As far as I can remember, it was very
soon after this that I first began to have the pain
in my hip, which has ended in making me a cripple for
life. I hardly recollect more than one walk after
our return under Mr. Gray’s escort from Mr.
Lathom’s. Indeed, at the time, I was not
without suspicions (which I never named) that the
beginning of all the mischief was a great jump I had
taken from the top of one of the stiles on that very
occasion.
Well, it is a long while ago, and
God disposes of us all, and I am not going to tire
you out with telling you how I thought and felt, and
how, when I saw what my life was to be, I could hardly
bring myself to be patient, but rather wished to die
at once. You can every one of you think for
yourselves what becoming all at once useless and unable
to move, and by-and-by growing hopeless of cure, and
feeling that one must be a burden to some one all
one’s life long, would be to an active, wilful,
strong girl of seventeen, anxious to get on in the
world, so as, if possible, to help her brothers and
sisters. So I shall only say, that one among
the blessings which arose out of what seemed at the
time a great, black sorrow was, that Lady Ludlow for
many years took me, as it were, into her own especial
charge; and now, as I lie still and alone in my old
age, it is such a pleasure to think of her!
Mrs. Medlicott was great as a nurse,
and I am sure I can never be grateful enough to her
memory for all her kindness. But she was puzzled
to know how to manage me in other ways. I used
to have long, hard fits of crying; and, thinking that
I ought to go home and yet what could they
do with me there? and a hundred and fifty
other anxious thoughts, some of which I could tell
to Mrs. Medlicott, and others I could not. Her
way of comforting me was hurrying away for some kind
of tempting or strengthening food a basin
of melted calves-foot jelly was, I am sure she thought,
a cure for every woe.
“There take it, dear, take it!”
she would say; “and don’t go on fretting
for what can’t be helped.”
But, I think, she got puzzled at length
at the non-efficacy of good things to eat; and one
day, after I had limped down to see the doctor, in
Mrs. Medlicott’s sitting-room a room
lined with cupboards, containing preserves and dainties
of all kinds, which she perpetually made, and never
touched herself when I was returning to
my bed-room to cry away the afternoon, under pretence
of arranging my clothes, John Footman brought me a
message from my lady (with whom the doctor had been
having a conversation) to bid me go to her in that
private sitting-room at the end of the suite of apartments,
about which I spoke in describing the day of my first
arrival at Hanbury. I had hardly been in it since;
as, when we read to my lady, she generally sat in
the small withdrawing-room out of which this private
room of hers opened. I suppose great people do
not require what we smaller people value so much, I
mean privacy. I do not think that there was
a room which my lady occupied that had not two doors,
and some of them had three or four. Then my lady
had always Adams waiting upon her in her bed-chamber;
and it was Mrs. Medlicott’s duty to sit within
call, as it were, in a sort of anteroom that led out
of my lady’s own sitting-room, on the opposite
side to the drawing-room door. To fancy the house,
you must take a great square and halve it by a line:
at one end of this line was the hall-door, or public
entrance; at the opposite the private entrance from
a terrace, which was terminated at one end by a sort
of postern door in an old gray stone wall, beyond which
lay the farm buildings and offices; so that people
could come in this way to my lady on business, while,
if she were going into the garden from her own room,
she had nothing to do but to pass through Mrs. Medlicott’s
apartment, out into the lesser hall, and then turning
to the right as she passed on to the terrace, she
could go down the flight of broad, shallow steps at
the corner of the house into the lovely garden, with
stretching, sweeping lawns, and gay flower-beds, and
beautiful, bossy laurels, and other blooming or massy
shrubs, with full-grown beeches, or larches feathering
down to the ground a little farther off. The
whole was set in a frame, as it were, by the more
distant woodlands. The house had been modernized
in the days of Queen Anne, I think; but the money had
fallen short that was requisite to carry out all the
improvements, so it was only the suite of withdrawing-rooms
and the terrace-rooms, as far as the private entrance,
that had the new, long, high windows put in, and these
were old enough by this time to be draped with roses,
and honeysuckles, and pyracanthus, winter and summer
long.
