“Know well, my soul, God’s
hand controls
Whate’er thou fearest;
Round Him in calmest music rolls
Whate’er thou hearest.”
“That girl is the most lovely
creature!” said Mrs. Esthwaite when she rejoined
her husband.
“What have you been talking
to her about? Now she will not be up in time
to take a drive in the Domain.”
“Yes, she will. She has
got plenty of spirit. But oh, Egbert! to think
of that girl going to put herself in those savage islands,
where she won’t see anybody!”
“It is absurd?” said her husband, but
somewhat faintly.
“I couldn’t but think
to-night as I looked at her you should have
seen her. Something upset her and set her
to crying; then she wouldn’t cry; and the little
white hand she brushed across her eyes and then rested
on the chair-back to keep herself steady I
looked at it, and I couldn’t bear to think of
her going to teach those barbarians. And her
eyes were all such a glitter with tears and her feelings I’ve
fallen in love with her, Egbert.”
“She’s a magnificent creature,”
said Mr. Esthwaite. “Wouldn’t she
set Sydney a fire, if she was to be here a little
while! But somebody has been beforehand with
Sydney so it’s no use talking.”
Eleanor was ready in good time for
the drive, and with spirits entirely refreshed by
the night’s sleep and the morning’s renewing
power. Things looked like new things, unlike
those which yesterday saw. All feeling of strangeness
and loneliness was gone; her spirits were primed for
enjoyment. Mr. and Mrs. Esthwaite both watched
eagerly to see the effect of the drive and the scene
upon her; one was satisfied, the other was not.
The intent delight in Eleanor’s eyes escaped
Mrs. Esthwaite; she looked for more expression in
words; her husband was content that Eleanor’s
mind was full of what he gave it to act upon.
The Domain was an exquisite place for a morning drive;
and the more stylish inhabitants of Sydney found it
so; there was a good display of équipages, varying
in shew and pretension. To Mrs. Esthwaite’s
disappointment neither these nor their owners drew
Eleanor’s attention; she did not even seem to
see them; while the flowers in the woods through which
part of the drive was cut, the innumerable, gorgeous,
novel and sweet flowers of a new land, were a very
great delight to her. All of them were new, or
nearly so; how Eleanor contrasted them with the wild
things of Plassy which she knew so well. And instead
of the blackbird and green wren, there were birds
of brilliant hues, almost as gay as the flowers over
which their bright wings went, and yet stranger than
they. It was a sort of drive of enchantment to
Eleanor; the air was delightful, though warm; with
no feeling of lassitude or oppression resulting from
the heat.
There were other pleasures. From
point to point, as they drove through the “bush,”
views opened upon them of the harbour and its islands,
glittering in the morning sun. Changes of beauty;
for every view was a little unlike the others and
revealed the loveliness with a difference. Eleanor
felt herself in a new world. She was quite ready
for the gardens, when they got through the “bush.”
The gardens were fine. Here she
had a feast which neither of her companions could
enjoy with her in anything like fellowship. Eleanor
had not lived so long with Mrs. Caxton, entering into
all her pursuits, without becoming somewhat well acquainted
with plants; and now she was almost equally charmed
at seeing her dear old home friends, and at making
acquaintance with the glorious beauties that outshone
them but could never look so kindly. Slowly Eleanor
went through the gardens, followed by her host and
hostess who took their enjoyment in observing her.
In the Botanical Gardens Mr. Esthwaite came up alongside
again, to tell her names and discuss specimens; he
found Eleanor knew more about them than he did.
“All this was a wild ’bush’ nothing
but rocks and trees, a few years ago,” he remarked.
“This? this garden?”
“Yes, only so long ago as 1825.”
“Somebody has deserved well
of the community, then,” said Eleanor. “It
is a delicious place.”
“General Sir Ralph Darling had
that good desert. It is a fine thing to be in
high place and able to execute great plans; isn’t
it?”
Eleanor rose up from a flower and
gave Mr. Esthwaite one of her thoughtful glances.
