But I don’t see how my lady
could think it was over-education that made Harry
Gregson break his thigh, for the manner in which he
met with the accident was this:
Mr. Horner, who had fallen sadly out
of health since his wife’s death, had attached
himself greatly to Harry Gregson. Now, Mr. Horner
had a cold manner to every one, and never spoke more
than was necessary, at the best of times. And,
latterly, it had not been the best of times with him.
I dare say, he had had some causes for anxiety (of
which I knew nothing) about my lady’s affairs;
and he was evidently annoyed by my lady’s whim
(as he once inadvertently called it) of placing Miss
Galindo under him in the position of a clerk.
Yet he had always been friends, in his quiet way,
with Miss Galindo, and she devoted herself to her new
occupation with diligence and punctuality, although
more than once she had moaned to me over the orders
for needlework which had been sent to her, and which,
owing to her occupation in the service of Lady Ludlow,
she had been unable to fulfil.
The only living creature to whom the
staid Mr. Horner could be said to be attached, was
Harry Gregson. To my lady he was a faithful and
devoted servant, looking keenly after her interests,
and anxious to forward them at any cost of trouble
to himself. But the more shrewd Mr. Horner was,
the more probability was there of his being annoyed
at certain peculiarities of opinion which my lady
held with a quiet, gentle pertinacity; against which
no arguments, based on mere worldly and business calculations,
made any way. This frequent opposition to views
which Mr. Horner entertained, although it did not interfere
with the sincere respect which the lady and the steward
felt for each other, yet prevented any warmer feeling
of affection from coming in. It seems strange
to say it, but I must repeat it the only
person for whom, since his wife’s death, Mr.
Horner seemed to feel any love, was the little imp
Harry Gregson, with his bright, watchful eyes, his
tangled hair hanging right down to his eyebrows, for
all the world like a Skye terrier. This lad,
half gipsy and whole poacher, as many people esteemed
him, hung about the silent, respectable, staid Mr.
Horner, and followed his steps with something of the
affectionate fidelity of the dog which he resembled.
I suspect, this demonstration of attachment to his
person on Harry Gregson’s part was what won
Mr. Horner’s regard. In the first instance,
the steward had only chosen the lad out as the cleverest
instrument he could find for his purpose; and I don’t
mean to say that, if Harry had not been almost as
shrewd as Mr. Horner himself was, both by original
disposition and subsequent experience, the steward
would have taken to him as he did, let the lad have
shown ever so much affection for him.
But even to Harry Mr. Horner was silent.
Still, it was pleasant to find himself in many ways
so readily understood; to perceive that the crumbs
of knowledge he let fall were picked up by his little
follower, and hoarded like gold that here was one
to hate the persons and things whom Mr. Horner coldly
disliked, and to reverence and admire all those for
whom he had any regard. Mr. Horner had never
had a child, and unconsciously, I suppose, something
of the paternal feeling had begun to develop itself
in him towards Harry Gregson. I heard one or
two things from different people, which have always
made me fancy that Mr. Horner secretly and almost
unconsciously hoped that Harry Gregson might be trained
so as to be first his clerk, and next his assistant,
and finally his successor in his stewardship to the
Hanbury estates.
Harry’s disgrace with my lady,
in consequence of his reading the letter, was a deeper
blow to Mr. Horner than his quiet manner would ever
have led any one to suppose, or than Lady Ludlow ever
dreamed of inflicting, I am sure.
Probably Harry had a short, stern
rebuke from Mr. Horner at the time, for his manner
was always hard even to those he cared for the most.
But Harry’s love was not to be daunted or quelled
by a few sharp words. I dare say, from what
I heard of them afterwards, that Harry accompanied
Mr. Horner in his walk over the farm the very day of
the rebuke; his presence apparently unnoticed by the
agent, by whom his absence would have been painfully
felt nevertheless. That was the way of it, as
I have been told. Mr. Horner never bade Harry
go with him; never thanked him for going, or being
at his heels ready to run on any errands, straight
as the crow flies to his point, and back to heel in
as short a time as possible. Yet, if Harry were
away, Mr. Horner never inquired the reason from any
of the men who might be supposed to know whether he
was detained by his father, or otherwise engaged;
he never asked Harry himself where he had been.
But Miss Galindo said that those labourers who knew
Mr. Horner well, told her that he was always more
quick-eyed to shortcomings, more savage-like in fault-finding,
on those days when the lad was absent.
