“Preach as I please, I doubt
our curious men
Will choose a pheasant still before a hen.”
HORACE.
AMONGST the various occupations to
which Mary devoted herself, there was none which merits
to be recorded as a greater act of immolation than
her unremitting attentions to Aunt Grizzy. It
wa not merely the sacrifice of time and talents that
was required for carrying on this intercourse; these,
it is to be hoped, even the most selfish can occasionally
sacrifice to the bienséances of society; but
it was, as it were, a total surrender of her whole
being. To a mind of any reflection no situation
can ever be very irksome in which we can enjoy the
privileges of sitting still and keeping silent but
as the companion of Miss Grizzy, quiet and reflection
were alike unattainable. When not engaged in
radotage with Sir Sampson, her life was spent
in losing her scissors, mislaying her spectacles,
wondering what had become of her thimble, and speculating
on the disappearance of a needle all of
which losses daily and hourly recurring, subjected
Mary to an unceasing annoyance, for she could not
be five minutes in her aunt’s company without
out being at least as many times disturbed, with “Mary,
my dear, will you get up? I think my spectacles
must be about you “ or, “Mary,
my dear, your eyes are younger than mine, will you
look if you can see my needle on the carpet?” or,
“Are you sure, Mary, that’s not my thimble
you have got? It’s very like it; and I’m
sure I can’t conceive what’s become of
mine, if that’s not it,” etc. etc.
etc. But her idleness was, if possible,
still more irritating than her industry. When
she betook herself to the window, it was one incessant
cry of “Who’s coach is that, Mary, with
the green and orange liveries? Come and look
at this lady and gentleman, Mary; I’m sure I
wonder who they are! Here’s something, I
declare I’m sure I don’t know what you
call it come here, Mary, and see what it
is “ and so on ad infinitum.
Walking was still worse. Grizzy not only stood
to examine every article in the shop windows, but actually
turned round to observe every striking figure that
passed. In short, Mary could not conceal from
herself that weak vulgar relations are an evil to those
whose taste and ideas are refined by superior intercourse.
But even this discovery she did not deem sufficient
to authorise her casting off or neglecting poor Miss
Grizzy, and she in no degree relaxed in her patient
attentions towards her.
Even the affection of her aunt, which
she possessed in the highest possible degree, far
from being an alleviation, was only an additional
torment. Every meeting began with, “My dear
Mary, how did you sleep last night? Did you make
a good breakfast this morning? I declare I think
you look a little pale. I’m sure I wish
to goodness, you mayn’t have got cold colds
are going very much about just now one of
the maids in this house has a very bad cold I
hope you will remember to bathe your feet And take
some water gruel to night, and do everything that Dr.
Redgill desires you, honest man!” If Mary absented
herself for a day, her salutation was, “My dear
Mary, what became of you yesterday? I assure you
I was quite miserable about you all day, thinking,
which was quite natural, that something was the matter
with you; and I declare I never closed my eyes all
night for thinking about you. I assure you if
it had not been that I couldn’t leave Sir Sampson,
I would have taken a hackney coach, although I know
what impositions they are, and have gone to Beech
Park to see what had come over you.”
Yet all this Mary bore with the patience
of a martyr, to the admiration of Lady Maclaughlan
and the amazement of Lady Emily, who declared she
could only submit to be bored as long as she was amused.
On going to Milsom Street one morning
Mary found her aunt in high delight at two invitations
she had just received for herself and her niece.
“The one,” said she, “is
to dinner at Mrs. Pullens’s. You can’t
remember her mother, Mrs. Macfuss, I daresay, Mary she
was a most excellent woman, I assure you, and got
all her daughters married. And I remember Mrs.
Pullens when she was Flora Macfuss; she was always
thought very like her mother and Mr. Pullens is a
most worthy man, and very rich and it was thought
at the time a great marriage for Flora Macfuss, for
she had no money of her own, but her mother was a
very clever woman, and a most excellent manager; and
I daresay so is Mrs. Pullens, for the Macfusses are
all famous for their management so it will
be a great thing for you, you know, Mary, to be acquainted
with Mrs. Pullens.”