“I don’t know,”
she said. “His gardeners did the work, after
all.”
“They don’t get the thanks.”
“That is not what one
works for,” said Eleanor smiling. “So
the thing is done what matter?”
“If it isn’t done, what
matter? No, no! I want to get the good of
what I do, in praise or in something else.”
“What is Sir Ralph Darling the better of my
thanks now?”
“Well, he’s dead!” said Mr. Esthwaite.
“So I was thinking.”
“Well, what do you mean?
Do you mean that you would do nothing while you are
alive, for fear you would not hear of it after you
have left the world?”
“Not exactly.”
“What then? I don’t know what you
are after.”
“You say this was all a wilderness
a few years ago why should you despair
of what you call the ‘black islands?’”
“O ho!” said Mr. Esthwaite, “we
are there, are we? By a hop, skip, and jump leaving
the argument. That’s like a woman.”
“Are you sure?” said Eleanor.
“Like all the women I ever saw. Not one
of them can stick to the point.”
“Then I will return to mine,”
said Eleanor laughing “or rather bring
you up to it. I referred and meant
to refer you to another sort of gardening,
in which the labourer receives wages and gathers fruit;
but the beauty of it is, that his wages go with him he
does not leave them behind and the fruit
is unto life eternal.”
“That’s fair,” said Mr. Esthwaite.
“See here you don’t preach,
do you?”
“I will not, to you,”
said Eleanor. “Mr. Esthwaite, I will look
at no more flowers I believe, this morning, since
you leave the time of our stay to me.”
Mr. Esthwaite behaved himself, and
though a speech was on his tongue he was silent, and
attended Eleanor home in an unexceptionable manner.
Mrs. Esthwaite was in a dissatisfied mood of mind.
“I hope it will be a great while
before you find a good chance to go to Fiji!”
she said.
“Do not wish that,” said
Eleanor: “for in that case I may have to
take a chance that is not good.”
“Ah but, you are not the sort of person to go
there.”
“I should be very sorry to think that,”
said Eleanor smiling.
“Well it is clear you are not.
Just to look at you! I am sure you are exactly
a person to look always as nice as you do now.”
“I hope never to look less nice
than I do now,” said Eleanor, rather opening
her eyes.
“What, in that place?”
“Why yes, certainly. Why not?”
“But you will not wear that flat there?”
Eleanor and Mr. Esthwaite here both gave way in a
fit of laughter.
“Why yes I will; if I find it,
as I suppose I shall, the most comfortable thing.”
“But you cannot wear white dresses there?”
“If I cannot, I will submit
to it, but, my dear cousin, I have brought little
else but white dresses with me. For such a climate,
what else is so good?”
“Not like that you wore yesterday?”
“They are all very much alike,
I believe. What was the matter with that?”
“Why, it was so ”
Mrs. Esthwaite paused. “But how can you
get them washed? do you expect to have servants there?”
“There are plenty of servants,
I believe; not very well trained, indeed, or it would
not be necessary to have so many. At any rate,
they can wash, whatever else they can do.”
“I don’t believe they
would know how to wash your dresses.”
“Then I can teach them,” said Eleanor
merrily.
“You! To wash a cambrick dress!”
“That, or any other.”
“Eleanor, do not talk so!”
“Certainly not, if you do not
wish it. I was only putting you to rest on the
score of my laundry work.”
“With those hands!” said Mrs. Esthwaite
expressively.
Eleanor looked down at her hands,
for a moment a higher and graver expression flitted
over her face, then she smiled again.
“I should be ashamed of my hands if they were
good for nothing.”
“Capital!” said Mr. Esthwaite.
“That’s what I like. That is what
I call having spirit. I like to see a woman have
some character of her own; something besides hands,
in fact.”
“But Eleanor, I do not understand.
I am serious. You never washed; how can you know
how?”
“That was precisely my reasoning; so I learned.”
“Learned to wash? You?"
“Yes.”
“You did it with your own hands?”
“The dress you were so good
as to approve,” said Eleanor smiling, “it
was washed and done up by myself.”
