I am an old woman now, and things
are very different to what they were in my youth.
Then we, who travelled, travelled in coaches, carrying
six inside, and making a two days’ journey out
of what people now go over in a couple of hours with
a whizz and a flash, and a screaming whistle, enough
to deafen one. Then letters came in but three
times a week: indeed, in some places in Scotland
where I have stayed when I was a girl, the post came
in but once a month; but letters were letters
then; and we made great prizes of them, and read them
and studied them like books. Now the post comes
rattling in twice a day, bringing short jerky notes,
some without beginning or end, but just a little sharp
sentence, which well-bred folks would think too abrupt
to be spoken. Well, well! they may all be improvements, I
dare say they are; but you will never meet with a
Lady Ludlow in these days.
I will try and tell you about her.
It is no story: it has, as I said, neither beginning,
middle, nor end.
My father was a poor clergyman with
a large family. My mother was always said to
have good blood in her veins; and when she wanted to
maintain her position with the people she was thrown
among, principally rich democratic manufacturers,
all for liberty and the French Revolution, she
would put on a pair of ruffles, trimmed with real old
English point, very much darned to be sure, but
which could not be bought new for love or money, as
the art of making it was lost years before. These
ruffles showed, as she said, that her ancestors had
been Somebodies, when the grandfathers of the rich
folk, who now looked down upon her, had been Nobodies, if,
indeed, they had any grandfathers at all. I don’t
know whether any one out of our own family ever noticed
these ruffles, but we were all taught as
children to feel rather proud when my mother put them
on, and to hold up our heads as became the descendants
of the lady who had first possessed the lace.
Not but what my dear father often told us that pride
was a great sin; we were never allowed to be proud
of anything but my mother’s ruffles: and
she was so innocently happy when she put them on, often,
poor dear creature, to a very worn and threadbare
gown, that I still think, even after all
my experience of life, they were a blessing to the
family. You will think that I am wandering away
from my Lady Ludlow. Not at all. The Lady
who had owned the lace, Ursula Hanbury, was a common
ancestress of both my mother and my Lady Ludlow.
And so it fell out, that when my poor father died,
and my mother was sorely pressed to know what to do
with her nine children, and looked far and wide for
signs of willingness to help, Lady Ludlow sent her
a letter, proffering aid and assistance. I see
that letter now: a large sheet of thick yellow
paper, with a straight broad margin left on the left-hand
side of the delicate Italian writing, writing
which contained far more in the same space of paper
than all the sloping, or masculine hand-writings of
the present day. It was sealed with a coat of
arms, a lozenge, for Lady Ludlow
was a widow. My mother made us notice the motto,
“Foy et Loy,” and told us where to look
for the quarterings of the Hanbury arms before she
opened the letter. Indeed, I think she was rather
afraid of what the contents might be; for, as I have
said, in her anxious love for her fatherless children,
she had written to many people upon whom, to tell
truly, she had but little claim; and their cold, hard
answers had many a time made her cry, when she thought
none of us were looking. I do not even know
if she had ever seen Lady Ludlow: all I knew
of her was that she was a very grand lady, whose grandmother
had been half-sister to my mother’s great-grandmother;
but of her character and circumstances I had heard
nothing, and I doubt if my mother was acquainted with
them.
I looked over my mother’s shoulder
to read the letter; it began, “Dear Cousin Margaret
Dawson,” and I think I felt hopeful from the
moment I saw those words. She went on to say, stay,
I think I can remember the very words:
’Dear cousin Margaret
Dawson, I have been much grieved to
hear of the loss you have sustained in the death of
so good a husband, and so excellent a clergyman as
I have always heard that my late cousin Richard was
esteemed to be.’
“There!” said my mother,
laying her finger on the passage, “read that
aloud to the little ones. Let them hear how their
father’s good report travelled far and wide,
and how well he is spoken of by one whom he never
saw. Cousin Richard, how prettily her ladyship
writes! Go on, Margaret!” She wiped her
eyes as she spoke: and laid her fingers on her
lips, to still my little sister, Cecily, who, not understanding
anything about the important letter, was beginning
to talk and make a noise.
