The judge pronouncing sentence of
condemnation on the criminal is proverbially a sorrowfully-minded
man; and still more would he be so had he to undertake
the part of executioner as well. This is equivalent
to saying that the simple pleasures are no longer
with us; it must be a personal enemy now to give us
any satisfaction in chastising and slaying. Perhaps
by-and-by that will be savourless: we degenerate.
There is, nevertheless, ever (and let nature be praised
for it) a strong sustainment in the dutiful exertion
of our physical energies, and Mr. Everard Romfrey
experienced it after he had fulfilled his double office
on the person of Dr. Shrapnel by carrying out his own
decree. His conscience approved him cheerlessly,
as it is the habit of that secret monitor to do when
we have no particular advantage coming of the act
we have performed; but the righteous labour of his
arm gave him high breathing and an appetite.
He foresaw that he and Nevil would
soon be having a wrestle over the matter, hand and
thigh; but a gentleman in the right engaged with a
fellow in the wrong has nothing to apprehend; is, in
fact, in the position of a game-preserver with a poacher.
The nearest approach to gratification in that day’s
work which Mr. Romfrey knew was offered by the picture
of Nevil’s lamentable attitude above his dirty
idol. He conceived it in the mock-mediaeval style
of our caricaturists: Shrapnel stretched
at his length, half a league, in slashed yellows and
blacks, with his bauble beside him, and prodigious
pointed toes; Nevil in parti-coloured tights, on one
leg, raising his fists in imprecation to a nose in
the firmament.
Gentlemen of an unpractised imaginative
capacity cannot vision for themselves exactly what
they would, being unable to exercise authority over
the proportions and the hues of the objects they conceive,
which are very much at the mercy of their sportive
caprices; and the state of mind of Mr. Romfrey
is not to be judged by his ridiculous view of the
pair. In the abstract he could be sorry for Shrapnel.
As he knew himself magnanimous, he promised himself
to be forbearing with Nevil.
Moreover, the month of September was
drawing nigh; he had plenty to think of. The
entire land (signifying all but all of those who occupy
the situation of thinkers in it) may be said to have
been exhaling the same thought in connection with
September. Our England holds possession of a
considerable portion of the globe, and it keeps the
world in awe to see her bestowing so considerable
a portion of her intelligence upon her recreations.
To prosecute them with her whole heart is an ingenious
exhibition of her power. Mr. Romfrey was of those
who said to his countrymen, ’Go yachting; go
cricketing; go boat-racing; go shooting; go horseracing,
nine months of the year, while the other Europeans
go marching and drilling.’ Those occupations
he considered good for us; and our much talking, writing,
and thinking about them characteristic, and therefore
good. And he was not one of those who do penance
for that sweating indolence in the fits of desperate
panic. Beauchamp’s argument that the rich
idler begets the idling vagabond, the rich wagerer
the brutal swindler, the general thirst for a mad
round of recreation a generally-increasing disposition
to avoid serious work, and the unbraced moral tone
of the country an indifference to national responsibility
(an argument doubtless extracted from Shrapnel, talk
tall as the very demagogue when he stood upright),
Mr. Romfrey laughed at scornfully, affirming that
our manufactures could take care of themselves.
As for invasion, we are circled by the sea. Providence
has done that for us, and may be relied on to do more
in an emergency. The children of wealth
and the children of the sun alike believe that Providence
is for them, and it would seem that the former can
do without it less than the latter, though the former
are less inclined to give it personification.
This year, however, the array of armaments
on the Continent made Mr. Romfrey anxious about our
navy. Almost his first topic in welcoming Colonel
Halkett and Cecilia to Steynham was the rottenness
of navy administration; for if Providence is to do
anything for us it must have a sea-worthy fleet for
the operation. How loudly would his contemptuous
laughter have repudiated the charge that he trusted
to supernatural agency for assistance in case of need!
But so it was: and he owned to believing in English
luck. Partly of course he meant that steady fire
of combat which his countrymen have got heated to of
old till fortune blessed them.
‘Nevil is not here?’ the colonel asked.
’No, I suspect he’s gruelling
and plastering a doctor of his acquaintance,’
Mr. Romfrey said, with his nasal laugh composed of
scorn and resignation.
‘Yes, yes, I’ve heard,’ said Colonel
Halkett hastily.
He would have liked to be informed
of Dr. Shrapnel’s particular offence: he
mentioned the execrable letter.
Mr. Romfrey complacently interjected:
‘Drug-vomit!’ and after an interval:
‘Gallows!’
