“Pray speak gently, dear.”
“Speak gently! how can a man
speak gently? The things are of no value, but
it worries me, I’ve taken such pains with them,
through the cold weather, to bring them on.”
“You have, Sir James, you have,
sir; and I never let the fire go out once.”
“No: but you’ve let
the grapes go out, confound you! and if I find that
you have been dishonest ”
“Oh! but I’m sure, dear, that he would
not be.”
“Thank you kindly, my lady,”
said John Monnick, the old gardener, taking off his
hat and wiping his streaming brow with his arm, as
he stood bent and dejected, leaning upon his spade,
with every line in his countenance puckered and drawn
with trouble, and a helpless look of appeal in his
eyes. “No, my lady, I wouldn’t let
these here old hands take to picking and stealing,
and many’s the trouble I’ve been in with
Fanny and Martha and the others because I was so particular
even to a gooseberry.”
“There, dear, I told you so!”
“But the grapes are gone,”
cried Sir James Scarlett angrily. “Who
could have taken them?”
“That’s what puzzles me,
Master James, it do indeed. I did get into temptation
once, and took something, but it’s been a lesson
to me; and I said then, never no more, with the Lord’s
help, and never no more, sir, it’s true, never
up to now.”
“Then you confess you did steal some fruit once?”
“Yes, Master James, I confess
it, sir, and a deal I’ve thought about it since;
and I’ve come to think from much reading, sir,
that though this here garden wasn’t planted
eastward in Eden it’s a very beautiful place;
all the neighbours say, sir, that there ain’t
a more beautiful little place for miles round, and
Lady Martlett’s folk’s about wild at our
growing such better fruit and flowers.”
“Oh, yes! I know all about
that, but what has that to do with your confession?”
“Everything, if you please,
Master James, for how could there be a beautiful garden
even now without temptation coming into it, same as
it did when that there apple, as brought all the sin
into the world, was picked and eat?”
“There, that will do, Monnick; now speak out.”
“I will, sir and my lady, and
ask your pardon humbly and get it off my mind.
It were five year ago, sir, and just after you’d
took the place, and I’d come up from old master’s,
sir.”
“Five years ago, John?” said Lady Scarlett
smiling.
“Yes, my lady, five year, and
it’ll be six at Michaelmas, and it wasn’t
over an apple but over one o’ them Willyum pears,
as growd on that cup-shaped tree down side the south
walk.”
“And you cleared that, did you?” said
Sir James grimly.
“Nay, sir, I didn’t; it
were only one of ’em as had hung till it were
dead-ripe, and then fell as soon as the sun came on
it hot, and there it lay under the tree, with its
rosy green and yellow side, and a big crack acrost
it like a hopen mouth asking me to taste how good it
was.”
“And did you, John?” said
Lady Scarlett, passing her arm through her husband’s,
and pressing it quietly.
“Did I, my lady? I was
mowing that there great walk and I went by it three
or four times, but the grass there was dry and wiry
and would not cut, and I had to go over it again and
again, and the more I tried to resist the temptation
the more it wouldn’t flee before me, but kept
on a-drawing and a-drawing of me till at last I dropped
my scythe and rubber and ran right away, I did, Sir
James and my lady, I did indeed.”
“And left the pear?” said Sir James.
The old man shook his grey head sadly.
“I was obliged to go and fetch
my scythe and rubber, master. I might ha’
left ’em till night, but that was the temptation
on it a drawing of me till I went back, meaning to
shut my eyes and snatch up the scythe and come away.
But lor’, my lady, you know how weak we sinful
mortals be. I tried hard but my eyes would open,
and so as I see that pear, I made a snatch at it,
meaning to run with it right into the house at once.”
“And you did not, John?” said Lady Scarlett.
“No, ma’am, my lady,”
said the old man sadly. “I got my finger
all over juiced and I sucked it and that did for me.
The taste of the sin was so good, Sir James, that
I did eat that pear, thinking no one would know, and
it’s lay heavy on my heart ever since.”
“And what about the grapes?” said Sir
James.
“I don’t, know, sir; I
didn’t know they were gone till you see it.
That was the on’y time, sir, as ever I dared
to take any of the fruit, and I wish as I could turn
myself inside out to show you how clean my heart is,
sir, of ever doing you a wrong all ’cept that
there pear, which has, as I said afore, lay heavy
on my chesty ever since.”
“Well, there: I don’t
think you took the grapes, Monnick; but it’s
very vexatious: I meant to send them to Lady
Martlett. You must keep a good look out.”
“Thank you kindly, sir, and
I will keep a look out, too. And you don’t
think I’d rob you, my lady?”