’You say you are left with nine
children. I too should have had nine, if mine
had all lived. I have none left but Rudolph,
the present Lord Ludlow. He is married, and
lives, for the most part, in London. But I entertain
six young gentlewomen at my house at Connington, who
are to me as daughters save that, perhaps,
I restrict them in certain indulgences in dress and
diet that might be befitting in young ladies of a higher
rank, and of more probable wealth. These young
persons all of condition, though out of
means are my constant companions, and I
strive to do my duty as a Christian lady towards them.
One of these young gentlewomen died (at her own home,
whither she had gone upon a visit) last May.
Will you do me the favour to allow your eldest daughter
to supply her place in my household? She is,
as I make out, about sixteen years of age. She
will find companions here who are but a little older
than herself. I dress my young friends myself,
and make each of them a small allowance for pocket-money.
They have but few opportunities for matrimony, as
Connington is far removed from any town. The
clergyman is a deaf old widower; my agent is married;
and as for the neighbouring farmers, they are, of
course, below the notice of the young gentlewomen
under my protection. Still, if any young woman
wishes to marry, and has conducted herself to my satisfaction,
I give her a wedding dinner, her clothes, and her
house-linen. And such as remain with me to my
death, will find a small competency provided for them
in my will. I reserve to myself the option of
paying their travelling expenses, disliking
gadding women, on the one hand; on the other, not
wishing by too long absence from the family home to
weaken natural ties.
’If my proposal pleases you
and your daughter or rather, if it pleases
you, for I trust your daughter has been too well brought
up to have a will in opposition to yours let
me know, dear cousin Margaret Dawson, and I will make
arrangements for meeting the young gentlewoman at
Cavistock, which is the nearest point to which the
coach will bring her.’
My mother dropped the letter, and sat silent.
“I shall not know what to do without you, Margaret.”
A moment before, like a young untried
girl as I was, I had been pleased at the notion of
seeing a new place, and leading a new life. But
now, my mother’s look of sorrow,
and the children’s cry of remonstrance:
“Mother; I won’t go,” I said.
“Nay! but you had better,”
replied she, shaking her head. “Lady Ludlow
has much power. She can help your brothers.
It will not do to slight her offer.”
So we accepted it, after much consultation.
We were rewarded, or so we thought, for,
afterwards, when I came to know Lady Ludlow, I saw
that she would have done her duty by us, as helpless
relations, however we might have rejected her kindness, by
a presentation to Christ’s Hospital for one
of my brothers.
And this was how I came to know my Lady Ludlow.
I remember well the afternoon of my
arrival at Hanbury Court. Her ladyship had sent
to meet me at the nearest post-town at which the mail-coach
stopped. There was an old groom inquiring for
me, the ostler said, if my name was Dawson from
Hanbury Court, he believed. I felt it rather
formidable; and first began to understand what was
meant by going among strangers, when I lost sight
of the guard to whom my mother had intrusted me.
I was perched up in a high gig with a hood to it,
such as in those days was called a chair, and my companion
was driving deliberately through the most pastoral
country I had ever yet seen. By-and-by we ascended
a long hill, and the man got out and walked at the
horse’s head. I should have liked to walk,
too, very much indeed; but I did not know how far
I might do it; and, in fact, I dared not speak to ask
to be helped down the deep steps of the gig.
We were at last at the top, on a long,
breezy, sweeping, unenclosed piece of ground, called,
as I afterwards learnt, a Chase. The groom stopped,
breathed, patted his horse, and then mounted again
to my side.
“Are we near Hanbury Court?” I asked.
“Near! Why, Miss! we’ve a matter
of ten mile yet to go.”
Once launched into conversation, we
went on pretty glibly. I fancy he had been afraid
of beginning to speak to me, just as I was to him;
but he got over his shyness with me sooner than I
did mine with him. I let him choose the subjects
of conversation, although very often I could not understand
the points of interest in them: for instance,
he talked for more than a quarter of an hour of a
famous race which a certain dog-fox had given him,
above thirty years before; and spoke of all the covers
and turns just as if I knew them as well as he did;
and all the time I was wondering what kind of an animal
a dog-fox might be.
