrs.
M’Catchley used like an angel,” this lady
suddenly perceived Leonard Fairfield; and his quiet,
simple, thoughtful air and look so contrasted with
the stiff beaux to whom she had been presented, that,
experienced in fashion as so fine a personage must
be supposed to be, she was nevertheless deceived into
whispering to Mrs. Pompley,
“That young man has really an air distingue;
who is he?”
“Oh,” said Mrs. Pompley,
in unaffected surprise, “that is the nephew of
the rich Vulgarian I was telling you of this morning.”
“Ah! and you say that he is Mr. Arundel’s
heir?”
“Avenel not Arundel my
sweet friend.”
“Avenel is not a bad name,”
said Mrs. M’Catchley. “But is the
uncle really so rich?”
“The colonel was trying this
very day to guess what he is worth; but he says it
is impossible to guess it.”
“And the young man is his heir?”
“It is thought so; and reading
for College, I hear. They say he is clever.”
“Present him, my love; I like
clever people,” said Mrs. M’Catchley,
falling back languidly.
About ten minutes afterwards, Richard
Avenel having effected his escape from the colonel,
and his gaze being attracted towards the sofa-table
by the buzz of the admiring crowd, beheld his nephew
in animated conversation with the long cherished idol
of his dreams. A fierce pang of jealousy shot
through his breast. His nephew had never looked
so handsome and so intelligent; in fact, poor Leonard
had never before been drawn out by a woman of the
world, who had learned how to make the most of what
little she knew. And as jealousy operates like
a pair of bellows on incipient flames, so, at first
sight of the smile which the fair widow bestowed upon
Leonard, the heart of Mr. Avenel felt in a blaze.
He approached with a step less assured
than usual, and, overhearing Leonard’s talk,
marvelled much at the boy’s audacity. Mrs.
M’Catchley had been speaking of Scotland and
the Waverley Novels, about which Leonard knew nothing.
But he knew Burns, and on Burns he grew artlessly
eloquent. Burns the poet and peasant Leonard
might well be eloquent on him. Mrs. M’Catchley
was amused and pleased with his freshness and naïveté,
so unlike anything she had ever heard or seen, and
she drew him on and on till Leonard fell to quoting.
And Richard heard, with less respect for the sentiment
than might be supposed, that
“Rank
is but the guinea’s stamp,
The
man’s the gowd for a’ that.”
“Well!” exclaimed Mr.
Avenel. “Pretty piece of politeness to tell
that to a lady like the Honourable Mrs. M’Catch
ley! You’ll excuse him, ma’am.”
“Sir!” said Mrs. M’Catchley,
startled, and lifting her glass. Leonard, rather
confused, rose and offered his chair to Richard, who
dropped into it. The lady, without waiting for
formal introduction, guessed that she saw the rich
uncle. “Such a sweet poet-Burns!”
said she, dropping her glass. “And it is
so refreshing to find so much youthful enthusiasm,”
she added, pointing her fan towards Leonard, who was
receding fast among the crowd.
“Well, he is youthful, my nephew, rather
green!”
“Don’t say green!”
said Mrs. M’Catchley. Richard blushed scarlet.
He was afraid he had committed himself to some expression
low and shocking. The lady resumed, “Say
unsophisticated.”
“A tarnation long word,”
thought Richard; but he prudently bowed and held his
tongue.
“Young men nowadays,”
continued Mrs. M’Catchley, resettling herself
on the sofa, “affect to be so old. They
don’t dance, and they don’t read, and
they don’t talk much! and a great many of them
wear toupets before they are two-and-twenty!”
Richard mechanically passed his hand
through his thick curls. But he was still mute;
he was still ruefully chewing the cud of the epithet
“green.” What occult horrid meaning
did the word convey to ears polite? Why should
he not say “green”?
“A very fine young man your
nephew, sir,” resumed Mrs. M’ Catchley.
Richard grunted.
“And seems full of talent.
Not yet at the University? Will he go to Oxford
or Cambridge?”
“I have not made up my mind
yet if I shall send him to the University at all.”
“A young man of his expectations!”
exclaimed Mrs. M’Catchley, artfully.
“Expectations!” repeated
Richard, firing up. “Has he been talking
to you of his expectations?”
“No, indeed, sir. But the
nephew of the rich Mr. Avenel! Ah, one hears
a great deal, you know, of rich people; it is the penalty
of wealth, Mr. Avenel!”
Richard was very much flattered. His crest rose.
“And they say,” continued
Mrs. M’Catchley, dropping out her words very
slowly, as she adjusted her blonde scarf, “that
Mr. Avenel has resolved not to marry.”
“The devil they do, ma’am!”
bolted out Richard, gruffly; and then, ashamed of
his lapsus linguae, screwed up his lips firmly, and
glared on the company with an eye of indignant fire.
Mrs. M’Catchley observed him
over her fan. Richard turned abruptly, and she
withdrew her eyes modestly, and raised the fan.
“She’s a real beauty,”
said Richard, between his teeth. The fan fluttered.
Five minutes afterwards, the widow
and the bachelor seemed so much at their ease that
Mrs. Pompley, who had been forced to leave her friend,
in order to receive the dean’s lady, could scarcely
believe her eyes when she returned to the sofa.
Now, it was from that evening that
Mr. Richard Avenel exhibited the change of mood which
I have described; and from that evening he abstained
from taking Leonard with him to any of the parties
in the Abbey Gardens.
CHAPTER IX.
Some days after this memorable soiree,
Colonel Pompley sat alone in his study (which opened
pleasantly on an old-fashioned garden), absorbed in
the house bills. For Colonel Pompley did not leave
that domestic care to his lady, perhaps
she was too grand for it. Colonel Pompley with
his own sonorous voice ordered the joints, and with
his own heroic hands dispensed the stores. In
justice to the colonel, I must add at whatever
risk of offence to the fair sex that there
was not a house at Screwstown so well managed as the
Pompleys’; none which so successfully achieved
the difficult art of uniting economy with show.
I should despair of conveying to you an idea of the
extent to which Colonel Pompley made his income go.
It was but seven hundred a year; and many a family
contrived to do less upon three thousand. To be
sure, the Pompleys had no children to sponge upon
them. What they had they spent all on themselves.
Neither, if the Pompleys never exceeded their income,
did they pretend to live much within it. The two
ends of the year met at Christmas, just
met, and no more.
Colonel Pompley sat at his desk.
He was in his well-brushed blue coat, buttoned across
his breast, his gray trousers fitted tight to his limbs,
and fastened under his boots with a link chain.
He saved a great deal of money in straps. No
one ever saw Colonel Pompley in dressing-gown and
slippers. He and his house were alike in order always
fit to be seen
“From
morn to noon, from noon to dewy eve.”
The colonel was a short compact man,
inclined to be stout, with a very red face,
that seemed not only shaved, but rasped. He wore
his hair cropped close, except just in front, where
it formed what the hairdresser called a feather, but
it seemed a feather of iron, so stiff and so strong
was it. Firmness and precision were emphatically
marked on the colonel’s countenance. There
was a resolute strain on his features, as if he was
always employed in making the two ends meet!
So he sat before his house-book, with
his steel-pen in his hand, and making crosses here
and notes of interrogation there.
“Mrs. M’Catchley’s
maid,” said the colonel to himself, “must
be put upon rations. The tea that she drinks!
Good heavens! tea again!”
There was a modest ring at the outer
door. “Too early for a visitor!”
thought the colonel. “Perhaps it is the
water-rates.”
The neat man-servant never
seen beyond the offices, save in grande ténue,
plushed and powdered-entered and bowed. “A
gentleman, sir, wishes to see you.”
“A gentleman,” repeated
the colonel, glancing towards the clock. “Are
you sure it is a gentleman?”
The man hesitated. “Why,
sir, I ben’t exactly sure; but he speaks like
a gentleman. He do say he comes from London to
see you, sir.”
A long and interesting correspondence
was then being held between the colonel and one of
his wife’s trustees touching the investment of
Mrs. Pompley’s fortune. It might be the
trustee, nay, it must be. The trustee
had talked of running down to see him.
“Let him come in,” said
the colonel, “and when I ring sandwiches
and sherry.”
“Beef, sir?”
“Ham.”
The colonel put aside his house-book,
and wiped his pen. In another minute the door
opened and the servant announced
“Mr. Digby.”
The colonel’s face fell, and he staggered back.
The door closed, and Mr. Digby stood
in the middle of the room, leaning on the great writing-table
for support. The poor soldier looked sicklier
and shabbier, and nearer the end of all things in life
and fortune, than when Lord L’Estrange had thrust
the pocket-book into his hands. But still the
servant showed knowledge of the world in calling him
gentleman; there was no other word to apply to him.
“Sir,” began Colonel Pompley,
recovering himself, and with great solemnity, “I
did not expect this pleasure.”
The poor visitor stared round him
dizzily, and sank into a chair, breathing hard.
The colonel looked as a man only looks upon a poor
relation, and buttoned up first one trouser pocket
and then the other.
“I thought you were in Canada,”
said the colonel, at last. Mr. Digby had now
got breath to speak, and he said meekly, “The
climate would have killed my child, and it is two
years since I returned.”
“You ought to have found a very
good place in England to make it worth your while
to leave Canada.”
“She could not have lived through
another winter in Canada, the doctor said
so.”
“Pooh,” quoth the colonel.
Mr. Digby drew a long breath.
“I would not come to you, Colonel Pompley, while
you could think that I came as a beggar for myself.”
The colonel’s brow relaxed.
“A very honourable sentiment, Mr. Digby.”
“No: I have gone through
a great deal; but you see, Colonel,” added the
poor relation, with a faint smile, “the campaign
is well-nigh over, and peace is at hand.”
