“Drum,” said Pet, in his
free and easy style, about ten days after that escape,
to a highly respected individual, Mr. Welldrum, the
butler — “Drum, you have heard perhaps
about my being poorly.”
“Ay, that I have, and too much
of it,” replied the portly butler, busy in his
office with inferior work, which he never should have
had to do, if rightly estimated. “What
you wants, Master Lancelot, is a little more of this
here sort of thing — sleeves up — elbow
grease — scrub away at hold ancient plate,
and be blowed up if you puts a scratch on it; and the
more you sweats, the less thanks you gets.”
“Drum, when you come to be my
butler, you shall have all the keys allowed you, and
walk about with them on a great gold ring, with a gold
chain down to your breeches pocket. You shall
dine when you like, and have it cooked on purpose,
and order it directly after breakfast; and you shall
have the very best hot-water plates; because you hate
grease, don’t you, Drum?”
“That I do; especial from young
chaps as wants to get something out of me.”
“I am always as good as my word; come, now.”
“That you are, Sir; and nothing
very grand to say, considering the hepithets you applies
to me sometimes. But you han’t insulted
me for three days now; and that proves to my mind
that you can’t be quite right.”
“But you would like to see me
better. I am sure you would. There is nobody
so good to you as I am, Drum; and you are very crusty
at times, you know. Your daughter shall be the
head cook; and then everything must be to your liking.”
“Master Lancelot, you speaks
fair. What can I have the honor of doing for
you, Sir, to set you up again in your poor dear ’ealth?”
“Well, you hate physic, don’t
you, Drum? And you make a strict point of never
taking it.”
“I never knew no good to come
out of no bottle, without it were a bottle of old
crusted port-wine. Ah! you likes that, Master
Lancelot.”
“I’ll tell you what it
is, Drum; I am obliged to be very careful. The
reason why I don’t get on is from taking my meals
too much in-doors. There is no fresh air in these
old rooms. I have got a man who says — I
could read it to you; but perhaps you don’t care
to hear poetry, Drum?” The butler made a face,
and put the leather to his ears. “Very well,
then; I am only just beginning; and it’s like
claret, you must learn to come to it. But from
what he says, and from my own stomach, I intend to
go and dine out-of-doors to-day.”
“Lord! Master Lancelot,
you must be gone clean daft. How ever could you
have hot gravy, Sir? And all the Yordases hales
cold meat. Your poor dear grandfather — ah!
he was a man.”
“So am I. And I have got half
a guinea. Now, Drum, you do just what I tell
you; and mind, not a word to any one. It will
be the last coin you ever see of mine, either now
or in all my life, remember, if you let my mamma ever
hear of it. You slip down to the larder and get
me a cold grouse, and a cold partridge, and two of
the hearth-stone cakes, and a pat of butter, and a
pinch of salt, and put them in my army knapsack Aunt
Philippa gave me; also a knife and fork and plate;
and — let me see — what had I better
have to drink?”
“Well, Sir, if I might offer
an opinion, a pint bottle of dry port, or your grandfather’s
Madeira.”
“Young ladies — young
gentlemen I mean, of course — never take strong
wines in the middle of the day. Bucellas, Drum — Bucellas
is the proper thing. And when you have got it
all together, turn the old cat into the larder, and
get away cleverly by your little door, and put my knapsack
in the old oak-tree, the one that was struck by lightning.
Now do you understand all about it? It must all
be ready in half an hour. And if I make a good
dinner out on the moor, why, you might get another
half guinea before long.” And with these
words away strode Pet.
“Well, well,” the butler
began muttering to himself; “what wickedness
are you up to next? A lassie in his head, and
his dear mammy thought he was sickening over his wisdom-teeth!
He is beginning airly, and no mistake. But the
gals are a coarse ugly lot about here” — Master
Welldrum was not a Yorkshireman — “and
the lad hath good taste in the matter of wine; although
he is that contrairy, Solomon’s self could not
be upsides with him. Fall fair, fall foul, I
must humor the boy, or out of this place I go, neck
and crop.”
Accordingly, Pet found all that he
had ordered, and several little things which he had
not thought of, especially a corkscrew and a glass;
and forgetting half his laziness, he set off briskly,
keeping through the trees where no window could espy
him, and down a little side glen, all afoot; for it
seemed to him safer to forego his pony.
