“What are you looking for, Sister Evelyn?”
“Veronica asked me to go into
the garden; I think it was to gather some laurel-leaves,
but I can’t remember where they grow.”
“Never mind the leaves, I will
gather them for you. Take my spade and dig a
little while. It is pleasanter being in the open
air than in that hot sacristy.”
“But I don’t know how
to dig. You’ll only laugh at me.”
“No, no. See, here is a
bed of spring onions, and it wants digging out.
You press the spade in as far as you can, pull down
the handle, and lift out the earth. I shall be
some little while away, and I expect you will have
dug some yards. You can dig as far as this.
Try, Evelyn, make up your mind that you will; if you
make up your mind, you will succeed.”
Evelyn promised.
“But you won’t stay a
long time, will you?” she called after the nun.
“Now I know why Sister Mary John wears men’s
boots.” And she stooped to pin up her skirt.
All the while the sky was clearing,
the wind drove the clouds westward, breaking up the
dark masses, scattering, winnowing, letting the sun
through. Delicious was the glow, though it lasted
but for a few minutes perhaps more delicious
because it was so transitory. Another patch of
wind-driven clouds came up, and the world became cold
and grey again. A moment afterwards the clouds
passed, the sun shone out, and the delicious warmth
filled mind and body with a delight that no artificial
warmth could; and, to enjoy the glowing of the sun,
Evelyn left her digging, and wandered away through
the garden, stopping now and then to notice the progress
of the spring. A late frost had cut the blossoms
of the pear and the cherry; the half-blown blossom
dropped at the touch of the finger, and Evelyn regretted
the frost, thinking of the nets she had made.
“They’ll be of very little
use this year.” And she wondered if the
currant and gooseberry-bushes had escaped; the apples
had, for they were later, unless there was another
frost. “And then my nets will be of no
use at all; and, I have worked so hard at them!”
The lilac-bushes were not yet in leaf only
some tiny green shoots. “We shall not have
any lilac this year till the middle of May. Was
there ever such a season?” Larks were everywhere,
ascending in short flights, trilling as they ascended;
and Evelyn listened to their singing, thinking it
most curious quaint cadenzas in which a
note was wanting, like in the bagpipes, a sort of
aerial bagpipes. But on a bare bough a thrush
sang, breaking out presently into a little tune of
five notes. “Quite a little tune; one would
think the bird had been taught it.” She
waited for him to sing it again, but, as if not wishing
to waste his song, being a careful bird, he continued
a sort of recitative; then, thinking his listener
had waited long enough for his little aria, he broke
out again. “There it is, five notes a
distinct little tune.” Why should he sing
and no other thrush sing it? There was a robin;
but he sang the same little roundelay all the year....
A little, pale-brown bird, fluttering among the bushes,
interested her; but it was some time before she could
catch fair sight of it. “A dear little
wren!” she said. “It must have its
nest about here.” She sought it, knowing
its beautifully woven house, with one hole, through
which the bird passes to feed a numerous progeny,
and expected to find it amid the tangle of traveller’s-joy
which covered an old wall.
In the convent garden there was a
beautiful ash-tree, under which Evelyn had often sat
with the nuns during recreation, but it showed no
signs of coming into leaf; and the poplars rose up
against the bright sky, like enormous brooms.
The hawthorns had resisted the frost better than the
sycamores. One pitied the sycamore and the chestnut-trees
most of all; and, fearing they would bear no leaves
that year, Evelyn stood with a black and shrivelled
leaf in her hand. “Autumn, before the spring
has begun,” she said. “But here is
Jack.” And she stooped to pick up the great
yellow tom-cat, whom she remembered as a kindly, affectionate
animal; but now he ran away from her, turning to snarl
at her. “What can have happened to our dear
Jack?” she asked herself. And Miss Dingle,
who had been watching her from a little distance,
cried out:
“You’ll not succeed in
catching him; he has been very wicked lately, and
is quite changed. The devil must have got into
him, in spite of the blue ribbon I tied round his
neck.”
“How are you, Miss Dingle?”
Miss Dingle evinced a considerable
shyness, and muttered under her breath that she was
very well. She hoped Evelyn was the same; and
ran away a little distance, then stopped and looked
back, her curiosity getting the better of her.
“Ordinary conversation does not suit her,”
Evelyn said to herself. And, when they were within
speaking distance again, Evelyn asked her what had
become of the blue ribbon she had tied round the cat’s
neck to save him from the devil.
“He tore it off I
mean the devil took it off. I can’t catch
him. If you’d try? if you’d
get between him and that bush. It is a pity to
see a good cat go to the devil because we can’t
get a bit of blue ribbon on his neck.”
