Like many other things which have
been declared to be impossible, this report of Captain
James being attentive to Miss Brooke turned out to
be very true.
The mere idea of her agent being on
the slightest possible terms of acquaintance with
the Dissenter, the tradesman, the Birmingham democrat,
who had come to settle in our good, orthodox, aristocratic,
and agricultural Hanbury, made my lady very uneasy.
Miss Galindo’s misdemeanour in having taken
Miss Bessy to live with her, faded into a mistake,
a mere error of judgment, in comparison with Captain
James’s intimacy at Yeast House, as the Brookes
called their ugly square-built farm. My lady
talked herself quite into complacency with Miss Galindo,
and even Miss Bessy was named by her, the first time
I had ever been aware that my lady recognized her
existence; but I recollect it was a long
rainy afternoon, and I sat with her ladyship, and we
had time and opportunity for a long uninterrupted
talk whenever we had been silent for a
little while she began again, with something like a
wonder how it was that Captain James could ever have
commenced an acquaintance with “that man Brooke.”
My lady recapitulated all the times she could remember,
that anything had occurred, or been said by Captain
James which she could now understand as throwing light
upon the subject.
“He said once that he was anxious
to bring in the Norfolk system of cropping, and spoke
a good deal about Mr. Coke of Holkham (who, by the
way, was no more a Coke than I am collateral
in the female line which counts for little
or nothing among the great old commoners’ families
of pure blood), and his new ways of cultivation; of
course new men bring in new ways, but it does not
follow that either are better than the old ways.
However, Captain James has been very anxious to try
turnips and bone manure, and he really is a man of
such good sense and energy, and was so sorry last
year about the failure, that I consented; and now I
begin to see my error. I have always heard that
town bakers adulterate their flour with bone-dust;
and, of course, Captain James would be aware of this,
and go to Brooke to inquire where the article was to
be purchased.”
My lady always ignored the fact which
had sometimes, I suspect, been brought under her very
eyes during her drives, that Mr. Brooke’s few
fields were in a state of far higher cultivation than
her own; so she could not, of course, perceive that
there was any wisdom to be gained from asking the
advice of the tradesman turned farmer.
But by-and-by this fact of her agent’s
intimacy with the person whom in the whole world she
most disliked (with that sort of dislike in which a
large amount of uncomfortableness is combined the
dislike which conscientious people sometimes feel
to another without knowing why, and yet which they
cannot indulge in with comfort to themselves without
having a moral reason why), came before my lady in
many shapes. For, indeed I am sure that Captain
James was not a man to conceal or be ashamed of one
of his actions. I cannot fancy his ever lowering
his strong loud clear voice, or having a confidental
conversation with any one. When his crops had
failed, all the village had known it. He complained,
he regretted, he was angry, or owned himself a –
fool, all down the village street; and the consequence
was that, although he was a far more passionate man
than Mr. Horner, all the tenants liked him far better.
People, in general, take a kindlier interest in any
one, the workings of whose mind and heart they can
watch and understand, than in a man who only lets
you know what he has been thinking about and feeling,
by what he does. But Harry Gregson was faithful
to the memory of Mr. Horner. Miss Galindo has
told me that she used to watch him hobble out of the
way of Captain James, as if to accept his notice, however
good-naturedly given, would have been a kind of treachery
to his former benefactor. But Gregson (the father)
and the new agent rather took to each other; and one
day, much to my surprise, I heard that the “poaching,
tinkering vagabond,” as the people used to call
Gregson when I first had come to live at Hanbury,
had been appointed gamekeeper; Mr. Gray standing godfather,
as it were, to his trustworthiness, if he were trusted
with anything; which I thought at the time was rather
an experiment, only it answered, as many of Mr. Gray’s
deeds of daring did. It was curious how he was
growing to be a kind of autocrat in the village; and
how unconscious he was of it. He was as shy
and awkward and nervous as ever in any affair that
was not of some moral consequence to him. But
as soon as he was convinced that a thing was right,
he “shut his eyes and ran and butted at it like
a ram,” as Captain James once expressed it, in
talking over something Mr. Gray had done. People
in the village said, “they never knew what the
parson would be at next;” or they might have
said, “where his reverence would next turn up.”