‘That man has done Nevil Beauchamp
a world of mischief, Romfrey.’
‘We’ll hope for a cure, colonel.’
‘Did the man come across you?’
‘He did.’
Mr. Romfrey was mute on the subject.
Colonel Halkett abstained from pushing his inquiries.
Cecilia could only tell her father
when they were alone in the drawing-room a few minutes
before dinner that Mrs. Culling was entirely ignorant
of any cause to which Nevil’s absence might be
attributed.
‘Mr. Romfrey had good cause,’
the colonel said, emphatically.
He repeated it next day, without being
a bit wiser of the cause.
Cecilia’s happiness or hope
was too sensitive to allow of a beloved father’s
deceiving her in his opposition to it.
She saw clearly now that he had fastened
on this miserable incident, expecting an imbroglio
that would divide Nevil and his uncle, and be an excuse
for dividing her and Nevil. O for the passionate
will to make head against what appeared as a fate
in this matter! She had it not.
Mr. and Mrs. Wardour-Devereux, Sir
John and Lady Baskelett, and the Countess of Welshpool,
another sister of Mr. Romfrey’s, arrived at
Steynham for a day and a night. Lady Baskelett
and Lady Welshpool came to see their brother, not
to countenance his household; and Mr. Wardour-Devereux
could not stay longer than a certain number of hours
under a roof where tobacco was in evil odour.
From her friend Louise, his wife, Cecilia learnt that
Mr. Lydiard had been summoned to Dr. Shrapnel’s
bedside, as Mrs. Devereux knew by a letter she had
received from Mr. Lydiard, who was no political devotee
of that man, she assured Cecilia, but had an extraordinary
admiration for the Miss Denham living with him.
This was kindly intended to imply that Beauchamp was
released from his attendance on Dr. Shrapnel, and
also that it was not he whom the Miss Denham attracted.
‘She is in Switzerland,’ said Cecilia.
‘She is better there,’ said Mrs. Devereux.
Mr. Stukely Culbrett succeeded to
these visitors. He heard of the case of Dr. Shrapnel
from Colonel Halkett, and of Beauchamp’s missing
of his chance with the heiress from Mr. Romfrey.
Rosamund Culling was in great perplexity
about Beauchamp’s prolonged absence; for he
had engaged to come, he had written to her to say
he would be sure to come; and she feared he was ill.
She would have persuaded Mr. Culbrett to go down to
Bevisham to see him: she declared that she could
even persuade herself to call on Dr. Shrapnel a second
time, in spite of her horror of the man. Her anger
at the thought of his keeping Nevil away from good
fortune and happiness caused her to speak in resentment
and loathing of the man.
‘He behaved badly when you saw
him, did he?’ said Stukely.
‘Badly, is no word. He is detestable,’
Rosamund replied.
‘You think he ought to be whipped?’
She feigned an extremity of vindictiveness,
and twisted her brows in comic apology for the unfeminine
sentiment, as she said: ‘I really do.’
The feminine gentleness of her character
was known to Stukely, so she could afford to exaggerate
the expression of her anger, and she did not modify
it, forgetful that a woman is the representative of
the sex with cynical men, and escapes from contempt
at the cost of her sisterhood.
Looking out of an upper window in
the afternoon she beheld Nevil Beauchamp in a group
with his uncle Everard, the colonel and Cecilia, and
Mr. Culbrett. Nevil was on his feet; the others
were seated under the great tulip-tree on the lawn.
A little observation of them warned
her that something was wrong. There was a vacant
chair; Nevil took it in his hand at times, stamped
it to the ground, walked away and sharply back fronting
his uncle, speaking vehemently, she perceived, and
vainly, as she judged by the cast of his uncle’s
figure. Mr. Romfrey’s head was bent, and
wagged slightly, as he screwed his brows up and shot
his eyes, queerly at the agitated young man.
Colonel Halkett’s arms crossed his chest.
Cecilia’s eyelids drooped their lashes.
Mr. Culbrett was balancing on the hind-legs of his
chair. No one appeared to be speaking but Nevil.
It became evident that Nevil was putting
a series of questions to his uncle. Mechanical
nods were given him in reply.
Presently Mr. Romfrey rose, thundering
out a word or two, without a gesture.
Colonel Halkett rose.
Nevil flung his hand out straight to the house.
Mr. Romfrey seemed to consent; the
colonel shook his head: Nevil insisted.
