While Fritzing was losing his temper
in this manner at the agent’s, Priscilla sat
up in the churchyard in the sun. The Symford churchyard,
its church, and the pair of coveted cottages, are on
a little eminence rising like an island out of the
valley. Sitting under the trees of this island
Priscilla amused herself taking in the quiet scene
at her feet and letting her thoughts wander down happy
paths. The valley was already in shadow, but
the tops of the hills on the west side of it were
golden in the late afternoon sunshine. From the
cottage chimneys smoke went up straight and blue into
the soft sky, rooks came and settled over her head
in the branches of the elms, and every now and then
a yellow leaf would fall slowly at her feet. Priscilla’s
heart was filled with peace. She was going to
be so good, she was going to lead such a clean and
beautiful life, so quiet, so helpful to the poor,
so hidden, so cleared of all confusions. Never
again would she need to pose; never again be forced
into conflict with her soul. She had chosen the
better part; she had given up everything and followed
after wisdom; and her life would be her justification.
Who but knows the inward peace that descends upon
him who makes good resolutions and abides with him
till he suddenly discovers they have all been broken?
And what does the breaking of them matter, since it
is their making that is so wholesome, so bracing to
the soul, bringing with it moments of such extreme
blessedness that he misses much who gives it up for
fear he will not keep them? Such blessed moments
of lifting up of the heart were Priscilla’s
as she sat in the churchyard waiting, invisibly surrounded
by the most beautiful resolutions it is possible to
imagine. The Rev. Edward Morrison, the vicar of
whom I have spoken as venerable, coming slowly up
the path leaning on his son’s arm with the intention
of going into the church in search of a mislaid sermon-book,
saw Priscilla’s thoughtful back under the elm-tree
and perceived at once that it was a back unknown to
him. He knew all the Symford backs, and tourists
hardly ever coming there, and never at that time of
the year, it could not, he thought, be the back of
a tourist. Nor could it belong to any one staying
with the Shuttleworths, for he had been there that
very afternoon and had found Lady Shuttleworth rejoicing
over the brief period of solitude she and her son
were enjoying before the stream of guests for the coming
of age festivities began.
“Robin, what girl is that?” asked the
vicar of his son.
“I’m sure I don’t know,” said
Robin.
“She’ll catch cold,” said the vicar.
“I dare say,” said Robin.
When they came out of the church ten
minutes later Priscilla had not moved.
“She’ll certainly catch cold,” said
the vicar, concerned.
“I should think it very likely,” said
Robin, locking the door.
“She’s sitting on a stone.”
“Yes, on old Dawson’s slab.”
“Unwise,” said the vicar.
“Profane,” said Robin.
The vicar took his boy’s arm
again the boy, head and shoulders taller
than his father, was down from Cambridge for the vacation
then drawing to its close and moved, I
fear, by the same impulse of pure curiosity they walked
together down the path that would take them right in
front of the young woman on the slab.
Priscilla was lost in the bright dreams
she was weaving, and looked up with the radiance of
them still in her eyes at the two figures between
her and the sunset.
“My dear young lady,”
said the vicar kindly, “are you not afraid of
catching cold? The evenings are so damp now, and
you have chosen a very cold seat.”
“I don’t feel cold,”
said Priscilla, smiling at this vision of benevolence.
“But I do think you ought not
to linger here,” said the vicar.
“I am waiting for my uncle.
He’s gone to buy a cottage, and ought to be
back, really, by now.”
“Buy a cottage?” repeated
the vicar. “My dear young lady, you say
that in the same voice you might use to tell me your
uncle had gone to buy a bun.”
“What is a bun?” asked Priscilla.
“A bun?” repeated the
vicar bewildered, for nobody had ever asked him that
before.
“Oh I know ”
said Priscilla quickly, faintly flushing, “it’s
a thing you eat. Is there a special voice for
buns?”
“There is for a thing so well,
so momentous as the buying of a cottage.”
