Stanley Freeland’s country house,
Becket, was almost a show place. It stood in
its park and pastures two miles from the little town
of Transham and the Morton Plough Works; close to
the ancestral home of the Moretóns, his mother’s
family that home burned down by Roundheads
in the Civil War. The site certain
vagaries in the ground Mrs. Stanley had
caused to be walled round, and consecrated so to speak
with a stone medallion on which were engraved the
aged Moreton arms arrows and crescent moons
in proper juxtaposition. Peacocks, too that
bird ‘parlant,’ from the old Moreton crest were
encouraged to dwell there and utter their cries, as
of passionate souls lost in too comfortable surroundings.
By one of those freaks of which Nature
is so prodigal, Stanley owner of this native
Moreton soil least of all four Freeland
brothers, had the Moreton cast of mind and body.
That was why he made so much more money than the other
three put together, and had been able, with the aid
of Clara’s undoubted genius for rank and station,
to restore a strain of Moreton blood to its rightful
position among the county families of Worcestershire.
Bluff and without sentiment, he himself set little
store by that, smiling up his sleeve for
he was both kindly and prudent at his wife
who had been a Tomson. It was not in Stanley to
appreciate the peculiar flavor of the Moretóns,
that something which in spite of their naïveté and
narrowness, had really been rather fine. To him,
such Moretóns as were left were ‘dry enough
sticks, clean out of it.’ They were of
a breed that was already gone, the simplest of all
country gentlemen, dating back to the Conquest, without
one solitary conspicuous ancestor, save the one who
had been physician to a king and perished without
issue marrying from generation to generation
exactly their own equals; living simple, pious, parochial
lives; never in trade, never making money, having
a tradition and a practice of gentility more punctilious
than the so-called aristocracy; constitutionally paternal
and maternal to their dependents, constitutionally
so convinced that those dependents and all indeed
who were not ‘gentry,’ were of different
clay, that they were entirely simple and entirely without
arrogance, carrying with them even now a sort of Early
atmosphere of archery and home-made cordials,
lavender and love of clergy, together with frequent
use of the word ‘nice,’ a peculiar regularity
of feature, and a complexion that was rather parchmenty.
High Church people and Tories, naturally, to a man
and woman, by sheer inbred absence of ideas, and sheer
inbred conviction that nothing else was nice; but withal
very considerate of others, really plucky in bearing
their own ills; not greedy, and not wasteful.
Of Becket, as it now was, they would
not have approved at all. By what chance Edmund
Moreton (Stanley’s mother’s grandfather),
in the middle of the eighteenth century, had suddenly
diverged from family feeling and ideals, and taken
that ‘not quite nice’ resolution to make
ploughs and money, would never now be known.
The fact remained, together with the plough works.
A man apparently of curious energy and character,
considering his origin, he had dropped the E from his
name, and though he continued the family
tradition so far as to marry a Fleeming of Worcestershire,
to be paternal to his workmen, to be known as Squire,
and to bring his children up in the older Moreton ’niceness’ he
had yet managed to make his ploughs quite celebrated,
to found a little town, and die still handsome and
clean-shaved at the age of sixty-six. Of his
four sons, only two could be found sufficiently without
the E to go on making ploughs. Stanley’s
grandfather, Stuart Morton, indeed, had tried hard,
but in the end had reverted to the congenital instinct
for being just a Moreton. An extremely amiable
man, he took to wandering with his family, and died
in France, leaving one daughter Frances,
Stanley’s mother and three sons,
one of whom, absorbed in horses, wandered to Australia
and was killed by falling from them; one of whom, a
soldier, wandered to India, and the embraces of a
snake; and one of whom wandered into the embraces
of the Holy Roman Church.
The Morton Plough Works were dry and
dwindling when Stanley’s father, seeking an
opening for his son, put him and money into them.