A footman carrying a tea-tray to Miss
Halkett received some commission and swiftly disappeared,
making Rosamund wonder whether sugar, milk or cream
had been omitted.
She met him on the first landing,
and heard that Mr. Romfrey requested her to step out
on the lawn.
Expecting to hear of a piece of misconduct
on the part of the household servants, she hurried
forth, and found that she had to traverse the whole
space of the lawn up to the tuliptree. Colonel
Halkett and Mr. Romfrey had resumed their seats.
The colonel stood up and bowed to her.
Mr. Romfrey said: ’One
question to you, ma’am, and you shall not be
detained. Did not that man Shrapnel grossly insult
you on the day you called on him to see Captain Beauchamp
about a couple of months before the Election?’
‘Look at me when you speak, ma’am,’
said Beauchamp.
Rosamund looked at him.
The whiteness of his face paralyzed
her tongue. A dreadful levelling of his eyes
penetrated and chilled her. Instead of thinking
of her answer she thought of what could possibly have
happened.
‘Did he insult you at all, ma’am?’
said Beauchamp.
Mr. Romfrey reminded him that he was
not a cross-examining criminal barrister.
They waited for her to speak.
She hesitated, coloured, betrayed
confusion; her senses telling her of a catastrophe,
her conscience accusing her as the origin of it.
’Did Dr. Shrapnel, to your belief,
intentionally hurt your feelings or your dignity?’
said Beauchamp, and made the answer easier:
‘Not intentionally, surely:
not... I certainly do not accuse him.’
’Can you tell me you feel that
he wounded you in the smallest degree? And if
so, how? I ask you this, because he is anxious,
if he lives, to apologize to you for any offence that
he may have been guilty of: he was ignorant of
it. I have his word for that, and his commands
to me to bear it to you. I may tell you I have
never known him injure the most feeble thing anything
alive, or wish to.’
Beauchamp’s voice choked.
Rosamund saw tears leap out of the stern face of her
dearest now in wrath with her.
‘Is he ill?’ she faltered.
‘He is. You own to a strong dislike of
him, do you not?’
‘But not to desire any harm to him.’
‘Not a whipping,’ Mr. Culbrett murmured.
Everard Romfrey overheard it.
He had allowed Mrs. Culling to be
sent for, that she might with a bare affirmative silence
Nevil, when his conduct was becoming intolerable before
the guests of the house.
‘That will do, ma’am,’ he dismissed
her.
Beauchamp would not let her depart.
’I must have your distinct reply,
and in Mr. Romfrey’s presence: say,
that if you accused him you were mistaken, or that
they were mistaken who supposed you had accused him.
I must have the answer before you go.’
‘Sir, will you learn manners!’
Mr. Romfrey said to him, with a rattle of the throat.
Beauchamp turned his face from-her.
Colonel Halkett offered her his arm to lead her away.
‘What is it? Oh, what is
it?’ she whispered, scarcely able to walk, but
declining the colonel’s arm.
‘You ought not to have been
dragged out here,’ said he. ’Any one
might have known there would be no convincing of Captain
Beauchamp. That old rascal in Bevisham has been
having a beating; that’s all. And a very
beautiful day it is! a little too hot, though.
Before we leave, you must give me a lesson or two
in gardening.’
‘Dr. Shrapnel Mr.
Romfrey!’ said Rosamund half audibly under the
oppression of the more she saw than what she said.
The colonel talked of her renown in
landscape-gardening. He added casually:
‘They met the other day.’
‘By accident?’
’By chance, I suppose.
Shrapnel defends one of your Steynham poaching vermin.’
‘Mr. Romfrey struck him? for
that? Oh, never!’ Rosamund exclaimed.
‘I suppose he had a long account to settle.’
She fetched her breath painfully. ‘I shall
never be forgiven.’
‘And I say that a gentleman
has no business with idols,’ the colonel fumed
as he spoke. ’Those letters of Shrapnel
to Nevil Beauchamp are a scandal on the name of Englishman.’
‘You have read that shocking one, Colonel Halkett?’
‘Captain Baskelett read it out to us.’
‘He? Oh! then...’
She stopped: Then the author of this mischief
is clear to me! her divining hatred of Cecil would
have said, but her humble position did not warrant
such speech. A consideration of the lowliness
necessitating this restraint at a moment when loudly
to denounce another’s infamy with triumphant
insight would have solaced and supported her, kept
Rosamund dumb.
She could not bear to think of her part in the mischief.
She was not bound to think of it,
knowing actually nothing of the occurrence.