“Is it momentous? It seems to me so nice
and natural.”
She looked up at the vicar and his
son, calmly scrutinizing first one and then the other,
and they stood looking down at her; and each time
her eyes rested on Robin they found his staring at
her with the frankest expression of surprise and admiration.
“Pardon me,” said the
vicar, “if I seem inquisitive, but is it one
of the Symford cottages your uncle wishes to buy?
I did not know any were for sale.”
“It’s that one by the
gate,” said Priscilla, slightly turning her head
in its direction.
“Is it for sale? Dear me,
I never knew Lady Shuttleworth sell a cottage yet.”
“I don’t know yet if she
wants to,” said Priscilla; “but Fr ,
my uncle, will give any price. And I must have
it. I shall I shall be ill if I don’t.”
The vicar gazed at her upturned face
in perplexity. “Dear me,” he said,
after a slight pause.
“We must live somewhere,” remarked Priscilla.
“Of course you must,”
said Robin, suddenly and so heartily that she examined
his eager face in more detail.
“Quite so, quite so,”
said the vicar. “Are you staying here at
present?”
“Never at the Cock and Hens?” broke in
Robin.
“We’re at Baker’s Farm.”
“Ah yes poor Mrs.
Pearce will be glad of lodgers. Poor soul, poor
soul.”
“She’s a very dirty soul,”
said Robin; and Priscilla’s eyes flashed over
him with a sudden sparkle.
“Is she the soul with the holes
in its apron?” she asked.
“I expect there are some there.
There generally are,” said Robin.
They both laughed; but the vicar gently
shook his head. “Ah well, poor thing,”
he said, “she has an uphill life of it.
They don’t seem able they don’t
seem to understand the art of making both ends meet.”
“It’s a great art,” said Robin.
“Perhaps they could be helped,”
said Priscilla, already arranging in her mind to go
and do it.
“They do not belong to the class
one can help. And Lady Shuttleworth, I am afraid,
disapproves of shiftless people too much to do anything
in the way of reducing the rent.”
“Lady Shuttleworth can’t
stand people who don’t look happy and don’t
mend their apron,” said Robin.
“But it’s her own apron,” objected
Priscilla.
“Exactly,” said Robin.
“Well, well, I hope they’ll
make you comfortable,” said the vicar; and having
nothing more that he could well say without having
to confess to himself that he was inquisitive, he
began to draw Robin away. “We shall see
you and your uncle on Sunday in church, I hope,”
he said benevolently, and took off his hat and showed
his snow-white hair.
Priscilla hesitated. She was,
it is true, a Protestant, it having been arranged
on her mother’s marriage with the Catholic Grand
Duke that every alternate princess born to them was
to belong to the Protestant faith, and Priscilla being
the alternate princess it came about that of the Grand
Duke’s three children she alone was not a Catholic.
Therefore she could go to church in Symford as often
as she chose; but it was Fritzing’s going that
made her hesitate, for Fritzing was what the vicar
would have called a godless man, and never went to
church.
“You are a member of the Church
of England?” inquired the vicar, seeing her
hesitate.
“Why, pater, she’s not English,”
burst out Robin.
“Not English?” echoed the vicar.
“Is my English so bad?” asked Priscilla,
smiling.
“It’s frightfully good,” said Robin;
“but the ‘r’s,’ you know
“Ah, yes. No, I’m not English.
I’m German.”
“Indeed?” said the vicar,
with all the interest that attaches to any unusual
phenomenon, and a German in Symford was of all phenomena
the most unusual. “My dear young lady,
how remarkable. I don’t remember ever having
met a German before in these parts. Your English
is really surprising. I should never have noticed my
boy’s ears are quicker than my old ones.
Will you think me unpardonably curious if I ask what
made you pitch on Symford as a place to live in?”
“My uncle passed through it
years ago and thought it so pretty that he determined
to spend his old age here.”
“And you, I suppose, are going to take care
of him.”
