Breakfast was laid in the “Chinese
room,” a room which formed part of the stately
“garden front,” added to the original structure
of the house in the eighteenth century by a Boyce
whose wife had money. The decorations, especially
of the domed and vaulted roof, were supposed by their
eighteenth century designer to be “Oriental”;
they were, at any rate, intricate and overladen; and
the figures of mandarins on the worn and discoloured
wall-paper had, at least, top-knots, pigtails, and
petticoats to distinguish them from the ordinary Englishmen
of 1760, besides a charming mellowness of colour and
general effect bestowed on them by time and dilapidation.
The marble mantelpiece was elaborately carved in Chinamen
and pagodas. There were Chinese curiosities of
a miscellaneous kind on the tables, and the beautiful
remains of an Indian carpet underfoot. Unluckily,
some later Boyce had thrust a crudely Gothic sideboard,
with an arched and pillared front, adapted to the
purposes of a warming apparatus, into the midst of
the mandarins, which disturbed the general effect.
But with all its original absurdities, and its modern
defacements, the room was a beautiful and stately one.
Marcella stepped into it with a slight unconscious
straightening of her tall form. It seemed to
her that she had never breathed easily till now, in
the ample space of these rooms and gardens.
Her father and mother were already
at table, together with Mrs. Boyce’s brown spaniel
Lynn.
Mr. Boyce was employed in ordering
about the tall boy in a worn and greasy livery coat,
who represented the men-service of the establishment;
his wife was talking to her dog, but from the lift
of her eyebrows, and the twitching of her thin lips,
it was plain to Marcella that her mother was as usual
of opinion that her father was behaving foolishly.
“There, for goodness’
sake, cut some bread on the sideboard,” said
the angry master, “and hand it round instead
of staring about you like a stuck pig. What they
taught you at Sir William Jute’s I can’t
conceive. I didn’t undertake to make
a man-servant of you, sir.”
The pale, harassed lad flew at the
bread, cut it with a vast scattering of crumbs, handed
it clumsily round, and then took glad advantage of
a short supply of coffee to bolt from the room to
order more.
“Idiot!” said Mr. Boyce,
with an angry frown, as he disappeared.
“If you would allow Ann to do
her proper parlour work again,” said his wife
blandly, “you would, I think, be less annoyed.
And as I believe William was boot boy at the Jutes’,
it is not surprising that he did not learn waiting.”
“I tell you, Evelyn, that our
position demands a man-servant!” was the
hot reply. “None of my family have ever
attempted to run this house with women only.
It would be unseemly unfitting incon ”
“Oh, I am no judge of course
of what a Boyce may do!” said his wife carelessly.
“I leave that to you and the neighbourhood.”
Mr. Boyce looked uncomfortable, cooled
down, and presently when the coffee came back asked
his wife for a fresh supply in tones from which all
bellicosity had for the time departed. He was
a small and singularly thin man, with blue wandering
eyes under the blackest possible eyebrows and hair.
The cheeks were hollow, the complexion as yellow as
that of the typical Anglo-Indian. The special
character of the mouth was hidden by a fine black
moustache, but his prevailing expression varied between
irritability and a kind of plaintiveness. The
conspicuous blue eyes were as a rule melancholy; but
they could be childishly bright and self-assertive.
There was a general air of breeding about Richard Boyce,
of that air at any rate which our common generalisations
connect with the pride of old family; his dress was
careful and correct to the last detail; and his hands
with their long fingers were of an excessive delicacy,
though marred as to beauty by a thinness which nearly
amounted to emaciation.
“The servants say they must
leave unless the ghost does, Marcella,” said
Mrs. Boyce, suddenly, laying a morsel of toast as she
spoke on Lynn’s nose. “Someone from
the village of course has been talking the
cook says she heard something last night, though
she will not condescend to particulars and
in general it seems to me that you and I may be left
before long to do the house work.”
“What do they say in the village?”
asked Marcella eagerly.
“Oh! they say there was a Boyce
two hundred years ago who fled down here from London
after doing something he shouldn’t I
really forget what. The sheriff’s officers
were advancing on the house. Their approach displeased
him, and he put an end to himself at the head of the
little staircase leading from the tapestry-room down
to my sitting-room. Why did he choose the staircase?”
said Mrs. Boyce with light reflectiveness.
