There happened to be at this time
an old fogy of course it is most distressing
to speak of anyone disrespectfully; but when one thinks
of the trouble he caused, and not only that, but he
was an old fogy, essentially and pre-eminently and
his name was Sir Maunder Meddleby. This worthy
baronet, one of the first of a newly invented order,
came in his sled stuffed with goose-feathers (because
he was too fat to ride, and no wheels were yet known
on the hill tracks) to talk about some exchange of
land with his old friend, our De Wiche-halse.
The baron and the baronet had been making a happy
day of it. Each knew pretty well exactly what
his neighbour’s little rashness might be hoped
to lead to, and each in his mind was pretty sure of
having the upper hand of it. Therefore both their
hearts were open business being now dismissed,
and dinner over to one another. They
sat in a beautiful place, and drew refreshment of
mind through their outward lips by means of long reeden
tubes with bowls at their ends, and something burning.
Clouds of delicate vapour wandered
round and betwixt them and the sea; and each was well
content to wonder whether the time need ever come
when he must have to think again. Suddenly a light
form flitted over the rocks, as the shadows flit;
and though Frida ran away for fear of interrupting
them, they knew who it was, and both, of course, began
to think about her.
The baron gave a puff of his pipe,
and left the baronet to begin. In course of time
Sir Maunder spoke, with all that breadth and beauty
of the vowels and the other things which a Devonshire
man commands, from the lord lieutenant downward.
“If so be that ’ee gooth
vor to ax me, aï can zay wan thing,
and wan oney.”
“What one thing is it, good
neighbour? I am well content with her as she
is.”
“Laikely enough. And ’e
wad be zo till ’e zeed a zummut fainer.”
“I want to see nothing finer
or better than what we have seen just now, sir.”
“There, you be like all varthers,
a’most! No zort o’ oose to advaise
’un.”
“Nay, nay! Far otherwise.
I am not by any means of that nature. Sir Maunder
Meddleby, I have the honour of craving your opinion.”
Sir Maunder Meddleby thought for a
while, or, at any rate, meant to be thinking, ere
ever he dared to deliver himself of all his weighty
judgment.
“I’ve a-knowed she, my
Lord Witcher, ever since her wore that haigh.
A purty wanch, and a peart one. But her wanteth
the vinish of the coort. Never do no good wi’out
un, whan a coomth, as her must, to coorting.”
This was the very thing De Wichehalse
was afraid to hear of. He had lived so mild a
life among the folk who loved him that any fear of
worry in great places was too much for him. And
yet sometimes he could not help a little prick of
thought about his duty to his daughter. Hence
it came that common sense was driven wild by conscience,
as forever happens with the few who keep that gadfly.
Six great horses, who knew no conscience but had more
fleshly tormentors, were ordered out, and the journey
began, and at last it ended.
Everything in London now was going
almost anyhow. Kind and worthy people scarcely
knew the way to look at things. They desired to
respect the king and all his privilege, and yet they
found his mind so wayward that they had no hold of
him.
The court, however, was doing its
best, from place to place in its wanderings, to despise
the uproar and enjoy itself as it used to do.
Bright and beautiful ladies gathered round the king,
when the queen was gone, persuading him and one another
that they must have their own way.
Of the lords who helped these ladies
to their strong opinions there was none in higher
favour with the queen and the king himself than the
young Lord Auberley. His dress was like a sweet
enchantment, and his tongue was finer still, and his
grace and beauty were as if no earth existed.
Frida was a new thing to him, in her pure simplicity.
He to her was such a marvel, such a mirror of the
skies, as a maid can only dream of in the full moon
of St. John.
Little dainty glance, and flushing,
and the fear to look too much, and the stealthy joy
of feeling that there must be something meant, yet
the terror of believing anything in earnest and the
hope that, after all, there may be nought to come
of it; and when this hope seems over true, the hollow
of the heart behind it, and the longing to be at home
with anyone to love oneself time is wasted
in recounting this that always must be.
Enough that Frida loved this gallant
from the depths of her pure heart, while he admired
and loved her to the best of his ability.