Miss Galindo, indeed, was my great
authority for most of the village news which I heard.
She it was who gave me the particulars of poor Harry’s
accident.
“You see, my dear,” she
said, “the little poacher has taken some unaccountable
fancy to my master.” (This was the name by which
Miss Galindo always spoke of Mr. Horner to me, ever
since she had been, as she called it, appointed his
clerk.)
“Now if I had twenty hearts
to lose, I never could spare a bit of one of them
for that good, gray, square, severe man. But
different people have different tastes, and here is
that little imp of a gipsy-tinker ready to turn slave
for my master; and, odd enough, my master, who,
I should have said beforehand, would have made short
work of imp, and imp’s family, and have sent
Hall, the Bang-beggar, after them in no time my
master, as they tell me, is in his way quite fond
of the lad, and if he could, without vexing my lady
too much, he would have made him what the folks here
call a Latiner. However, last night, it seems
that there was a letter of some importance forgotten
(I can’t tell you what it was about, my dear,
though I know perfectly well, but ‘service
oblige,’ as well as ‘noblesse,’
and you must take my word for it that it was important,
and one that I am surprised my master could forget),
till too late for the post. (The poor, good, orderly
man is not what he was before his wife’s death.)
Well, it seems that he was sore annoyed by his forgetfulness,
and well he might be. And it was all the more
vexatious, as he had no one to blame but himself.
As for that matter, I always scold somebody else
when I’m in fault; but I suppose my master would
never think of doing that, else it’s a mighty
relief. However, he could eat no tea, and was
altogether put out and gloomy. And the little
faithful imp-lad, perceiving all this, I suppose,
got up like a page in an old ballad, and said he would
run for his life across country to Comberford, and
see if he could not get there before the bags were
made up. So my master gave him the letter, and
nothing more was heard of the poor fellow till this
morning, for the father thought his son was sleeping
in Mr. Horner’s barn, as he does occasionally,
it seems, and my master, as was very natural, that
he had gone to his father’s.”
“And he had fallen down the old stone quarry,
had he not?”
“Yes, sure enough. Mr.
Gray had been up here fretting my lady with some of
his new-fangled schemes, and because the young man
could not have it all his own way, from what I understand,
he was put out, and thought he would go home by the
back lane, instead of through the village, where the
folks would notice if the parson looked glum.
But, however, it was a mercy, and I don’t mind
saying so, ay, and meaning it too, though it may be
like methodism; for, as Mr. Gray walked by the quarry,
he heard a groan, and at first he thought it was a
lamb fallen down; and he stood still, and then he
heard it again; and then I suppose, he looked down
and saw Harry. So he let himself down by the
boughs of the trees to the ledge where Harry lay half-dead,
and with his poor thigh broken. There he had
lain ever since the night before: he had been
returning to tell the master that he had safely posted
the letter, and the first words he said, when they
recovered him from the exhausted state he was in, were”
(Miss Galindo tried hard not to whimper, as she said
it), “’It was in time, sir. I see’d
it put in the bag with my own eyes.’”
“But where is he?” asked
I. “How did Mr. Gray get him out?”
“Ay! there it is, you see.
Why the old gentleman (I daren’t say Devil in
Lady Ludlow’s house) is not so black as he is
painted; and Mr. Gray must have a deal of good in
him, as I say at times; and then at others, when he
has gone against me, I can’t bear him, and think
hanging too good for him. But he lifted the
poor lad, as if he had been a baby, I suppose, and
carried him up the great ledges that were formerly
used for steps; and laid him soft and easy on the
wayside grass, and ran home and got help and a door,
and had him carried to his house, and laid on his bed;
and then somehow, for the first time either he or any
one else perceived it, he himself was all over blood his
own blood he had broken a blood-vessel;
and there he lies in the little dressing-room, as white
and as still as if he were dead; and the little imp
in Mr. Gray’s own bed, sound asleep, now his
leg is set, just as if linen sheets and a feather bed
were his native element, as one may say. Really,
now he is doing so well, I’ve no patience with
him, lying there where Mr. Gray ought to be.
It is just what my lady always prophesied would come
to pass, if there was any confusion of ranks.”
“Poor Mr. Gray!” said
I, thinking of his flushed face, and his feverish,
restless ways, when he had been calling on my lady
not an hour before his exertions on Harry’s
behalf. And I told Miss Galindo how ill I had
thought him.