“Indeed I don’t, John,”
cried Lady Scarlett, who was divided between a desire
to laugh and sorrow for the faithful old fellow’s
trouble.
“God bless your dear, sweet,
kind face, my lady, and bless you too, Sir James,”
said the old fellow, taking off his ragged straw hat
and standing bare-headed, “I wouldn’t
rob you of a leaf.”
The three then separated, Sir James
Scarlett and his sweet young wife going towards the
glass-houses, and old John Monnick shouldering his
spade and watching them for a few moments before going
down towards another part of the garden.
“Eh, but they’re a handsome
pair,” he muttered. “He’s a
bit masterful, but he’s got a good heart, and
she’s an angel, like a pear-tree growed by the
water side, she is, bless her! and if I get hold of
him as took them grapes I’ll ”
He gave the little box edging a blow
with the flat of the spade, with the effect that a
great snail rolled out on to the path, and suffered
death beneath the old gardener’s heel, being
crushed and ground into the gravel with savage earnestness.
“That I will,” said the
old fellow, and then he walked away, meeting before
he had gone many yards a tall, dark, grave-looking
man of about thirty, coming slowly along the path
reading. He was scrupulously attired in glossy
black with tie to match, grey check trousers, and
faultless shirt front, while his hat was of the most
glossy. The hands that held the volume were
white and carefully kept, while the expression of
the man’s face was that of some calm, thoughtful
student, who passed the greater portion of his life
with books, not men.
“Ah, gardener,” he said
softly, and his voice was very rich and deep, “what
a lovely day! Your garden looks exquisite.
I hope you are quite well.”
“Tidy, sir, thank you kindly,
tidy; and, yes, the garden do look well just now,
if we could keep out the thieves.”
“Ah! yes, the birds, and slugs,
and snails, and insects,” said the other with
a soft, grave smile; “but we must not forget,
gardener, that these poor things do not comprehend
the difference between right and wrong. The fair
fruits of the earth are growing in their path, and
they do not understand why they may not freely eat.”
“No, sir, of course not,”
said Monnick, giving his ear a vicious rub, “but
they has to pay for it precious dear when they are
ketched.”
“Yes, gardener, yes, poor things,”
said the other, letting his head sink sidewise; and
shutting his book upon one finger he crossed his wrists
so that the work hung lightly from his shapely hand,
while his eyes half-closed and a dreamy, thoughtful
look came upon his face.
“It’s a deal o’
mischief they do, sir, like plagues of Egyp’
they’d be if they weren’t stopped.”
“All, yes, gardener,”
said the other contemplatively, “but it often
strikes me as being one of the darker sides of horticultural
pursuits, that the gardener’s way is by a path
of blood.”
John Monnick pushed his old straw
hat a little on one side and stared.
“I saw traps down by the wood
to catch the soft velvet mole, a wire by a hole in
the fence to take the harmless rabbit.”
“Harmless, sir? He took
the hearts out of a row of young cauliflowers all
in one night.”
“Ah, yes, but he sinned in ignorance.
Then you are always destroying life. That implement
you hold pierces the ground and cuts in two the burrowing
worm. There was a scent of pungent fumes in the
greenhouse and myriads of tiny flies lay scattered
in the pots dead from the poisonous smoke. You
crush the snail and slug, the beetle, and the grub.
The birds are often shot. Yes, yes, I think
I’m right; your path is marked by blood, but
this place is very bright and beautiful, gardener.”
“Yes, sir, it is,” said
Monnick, changing his spade to the other hand so as
to tilt his straw hat the other way.
“It is a privilege to come down
upon this glowing summer day, from the smoke and noise
and crowd of London streets.”
“Ay, sir, it must be,”
said the old man. “I often pity you as
lives there. I was never there but once and
never want to go again.”
“And I envy you, gardener,”
said the speaker with a sigh, and raising his book
he opened it, smiled sadly, nodded, and walked on.
“And he might do that in London
town,” muttered the old man. “Looks
well! of course it does; but what’s the use of
looking at all my bedding plants through a book?”
“Ah!” he said as he went
on, “it’s all very tine, but where would
the niceness be if we didn’t kill the snails?
Master don’t buy coke to heat the greenhouse
to breed green fly and thrip, and as to the worms,
and slugs, and grubs, there’s room enough in
the whole wide world without their coming here, he’s
a very nice smooth-spoken gent he is, and can’t
have ever cut a worm in two with digging in his blessed
life; but somehow he’s too fine for me.
I wonder what his mother were like now, to have such
a son. Let’s see, master’s mother’s
sister I think she were. Ah! people’s
like plants, they’ve sports and wariations from
the payrent stock; but if I wanted to produce the
finest specimen of human kind I wouldn’t graft
on he.”