“Remember, Hazel,” said
Mrs Thorne, “remember this we may
be reduced in circumstances; we may have been compelled
by misfortune to come down into this wretched little
town, and to live in this miserable, squeezy, poorly-furnished
house or cottage, with the light kept out by the yellow
glass, and scarcely a chimney that does not smoke;
we may be compelled to dress shab ”
“Yes, yes, mother dear ”
“Bily,” said Mrs
Thorne, with indignant emphasis on account of the
interruption, “but remember this, Hazel, you
are a lady.”
“Forgive me for interrupting you, mother.”
“Mamma, Hazel,”
said the lady, drawing herself up with great dignity.
“If we are by a cruel stroke of fate compelled
to live in a state of indigence when pride has made
my eldest child refuse the assistance of my relatives,
I still maintain that I have a right to keep up my
old and ladylike title mamma.”
“But, dear, I am only a schoolmistress
now a national schoolmistress, and it would
sound full of foolish assumption if I called you mamma.
And are you not my dear, dear mother! There,
there, good-bye, dear,” cried the speaker, kissing
her affectionately; “and mind the dinner is
done, for I shall be, oh, so hungry.”
“As you please, Hazel,”
said Mrs Thorne, smoothing down her dress, and looking
ill-used. “Let it be mother then.
My feelings have to be set aside as usual.
My life is to be one slow glide down a slope of indignity
to the grave. Ah, what have I done to deserve
such a fate?”
“Mother, dear mother, pray,
pray don’t grieve, and I’ll strive so hard
to make you and the girls happy. You will soon
like this little cottage; and when we get some more
furniture, and some flowers, and a bird in the window,
it will look so bright and cheerful and there,
there, pray don’t cry. I must go; it only
wants five minutes to nine, and I must not be late
the first morning.”
“I think it disgraceful that,
in addition to six days a week, you should be compelled
to go and teach on Sundays as well; and I shall make
a point of speaking to Mr Lambent the first time he
calls that is, if he should ever condescend
to call.”
“No, no, pray don’t think
of such a thing, dear,” cried Hazel Thorne excitedly.
“You forget that I have the whole of Saturday,
and there, there dear, dear
mother, I must go. Good good-bye.”
Hazel Thorne kissed the stiff stately-looking
lady in the stiffest of widow’s weeds, and with
a bright look and a cheery nod, she hurried out of
the little Gothic schoolhouse, with its prim, narrow
lancet windows; but as she closed the door, the bright
look gave place to one of anxious care, and there
was a troubled nervous twitching about her lips that
told of a struggle to master some painful emotion.
She had but a few yards to go, for
the new school-buildings at Plumton All Saints were
in one tolerably attractive architectural group, built
upon a piece of land given two years before by Mr William
Forth Burge, a gentleman who had left Plumton All
Saints thirty but it should be given in
his own words, as he made a point of repeating them
to every new-comer:
“Yes, sir; I left Plumton thirty
year ago, after being two year with old Marks the
butcher, and went up to London to seek my fortune,
and I think I found it, I did.”
Mr William Forth Burge’s fortune
was made by being a butcher’s boy for some years,
and then starting among some new houses near Chelsea
on his own account. Fashion and the speculative
builders did the rest. Mr William Forth Burge’s
business grew to a tremendous extent, and at forty-five
he sold it and proudly returned to his native place a
gentleman, he said. Stout, red-faced, very pomatumy
about his smooth, plastered-down dark hair, very much
dressed in glossy broadcloth and white waistcoats,
and very much scented with his favourite perfume,
“mill flowers,” as he called it.
Mr William Forth Burge left Plumton “Bill”;
he came back writing his name in full, and everybody
followed his example as soon as he had shown himself
at the various land sales and bought pretty largely.
For he was always looking out for “investments,”
and the local auctioneers addressed him with great
respect as “sir.” Why, upon the occasion
of the dinner given at the “George,” when
he took the chair after the laying of the first stone
of the new school-buildings by Sir Appleton Burr,
the county member, whose name was down for ten pounds,
the Reverend Henry Lambent, the vicar, made his chin
sore with his very stiff cravat, rolling his head
to give due emphasis to the very sermon-like speech,
the text of which was that Mr William Forth Burge
was an honour to the place of his birth; and the finale,
received with vociferous cheering and stamping of
feet, was the proposal of this gentleman’s health.
