It is well worth encountering the perils of the sea,
even in the middle
of winter, and in the teeth of a north-east wind,
if only to experience
the absolute comfort and ease with which, in these
space-annihilating
days, the once-dreaded journey from England to the
Emerald Isle can be
made. You have resolved to accept a hospitable
invitation from Mrs.
Hungerford, the well-known author of Molly Bawn,
etc., to visit her
at her lovely house, St. Brenda’s, Bandon, co.
Cork, where a ’hearty
Irish welcome’ is promised, and though circumstances
prevent your
availing yourself of the ‘month’s holiday’
so kindly offered, and limit
an absence from home to but four days, it is delightful
to find that,
travelling by the best of all possible routes the
Irish Mail it
is to be accomplished easily and without any fatiguing
haste.
Having given due notice of your intentions, you arrive
at Euston just
in time for the 7.15 a.m. express, and find that by
the kindness of the
station-master a compartment is reserved, and every
arrangement,
including an excellent meal, is made for your comfort.
The carriages
are lighted by electricity, and run so smoothly that
it is possible to
get a couple of hours’ good sleep, which the
very early start has made
so desirable. On reaching Holyhead at 1.30 p.m.
to the minute, you are
met by the courteous and attentive marine superintendant
Captain Cay,
R.N., who takes you straight on board the Ireland,
the newest
addition to the fleet of fine ships, owned by the
City of Dublin Steam
Packet Company. She is a magnificent vessel,
380 feet long, 38 feet in
beam, 2,589 tons, and 6,000 horse-power; her fine,
broad bridge,
handsome deck-houses, and brass work glisten in the
bright sunlight.
She carries electric light; and the many airy private
cabins indicate
that, though built for speed, the comfort of her passengers
has been a
matter of much consideration. She is well captained,
well officered,
well manned, and well navigated. The good-looking,
weather-beaten
Captain Kendall is indeed the commodore of the company,
and has made
the passage for nearly thirty years. There is
an unusually large number
of passengers to-day, for it is the first week of
the accelerated
speed, and it is amusing to notice the rapidity with
which the mails
are shipped, on men’s backs, which plan is found
quicker than any
appliance. Captain Cay remarks that it is no
uncommon thing to ship
seven hundred sacks on foreign mail days; he says,
too, that never
since these vessels were started has there been a
single accident to
life or limb. But the last bag is on board, steam
is up, and away goes
the ship past the South Stack lighthouse, built on
an island under
precipitous cliffs, from which a gun is fired when
foggy, and in about
an hour the Irish coast becomes visible, Howth and
Bray Head. The sea
gets pretty rough, but luckily does not interfere
with your excellent
appetite for the first-class refreshments supplied.
The swift-revolving
paddles churn the big waves into a thick foam as the
good ship
Ireland ploughs her way through at the rate
of twenty knots an hour,
‘making good weather of it’, and actually
accomplishes the voyage in
three hours and fifteen minutes one of
the shortest runs on record.
The punctuality with which these mail packets make
the passage in all
weathers is indeed truly wonderful a fact
which is experienced a few
days later on the return journey. Kingstown is
reached at 6.10 p.m.
(Irish time), where the mail train is waiting to convey
passengers by
the new loop line that runs in a curve right through
’dear dirty
Dublin’, as it is popularly called, to Kingsbridge,
and so on to Cork,
where you put up for the night at the Imperial Hotel.
Another bright sunshiny morning opens, and shows old
Cork at her best.
Cork! the old city of Father Prout’s poem, ‘The
Bells of Shandon’,
which begins thus: With deep affection and recollection
I often think of Shandon bells,
Whose sounds so wild would in days of
childhood
Fling round my cradle their magic spells,
On this I ponder where’er I wander,
And thus grow fonder, sweet Cork, of thee;
With the bells of Shandon
That sound so grand on, etc. etc.
The river Lee runs through the handsome little city,
and has often been
favourably compared with the Rhine. But Bandon
must be reached, which
is easily managed in an hour by rail, and there you
are met by your
host with a neat dog-cart, and good grey mare; being
in light marching
order, your kit is quickly stowed away by a smart-looking
groom, and
soon you find yourself tearing along at a spanking
pace through the
‘most Protestant’ town of Bandon, where
Mr. Hungerford pulls up for a
moment to point out the spot where once the old gates
stood, whereon
was written the legend, ‘Let no Papist enter
here’. Years after, a
priest in the dead of night added to it. He wrote:
Whoever wrote this, wrote it well
The same is written on the gates of Hell.