The colonel seemed touched.
“Don’t talk so, Digby, I
don’t like it. You are younger than I am nothing
more disagreeable than these gloomy views of things.
You have got enough to live upon, you say, at
least so I understand you. I am very glad to
hear it; and, indeed, I could not assist you so
many claims on me. So it is all very well, Digby.”
“Oh, Colonel Pompley,”
cried the soldier, clasping his hands, and with feverish
energy, “I am a suppliant, not for myself, but
my child! I have but one, only one,
a girl. She has been so good to me! She will
cost you little. Take her when I die; promise
her a shelter, a home. I ask no more. You
are my nearest relative. I have no other to look
to. You have no children of your own. She
will be a blessing to you, as she has been all upon
earth to me!”
If Colonel Pompley’s face was
red in ordinary hours, no epithet sufficiently rubicund
or sanguineous can express its colour at this appeal.
“The man’s mad,” he said, at last,
with a tone of astonishment that almost concealed
his wrath, “stark mad! I take
his child! lodge and board a great, positive,
hungry child! Why, sir, many and many a time
have I said to Mrs. Pompley, ’’T is a mercy
we have no children. We could never live in this
style if we had children, never make both
ends meet.’ Child the most expensive,
ravenous, ruinous thing in the world a
child.”
“She has been accustomed to
starve,” said Mr. Digby, plaintively. “Oh,
Colonel, let me see your wife. Her heart I can
touch, she is a woman.”
Unlucky father! A more untoward,
unseasonable request the Fates could not have put
into his lips.
Mrs. Pompley see the Digbies!
Mrs. Pompley learn the condition of the colonel’s
grand connections! The colonel would never have
been his own man again. At the bare idea, he
felt as if he could have sunk into the earth with
shame. In his alarm he made a stride to the door,
with the intention of locking it. Good heavens,
if Mrs. Pompley should come in! And the man,
too, had been announced by name. Mrs. Pompley
might have learned already that a Digby was with her
husband, she might be actually dressing
to receive him worthily; there was not a moment to
lose.
The colonel exploded. “Sir,
I wonder at your impudence. See Mrs. Pompley!
Hush, sir, hush! hold your tongue.
I have disowned your connection. I will not have
my wife a woman, sir, of the first family disgraced
by it. Yes; you need not fire up. John Pompley
is not a man to be bullied in his own house.
I say disgraced. Did not you run into debt, and
spend your fortune? Did not you marry a low creature, a
vulgarian, a tradesman’s daughter? and
your poor father such a respectable man, a
benefited clergyman! Did not you sell your commission?
Heaven knows what became of the money! Did not
you turn (I shudder to say it) a common stage-player,
sir? And then, when you were on your last legs,
did I not give you L200 out of my own purse to go
to Canada? And now here you are again, and
ask me, with a coolness that that takes
away my breath takes away-my breath, sir to
provide for the child you have thought proper to have, a
child whose connections on the mother’s side
are of the most abject and discreditable condition.
Leave my house, leave it! good heavens, sir, not that
way! this.” And the colonel opened
the glass-door that led into the garden. “I
will let you out this way. If Mrs. Pompley should
see you!” And with that thought the colonel absolutely
hooked his arm into his poor relation’s, and
hurried him into the garden.
Mr. Digby said not a word, but he
struggled ineffectually to escape from the colonel’s
arm; and his colour went and came, came and went, with
a quickness that showed that in those shrunken veins
there were still some drops of a soldier’s blood.
But the colonel had now reached a
little postern-door in the garden-wall. He opened
the latch, and thrust out his poor cousin. Then
looking down the lane, which was long, straight, and
narrow, and seeing it was quite solitary, his eye
fell upon the forlorn man, and remorse shot through
his heart. For a moment the hardest of all kinds
of avarice, that of the genteel, relaxed its gripe.
For a moment the most intolerant of all forms of pride,
that which is based upon false pretences, hushed its
voice, and the colonel hastily drew out his purse.
“There,” said he, “that is all I
can do for you. Do leave the town as quick as
you can, and don’t mention your name to any one.
Your father was such a respectable man, beneficed
clergyman!”
“And paid for your commission,
Mr. Pompley. My name! I am not ashamed of
it. But do not fear I shall claim your relationship.
No; I am ashamed of you!”
The poor cousin put aside the purse,
still stretched towards him, with a scornful hand,
and walked firmly down the lane. Colonel Pompley
stood irresolute. At that moment a window in
his house was thrown open. He heard the noise,
turned round, and saw his wife looking out.
Colonel Pompley sneaked back through
the shrubbery, hiding himself amongst the trees.
CHAPTER X.
“Ill-luck is a bêtise,”
said the great Cardinal Richelieu; and in the long
run, I fear, his Eminence was right. If you could
drop Dick Avenel and Mr. Digby in the middle of Oxford
Street, Dick in a fustian jacket, Digby
in a suit of superfine; Dick with five shillings in
his pocket, Digby with L1000, and if, at
the end of ten years, you looked up your two men,
Dick would be on his road to a fortune, Digby what
we have seen him! Yet Digby had no vice; he did
not drink nor gamble. What was he, then?
Helpless. He had been an only son, a
spoiled child, brought up as “a gentleman;”
that is, as a man who was not expected to be able
to turn his hand to anything. He entered, as we
have seen, a very expensive regiment, wherein he found
himself, at his father’s death, with L4000 and
the incapacity to say “No.” Not naturally
extravagant, but without an idea of the value of money, the
easiest, gentlest, best-tempered man whom example
ever led astray. This part of his career comprised
a very common history, the poor man living
on equal terms with the rich. Debt; recourse
to usurers; bills signed sometimes for others, renewed
at twenty per cent; the L4000 melted like snow; pathetic
appeal to relations; relations have children of their
own; small help given grudgingly, eked out by much
advice, and coupled with conditions. Amongst
the conditions there was a very proper and prudent
one, exchange into a less expensive regiment.
Exchange effected; peace; obscure country quarters;
ennui, flute-playing, and idleness. Mr. Digby
had no resources on a rainy day except flute-playing;
pretty girl of inferior rank; all the officers after
her; Digby smitten; pretty girl very virtuous; Digby
forms honourable intentions; excellent sentiments;
imprudent marriage. Digby falls in life; colonel’s
lady will not associate with Mrs. Digby; Digby cut
by his whole kith and kin; many disagreeable circumstances
in regimental life; Digby sells out; love in a cottage;
execution in ditto. Digby had been much applauded
as an amateur actor; thinks of the stage; genteel
comedy, a gentlemanlike profession.
Tries in a provincial town, under another name; unhappily
succeeds; life of an actor; hand-to-mouth life; illness;
chest affected; Digby’s voice becomes hoarse
and feeble; not aware of it; attributes failing success
to ignorant provincial public; appears in London; is
hissed; returns to the provinces; sinks into very small
parts; prison; despair; wife dies; appeal again to
relations; a subscription made to get rid of him;
send him out of the country; place in Canada, superintendent
to an estate, L150 a year; pursued by ill-luck; never
before fit for business, not fit now; honest as the
day, but keeps slovenly accounts; child cannot bear
the winter of Canada; Digby wrapped up in the child;
return home; mysterious life for two years; child
patient, thoughtful, loving; has learned to work; manages
for father; often supports him; constitution rapidly
breaking; thought of what will become of his child, worst
disease of all. Poor Digby! never did a base,
cruel, unkind thing in his life; and here he is, walking
down the lane from Colonel Pompley’s house!
Now, if Digby had but learned a little of the world’s
cunning, I think he would have succeeded even with
Colonel Pompley. Had he spent the L100 received
from Lord L’Estrange with a view to effect;
had he bestowed a fitting wardrobe on himself and
his pretty Helen; had he stopped at the last stage,
taken thence a smart chaise and pair, and presented
himself at Colonel Pompley’s in a way that would
not have discredited the colonel’s connection,
and then, instead of praying for home and shelter,
asked the colonel to become guardian to his child
in case of his death, I have a strong notion that
the colonel, in spite of his avarice, would have stretched
both ends so as to take in Helen Digby. But our
poor friend had no such arts. Indeed, of the
L100 he had already very little left, for before leaving
town he had committed what Sheridan considered the
extreme of extravagance, frittered away
his money in paying his debts; and as for dressing
up Helen and himself if that thought had
ever occurred to him, he would have rejected it as
foolish. He would have thought that the more
he showed his poverty, the more he would be pitied, the
worst mistake a poor cousin can commit. According
to Theophrastus, the partridge of Paphlagonia has
two hearts: so have most men; it is the common
mistake of the unlucky to knock at the wrong one.
CHAPTER XI.
Mr. Digby entered the room of the
inn in which he had left Helen. She was seated
by the window, and looking out wistfully on the narrow
street, perhaps at the children at play. There
had never been a playtime for Helen Digby.
She sprang forward as her father came
in. His coming was her holiday.
“We must go back to London,”
said Mr. Digby, sinking helplessly on the chair.
Then with his sort of sickly smile, for
he was bland even to his child, “Will
you kindly inquire when the first coach leaves?”
All the active cares of their careful
life devolved upon that quiet child. She kissed
her father, placed before him a cough mixture which
he had brought from London, and went out silently to
make the necessary inquiries, and prepare for the
journey back.
At eight o’clock the father
and child were seated in the night-coach, with one
other passenger, a man muffled up to the
chin. After the first mile the man let down one
of the windows. Though it was summer the air
was chill and raw. Digby shivered and coughed.
Helen placed her hand on the window,
and, leaning towards the passenger, whispered softly.
“Eh!” said the passenger,
“draw up the window? You have got your own
window; this is mine. Oxygen, young lady,”
he added solemnly, “oxygen is the breath of
life. Cott, child!” he continued with suppressed
choler, and a Welsh pronunciation, “Cott! let
us breathe and live.”