From that moment they had never looked back, and now
brought Stanley, the sole proprietor, an income of
full fifteen thousand pounds a year. He wanted
it. For Clara, his wife, had that energy of aspiration
which before now has raised women to positions of
importance in the counties which are not their own,
and caused, incidentally, many acres to go out of
cultivation. Not one plough was used on the whole
of Becket, not even a Morton plough these
indeed were unsuitable to English soil and were all
sent abroad. It was the corner-stone of his success
that Stanley had completely seen through the talked-of
revival of English agriculture, and sedulously cultivated
the foreign market. This was why the Becket dining-room
could contain without straining itself large quantities
of local magnates and celebrities from London, all
deploring the condition of ‘the Land,’
and discussing without end the regrettable position
of the agricultural laborer. Except for literary
men and painters, present in small quantities to leaven
the lump, Becket was, in fact, a rallying point for
the advanced spirits of Land Reform one
of those places where they were sure of being well
done at week-ends, and of congenial and even stimulating
talk about the undoubted need for doing something,
and the designs which were being entertained upon ‘the
Land’ by either party. This very heart
of English country that the old Moretóns in their
paternal way had so religiously farmed, making out
of its lush grass and waving corn a simple and by
no means selfish or ungenerous subsistence, was now
entirely lawns, park, coverts, and private golf course,
together with enough grass to support the kine which
yielded that continual stream of milk necessary to
Clara’s entertainments and children, all female,
save little Francis, and still of tender years.
Of gardeners, keepers, cow-men, chauffeurs, footmen,
stablemen full twenty were supported on
those fifteen hundred acres that formed the little
Becket demesne. Of agricultural laborers proper that
vexed individual so much in the air, so reluctant
to stay on ‘the Land,’ and so difficult
to house when he was there, there were fortunately
none, so that it was possible for Stanley, whose wife
meant him to ‘put up’ for the Division,
and his guests, who were frequently in Parliament,
to hold entirely unbiassed and impersonal views upon
the whole question so long as they were at Becket.
It was beautiful there, too, with
the bright open fields hedged with great elms, and
that ever-rich serenity of its grass and trees.
The white house, timbered with dark beams in true
Worcestershire fashion, and added-to from time to
time, had preserved, thanks to a fine architect, an
old-fashioned air of spacious presidency above its
gardens and lawns. On the long artificial lake,
with innumerable rushy nooks and water-lilies and
coverture of leaves floating flat and bright in the
sun, the half-tame wild duck and shy water-hens had
remote little worlds, and flew and splashed when all
Becket was abed, quite as if the human spirit, with
its monkey-tricks and its little divine flame, had
not yet been born.
Under the shade of a copper-beech,
just where the drive cut through into its circle before
the house, an old lady was sitting that afternoon on
a campstool. She was dressed in gray alpaca, light
and cool, and had on her iron-gray hair a piece of
black lace. A number of Hearth and Home and a
little pair of scissors, suspended by an inexpensive
chain from her waist, rested on her knee, for she
had been meaning to cut out for dear Felix a certain
recipe for keeping the head cool; but, as a fact,
she sat without doing so, very still, save that, now
and then, she compressed her pale fine lips, and continually
moved her pale fine hands. She was evidently
waiting for something that promised excitement, even
pleasure, for a little rose-leaf flush had quavered
up into a face that was colored like parchment; and
her gray eyes under regular and still-dark brows,
very far apart, between which there was no semblance
of a wrinkle, seemed noting little definite things
about her, almost unwillingly, as an Arab’s
or a Red Indian’s eyes will continue to note
things in the present, however their minds may be set
on the future. So sat Frances Fleeming Freeland
(nee Morton) waiting for the arrival of her son Felix
and her grandchildren Alan and Nedda.
She marked presently an old man limping
slowly on a stick toward where the drive debouched,
and thought at once: “He oughtn’t
to be coming this way. I expect he doesn’t
know the way round to the back. Poor man, he’s
very lame. He looks respectable, too.”
She got up and went toward him, remarking that his
face with nice gray moustaches was wonderfully regular,
almost like a gentleman’s, and that he touched
his dusty hat with quite old-fashioned courtesy.