For I have heard of his marching right into the middle
of a set of poachers, gathered together for some desperate
midnight enterprise, or walking into a public-house
that lay just beyond the bounds of my lady’s
estate, and in that extra-parochial piece of ground
I named long ago, and which was considered the rendezvous
of all the ne’er-do-weel characters for miles
round, and where a parson and a constable were held
in much the same kind of esteem as unwelcome visitors.
And yet Mr. Gray had his long fits of depression,
in which he felt as if he were doing nothing, making
no way in his work, useless and unprofitable, and
better out of the world than in it. In comparison
with the work he had set himself to do, what he did
seemed to be nothing. I suppose it was constitutional,
those attacks of lowness of spirits which he had about
this time; perhaps a part of the nervousness which
made him always so awkward when he came to the Hall.
Even Mrs. Medlicott, who almost worshipped the ground
he trod on, as the saying is, owned that Mr. Gray
never entered one of my lady’s rooms without
knocking down something, and too often breaking it.
He would much sooner have faced a desperate poacher
than a young lady any day. At least so we thought.
I do not know how it was that it came
to pass that my lady became reconciled to Miss Galindo
about this time. Whether it was that her ladyship
was weary of the unspoken coolness with her old friend;
or that the specimens of delicate sewing and fine
spinning at the school had mollified her towards Miss
Bessy; but I was surprised to learn one day that Miss
Galindo and her young friend were coming that very
evening to tea at the Hall. This information
was given me by Mrs. Medlicott, as a message from
my lady, who further went on to desire that certain
little preparations should be made in her own private
sitting-room, in which the greater part of my days
were spent. From the nature of these preparations,
I became quite aware that my lady intended to do honour
to her expected visitors. Indeed, Lady Ludlow
never forgave by halves, as I have known some people
do. Whoever was coming as a visitor to my lady,
peeress, or poor nameless girl, there was a certain
amount of preparation required in order to do them
fitting honour. I do not mean to say that the
preparation was of the same degree of importance in
each case. I dare say, if a peeress had come
to visit us at the Hall, the covers would have been
taken off the furniture in the white drawing-room (they
never were uncovered all the time I stayed at the
Hall), because my lady would wish to offer her the
ornaments and luxuries which this grand visitor (who
never came I wish she had! I did so
want to see that furniture uncovered!) was accustomed
to at home, and to present them to her in the best
order in which my lady could. The same rule,
mollified, held good with Miss Galindo. Certain
things, in which my lady knew she took an interest,
were laid out ready for her to examine on this very
day; and, what was more, great books of prints were
laid out, such as I remembered my lady had had brought
forth to beguile my own early days of illness, Mr.
Hogarth’s works, and the like, which
I was sure were put out for Miss Bessy.
No one knows how curious I was to
see this mysterious Miss Bessy twenty times
more mysterious, of course, for want of her surname.
And then again (to try and account for my great curiosity,
of which in recollection I am more than half ashamed),
I had been leading the quiet monotonous life of a
crippled invalid for many years, shut up
from any sight of new faces; and this was to be the
face of one whom I had thought about so much and so
long, Oh! I think I might be excused.
Of course they drank tea in the great
hall, with the four young gentlewomen, who, with myself,
formed the small bevy now under her ladyship’s
charge. Of those who were at Hanbury when first
I came, none remained; all were married, or gone once
more to live at some home which could be called their
own, whether the ostensible head were father or brother.
I myself was not without some hopes of a similar kind.
My brother Harry was now a curate in Westmoreland,
and wanted me to go and live with him, as eventually
I did for a time. But that is neither here nor
there at present. What I am talking about is
Miss Bessy.