Helen was frightened, and recoiled.
Her father, who had not heard, or
had not heeded, this colloquy, retreated into the
corner, put up the collar of his coat, and coughed
again.
“It is cold, my dear,” said he, languidly,
to Helen.
The passenger caught the word, and
replied indignantly, but as if soliloquizing,
“Cold-ugh! I do believe
the English are the stuffiest people! Look at
their four-post beds all the curtains drawn,
shutters closed, board before the chimney not
a house with a ventilator! Cold-ugh!”
The window next Mr. Digby did not
fit well into its frame. “There is a sad
draught,” said the invalid.
Helen instantly occupied herself in
stopping up the chinks of the window with her handkerchief.
Mr. Digby glanced ruefully at the other window.
The look, which was very eloquent, aroused yet more
the traveller’s spleen.
“Pleasant!” said he.
“Cott! I suppose you will ask me to go outside
next! But people who travel in a coach should
know the law of a coach. I don’t interfere
with your window; you have no business to interfere
with mine.”
“Sir, I did not speak,” said Mr. Digby,
meekly.
“But Miss here did.”
“Ah, sir!” said Helen,
plaintively, “if you knew how Papa suffers!”
And her hand again moved towards the obnoxious window.
“No, my dear; the gentleman
is in his right,” said Mr. Digby; and, bowing
with his wonted suavity, he added, “Excuse her,
sir. She thinks a great deal too much of me.”
The passenger said nothing, and Helen
nestled closer to her father, and strove to screen
him from the air.
The passenger moved uneasily.
“Well,” said he, with a sort of snort,
“air is air, and right is right: but here
goes ” and he hastily drew up the
window.
Helen turned her face full towards
the passenger with a grateful expression, visible
even in the dim light.
“You are very kind, sir,”
said poor Mr. Digby; “I am ashamed to ”
his cough choked the rest of the sentence. The
passenger, who was a plethoric, sanguineous man, felt
as if he were stifling. But he took off his wrappers,
and resigned the oxygen like a hero.
Presently he drew nearer to the sufferer,
and laid hand on his wrist.
“You are feverish, I fear.
I am a medical man. St! one two.
Cott! you should not travel; you are not fit for it!”
Mr. Digby shook his head; he was too feeble to reply.
The passenger thrust his hand into
his coat-pocket, and drew out what seemed a cigar-case,
but what, in fact, was a leathern repertory, containing
a variety of minute phials.
From one of these phials he extracted
two tiny globules. “There,” said
he, “open your mouth, put those on the tip of
your tongue. They will lower the pulse, check
the fever. Be better presently, but should not
travel, want rest; you should be in bed. Aconite!
Henbane! hum! Your papa is of fair complexion, a
timid character, I should say; a horror
of work, perhaps. Eh, child?”
“Sir!” faltered Helen,
astonished and alarmed. Was the man a conjuror?
“A case for phosphor!”
cried the passenger: “that fool Browne would
have said arsenic. Don’t be persuaded to
take arsenic!”
“Arsenic, sir!” echoed
the mild Digby. “No: however unfortunate
a man may be, I think, sir, that suicide is tempting,
perhaps, but highly criminal.”
“Suicide,” said the passenger,
tranquilly, “suicide is my hobby!
You have no symptom of that kind, you say?”
“Good heavens! No, sir.”
“If ever you feel violently
impelled to drown yourself, take pulsatilla; but if
you feel a preference towards blowing out your brains,
accompanied with weight in the limbs, loss of appetite,
dry cough, and bad corns, sulphuret of antimony.
Don’t forget.”
Though poor Mr. Digby confusedly thought
that the gentleman was out of his mind, yet he tried
politely to say “that he was much obliged, and
would be sure to remember;” but his tongue failed
him, and his own ideas grew perplexed. His head
fell back heavily, and he sank into a silence which
seemed that of sleep.
The traveller looked hard at Helen,
as she gently drew her father’s head on her
shoulder, and there pillowed it with a tenderness which
was more that of a mother than child.
“Moral affections, soft, compassionate! a
good child and would go well with pulsatilla.”
Helen held up her finger, and glanced
from her father to the traveller, and then to her
father again.
“Certainly, pulsatilla!”
muttered the homoeopathist, and ensconcing himself
in his own corner, he also sought to sleep. But
after vain efforts, accompanied by restless gestures
and movements, he suddenly started up, and again extracted
his phial-book.
“What the deuce are they to
me?” he muttered. “Morbid sensibility
of character coffee? No! accompanied
by vivacity and violence nux!” He
brought his book to the window, contrived to read the
label on a pigmy bottle. “Nux! that’s
it,” he said, and he swallowed a globule!
“Now,” quoth he, after
a pause, “I don’t care a straw for the
misfortunes of other people; nay, I have half a mind
to let down the window.”
Helen looked up.
“But I’ll not,”
he added resolutely; and this time he fell fairly
asleep.
CHAPTER XII.
The coach stopped at eleven o’clock
to allow the passengers to sup. The homoeopathist
woke up, got out, gave himself a shake, and inhaled
the fresh air into his vigorous lungs with an evident
sensation of delight. He then turned and looked
into the coach.
“Let your father get out, my
dear,” said he, with a tone more gentle than
usual. “I should like to see him indoors, perhaps
I can do him good.”
But what was Helen’s terror
when she found that her father did not stir!
He was in a deep swoon, and still quite insensible
when they lifted him from the carriage. When
he recovered his senses his cough returned, and the
effort brought up blood.
It was impossible for him to proceed
farther. The homoeopathist assisted to undress
and put him into bed. And having administered
another of his mysterious globules, he inquired
of the landlady how far it was to the nearest doctor, for
the inn stood by itself in a small hamlet. There
was the parish apothecary three miles off. But
on hearing that the gentlefolks employed Dr. Dosewell,
and it was a good seven miles to his house, the homoeopathist
fetched a deep breath. The coach only stopped
a quarter of an hour.
“Cott!” said he, angrily,
to himself, “the nux was a failure. My
sensibility is chronic. I must go through a long
course to get rid of it. Hollo, guard! get out
my carpet-bag. I sha’n’t go on to-night.”
And the good man after a very slight
supper went upstairs again to the sufferer.
“Shall I send for Dr. Dosewell,
sir?” asked the landlady, stopping him at the
door.
“Hum! At what hour to-morrow
does the next coach to London pass?”
“Not before eight, sir.”
“Well, send for the doctor to
be here at seven. That leaves us at least some
hours free from allopathy and murder,” grunted
the disciple of Hahnemann, as he entered the room.
Whether it was the globule that the
homoeopathist had administered, or the effect of nature,
aided by repose, that checked the effusion of blood,
and restored some temporary strength to the poor sufferer,
is more than it becomes one not of the Faculty to
opine. But certainly Mr. Digby seemed better,
and he gradually fell into a profound sleep, but not
till the doctor had put his ear to his chest, tapped
it with his hand, and asked several questions; after
which the homoeopathist retired into a corner of the
room, and leaning his face on his hand seemed to meditate.
From his thoughts he was disturbed by a gentle touch.
Helen was kneeling at his feet. “Is he
very ill, very?” said she; and her fond wistful
eyes were fixed on the physician’s with all the
earnestness of despair.
“Your father is very ill,”
replied the doctor, after a short pause. “He
cannot move hence for some days at least. I am
going to London; shall I call on your relations, and
tell some of them to join you?”
“No, thank you, sir,”
answered Helen, colouring. “But do not fear;
I can nurse Papa. I think he has been worse before, that
is, he has complained more.”
The homeopathist rose, and took two
strides across the room; then he paused by the bed,
and listened to the breathing of the sleeping man.
He stole back to the child, who was
still kneeling, took her in his arms and kissed her.
“Tamn it,” said he, angrily, and putting
her down, “go to bed now, you are
not wanted any more.”
“Please, sir,” said Helen,
“I cannot leave him so. If he wakes he would
miss me.”
The doctor’s hand trembled;
he had recourse to his globules.
“Anxiety grief suppressed,”
muttered he. “Don’t you want to cry,
my dear? Cry, do!”
“I can’t,” murmured Helen.
“Pulsatilla!” said the
doctor, almost with triumph. “I said so
from the first. Open your mouth here!
Goodnight. My room is opposite, N; call me if he wakes.”
CHAPTER XIII.
At seven o’clock Dr. Dosewell
arrived, and was shown into the room of the homoeopathist,
who, already up and dressed, had visited his patient.
“My name is Morgan,” said
the homoeopathist; “I am a physician. I
leave in your hands a patient whom, I fear, neither
I nor you can restore. Come and look at him.”
The two doctors went into the sick-room.
Mr. Digby was very feeble, but he had recovered his
consciousness, and inclined his head courteously.
“I am sorry to cause so much
trouble,” said he. The homoeopathist drew
away Helen; the allopathist seated himself by the bedside
and put his questions, felt the pulse, sounded the
lungs, and looked at the tongue of the patient.
Helen’s eye was fixed on the strange doctor,
and her colour rose, and her eye sparkled when he
got up cheerfully, and said in a pleasant voice, “You
may have a little tea.”
“Tea!” growled the homeopathist, “barbarian!”
“He is better, then, sir?” said Helen,
creeping to the allopathist.
“Oh, yes, my dear, certainly; and
we shall do very well, I hope.”
The two doctors then withdrew.
“Last about a week!” said
Dr. Dosewell, smiling pleasantly, and showing a very
white set of teeth.
“I should have said a month;
but our systems are different,” replied Dr.
Morgan, dryly.