Well, to go back to that day when
I limped into my lady’s sitting-room, trying
hard to look as if I had not been crying, and not to
walk as if I was in much pain. I do not know
whether my lady saw how near my tears were to my eyes,
but she told me she had sent for me, because she wanted
some help in arranging the drawers of her bureau, and
asked me just as if it was a favour I was
to do her if I could sit down in the easy-chair
near the window (all quietly arranged before
I came in, with a footstool, and a table quite near) and
assist her. You will wonder, perhaps, why I
was not bidden to sit or lie on the sofa; but (although
I found one there a morning or two afterwards, when
I came down) the fact was, that there was none in
the room at this time. I have even fancied that
the easy-chair was brought in on purpose for me; for
it was not the chair in which I remembered my lady
sitting the first time I saw her. That chair
was very much carved and gilded, with a countess’
coronet at the top. I tried it one day, some
time afterwards, when my lady was out of the room,
and I had a fancy for seeing how I could move about,
and very uncomfortable it was. Now my chair
(as I learnt to call it, and to think it) was soft
and luxurious, and seemed somehow to give one’s
body rest just in that part where one most needed
it.
I was not at my ease that first day,
nor indeed for many days afterwards, notwithstanding
my chair was so comfortable. Yet I forgot my
sad pain in silently wondering over the meaning of
many of the things we turned out of those curious
old drawers. I was puzzled to know why some were
kept at all; a scrap of writing maybe, with only half
a dozen common-place words written on it, or a bit
of broken riding-whip, and here and there a stone,
of which I thought I could have picked up twenty just
as good in the first walk I took. But it seems
that was just my ignorance; for my lady told me they
were pieces of valuable marble, used to make the floors
of the great Roman emperors palaces long ago; and that
when she had been a girl, and made the grand tour
long ago, her cousin Sir Horace Mann, the Ambassador
or Envoy at Florence, had told her to be sure to go
into the fields inside the walls of ancient Rome,
when the farmers were preparing the ground for the
onion-sowing, and had to make the soil fine, and pick
up what bits of marble she could find. She had
done so, and meant to have had them made into a table;
but somehow that plan fell through, and there they
were with all the dirt out of the onion-field upon
them; but once when I thought of cleaning them with
soap and water, at any rate, she bade me not to do
so, for it was Roman dirt earth, I think,
she called it but it was dirt all the same.
Then, in this bureau, were many other
things, the value of which I could understand locks
of hair carefully ticketed, which my lady looked at
very sadly; and lockets and bracelets with miniatures
in them, very small pictures to what they
make now-a-days, and called miniatures: some
of them had even to be looked at through a microscope
before you could see the individual expression of
the faces, or how beautifully they were painted.
I don’t think that looking at these made may
lady seem so melancholy, as the seeing and touching
of the hair did. But, to be sure, the hair was,
as it were, a part of some beloved body which she might
never touch and caress again, but which lay beneath
the turf, all faded and disfigured, except perhaps
the very hair, from which the lock she held had been
dissevered; whereas the pictures were but pictures
after all likenesses, but not the very
things themselves. This is only my own conjecture,
mind. My lady rarely spoke out her feelings.
For, to begin with, she was of rank: and I have
heard her say that people of rank do not talk about
their feelings except to their equals, and even to
them they conceal them, except upon rare occasions.
Secondly, and this is my own reflection, she
was an only child and an heiress; and as such was
more apt to think than to talk, as all well-brought-up
heiresses must be. I think. Thirdly, she
had long been a widow, without any companion of her
own age with whom it would have been natural for her
to refer to old associations, past pleasures, or mutual
sorrows. Mrs. Medlicott came nearest to her
as a companion of this sort; and her ladyship talked
more to Mrs. Medlicott, in a kind of familiar way,
than she did to all the rest of the household put
together. But Mrs. Medlicott was silent by nature,
and did not reply at any great length. Adams,
indeed, was the only one who spoke much to Lady Ludlow.
After we had worked away about an
hour at the bureau, her ladyship said we had done
enough for one day; and as the time was come for her
afternoon ride, she left me, with a volume of engravings
from Mr. Hogarth’s pictures on one side of me
(I don’t like to write down the names of them,
though my lady thought nothing of it, I am sure), and
upon a stand her great prayer-book open at the evening
psalms for the day, on the other. But as soon
as she was gone, I troubled myself little with either,
but amused myself with looking round the room at my
leisure. The side on which the fire-place stood
was all panelled, part of the old ornaments
of the house, for there was an Indian paper with birds
and beasts and insects on it, on all the other sides.
There were coats of arms, of the various families
with whom the Hanburys had intermarried, all over
these panels, and up and down the ceiling as well.
There was very little looking-glass in the room,
though one of the great drawing-rooms was called
the “Mirror Room,” because it was lined
with glass, which my lady’s great-grandfather
had brought from Venice when he was ambassador there.