“It won’t do,” said
Marcella, shaking her head. “I know the
Boyce they mean. He was a ruffian, but he shot
himself in London; and, any way, he was dead long
before that staircase was built.”
“Dear me, how well up you are!”
said her mother. “Suppose you give a little
lecture on the family in the servants’ hall.
Though I never knew a ghost yet that was undone by
dates.”
There was a satiric detachment in
her tone which contrasted sharply with Marcella’s
amused but sympathetic interest. Detachment
was perhaps the characteristic note of Mrs. Boyce’s
manner, a curious separateness, as it were,
from all the things and human beings immediately about
her.
Marcella pondered.
“I shall ask Mr. Harden about
the stories,” she said presently. “He
will have heard them in the village. I am going
to the church this morning.”
Her mother looked at her a
look of quiet examination and smiled.
The Lady Bountiful airs that Marcella had already
assumed during the six weeks she had been in the house
entertained Mrs. Boyce exceedingly.
“Harden!” said Mr. Boyce,
catching the name. “I wish that man would
leave me alone. What have I got to do with a water-supply
for the village? It will be as much as ever I
can manage to keep a water-tight roof over our heads
during the winter after the way in which Robert has
behaved.”
Marcella’s cheek flushed.
“The village water-supply is
a disgrace,” she said with low emphasis.
“I never saw such a crew of unhealthy, wretched-looking
children in my life as swarm about those cottages.
We take the rent, and we ought to look after them.
I believe you could be forced to do something,
papa if the local authority were of any
use.”
She looked at him defiantly.
“Nonsense,” said Mr. Boyce
testily. “They got along in your Uncle
Robert’s days, and they can get along now.
Charity, indeed! Why, the state of this house
and the pinch for money altogether is enough, I should
think, to take a man’s mind. Don’t
you go talking to Mr. Harden in the way you do, Marcella.
I don’t like it, and I won’t have it.
You have the interests of your family and your home
to think of first.”
“Poor starved things!”
said Marcella sarcastically “living
in such a den!”
And she swept her white hand round,
as though calling to witness the room in which they
sat.
“I tell you,” said Mr.
Boyce, rising and standing before the fire, whence
he angrily surveyed the handsome daughter who was in
truth so little known to him, and whose nature and
aims during the close contact of the last few weeks
had become something of a perplexity and disturbance
to him, “I tell you our great effort,
the effort of us all, must be to keep up the family
position! our position. Look
at that library, and its condition; look at the state
of these wall-papers; look at the garden; look at
the estate books if it comes to that. Why, it
will be years before, even with all my knowledge of
affairs, I can pull the thing through years!”
Mrs. Boyce gave a slight cough she
had pushed back her chair, and was alternately studying
her husband and daughter. They might have been
actors performing for her amusement. And yet,
amusement is not precisely the word. For that
hazel eye, with its frequent smile, had not a spark
of geniality. After a time those about her found
something scathing in its dry light.
Now, as soon as her husband became
aware that she was watching him, his look wavered,
and his mood collapsed. He threw her a curious
furtive glance, and fell silent.
“I suppose Mr. Harden and his
sister remind you of your London Socialist friends,
Marcella?” asked Mrs. Boyce lightly, in the pause
that followed. “You have, I see, taken
a great liking for them.”
“Oh! well I don’t
know,” said Marcella, with a shrug, and something
of a proud reticence. “Mr. Harden is very
kind but he doesn’t seem
to have thought much about things.”
She never talked about her London
friends to her mother, if she could help it.
The sentiments of life generally avoided Mrs. Boyce
when they could. Marcella being all sentiment
and impulse, was constantly her mother’s victim,
do what she would. But in her quiet moments she
stood on the defensive.
“So the Socialists are the only
people who think?” said Mrs. Boyce, who was
now standing by the window, pressing her dog’s
head against her dress as he pushed up against her.
“Well, I am sorry for the Hardens. They
tell me they give all their substance away already and
every one says it is going to be a particularly bad
winter. The living, I hear, is worth nothing.