Dr. Dosewell (courteously). “We
country doctors bow to our metropolitan superiors;
what would you advise? You would venture, perhaps,
the experiment of bleeding.”
Dr. Morgan (spluttering
and growling Welsh, which he never did but in excitement). “Pleed!
Cott in heaven! do you think I am a putcher, an
executioner? Pleed! Never.”
Dr. Dosewell. “I
don’t find it answer, myself, when both lungs
are gone! But perhaps you are for inhaling?”
Dr. Morgan. “Fiddledee!”
Dr. Dosewell (with some
displeasure). “What would you advise,
then, in order to prolong our patient’s life
for a month?”
Dr. Morgan. “Give him Rhus!”
Dr. Dosewell. “Rhus, sir!
Rhus! I don’t know that medicine. Rhus!”
Dr. Morgan. “Rhus Toxicodendron.”
The length of the last word excited
Dr. Dosewell’s respect. A word of five
syllables, that was something like!
He bowed deferentially, but still looked puzzled.
At last he said, smiling frankly, “You great
London practitioners have so many new medicines:
may I ask what Rhus tóxico tóxico ”
“Dendron.”
“Is?”
“The juice of the upas, vulgarly
called the poison-tree.” Dr. Dosewell started.
“Upas poison-tree little
birds that come under the shade fall down dead!
You give upas juice in these desperate cases:
what’s the dose?”
Dr. Morgan grinned maliciously, and
produced a globule the size of a small pin’s
head.
Dr. Dosewell recoiled in disgust.
“Oh!” said he, very coldly,
and assuming at once an air of superb superiority,
“I see, a homoeopathist, sir!”
“A homoeopathist.”
“Um!”
“Um!”
“A strange system, Dr. Morgan,”
said Dr. Dosewell, recovering his cheerful smile,
but with a curl of contempt in it, “and would
soon do for the druggists.”
“Serve ’em right. The druggists soon
do for the patients.”
“Sir!”
“Sir!”
Dr. Dosewell (with dignity). “You
don’t know, perhaps, Dr. Morgan, that I am an
apothecary as well as a surgeon. In fact,”
he added, with a certain grand humility, “I
have not yet taken a diploma, and am but doctor by
courtesy.”
Dr. Morgan. “All
one, sir! Doctor signs the death-warrant, ’pothecary
does the deed!”
Dr. Dosewell (with a withering
sneer). “Certainly we don’t
profess to keep a dying man alive upon the juice of
the deadly upas-tree.”
Dr. Morgan (complacently). “Of
course you don’t. There are no poisons
with us. That’s just the difference between
you and me, Dr. Dosewell.”
Dr. Dosewell (pointing to
the homeopathist’s travelling pharmacopoeia,
and with affected candour). “Indeed,
I have always said that if you can do no good, you
can do no harm, with your infinitesimals.”
Dr. Morgan, who had been
obtuse to the insinuation of poisoning, fires up violently
at the charge of doing no harm. “You know
nothing about it! I could kill quite as many
people as you, if I chose it; but I don’t choose.”
Dr. Dosewell (shrugging
his shoulders). “Sir Sir! It
is no use arguing; the thing’s against common-sense.
In short, it is my firm belief that it is is
a complete ”
Dr. Morgan. “A complete
what?”
Dr. Dosewell (provoked to the utmost). “Humbug!”
Dr. Morgan. “Humbug!
Cott in heaven! You old ”
Dr. Dosewell. “Old what,
sir?”
Dr. Morgan (at home in a
series of alliteral vowels, which none but a Cymbrian
could have uttered without gasping). “Old
allopathical anthropophagite!”
Dr. Dosewell (starting up,
seizing by the back the chair on which he had sat,
and bringing it down violently on its four legs). “Sir!”
Dr. Morgan (imitating the action with his
own chair). “Sir!”
Dr. Dosewell. “You’re
abusive.”
Dr. Morgan. “You’re
impertinent.”
Dr. Dosewell. “Sir!”
Dr. Morgan. “Sir!”
The two rivals confronted each other.
They were both athletic men, and fiery
men. Dr. Dosewell was the taller, but Dr. Morgan
was the stouter. Dr. Dosewell on the mother’s
side was Irish; but Dr. Morgan on both sides was Welsh.
All things considered, I would have backed Dr. Morgan
if it had come to blows. But, luckily for the
honour of science, here the chambermaid knocked at
the door, and said, “The coach is coming, sir.”
Dr. Morgan recovered his temper and
his manners at that announcement. “Dr.
Dosewell,” said he, “I have been too hot, I
apologize.”
“Dr. Morgan,” answered
the allopathist, “I forgot myself. Your
hand, sir.”
Dr. Morgan. “We
are both devoted to humanity, though with different
opinions. We should respect each other.”
Dr. Dosewell. “Where
look for liberality, if men of science are illiberal
to their brethren?”
Dr. Morgan (aside). “The
old hypocrite! He would pound me in a mortar
if the law would let him.”
Dr. Dosewell (aside). “The
wretched charlatan! I should like to pound him
in a mortar.”
Dr. Morgan. “Good-by, my
esteemed and worthy brother.”
Dr. Dosewell. “My excellent
friend, good-by.”
Dr. Morgan (returning in
haste). “I forgot. I don’t
think our poor patient is very rich. I confide
him to your disinterested benevolence.”
(Hurries away.)
Dr. Dosewell (in a rage). “Seven
miles at six o’clock in the morning, and perhaps
done out of my fee! Quack! Villain!”
Meanwhile, Dr. Morgan had returned to the sick-room.
“I must wish you farewell,”
said he to poor Mr. Digby, who was languidly sipping
his tea. “But you are in the hands of a of
a gentleman in the profession.”
“You have been too kind, I
am shocked,” said Mr. Digby. “Helen,
where’s my purse?”
Dr. Morgan paused.
He paused, first, because it must
be owned that his practice was restricted, and a fee
gratified the vanity natural to unappreciated talent,
and had the charm of novelty, which is sweet to human
nature itself. Secondly, he was a man
“Who knew his
rights; and, knowing, dared maintain.”
He had resigned a coach fare, stayed
a night, and thought he had relieved his patient.
He had a right to his fee.
On the other hand, he paused, because,
though he had small practice, he was tolerably well
off, and did not care for money in itself, and he
suspected his patient to be no Croesus.
Meanwhile the purse was in Helen’s
hand. He took it from her, and saw but a few
sovereigns within the well-worn network. He drew
the child a little aside.
“Answer me, my dear, frankly, is
your papa rich? ” And he glanced at
the shabby clothes strewed on the chair and Helen’s
faded frock.
“Alas, no!” said Helen,
hanging her head. “Is that all you have?”
“All.”
“I am ashamed to offer you two
guineas,” said Mr. Digby’s hollow voice
from the bed.
“And I should be still more
ashamed to take them. Good by, sir. Come
here, my child. Keep your money, and don’t
waste it on the other doctor more than you can help.
His medicines can do your father no good. But
I suppose you must have some. He’s no physician,
therefore there’s no fee. He’ll send
a bill, it can’t be much. You
understand. And now, God bless you.”
Dr. Morgan was off. But, as he
paid the landlady his bill, he said considerately,
“The poor people upstairs can pay you, but not
that doctor, and he’s of no use.
Be kind to the little girl, and get the doctor to
tell his patient (quietly of course) to write to his
friends soon you understand.
Somebody must take charge of the poor child.
And stop hold your hand; take care these
globules for the little girl when her father
dies,” here the doctor muttered to
himself, “grief, aconite, and if
she cries too much afterwards, these (don’t
mistake). Tears, caustic!”
“Come, sir,” cried the coachman.
“Coming; tears, caustic,”
repeated the homoeopathist, pulling out his handkerchief
and his phial-book together as he got into the coach;
and he hastily swallowed his antilachrymal.
CHAPTER XIV.
Richard Avenel was in a state of great
nervous excitement. He proposed to give an entertainment
of a kind wholly new to the experience of Screwstown.
Mrs. M’Catchley had described with much eloquence
the Dejeunes dansants of her fashionable friends residing
in the elegant suburbs of Wimbledon and Fulham.
She declared that nothing was so agreeable. She
had even said point-blank to Mr. Avenel, “Why
don’t you give a Déjeune dansant?”
And, therewith, a Déjeune dansant Mr. Avenel
resolved to give.
The day was fixed, and Mr. Avenel
entered into all the requisite preparations, with
the energy of a man and the providence of a woman.
One morning as he stood musing on
the lawn, irresolute as to the best site for the tents,
Leonard came up to him with an open letter in his
hand.
“My dear uncle,” said he, softly.
“Ha!” exclaimed Mr. Avenel, with a start.
“Ha-well, what now?”
“I have just received a letter
from Mr. Dale. He tells me that my poor mother
is very restless and uneasy, because he cannot assure
her that he has heard from me; and his letter requires
an answer. Indeed I shall seem very ungrateful
to him to all if I do not write.”
Richard Avenel’s brows met.
He uttered an impatient “Pish!” and turned
away. Then coming back, he fixed his clear hawk-like
eye on Leonard’s ingenuous countenance, linked
his arm into his nephew’s, and drew him into
the shrubbery.
“Well, Leonard,” said
he, after a pause, “it is time that I should
give you some idea of my plans with regard to you.
You have seen my manner of living some
difference from what you ever saw before, I calculate!
Now I have given you, what no one gave me, a lift
in the world; and where I place you, there you must
help yourself.”
“Such is my duty and my desire,”
said Leonard, heartily. “Good. You
are a clever lad, and a genteel lad, and will do me
credit. I have had doubts of what is best for
you. At one time I thought of sending you to
college. That, I know; is Mr. Dale’s wish;
perhaps it is your own. But I have given up that
idea; I have something better for you. You have
a clear head for business, and are a capital arithmetician.