There were china jars of all shapes and sizes round
and about the room, and some china monsters, or idols,
of which I could never bear the sight, they were so
ugly, though I think my lady valued them more than
all. There was a thick carpet on the middle of
the floor, which was made of small pieces of rare
wood fitted into a pattern; the doors were opposite
to each other, and were composed of two heavy tall
wings, and opened in the middle, moving on brass grooves
inserted into the floor they would not
have opened over a carpet. There were two windows
reaching up nearly to the ceiling, but very narrow
and with deep window-seats in the thickness of the
wall. The room was full of scent, partly from
the flowers outside, and partly from the great jars
of pot-pourri inside. The choice of odours
was what my lady piqued herself upon, saying nothing
showed birth like a keen susceptibility of smell.
We never named musk in her presence, her antipathy
to it was so well understood through the household:
her opinion on the subject was believed to be, that
no scent derived from an animal could ever be of a
sufficiently pure nature to give pleasure to any person
of good family, where, of course, the delicate perception
of the senses had been cultivated for generations.
She would instance the way in which sportsmen preserve
the breed of dogs who have shown keen scent; and how
such gifts descend for generations amongst animals,
who cannot be supposed to have anything of ancestral
pride, or hereditary fancies about them. Musk,
then, was never mentioned at Hanbury Court. No
more were bergamot or southern-wood, although vegetable
in their nature. She considered these two latter
as betraying a vulgar taste in the person who chose
to gather or wear them. She was sorry to notice
sprigs of them in the button-hole of any young man
in whom she took an interest, either because he was
engaged to a servant of hers or otherwise, as he came
out of church on a Sunday afternoon. She was
afraid that he liked coarse pleasures; and I am not
sure if she did not think that his preference for
these coarse sweetnesses did not imply a probability
that he would take to drinking. But she distinguished
between vulgar and common. Violets, pinks, and
sweetbriar were common enough; roses and mignionette,
for those who had gardens, honeysuckle for those who
walked along the bowery lanes; but wearing them betrayed
no vulgarity of taste: the queen upon her throne
might be glad to smell at a nosegay of the flowers.
A beau-pot (as we called it) of pinks and roses
freshly gathered was placed every morning that they
were in bloom on my lady’s own particular table.
For lasting vegetable odours she preferred lavender
and sweet-woodroof to any extract whatever.
Lavender reminded her of old customs, she said, and
of homely cottage-gardens, and many a cottager made
his offering to her of a bundle of lavender.
Sweet woodroof, again, grew in wild, woodland places
where the soil was fine and the air delicate:
the poor children used to go and gather it for her
up in the woods on the higher lands; and for this
service she always rewarded them with bright new pennies,
of which my lord, her son, used to send her down a
bagful fresh from the Mint in London every February.
Attar of roses, again, she disliked.
She said it reminded her of the city and of merchants’
wives, over-rich, over-heavy in its perfume.
And lilies-of-the-valley somehow fell under the same
condemnation. They were most graceful and elegant
to look at (my lady was quite candid about this),
flower, leaf, colour everything was refined
about them but the smell. That was too strong.
But the great hereditary faculty on which my lady
piqued herself, and with reason, for I never met with
any person who possessed it, was the power she had
of perceiving the delicious odour arising from a bed
of strawberries in the late autumn, when the leaves
were all fading and dying. “Bacon’s
Essays” was one of the few books that lay about
in my lady’s room; and if you took it up and
opened it carelessly, it was sure to fall apart at
his “Essay on Gardens.” “Listen,”
her ladyship would say, “to what that great philosopher
and statesman says. ’Next to that,’ he
is speaking of violets, my dear, ’is
the musk-rose,’ of which you remember
the great bush, at the corner of the south wall just
by the Blue Drawing-room windows; that is the old
musk-rose, Shakespeare’s musk-rose, which is
dying out through the kingdom now. But to return
to my Lord Bacon: ’Then the strawberry
leaves, dying with a most excellent cordial smell.’
Now the Hanburys can always smell this excellent
cordial odour, and very delicious and refreshing it
is. You see, in Lord Bacon’s time, there
had not been so many intermarriages between the court
and the city as there have been since the needy days
of his Majesty Charles the Second; and altogether in
the time of Queen Elizabeth, the great, old families
of England were a distinct race, just as a cart-horse
is one creature, and very useful in its place, and
Childers or Eclipse is another creature, though both
are of the same species. So the old families
have gifts and powers of a different and higher class
to what the other orders have. My dear, remember
that you try if you can smell the scent of dying strawberry-leaves
in this next autumn. You have some of Ursula
Hanbury’s blood in you, and that gives you a
chance.”