All the same, I should wish them to look more cheerful.
It is the first duty of martyrs.”
Marcella looked at her mother indignantly.
It seemed to her often that she said the most heartless
things imaginable.
“Cheerful!” she said “in
a village like this with all the young men
drifting off to London, and all the well-to-do people
dissenters no one to stand by him no
money and no helpers the people always ill wages
eleven and twelve shillings a week and only
the old wrecks of men left to do the work! He
might, I think, expect the people in this house
to back him up a little. All he asks is that
papa should go and satisfy himself with his own eyes
as to the difference between our property and Lord
Maxwell’s ”
“Lord Maxwell’s!”
cried Mr. Boyce, rousing himself from a state of half-melancholy,
half-sleepy reverie by the fire, and throwing away
his cigarette “Lord Maxwell!
Difference! I should think so. Thirty thousand
a year, if he has a penny. By the way, I wish
he would just have the civility to answer my note
about those coverts over by Willow Scrubs!”
He had hardly said the words when
the door opened to admit William the footman, in his
usual tremor of nervousness, carrying a salver and
a note.
“The man says, please sir, is there any answer,
sir?”
“Well, that’s odd!”
said Mr. Boyce, his look brightening. “Here
is Lord Maxwell’s answer, just as I was
talking of it.”
His wife turned sharply and watched
him take it; her lips parted, a strange expectancy
in her whole attitude. He tore it open, read it,
and then threw it angrily under the grate.
“No answer. Shut the door.”
The lad retreated. Mr. Boyce sat down and began
carefully to put the fire together. His thin left
hand shook upon his knee.
There was a moment’s pause of
complete silence. Mrs. Boyce’s face might
have been seen by a close observer to quiver and then
stiffen as she stood in the light of the window, a
tall and queenly figure in her sweeping black.
But she said not a word, and presently left the room.
Marcella watched her father.
“Papa was that a note from
Lord Maxwell?”
Mr. Boyce looked round with a start,
as though surprised that any one was still there.
It struck Marcella that he looked yellow and shrunken years
older than her mother. An impulse of tenderness,
joined with anger and a sudden sick depression she
was conscious of them all as she got up and went across
to him, determined to speak out. Her parents
were not her friends, and did not possess her confidence;
but her constant separation from them since her childhood
had now sometimes the result of giving her the boldness
with them that a stranger might have had. She
had no habitual deference to break through, and the
hindering restraints of memory, though strong, were
still less strong than they would have been if she
had lived with them day by day and year by year, and
had known their lives in close detail instead of guessing
at them, as was now so often the case with her.
“Papa, is Lord Maxwell’s note an uncivil
one?”
Mr. Boyce stooped forward and began
to rub his chilly hand over the blaze.
“Why, that man’s only
son and I used to loaf and shoot and play cricket
together from morning till night when we were boys.
Henry Raeburn was a bit older than I, and he lent
me the gun with which I shot my first rabbit.
It was in one of the fields over by Soleyhurst, just
where the two estates join. After that we were
always companions we used to go out at
night with the keepers after poachers; we spent hours
in the snow watching for wood-pigeons; we shot that
pair of kestrels over the inner hall door, in the
Windmill Hill fields at least I did I
was a better shot than he by that time. He didn’t
like Robert he always wanted me.”
“Well, papa, but what does he
say?” asked Marcella, impatiently. She
laid her hand, however, as she spoke, on her father’s
shoulder.
Mr. Boyce winced and looked up at
her. He and her mother had originally sent their
daughter away from home that they might avoid the daily
worry of her awakening curiosities, and one of his
resolutions in coming to Mellor Park had been to keep
up his dignity with her. But the sight of her
dark face bent upon him, softened by a quick and womanly
compassion, seemed to set free a new impulse in him.