Then up the hill past Ballymoden Church, in through
the gates of Castle
Bernard, past Lord Bandon’s beautiful old castle
covered with exquisite
ivy, out through a second gate, over the railway,
a drive of twenty
minutes in all, and so up to the gates of St. Brenda’s.
A private road
of about half a mile long, hedged on either side by
privet and hawthorn
and golden furze, leads to the avenue proper, the
entrance gate which
is flanked by two handsome deodars. It takes
a few minutes more to
arrive at a large, square, ivy-clad house, and ere
there is time to
take in an idea of its gardens and surroundings, the
great hall door is
flung open, a little form trips down the stone steps,
and almost before
the horse has come to a standstill, Mrs. Hungerford
gives you indeed
the ‘hearty Irish welcome’ she promised.
It is now about four o’clock, and the day is
growing dark. Your hostess
draws you in hastily out of the cold, into a spacious
hall lighted by a
hanging Eastern lamp, and by two other lamps let into
the wide circular
staircase at the lower end of it. The drawing-room
door is open, and a
stream of ruddy light from half-a-dozen crimson shaded
lamps, rushing
out, seems to welcome you too. It is a large,
handsome room, very
lofty, and charmingly furnished, with a Persian carpet,
tiny tables,
low lounging chairs, innumerable knick-knacks of all
kinds, ferns,
winter flowers of every sort, screens and palms.
A great fire of pine-logs
is roaring up the chimney. The piano is draped
with Bokhara plush,
and everywhere the latest magazines, novels, and papers
are scattered.
Mrs. Hungerford is a very tiny woman, but slight and
well-proportioned.
Her large hazel eyes, sparkling with fun and merriment,
are shaded by
thick, curly lashes. She has a small, determined
mouth, and the chin
slightly upturned, gives a piquante expression
to the intelligent
face so bright and vivacious. Her
hair is of a fair-brown colour, a
little lighter than her eyelashes, and is piled up
high on the top of
her head, breaking away into natural curls over her
brow. She is clad
in an exquisite tea-gown of dark blue plush, with
a soft, hanging,
loose front of a lighter shade of silk. Some
old lace ruffles finish
off the wrists and throat, and she wears a pair of
little high-heeled
Louis quinze shoes, which display her small
and pretty feet. She
looks the embodiment of good temper, merry wit, and
espieglerie.
It is difficult to realize that she is the mother
of the six children
who are grouped in the background. One lovely
little fairy, ‘Vera’,
ages three and a half, runs clinging up to her skirts,
and peeps out
shyly. Her delicate colouring suggests a bit
of dainty Dresden china.
Later on, you discover that this is actually the pet
name by which she
is known, being indeed quite famous here as a small
beauty. ’Master
Tom’, a splendid roly-poly fellow, aged sixteen
months is playing with
a heap of toys on the rug near the fire and is carefully
watched over
by a young brother of five. The three other girls
are charming little
maidens. The eldest, though but in her early
teens, is intellectual and
studious; the second has a decided talent for painting,
whilst the
third, says her mother, laughing, ’is a consummate
idler, but witty and
clever’.
By and bye your hostess takes you into what she calls
her ‘den’, for a
long, undisturbed chat, and this room also bears the
stamp of her taste
and love of study. A big log fire burns merrily
here, too, in the huge
grate, and lights up a splendid old oak cabinet, reaching
from floor to
ceiling, which, with four more bookcases, seems literally
crammed with
dictionaries, books of reference, novels, and other
light literature;
but the picturesque is not wanting, and there are
plenty of other
decorations, such as paintings, flowers, and valuable
old china to be
seen. Here the clever little author passes three
hours every morning.
She is, as usual, over-full of work, sells as fast
as she can write,
and has at the present time more commissions than
she can get through
during the next few years. Everything is very
orderly each big or
little bundle of MSS. is neatly tied together and
duly labelled. She
opens one drawer of a great knee-hole writing table,
which discloses
hundreds of half sheets of paper. ‘Yes’,
she says, with a laugh; ’I
scribble my notes on these: they are the backs
of my friends’ letters;
how astonished many of them would be if they knew
that the last half
sheet they write me becomes on the spot a medium for
the latest
full-blown accounts of a murder, or a laugh, or a
swindle, perhaps, more
frequently, a flirtation! I am a bad sleeper’,
she adds, ’I think my
brain is too active, for I always plan out my best
scenes at night, and
write them out in the morning without any trouble’.