Evelyn stood between the cat and the
bush, and creeping near, caught him by the neck, and
held him by the forepaws while Miss Dingle tried to
tie the ribbon round his neck; but Jack struggled,
and raising one of his hind paws obliged Evelyn to
loose him.
“There is no use trying; he
won’t let it be put on his neck.”
“But what will become of him?
He will get more and more savage.” Miss
Dingle ran after the cat, who put up his tail and trotted
away, eluding her. She came back, telling Evelyn
that she might see the devil if she wished. “That
is to say, if you are not afraid. He’s in
that corner, and I don’t like to go there.
I have hunted him out of these bushes you
need not be afraid, my rosary has been over them all.”
Evelyn could see that Miss Dingle
wished her to exorcise the dangerous corner, and she
offered to do so.
“You have two rosaries, you might lend me one.”
“No, I don’t think I could.
I want two, one for each hand, you see.... I
have not seen you in the garden this last day or two.
You’ve been away, haven’t you?”
“I’ve been in Rome.”
“In Rome! Then why don’t
you go and hunt him out... frighten him away?
You don’t need a rosary if you have touched the
precious relics. You should be able to drive
him out of the garden, and out of the park too, though
the park is a big place. But here comes Sister
Mary John. You will tell me another time if you’ve
brought back anything that the Pope has worn.”
Sister Mary John came striding over
the broken earth, followed by her jackdaw. The
bird stopped to pick up a fat worm, and the nun sent
Miss Dingle away very summarily.
“I can’t have you here,
Alice. Go to the summer-house and worry the devil
away with your holy pictures. I’ve no time
for you, dear,” she said to the jackdaw, who
had alighted on her shoulder; “and I have been
looking for you everywhere,” she said, turning
from her bird to Evelyn. “You promised
me But I suppose digging tired you?”
“No, it was not that, Sister,
only the sun came out and the warmth was so delicious;
I am afraid I am easily beguiled.”
“We are all easily beguiled,”
Sister Mary John answered somewhat sharply. “Now
we must try to get on with our digging. You can
help me a little with it, can’t you?”
And looking up and down a plot about ten yards long
and twenty feet wide, protected by a yew-hedge, she
said, “This is the rhubarb-bed. And this
piece,” she said, walking to another plot between
the yew-hedge and the gooseberry bushes, “will
have to be dug up. We were short of vegetables
last year.”
“You speak very lightly, Sister,
of so much digging. Do you never get tired?”
So that she might not lose heart altogether, Sister
Mary John told her one of these beds had been dug
up in autumn, and that no more would be required than
the hoeing out of the weeds.
“Is hoeing lighter work than digging?”
“You will find out soon.”
Evelyn set to work; but when she had cleared a large
piece of weeds she had to go over the ground again,
having missed a great many. “But you will
soon get used to the work. Now, there’s
the dinner bell. Are you so tired as all that?”
“Well, you see, I have never done any digging
before.”
After dinner Sister Mary John without
further words told her she was to go in front with
the dibble and make holes for the potatoes, for an
absent-minded person could not be trusted with the
seed potatoes she would be sure to break
the shoots. The next week they were engaged in
sowing French beans and scarlet runners, and Evelyn
thought it rather unreasonable of the sister to expect
her to know by instinct that French beans should not
be set as closely together as the scarlet runners,
and she laughed outright when the sister said, “But
surely you know that broad beans must be trodden firmly
into the ground?” Sister Mary John noticed her
laugh. “Work in the garden suits her,”
she said to herself, “she is getting better;
only we must be careful against a relapse. Now,
Evelyn, we must weed the flower beds, or there will
be no flowers for the Virgin in May.” And
they weeded and weeded, day after day, filling in
the gaps with plants from the nursery. A few
days later came the seed sowing, the mignonette, sweet
pea, stocks, larkspur, poppies, and nasturtiums
all of which should have been sown earlier, the nun
said, only the season was so late, and the vegetables
had taken all their time.
“They all like to see flowers
on the altar, but not one of them will tie up her
habit and dig, and they are as ignorant as you are,
dear.”
“Sister, that is unkind.
I have learned as much as can be expected in a month.”
“You aren’t so careless
as you were.” The two women walked a little
way, and then they sat for a long time looking into
the distant park, enjoying the soft south wind blowing
over it. Evelyn would have liked to have sat
there indefinitely, and far too soon did the nun remind
her that time was going by and they must return to
their work. “We have had some warm nights
lately and the wallflowers are out; come and look
at them, dear.” And forgetful of her, Sister
Mary John rose and went towards the flower garden.
Evelyn was too tired to follow, and she sat watching
Sister Mary John, who seemed as much part of the garden
as the wind, or the rain, or the sun.