Mary was obliged to break in upon
the eulogium on Mrs. Pullens by noticing the other
card. This was a subject for still greater gratulation.
“This,” said she, “is
from Mrs. Bluemits, and it is for the same day with
Mrs. Pullens, only it is to tea, not to dinner.
To be sure it will be a great pity to leave Mrs. Pullens
so soon; but then it would be a great pity not to
go to Mrs. Bluemits’s; for I’ve never seen
her, and her aunt, Miss Shaw, would think it very
odd if I was to go back to the Highlands without seeing
Nancy Shaw, now Mrs. Bluemits; and at any rate I assure
you we may think much of being asked, for she is a
very clever woman, and makes it a point never to ask
any but clever people to her house; so it’s
a very great honour to be asked.”
It was an honour Mary would fain have
dispensed with. At another time she might have
anticipated some amusement from such parties, but at
present her heart was not tuned to the ridiculous,
and she attempted to decline the invitations, and
get her aunt to do the same; but she gave up the point
when she saw how deeply Grizzy’s happiness for
the time being was involved in these invitations,
and she even consented to accompany her, conscious,
as Lady Maclaughlan said, that the poor creature required
a leading string, and was not fit to go alone.
The appointed day arrived, and Mary found herself
in company with Aunt Grizzy at the mansion of Mr.
Pullens, the fortunate husband of the ci-devant
Miss Flora Macfuss; but as Grizzy is not the best of
biographers, we must take the liberty of introducing
this lady to the acquaintance of our reader.
The domestic economy of Mrs. Pullens
was her own theme, and the theme of all her friends;
and such was the zeal in promulgating her doctrines,
and her anxiety to see them carried into effect, that
she had endeavoured to pass it into a law that no
preserves could be eatable but those preserved in
her method; no hams could be good but those cured
according to her receipt; no liquors drinkable but
such as were made from the results of her experience;
neither was it possible that any linens could be white,
or any flannels soft, or any muslins clear, unless
after the manner practised in her laundry. By
her own account she was the slave of every servant
within her door, for her life seemed to be one unceasing
labour to get everything done in her own way, to the
very blacking of Mr. Pullens’s shoes, and the
brushing of Mr. Pullens’s coat. But then
these heroic acts of duty were more than repaid by
the noble consciousness of a life well spent.
In her own estimation she was one of the greatest
characters that had ever lived; for, to use her own
words, she passed nothing over she saw everything
done herself she trusted nothing to servants,
etc. etc. etc.
From the contemplation of these her
virtues her face had acquired an expression of complacency
foreign to her natural temper; for, after having scolded
and slaved in the kitchen, she sat down to taste the
fruits of her labours with far more elevated feelings
of conscious virtue than ever warmed the breast of
a Hampden or a Howard; and when she helped Mr. Pullens
to pie, made not by the cook, but by herself, it was
with an air of self-approbation that might have vied
with that of the celebrated Jack Horner upon a similar
occasion. In many cases there might have been
merit in Mrs. Pullens’s doings –a
narrow income, the capricious taste of a sick or a
cross husband, may exalt the meanest offices which
woman can render into acts of virtue, and even diffuse
a dignity around them; but Mr. Pullens was rich and
good-natured, and would have been happy had his cook
been allowed to dress his dinner, and his barber his
wig, quietly in their own way. Mrs. Pullens, therefore,
only sought the indulgence of her own low inclinations
in thus interfering in every menial department; while,
at the same time, she expected all the gratitude and
admiration that would have been due to the sacrifice
of the most refined taste and elegant pursuits.
But “envy does merit as its
shade pursue,” as Mrs Pullens experienced, for
she found herself assailed by a host of housekeepers
who attempted to throw discredit on her various arts.