“He writes in the third person,
if you want to know, my dear, and refers me to his
agent, very much as though I were some London grocer
who had just bought the place. Oh, it is quite
evident what he means. They were here without
moving all through June and July, and it is now three
weeks at least since he and Miss Raeburn came back
from Scotland, and not a card nor a word from either
of them! Nor from the Winterbournes, nor the
Levens. Pleasant! Well, my dear, you must
make up your mind to it. I did think I
was fool enough to think that when I came
back to the old place, my father’s old friends
would let bygones be bygones. I never did them
any harm. Let them ‘gang their gait,’
confound them!” the little dark man
straightened himself fiercely “I can
get my pleasure out of the land; and as for your mother,
she’d not lift a finger to propitiate one of
them!”
In the last words, however, there
was not a fraction of that sympathetic pride which
the ear expected, but rather fresh bitterness and grievance.
Marcella stood thinking, her mind
travelling hither and thither with lightning speed,
now over the social events of the last six weeks now
over incidents of those long-past holidays. Was
this, indeed, the second volume beginning the
natural sequel to those old mysterious histories of
shrinking, disillusion, and repulse?
“What was it you wanted about
those coverts, papa?” she asked presently, with
a quick decision.
“What the deuce does it matter?
If you want to know, I proposed to him to exchange
my coverts over by the Scrubs, which work in with his
shooting, for the wood down by the Home Farm.
It was an exchange made year after year in my father’s
time. When I spoke to the keeper, I found it
had been allowed to lapse. Your uncle let the
shooting go to rack and ruin after Harold’s
death. It gave me something to write about, and
I was determined to know where I stood Well!
the old Pharisee can go his way: I’ll go
mine.”
And with a spasmodic attempt to play
the squire of Mellor on his native heath, Richard
Boyce rose, drew his emaciated frame to its full height,
and stood looking out drearily to his ancestral lawns a
picturesque and elegant figure, for all its weakness
and pitiableness.
“I shall ask Mr. Aldous Raeburn
about it, if I see him in the village to-day,”
said Marcella, quietly.
Her father started, and looked at
her with some attention.
“What have you seen of Aldous
Raeburn?” he inquired. “I remember
hearing that you had come across him.”
“Certainly I have come across
him. I have met him once or twice at the Vicarage and oh!
on one or two other occasions,” said Marcella,
carelessly. “He has always made himself
agreeable. Mr. Harden says his grandfather is
devoted to him, and will hardly ever let him go away
from home. He does a great deal for Lord Maxwell
now: writes for him, and helps to manage the
estate; and next year, when the Tories come back and
Lord Maxwell is in office again ”
“Why, of course, there’ll
be plums for the grandson,” said Mr. Boyce with
a sneer. “That goes without saying though
we are such a virtuous lot.”
“Oh yes, he’ll get on everybody
says so. And he’ll deserve it too!”
she added, her eye kindling combatively as she surveyed
her father. “He takes a lot of trouble
down here, about the cottages and the board of guardians
and the farms. The Hardens like him very much,
but he is not exactly popular, according to them.
His manners are sometimes shy and awkward, and the
poor people think he’s proud.”
“Ah! a prig I dare say like
some of his uncles before him,” said Mr. Boyce,
irritably. “But he was civil to you, you
say?”
And again he turned a quick considering
eye on his daughter.
“Oh dear! yes,” said Marcella,
with a little proud smile. There was a pause;
then she spoke again. “I must go off to
the church; the Hardens have hard work just now with
the harvest festival, and I promised to take them
some flowers.”
“Well” said
her father, grudgingly, “so long as you don’t
promise anything on my account! I tell you, I
haven’t got sixpence to spend on subscriptions
to anything or anybody. By the way, if you see
Reynolds anywhere about the drive, you can send him
to me. He and I are going round the Home Farm
to pick up a few birds if we can, and see what the
coverts look like. The stock has all run down,
and the place has been poached to death. But
he thinks if we take on an extra man in the spring,
and spend a little on rearing, we shall do pretty decently
next year.”
The colour leapt to Marcella’s
cheek as she tied on her hat.
“You will set up another keeper,
and you won’t do anything for the village?”
she cried, her black eyes lightening, and without another
word she opened the French window and walked rapidly
away along the terrace, leaving her father both angered
and amazed.
A man like Richard Boyce cannot get
comfortably through life without a good deal of masquerading
in which those in his immediate neighbourhood are
expected to join. His wife had long since consented
to play the game, on condition of making it plain
the whole time that she was no dupe. As to what
Marcella’s part in the affair might be going
to be, her father was as yet uneasily in the dark.