“Yes,” said she.
“And that was the reason my lady had sent for
Doctor Trevor. Well, it has fallen out admirably,
for he looked well after that old donkey of a Prince,
and saw that he made no blunders.”
Now “that old donkey of a Prince”
meant the village surgeon, Mr. Prince, between whom
and Miss Galindo there was war to the knife, as they
often met in the cottages, when there was illness,
and she had her queer, odd recipes, which he, with
his grand pharmacopoeia, held in infinite contempt,
and the consequence of their squabbling had been, not
long before this very time, that he had established
a kind of rule, that into whatever sick-room Miss
Galindo was admitted, there he refused to visit.
But Miss Galindo’s prescriptions and visits cost
nothing and were often backed by kitchen-physic; so,
though it was true that she never came but she scolded
about something or other, she was generally preferred
as medical attendant to Mr. Prince.
“Yes, the old donkey is obliged
to tolerate me, and be civil to me; for, you see,
I got there first, and had possession, as it were,
and yet my lord the donkey likes the credit of attending
the parson, and being in consultation with so grand
a county-town doctor as Doctor Trevor. And Doctor
Trevor is an old friend of mine” (she sighed
a little, some time I may tell you why), “and
treats me with infinite bowing and respect; so the
donkey, not to be out of medical fashion, bows too,
though it is sadly against the grain; and he pulled
a face as if he had heard a slate-pencil gritting
against a slate, when I told Doctor Trevor I meant
to sit up with the two lads, for I call Mr. Gray little
more than a lad, and a pretty conceited one, too,
at times.”
“But why should you sit up,
Miss Galindo? It will tire you sadly.”
“Not it. You see, there
is Gregson’s mother to keep quiet for she sits
by her lad, fretting and sobbing, so that I’m
afraid of her disturbing Mr. Gray; and there’s
Mr. Gray to keep quiet, for Doctor Trevor says his
life depends on it; and there is medicine to be given
to the one, and bandages to be attended to for the
other; and the wild horde of gipsy brothers and sisters
to be turned out, and the father to be held in from
showing too much gratitude to Mr. Gray, who can’t
hear it, and who is to do it all but me?
The only servant is old lame Betty, who once lived
with me, and would leave me because she said
I was always bothering (there was a good
deal of truth in what she said, I grant, but she need
not have said it; a good deal of truth is best let
alone at the bottom of the well), and what can she
do, deaf as ever she can be, too?”
So Miss Galindo went her ways; but
not the less was she at her post in the morning; a
little crosser and more silent than usual; but the
first was not to be wondered at, and the last was
rather a blessing.
Lady Ludlow had been extremely anxious
both about Mr. Gray and Harry Gregson. Kind
and thoughtful in any case of illness and accident,
she always was; but somehow, in this, the feeling
that she was not quite what shall I call
it? “friends” seems hardly the
right word to use, as to the possible feeling between
the Countess Ludlow and the little vagabond messenger,
who had only once been in her presence, that
she had hardly parted from either as she could have
wished to do, had death been near, made her more than
usually anxious. Doctor Trevor was not to spare
obtaining the best medical advice the county could
afford: whatever he ordered in the way of diet,
was to be prepared under Mrs. Medlicott’s own
eye, and sent down from the Hall to the Parsonage.
As Mr. Horner had given somewhat similar directions,
in the case of Harry Gregson at least, there was rather
a multiplicity of counsellors and dainties, than any
lack of them. And, the second night, Mr. Horner
insisted on taking the superintendence of the nursing
himself, and sat and snored by Harry’s bedside,
while the poor, exhausted mother lay by her child, thinking
that she watched him, but in reality fast asleep, as
Miss Galindo told us; for, distrusting any one’s
powers of watching and nursing but her own, she had
stolen across the quiet village street in cloak and
dressing-gown, and found Mr. Gray in vain trying
to reach the cup of barley-water which Mr. Horner
had placed just beyond his reach.
In consequence of Mr. Gray’s
illness, we had to have a strange curate to do duty;
a man who dropped his h’s, and hurried through
the service, and yet had time enough to stand in my
Lady’s way, bowing to her as she came out of
church, and so subservient in manner, that I believe
that sooner than remain unnoticed by a countess, he
would have preferred being scolded, or even cuffed.