I think of bringing you up to superintend my business;
by and by I will admit you into partnership; and before
you are thirty you will be a rich man. Come,
does that suit you?”
“My dear uncle,” said
Leonard, frankly, but much touched by this generosity,
“it is not for me to have a choice. I should
have preferred going to college, because there I might
gain independence for myself and cease to be a burden
on you. Moreover, my heart moves me to studies
more congenial with the college than the counting-house.
But all this is nothing compared with my wish to be
of use to you, and to prove in any way, however feebly,
my gratitude for all your kindness.”
“You’re a good, grateful,
sensible lad,” exclaimed Richard, heartily;
“and believe me, though I’m a rough diamond,
I have your true interest at heart. You can be
of use to me, and in being so you will best serve
yourself. To tell you the truth, I have some idea
of changing my condition. There’s a lady
of fashion and quality who, I think, may condescend
to become Mrs. Avenel; and if so, I shall probably
reside a great part of the year in London. I
don’t want to give up my business. No other
investment will yield the same interest. But you
can soon learn to superintend it for me, as some day
or other I may retire, and then you can step in.
Once a member of our great commercial class, and with
your talents you may be anything, member
of parliament, and after that, minister of State,
for what I know. And my wife hem! that
is to be has great connections, and you
shall marry well; and oh, the Avenels will
hold their heads with the highest, after all!
Damn the aristocracy! we clever fellows will be the
aristocrats, eh?” Richard rubbed his hands.
Certainly, as we have seen, Leonard,
especially in his earlier steps to knowledge, had
repined at his position in the many degrees of life;
certainly he was still ambitious; certainly he could
not now have returned contentedly to the humble occupation
he had left; and woe to the young man who does not
hear with a quickened pulse and brightening eye words
that promise independence, and flatter with the hope
of distinction. Still, it was with all the reaction
of chill and mournful disappointment that Leonard,
a few hours after this dialogue with his uncle, found
himself alone in the fields, and pondering over the
prospects before him. He had set his heart upon
completing his intellectual education, upon developing
those powers within him which yearned for an arena
of literature, and revolted from the routine of trade.
But to his credit be it said, that
he vigorously resisted this natural disappointment,
and by degrees schooled himself to look cheerfully
on the path imposed on his duty, and sanctioned by
the manly sense that was at the core of his character.
I believe that this self-conquest
showed that the boy had true genius. The false
genius would have written sonnets and despaired.
But still, Richard Avenel left his
nephew sadly perplexed as to the knotty question from
which their talk on the future had diverged, namely,
should he write to the parson, and assure the fears
of his mother? How do so without Richard’s
consent, when Richard had on a former occasion so
imperiously declared that, if he did, it would lose
his mother all that Richard intended to settle on her?
While he was debating this matter with his conscience,
leaning against a stile that interrupted a path to
the town, Leonard Fairfield was startled by an exclamation.
He looked up, and beheld Mr. Sprott the tinker.
CHAPTER XV.
The tinker, blacker and grimmer than
ever, stared hard at the altered person of his old
acquaintance, and extended his sable fingers, as if
inclined to convince himself by the sense of touch
that it was Leonard in the flesh that he beheld, under
vestments so marvellously elegant and preternaturally
spruce.
Leonard shrank mechanically from the
contact, while in great surprise he faltered,
“You here, Mr. Sprott!
What could bring you so far from home?”
“’Ome!” echoed the
tinker, “I ’as no ‘ome! or rather,
d’ ye see, Muster Fairfilt, I makes myself at
‘ome verever I goes! Lor’ love ye!
I ben’t settled on no parridge. I wanders
here and I vanders there, and that’s my ’ome
verever I can mend my kettles and sell my tracks!”
So saying, the tinker slid his panniers
on the ground, gave a grunt of release and satisfaction,
and seated himself with great composure on the stile
from which Leonard had retreated.
“But, dash my wig,” resumed
Mr. Sprott, as he once more surveyed Leonard, “vy,
you bees a rale gentleman, now, surely! Vot’s
the dodge, eh?”
“Dodge!” repeated Leonard,
mechanically, “I don’t understand you.”
Then, thinking that it was neither necessary nor expedient
to keep up his acquaintance with Mr. Sprott, nor prudent
to expose himself to the battery of questions which
he foresaw that further parley would bring upon him,
he extended a crown-piece to the tinker; and saying,
with a half-smile, “You must excuse me for leaving
you I have business in the town; and do
me the favour to accept this trifle,” he walked
briskly off.
The tinker looked long at the crown-piece,
and then sliding it into his pocket, said to himself,
“Ho, ’ush-money! No go, my swell
cove.”
After venting that brief soliloquy
he sat silent a little while, till Leonard was nearly
out of sight; then rose, resumed his fardel, and creeping
quick along the hedgerows, followed Leonard towards
the town. Just in the last field, as he looked
over the hedge, he saw Leonard accosted by a gentleman
of comely mien and important swagger. That gentleman
soon left the young man, and came, whistling loud,
up the path, and straight towards the tinker.
Mr. Sprott looked round, but the hedge was too neat
to allow of a good hiding-place, so he put a bold
front on it, and stepped forth like a man. But,
alas for him! before he got into the public path,
the proprietor of the land, Mr. Richard Avenel (for
the gentleman was no less a personage), had spied out
the trespasser, and called to him with a “Hillo,
fellow,” that bespoke all the dignity of a man
who owns acres, and all the wrath of a man who beholds
those acres impudently invaded.
The tinker stopped, and Mr. Avenel
stalked up to him. “What the devil are
you doing on my property, lurking by my hedge?
I suspect you are an incendiary!”
“I be a tinker,” quoth
Mr. Sprott, not louting low, for a sturdy republican
was Mr. Sprott, but, like a lord of human kind,
“Pride
in his port, defiance in his eye.”
Mr. Avenel’s fingers itched
to knock the tinker’s villanous hat off his
jacobinical head, but he repressed the undignified
impulse by thrusting both hands deep into his trousers’
pockets.
“A tinker!” he cried, “that’s
a vagrant; and I’m a magistrate, and I’ve
a great mind to send you to the treadmill, that
I have. What do you do here, I say? You
have not answered my question.”
“What does I do ’ere?”
said Mr. Sprott. “Vy, you had better ax
my crakter of the young gent I saw you talking with
just now; he knows me.”
“What! my nephew knows you?”
“W-hew,” whistled the
tinker, “your nephew is it, sir? I have
a great respek for your family. I ’ve
knowed Mrs. Fairfilt the vashervoman this many a year.
I ’umbly ax your pardon.” And he took
off his hat this time.
Mr. Avenel turned red and white in
a breath. He growled out something inaudible,
turned on his heel, and strode off. The tinker
watched him as he had watched Leonard, and then dogged
the uncle as he had dogged the nephew. I don’t
presume to say that there was cause and effect in what
happened that night, but it was what is called “a
curious coincidence” that that night one of
Richard Avenel’s ricks was set on fire, and that
that day he had called Mr. Sprott an incendiary.
Mr. Sprott was a man of a very high spirit, and did
not forgive an insult easily. His nature was
inflammatory, and so was that of the lucifers which
he always carried about him, with his tracts and glue-pots.
The next morning there was an inquiry
made for the tinker, but he had disappeared from the
neighbourhood.
CHAPTER XVI.
It was a fortunate thing that the
déjeune dansant so absorbed Mr. Richard Avenel’s
thoughts that even the conflagration of his rick could
not scare away the graceful and poetic images connected
with that pastoral festivity. He was even loose
and careless in the questions he put to Leonard about
the tinker; nor did he send justice in pursuit of
that itinerant trader; for, to say truth, Richard Avenel
was a man accustomed to make enemies amongst the lower
orders; and though he suspected Mr. Sprott of destroying
his rick, yet, when he once set about suspecting,
he found he had quite as good cause to suspect fifty
other persons. How on earth could a man puzzle
himself about ricks and tinkers when all his cares
and energies were devoted to a déjeune dansant?
It was a maxim of Richard Avenel’s, as it ought
to be of every clever man, “to do one thing
at a time;” and therefore he postponed all other
considerations till the déjeune dansant was fairly
done with. Amongst these considerations was the
letter which Leonard wished to write to the parson.
“Wait a bit, and we will both write!” said
Richard, good-humouredly, “the moment the dijeune
dansant is over!”
It must be owned that this fête was
no ordinary provincial ceremonial. Richard Avenel
was a man to do a thing well when he set about it,
“He soused the
cabbage with a bounteous heart.”
By little and little his first notions
had expanded, till what had been meant to be only
neat and elegant now embraced the costly and magnificent.
Artificers accustomed to dejeunes dansants came all
the way from London to assist, to direct, to create.
Hungarian singers and Tyrolese singers and Swiss peasant-women,
who were to chant the Ranz des Vaches,
and milk cows or make syllabubs, were engaged.
The great marquee was decorated as a Gothic banquet-hall;
the breakfast itself was to consist of “all
the delicacies of the season.” In short,
as Richard Avenel said to himself, “It is a
thing once in a way; a thing on which I don’t
object to spend money, provided that the thing is the
thing!”
It had been a matter of grave meditation
how to make the society worthy of the revel; for Richard
Avenel was not contented with the mere aristocracy
of the town, his ambition had grown with
his expenses. “Since it will cost so much,”
said he, “I may as well come it strong, and
get in the county.”
True, that he was personally acquainted
with very few of what are called county families.
But still, when a man makes himself a mark in a large
town, and can return one of the members whom that town
sends to parliament; and when, moreover, that man
proposes to give some superb and original entertainment,
in which the old can eat and the young can dance,
there is no county in the island that has not families
enow who will be delighted by an invitation from that
man. And so Richard, finding that, as the
thing got talked of, the dean’s lady, and Mrs.