“Do you expect to have to do
it for yourself?” said Mrs. Esthwaite looking
intensely horrified.
“No, not generally; but to teach
somebody, or upon occasion, you know. You see,”
she said smiling again her full rich smile, “I
am bent upon having my white dresses.”
Mrs. Esthwaite was too full for speech,
and her husband looked at his new cousin with an eye
of more absolute admiration than he had yet bestowed
on her. Eleanor’s thoughts were already
on something else; springing forward to meet Mr. Amos
and his letters.
Breakfast was over however before
he arrived. Much to her chagrin, she was obliged
to receive him in the company of Mr. and Mrs. Esthwaite;
no private talk was possible. Mr. Esthwaite engaged
him immediately in an earnest but desultory conversation,
about Sydney, Eleanor, and the mission, and the prospect
of their getting to their destination; which Mr. Esthwaite
prophesied would not be within any moderate limits
of time. Mr. Amos owned that he had heard of
no opportunity, near or far. The talk lasted
a good while and it was not till he was taking leave
that Eleanor contrived to follow him out and gain a
word to herself.
“There are no letters for you,”
said Mr. Amos, speaking under his breath, and turning
a cheerful but concerned face towards Eleanor.
“I have made every enquiry at the
post-office, and of everybody likely to know about
such things. There are none, and they know of
none.”
Eleanor said nothing; her face grew perceptibly white.
“There is nothing the matter
with brother Rhys,” said Mr. Amos hastily; “we
have plenty of news from him all right he
is quite well, and for a year past has been on another
station; different from the one he was on when you
last heard from him. There is nothing the matter only
there are no letters for you; and there must be some
explanation of that.”
He paused, but Eleanor was silent,
only her colour returned a little.
“We want to get away from here
as soon as possible, I suppose,” Mr. Amos went
on half under breath; “but as yet I see no opening.
It will come.”
“Yes,” said Eleanor somewhat
mechanically. “You will let me know ”
“Certainly as soon
as I know anything myself; and I will continue to
make enquiry for those letters. Mr. Armitage is
away in the country he might know something
about them, but nobody else does; and he ought to
have left them with somebody else if he had them.
But there can be nothing wrong about it; there is
only some mistake, or mischance; the letters from
Vuliva where brother Rhys is, are quite recent and
everything is going on most prosperously; himself included.
And we are to proceed to the same station. I
am very glad for ourselves and for you.”
“Thank you ”
Eleanor said; but she was not equal to saying much.
She listened quietly, and with her usual air, and
Mr. Amos never discovered the work his tidings wrought;
he told his wife, sister Powle looked a little blank,
he thought, at missing her expected despatches, and
no wonder. It was an awkward thing.
Eleanor slowly made her way up to
her room and sat down, feeling as if the foundations
of the earth, to her standing, had given way.
She was more overwhelmed with dismay than she would
have herself anticipated in England, if she could
have looked forward to such a catastrophe. Reason
said there was not sufficient cause; but poor Eleanor
was to feel the truth of Mrs. Caxton’s prediction,
that she would find out again that certain feelings
might be natural that were not reasonable. Nay,
reason said on this occasion that the failure of letters
proved too much to justify the distress she felt;
it proved a combination of things, that no carelessness
nor indifference nor unwillingness to write, on the
part of Mr. Rhys, could possibly have produced.
Let him feel how he would, he would have written,
he must have written to meet her there; all
his own delicacy and his knowledge of hers affirmed
and reaffirmed that letters were in existence somewhere,
though it might be at the bottom of the ocean.
Reason fought well; to what use, when nature trembled,
and shivered, and shrank. Poor Eleanor! she felt
alone now, without a mother and without shelter; and
the fair shores of Port Jackson looked very strange
and desolate to her; a very foreign land, far from
home. What if Mr. Rhys, with his fastidious notions
of delicacy, did not fancy so bold a proceeding as
her coming out to him? what if he disapproved?