After we loft the Chase, the road
grew worse. No one in these days, who has not
seen the byroads of fifty years ago, can imagine what
they were. We had to quarter, as Randal called
it, nearly all the way along the deep-rutted, miry
lanes; and the tremendous jolts I occasionally met
with made my seat in the gig so unsteady that I could
not look about me at all, I was so much occupied in
holding on. The road was too muddy for me to
walk without dirtying myself more than I liked to do,
just before my first sight of my Lady Ludlow.
But by-and-by, when we came to the fields in which
the lane ended, I begged Randal to help me down, as
I saw that I could pick my steps among the pasture
grass without making myself unfit to be seen; and
Randal, out of pity for his steaming horse, wearied
with the hard struggle through the mud, thanked me
kindly, and helped me down with a springing jump.
The pastures fell gradually down to
the lower land, shut in on either side by rows of
high elms, as if there had been a wide grand avenue
here in former times. Down the grassy gorge
we went, seeing the sunset sky at the end of the shadowed
descent. Suddenly we came to a long flight of
steps.
“If you’ll run down there,
Miss, I’ll go round and meet you, and then you’d
better mount again, for my lady will like to see you
drive up to the house.”
“Are we near the house?”
said I, suddenly checked by the idea.
“Down there, Miss,” replied
he, pointing with his whip to certain stacks of twisted
chimneys rising out of a group of trees, in deep shadow
against the crimson light, and which lay just beyond
a great square lawn at the base of the steep slope
of a hundred yards, on the edge of which we stood.
I went down the steps quietly enough.
I met Randal and the gig at the bottom; and, falling
into a side road to the left, we drove sedately round,
through the gateway, and into the great court in front
of the house.
The road by which we had come lay right at the back.
Hanbury Court is a vast red-trick
house at least, it is cased in part with
red bricks; and the gate-house and walls about the
place are of brick, with stone facings
at every corner, and door, and window, such as you
see at Hampton Court. At the back are the gables,
and arched doorways, and stone mullions, which show
(so Lady Ludlow used to tell us) that it was once
a priory. There was a prior’s parlour,
I know only we called it Mrs. Medlicott’s
room; and there was a tithe-barn as big as a church,
and rows of fish-ponds, all got ready for the monks’
fasting-days in old time. But all this I did
not see till afterwards. I hardly noticed, this
first night, the great Virginian Creeper (said to have
been the first planted in England by one of my lady’s
ancestors) that half covered the front of the house.
As I had been unwilling to leave the guard of the
coach, so did I now feel unwilling to leave Randal,
a known friend of three hours. But there was
no help for it; in I must go; past the grand-looking
old gentleman holding the door open for me, on into
the great hall on the right hand, into which the sun’s
last rays were sending in glorious red light, the
gentleman was now walking before me, up
a step on to the dais, as I afterwards learned that
it was called, then again to the left,
through a series of sitting-rooms, opening one out
of another, and all of them looking into a stately
garden, glowing, even in the twilight, with the bloom
of flowers. We went up four steps out of the
last of these rooms, and then my guide lifted up a
heavy silk curtain and I was in the presence of my
Lady Ludlow.
She was very small of stature, and
very upright. She wore a great lace cap, nearly
half her own height, I should think, that went round
her head (caps which tied under the chin, and which
we called “mobs,” came in later, and my
lady held them in great contempt, saying people might
as well come down in their nightcaps). In front
of my lady’s cap was a great bow of white satin
ribbon; and a broad band of the same ribbon was tied
tight round her head, and served to keep the cap straight.
She had a fine Indian muslin shawl folded over her
shoulders and across her chest, and an apron of the
same; a black silk mode gown, made with short sleeves
and ruffles, and with the tail thereof pulled through
the pocket-hole, so as to shorten it to a useful
length: beneath it she wore, as I could plainly
see, a quilted lavender satin petticoat. Her
hair was snowy white, but I hardly saw it, it was
so covered with her cap: her skin, even at her
age, was waxen in texture and tint; her eyes were large
and dark blue, and must have been her great beauty
when she was young, for there was nothing particular,
as far as I can remember, either in mouth or nose.
She had a great gold-headed stick by her chair; but
I think it was more as a mark of state and dignity
than for use; for she had as light and brisk a step
when she chose as any girl of fifteen, and, in her
private early walk of meditation in the mornings, would
go as swiftly from garden alley to garden alley as
any one of us.