He was a very modest, mild man, this
donor of a piece of land of the value of some three
hundred and fifty pounds to the parish; and though
an ex-butcher, had probably never slain innocent lamb,
let alone sheep or ox, in his life. When he
rose to respond he broke forth into a profuse perspiration a
more profuse perspiration than usual; and his application
of a fiery orange silk handkerchief to his face, neck,
and hands, almost suggested that its contact with
his skin would scorch him, or at least make him hiss,
what time he told people that he left Plumton thirty
year ago, after being two year with old Marks the butcher,
etc., and then went on to speak of himself as
if he were an oyster, for every few moments he announced
to his fellow-townsmen that he was a native, and that
he was proud of being a native, and that he did not
see how a native could better show his love for his
native place than by giving his native place a piece
of ground for the erection of the new schools; and
so on, and so on.
Of course, Sir Appleton Burr, M.P.,
said that it was a charmingly naïve piece of
autobiography, and that Plumton All Saints ought to
be very proud of such a man, and no doubt Plumton
was proud of him, for where was the need of grammar
to a man with fifty thousand pounds; especially as
Mr William Forth Burge, besides having no grammar,
had no pride.
In due time, the money was found,
with the help of a grant from the Committee of Council
on Education, the schools being meanwhile erected
a long red-brick semi-Gothic central building, with
houses for the schoolmaster and mistress at either
end, each standing in its neat garden, the central
school building being so arranged that, by drawing
up and pushing down sash-hung shutters, the boys and
girls’ schools could be thrown into one, as
was always the case on Sundays.
Just as Hazel Thorne left her gate
to walk thirty yards to that leading to the girls’
entrance, Mr Samuel Chute, master of the boys’
school, left his door to walk thirty yards to the
gate leading to the boys’ entrance, but did
not stop there, for he came right on, raising his hat,
and displaying a broad white lumpy forehead, backed
by fair hair that seemed to have been sown upon his
head and come up in a sturdy crop, some portions being
more vigorous than others, and standing up in tufts
behind the lumps about his forehead; doubtless these
latter being kindly arrangements made by nature to
allow room for brain projections, consequent upon
over-study.
Mr Samuel Chute smiled, and said that
it was a very fine morning, a fact that Hazel Thorne
acknowledged, as the schoolmaster replaced his hat.
“The handle of the door goes
very stiffly,” he said, still smiling rather
feebly, for he was annoyed with himself for not having
offered to shake hands, and it was too late now.
“I thought I’d come and open it for you.”
Hazel thanked him. The heavy
latch was twisted up by an awkward ring like a young
door-knocker, and went click! and was let down
again, and went clack! Then the new schoolmistress
bowed and entered, and Mr Samuel Chute went back to
his own entrance, looking puzzled, his forehead full
of wrinkles, and so preoccupied that he nearly ran
up against Mr William Forth Burge, whom he might have
smelt if he had not seen, as he came to the school
as usual on Sunday mornings to take his class, and
impart useful and religious instruction to the twelve
biggest boys.
There was a mist before Hazel Thorne’s
eyes as she entered the large schoolroom, with its
so-called gallery and rows of desks down the side,
all supported upon iron pedestals like iron bars with
cricks in their backs. All about the floor were
semicircles marked out by shiny brass-headed nails,
as if the boards had been decorated by a mad undertaker
after the fashion of a coffin-lid, while between the
windows, and in every other vacant place, were hung
large drawing copies of a zoological character, embracing
the affectionate boa-constrictor, the crafty crocodile,
and the playful squirrel, all of which woodcuts had
issued from the Sanctuary at Westminster, probably
with the idea that some child in Plumton schools might
develop into a female Landseer.
This being Sunday, Hazel Thorne’s
duties were light, and after Mr Samuel Chute had rapped
upon his desk, and read prayers for the benefit of
both schools, the new mistress had little to do beyond
superintending, and trying to make herself at home.