Pompley, and various other great personages, took the
liberty to suggest that Squire this, and Sir somebody
that, would be so pleased if they were asked, fairly
took the bull by the horns, and sent out his cards
to Park, Hall, and Rectory, within a circumference
of twelve miles. He met with but few refusals,
and he now counted upon five hundred guests.
“In for a penny in for a pound,”
said Mr. Richard Avenel. “I wonder what
Mrs. M’Catchley will say?” Indeed, if the
whole truth must be known, Mr. Richard
Avenel not only gave that déjeune dansant in honour
of Mrs. M’Catchley, but he had fixed in his heart
of hearts upon that occasion (when surrounded by all
his splendour, and assisted by the seductive arts
of Terpsichore and Bacchus) to whisper to Mrs. M’Catchley
those soft words which but why not here
let Mr. Richard Avenel use his own idiomatic and unsophisticated
expression? “Please the pigs, then,”
said Mr. Avenel to himself, “I shall pop the
question!”
CHAPTER XVII.
The Great Day arrived at last; and
Mr. Richard Avenel, from his dressing-room window,
looked on the scene below as Hannibal or Napoleon
looked from the Alps on Italy. It was a scene
to gratify the thought of conquest, and reward the
labours of ambition. Placed on a little eminence
stood the singers from the mountains of the Tyrol,
their high-crowned hats and filigree buttons and gay
sashes gleaming in the sun. Just seen from his
place of watch, though concealed from the casual eye,
the Hungarian musicians lay in ambush amidst a little
belt of laurels and American shrubs. Far to the
right lay what had once been called horresco
referens the duckpond, where “Dulce
sonant tenui gutture carmen aves.”
But the ruthless ingenuity of the head-artificer had
converted the duck-pond into a Swiss lake, despite
grievous wrong and sorrow to the assuetum innocuumque
genus, the familiar and harmless inhabitants,
who had been all expatriated and banished from their
native waves. Large poles twisted with fir branches,
stuck thickly around the lake, gave to the waters
the becoming Helvetian gloom. And here, beside
three cows all bedecked with ribbons, stood the Swiss
maidens destined to startle the shades with the Ranz
des Vaches. To the left, full upon
the sward, which it almost entirely covered, stretched
the great Gothic marquee, divided into two grand sections, one
for the dancing, one for the déjeune.
The day was propitious, not
a cloud in the sky. The musicians were already
tuning their instruments; figures of waiters hired
of Gunter trim and decorous, in black trousers
and white waistcoats passed to and fro
the space between the house and marquee. Richard
looked and looked; and as he looked he drew mechanically
his razor across the strop; and when he had looked
his fill, he turned reluctantly to the glass and shaved!
All that blessed morning he had been too busy, till
then, to think of shaving.
There is a vast deal of character
in the way that a man performs that operation of shaving!
You should have seen Richard Avenel shave! You
could have judged at once how he would shave his neighbours,
when you saw the celerity, the completeness with which
he shaved himself, a forestroke and a backstroke,
and tondenti barba cadebat. Cheek and chin
were as smooth as glass. You would have buttoned
up your pockets instinctively if you had seen him.
But the rest of Mr. Avenel’s
toilet was not completed with correspondent despatch.
On his bed, and on his chairs, and on his sofa, and
on his drawers, lay trousers and vests and cravats
enough to distract the choice of a Stoic. And
first one pair of trousers was tried on, and then
another and one waistcoat, and then a second,
and then a third. Gradually that chef-d’oeuvre
of civilization a man dressed grew
into development and form; and, finally, Mr. Richard
Avenel emerged into the light of day. He had
been lucky in his costume, he felt it.
It might not suit every one in colour or cut, but
it suited him.
And this was his garb. On such
occasion, what epic poet would not describe the robe
and tunic of a hero?
His surtout in modern phrase
his frockcoat was blue, a rich blue, a
blue that the royal brothers of George the Fourth were
wont to favour. And the surtout, single-breasted,
was thrown open gallantly; and in the second button-hole
thereof was a moss-rose. The vest was white, and
the trousers a pearl gray, with what tailors style
“a handsome fall over the boot.”
A blue and white silk cravat, tied loose and debonair;
an ample field of shirt front, with plain gold studs;
a pair of lemon-coloured kid gloves, and a white hat,
placed somewhat too knowingly on one side, complete
the description, and “give the world assurance
of the man.” And, with his light, firm,
well-shaped figure, his clear complexion, his keen,
bright eye, and features that bespoke the courage,
precision, and alertness of his character, that
is to say, features bold, not large, well-defined,
and regular, you might walk long through
town or country before you would see a handsomer specimen
of humanity than our friend Richard Avenel.
Handsome, and feeling that he was
handsome; rich, and feeling that he was rich; lord
of the fête, and feeling that he was lord of the fête,
Richard Avenel stepped out upon his lawn.
And now the dust began to rise along
the road, and carriages and gigs and chaises
and flies might be seen at near intervals and in quick
procession. People came pretty much about the
same time-as they do in the country Heaven
reward them for it!
Richard Avenel was not quite at his
ease at first in receiving his guests, especially
those whom he did not know by sight. But when
the dancing began, and he had secured the fair hand
of Mrs. M’Catchley for the initiary quadrille,
his courage and presence of mind returned to him;
and, seeing that many people whom he had not received
at all seemed to enjoy themselves very much, he gave
up the attempt to receive those who came after, and
that was a great relief to all parties.
Meanwhile Leonard looked on the animated
scene with a silent melancholy, which he in vain endeavoured
to shake off, a melancholy more common
amongst very young men in such scenes than we are apt
to suppose. Somehow or other, the pleasure was
not congenial to him; he had no Mrs. M’Catchley
to endear it; he knew very few people, he was shy,
he felt his position with his uncle was equivocal,
he had not the habit of society, he heard, incidentally,
many an ill-natured remark upon his uncle and the
entertainment, he felt indignant and mortified.
He had been a great deal happier eating his radishes
and reading his book by the little fountain in Riccabocca’s
garden. He retired to a quiet part of the grounds,
seated himself under a tree, leaned his cheek on his
hand, and mused. He was soon far away; happy
age, when, whatever the present, the future seems
so fair and so infinite!
But now the déjeune had succeeded
the earlier dances; and, as champagne flowed royally,
it is astonishing how the entertainment brightened.
The sun was beginning to slope towards
the west, when, during a temporary cessation of the
dance, all the guests had assembled in such space
as the tent left on the lawn, or thickly filled the
walks immediately adjoining it. The gay dresses
of the ladies, the joyous laughter heard everywhere,
and the brilliant sunlight over all, conveyed even
to Leonard the notion, not of mere hypocritical pleasure,
but actual healthful happiness. He was attracted
from his revery, and timidly mingled with the groups.
But Richard Avenel, with the fair Mrs. M’Catchley her
complexion more vivid, and her eyes more dazzling,
and her step more elastic than usual had
turned from the gayety just as Leonard had turned
towards it, and was now on the very spot (remote,
obscure, shaded by the few trees above five years old
that Mr. Avenel’s property boasted) which the
young dreamer had deserted.
And then! Ah, then! moment so
meet for the sweet question of questions, place so
appropriate for the delicate, bashful, murmured popping
thereof! suddenly from the sward before,
from the groups beyond, there floated to the ears
of Richard Avenel an indescribable, mingled, ominous
sound, a sound as of a general titter, a
horrid, malignant, but low cachinnation. And
Mrs. M’Catchley, stretching forth her parasol,
exclaimed, “Dear me, Mr. Avenel, what can they
be all crowding there for?”
There are certain sounds and certain
sights the one indistinct, the other vaguely
conjecturable which, nevertheless, we know,
by an instinct, bode some diabolical agency at work
in our affairs. And if any man gives an entertainment,
and hears afar a general, ill-suppressed, derisive
titter, and sees all his guests hurrying towards one
spot, I defy him to remain unmoved and uninquisitive.
I defy him still more to take that precise occasion
(however much he may have before designed it) to drop
gracefully on his right knee before the handsomest
Mrs. M’Catchley in the universe, and pop
the question! Richard Avenel blurted out something
very like an oath; and, half guessing that something
must have happened that it would not be pleasing to
bring immediately under the notice of Mrs. M’Catchley,
he said hastily, “Excuse me. I’ll
just go and see what is the matter; pray, stay till
I come back.” With that he sprang forward;
in a minute he was in the midst of the group, that
parted aside with the most obliging complacency to
make way for him.
“But what’s the matter?”
he asked impatiently, yet fearfully. Not a voice
answered. He strode on, and beheld his nephew
in the arms of a woman!
“God bless my soul!” said Richard Avenel.
CHAPTER XVIII.
And such a woman!
She had on a cotton gown, very
neat, I dare say, for an under-housemaid; and such
thick shoes! She had on a little black straw
bonnet; and a kerchief, that might have cost tenpence,
pinned across her waist instead of a shawl; and she
looked altogether-respectable, no doubt, but exceedingly
dusty! And she was hanging upon Leonard’s
neck, and scolding, and caressing, and crying very
loud. “God bless my soul!” said Mr.
Richard Avenel.
And as he uttered that innocent self-benediction,
the woman hastily turned round, and darting from Leonard,
threw herself right upon Richard Avenel burying
under her embrace blue-coat, moss rose, white waistcoat
and all with a vehement sob and a loud exclamation!
“Oh! brother Dick! dear,
dear brother Dick! And I lives to see thee agin!”
