‘Something has happened to my
learned daughter,’ said Mr. Barton, and he continued
his thumb-nail sketch on the tablecloth. ‘What
is it?’ he added indolently.
Alice passed the cheque and the memorandum
across the table. ’Three pounds for three
articles contributed to the during
the month of April.’
‘You don’t mean to say,
Alice, you got three pounds for your writing?’
said Mrs. Barton.
’Yes, mother, I have, and I
hope to make ten pounds next month. Mr. Harding
says he can get me lots of work.’
’So my lady then, with all her
shy ways, knows how to make use of a man as well as
any of us.’
Mrs. Barton did not willingly wound.
She saw life from the point of view of making use
of men, that was all; and when Alice walked out of
the room, Mrs. Barton felt sorry for what she had
said, and she would have gone to comfort her daughter
if Olive had not, at that moment, stood in imminent
need of comfort.
‘I suppose,’ she said
pettishly, ’the letter you received this morning
is from the Marquis, to say he won’t be here
next Tuesday?’
It was. For as the day fixed
for his arrival at Brookfield approached, he would
write to apologize, and to beg that he might be allowed
to postpone his visit to Monday week or Wednesday
fortnight. Mrs. Barton replied that they would
be very glad to see him when he found it convenient
to come and see them. She did not inquire into
the reason of his rudeness, she was determined to
fight the battle out to the end, and she did not dare
to think that he was being prompted by that beast of
a girl, Violet Scully.
’He writes a very nice letter
indeed. He says he has a very bad cold, and doesn’t
like to show himself at Brookfield with a red nose,
but that, unless he dies in the meantime, he will
be with us on the twentieth of the month, and will if
we’ll have him stop three weeks with
us.’
’I knew the letter was a put-off.
I don’t believe he admires me at all, the little
beast; and I know I shall never be a marchioness.
You made me treat poor Edward shamefully, and for
no purpose, after all.’
’Now, Olive, you mustn’t
speak like that. Go upstairs and ask Barnes if
she has heard anything lately?’
‘Oh, I’m sick of Barnes; what has she
heard?’
’She is a great friend of Lady
Georgina’s maid, who knows the Burkes intimately,
particularly Lady Emily’s maid, and Barnes got
a letter from her friend the other day, saying that
Lady Emily was delighted at the idea of her brother
marrying you, dear, and that he thinks of nobody else,
speaks of nobody else. Run up and speak to her
about it.’
As we have seen, Mrs. Barton had drugged
Olive’s light brain with visions of victories,
with dancing, dresses, admiration; but now, in the
tiring void of country days, memories of Edward’s
love and devotion were certain to arise. He made,
however, no attempt to renew his courtship. At
Gort, within three miles, he remained silent, immovable
as one of the Clare mountains. Sometimes his
brown-gold moustache and square shoulders were caught
sight of as he rode rapidly along the roads. He
had once been seen sitting with Mrs. Lawler behind
the famous cream-coloured ponies; and to allude to
his disgraceful conduct without wounding Olive’s
vanity was an art that Mrs. Barton practised daily;
and to keep the girl in spirits she induced Sir Charles,
who it was reported was about to emigrate his family
to the wilds of Maratoga, to come and stay with them.
If a rumour were to reach the Marquis’s ears,
it might help to bring him to the point. In any
case Sir Charles’s attentions to Olive would
keep her in humour until the great day arrived.
Well convinced that this was her last
throw, Mrs. Barton resolved to smear the hook well
with the three famous baits she was accustomed to
angle with. They were dinners, flattery,
and dancing. Accordingly, an order was given
to the Dublin fishmonger to send them fish daily for
the next three weeks, and to the pastrycook for a
French cook. The store of flattery kept on the
premises being illimitable, she did not trouble about
that, but devoted herself to the solution of the problem
of how she should obtain a constant and unfailing
supply of music. Once she thought of sending
up to Dublin for a professional pianist, but was obliged
to abandon the idea on account of the impossibility
of devising suitable employment for him during the
morning hours. A tune or two might not come in
amiss after lunch, but to have him hanging about the
shrubberies all the morning would be intolerable.