She finds, too,
that driving has a curious effect upon her; the action
of the air seems
to stimulate her. She dislikes talking, or being
talked to, when
driving, but loves to think, and to watch the lovely
variations of the
world around her, and often comes home filled with
fresh ideas, scenes,
and conversations, which she scribbles down without
even waiting to
throw off her furs. Asking her how she goes to
work about her plot, she
answers with a reproachful little laugh ’That
is unkind! You know I
never have a plot really, not the bona fide
plot one looks for in a
novel. An idea comes to me, or I to it’,
she says, airily, ’a scene a
situation a young man, a young woman, and
on that mental hint I
begin to build’, but the question naturally
arises, she must make a
beginning? ‘Indeed, no’, she replies;
’it has frequently happened to me
that I have written the last chapter first, and so,
as it were, worked
backwards’.
‘Phyllis’ was the young author’s
first work. It was written before she
was nineteen, and was read by Mr. James Payn, who
accepted it for
Messrs. Smith Elder & Co.
Mrs. Hungerford is the daughter of the late Rev. Canon
Hamilton, rector
and vicar choral of St. Faughnan’s cathedral
in Ross Carberry, co.
Cork, one of the oldest churches in Ireland.
Her grandfather was John
Hamilton, of Vesington, Dunboyne, a property thirteen
miles out of
Dublin. The family is very old, very distinguished,
and came over from
Scotland to Ireland in the reign of James I.
Most of her family are in the army; but of literary
talent, she
remarks, it has but little to boast. Her principal
works are Phyllis,
Molly Bawn, Mrs. Geoffrey, Portia,
Rossmoyne, Undercurrents,
A Life’s Remorse, A Born Coquette,
A Conquering Heroine. She has
written up to this time thirty-two novels, besides
uncountable articles
for home and American papers. In the latter country
she enjoys an
enormous popularity, and everything she writes is
rapidly printed off.
First sheets of the novels in hand are bought from
her for American
publications, months before there is any chance of
their being
completed. In Australia, too, her books are eagerly
looked for, whilst
every story she has ever written can be found in the
Tauchnitz series.
She began to write when very young, at school taking
always the prize
in composition. As a mere child she could always
keep other children
spellbound whilst telling them fairy stories of her
own invention. ’I
remember’, she says, turning round with a laugh,
’when I was about ten
years old, writing a ghost story which so frightened
myself, that when
I went to bed that night, I couldn’t sleep till
I had tucked my head
under the bedclothes’. ‘This’,
she adds, ’I have always considered my
chef d’oeuvre, as I don’t believe
I have ever succeeded in
frightening anyone ever since’. At eighteen
she gave herself up
seriously, or rather, gaily, to literary work.
All her books teem with
wit and humor. One of her last creations, the
delightful old butler,
Murphy, in A Born Coquette, is equal to anything
ever written by her
compatriot, Charles Lever. Not that she has devoted
herself entirely to
mirth-moving situations. The delicacy of her
love scenes, the lightness
of touch that distinguishes her numerous flirtations
can only be
equalled by the pathos she has thrown into her work
every now and then,
as if to temper her brightness with a little shade.
Her descriptions of
scenery are specially vivid and delightful, and very
often full of
poetry. She is never didactic or goody-goody,
neither does she revel in
risky situations, nor give the world stories which,
to quote the
well-known saying of a popular playwright, ’no
nice girl would allow her
mother to read’.
Mrs. Hungerford married first when very young, but
her husband died in
less than six years, leaving her with three little
girls. In 1883 she
married Mr. Henry Hungerford. He also is Irish,
and his father’s place,
Cahirmore, of about eleven thousand acres, lies nearly
twenty miles to
the west of Bandon. ‘It may interest you’,
she says, ’to hear that my
husband was at the same school as Mr. Rider Haggard.
I remember when we
were all much younger than we are now, the two boys
came over for their
holidays to Cahirmore, and one day in my old home
“Milleen” we all went
down to the kitchen to cast bullets. We little
thought then that the
quiet, shy schoolboy, was destined to be the author
of “King Solomon’s
Mines"’.
Nothing less than a genius is Mrs. Hungerford at gardening.