And then came two such kisses you might
have heard them a mile off! The situation of
brother Dick was appalling; and the crowd, that had
before only tittered politely, could not now resist
the effect of this sudden embrace. There was
a general explosion! It was a roar! That
roar would have killed a weak man; but it sounded to
the strong heart of Richard Avenel like the defiance
of a foe, and it plucked forth in an instant from
all conventional let and barrier the native spirit
of the Anglo-Saxon.
He lifted abruptly his handsome masculine
head, and looked round the ring of his ill-bred visitors
with a haughty stare of rebuke and surprise.
“Ladies and gentlemen,”
then said he, very coolly, “I don’t see
what there is to laugh at! A brother and sister
meet after many years’ separation, and the sister
cries, poor thing. For my part I think it very
natural that she should cry; but not that you should
laugh!”
In an instant the whole shame was
removed from Richard Avenel, and rested in full weight
upon the bystanders. It is impossible to say how
foolish and sheepish they all looked, nor how slinkingly
each tried to creep off.
Richard Avenel seized his advantage
with the promptitude of a man who had got on in America,
and was, therefore, accustomed to make the best of
things. He drew Mrs. Fairfield’s arm in
his, and led her into the house; but when he had got
her safe into his parlour Leonard following
all the time and the door was closed upon
those three, then Richard Avenel’s ire burst
forth.
“You impudent, ungrateful, audacious drab!”
Yes, drab was the word. I am
shocked to say it, but the duties of a historian are
stern: and the word was drab.
“Drab!” faltered poor
Jane Fairfield; and she clutched hold of Leonard to
save herself from falling.
“Sir!” cried Leonard, fiercely.
You might as well have cried “sir”
to a mountain torrent. Richard hurried on, for
he was furious.
“You nasty, dirty, dusty dowdy!
How dare you come here to disgrace me in my own house
and premises, after my sending you L50! To take
the very time, too, when when Richard gasped
for breath; and the laugh of his guests rang in his
ears, and got into his chest, and choked him.
Jane Fairfield drew herself up, and her tears were
dried.
“I did not come to disgrace
you! I came to see my boy, and ”
“Ha!” interrupted Richard, “to see
him.”
He turned to Leonard: “You have written
to this woman, then?”
“No, sir, I have not.”
“I believe you lie.”
“He does not lie; and he is
as good as yourself, and better, Richard Avenel,”
exclaimed Mrs. Fairfield; “and I won’t
stand here and hear him insulted, that’s
what I won’t. And as for your L50, there
are forty-five of it; and I’ll work my fingers
to the bone till I pay back the other five. And
don’t be afeard I shall disgrace you, for I’ll
never look on your face agin; and you’re a wicked,
bad man, that’s what you are!”
The poor woman’s voice was so
raised and so shrill, that any other and more remorseful
feeling which Richard might have conceived was drowned
in his apprehensions that she would be overheard by
his servants or his guests, a masculine
apprehension, with which females rarely sympathize;
which, on the contrary, they are inclined to consider
a mean and cowardly terror on the part of their male
oppressors.
“Hush! hold your infernal squall, do’.”
said Mr. Avenel, in a tone that he meant to be soothing.
“There sit down and don’t
stir till I come back again, and can talk to you calmly.
Leonard, follow me, and help to explain things to
our guests.”
Leonard stood still, but shook his head slightly.
“What do you mean, sir?”
said Richard Avenel, in a very portentous growl.
“Shaking your head at me? Do you intend
to disobey me? You had better take care!”
Leonard’s front rose; he drew
one arm round his mother, and thus he spoke,
“Sir, you have been kind to
me, and generous, and that thought alone silenced
my indignation when I heard you address such language
to my mother; for I felt that, if I spoke, I should
say too much. Now I speak, and it is to say,
shortly, that ”
“Hush, boy,” said poor
Mrs. Fairfield, frightened; “don’t mind
me. I did not come to make mischief, and ruin
your prospex. I’ll go!”
“Will you ask her pardon, Mr.
Avenel?” said Leonard, firmly; and he advanced
towards his uncle.
Richard, naturally hot and intolerant
of contradiction, was then excited, not only by the
angry emotions, which, it must be owned, a man so
mortified, and in the very flush of triumph, might
well experience, but by much more wine than he was
in the habit of drinking; and when Leonard approached
him, he misinterpreted the movement into one of menace
and aggression. He lifted his arm: “Come
a step nearer,” said he, between his teeth,
“and I’ll knock you down.” Leonard
advanced the forbidden step; but as Richard caught
his eye, there was something in that eye not
defying, not threatening, but bold and dauntless which
Richard recognized and respected, for that something
spoke the Freeman. The uncle’s arm mechanically
fell to his side. “You cannot strike me,
Mr. Avenel,” said Leonard, “for you are
aware that I could not strike again my mother’s
brother. As her son, I once more say to you, ask
her pardon.”
“Ten thousand devils! Are
you mad? or do you want to drive me mad?
You insolent beggar, fed and clothed by my charity!
Ask her pardon! what for? That she
has made me the object of jeer and ridicule with that
d –d cotton gown and those double-d –d
thick shoes I vow and protest they’ve
got nails in them! Hark ye, sir, I’ve been
insulted by her, but I’m not to be bullied by
you. Come with me instantly, or I discard you;
not a shilling of mine shall you have as long as I
live. Take your choice: be a peasant, a
labourer, or ”
“A base renegade to natural
affection, a degraded beggar indeed!” cried
Leonard, his breast heaving, and his cheeks in a glow.
“Mother, Mother, come away. Never fear, I
have strength and youth, and we will work together
as before.”
But poor Mrs. Fairfield, overcome
by her excitement, had sunk down into Richard’s
own handsome morocco leather easy-chair, and could
neither speak nor stir.
“Confound you both!” muttered
Richard. “You can’t be seen creeping
out of my house now. Keep her here, you young
viper, you; keep her till I come back; and then, if
you choose to go, go and be ”
Not finishing his sentence, Mr. Avenel
hurried out of the room, and locked the door, putting
the key into his pocket. He paused for a moment
in the hall, in order to collect his thoughts, drew
three or four deep breaths, gave himself a great shake,
and, resolved to be faithful to his principle of doing
one thing at a time, shook off in that shake all disturbing
recollection of his mutinous captives. Stern as
Achilles when he appeared to the Trojans, Richard
Avenel stalked back to his lawn.
CHAPTER XIX.
Brief as had been his absence, the
host could see that, in the interval, a great and
notable change had come over the spirit of his company.
Some of those who lived in the town were evidently
preparing to return home on foot; those who lived
at a distance, and whose carriages (having been sent
away, and ordered to return at a fixed hour) had not
yet arrived, were gathered together in small knots
and groups; all looked sullen and displeased, and
all instinctively turned from their host as he passed
them by. They felt they had been lectured, and
they were more put out than Richard himself.
They did not know if they might not be lectured again.
This vulgar man, of what might he not be capable?
Richard’s shrewd sense comprehended in an instant
all the difficulties of his position; but he walked
on deliberately and directly towards Mrs. M’Catchley,
who was standing near the grand marquee with the Pompleys
and the dean’s lady. As those personages
saw him make thus boldly towards them, there was a
flutter. “Hang the fellow!” said the
colonel, intrenching himself in his stock, “he
is coming here. Low and shocking what
shall we do? Let us stroll on.” But
Richard threw himself in the way of the retreat.
“Mrs. M’Catchley,” said he, very
gravely, and offering her his arm, “allow me
three words with you.”
The poor widow looked very much discomposed.
Mrs. Pompley pulled her by the sleeve. Richard
still stood gazing into her face, with his arm extended.
She hesitated a minute, and then took the arm.
“Monstrous impudent!” cried the colonel.
“Let Mrs. M’Catchley alone,
my dear,” responded Mrs. Pompley; “she
will know how to give him a lesson.”
“Madam,” said Richard,
as soon as he and his companion were out of hearing,
“I rely on you to do me a favour.”
“On me?”
“On you, and you alone.
You have influence with all those people, and a word
from you will effect what I desire. Mrs. M’Catchley,”
added Richard, with a solemnity that was actually
imposing, “I flatter myself that you have some
friendship for me, which is more than I can say of
any other soul in these grounds; will you do me this
favour, ay or no?”
“What is it, Mr. Avenel?”
asked Mrs. M’Catchley, much disturbed, and somewhat
softened, for she was by no means a woman
without feeling; indeed, she considered herself nervous.
“Get all your friends all
the company, in short-to come back into the tent for
refreshments, for anything. I want to say a few
words to them.”
“Bless me! Mr. Avenel a
few words!” cried the widow, “but that’s
just what they’re all afraid of. You must
pardon me, but you really can’t ask people to
a déjeune dansant, and then scold ’em!”
“I’m not going to scold
them,” said Air. Avenel, very seriously, “upon
my honour, I’m not. I’m going to make
all right, and I even hope afterwards that the dancing
may go on and that you will honour me again
with your hand. I leave you to your task; and
believe me, I’m not an ungrateful man.”
He spoke, and bowed not without some dignity and
vanished within the breakfast division of the marquee.
There he busied himself in re-collecting the waiters,
and directing them to re-arrange the mangled remains
of the table as they best could. Mrs. M’Catchley,
whose curiosity and interest were aroused, executed
her commission with all the ability and tact of a
woman of the world, and in less than a quarter of
an hour the marquee was filled, the corks flew, the
champagne bounced and sparkled, people drank in silence,
munched fruits and cakes, kept up their courage with
the conscious sense of numbers, and felt a great desire
to know what was coming. Mr. Avenel, at the head
of the table, suddenly rose.
“Ladies and Gentlemen,”
said he, “I have taken the liberty to invite
you once more into this tent, in order to ask you
to sympathize with me upon an occasion which took
us all a little by surprise to-day.
“Of course, you all know I am
a new man, the maker of my own fortunes.”