What constantly astonished him, as she moved and talked
under his eye, was the girl’s beauty. Surely
she had been a plain child, though a striking one.
But now she had not only beauty, but the air of beauty.
The self-confidence given by the possession of good
looks was very evident in her behaviour. She was
very accomplished, too, and more clever than was always
quite agreeable to a father whose self-conceit was
one of the few compensations left him by misfortune.
Such a girl was sure to be admired. She would
have lovers friends of her own. It
seemed that already, while Lord Maxwell was preparing
to insult the father, his grandson had discovered that
the daughter was handsome. Richard Boyce fell
into a miserable reverie, wherein the Raeburns’
behaviour and Marcella’s unexpected gifts played
about equal parts.
Meanwhile Marcella was gathering flowers
in the “Cedar garden,” the most adorable
corner of Mellor Park, where the original Tudor house,
grey, mullioned and ivy-covered, ran at right angles
into the later “garden front,” which projected
beyond it to the south, making thereby a sunny and
sheltered corner where roses, clematis, hollyhocks,
and sunflowers grew with a more lavish height and
blossom than elsewhere, as though conscious they must
do their part in a whole of beauty. The grass
indeed wanted mowing, and the first autumn leaves
lay thickly drifted upon it; the flowers were untied
and untrimmed. But under the condition of two
gardeners to ten acres of garden, nature does very
much as she pleases, and Mr. Boyce when he came that
way grumbled in vain.
As for Marcella, she was alternately
moved to revolt and tenderness by the ragged charm
of the old place.
On the one hand, it angered her that
anything so plainly meant for beauty and dignity should
go so neglected and unkempt. On the other, if
house and gardens had been spick and span like the
other houses of the neighbourhood, if there had been
sound roofs, a modern water-supply, shutters, greenhouses,
and weedless paths, in short, the general
self-complacent air of a well-kept country house, where
would have been that thrilling intimate appeal, as
for something forlornly lovely, which the old place
so constantly made upon her? It seemed to depend
even upon her, the latest born of all its children to
ask for tendance and cherishing even from her.
She was always planning how with a minimum
of money to spend it could be comforted
and healed, and in the planning had grown in these
few weeks to love it as though she had been bred there.
But this morning Marcella picked her
roses and sunflowers in tumult and depression of spirit.
What was this past which in these new surroundings
was like some vainly fled tyrant clutching at them
again? She energetically decided that the time
had come for her to demand the truth. Yet, of
whom? Marcella knew very well that to force her
mother to any line of action Mrs. Boyce was unwilling
to follow, was beyond her power. And it was not
easy to go to her father directly and say, “Tell
me exactly how and why it is that society has turned
its back upon you.” All the same, it was
due to them all, due to herself especially, now that
she was grown up and at home, that she should not be
kept in the dark any longer like a baby, that she
should be put in possession of the facts which, after
all, threatened to stand here at Mellor Park, as untowardly
in their, in her way, as they had done in the
shabby school and lodging-house existence of all those
bygone years.
Perhaps the secret of her impatience
was that she did not, and could not, believe that
the facts, if faced, would turn out to be insurmountable.
Her instinct told her as she looked back that their
relation toward society in the past, though full of
discomforts and humiliations, had not been the relation
of outcasts. Their poverty and the shifts to
which poverty drives people had brought them the disrespect
of one class; and as to the acquaintances and friends
of their own rank, what had been mainly shown them
had been a sort of cool distaste for their company,
an insulting readiness to forget the existence of
people who had so to speak lost their social bloom,
and laid themselves open to the contemptuous disapproval
or pity of the world. Everybody, it seemed, knew
their affairs, and knowing them saw no personal advantage
and distinction in the Boyces’ acquaintance,
but rather the contrary.
As she put the facts together a little,
she realised, however, that the breach had always
been deepest between her father and his relations,
or his oldest friends. A little shiver passed
through her as she reflected that here, in his own
country, where his history was best known, the feeling
towards him, whatever it rested upon, might very probably
be strongest. Well, it was hard upon them! hard
upon her mother hard upon her. In
her first ecstasy over the old ancestral house and
the dignities of her new position, how little she
had thought of these things! And there they were
all the time dogging and thwarting.