Her dress
protected by a pretty holland apron, her hands encased
in brown leather
gloves, she digs and delves. Followed by many
children, each armed with
one of ‘mother’s own’ implements for
she has her own little spade
and hoe, and rake, and trowel, and fork she
plants her own seeds,
and pricks her own seedlings, prunes, grafts, and
watches with the
deepest eagerness to see them grow. In springtime,
her interest is
alike divided between the opening buds of her daffodils,
and the
breaking of the eggs of the first little chickens,
for she has a fine
poultry yard too, and is very successful in her management
of it. She
is full of vitality, and is the pivot on which every
member of the
house turns. Blessed with an adoring husband,
and healthy, handsome,
obedient children, who come to her for everything
and tell her
anything, her life seems idyllic.
‘Now and then’, she remarks laughing,
’I really have great difficulty
in securing two quiet hours for my work’; but
everything is done in
such method and order, the writing included, there
is little wonder
that so much is got through. It is a full, happy,
complete life. ’I
think’, she adds, ’my one great dread
and anxiety is a review. I never
yet have got over my terror of it, and as each one
arrives, I tremble
and quake afresh ere reading’.
April’s Lady is one of the author’s
lately published works. It is in
the three volumes, and ran previously as a serial
in Belgravia. Lady
Patty, a society sketch drawn from life, has a
most favourable
reception from the critics and public alike, but in
her last novel,
very cleverly entitled Nor Wife Nor Maid, Mrs.
Hungerford is to be
seen, or rather read, at her best. This charming
book, so full of
pathos, so replete with tenderness, ran into a second
edition in about
ten days. In it the author has taken somewhat
of a departure from her
usual lively style. Here she has indeed given
‘sorrow words’. The third
volume is so especially powerful and dramatic, that
it keeps the
attention chained. The description indeed of
poor Mary’s grief and
despair are hardly to be outdone. The plot contains
a delicate
situation, most delicately worked out. Not a
word or suspicion of a
word jars upon the reader. It is not however
all gloom. There is in it
a second pair of lovers who help to lift the clouds,
and bring a smile
to the lips of the reader.
Mrs. Hungerford does not often leave her pretty Irish
home. What with
her incessant literary work, her manifold domestic
occupations, and the
cares of her large family, she can seldom be induced
to quit what she
calls, ‘an out and out country life’,
even to pay visits to her English
friends. Mrs. Hungerford unhesitatingly declares
that everything in the
house seems wrong, and there is a howl of dismay from
the children when
the presiding genius even suggests a few days’
leave of absence. Last
year, however, she determined to go over London at
the pressing
invitation of a friend, in order to make the acquaintance
of some of
her distinguished brothers and sisters of the pen,
and she speaks of
how thoroughly she enjoyed that visit, with an eager
delight. ’Everyone
was so kind’, she says, ’so flattering,
far, far too flattering. They
all seemed to have some pretty thing to say to me.
I have felt a little
spoilt ever since. However, I am going to try
what a little more
flattery will do for me, so Mr. Hungerford and I hope
to accept, next
Spring, a second invitation from the same friend,
who wants us to go to
a large ball she is going to give some time in May
for some charitable
institution a Cottage Hospital I believe;
but come’, she adds,
suddenly springing up, ’we have spent quite
too much time over my
stupid self. Come back to the drawing-room and
the chicks, I am sure
they must be wondering where we are, and the tea and
the cakes are
growing cold’.
At this moment the door opens, and her husband, gun
in hand, with muddy
boots and gaiters, nods to you from the threshold;
he says he dare not
enter the ‘den’ in this state, and hurries
up to change before joining
the tea table. ‘He is a great athlete’,
says his wife, ’good at
cricket, football, and hockey, and equally fond of
shooting, fishing,
and riding’. That he is a capital whip,
you have already found out.
In the morning you see from the library window a flower
garden and
shrubbery, with rose trees galore, and after breakfast
a stroll round
the place is proposed. A brisk walk down the
avenue first, and then
back to the beech trees standing on the lawn, which
slopes away from
the house down to a river running at the bottom of
a deep valley, up
the long gravelled walk by the hall door, and you
turn into a handsome
walled kitchen garden, where fruit trees abound apple
and pear trees
laden with fruit, a quarter of an acre of strawberry
beds, and currant
and raspberry bushes in plenty.
But time and tide, trains and steamers, wait to for
no man, or woman
either. A few hours later you regretfully bid
adieu to the charming
little author, and watch her until the bend of the
road hides her from
your sight. Mr. Hungerford sees you through the
first stage of the
journey, which is all accomplished satisfactorily,
and you reach home
to find that whilst you have been luxuriating in fresh
sea and country
air, London has been wrapped in four days of gloom
and darkness.”