Now I found out, that great as was my lady’s
liking and approval of respect, nay, even reverence,
being paid to her as a person of quality, a
sort of tribute to her Order, which she had no individual
right to remit, or, indeed, not to exact, yet
she, being personally simple, sincere, and holding
herself in low esteem, could not endure anything like
the servility of Mr. Crosse, the temporary curate.
She grew absolutely to loathe his perpetual smiling
and bowing; his instant agreement with the slightest
opinion she uttered; his veering round as she blew
the wind. I have often said that my lady did
not talk much, as she might have done had she lived
among her equals. But we all loved her so much,
that we had learnt to interpret all her little ways
pretty truly; and I knew what particular turns of her
head, and contractions of her delicate fingers meant,
as well as if she had expressed herself in words.
I began to suspect that my lady would be very thankful
to have Mr. Gray about again, and doing his duty even
with a conscientiousness that might amount to worrying
himself, and fidgeting others; and although Mr. Gray
might hold her opinions in as little esteem as those
of any simple gentlewoman, she was too sensible not
to feel how much flavour there was in his conversation,
compared to that of Mr. Crosse, who was only her tasteless
echo.
As for Miss Galindo, she was utterly
and entirely a partisan of Mr. Gray’s, almost
ever since she had begun to nurse him during his illness.
“You know, I never set up for
reasonableness, my lady. So I don’t pretend
to say, as I might do if I were a sensible woman and
all that, that I am convinced by Mr. Gray’s
arguments of this thing or t’other. For
one thing, you see, poor fellow! he has never been
able to argue, or hardly indeed to speak, for Doctor
Trevor has been very peremptory. So there’s
been no scope for arguing! But what I mean is
this: When I see a sick man thinking always
of others, and never of himself; patient, humble a
trifle too much at times, for I’ve caught him
praying to be forgiven for having neglected his work
as a parish priest,” (Miss Galindo was making
horrible faces, to keep back tears, squeezing up her
eyes in a way which would have amused me at any other
time, but when she was speaking of Mr. Gray); “when
I see a downright good, religious man, I’m apt
to think he’s got hold of the right clue, and
that I can do no better than hold on by the tails
of his coat and shut my eyes, if we’ve got to
go over doubtful places on our road to Heaven.
So, my lady, you must excuse me if, when he gets
about again, he is all agog about a Sunday-school,
for if he is, I shall be agog too, and perhaps twice
as bad as him, for, you see, I’ve a strong constitution
compared to his, and strong ways of speaking and acting.
And I tell your ladyship this now, because I think
from your rank and still more, if I may
say so, for all your kindness to me long ago, down
to this very day you’ve a right to
be first told of anything about me. Change of
opinion I can’t exactly call it, for I don’t
see the good of schools and teaching A B C, any more
than I did before, only Mr. Gray does, so I’m
to shut my eyes, and leap over the ditch to the side
of education. I’ve told Sally already,
that if she does not mind her work, but stands gossiping
with Nelly Mather, I’ll teach her her lessons;
and I’ve never caught her with old Nelly since.”
I think Miss Galindo’s desertion
to Mr. Gray’s opinions in this matter hurt my
lady just a little bit; but she only said
“Of course, if the parishoners
wish for it, Mr. Gray must have his Sunday-school.
I shall, in that case, withdraw my opposition.
I am sorry I cannot alter my opinions as easily as
you.”
My lady made herself smile as she
said this. Miss Galindo saw it was an effort
to do so. She thought a minute before she spoke
again.
“Your ladyship has not seen
Mr. Gray as intimately as I have done. That’s
one thing. But, as for the parishioners, they
will follow your ladyship’s lead in everything;
so there is no chance of their wishing for a Sunday-school.”
“I have never done anything
to make them follow my lead, as you call it, Miss
Galindo,” said my lady, gravely.
“Yes, you have,” replied
Miss Galindo, bluntly. And then, correcting
herself, she said, “Begging your ladyship’s
pardon, you have. Your ancestors have lived
here time out of mind, and have owned the land on
which their forefathers have lived ever since there
were forefathers. You yourself were born amongst
them, and have been like a little queen to them ever
since, I might say, and they’ve never known your
ladyship do anything but what was kind and gentle;
but I’ll leave fine speeches about your ladyship
to Mr. Crosse. Only you, my lady, lead the thoughts
of the parish; and save some of them a world of trouble,
for they could never tell what was right if they had
to think for themselves. It’s all quite
right that they should be guided by you, my lady, if
only you would agree with Mr. Gray.”