After a reasonable time had elapsed,
occupied as I well knew by the meal in the great hall, the
measured, yet agreeable conversation afterwards, and
a certain promenade around the hall, and through the
drawing-rooms, with pauses before different pictures,
the history or subject of each of which was invariably
told by my lady to every new visitor, a
sort of giving them the freedom of the old family-seat,
by describing the kind and nature of the great progenitors
who had lived there before the narrator, I
heard the steps approaching my lady’s room,
where I lay. I think I was in such a state of
nervous expectation, that if I could have moved easily,
I should have got up and run away. And yet I
need not have been, for Miss Galindo was not in the
least altered (her nose a little redder, to be sure,
but then that might only have had a temporary cause
in the private crying I know she would have had before
coming to see her dear Lady Ludlow once again).
But I could almost have pushed Miss Galindo away,
as she intercepted me in my view of the mysterious
Miss Bessy.
Miss Bessy was, as I knew, only about
eighteen, but she looked older. Dark hair, dark
eyes, a tall, firm figure, a good, sensible face, with
a serene expression, not in the least disturbed by
what I had been thinking must be such awful circumstances
as a first introduction to my lady, who had so disapproved
of her very existence: those are the clearest
impressions I remember of my first interview with Miss
Bessy. She seemed to observe us all, in her
quiet manner, quite as much as I did her; but she
spoke very little; occupied herself, indeed, as my
lady had planned, with looking over the great books
of engravings. I think I must have (foolishly)
intended to make her feel at her ease, by my patronage;
but she was seated far away from my sofa, in order
to command the light, and really seemed so unconcerned
at her unwonted circumstances, that she did not need
my countenance or kindness. One thing I did like her
watchful look at Miss Galindo from time to time:
it showed that her thoughts and sympathy were ever
at Miss Galindo’s service, as indeed they well
might be. When Miss Bessy spoke, her voice was
full and clear, and what she said, to the purpose,
though there was a slight provincial accent in her
way of speaking. After a while, my lady set us
two to play at chess, a game which I had lately learnt
at Mr. Gray’s suggestion. Still we did
not talk much together, though we were becoming attracted
towards each other, I fancy.
“You will play well,”
said she. “You have only learnt about six
months, have you? And yet you can nearly beat
me, who have been at it as many years.”
“I began to learn last November.
I remember Mr. Gray’s bringing me ‘Philidor
on Chess,’ one very foggy, dismal day.”
What made her look up so suddenly,
with bright inquiry in her eyes? What made her
silent for a moment as if in thought, and then go on
with something, I know not what, in quite an altered
tone?
My lady and Miss Galindo went on talking,
while I sat thinking. I heard Captain James’s
name mentioned pretty frequently; and at last my lady
put down her work, and said, almost with tears in
her eyes:
“I could not I cannot
believe it. He must be aware she is a schismatic;
a baker’s daughter; and he is a gentleman by
virtue and feeling, as well as by his profession,
though his manners may be at times a little rough.
My dear Miss Galindo, what will this world come to?”
Miss Galindo might possibly be aware
of her own share in bringing the world to the pass
which now dismayed my lady, for of course,
though all was now over and forgiven, yet Miss, Bessy’s
being received into a respectable maiden lady’s
house, was one of the portents as to the world’s
future which alarmed her ladyship; and Miss Galindo
knew this, but, at any rate, she had too
lately been forgiven herself not to plead for mercy
for the next offender against my lady’s delicate
sense of fitness and propriety, so she
replied:
“Indeed, my lady, I have long
left off trying to conjecture what makes Jack fancy
Gill, or Gill Jack. It’s best to sit down
quiet under the belief that marriages are made for
us, somewhere out of this world, and out of the range
of this world’s reason and laws. I’m
not so sure that I should settle it down that they
were made in heaven; t’other place seems to
me as likely a workshop; but at any rate, I’ve
given up troubling my head as to why they take place.
Captain James is a gentleman; I make no doubt of
that ever since I saw him stop to pick up old Goody
Blake (when she tumbled down on the slide last winter)
and then swear at a little lad who was laughing at
her, and cuff him till he tumbled down crying; but
we must have bread somehow, and though I like it better
baked at home in a good sweet brick oven, yet, as
some folks never can get it to rise, I don’t
see why a man may not be a baker. You see, my
lady, I look upon baking as a simple trade, and as
such lawful. There is no machine comes in to
take away a man’s or woman’s power of earning
their living, like the spinning-jenny (the old busybody
that she is), to knock up all our good old women’s
livelihood, and send them to their graves before their
time. There’s an invention of the enemy,
if you will!”