A great many heads bowed involuntarily.
The words were said manfully, and there was a general
feeling of respect. “Probably, too,”
resumed Mr. Avenel, “you may know that I am
the son of very honest tradespeople. I say honest,
and they are not ashamed of me; I say tradespeople,
and I’m not ashamed of them. My sister
married and settled at a distance. I took her
son to educate and bring up. But I did not tell
her where he was, nor even that I had returned from
America; I wished to choose my own time for that,
when I could give her the surprise, not only of a rich
brother, but of a son whom I intended to make a gentleman,
so far as manners and education can make one.
Well, the poor dear woman has found me out sooner
than I expected, and turned the tables on me by giving
me a surprise of her own invention. Pray, forgive
the confusion this little family-scene has created;
and though I own it was very laughable at the moment,
and I was wrong to say otherwise, yet I am sure I don’t
judge ill of your good hearts, when I ask you to think
what brother and sister must feel who parted from
each other when they were boy and girl. To me”
(and Richard gave a great gulp, for he felt that a
great gulp alone could swallow the abominable lie
he was about to utter) “to me this
has been a very happy occasion! I’m a plain
man: no one can take ill what I’ve said.
And wishing that you may be all as happy in your family
as I am in mine humble though it be I
beg to drink your very good healths!”
There was a universal applause when
Richard sat down; and so well in his plain way had
he looked the thing, and done the thing, that at least
half of those present who till then had
certainly disliked and half despised him suddenly
felt that they were proud of his acquaintance.
For however aristocratic this country of ours may be,
and however especially aristocratic be the genteeler
classes in provincial towns and coteries, there is
nothing which English folks, from the highest to the
lowest, in their hearts so respect as a man who has
risen from nothing, and owns it frankly. Sir
Compton Delaval, an old baronet, with a pedigree as
long as a Welshman’s, who had been reluctantly
decoyed to the feast by his three unmarried daughters not
one of whom, however, had hitherto condescended even
to bow to the host now rose. It was
his right, he was the first person there
in rank and station.
“Ladies and Gentlemen,”
quoth Sir Compton Delaval, “I am sure that I
express the feelings of all present when I say that
we have heard with great delight and admiration the
words addressed to us by our excellent host. [Applause.]
And if any of us, in what Mr. Avenel describes
justly as the surprise of the moment, were betrayed
into an unseemly merriment at at [the
dean’s lady whispered ’some of the’] some
of the some of the ” repeated
Sir Compton, puzzled, and coming to a deadlock ["holiest
sentiments,” whispered the dean’s lady] “ay,
some of the holiest sentiments in our nature, I beg
him to accept our sincerest apologies. I can
only say, for my part, that I am proud to rank Mr.
Avenel amongst the gentlemen of the county”
(here Sir Compton gave a sounding thump on the table),
“and to thank him for one of the most brilliant
entertainments it has ever been my lot to witness.
If he won his fortune honestly, he knows how to spend
it nobly.”
Whiz went a fresh bottle of champagne.
“I am not accustomed to public
speaking, but I could not repress my sentiments.
And I’ve now only to propose to you the health
of our host. Richard Avenel, Esquire; and to
couple with that the health of his very
interesting sister, and long life to them both.”
The sentence was half drowned in enthusiastic
plaudits, and in three cheers for Richard Avenel,
Esquire, and his very interesting sister.
“I’m a cursed humbug,”
thought Richard Avenel, as he wiped his forehead;
“but the world is such a humbug!” Then
he glanced towards Mrs. M’Catehley and, to his
great satisfaction, saw Mrs. M’Catchley with
her handkerchief before her eyes.
Truth must be told; although the fair
widow might certainly have contemplated the probability
of accepting Mr. Avenel as a husband, she had never
before felt the least bit in love with him; and now
she did. There is something in courage and candour in
a word, in manliness that all women, the
most worldly, do admire in men; and Richard Avenel,
humbug though his conscience said he was, seemed to
Mrs. M’Catchley like a hero.
The host saw his triumph. “Now
for another dance!” said he, gayly; and he was
about to offer his hand to Mrs. M’Catchley, when
Sir Compton Delaval seizing it, and giving it a hearty
shake, cried, “You have not yet danced with
my eldest daughter; so if you’ll not ask her,
why, I must offer her to you as your partner.
Here, Sarah.”
Miss Sarah Delaval, who was five feet
eight, and as stately as she was tall, bowed her head
graciously; and Mr. Avenel, before he knew where he
was, found her leaning on his arm. But as he passed
into the next division of the tent, he had to run
the gauntlet of all the gentlemen, who thronged round
to shake hands with him. Their warm English hearts
could not be satisfied till they had so repaired the
sin of their previous haughtiness and mockery.
Richard Avenel might then have safely introduced his
sister gown, kerchief, thick shoes, and
all to the crowd; but he had no such thought.
He thanked Heaven devoutly that she was safely under
lock and key.
It was not till the third dance that
he could secure Mrs. M’Catchley’s hand,
and then it was twilight. The carriages were at
the door, but no one yet thought of going. People
were really enjoying themselves. Mr. Avenel had
had time, in the interim, to mature all his plans for
completing and consummating that triumph which his
tact and pluck had drawn from his momentary disgrace.
Excited as he was with wine, and suppressed passion,
he had yet the sense to feel that, when all the halo
that now surrounded him had evaporated, and Mrs. M’Catchley
was redelivered up to the Pompleys, whom he felt to
be the last persons his interest could desire for
her advisers, the thought of his low relations would
return with calm reflection. Now was the time.
The iron was hot, now was the time to strike it, and
forge the enduring chain. As he led Mrs. M’Catchley
after the dance, into the lawn, he therefore said
tenderly,
“How shall I thank you for the favour you have
done me?”
“Oh!” said Mrs. M’Catchley,
warmly, “It was no favour, and I am so glad ”
She stopped.
“You’re not ashamed of
me, then, in spite of what has happened?”
“Ashamed of you! Why, I
should be so proud of you, if I were ”
“Finish the sentence and say ’your
wife!’ there, it is out. My dear
madam, I am rich, as you know; I love you very heartily.
With your help, I think I can make a figure in a larger
world than this: and that, whatever my father,
my grandson at least will be but it is time
enough to speak of him. What say you? you turn
away. I’ll not tease you, it
is not my way. I said before, ay or no; and your
kindness so emboldens me that I say it again, ay or
no?”
“But you take me so unawares so so Lord!
my dear Mr. Avenel; you are so hasty I I ”
And the widow actually blushed, and was genuinely
bashful.
“Those horrid Pompleys!”
thought Richard, as he saw the colonel bustling up
with Mrs. M’Catchley’s cloak on his arm.
“I press for your answer,” continued the
suitor, speaking very fast. “I shall leave
this place to-morrow, if you will not give it.”
“Leave this place leave me?”
“Then you will be mine?”
“Ah, Mr. Avenel!” said
the widow, languidly, and leaving her hand in his,
“who can resist you?”
Up came Colonel Pompley; Richard took the shawl:
“No hurry for that now,
Colonel, Mrs. M’Catchley feels already
at home here.”
Ten minutes afterwards, Richard Avenel
so contrived that it was known by the whole company
that their host was accepted by the Honourable Mrs.
M’Catchley. And every one said, “He
is a very clever man and a very good fellow,”
except the Pompleys and the Pompleys were
frantic. Mr. Richard Avenel had forced his way
into the aristocracy of the country; the husband of
an Honourable, connected with peers!
“He will stand for our city Vulgarian!”
cried the colonel. “And his wife will walk
out before me,” cried the colonel’s lady, “nasty
woman!” And she burst into tears.
The guests were gone; and Richard
had now leisure to consider what course to pursue
with regard to his sister and her son.
His victory over his guests had in
much softened his heart towards his relations; but
he still felt bitterly aggrieved at Mrs. Fairfield’s
unseasonable intrusion, and his pride was greatly chafed
by the boldness of Leonard. He had no idea of
any man whom he had served, or meant to serve, having
a will of his own, having a single thought in opposition
to his pleasure. He began, too, to feel that words
had passed between him and Leonard which could not
be well forgotten by either, and would render their
close connection less pleasant than heretofore.
He, the great Richard Avenel, beg pardon of Mrs. Fairfield,
the washerwoman! No; she and Leonard must beg
his. “That must be the first step,”
said Richard Avenel; “and I suppose they have
come to their senses.” With that expectation,
he unlocked the door of his parlour, and found himself
in complete solitude. The moon, lately risen,
shone full into the room, and lit up every corner.
He stared round bewildered, the birds had
flown. “Did they go through the keyhole?”
said Air. Avenel. “Ha! I see!
the window is open!” The window reached to the
ground. Mr. Avenel, in his excitement, had forgotten
that easy mode of egress. “Well,”
said he, throwing himself into his easy-chair, “I
suppose I shall soon hear from them: they’ll
be wanting my money fast enough, I fancy.”
His eye caught sight of a letter, unsealed, lying
on the table. He opened it, and saw bank-notes
to the amount of L50, the widow’s
forty-five country notes, and a new note, Bank of
England, that he had lately given to Leonard.
With the money were these lines, written in Leonard’s
bold, clear writing, though a word or two here and
there showed that the hand had trembled,
I thank you for all you have done
to one whom you regarded as the
object of charity. My mother
and I forgive what has passed. I
depart with her. You bade me
make my choice, and I have made it.
Leonard Fairfield.
The paper dropped from Richard’s
hand, and he remained mute and remorseful for a moment.
He soon felt, however, that he had no help for it
but working himself up into a rage. “Of
all people in the world,” cried Richard, stamping
his foot on the floor, “there are none so disagreeable,
insolent, and ungrateful as poor relations. I
wash my hands of them!”