IN WHICH OUR HERO’S WORLD GROWS SENSIBLY WIDER
In the autumn of 1862 Richard Calmady
went up to Oxford. Not through ostentation, but
in obedience to the exigencies of the case, his going
was in a somewhat princely sort, so that the venerable
city, moved from the completeness of her scholarly
and historic calm, turned her eyes, in a flutter of
quite mundane excitement, upon the newcomer. Julius
March accompanied Richard. Time and thought had
moved forward; but the towers and spires of Oxford,
her fair cloisters and enchanting gardens, her green
meadows and noble elms, her rivers, Isis and Cherwell,
remained as when Julius too had been among the young
and ardent of her sons. He was greatly touched
by this return to the Holy City of his early manhood.
He renewed old friendships. He reviewed the past,
taking the measure calmly of what life had promised,
what it had given of good. A pleasant house had
been secured in St. Giles’ Street; and a contingent
of the Brockhurst household, headed by Winter, went
with the two gentlemen, while Chaplin and a couple
of grooms preceded them, in charge of a goodly number
of horse-boxes.
For that first saddle, fashioned now
some six years ago by Josiah Appleyard of Farley Row,
had worked something as near a miracle as ever yet
was worked by pigskin. It was a singularly ugly
saddle, running up into a peak front and back, furnished
with a complicated system of straps and buckles and in
place of stirrups and stirrup-leathers with
a pair of contrivances resembling old-fashioned holsters.
Mary Cathcart’s brown eyes had grown moist on
first beholding it. And Colonel Ormiston had
exclaimed, “Good God! Oh, well, poor dear
little chap, I suppose it’s the best we can
do for him.” An ugly saddle yet
had Josiah Appleyard ample reason to skip, goat-like,
being glad. For, ugly or not, it fulfilled its
purpose, bringing custom to the maker and happiness
and health to the owner of it.
The boy rode fearlessly, while exercise
and exertion begot in him a certain light-heartedness
and audacity good to see. The window-seat of
the Long Gallery, the book-shelves of the library,
knew him but seldom now. He was no less courteous,
no less devoted to his mother, no less in admiration
of her beauty; but the young barbarian was well awake
in Dickie, and drove him out of doors, on to the moorland
or into the merry greenwood, with dog, and horse,
and gun. On his well-broken pony he shot over
the golden stubble fields in autumn, brought down his
pheasants, stationed at the edge of the great coverts;
went out for long afternoons, rabbiting in the warrens
and field banks, escorted by spaniels and retrievers,
and keepers carrying lithe, lemon-coloured ferrets
tied up in a bag.
Later, when he was older, but
this tried Katherine somewhat, reminding her too keenly
of another Richard Calmady and days long dead, Winter,
a trifle reluctant at such shortening of his own virtuous
slumbers, would call Dickie and dress him, all in
the gray of the summer morning; while, at the little
arched doorway in the west front, Chifney and a groom
with a led horse would await his coming, and the boy
would mount and ride away from the great, sleeping
house. At such times a charm of dewy freshness
lay on grass and woodland, on hill and vale. The
morning star grew pale and vanished in the clear-flashing
delight of sunrise, as Richard rode forth to meet
the string of racers; as he noted the varying form
and fortune of Rattlepate or Sweet Rosemary, of Yellow
Jacket, Morion or Light-o’-Love, over the short
fragrant turf of the gallop; as he felt the virile
joy which the strength of the horses and the pounding
rush of them as they swept past him ever aroused in
him. Then he would ride on, by a short cut, to
the old, red-brick rubbing-house, crowning the rising
ground on the farther side of the lake, and wait there
to see the finish, talking of professional matters
with Chifney meanwhile; or, turning his horse’s
head towards the wide, distant view, sit silent, drawing
near to nature and worshipping with the
innocent gladness of a still virgin heart in
the temple of the dawn.
Life at Oxford was set in a different
key. The university city was well disposed towards
this young man of so great wealth and so strange fortunes;
and Richard was unsuspicious, and ready enough to meet
friendliness half-way. Yet it must be owned he
suffered many bad quarters of an hour. He was,
at once, older in thought and younger in practical
experience than his fellow-undergraduates. He
was cut off, of necessity, from their sports.
They would eat his breakfasts, drink his wine, and
show no violent objection to riding his horses.
They were considerate, almost anxiously careful of
him, being generous and good-hearted lads. And
yet poor Dick was perturbed by the fear that they
were more at ease without him, that his presence acted
as a slight check upon their genial spirits and their
rattling talk. And so it came about that though
his acquaintances were many, his friends were few.
Chief among the latter was Ludovic Quayle, a younger
son of Lord Fallowfeild whom that kindly
if not very intelligent nobleman had long ago proposed
to export from the Whitney to the Brockhurst nursery
with a view to the promotion of general cheerfulness.
Mr. Ludovic Quayle was a rather superfine, young gentleman,
possessed of an excellent opinion of himself, and
a modest opinion of other persons his father
included. But under his somewhat supercilious
demeanour there was a vein of true romance. He
loved Richard Calmady; and neither time, nor opposing
interests, nor certain black chapters which had later
to be read in the history of life, destroyed or even
weakened that love.
And so Dick, finding himself at sad
disadvantage with most of the charming young fellows
about him in matters of play, turned to matters of
work, letting go the barbarian side of life for a while.
In brain, if not in body, he believed himself the
equal of the best of them. His ambition was fired
by the desire of intellectual triumph. He would
have the success of the schools, since the success
of the river and the cricket-field were denied him.