At the head of this association was Mrs. Jekyll, whose
arrangements were on a quite contrary plan. The
great branch of science on which Mrs. Pullens mainly
relied for fame was her unrivalled art in keeping
things long beyond the date assigned by nature; and
one of her master-strokes was, in the middle of summer,
to surprise a whole company with gooseberry tarts
made of gooseberries of the preceding year; and her
triumph was complete when any of them were so polite
as to assert that they might have passed upon them
for the fruits of the present season. Another
art in which she flattered herself she was unrivalled
was that of making things pass for what they were
not; thus, she gave pork for lamb common
fowls for turkey poults currant wine for
champagne whisky with peach leaves for noyau;
but all these deceptions Mrs. Jekyll piqued herself
immediately detecting, and never failed to point out
the difference, and in the politest manner to hint
her preference of the real over the spurious.
Many were the wonderful morsels with which poor Mr.
Pullens was regaled, but he had now ceased to be surprised
at anything that appeared on his own table; and he
had so often heard the merit of his wife’s housekeeping
extolled by herself that, contrary to his natural
conviction, he now began to think it must be true;
or if he had occasionally any little private misgivings
when he thought of the good dinners he used to have
in his bachelor days, he comforted himself by thinking
that his lot was the lot of all married men who are
blest with active, managing, economical wives.
Such were Mr. and Mrs. Pullens; and the appearance
of the house offered no inadequate idea of the mistress.
The furniture was incongruous, and everything was
ill-matched for Mrs. Pullens was a frequenter
of sales, and, like many other liberal-minded ladies,
never allowed a bargain to pass, whether she required
the articles or not. Her dress was the same; there
was always something to wonder at; caps that had been
bought for nothing, because they were a little soiled,
but by being taken down and washed, and new trimmed,
turned out to be just as good as new gowns that had
been dyed, turned, cleaned, washed, etc.; and
the great triumph was when nobody could tell the old
breadth from the new.
The dinner was of course bad, the
company stupid, and the conversation turned solely
upon Mrs. Pullens’s exploits, with occasional
attempts of Mrs. Jekyll to depreciate the merits of
some of her discoveries. At length the hour of
departure arrived, to Mary’s great relief, as
she thought any change must be for the better.
Not so Grizzy, who was charmed and confounded by all
she had seen, and heard, and tasted, and all of whose
preconceived ideas on the subjects of washing, preserving,
etc., had sustained a total bouleversement,
upon hearing of the superior methods practised by
Mrs. Pullens.
“Well, certainly, Mary, you
must allow Mrs. Pullens is an astonishing clever
woman! Indeed, I think nobody can dispute it only
think of her never using a bit of soap in her house everything
is washed by steam. To be sure, as Mrs Jekyll
said, the table linen was remarkably ill-coloured but
no wonder, considering it must be a great
saving, I’m sure and she always stands
and sees it done herself, for there’s no trusting
these things to servants. Once when she trusted
it to them, they burned a dozen of Mr. Pullens’s
new shirts, just from carelessness, which I’m
sure was very provoking. To be sure, as Mrs. Jekyll
said, if she had used soap like other people that
wouldn’t have happened; and then it is wonderful
how well she contrives to keep things. I declare
I can’t think enough of these green peas that
we had at dinner today having been kept since summer
was a year. To be sure, as Mrs. Jekyll said,
they certainly were hard nobody can deny
that but then, you know, anything would
be hard that had been kept since summer was a year;
and I’m sure I thought they ate wonderfully well
considering and these red currants, too I’m
afraid you didn’t taste them I wish
to goodness you had tasted them, Mary. They were
sour and dry, certainly, as Mrs. Jekyll said; but
no wonder, anything would be sour and dry that had
been kept in bottles for three years.”
Grizzy was now obliged to change the
current of her ideas, for the carriage had stopped
at Mrs. Bluemits’s.