Complement:
Helen C. BLACK, In memoriam The late Mrs. Hungerford from The
Englishwoman April 1897 pp. 102-105
“The sad news of the death of
the popular and well-known author, Mrs. Hungerford,
has caused a universal thrill of sorrow, no less to
her many friends than to the large section of the
reading public, in every part of the globe where the
English tongue is spoken, who delight in her simple
but bright and witty love-stories, so full of pathos,
so replete with tenderness and human interest.
The melancholy event took place on Sunday morning,
the 24th January, after many weeks’ illness
from typhoid fever, and has deprived what the beloved
little writer was wont to call ‘a perfectly
happy and idyllic Irish home’ of its chiefest
treasure.
The late Mrs. Hungerford came before
the public at the early age of eighteen, when she
made an immediate success with her first novel, Phyllis,
which was read and accepted by Mr. James Payn, then
reader for Messrs. Smith Elder & Co. Her natural
bent towards literature had, however, manifested itself
in childhood, when she took at school all the prizes
in composition, and used to keep her playfellows enthralled
by the stories and fairy-tales she invented and wrote
for them. On leaving school she at once decided
to adopt the pen as a profession, in which she has
had so successful a career. The tone of Phyllis
was so fresh and ingenuous that it soon found favour
with the public, and was shortly followed by the far-famed
Molly Bawn a title which was peculiarly
associated with her, inasmuch as it was the name by
which many friends called her and a long
series, numbering over forty novels, besides countless
short stories for home and American magazines, where,
together with Australia and India, she enjoyed a vast
popularity. In America everything she wrote was
rapidly printed off, first sheets of novels in hand
being bought from her for Transatlantic publications
long before there was any chance of their being completed,
while every story she ever wrote can be found in the
Tauchnitz series. Among her earlier works are
Portia, Mrs. Geoffrey, Airy Fairy
Lilian, Rossmoyne, etc., which were
followed as years rolled on, by Undercurrents,
A Life’s Remorse, A Born Coquette where
her creation of the delightful old butler, Murphy,
is equal to anything ever written by her compatriot
Charles Lever , Nor Wife, nor Maid,
The Professor’s Experiment, etc.
The latest work that she lived to see published is
a collection of clever, crisp stories, entitled An
Anxious Moment, which, with a strange and pathetic
significance, terminates with a brief paper called
‘How I Write my Novels’. Two posthumous
works were left completed, bearing the names, respectively,
of Lovice, just issued, and The Coming of
Chloe, which will shortly be brought out.
Thoroughly wholesome in tone, bright
and sparkling in style, the delicacy of here love-scenes
and the lightness of touch that distinguishes her
character sketches can only be equalled by the pathos,
which every now and then she has thrown in, as if to
temper her vivacity with a little shade. Here
and there, as in the case of Nor Wife, nor Maid,
she has struck a powerfully dramatic note, while her
descriptions of scenery are especially vivid and delightful,
and very often full of poetry.
The late Mrs. Hungerford was the daughter
of the late Rev. Canon Hamilton, Rector and Vicar
Choral of St. Faughman’s Cathedral, Ross Carberry,
co. Cork, one of the oldest churches in Ireland.
Her grandfather was John Hamilton, of Vesington, Dunboyne,
a property thirteen miles out of Dublin. The
family is very old, very distinguished, and came over
from Scotland to Ireland in the Reign of James I.
She was first married when very young, but her husband
died five and a half years later, leaving her with
three little girls. In 1882, en secondes noces,
she married Mr. Thomas Henry Hungerford, of St. Brenda’s,
Bandon, co. Cork, whose father’s estate
Cahirmore, of about eleven thousand acres, lies nearly
twenty miles to the west of Bandon. By this most
happy union, she has left three children two
sons and a daughter.
Thoroughly domestic in all her tastes,
with a love of gardening, and a practical knowledge
of all the details of country life, which tend to
make the home so comfortable, her unfailing sweet temper,
ready wit and espièglerie, her powers of sympathy
and strong common sense, caused her to be the life
and center of her large household. Tenderly attached
to her husband and family, by all of whom she was adored,
she used often to say, with joy and pride, ’They
came to her for everything, and told her everything,
and it was a union of perfect love, confidence, and
peace’. In social life she numbered a large
circle of friends, to whom she was deservedly endeared
by her many engaging qualities; she possessed, indeed,
a magnetism which drew all hearts towards her.