She might ask a couple of the Brennans or the Duffys
to stay with them, but they would be in the way, and
occupy the Marquis’s time, and go tell-taling
all over the country; no, that wouldn’t do either.
Alice’s playing was wretched. It was a
wonderful thing that a girl like her would not make
some effort to amuse men would not do something.
Once Olive was married, she (Mrs. Barton) would try
to patch up something for this gawk of a girl marry
her to Sir Charles; excellent match it would be, too get
all the children emigrated first: and if he would
not have her, there was Sir Richard. It was said
that he was quite reformed had given up
drink. But there was no use thinking of that:
for the present she would have to put up with the
girl’s music, which was wretched.
Olive fell in with her mother’s
plans, and she angled industriously for Lord Kilcarney.
She did not fail to say in or out of season, ’Il
n’y a personne comme nôtre cher Marquis,’
and as the turbot and fruit, that had arrived by the
afternoon train from Dublin, were discussed, Milord
did not cease to make the most appropriate remarks.
Referring to the bouquet that she had pinned into
the Marquis’s buttonhole, he said:
‘Il y a des amants partout
où il y a des oiseaux et des roses.’
And again: ’Les regardes des amoureux
sont la lumiere comme lé baiser est la vie du monde.’
After dinner no time was lost, although
the Marquis pleaded fatigue, in settling Alice at
the piano, and dancing began in sober earnest.
After each waltz Olive conducted him to the dining-room;
she helped him liberally to wine, and when she held
a match to his cigarette their fingers touched.
But to find occupation for the long morning hours of
her young couple was a grave trouble to Mrs. Barton.
She was determined to make every moment of the little
Marquis’s stay in Galway moments of sunshine;
but mental no more than atmospheric sunshine is to
be had by the willing, and the poor little fellow
seemed to pine in his Galway cage like a moulting
canary. He submitted to all the efforts made in
his behalf, but his submission was that of a victim.
After breakfast he always attempted to escape, and
if he succeeded in eluding Mrs. Barton, he would remain
for hours hidden in the laurels, enwrapped in summer
meditations, the nature of which it was impossible
even to conjecture. In the afternoon he spoke
of the burden of his correspondence, and when the
inevitable dancing was spoken of, he often excused
himself on the ground of having a long letter to finish.
If it were impossible for her to learn the contents
of these letters, Mrs. Barton ardently desired to
know to whom they were addressed. Daily she volunteered
to send special messengers to the post on his account;
the footman, the coachman, and pony-chaise, were in
turn rejected by him.
’Thank you, Mrs. Barton, thank
you, but I should like to avail myself of the chance
of a constitutional.’
‘La santé de nôtre petit
Marquis avant tout,’ she would exclaim, with
much silvery laughter and all the habitual movements
of the white hands. ’But what do you say:
I am sure the young ladies would like a walk, too?’
With a view to picturesque effect
Mrs. Barton’s thoughts had long been centred
on a picnic. They were now within a few days of
the first of May, and there was enough sunshine in
the air to justify an excursion to Kinvarra Castle.
It is about four miles distant, at the end of a long
narrow bay.
Mrs. Barton applied herself diligently
to the task of organization. Having heard from
Dublin of the hoax that was being played on their
enemy, the Ladies Cullen consented to join the party,
and they brought with them one of the Honourable Miss
Gores. The Duffys and Brennans numbered their
full strength, including even the famous Bertha, who
was staying with her sisters on a visit. The
Goulds excused themselves on account of the distance
and the disturbed state of the country. Mrs.
Barton found, therefore, much difficulty in maintaining
the noted characteristic of her parties. Sir
Richard and Sir Charles had agreed to come; Mr. Adair,
Mr. Ryan, and Mr. Lynch were also present. They
drove up on outside cars, and were all attended by
a bodyguard of policemen.