“That’s very true!” said my lady,
shaking her head.
“But baking bread is wholesome,
straight-forward elbow-work. They have not got
to inventing any contrivance for that yet, thank Heaven!
It does not seem to me natural, nor according to
Scripture, that iron and steel (whose brows can’t
sweat) should be made to do man’s work.
And so I say, all those trades where iron and steel
do the work ordained to man at the Fall, are unlawful,
and I never stand up for them. But say this baker
Brooke did knead his bread, and make it rise, and then
that people, who had, perhaps, no good ovens, came
to him, and bought his good light bread, and in this
manner he turned an honest penny and got rich; why,
all I say, my lady, is this, I dare say
he would have been born a Hanbury, or a lord if he
could; and if he was not, it is no fault of his, that
I can see, that he made good bread (being a baker by
trade), and got money, and bought his land.
It was his misfortune, not his fault, that he was
not a person of quality by birth.”
“That’s very true,”
said my lady, after a moment’s pause for consideration.
“But, although he was a baker, he might have
been a Churchman. Even your eloquence, Miss
Galindo, shan’t convince me that that is not
his own fault.”
“I don’t see even that,
begging your pardon, my lady,” said Miss Galindo,
emboldened by the first success of her eloquence.
“When a Baptist is a baby, if I understand
their creed aright, he is not baptized; and, consequently,
he can have no godfathers and godmothers to do anything
for him in his baptism; you agree to that, my lady?”
My lady would rather have known what
her acquiescence would lead to, before acknowledging
that she could not dissent from this first proposition;
still she gave her tacit agreement by bowing her head.
“And, you know, our godfathers
and godmothers are expected to promise and vow three
things in our name, when we are little babies, and
can do nothing but squall for ourselves. It
is a great privilege, but don’t let us be hard
upon those who have not had the chance of godfathers
and godmothers. Some people, we know, are born
with silver spoons, that’s to say,
a godfather to give one things, and teach one’s
catechism, and see that we’re confirmed into
good church-going Christians, and others
with wooden ladles in their mouths. These poor
last folks must just be content to be godfatherless
orphans, and Dissenters, all their lives; and if they
are tradespeople into the bargain, so much the worse
for them; but let us be humble Christians, my dear
lady, and not hold our heads too high because we were
born orthodox quality.”
“You go on too fast, Miss Galindo!
I can’t follow you. Besides, I do believe
dissent to be an invention of the Devil’s.
Why can’t they believe as we do? It’s
very wrong. Besides, its schism and heresy, and,
you know, the Bible says that’s as bad as witchcraft.”
My lady was not convinced, as I could
see. After Miss Galindo had gone, she sent Mrs.
Medlicott for certain books out of the great old library
up stairs, and had them made up into a parcel under
her own eye.
“If Captain James comes to-morrow,
I will speak to him about these Brookes. I have
not hitherto liked to speak to him, because I did not
wish to hurt him, by supposing there could be any truth
in the reports about his intimacy with them.
But now I will try and do my duty by him and them.
Surely this great body of divinity will bring them
back to the true church.”
I could not tell, for though my lady
read me over the titles, I was not any the wiser as
to their contents. Besides, I was much more anxious
to consult my lady as to my own change of place.
I showed her the letter I had that day received from
Harry; and we once more talked over the expediency
of my going to live with him, and trying what entire
change of air would do to re-establish my failing
health. I could say anything to my lady, she
was so sure to understand me rightly. For one
thing, she never thought of herself, so I had no fear
of hurting her by stating the truth. I told
her how happy my years had been while passed under
her roof; but that now I had begun to wonder whether
I had not duties elsewhere, in making a home for Harry, and
whether the fulfilment of these duties, quiet ones
they must needs be in the case of such a cripple as
myself, would not prevent my sinking into the querulous
habit of thinking and talking, into which I found
myself occasionally falling. Add to which, there
was the prospect of benefit from the more bracing air
of the north.