The gill (or “ghyll,”
as the poet writes it), from which the lonely family
that dwelt there took their name, was not upon the
bridle-road from Scargate Hall toward Middleton, nor
even within eye or reach of any road at all; but overlooked
by kites alone, and tracked with thoroughfare of nothing
but the mountain streamlet. The four who lived
there — “Bat and Zilpic, Maunder and
Insie, of the Gill” — had nothing to
do with, and little to say to, any of the scatterling
folk about them, across the blue distance of the moor.
They ploughed no land, they kept no cattle, they scarcely
put spade in the ground, except for about a fortnight
in April, when they broke up a strip of alluvial soil
new every season, and abutting on the brook; and there
sowed or planted their vegetable crop, and left it
to the clemency of heaven. Yet twice every year
they were ready with their rent when it suited Master
Jordas to come for it, since audits at the hall, and
tenants’ dinners, were not to their liking.
The rent was a trifle; but Jordas respected them highly
for handing it done up in white paper, without even
making him leave the saddle. How many paid less,
or paid nothing at all, yet came to the dinners under
rent reservation of perhaps one mark, then strictly
reserved their rent, but failed not to make the most
punctual and liberal marks upon roast beef and plum-pudding!
But while the worthy dogman got his
little bit of money, sealed up and so correct that
(careful as he was) he never stopped now to count it,
even his keen eyes could make nothing of these people,
except that they stood upon their dignity. To
him they appeared to be of gypsy race; or partly of
wild and partly perhaps of Lancastrian origin; for
they rather “featured” the Lancashire
than the Yorkshire type of countenance, yet without
any rustic coarseness, whether of aspect, voice, or
manners. The story of their settlement in this
glen had flagged out of memory of gossip by reason
of their calm obscurity, and all that survived was
the belief that they were queer, and the certainty
that they would not be meddled with.
Lancelot Yordas Carnaby was brave,
both in the outward and the inward boy, when he struck
into the gill from a trackless spread of moor, not
far from the source of the beck that had shaped or
been shaped by this fissure. He had made up his
mind to learn all about the water that filled sweet
Insie’s pitcher; and although the great poet
of nature as yet was only in early utterance, some
of his words had already touched Pet as he had never
been touched before; but perhaps that fine effect
was due to the sapping power of first love.
Yet first love, however it may soften
and enlarge a petulant and wayward nature, instead
of increasing, cuts short and crisp the patience of
the patient. When Lancelot was as near as manners
and prudence allowed to that lonesome house, he sat
down quietly for a little while in a little niche
of scrubby bush whence he could spy the door.
For a short time this was very well; also it was well
to be furnishing his mind with a form for the beautiful
expressions in it, and prepare it for the order of
their coming out. And when he was sure that these
were well arranged, and could not fail at any crisis,
he found a further pastime in considering his boots,
then his gaiters and small-clothes (which were of
lofty type), and his waistcoat, elegant for anybody’s
bosom. But after a bit even this began to pall;
and when one of his feet went fast asleep, in spite
of its beautiful surroundings, he jumped up and stamped,
and was not so very far from hot words as he should
have been. For his habit was not so much to want
a thing as to get it before he wanted it, which is
very poor training for the trials of the love-time.
But just as he was beginning to resolve
to be wise, and eat his victuals, now or never, and
be sorry for any one who came too late — there
came somebody by another track, whose step made the
heart rise, and the stomach fall. Lancelot’s
mind began to fail him all at once; and the spirit
that was ready with a host of words fluttered away
into a quaking depth of silence. Yet Insie tripped
along as if the world held no one to cast a pretty
shadow from the sun beside her own.
Even the youngest girls are full of
little tricks far beyond the oldest boy’s comprehension.
But the wonder of all wonders is, they have so pure
a conscience as never to be thinking of themselves
at all, far less of any one who thinks too much of
them. “I declare, she has forgotten that
she ever saw me!” Lancelot muttered to the bush
in which he trembled. “It would serve her
right, if I walked straight away.” But he
looked again, and could not help looking more than
many times again, so piercing (as an ancient poet
puts it) is the shaft from the eyes of the female
women. And Insie was especially a female girl — which
has now ceased to be tautology — so feminine
were her walk, and way, and sudden variety of unreasonable
charm.