“Well,” said my lady,
“I told him only the last day that he was here,
that I would think about it. I do believe I could
make up my mind on certain subjects better if I were
left alone, than while being constantly talked to
about them.”
My lady said this in her usual soft
tones; but the words had a tinge of impatience about
them; indeed, she was more ruffled than I had often
seen her; but, checking herself in an instant she
said
“You don’t know how Mr.
Horner drags in this subject of education apropos
of everything. Not that he says much about it
at any time: it is not his way. But he
cannot let the thing alone.”
“I know why, my lady,”
said Miss Galindo. “That poor lad, Harry
Gregson, will never be able to earn his livelihood
in any active way, but will be lame for life.
Now, Mr. Horner thinks more of Harry than of any one
else in the world, except, perhaps, your
ladyship.” Was it not a pretty companionship
for my lady? “And he has schemes of his
own for teaching Harry; and if Mr. Gray could but
have his school, Mr. Horner and he think Harry might
be schoolmaster, as your ladyship would not like to
have him coming to you as steward’s clerk.
I wish your ladyship would fall into this plan; Mr.
Gray has it so at heart.”
Miss Galindo looked wistfully at my
lady, as she said this. But my lady only said,
drily, and rising at the same time, as if to end the
conversation
“So Mr. Horner and Mr. Gray
seem to have gone a long way in advance of my consent
to their plans.”
“There!” exclaimed Miss
Galindo, as my lady left the room, with an apology
for going away; “I have gone and done mischief
with my long, stupid tongue. To be sure, people
plan a long way ahead of to-day; more especially when
one is a sick man, lying all through the weary day
on a sofa.”
“My lady will soon get over
her annoyance,” said I, as it were apologetically.
I only stopped Miss Galindo’s self-reproaches
to draw down her wrath upon myself.
“And has not she a right to
be annoyed with me, if she likes, and to keep annoyed
as long as she likes? Am I complaining of her,
that you need tell me that? Let me tell you,
I have known my lady these thirty years; and if she
were to take me by the shoulders, and turn me out of
the house, I should only love her the more.
So don’t you think to come between us with any
little mincing, peace-making speeches. I have
been a mischief-making parrot, and I like her the
better for being vexed with me. So good-bye
to you, Miss; and wait till you know Lady Ludlow as
well as I do, before you next think of telling me
she will soon get over her annoyance!” And
off Miss Galindo went.
I could not exactly tell what I had
done wrong; but I took care never again to come in
between my lady and her by any remark about the one
to the other; for I saw that some most powerful bond
of grateful affection made Miss Galindo almost worship
my lady.
Meanwhile, Harry Gregson was limping
a little about in the village, still finding his home
in Mr. Gray’s house; for there he could most
conveniently be kept under the doctor’s eye,
and receive the requisite care, and enjoy the requisite
nourishment. As soon as he was a little better,
he was to go to Mr. Horner’s house; but, as the
steward lived some distance out of the way, and was
much from home, he had agreed to leave Harry at the
house; to which he had first been taken, until he was
quite strong again; and the more willingly, I suspect,
from what I heard afterwards, because Mr. Gray gave
up all the little strength of speaking which he had,
to teaching Harry in the very manner which Mr. Horner
most desired.
As for Gregson the father he wild
man of the woods, poacher, tinker, jack-of-all trades was
getting tamed by this kindness to his child.
Hitherto his hand had been against every man, as every
man’s had been against him. That affair
before the justice, which I told you about, when Mr.