It was then settled that my departure
from Hanbury, my happy home for so long, was to take
place before many weeks had passed. And as, when
one period of life is about to be shut up for ever,
we are sure to look back upon it with fond regret,
so I, happy enough in my future prospects, could not
avoid recurring to all the days of my life in the Hall,
from the time when I came to it, a shy awkward girl,
scarcely past childhood, to now, when a grown woman, past
childhood almost, from the very character
of my illness, past youth, I was looking
forward to leaving my lady’s house (as a residence)
for ever. As it has turned out, I never saw
either her or it again. Like a piece of sea-wreck,
I have drifted away from those days: quiet, happy,
eventless days, very happy to remember!
I thought of good, jovial Mr. Mountford, and
his regrets that he might not keep a pack, “a
very small pack,” of harriers, and his merry
ways, and his love of good eating; of the first coming
of Mr. Gray, and my lady’s attempt to quench
his sermons, when they tended to enforce any duty
connected with education. And now we had an absolute
school-house in the village; and since Miss Bessy’s
drinking tea at the Hall, my lady had been twice inside
it, to give directions about some fine yarn she was
having spun for table-napery. And her ladyship
had so outgrown her old custom of dispensing with
sermon or discourse, that even during the temporary
preaching of Mr. Crosse, she had never had recourse
to it, though I believe she would have had all the
congregation on her side if she had.
And Mr. Horner was dead, and Captain
James reigned in his stead. Good, steady, severe,
silent Mr. Horner! with his clock-like regularity,
and his snuff-coloured clothes, and silver buckles!
I have often wondered which one misses most when
they are dead and gone, the bright creatures
full of life, who are hither and thither and everywhere,
so that no one can reckon upon their coming and going,
with whom stillness and the long quiet of the grave,
seems utterly irreconcilable, so full are they of
vivid motion and passion, or the slow, serious
people, whose movements nay, whose very
words, seem to go by clockwork; who never appear much
to affect the course of our life while they are with
us, but whose methodical ways show themselves, when
they are gone, to have been intertwined with our very
roots of daily existence. I think I miss these
last the most, although I may have loved the former
best. Captain James never was to me what Mr.
Horner was, though the latter had hardly changed a
dozen words with me at the day of his death.
Then Miss Galindo! I remembered the time as
if it had been only yesterday, when she was but a
name and a very odd one to me;
then she was a queer, abrupt, disagreeable, busy old
maid. Now I loved her dearly, and I found out
that I was almost jealous of Miss Bessy.
Mr. Gray I never thought of with love;
the feeling was almost reverence with which I looked
upon him. I have not wished to speak much of
myself, or else I could have told you how much he
had been to me during these long, weary years of illness.
But he was almost as much to every one, rich and
poor, from my lady down to Miss Galindo’s Sally.
The village, too, had a different
look about it. I am sure I could not tell you
what caused the change; but there were no more lounging
young men to form a group at the cross-road, at a
time of day when young men ought to be at work.
I don’t say this was all Mr. Gray’s doing,
for there really was so much to do in the fields that
there was but little time for lounging now-a-days.
And the children were hushed up in school, and better
behaved out of it, too, than in the days when I used
to be able to go my lady’s errands in the village.
I went so little about now, that I am sure I can’t
tell who Miss Galindo found to scold; and yet she
looked so well and so happy that I think she must have
had her accustomed portion of that wholesome exercise.
Before I left Hanbury, the rumour
that Captain James was going to marry Miss Brooke,
Baker Brooke’s eldest daughter, who had only
a sister to share his property with her, was confirmed.
He himself announced it to my lady; nay, more, with
a courage, gained, I suppose, in his former profession,
where, as I have heard, he had led his ship into many
a post of danger, he asked her ladyship, the Countess
Ludlow, if he might bring his bride elect, (the Baptist
baker’s daughter!) and present her to my lady!
I am glad I was not present when he
made this request; I should have felt so much ashamed
for him, and I could not have helped being anxious
till I heard my lady’s answer, if I had been
there. Of course she acceded; but I can fancy
the grave surprise of her look. I wonder if Captain
James noticed it.