“Dear me! I never thought
to see you any more, Sir;” said she, with a
bright blush, perhaps at such a story, as Pet jumped
out eagerly, with hands stretched forth. “It
is the most surprising thing. And we might have
done very well with rain-water.”
“Oh, Insie! don’t be so
cold-hearted. Who can drink rain-water? I
have got something very good for you indeed.
I have carried it all the way myself; and only a strong
man could have done it. Why, you have got stockings
on, I declare; but I like you much better without them.”
“Then, Master Lancelot Yordas
Carnaby, you had better go home with all your good
things.”
“You are totally mistaken about
that. I could never get these things into the
house again, without being caught out to a certainty.
It shows how little girls know of anything.”
“A girl can not be expected,”
she answered, looking most innocently at him, “to
understand anything sly or cunning. Why should
anything of that sort be?”
“Well, if it comes to that,”
cried Pet, who (like all unreasonable people) had
large rudiments of reasoning, “why should not
I come up to your door, and knock, and say, ’I
want to see Miss Insie; I am fond of Miss Insie, and
have got something good for her’? That is
what I shall do next time.”
“If you do, my brother Maunder
will beat you dreadfully — so dreadfully
that you will never walk home. But don’t
let us talk of such terrible things. You must
never come here, if you think of such things.
I would not have you hurt for all the world; for sometimes
I think that I like you very much.”
The lovely girl looked at the handsome
boy, as if they were at school together, learning
something difficult, which must be repeated to the
other’s eyes, with a nod, or a shake of the head,
as may be. A kind, and pure, and soft gaze she
gave him, as if she would love his thoughts, if he
could explain them. And Pet turned away, because
he could not do so.
“I’ll tell you what it
is,” he said, bravely, while his heart was thrilling
with desire to speak well; “we will set to at
once, and have a jolly good spread. I told my
man to put up something very good, because I was certain
that you would be very hungry.”
“Surely you were not so foolish as to speak
of me?”
“No, no, no; I know a trick
worth two of that. I was not such a fool as to
speak of you, of course. But — ”
“But I would never condescend
to touch one bit. You were ashamed to say a word
about me, then, were you?”
“Insie, now, Insie, too bad
of you it is. You can have no idea what those
butlers and footmen are, if ever you tell them anything.
They are worse than the maids; they go down stairs,
and they get all the tidbits out of the cook, and
sit by the girl they like best, on the strength of
having a secret about their master.”
“Well, you are cunning!”
cried the maiden, with a sigh. “I thought
that your nature was loftier than that. No, I
do not know anything of butlers and footmen; and I
think that the less I know of you the better.”
“Oh, Insie, darling Insie, if
you run away like that — I have got both
your hands, and you shall not run away. Do you
want to kill me, Insie? They have had the doctor
for me.”
“Oh, how very dreadful! that
does sound dreadful. I am not at all crying,
and you need not look. But what did he say?
Please to tell me what he said.”
“He said, ‘Salts and senna.’
But I got up a high tree. Let us think of nicer
things. It is enough to spoil one’s dinner.
Oh, Insie, what is anything to eat or drink, compared
with looking at you, when you are good? If I
could only tell you the things that I have felt, all
day and all night, since this day fortnight, how sorry
you would be for having evil thoughts of me!”
“I have no evil thoughts; I
have no thoughts at all. But it puzzles me to
think what on earth you have been thinking. There,
I will sit down, and listen for a moment.”
“And I may hold one of your
hands? I must, or you would never understand
me. Why, your hands are much smaller than mine,
I declare! And mine are very small; because of
thinking about you. Now you need not laugh — it
does spoil everything to laugh so. It is more
than a fortnight since I laughed at all. You
make me feel so miserable. But would you like
to know how I felt? Mind, I would rather cut
my head off than tell it to any one in the world but
you.”
“Now I call that very kind of
you. If you please, I should like to know how
you have been feeling.” With these words
Insie came quite close up to his side, and looked
at him so that he could hardly speak. “You
may say it in a whisper, if you like,” she said;
“there is nobody coming for at least three hours,
and so you may say it in a whisper.”
“Then I will tell you; it was
just like this. You know that I began to think
how beautiful you were at the very first time I looked
at you. But you could not expect me so to love
you all at once as I love you now, dear Insie.”
“I can not understand any meaning
in such things.” But she took a little
distance, quite as if she did.