She walked slowly along, with her
burden of flowers, through a laurel path which led
straight to the drive, and so, across it, to the little
church. The church stood all alone there under
the great limes of the Park, far away from parsonage
and village the property, it seemed, of
the big house. When Marcella entered, the doors
on the north and south sides were both standing open,
for the vicar and his sister had been already at work
there, and had but gone back to the parsonage for a
bit of necessary business, meaning to return in half
an hour.
It was the unpretending church of
a hamlet, girt outside by the humble graves of toiling
and forgotten generations, and adorned, or, at any
rate, diversified within by a group of mural monuments,
of various styles and dates, but all of them bearing,
in some way or another, the name of Boyce conspicuous
amongst them a florid cherub-crowned tomb in the chancel,
marking the remains of that Parliamentarian Boyce who
fought side by side with Hampden, his boyish friend,
at Chalgrove Field, lived to be driven out of Westminster
by Colonel Pryde, and to spend his later years at
Mellor, in disgrace, first with the Protector, and
then with the Restoration. From these monuments
alone a tolerably faithful idea of the Boyce family
could have been gathered. Clearly not a family
of any very great pretensions a race for
the most part of frugal, upright country gentlemen to
be found, with scarcely an exception, on the side
of political liberty, and of a Whiggish religion; men
who had given their sons to die at Quebec, and Plassy,
and Trafalgar, for the making of England’s Empire;
who would have voted with Fox, but that the terrors
of Burke, and a dogged sense that the country must
be carried on, drove them into supporting Pitt; who,
at home, dispensed alternate justice and doles, and
when their wives died put up inscriptions to them
intended to bear witness at once to the Latinity of
a Boyce’s education, and the pious strength
of his legitimate affections a tedious
race perhaps and pig-headed, tyrannical too here and
there, but on the whole honourable English stuff the
stuff which has made, and still in new forms sustains,
the fabric of a great state.
Only once was there a break in the
uniform character of the monuments a break
corresponding to the highest moment of the Boyce fortunes,
a moment when the respectability of the family rose
suddenly into brilliance, and the prose of generations
broke into a few years of poetry. Somewhere in
the last century an earlier Richard Boyce went abroad
to make the grand tour. He was a man of parts,
the friend of Horace Walpole and of Gray, and his
introductions opened to him whatever doors he might
wish to enter, at a time when the upper classes of
the leading European nations were far more intimately
and familiarly acquainted with each other than they
are now. He married at Rome an Italian lady of
high birth and large fortune. Then he brought
her home to Mellor, where straightway the garden front
was built with all its fantastic and beautiful decoration,
the great avenue was planted, pictures began to invade
the house, and a musical library was collected whereof
the innumerable faded volumes, bearing each of them
the entwined names of Richard and Marcella Boyce,
had been during the last few weeks mines of delight
and curiosity to the Marcella of to-day.
The Italian wife bore her lord two
sons, and then in early middle life she died much
loved and passionately mourned. Her tomb bore
no long-winded panegyric. Her name only, her
parentage and birthplace for she was Italian
to the last, and her husband loved her the better for
it the dates of her birth and death, and
then two lines from Dante’s Vita Nuova.
The portrait of this earlier Marcella
hung still in the room where her music-books survived, a
dark blurred picture by an inferior hand; but the
Marcella of to-day had long since eagerly decided that
her own physique and her father’s were to be
traced to its original, as well, no doubt, as the
artistic aptitudes of both aptitudes not
hitherto conspicuous in her respectable race.
In reality, however, she loved every
one of them these Jacobean and Georgian
squires with their interminable epitaphs. Now,
as she stood in the church, looking about her, her
flowers lying beside her in a tumbled heap on the
chancel step, cheerfulness, delight, nay, the indomitable
pride and exultation of her youth, came back upon her
in one great lifting wave. The depression of
her father’s repentances and trépidations
fell away; she felt herself in her place, under the
shelter of her forefathers, incorporated and redeemed,
as it were, into their guild of honour.