I hardly dared ask my lady, after
the interview had taken place, what she thought of
the bride elect; but I hinted my curiosity, and she
told me, that if the young person had applied to Mrs.
Medlicott, for the situation of cook, and Mrs. Medlicott
had engaged her, she thought that it would have been
a very suitable arrangement. I understood from
this how little she thought a marriage with Captain
James, R.N., suitable.
About a year after I left Hanbury,
I received a letter from Miss Galindo; I think I can
find it. Yes, this is it.
’Hanbury, May 4, 1811.
Dear Margaret,
’You ask for news of us all.
Don’t you know there is no news in Hanbury?
Did you ever hear of an event here? Now, if
you have answered “Yes,” in your own
mind to these questions, you have fallen into my
trap, and never were more mistaken in your life.
Hanbury is full of news; and we have more events
on our hands than we know what to do with.
I will take them in the order of the newspapers births,
deaths, and marriages. In the matter of births,
Jenny Lucas has had twins not a week ago.
Sadly too much of a good thing, you’ll say.
Very true: but then they died; so their birth
did not much signify. My cat has kittened,
too; she has had three kittens, which again you may
observe is too much of a good thing; and so it would
be, if it were not for the next item of intelligence
I shall lay before you. Captain and Mrs.
James have taken the old house next Pearson’s;
and the house is overrun with mice, which is just
as fortunate for me as the King of Egypt’s
rat-ridden kingdom was to Dick Whittington. For
my cat’s kittening decided me to go and call
on the bride, in hopes she wanted a cat; which
she did like a sensible woman, as I do believe she
is, in spite of Baptism, Bakers, Bread, and Birmingham,
and something worse than all, which you shall hear
about, if you’ll only be patient. As I
had got my best bonnet on, the one I bought when
poor Lord Ludlow was last at Hanbury in ’99 I
thought it a great condescension in myself (always
remembering the date of the Galindo baronetcy) to go
and call on the bride; though I don’t think
so much of myself in my every-day clothes, as you
know. But who should I find there but my Lady
Ludlow! She looks as frail and delicate as
ever, but is, I think, in better heart ever since
that old city merchant of a Hanbury took it into his
head that he was a cadet of the Hanburys of Hanbury,
and left her that handsome legacy. I’ll
warrant you that the mortgage was paid off pretty
fast; and Mr. Horner’s money or my
lady’s money, or Harry Gregson’s money,
call it which you will is invested in his
name, all right and tight; and they do talk of
his being captain of his school, or Grecian, or
something, and going to college, after all! Harry
Gregson the poacher’s son! Well! to
be sure, we are living in strange times!
’But I have not done with the marriages
yet. Captain James’s is all very well,
but no one cares for it now, we are so full of Mr.
Gray’s. Yes, indeed, Mr. Gray is going
to be married, and to nobody else but my little
Bessy! I tell her she will have to nurse him
half the days of her life, he is such a frail little
body. But she says she does not care for
that; so that his body holds his soul, it is enough
for her. She has a good spirit and a brave
heart, has my Bessy! It is a great advantage
that she won’t have to mark her clothes over
again: for when she had knitted herself her
last set of stockings, I told her to put G for
Galindo, if she did not choose to put it for Gibson,
for she should be my child if she was no one else’s.
And now you see it stands for Gray. So there
are two marriages, and what more would you have?
And she promises to take another of my kittens.
’Now, as to deaths, old Farmer
Hale is dead poor old man, I should think
his wife thought it a good riddance, for he beat her
every day that he was drunk, and he was never sober,
in spite of Mr. Gray. I don’t think
(as I tell him) that Mr. Gray would ever have found
courage to speak to Bessy as long as Farmer Hale
lived, he took the old gentleman’s sins so
much to heart, and seemed to think it was all his
fault for not being able to make a sinner into a saint.
The parish bull is dead too. I never was
so glad in my life. But they say we are to
have a new one in his place. In the meantime
I cross the common in peace, which is very convenient
just now, when I have so often to go to Mr. Gray’s
to see about furnishing.
’Now you think I have told you
all the Hanbury news, don’t you? Not so.