But seldom could Mrs. Hungerford be induced to leave
her picturesque Irish home, even to pay visits to
her friends in England. Her manifold duties,
the cares of a large family, and her incessant literary
work filled up a life that was complete, useful, and
congenial, and leaves behind an irreparable blank.
A brief description of the well-beloved
little author and her pretty home will be interesting
to those who knew her not, save through her works.
She was a very tiny woman, but slight and well-proportioned,
with baby hands and feet. The large hazel eyes,
that sparkled with fun and merriment, were shaded
by thick curly lashes; a small, determined mouth and
slightly upturned chin gave a piquant expression to
the intelligent face so bright and vivacious.
Her hair, of a fair brown colour, a little lighter
than the eyelashes, was worn piled up on the top of
her head, and broke away into natural curls over a
broad and intellectual brow.
Driving up the hill, past Ballymoden
Church, in through the gates of Castle Barnard, Lord
Bandon’s beautiful old place covered with ivy,
out through a second gate and over the railway, the
gates of St. Brenda are reached. A private road,
about half a mile long, hedged on either side with
privet, hawthorn and golden furze, leads to the avenue
proper, the entrance gate of which is flanked by two
handsome deodars. It takes a few minutes more
to arrive at the large square ivy-clad house an grounds,
where beech trees stand on the lawn sloping away down
to a river running at the bottom of a deep valley.
The long gravelled walk by the hall door turns into
a handsome walled kitchen garden, where apple and
pear trees abound, together with a quarter of an acre
of strawberry beds, currant, gooseberry, and raspberry
bushes in plenty. From the library window can
be seen the flower garden and shrubbery and a large
variety of rose trees. Close by is her own special
plot where she delighted to work with her own little
implements, spade, trowel, hoe, and rake, planting
her seeds, pricking her seedlings, pruning, grafting,
and watching with deepest eagerness to see them grow.
In spring-time her interest was alike divided between
the opening buds of her daffodils and the breaking
of the eggs of the first little chickens in the fine
poultry yard, in the management of which she was so
successful. But among all these multifarious and
healthy outdoor occupations in which she delighted,
Mrs. Hungerford invariably secured three hours daily
for her literary pursuits, when everything was done
with such method and order, the writing included, that
there was little wonder that she got through so much.
Her own writing-room bears the stamp
of her taste and her love of study, where the big
log-fire burned in the huge grate, and lighted up
a splendid old oak cabinet that reaches from floor
to ceiling, which, together with four other bookcases,
are literally crammed to overflowing, while the picturesque
is not wanting, as the many paintings, old china,
ferns, plants and winter flowers can testify.
On the great knee-hole writing table
lies the now silent pen where last she used it, with
each big or little bundle of MSS. methodically
labelled, and a long list of engagements for work,
extending into future years, now, alas! destined to
remain unfulfilled!
With so active a brain she was a bad
sleeper, and always planned out her best schemes during
the night, and wrote them out in the morning without
difficulty. Driving, too, had a curious effect
upon her; the action of the air seemed to stimulate
her, and she disliked talking, or being talked to,
when driving. She loved to think and to watch
the lovely variations of the world around her, and
would often come home filled with fresh ideas, scenes,
and conversations, which she used to note down without
even waiting to throw off her furs. If questioned
how she went to work about a plot she would reply,
with a reproachful little laugh, ’I never have
a plot really, not the bona fide plot one looks
for in a novel. An idea comes to me, or I to it a
scene, a situation, a young man or a young woman and
on that mental hint I begin to build, and it has frequently
happened to me that I have written the last chapter
first, and so, as it were, worked backwards’.
But in whatsoever form the gifted
writer composed her novels the result was the same,
and she will be widely mourned by the many, who in
hours of sickness, of carking care or sorrow, owed
a temporary respite from heavy thought, or the laugh
that banishes ennui, to her ready pen grave
and gay by turns, but in every mood bewitching.
During her long illness, with its constant relapses,
its alternations of now hope, now despair, her patience
and unselfishness were exhibited to a remarkable degree.
Ever fearful to give trouble, hopeful and wishing to
encourage the loved ones around her, she maintained
a gentle cheerfulness and resignation, and finally
passed away so peacefully that her sorrowing husband
and children scarcely realised the moment when her
spirit winged its flight to the better land, whence
she, being dead, ’yet speaketh’, for ’to
live in hearts we leave behind is not to die’.”