And smiling her smile was sweet but critical she
said: “You’ll find the best way is
to go back to that little path, and past the greenhouses.
Have you hurt your leg?”
“My leg’s been like that,
m’m, fifteen year come Michaelmas.”
“How did it happen?”
“Ploughin’. The bone
was injured; an’ now they say the muscle’s
dried up in a manner of speakin’.”
“What do you do for it? The very best thing
is this.”
From the recesses of a deep pocket,
placed where no one else wore such a thing, she brought
out a little pot.
“You must let me give it you.
Put it on when you go to bed, and rub it well in;
you’ll find it act splendidly.”
The old man took the little pot with dubious reverence.
“Yes, m’m,” he said; “thank
you, m’m.”
“What is your name?”
“Gaunt.”
“And where do you live?”
“Over to Joyfields, m’m.”
“Joyfields another
of my sons lives there Mr. Morton Freeland.
But it’s seven miles.”
“I got a lift half-way.”
“And have you business at the
house?” The old man was silent; the downcast,
rather cynical look of his lined face deepened.
And Frances Freeland thought: ’He’s
overtired. They must give him some tea and an
egg. What can he want, coming all this way?
He’s evidently not a beggar.’
The old man who was not a beggar spoke suddenly:
“I know the Mr. Freeland at Joyfields.
He’s a good gentleman, too.”
“Yes, he is. I wonder I don’t know
you.”
“I’m not much about, owin’
to my leg. It’s my grand-daughter in service
here, I come to see.”
“Oh, yes! What is her name?”
“Gaunt her name is.”
“I shouldn’t know her by her surname.”
“Alice.”
“Ah! in the kitchen; a nice, pretty girl.
I hope you’re not in trouble.”
Again the old man was silent, and again spoke suddenly:
“That’s as you look at
it, m’m,” he said. “I’ve
got a matter of a few words to have with her about
the family. Her father he couldn’t come,
so I come instead.”
“And how are you going to get back?”
“I’ll have to walk, I expect, without
I can pick up with a cart.”
Frances Freeland compressed her lips.
“With that leg you should have come by train.”
The old man smiled.
“I hadn’t the fare like,”
he said. “I only gets five shillin’s
a week, from the council, and two o’ that I
pays over to my son.”
Frances Freeland thrust her hand once
more into that deep pocket, and as she did so she
noticed that the old man’s left boot was flapping
open, and that there were two buttons off his coat.
Her mind was swiftly calculating: “It is
more than seven weeks to quarter day. Of course
I can’t afford it, but I must just give him
a sovereign.”
She withdrew her hand from the recesses
of her pocket and looked at the old man’s nose.
It was finely chiselled, and the same yellow as his
face. “It looks nice, and quite sober,”
she thought. In her hand was her purse and a
boot-lace. She took out a sovereign.
“Now, if I give you this,”
she said, “you must promise me not to spend
any of it in the public-house. And this is for
your boot. And you must go back by train.
And get those buttons sewn on your coat. And tell
cook, from me, please, to give you some tea and an
egg.” And noticing that he took the sovereign
and the boot-lace very respectfully, and seemed altogether
very respectable, and not at all coarse or beery-looking,
she said:
“Good-by; don’t forget
to rub what I gave you into your leg every night and
every morning,” and went back to her camp-stool.
Sitting down on it with the scissors in her hand,
she still did not cut out that recipe, but remained
as before, taking in small, definite things, and feeling
with an inner trembling that dear Felix and Alan and
Nedda would soon be here; and the little flush rose
again in her cheeks, and again her lips and hands
moved, expressing and compressing what was in her heart.
And close behind her, a peacock, straying from the
foundations of the old Moreton house, uttered a cry,
and moved slowly, spreading its tail under the low-hanging
boughs of the copper-beeches, as though it knew those
dark burnished leaves were the proper setting for its
‘parlant’ magnificence.