“Well, I went away without thinking
very much, because I had a bad place in my knee — a
blue place bigger than the new half crown, where you
saw that the pony kicked me. I had him up, and
thrashed him, when I got home; but that has got nothing
to do with it — only that I made him know
who was his master. And then I tried to go on
with a lot of things as usual; but somehow I did not
care at all. There was a great rat hunt that
I had been thinking of more than three weeks, when
they got the straddles down, to be ready for the new
ricks to come instead. But I could not go near
it; and it made them think that the whole of my inside
was out of order. And it must have been.
I can see by looking back; it must have been so, without
my knowing it. I hit several people with my holly
on their shins, because they knew more than I did.
But that was no good; nor was anything else.
I only got more and more out of sorts, and could not
stay quiet anywhere; and yet it was no good to me to
try to make a noise. All day I went about as
if I did not care whether people contradicted me or
not, or where I was, or what time I should get back,
or whether there would be any dinner. And I tucked
up my feet in my nightgown every night; but instead
of stopping there, as they always used to do, they
were down in cold places immediately; and instead of
any sleep, I bit holes by the hundred in the sheets,
with thinking. I hated to be spoken to, and I
hated everybody; and so I do now, whenever I come
to think about them!”
“Including even poor me, I suppose?”
Insie had wonderfully pretty eyebrows, and a pretty
way of raising them, and letting more light into her
bright hazel eyes.
“No, I never seemed to hate
you; though I often was put out, because I could never
make your face come well. I was thinking of you
always, but I could not see you. Now tell me
whether you have been like that.”
“Not at all; but I have thought
of you once or twice, and wondered what could make
you want to come and see me. If I were a boy,
perhaps I could understand it.”
“I hate boys; I am a man all
over now. I am old enough to have a wife; and
I mean to have you. How much do you suppose my
waistcoat cost? Well, never mind, because you
are not rich. But I have got money enough for
both of us to live well, and nobody can keep me out
of it. You know what a road is, I suppose — a
good road leading to a town? Have you ever seen
one? A brown place, with hedges on each side,
made hard and smooth for horses to go upon, and wheels
that make a rumble. Well, if you will have me,
and behave well to me, you shall sit up by yourself
in a velvet dress, with a man before you and a man
behind, and believe that you are flying.”
“But what would become of my
father, and my mother, and my brother Maunder?”
“Oh, they must stop here, of
course. We shouldn’t want them. But
I would give them all their house rent-free, and a
fat pig every Christmas. Now you sit there and
spread your lap, that I may help you properly.
I want to see you eat; you must learn to eat like
a lady of the highest quality; for that you are going
to be, I can tell you.”
The beautiful maid of the gill smiled
sweetly, sitting on the low bank with the grace of
simple nature and the playfulness of girlhood.
She looked up at Lancelot, the self-appointed man,
with a bright glance of curious contemplation; and
contemplation (of any other subject than self) is
dangerously near contempt. She thought very little
of his large, free brag, of his patronizing manner,
and fine self-content, reference of everything to
his own standard, beauty too feminine, and instead
of female gentleness, highly cultivated waywardness.
But in spite of all that, she could not help liking,
and sometimes admiring him, when he looked away.
And now he was very busy with the high feast he had
brought.
“To begin with,” he said,
when his good things were displayed, “you must
remember that nothing is more vulgar than to be hungry.
A gentleman may have a tremendous appetite, but a
lady never.”
“But why? but why? That
does seem foolish. I have read that the ladies
are always helped first. That must be because
of their appetites.”
“Insie, I tell you things, not
the reasons of them. Things are learned by seeing
other people, and not by arguing about them.”
“Then you had better eat your
dinner first, and let me sit and watch you. And
then I can eat mine by imitation; that is to say, if
there is any left.”
“You are one of the oddest people
I have ever seen. You go round the corner of
all that I say, instead of following properly.
When we are married, you will always make me laugh.
At one time they kept a boy to make me laugh; but
I got tired of him. Now I help you first, although
I am myself so hungry. I do it from a lofty feeling,
which my aunt Philippa calls ‘chivalry.’
Ladies talk about it when they want to get the best
of us. I have given you all the best part, you
see; and I only keep the worst of it for myself.”
If Pet had any hope that his self-denial
would promptly be denied to him, he made a great mistake;
for the damsel of the gill had a healthy moorland
appetite, and did justice to all that was put before
her; and presently he began, for the first time in
his life, to find pleasure in seeing another person
pleased. But the wine she would not even taste,
in spite of persuasion and example; the water from
the brook was all she drank, and she drank as prettily
as a pigeon. Whatever she did was done gracefully
and well.