Gray and even my lady had interested themselves to
get him released from unjust imprisonment, was the
first bit of justice he had ever met with; it attracted
him to the people, and attached him to the spot on
which he had but squatted for a time. I am not
sure if any of the villagers were grateful to him
for remaining in their neighbourhood, instead of decamping
as he had often done before, for good reasons, doubtless,
of personal safety. Harry was only one out of
a brood of ten or twelve children, some of whom had
earned for themselves no good character in service:
one, indeed, had been actually transported, for a
robbery committed in a distant part of the county;
and the tale was yet told in the village of how Gregson
the father came back from the trial in a state of
wild rage, striding through the place, and uttering
oaths of vengeance to himself, his great black eyes
gleaming out of his matted hair, and his arms working
by his side, and now and then tossed up in his impotent
despair. As I heard the account, his wife followed
him, child-laden and weeping. After this, they
had vanished from the country for a time, leaving
their mud hovel locked up, and the door-key, as the
neighbours said, buried in a hedge bank. The
Gregsons had reappeared much about the same time that
Mr. Gray came to Hanbury. He had either never
heard of their evil character, or considered that it
gave them all the more claims upon his Christian care;
and the end of it was, that this rough, untamed, strong
giant of a heathen was loyal slave to the weak, hectic,
nervous, self-distrustful parson. Gregson had
also a kind of grumbling respect for Mr. Horner:
he did not quite like the steward’s monopoly
of his Harry: the mother submitted to that with
a better grace, swallowing down her maternal jealousy
in the prospect of her child’s advancement to
a better and more respectable position than that in
which his parents had struggled through life.
But Mr. Horner, the steward, and Gregson, the poacher
and squatter, had come into disagreeable contact too
often in former days for them to be perfectly cordial
at any future time. Even now, when there was
no immediate cause for anything but gratitude for
his child’s sake on Gregson’s part, he
would skulk out of Mr. Horner’s way, if he saw
him coming; and it took all Mr. Horner’s natural
reserve and acquired self-restraint to keep him from
occasionally holding up his father’s life as
a warning to Harry. Now Gregson had nothing of
this desire for avoidance with regard to Mr. Gray.
The poacher had a feeling of physical protection
towards the parson; while the latter had shown the
moral courage, without which Gregson would never have
respected him, in coming right down upon him more
than once in the exercise of unlawful pursuits, and
simply and boldly telling him he was doing wrong,
with such a quiet reliance upon Gregson’s better
feeling, at the same time, that the strong poacher
could not have lifted a finger against Mr. Gray, though
it had been to save himself from being apprehended
and taken to the lock-ups the very next hour.
He had rather listened to the parson’s bold
words with an approving smile, much as Mr. Gulliver
might have hearkened to a lecture from a Lilliputian.
But when brave words passed into kind deeds, Gregson’s
heart mutely acknowledged its master and keeper.
And the beauty of it all was, that Mr. Gray knew nothing
of the good work he had done, or recognized himself
as the instrument which God had employed. He
thanked God, it is true, fervently and often, that
the work was done; and loved the wild man for his rough
gratitude; but it never occurred to the poor young
clergyman, lying on his sick-bed, and praying, as
Miss Galindo had told us he did, to be forgiven for
his unprofitable life, to think of Gregson’s
reclaimed soul as anything with which he had had to
do. It was now more than three months since Mr.
Gray had been at Hanbury Court. During all that
time he had been confined to his house, if not to
his sick-bed, and he and my lady had never met since
their last discussion and difference about Farmer Hale’s
barn.
This was not my dear lady’s
fault; no one could have been more attentive in every
way to the slightest possible want of either of the
invalids, especially of Mr. Gray. And she would
have gone to see him at his own house, as she sent
him word, but that her foot had slipped upon the polished
oak staircase, and her ancle had been sprained.
So we had never seen Mr. Gray since
his illness, when one November day he was announced
as wishing to speak to my lady. She was sitting
in her room the room in which I lay now
pretty constantly and I remember she looked
startled, when word was brought to her of Mr. Gray’s
being at the Hall.
She could not go to him, she was too
lame for that, so she bade him be shown into where
she sat.
“Such a day for him to go out!”
she exclaimed, looking at the fog which had crept
up to the windows, and was sapping the little remaining
life in the brilliant Virginian creeper leaves that
draperied the house on the terrace side.
He came in white, trembling, his large
eyes wild and dilated. He hastened up to Lady
Ludlow’s chair, and, to my surprise, took one
of her hands and kissed it, without speaking, yet
shaking all over.
“Mr. Gray!” said she,
quickly, with sharp, tremulous apprehension of some
unknown evil. “What is it? There
is something unusual about you.”
“Something unusual has occurred,”
replied he, forcing his words to be calm, as with
a great effort. “A gentleman came to my
house, not half an hour ago a Mr. Howard.
He came straight from Vienna.”
“My son!” said my dear
lady, stretching out her arms in dumb questioning
attitude.
“The Lord gave and the Lord
taketh away. Blessed be the name of the Lord.”
But my poor lady could not echo the
words. He was the last remaining child.
And once she had been the joyful mother of nine.