“Yes,” said Priscilla,
“for we only” she looked from
one to the other and thought herself extremely clever “we
only have each other in the whole wide world.”
“Ah, poor child you are an orphan.”
“I didn’t say so,”
said Priscilla quickly, turning red; she who had always
been too proud to lie, how was she going to lie now
to this aged saint with the snow-white hair?
“Ah well, well,” said
the vicar, vaguely soothing. “We shall see
you on Sunday perhaps. There is no reason that
I know of why a member of the German Church should
not assist at the services of the Church of England.”
And he took off his hat again, and tried to draw Robin
away.
But Robin lingered, and Priscilla
saw so much bright curiosity in his eyes that she
felt she was giving an impression of mysteriousness;
and this being the last thing she wanted to do she
thought she had better explain a little always
a dangerous course to take and she said,
“My uncle taught languages for years, and is
old now and tired, and we both long for the country
and to be quiet. He taught me English that’s
why it’s as good as it is. His name” She
was carried away by the desire to blow out that questioning
light in Robin’s eyes “his
name is Schultz.”
The vicar bowed slightly, and Robin
asked with an air of great politeness but still with
that light in his eyes if he were to address her,
then, as Miss Schultz.
“I’m afraid so,”
said Priscilla, regretfully. It really sounded
gross. Miss Schultz? She might just as well
have chosen something romantic while she was about
it, for Fritzing in the hurry of many cares had settled
nothing yet with her about a name.
Robin stared at her very hard, her
answer seemed to him so odd. He stared still
more when she looked up with the air of one who has
a happy thought and informed him that her Christian
name was Ethel.
“Ethel?” echoed Robin.
“It’s a very pretty name, I think,”
said Priscilla, looking pleased.
“Our housemaid’s called
Ethel, and so is the little girl that wheels the gardener’s
baby’s perambulator,” was Robin’s
impetuous comment.
“That doesn’t make it less pretty,”
said Priscilla, frowning.
“Surely,” interrupted the vicar mildly,
“Ethel is not a German name?”
“I was christened after my mother,”
said Priscilla gently; and this was strictly true,
for the deceased Grand Duchess had also been Priscilla.
Then a feeling came over her that she was getting into
those depths where persons with secrets begin to flounder
as a preliminary to letting them out, and seized with
panic she got up off the slab.
“You are half English, then,”
said Robin triumphantly, his bright eyes snapping.
He looked very bold and masterful staring straight
at her, his head thrown back, his handsome face twinkling
with interest. But a person of Priscilla’s
training could not possibly be discomposed by the
stare of any Robin, however masterful; had it not been
up to now her chief function in life to endure being
stared at with graceful indifference? “I
did not say so,” she said, glancing briefly at
him; and including both father and son in a small
smile composed indescribably of graciousness and chill
she added, “It really is damp here I
don’t think I’ll wait for my uncle,”
and slightly bowing walked away without more ado.
She walked very slowly, her skirts
gathered loosely in one hand, every line of her body
speaking of the most absolute self-possession and
unapproachableness. Never had the two men seen
any one quite so calm. They watched her in silence
as she went up the path and out at the gate; then
Robin looked down at his father and drew his hand more
firmly through his arm and said with a slight laugh,
“Come on, pater, let’s go home. We’re
dismissed.”
“By a most charming young lady,”
said the vicar, smiling.
“By a very cool one,”
said Robin, shrugging his shoulders, for he did not
like being dismissed.
“Yes oddly self-possessed
for her age,” agreed the vicar.
“I wonder if all German teacher’s
nieces are like that,” said Robin with another
laugh.
“Few can be so blest by nature, I imagine.”
“Oh, I don’t mean faces.
She is certainly prettier by a good bit than most
girls.”
“She is quite unusually lovely,
young man. Don’t quibble.”
“Miss Schultz Ethel
Schultz,” murmured Robin; adding under his breath,
“Good Lord.”