And very soon everybody fell to babbling
of the history of the Castle, which nobody knew:
Ireland has had few chroniclers. Lord Dungory
pointed out that in the seventeenth century people
lived in Ireland naked speaking Latin habitually without
furniture or tapestries or paintings or baths.
The Castle suggested a military movement to Mr. Barton.
’If things get any worse, we
might all retire into this castle. The ladies
will stand on the battlements, and I will undertake
to hold the place for ever against those village ruffians.’
‘I do not think there will be
any necessity for that,’ replied Mr. Adair sententiously.
’I think that these last terrible outrages have
awakened the Government to a sense of their responsibility.
I have reason to believe that immediate steps will
be taken to crush this infamous conspiracy.’
Lord Dungory interposed with a neat
epigram, and Mr. Adair fell to telling how he would
crush the Land League out of existence if the Government
would place him in supreme power for the space of one
month.
’That is all I would ask:
one month to restore this island to peace and prosperity.
I have always been a Liberal, but I confess that I
entirely fail to understand the action the Government
are taking in the present crisis.’
As Lord Dungory was about to reply
that he did not believe that the peasants could continue
to resist the Government indefinitely, the police-sergeant
in charge of the picnic-party approached, his face
overcast.
’We’ve just received bad
news from Dublin, my lord. The worst. Lord
Frederick Cavendish and Mr. Burke were murdered this
evening in the Phoenix Park. It is unfortunately
true, sir; I’ve the telegram with me.’
And he handed the yellow envelope to Lord Dungory,
who, after glancing at it, handed it on to Mr. Adair.
The appearance of the police in conversation
with Lord Dungory and Mr. Adair was a sign for the
assembling of the rest of the company, and it was
under the walls of old Kinvarra Castle that the picnic-party
heard the awful news.
Then, in turn, each ejaculated a few words.
Mrs. Barton said: ’It is
dreadful to think there are such wicked people in
the world.’
Mr. Adair said: ’There
can be no doubt but that we have arrived at the crisis;
Europe will ring with the echoes of the crime.’
Olive said: ’I think they
ought to hang Mr. Parnell; I believe it was he who
drove the car.’
Mr. Barton said: ’The landlords
and Land-Leaguers will have to do what I say; they
will have to fight it out. Now, at their head,
I believe by a series of rapid marches ’
‘Arthur, Arthur, I beg of you,’ exclaimed
Mrs. Barton.
‘We shall all have to emigrate,’ Sir Charles
murmured reflectively.
‘The law is in abeyance,’ said Mr. Lynch.
‘Precisely,’ replied Milord;
’and as I once said to Lord Granville, “Les
moeurs sont les hommes, maïs la loi est la raison du
pays."’
Mr. Adair looked up; he seemed about
to contest the truth of this aphorism, but he relapsed
into his consideration of Mr. Gladstone’s political
integrity. The conversation had fallen, but at
the end of a long silence Mr. Ryan said:
‘Begorra, I am very glad they were murthered.’
All drew back instinctively.
This was too horrible, and doubt of Mr. Ryan’s
sanity was expressed on every face.
At last Mr. Adair said, conscious
that he was expressing the feelings of the entire
company: ’What do you mean, sir? Have
you gone mad? Do you not know that this is no
fitting time for buffoonery?’
‘Will ye hear me cousin out?’ said Mr.
Lynch.
‘Begorra, I’m glad they
were murthered,’ continued Mr. Ryan; ’for
if they hadn’t been we’d have been there’s
the long and the short of it. I know the counthry
well, and I know that in six months more, without a
proper Coercion Act, we’d have been burned in
our beds.’
The unanswerableness of Mr. Ryan’s
words, and the implacable certainty which forced itself
into every heart, that he spoke but the truth, did
not, however, make the company less inclined to oppose
the utilitarian view he took of the tragedy.
Unfinished phrases . . . ‘Disgraceful’
. . . ‘Shocking’ . . . ‘Inconceivable’
. . . ‘That anyone should say such a thing’
. . . were passed round, and a disposition was shown
to boycott Mr. Ryan.