“I am very particular,”
he said at last; “but you are fit to dine with
anybody. How have you managed to learn it all?
You take the best of everything, without a word about
it, as gently as great ladies do. I thought that
you would want me to eat the nicest pieces; but instead
of that, you have left me bones and drumsticks.”
He gave such a melancholy look at
these that Insie laughed quite merrily. “I
wanted to see you practice chivalry,” she said.
“Well, never mind; I shall know
another time. Instead of two birds, I shall order
four, and other things in proportion. But now
I want to know about your father and your mother.
They must be respectable people, to judge by you.
What is their proper name, and how much have they got
to live upon?”
“More than you — a
great deal more than you,” she answered, with
such a roguish smile that he forgot his grievances,
or began to lose them in the mist of beauty.
“More than me! And they
live in such a hole, where only the crows come near
them?”
“Yes, more than you, Sir.
They have their wits to live upon, and industry, and
honesty.”
Pet was not old enough yet in the
world to say, “What is the use of all those?
All their income is starvation.” He was
young enough to think that those who owned them had
advantage of him, for he knew that he was very lazy.
Moreover, he had heard of such people getting on — through
the striking power of exception, so much more brilliant
than the rule — when all the blind virtues
found luck to lead them. Industry, honesty, and
ability always get on in story-books, and nothing is
nicer than to hear a pretty story. But in some
ways Pet was sharp enough.
“Then they never will want that
house rent-free, nor the fat pig, nor any other presents.
Oh, Insie, how very much better that will be!
I find it so much nicer always to get thing’s
than to give them. And people are so good-natured,
when they have done it, and can talk of it. Insie,
they shall give me something when I marry you, and
as often as they like afterward.”
“They will give you something
you will not like,” she answered, with a laugh,
and a look along the moor, “if you stay here
too long chattering with me. Do you know what
o’clock it is? I know always, whether the
sun is out or in. You need show no gold watch
to me.”
“Oh, that comes of living in
a draught all day. The out-door people grow too
wise. What do you see about ten miles off?
It must be ten miles to that hill.”
“That hill is scarcely five
miles off, and what I see is not half of that.
I brought you up here to be quite safe. Maunder’s
eyes are better than mine. But he will not see
us, for another mile, if you cover your grand waistcoat,
because we are in the shadows. Slip down into
the gill again, and keep below the edge of it, and
go home as fast as possible.”
Lancelot felt inclined to do as he
was told, and keep to safe obscurity. The long
uncomfortable loneliness of prospect, and dim airy
distance of the sinking sun, and deeply silent emptiness
of hollows, where great shadows began to crawl — in
the waning of the day, and so far away from home — all
these united to impress upon the boy a spiritual influence,
whose bodily expression would be the appearance of
a clean pair of heels. But, to meet this sensible
impulse, there arose the stubborn nature of his race,
which hated to be told to do anything, and the dignity
of his new-born love — such as it was — and
the thought of looking small.
“Why should I go?” he
said. “I will meet them, and tell them that
I am their landlord, and have a right to know all
about them. My grandfather never ran away from
anybody. And they have got a donkey with them.”
“They will have two, if you
stop,” cried Insie, although she admired his
spirit. “My father is a very quiet man.
But Maunder would take you by the throat and cast
you down into the beck.”
“I should like to see him try
to do it. I am not so very strong, but I am active
as a cat. I have no idea of being threatened.”
“Then will you be coaxed?
I do implore you, for my sake, to go, or it will be
too late. Never, never, will you see me again,
unless you do what I beseech of you.”
“I will not stir one peg, unless
you put your arms round my neck and kiss me, and say
that you will never have anybody else.”
Insie blushed deeply, and her bright
eyes flashed with passion not of loving kind.
But it went to her heart that he was brave, and that
he loved her truly. She flung her comely arms
round his neck, and touched her rosy lips with his;
and before he could clasp her she was gone, with no
more comfort than these words:
“Now if you are a gentleman,
you must go, and never come near this place again.”
Not a moment too soon he plunged into
the gill, and hurried up its winding course; but turning
back at the corner, saw a sweet smile in the distance,
and a wave of the hand, that warmed his heart.