But when October came, I sniffed and
sniffed, and all to no purpose; and my lady who
had watched the little experiment rather anxiously had
to give me up as a hybrid. I was mortified,
I confess, and thought that it was in some ostentation
of her own powers that she ordered the gardener to
plant a border of strawberries on that side of the
terrace that lay under her windows.
I have wandered away from time and
place. I tell you all the remembrances I have
of those years just as they come up, and I hope that,
in my old age, I am not getting too like a certain
Mrs. Nickleby, whose speeches were once read out aloud
to me.
I came by degrees to be all day long
in this room which I have been describing; sometimes
sitting in the easy-chair, doing some little piece
of dainty work for my lady, or sometimes arranging
flowers, or sorting letters according to their handwriting,
so that she could arrange them afterwards, and destroy
or keep, as she planned, looking ever onward to her
death. Then, after the sofa was brought in, she
would watch my face, and if she saw my colour change,
she would bid me lie down and rest. And I used
to try to walk upon the terrace every day for a short
time: it hurt me very much, it is true, but the
doctor had ordered it, and I knew her ladyship wished
me to obey.
Before I had seen the background of
a great lady’s life, I had thought it all play
and fine doings. But whatever other grand people
are, my lady was never idle. For one thing,
she had to superintend the agent for the large Hanbury
estate. I believe it was mortgaged for a sum
of money which had gone to improve the late lord’s
Scotch lands; but she was anxious to pay off this
before her death, and so to leave her own inheritance
free of incumbrance to her son, the present Earl; whom,
I secretly think, she considered a greater person,
as being the heir of the Hanburys (though through
a female line), than as being my Lord Ludlow with
half a dozen other minor titles.
With this wish of releasing her property
from the mortgage, skilful care was much needed in
the management of it; and as far as my lady could go,
she took every pains. She had a great book, in
which every page was ruled into three divisions; on
the first column was written the date and the name
of the tenant who addressed any letter on business
to her; on the second was briefly stated the subject
of the letter, which generally contained a request
of some kind. This request would be surrounded
and enveloped in so many words, and often inserted
amidst so many odd reasons and excuses, that Mr. Horner
(the steward) would sometimes say it was like hunting
through a bushel of chaff to find a grain of wheat.
Now, in the second column of this book, the grain
of meaning was placed, clean and dry, before her ladyship
every morning. She sometimes would ask to see
the original letter; sometimes she simply answered
the request by a “Yes,” or a “No;”
and often she would send for lenses and papers, and
examine them well, with Mr. Horner at her elbow, to
see if such petitions, as to be allowed to plough
up pasture fields, were provided for in the terms
of the original agreement. On every Thursday
she made herself at liberty to see her tenants, from
four to six in the afternoon. Mornings would
have suited my lady better, as far as convenience went,
and I believe the old custom had been to have these
levees (as her ladyship used to call them) held before
twelve. But, as she said to Mr. Horner, when
he urged returning to the former hours, it spoilt a
whole day for a farmer, if he had to dress himself
in his best and leave his work in the forenoon (and
my lady liked to see her tenants come in their Sunday
clothes; she would not say a word, maybe, but she would
take her spectacles slowly out, and put them on with
silent gravity, and look at a dirty or raggedly-dressed
man so solemnly and earnestly, that his nerves must
have been pretty strong if he did not wince, and resolve
that, however poor he might be, soap and water, and
needle and thread, should be used before he again
appeared in her ladyship’s anteroom). The
out-lying tenants had always a supper provided for
them in the servants’-hall on Thursdays, to
which, indeed all comers were welcome to sit down.