Mr. Adair spoke of not sitting in
the room where such opinions were expressed, but Milord
was seen whispering to him, ’We’re not
in a room, Adair, we’re out of doors;’
and Mrs. Barton, always anxious to calm troubled lives,
suggested that ‘people did not mean all they
said.’ Mr. Ryan, however, maintained through
it all an attitude of stolid indifference, the indifference
of a man who knows that all must come back sooner
or later to his views.
And presently, although the sting
remained, the memory of the wasp that had stung seemed
to be lost. Milord and Mr. Adair engaged in a
long and learned discussion concerning the principles
of Liberalism, in the course of which many allusions
were made to the new Coercion Bill, which, it was
now agreed, Mr. Gladstone would, in a few days, lay
before Parliament. The provisions of this Bill
were debated. Milord spoke of an Act that had
been in force consequent on the Fenian rising in ’69.
Mr. Adair was of opinion that the importance of a
new Coercion Act could not be over-estimated; Mr.
Barton declared in favour of a military expedition a
rapid dash into the heart of Connemara. But the
conversation languished, and in the ever-lengthening
silences all found their thoughts reverting to the
idea brutally expressed by Mr. Ryan: Yes,
they were glad; for if Lord Frederick Cavendish and
Mr. Burke had not been assassinated, every landowner
in the country would have been murdered.
There was no dancing that evening;
and as the night advanced the danger of the long drive
home increased in intensity in the minds of Messrs.
Lynch and Ryan. They sat on either side of Mr.
Adair, and it was finally arranged that they should
join their police-forces, and spend the night at his
place. Sir Charles was sleeping at Brookfield;
Milord had four policemen with him; and as all would
have to pass his gate, he did not anticipate that
even the Land League would venture to attack thirteen
armed men. Mr. Barton, who saw the picturesque
in everything, declared, when he came back, that they
looked like a caravan starting for a pilgrimage across
the desert. After a few further remarks, the ladies
rose to retire; but when Mrs. Barton gave her hand
to Lord Kilcarney, he said, his voice trembling a
little:
’I’m afraid I must leave
you to-morrow, Mrs. Barton. I shall have to run
over to London to vote in the House of Lords. . .’
Mrs. Barton led the poor little man
into the farther corner of the room, and making a
place for him by her side, she said:
’Of course we are very sorry
you are leaving we should like you to stop
a little longer with us. Is it impossible for
you. . . ?’
‘I am afraid so, Mrs. Barton;
it is very kind of you, but ’
‘It is a great pity,’
she answered; ’but before we part I should like
to know if you have come to any conclusion about what
I spoke to you of in Dublin. If it is not to
be, I should like to know, that I might tell the girl,
so that she might not think anything more about ’
‘What am I to say, what am I
to do?’ thought the Marquis. ’Oh!
why does this woman worry me? How can I tell
her that I wouldn’t marry her daughter for tens
of thousands of pounds?’ ’I think, Mrs.
Barton I mean, I think you will agree with
me that until affairs in Ireland grow more settled,
it would be impossible for anyone to enter into any
engagements whatever. We are all on the brink
of ruin.’
‘But twenty thousand pounds would settle a great
deal.’
The little Marquis was conscious of
annihilation, and he sought to escape Mrs. Barton
as he might a piece of falling rock. With a desperate
effort he said:
’Yes, Mrs. Barton yes,
I agree with you, twenty thousand pounds is a great
deal of money; but I think we had better wait until
the Lords have passed the new Coercion Bill say
nothing more about this leave it an open
question.’
And on this eminently unsatisfactory
answer the matter ended; even Mrs. Barton saw she
could not, at least for the present, continue to press
it. Still she did not give up hope. ’Try
on to the end; we never know that it is not the last
little effort that will win the game,’ was the
aphorism with which she consoled her daughter, and
induced her to write to Lord Kilcarney. And almost
daily he received from her flowers, supposed to be
emblematical of the feeling she entertained for him;
and for these Alice was sometimes ordered to compose
verses and suitable mottoes.