She was standing up when I went in.
I dropped my curtsey at the door, which my mother
had always taught me as a part of good manners, and
went up instinctively to my lady. She did not
put out her hand, but raised herself a little on tiptoe,
and kissed me on both cheeks.
“You are cold, my child.
You shall have a dish of tea with me.”
She rang a little hand-bell on the table by her,
and her waiting-maid came in from a small anteroom;
and, as if all had been prepared, and was awaiting
my arrival, brought with her a small china service
with tea ready made, and a plate of delicately-cut
bread and butter, every morsel of which I could have
eaten, and been none the better for it, so hungry was
I after my long ride. The waiting-maid took
off my cloak, and I sat down, sorely alarmed at the
silence, the hushed foot-falls of the subdued maiden
over the thick carpet, and the soft voice and clear
pronunciation of my Lady Ludlow. My teaspoon
fell against my cup with a sharp noise, that seemed
so out of place and season that I blushed deeply.
My lady caught my eye with hers, both
keen and sweet were those dark-blue eyes of her ladyship’s:
“Your hands are very cold, my
dear; take off those gloves” (I wore thick serviceable
doeskin, and had been too shy to take them off unbidden),
“and let me try and warm them the
evenings are very chilly.” And she held
my great red hands in hers, soft, warm,
white, ring-laden. Looking at last a little
wistfully into my face, she said “Poor
child! And you’re the eldest of nine!
I had a daughter who would have been just your age;
but I cannot fancy her the eldest of nine.”
Then came a pause of silence; and then she rang her
bell, and desired her waiting-maid, Adams, to show
me to my room.
It was so small that I think it must
have been a cell. The walls were whitewashed
stone; the bed was of white dimity. There was
a small piece of red staircarpet on each side of the
bed, and two chairs. In a closet adjoining were
my washstand and toilet-table. There was a text
of Scripture painted on the wall right opposite to
my bed; and below hung a print, common enough in those
days, of King George and Queen Charlotte, with all
their numerous children, down to the little Princess
Amelia in a go-cart. On each side hung a small
portrait, also engraved: on the left, it was
Louis the Sixteenth; on the other, Marie-Antoinette.
On the chimney-piece there was a tinder-box and a
Prayer-book. I do not remember anything else
in the room. Indeed, in those days people did
not dream of writing-tables, and inkstands, and portfolios,
and easy chairs, and what not. We were taught
to go into our bedrooms for the purposes of dressing,
and sleeping, and praying.
Presently I was summoned to supper.
I followed the young lady who had been sent to call
me, down the wide shallow stairs, into the great hall,
through which I had first passed on my way to my Lady
Ludlow’s room. There were four other young
gentlewomen, all standing, and all silent, who curtsied
to me when I first came in. They were dressed
in a kind of uniform: muslin caps bound round
their heads with blue ribbons, plain muslin handkerchiefs,
lawn aprons, and drab-coloured stuff gowns. They
were all gathered together at a little distance from
the table, on which were placed a couple of cold chickens,
a salad, and a fruit tart. On the dais there
was a smaller round table, on which stood a silver
jug filled with milk, and a small roll. Near
that was set a carved chair, with a countess’s
coronet surmounting the back of it. I thought
that some one might have spoken to me; but they were
shy, and I was shy; or else there was some other reason;
but, indeed, almost the minute after I had come into
the hall by the door at the lower hand, her ladyship
entered by the door opening upon the dais; whereupon
we all curtsied very low; I because I saw the others
do it. She stood, and looked at us for a moment.
“Young gentlewomen,” said
she, “make Margaret Dawson welcome among you;”
and they treated me with the kind politeness due to
a stranger, but still without any talking beyond what
was required for the purposes of the meal. After
it was over, and grace was said by one of our party,
my lady rang her hand-bell, and the servants came
in and cleared away the supper things: then they
brought in a portable reading-desk, which was placed
on the dais, and, the whole household trooping in,
my lady called to one of my companions to come up
and read the Psalms and Lessons for the day.
I remember thinking how afraid I should have been
had I been in her place. There were no prayers.