There were difficulties in her path,
no doubt but she had her vantage-ground,
and would use it for her own profit and that of others.
She had no cause for shame; and in these days
of the developed individual the old solidarity of
the family has become injustice and wrong. Her
mind filled tumultuously with the evidence these last
two years had brought her of her natural power over
men and things. She knew perfectly well that
she could do and dare what other girls of her age
could never venture that she had fascination,
resource, brain.
Already, in these few weeks Smiles
played about her lips as she thought of that quiet
grave gentleman of thirty she had been meeting at the
Hardens’. His grandfather might write what
he pleased. It did not alter the fact that during
the last few weeks Mr. Aldous Raeburn, clearly one
of the partis most coveted, and one of the men
most observed, in the neighbourhood, had taken and
shown a very marked interest in Mr. Boyce’s
daughter all the more marked because of
the reserved manner with which it had to contend.
No! whatever happened, she would carve
her path, make her own way, and her parents’
too. At twenty-one, nothing looks irrevocable.
A woman’s charm, a woman’s energy should
do it all.
Ay, and something else too. She
looked quickly round the church, her mind swelling
with the sense of the Cravens’ injustice and
distrust. Never could she be more conscious than
here on this very spot of mission,
of an urging call to the service of man. In front
of her was the Boyces’ family pew, carved and
becushioned, but behind it stretched bench after bench
of plain and humble oak, on which the village sat when
it came to church. Here, for the first time, had
Marcella been brought face to face with the agricultural
world as it is no stage ruralism, but the
bare fact in one of its most pitiful aspects.
Men of sixty and upwards, grey and furrowed like the
chalk soil into which they had worked their lives;
not old as age goes, but already the refuse of their
generation, and paid for at the rate of refuse; with
no prospect but the workhouse, if the grave should
be delayed, yet quiet, impassive, resigned, now showing
a furtive childish amusement if a schoolboy misbehaved,
or a dog strayed into church, now joining with a stolid
unconsciousness in the tremendous sayings of the Psalms;
women coarse, or worn, or hopeless; girls and boys
and young children already blanched and emaciated
beyond even the normal Londoner from the effects of
insanitary cottages, bad water, and starvation food these
figures and types had been a ghastly and quickening
revelation to Marcella. In London the agricultural
labourer, of whom she had heard much, had been to
her as a pawn in the game of discussion. Here
he was in the flesh; and she was called upon to live
with him, and not only to talk about him. Under
circumstances of peculiar responsibility too.
For it was very clear that upon the owner of Mellor
depended, and had always depended, the labourer of
Mellor.
Well, she had tried to live with them
ever since she came had gone in and out
of their cottages in flat horror and amazement at them
and their lives and their surroundings; alternately
pleased and repelled by their cringing; now enjoying
her position among them with the natural aristocratic
instinct of women, now grinding her teeth over her
father’s and uncle’s behaviour and the
little good she saw any prospect of doing for her
new subjects.
What, their friend and champion,
and ultimately their redeemer too? Well, and
why not? Weak women have done greater things in
the world. As she stood on the chancel step,
vowing herself to these great things, she was conscious
of a dramatic moment would not have been
sorry, perhaps, if some admiring eye could have seen
and understood her.
But there was a saving sincerity at
the root of her, and her strained mood sank naturally
into a girlish excitement.
“We shall see! We
shall see!” she said aloud, and was startled
to hear her words quite plainly in the silent church.
As she spoke she stooped to separate her flowers and
see what quantities she had of each.
But while she did so a sound of distant
voices made her raise herself again. She walked
down the church and stood at the open south door,
looking and waiting. Before her stretched a green
field path leading across the park to the village.
The vicar and his sister were coming along it towards
the church, both flower-laden, and beside walked a
tall man in a brown shooting suit, with his gun in
his hand and his dog beside him.
The excitement in Marcella’s
eyes leapt up afresh for a moment as she saw the group,
and then subsided into a luminous and steady glow.
She waited quietly for them, hardly responding to
the affectionate signals of the vicar’s sister;
but inwardly she was not quiet at all. For the
tall man in the brown shooting coat was Mr. Aldous
Raeburn.