Still she felt that she was on her
trial. She detected herself running in and out
of her nature to fortify it against accusations rather
than cleanse it for inspection. It was narrowing
in her own sight. The prospect of her having
to submit to a further interrogatory, shut it up entrenched
in the declaration that Dr. Shrapnel had so far outraged
her sentiments as to be said to have offended her:
not insulted, perhaps, but certainly offended.
And this was a generous distinction.
It was generous; and, having recognized the generosity,
she was unable to go beyond it.
She was presently making the distinction
to Miss Halkett. The colonel had left her at
the door of the house: Miss Halkett sought admission
to her private room on an errand of condolence, for
she had sympathized with her very much in the semi-indignity
Nevil had forced her to undergo: and very little
indeed had she been able to sympathize with Nevil,
who had been guilty of the serious fault of allowing
himself to appear moved by his own commonplace utterances;
or, in other words, the theme being hostile to his
audience, he had betrayed emotion over it without
first evoking the spirit of pathos.
‘As for me,’ Rosamund
replied, to some comforting remarks of Miss Halkett’s,
’I do not understand why I should be mixed up
in Dr. Shrapnel’s misfortunes: I really
am quite unable to recollect his words to me or his
behaviour: I have only a positive impression that
I left his house, where I had gone to see Captain
Beauchamp, in utter disgust, so repelled by his language
that I could hardly trust myself to speak of the man
to Mr. Romfrey when he questioned me. I did not
volunteer it. I am ready to say that I believe
Dr. Shrapnel did not intend to be insulting.
I cannot say that he was not offensive.
You know, Miss Halkett, I would willingly,
gladly have saved him from anything like punishment.’
‘You are too gentle to have thought of it,’
said Cecilia.
’But I shall never be forgiven
by Captain Beauchamp. I see in his eyes that
he accuses me and despises me.’
‘He will not be so unjust, Mrs. Culling.’
Rosamund begged that she might hear
what Nevil had first said on his arrival.
Cecilia related that they had seen
him walking swiftly across the park, and that Mr.
Romfrey had hailed him, and held his hand out; and
that Captain Beauchamp had overlooked it, saying he
feared Mr. Romfrey’s work was complete.
He had taken her father’s hand and hers and his
touch was like ice.
‘His worship of that Dr. Shrapnel
is extraordinary,’ quoth Rosamund. ‘And
how did Mr. Romfrey behave to him?’
‘My father thinks, very forbearingly.’
Rosamund sighed and made a semblance
of wringing her hands. ’It seems to me
that I anticipated ever since I heard of the man...
or at least ever since I saw him and heard him, he
would be the evil genius of us all: if I dare
include myself. But I am not permitted to escape!
And, Miss Halkett, can you tell me how it was that
my name that I became involved? I
cannot imagine the circumstances which would bring
me forward in this unhappy affair.’
Cecilia replied: ’The occasion
was, that Captain Beauchamp so scornfully contrasted
the sort of injury done by Dr. Shrapnel’s defence
of a poacher on his uncle’s estate, with the
severe chastisement inflicted by Mr. Romfrey in revenge
for it. He would not leave the subject.’
‘I see him see his
eyes!’ cried Rosamund, her bosom heaving and
sinking deep, as her conscience quavered within her.
’At last Mr. Romfrey mentioned me?’
‘He stood up and said you had
been personally insulted by Dr. Shrapnel.’
Rosamund meditated in a distressing
doubt of her conscientious truthfulness.
’Captain Beauchamp will be coming
to me; and how can I answer him? Heaven knows
I would have shielded the poor man, if possible poor
wretch! Wicked though he is, one has only to hear
of him suffering! But what can I answer?
I do recollect now that Mr. Romfrey compelled me from
question to question to confess that the man had vexed
me. Insulted, I never said. At the worst,
I said vexed. I would not have said insulted,
or even offended, because Mr. Romfrey... ah! we know
him. What I did say, I forget. I have no
guide to what I said but my present feelings, and
they are pity for the unfortunate man much more than
dislike. Well, I must go through the scene
with Nevil!’ Rosamund concluded her outcry of
ostensible exculpation.
She asked in a cooler moment how it
was that Captain Beauchamp had so far forgotten himself
as to burst out on his uncle before the guests of
the house. It appeared that he had wished his
uncle to withdraw with him, and Mr. Romfrey had bidden
him postpone private communications. Rosamund
gathered from one or two words of Cecilia’s that
Mr. Romfrey, until finally stung by Nevil, had indulged
in his best-humoured banter.