My lady thought it schismatic to have any prayers
excepting those in the Prayer-book; and would as soon
have preached a sermon herself in the parish church,
as have allowed any one not a deacon at the least
to read prayers in a private dwelling-house.
I am not sure that even then she would have approved
of his reading them in an unconsecrated place.
She had been maid of honour to Queen
Charlotte: a Hanbury of that old stock that flourished
in the days of the Plantagenets, and heiress of all
the land that remained to the family, of the great
estates which had once stretched into four separate
counties. Hanbury Court was hers by right.
She had married Lord Ludlow, and had lived for many
years at his various seats, and away from her ancestral
home. She had lost all her children but one,
and most of them had died at these houses of Lord Ludlow’s;
and, I dare say, that gave my lady a distaste to the
places, and a longing to come back to Hanbury Court,
where she had been so happy as a girl. I imagine
her girlhood had been the happiest time of her life;
for, now I think of it, most of her opinions, when
I knew her in later life, were singular enough then,
but had been universally prevalent fifty years before.
For instance, while I lived at Hanbury Court, the
cry for education was beginning to come up: Mr.
Raikes had set up his Sunday Schools; and some clergymen
were all for teaching writing and arithmetic, as well
as reading. My lady would have none of this;
it was levelling and revolutionary, she said.
When a young woman came to be hired, my lady would
have her in, and see if she liked her looks and her
dress, and question her about her family. Her
ladyship laid great stress upon this latter point,
saying that a girl who did not warm up when any interest
or curiosity was expressed about her mother, or the
“baby” (if there was one), was not likely
to make a good servant. Then she would make her
put out her feet, to see if they were well and neatly
shod. Then she would bid her say the Lord’s
Prayer and the Creed. Then she inquired if she
could write. If she could, and she had liked
all that had gone before, her face sank it
was a great disappointment, for it was an all but
inviolable rule with her never to engage a servant
who could write. But I have known her ladyship
break through it, although in both cases in which
she did so she put the girl’s principles to a
further and unusual test in asking her to repeat the
Ten Commandments. One pert young woman and
yet I was sorry for her too, only she afterwards married
a rich draper in Shrewsbury who had got
through her trials pretty tolerably, considering she
could write, spoilt all, by saying glibly, at the
end of the last Commandment, “An’t please
your ladyship, I can cast accounts.”
“Go away, wench,” said
my lady in a hurry, “you’re only fit for
trade; you will not suit me for a servant.”
The girl went away crestfallen: in a minute,
however, my lady sent me after her to see that she
had something to eat before leaving the house; and,
indeed, she sent for her once again, but it was only
to give her a Bible, and to bid her beware of French
principles, which had led the French to cut off their
king’s and queen’s heads.
The poor, blubbering girl said, “Indeed,
my lady, I wouldn’t hurt a fly, much less a
king, and I cannot abide the French, nor frogs neither,
for that matter.”
But my lady was inexorable, and took
a girl who could neither read nor write, to make up
for her alarm about the progress of education towards
addition and subtraction; and afterwards, when the
clergyman who was at Hanbury parish when I came there,
had died, and the bishop had appointed another, and
a younger man, in his stead, this was one of the points
on which he and my lady did not agree. While
good old deaf Mr. Mountford lived, it was my lady’s
custom, when indisposed for a sermon, to stand up
at the door of her large square pew, just
opposite to the reading-desk, and to say
(at that part of the morning service where it is decreed
that, in quires and places where they sing, here followeth
the anthem): “Mr. Mountford, I will not
trouble you for a discourse this morning.”
And we all knelt down to the Litany with great satisfaction;
for Mr. Mountford, though he could not hear, had always
his eyes open about this part of the service, for
any of my lady’s movements. But the new
clergyman, Mr. Gray, was of a different stamp.
He was very zealous in all his parish work; and my
lady, who was just as good as she could be to the
poor, was often crying him up as a godsend to the parish,
and he never could send amiss to the Court when he
wanted broth, or wine, or jelly, or sago for a sick
person. But he needs must take up the new hobby
of education; and I could see that this put my lady
sadly about one Sunday, when she suspected, I know
not how, that there was something to be said in his
sermon about a Sunday-school which he was planning.