The very greatest thing of all is to come. I
won’t tantalize you, but just out with it,
for you would never guess it. My Lady Ludlow
has given a party, just like any plebeian amongst us.
We had tea and toast in the blue drawing-room,
old John Footman waiting with Tom Diggles, the
lad that used to frighten away crows in Farmer Hale’s
fields, following in my lady’s livery, hair
powdered and everything. Mrs. Medlicott made
tea in my lady’s own room. My lady looked
like a splendid fairy queen of mature age, in black
velvet, and the old lace, which I have never seen
her wear before since my lord’s death.
But the company? you’ll say. Why, we
had the parson of Clover, and the parson of Headleigh,
and the parson of Merribank, and the three parsonesses;
and Farmer Donkin, and two Miss Donkins; and Mr. Gray
(of course), and myself and Bessy; and Captain
and Mrs. James; yes, and Mr. and Mrs. Brooke; think
of that! I am not sure the parsons liked it;
but he was there. For he has been helping Captain
James to get my lady’s land into order; and
then his daughter married the agent; and Mr. Gray
(who ought to know) says that, after all, Baptists
are not such bad people; and he was right against
them at one time, as you may remember. Mrs.
Brooke is a rough diamond, to be sure. People
have said that of me, I know. But, being
a Galindo, I learnt manners in my youth and can
take them up when I choose. But Mrs. Brooke never
learnt manners, I’ll be bound. When
John Footman handed her the tray with the tea-cups,
she looked up at him as if she were sorely puzzled
by that way of going on. I was sitting next
to her, so I pretended not to see her perplexity,
and put her cream and sugar in for her, and was
all ready to pop it into her hands, when
who should come up, but that impudent lad Tom Diggles
(I call him lad, for all his hair is powdered,
for you know that it is not natural gray hair), with
his tray full of cakes and what not, all as good
as Mrs. Medlicott could make them. By this
time, I should tell you, all the parsonesses were
looking at Mrs. Brooke, for she had shown her want
of breeding before; and the parsonesses, who were
just a step above her in manners, were very much
inclined to smile at her doings and sayings.
Well! what does she do, but pull out a clean Bandanna
pocket-handkerchief all red and yellow silk, spread
it over her best silk gown; it was, like enough,
a new one, for I had it from Sally, who had it from
her cousin Molly, who is dairy-woman at the Brookes’,
that the Brookes were mighty set-up with an invitation
to drink tea at the Hall. There we were,
Tom Diggles even on the grin (I wonder how long it
is since he was own brother to a scarecrow, only
not so decently dressed) and Mrs. Parsoness of
Headleigh, I forget her name, and it’s
no matter, for she’s an ill-bred creature,
I hope Bessy will behave herself better was
right-down bursting with laughter, and as near a hee-haw
as ever a donkey was, when what does my lady do?
Ay! there’s my own dear Lady Ludlow, God
bless her! She takes out her own pocket-handkerchief,
all snowy cambric, and lays it softly down on her
velvet lap, for all the world as if she did it every
day of her life, just like Mrs. Brooke, the baker’s
wife; and when the one got up to shake the crumbs
into the fire-place, the other did just the same.
But with such a grace! and such a look at us all!
Tom Diggles went red all over; and Mrs. Parsoness
of Headleigh scarce spoke for the rest of the evening;
and the tears came into my old silly eyes; and Mr.
Gray, who was before silent and awkward in a way
which I tell Bessy she must cure him of, was made
so happy by this pretty action of my lady’s,
that he talked away all the rest of the evening,
and was the life of the company.
’Oh, Margaret Dawson! I sometimes
wonder if you’re the better off for leaving
us. To be sure you’re with your brother,
and blood is blood. But when I look at my
lady and Mr. Gray, for all they’re so different,
I would not change places with any in England.’
Alas! alas! I never saw my dear
lady again. She died in eighteen hundred and
fourteen, and Mr. Gray did not long survive her.
As I dare say you know, the Reverend Henry Gregson
is now vicar of Hanbury, and his wife is the daughter
of Mr. Gray and Miss Bessy.