Not that Richard set any exaggerated value upon academic
honours. Only two things are necessary this
at least was his code at that period never
to lapse from the instincts of high-breeding and honour,
and to see just as much of life, of men and of affairs,
as obedience to those instincts permits. Already
the sense of proportion was strong in Richard, fed
perhaps by the galling sense of personal deformity.
Learning is but a part of the whole of man’s
equipment, and a paltry enough part unless wisdom go
along with it. But the thirst of battle remained
in Richard; and in this matter of learning, at least,
he could meet men of his own age and standing on equal
terms and overcome them in fair fight.
And so, during the last two years
of his university course, he did meet them and overcame,
honours falling liberally to his share. Julius
March looked on in pleased surprise at the exploits
of his former pupil. While Ludovic Quayle, with
raised eyebrows and half-tender, half-ironical amusement
relaxing the corners of his remarkably beautiful mouth,
would say:
“Calmady, you really are a shameless
glutton! How many more immortal glories, any
one of which would satisfy an ordinary man, do you
propose to swallow?”
“I suppose it’s a bad
year,” Richard would answer. “The
others can’t amount to very much, or, needless
to say, I shouldn’t walk over the course.”
“A charming little touch of
modesty, as far as you yourself are concerned,”
Ludovic answered. “But not strikingly flattering
to the others. I would rather suppose you abnormally
clever, than all the rest abnormally stupid for,
after all, you know, am I, my great self, not among
the rest?”
At which Dickie would laugh rather
shamefacedly, and say: “Oh you! why
you know well enough you could do anything you liked
if you weren’t so confoundedly lazy!”
And, meanwhile, at Brockhurst, as
news arrived of these successes, Lady Calmady’s
soul received comfort. Her step was light, her
eyes full of clear shining as she moved to and fro
ordering the great house and great estate. She
felt repaid for the bitter pain of parting with her
darling, and sending him forth to face the curious,
possibly scornful, world of the university city.
He had proved himself and won his spurs. And
this solaced her in the solitude and loneliness of
her present life. For her dear friend and companion
Marie de Mirancourt had found the final repose, before
seeking that of the convent. Early one February
morning, in the second year of Richard’s sojourn
at Oxford, fortified by the rites of the Church, she
had passed the gates of death peacefully, blessing
and blessed. Katherine mourned for her, and would
continue to mourn with still and faithful sorrow, even
while welcoming home her young scholar, hearing the
details of his past achievements and hopes for the
future, or entertaining with all gracious
hospitality such of his Oxford friends as
he elected to invite to Brockhurst.
It was on one of these last occasions,
the young men having gone down to the Gun-Room to
smoke and discuss the day’s pheasant shooting,
that Katherine had kept Julius March standing before
the Chapel-Room fire, and had looked at him, a certain
wistfulness in her face.
“He is happy don’t
you think, Julius?” she said. “He
seems to me really happier, more contented, than I
have ever seen him since his childhood.”
“Yes, I also think that,”
Julius answered. “He has reason to be contented.
He has measured himself against other men and is satisfied
of his own powers.”
“Every one admires him at Oxford?”
“Yes, they admire and envy him. He has
been brilliantly successful.”
Katherine drew herself up, clasping
her hands behind her, and smiling proudly as she mused,
gazing into the crimson heart of the burning logs.
Then, after a silence, she turned suddenly to her companion.
“It is very sweet to have you
here at home again, Julius,” she said gently.
“I have missed you sorely since dearest Marie
de Mirancourt died. Live a little longer than
I do, please. Ah! I am afraid it is no small
thing that I ask you to do for my sake, for I foresee
that I shall survive to a lamentably old age.
But sacrifice yourself, Julius, in the matter of living.
Less than ever, when the shadows fall, shall I be
able to spare you.”
For which words of his dear lady’s,
though spoken lightly, half in jest, Julius March
gave God great thanks that night.
It was about this period that two
pieces of news, each proving eventually to have much
personal significance, reached Lady Calmady from the
outside world. The first took the form of a letter a
rather pensive and tired letter from her
brother, William Ormiston, telling her that his daughter
Helen was about to marry the Comte de Vallorbes, a
young gentleman very well known both to Parisian and
Neapolitan society. The second took the form
of an announcement in the Morning Post, to
the effect that Lady Tobemory, whose lamented death
that paper had already chronicled, had left the bulk
of her not inconsiderable fortune to her god-daughter
Honoria, eldest child of that distinguished officer
General St. Quentin. In both cases Lady Calmady
wrote letters of congratulation, in the latter with
very sincere and lively pleasure. She held her
cousin, General St. Quentin, in affection for old
sake’s sake. Honoria she remembered as a
singularly graceful, high-bred, little maiden, fleet
of foot as a hind too fleet of foot indeed
for little Dickie’s comfort of mind, and therefore
banished from the Brockhurst nursery. In the former
case, her congratulations being somewhat conventional,
she added in her own name and that of Richard a
necklace of pearls, with a diamond clasp and bars
to it, of no mean value.
In the spring of 1865 Richard left
Oxford for good, and took up his residence once more
at Brockhurst. But it was not until the autumn
of the following year, when he had reached the age
of three-and-twenty, and had already for some six
months served his Queen and country in the capacity
of Justice of the Peace for the county of Southampton,
that any event occurred greatly affecting his fortunes,
and therefore worthy to set forth at large in this
history.