She stood up, as she had not done since Mr. Mountford’s
death, two years and better before this time, and
said
“Mr. Gray, I will not trouble
you for a discourse this morning.”
But her voice was not well-assured
and steady; and we knelt down with more of curiosity
than satisfaction in our minds. Mr. Gray preached
a very rousing sermon, on the necessity of establishing
a Sabbath-school in the village. My lady shut
her eyes, and seemed to go to sleep; but I don’t
believe she lost a word of it, though she said nothing
about it that I heard until the next Saturday, when
two of us, as was the custom, were riding out with
her in her carriage, and we went to see a poor bedridden
woman, who lived some miles away at the other end of
the estate and of the parish: and as we came
out of the cottage we met Mr. Gray walking up to it,
in a great heat, and looking very tired. My lady
beckoned him to her, and told him she should wait and
take him home with her, adding that she wondered to
see him there, so far from his home, for that it was
beyond a Sabbath-day’s journey, and, from what
she had gathered from his sermon the last Sunday,
he was all for Judaism against Christianity.
He looked as if he did not understand what she meant;
but the truth was that, besides the way in which he
had spoken up for schools and schooling, he had kept
calling Sunday the Sabbath: and, as her ladyship
said, “The Sabbath is the Sabbath, and that’s
one thing it is Saturday; and if I keep
it, I’m a Jew, which I’m not. And
Sunday is Sunday; and that’s another thing;
and if I keep it, I’m a Christian, which I humbly
trust I am.”
But when Mr. Gray got an inkling of
her meaning in talking about a Sabbath-day’s
journey, he only took notice of a part of it:
he smiled and bowed, and said no one knew better than
her ladyship what were the duties that abrogated all
inferior laws regarding the Sabbath; and that he must
go in and read to old Betty Brown, so that he would
not detain her ladyship.
“But I shall wait for you, Mr.
Gray,” said she. “Or I will take
a drive round by Oakfield, and be back in an hour’s
time.” For, you see, she would not have
him feel hurried or troubled with a thought that he
was keeping her waiting, while he ought to be comforting
and praying with old Betty.
“A very pretty young man, my
dears,” said she, as we drove away. “But
I shall have my pew glazed all the same.”
We did not know what she meant at
the time; but the next Sunday but one we did.
She had the curtains all round the grand old Hanbury
family seat taken down, and, instead of them, there
was glass up to the height of six or seven feet.
We entered by a door, with a window in it that drew
up or down just like what you see in carriages.
This window was generally down, and then we could
hear perfectly; but if Mr. Gray used the word “Sabbath,”
or spoke in favour of schooling and education, my lady
stepped out of her corner, and drew up the window
with a decided clang and clash.
I must tell you something more about
Mr. Gray. The presentation to the living of
Hanbury was vested in two trustees, of whom Lady Ludlow
was one: Lord Ludlow had exercised this right
in the appointment of Mr. Mountford, who had won his
lordship’s favour by his excellent horsemanship.
Nor was Mr. Mountford a bad clergyman, as clergymen
went in those days. He did not drink, though
he liked good eating as much as any one. And
if any poor person was ill, and he heard of it, he
would send them plates from his own dinner of what
he himself liked best; sometimes of dishes which were
almost as bad as poison to sick people. He meant
kindly to everybody except dissenters, whom Lady Ludlow
and he united in trying to drive out of the parish;
and among dissenters he particularly abhorred Methodists some
one said, because John Wesley had objected to his
hunting. But that must have been long ago for
when I knew him he was far too stout and too heavy
to hunt; besides, the bishop of the diocese disapproved
of hunting, and had intimated his disapprobation to
the clergy. For my own part, I think a good run
would not have come amiss, even in a moral point of
view, to Mr. Mountford. He ate so much, and
took so little exercise, that we young women often
heard of his being in terrible passions with his servants,
and the sexton and clerk. But they none of them
minded him much, for he soon came to himself, and
was sure to make them some present or other some
said in proportion to his anger; so that the sexton,
who was a bit of a wag (as all sextons are, I think),
said that the vicar’s saying, “The Devil
take you,” was worth a shilling any day, whereas
“The Deuce” was a shabby sixpenny speech,
only fit for a curate.