For my lady said, though there were not many hours
left of a working man’s day when their business
with her was ended, yet that they needed food and
rest, and that she should be ashamed if they sought
either at the Fighting Lion (called at this day the
Hanbury Arms). They had as much beer as they
could drink while they were eating; and when the food
was cleared away, they had a cup a-piece of good ale,
in which the oldest tenant present, standing up, gave
Madam’s health; and after that was drunk, they
were expected to set off homewards; at any rate, no
more liquor was given them. The tenants one
and all called her “Madam;” for they recognized
in her the married heiress of the Hanburys, not the
widow of a Lord Ludlow, of whom they and their forefathers
knew nothing; and against whose memory, indeed, there
rankled a dim unspoken grudge, the cause of which
was accurately known to the very few who understood
the nature of a mortgage, and were therefore aware
that Madam’s money had been taken to enrich
my lord’s poor land in Scotland. I am sure for
you can understand I was behind the scenes, as it
were, and had many an opportunity of seeing and hearing,
as I lay or sat motionless in my lady’s room
with the double doors open between it and the anteroom
beyond, where Lady Ludlow saw her steward, and gave
audience to her tenants, I am certain,
I say, that Mr. Horner was silently as much annoyed
at the money that was swallowed up by this mortgage
as any one; and, some time or other, he had probably
spoken his mind out to my lady; for there was a sort
of offended reference on her part, and respectful
submission to blame on his, while every now and then
there was an implied protest whenever the
payments of the interest became due, or whenever my
lady stinted herself of any personal expense, such
as Mr. Horner thought was only decorous and becoming
in the heiress of the Hanburys. Her carriages
were old and cumbrous, wanting all the improvements
which had been adopted by those of her rank throughout
the county. Mr. Horner would fain have had the
ordering of a new coach. The carriage-horses,
too, were getting past their work; yet all the promising
colts bred on the estate were sold for ready money;
and so on. My lord, her son, was ambassador
at some foreign place; and very proud we all were of
his glory and dignity; but I fancy it cost money,
and my lady would have lived on bread and water sooner
than have called upon him to help her in paying off
the mortgage, although he was the one who was to benefit
by it in the end.
Mr. Horner was a very faithful steward,
and very respectful to my lady; although sometimes,
I thought she was sharper to him than to any one else;
perhaps because she knew that, although he never said
anything, he disapproved of the Hanburys being made
to pay for the Earl Ludlow’s estates and state.
The late lord had been a sailor, and
had been as extravagant in his habits as most sailors
are, I am told, for I never saw the sea;
and yet he had a long sight to his own interests;
but whatever he was, my lady loved him and his memory,
with about as fond and proud a love as ever wife gave
husband, I should think.
For a part of his life Mr. Horner,
who was born on the Hanbury property, had been a clerk
to an attorney in Birmingham; and these few years had
given him a kind of worldly wisdom, which, though always
exerted for her benefit, was antipathetic to her ladyship,
who thought that some of her steward’s maxims
savoured of trade and commerce. I fancy that
if it had been possible, she would have preferred
a return to the primitive system, of living on the
produce of the land, and exchanging the surplus for
such articles as were needed, without the intervention
of money.
But Mr. Horner was bitten with new-fangled
notions, as she would say, though his new-fangled
notions were what folk at the present day would think
sadly behindhand; and some of Mr. Gray’s ideas
fell on Mr. Horner’s mind like sparks on tow,
though they started from two different points.
Mr. Horner wanted to make every man useful and active
in this world, and to direct as much activity and
usefulness as possible to the improvement of the Hanbury
estates, and the aggrandisement of the Hanbury family,
and therefore he fell into the new cry for education.
Mr. Gray did not care much, Mr.
Horner thought not enough, for this world,
and where any man or family stood in their earthly
position; but he would have every one prepared for
the world to come, and capable of understanding and
receiving certain doctrines, for which latter purpose,
it stands to reason, he must have heard of these doctrines;
and therefore Mr. Gray wanted education. The
answer in the Catechism that Mr. Horner was most fond
of calling upon a child to repeat, was that to, “What
is thy duty towards thy neighbour?” The answer
Mr. Gray liked best to hear repeated with unction,
was that to the question, “What is the inward
and spiritual grace?” The reply to which Lady
Ludlow bent her head the lowest, as we said our Catechism
to her on Sundays, was to, “What is thy duty
towards God?” But neither Mr. Horner nor Mr.
Gray had heard many answers to the Catechism as yet.
Up to this time there was no Sunday-school
in Hanbury. Mr. Gray’s desires were bounded
by that object. Mr. Horner looked farther on:
he hoped for a day-school at some future time, to
train up intelligent labourers for working on the
estate. My lady would hear of neither one nor
the other: indeed, not the boldest man whom she
ever saw would have dared to name the project of a
day-school within her hearing.
So Mr. Horner contented himself with
quietly teaching a sharp, clever lad to read and write,
with a view to making use of him as a kind of foreman
in process of time. He had his pick of the farm-lads
for this purpose; and, as the brightest and sharpest,
although by far the raggedest and dirtiest, singled
out Job Gregson’s son. But all this as
my lady never listened to gossip, or indeed, was spoken
to unless she spoke first was quite unknown
to her, until the unlucky incident took place which
I am going to relate.