She found that there were four classes
in her side of the Sunday-school, each with its own
teacher, certain ladies coming regularly from the
town, chief of whom were the Misses Lambent Beatrice
and Rebecca, the former a pale, handsome, but rather
sinister lady of seven or eight-and-twenty, the latter
a pale, unhandsome, and very sinister lady of seven
or eight-and-thirty, both elegantly dressed, and ready
to receive the new mistress with a cold and distant
bow that spoke volumes, and was as repellant as hailstones
before they have touched the earth.
For the Misses Lambent were the vicar’s
sisters, and taught in the Sunday-school from a sense
of duty. Hazel Thorne was ready to forget that
she was a lady by birth and education. The Misses
Lambent were not; and besides, it was two minutes
past nine when Hazel entered the room. It was
five minutes to nine when they rustled in with their
stiffest mien and downcast eyes.
But they always displayed humility,
even when they snubbed the girls of their classes a
humility which prompted them to give up the first class
to Miss Burge christened Betsey, a name
of which she was not in the least ashamed, and which,
like her brother with his William Forth, she wrote
in full.
The third and fourth class girls had
an enmity against those of the first for no other
reason than that they were under Miss Burge, who heard
them say their catechism, and read, and asked questions
afterwards out of a little book which she kept half
hidden beneath her silk visite; for pleasant,
little, homely, round-faced Miss Burge could hardly
have invented a question of an original character to
save her life. One thing, however, was patent,
and that was that the first class was so far a model
of good behaviour that the girls did not titter very
much, nor yet pinch one another, or dig elbows into
each other’s ribs more than might be expected
from young ladies of their station; while they never
by any chance made faces at “teacher” when
her back was turned, a practice that seemed to afford
great pleasure to the young ladies who were submitted
to a sort of cold shower-bath, iced with awkward texts
by the Misses Lambent, in classes third and fourth.
The second class was taken by another
maiden lady Miss Penstemon, sister of Doctor
Penstemon, M.D., F.R.C.S., of the High Street.
She was thinner and more graceful than the Misses
Lambent, and possibly much older; but that was her
secret and one which she never divulged.
The Misses Lambent, as before mentioned,
bowed with dignity and grave condescension to the
new mistress; and, taking her cue from the vicar’s
sisters. Miss Penstemon bowed also, plunging
her hand afterwards into her black bag for her smelling-bottle,
for she thought the room was rather close.
The bottle she brought out, however,
she thrust back hastily, and gave a quick glance round
to see if she had been observed; for, instead of its
containing a piece of sponge saturated with the colourless
fluid labelled in her brother’s surgery, “Liq.
Amm.,” and afterwards scented with a few drops
of an essential oil, the little stoppered bottle bore
a label with the enigmatical word “Puls.”
thereon, and its contents were apparently a number
of little sugar pills.
For be it known that Maria Penstemon
had a will of her own, and a strong tendency to foster
crotchets. The present crotchet was homoeopathy,
which, without expressing any belief for or against,
the doctor had forbidden her to practise.
“No, ’Ria,” he said,
“if you want to go doctoring, doctor the people
with your moral medicines. It won’t do
for you to be physicking one way and me another, so
let it alone.”
But Miss Penstemon refused to submit
to coercion, and insisted in secret upon following
her path while the doctor went his, Maria’s being
the homoeopath, while the doctor’s was, of course,
the allopath; and he was a long time finding out that
his sister surreptitiously “exhibited”
pilules, for she never did any harm.
Hazel Thorne met with a different
reception, however, from downright Miss Burge, who
rose from her seat, looked red and “flustered,”
as she called it, smiled, and shook hands.
“I’m very, very glad to
know you, my dear,” she said warmly, “and
I hope you’ll come and see me often as soon
as you get shaken down.”
Shaken down! The words jarred
upon the young mistress, who felt that she could never
become intimate with Miss Burge, whom she left to her
class, and then busied herself with the attendance
register and various other little matters connected
with her duties. Once she stole a glance across
at the boys’ school, to become aware of the fact
that Mr Chute was watching her attentively, so was
Mr William Forth Burge; and, to make matters worse,
half the boys in the classes were following their
teachers’ eyes, so that it was with something
like a feeling of relief that Hazel saw that the clock
pointed to half-past ten, the time for closing for
the morning, and marshalling the girls in order for
walking two-and-two as far as the church.