“She can’t help her name.
These things are thrust upon one.”
“It’s a beastly common
name. Macgrigor, who was a year in Dresden, told
me everybody in Germany is called Schultz.”
“Except those who are not.”
“Now, pater, you’re being
clever again,” said Robin, smiling down at his
father.
“Here comes some one in a hurry,”
said the vicar, his attention arrested by the rapidly
approaching figure of a man; and, looking up, Robin
beheld Fritzing striding through the churchyard, his
hat well down over his eyes as if clapped on with
unusual vigour, both hands thrust deep in his pockets,
the umbrella, without which he never, even on the
fairest of days, went out, pressed close to his side
under his arm, and his long legs taking short and
profane cuts over graves and tombstones with the indifference
to decency of one immersed in unpleasant thought.
It was not the custom in Symford to leap in this manner
over its tombs; and Fritzing arriving at a point a
few yards from the vicar, and being about to continue
his headlong career across the remaining graves to
the tree under which he had left Priscilla, the vicar
raised his voice and exhorted him to keep to the path.
“Quaint-looking person,”
remarked Robin. “Another stranger.
I say, it can’t be no, it can’t
possibly be the uncle?” For he saw he was a
foreigner, yet on the other hand never was there an
uncle and a niece who had less of family likeness.
Fritzing was the last man wilfully
to break local rules or wound susceptibilities; and
pulled out of his unpleasant abstraction by the vicar’s
voice he immediately desisted from continuing his short
cut, and coming onto the path removed his hat and
apologized with the politeness that was always his
so long as nobody was annoying him.
“My name is Neumann, sir,”
he said, introducing himself after the German fashion,
“and I sincerely beg your pardon. I was
looking for a lady, and” he gave
his spectacles a little adjusting shove as though
they were in fault, and gazing across to the elm where
he had left Priscilla sitting added with sudden anxiety “I
fear I do not see her.”
“Do you mean Miss Schultz?”
asked the vicar, looking puzzled.
“No, sir, I do not mean Miss
Schultz,” said Fritzing, peering about him at
all the other trees in evident surprise and distress.
“A lady left about five minutes ago,”
said Robin.
“A tall young lady in a blue costume?”
“Yes. Miss Schultz.”
Fritzing looked at him with some sternness.
“Sir, what have I to do with Miss Schultz?”
he inquired.
“Oh come now,” said the cheerful Robin,
“aren’t you looking for her?”
“I am in search of my niece, sir.”
“Yes. Miss Schultz.”
“No sir,” said Fritzing,
controlling himself with an effort, “not Miss
Schultz. I neither know Miss Schultz nor do I
care a
“Sir, sir,” interposed the vicar, hastily.
“I do not care a pfenning for any Miss
Schultz.”
The vicar looked much puzzled.
“There was a young lady,” he said, “waiting
under that tree over there for her uncle who had gone,
she said, to see Lady Shuttleworth’s agent about
the cottage by the gate. She said her uncle’s
name was Schultz.”
“She said she was Miss Ethel Schultz,”
said Robin.
“She said she was staying at Baker’s Farm,”
said the vicar.
Fritzing stared for a moment from
one to the other, then clutching his hat mechanically
half an inch into the air turned on his heel without
another word and went with great haste out of the churchyard
and down the hill and away up the road to the farm.
“Quaint, isn’t he,”
said Robin as they slowly followed this flying figure
to the gate.
“I don’t understand it,” said the
vicar.
“It does seem a bit mixed.”
“Did he not say his name was Neumann?”
“He did. And he looked as if he’d
fight any one who said it wasn’t.”
“It is hardly credible that
there should be two sets of German uncles and nieces
in Symford at one and the same time,” mused the
vicar. “Even one pair is a most unusual
occurrence.”
“If there are,” said Robin
very earnestly, “pray let us cultivate the Schultz
set and not the other.”
“I don’t understand it,” repeated
the vicar, helplessly.