There was a great deal of good in
Mr. Mountford, too. He could not bear to see
pain, or sorrow, or misery of any kind; and, if it
came under his notice, he was never easy till he had
relieved it, for the time, at any rate. But
he was afraid of being made uncomfortable; so, if he
possibly could, he would avoid seeing any one who
was ill or unhappy; and he did not thank any one for
telling him about them.
“What would your ladyship have
me to do?” he once said to my Lady Ludlow, when
she wished him to go and see a poor man who had broken
his leg. “I cannot piece the leg as the
doctor can; I cannot nurse him as well as his wife
does; I may talk to him, but he no more understands
me than I do the language of the alchemists.
My coming puts him out; he stiffens himself into
an uncomfortable posture, out of respect to the cloth,
and dare not take the comfort of kicking, and swearing,
and scolding his wife, while I am there. I hear
him, with my figurative ears, my lady, heave a sigh
of relief when my back is turned, and the sermon that
he thinks I ought to have kept for the pulpit, and
have delivered to his neighbours (whose case, as he
fancies, it would just have fitted, as it seemed to
him to be addressed to the sinful), is all ended,
and done, for the day. I judge others as myself;
I do to them as I would be done to. That’s
Christianity, at any rate. I should hate saving
your ladyship’s presence to have
my Lord Ludlow coming and seeing me, if I were ill.
’Twould be a great honour, no doubt; but I should
have to put on a clean nightcap for the occasion;
and sham patience, in order to be polite, and not
weary his lordship with my complaints. I should
be twice as thankful to him if he would send me game,
or a good fat haunch, to bring me up to that pitch
of health and strength one ought to be in, to appreciate
the honour of a visit from a nobleman. So I
shall send Jerry Butler a good dinner every day till
he is strong again; and spare the poor old fellow
my presence and advice.”
My lady would be puzzled by this,
and by many other of Mr. Mountford’s speeches.
But he had been appointed by my lord, and she could
not question her dead husband’s wisdom; and
she knew that the dinners were always sent, and often
a guinea or two to help to pay the doctor’s bills;
and Mr. Mountford was true blue, as we call it, to
the back-bone; hated the dissenters and the French;
and could hardly drink a dish of tea without giving
out the toast of “Church and King, and down with
the Rump.” Moreover, he had once had the
honour of preaching before the King and Queen, and
two of the Princesses, at Weymouth; and the King had
applauded his sermon audibly with, “Very
good; very good;” and that was a seal put upon
his merit in my lady’s eyes.
Besides, in the long winter Sunday
evenings, he would come up to the Court, and read
a sermon to us girls, and play a game of picquet with
my lady afterwards; which served to shorten the tedium
of the time. My lady would, on those occasions,
invite him to sup with her on the dais; but as her
meal was invariably bread and milk only, Mr. Mountford
preferred sitting down amongst us, and made a joke
about its being wicked and heterodox to eat meagre
on Sunday, a festival of the Church. We smiled
at this joke just as much the twentieth time we heard
it as we did at the first; for we knew it was coming,
because he always coughed a little nervously before
he made a joke, for fear my lady should not approve:
and neither she nor he seemed to remember that he
had ever hit upon the idea before.
Mr. Mountford died quite suddenly
at last. We were all very sorry to lose him.
He left some of his property (for he had a private
estate) to the poor of the parish, to furnish them
with an annual Christmas dinner of roast beef and
plum pudding, for which he wrote out a very good receipt
in the codicil to his will.
Moreover, he desired his executors
to see that the vault, in which the vicars of Hanbury
were interred, was well aired, before his coffin was
taken in; for, all his life long, he had had a dread
of damp, and latterly he kept his rooms to such a
pitch of warmth that some thought it hastened his
end.
Then the other trustee, as I have
said, presented the living to Mr. Gray, Fellow of
Lincoln College, Oxford. It was quite natural
for us all, as belonging in some sort to the Hanbury
family, to disapprove of the other trustee’s
choice. But when some ill-natured person circulated
the report that Mr. Gray was a Moravian Methodist,
I remember my lady said, “She could not believe
anything so bad, without a great deal of evidence.”