What if, on further knowledge of the place and the
work, he had judged both unfit for her; and did not,
for his own sake only in a selfish point of view,
choose to encourage her coming? in that case her being
come would make no difference; he would not
shelter himself from a judgment displeasing to him,
because the escape from its decisions was rendered
easy. What if for his own sake his feeling
had changed, and he wanted her no longer? years had
gone by since he had seen her; it must have been a
wayward fancy that could ever have made him think
of her at first; and now, about his grave work in
a distant land, and with leisure to correct blunders
of fancy, perhaps he had settled into the opinion
that it was just as well that his coming away had
separated them; and did not feel able to welcome her
appearance in Australia, and was too sincere to write
what he did not feel; so wrote nothing? Not very
like Mr. Rhys, reason whispered; but reason’s
whisper, though heard, could not quiet the sensitive
delicacy which trembled at doubt. So miserable,
so chilled, so forlorn, Eleanor had never felt in
her life; not when the ‘Diana’ first carried
her away from the shores of her native land.
What was she to do? that question
throbbed at her heart; but it answered itself soon.
Stay in Australia she could not; go home to England
she could not; no, not upon this mere deficiency of
testimony. There was only one alternative left;
she must go on whenever Mr. and Mrs. Amos should move.
Nature might tremble and quiver, and all Eleanor’s
nerves did; but there was no other course to pursue.
“I can tell,” she thought, “I
shall know the first word, the first look,
will tell me the whole; I cannot be deceived.
I must go on and meet that word and look, whatever
it costs me I must; and then, if it is if
it is not satisfying to me, then aunt Caxton shall
have me! I can go back, as well as I have come.
Shame and misery would not hinder me they
would not be so bad as my staying here then.”
So the question of action was settled;
but the question of feeling not so soon. Eleanor’s
enjoyment was gone, of all the things she had enjoyed
those first twenty-four hours, and of all others which
her entertainers brought forward for her pleasure.
Yet Eleanor kept her own counsel, and as they did
not know the cause she had for trouble, so neither
did they discover any tokens of it. She did not
withdraw herself from their kind efforts to please
her, and they spared no pains. They took her
in boat excursions round the beautiful harbour.
They shewed her the pretty environs of the Parramatta
river. Nay, though it was not very easy for him
to leave his business, Mr. Esthwaite went with her
and his wife to the beautiful Illawarra district;
put the whole party on horses, and shewed Eleanor a
land of tropical beauty under the clear, bracing,
delicious warm weather of Australia. Fern trees
springing up to the dimensions of trees indeed, with
the very fern foliage she was accustomed to in low
herbaceous growth at home; only magnified superbly.
There were elegant palms, too, with other evergreens,
and magnificent creepers; and floating out and in
among them in great numbers were gay red-crested cockatoos
and other tropical birds. The character of the
scenery was exquisite. Eleanor saw one or two
of the fair lake-like lagoons of that district, eat
of the fish from them; for they made a kind of gypsey
expedition, camping out and providing for themselves
fascinatingly; and finally returned in the steamer
from Wollongong to Sydney. Her friends would have
taken her to see the gold diggings if it had been
possible. But Eleanor saw it all, all they could
shew her, with half a heart. She had learned long
ago to conceal what she felt.
“I think she wants to get away,”
said Mrs. Esthwaite one night, half vexed, wholly
sorry.
“That’s what it is to
be in love!” said her husband. “You
won’t keep her in Sydney. Do you notice
she has given up smiling?”
“No!” said his wife indignantly;
“I notice no such thing. She is as ready
to smile as anybody I ever saw.” And
I wish I had as good reason! was the mental conclusion;
for Eleanor and she had had many an evening talk by
that time, and many a hymn had been listened to.
“All very well,” said
Mr. Esthwaite; “but she don’t smile as
she did at first. Don’t you remember? that
full smile she used to give once in a while, with
a little world of mischief in the corners? I would
like to see it the next time! ”
“I declare,” said Mrs.
Esthwaite, “I think you take quite an impertinent
interest in people’s concerns. She wouldn’t
let you see it, besides.”
At which Mr. Esthwaite laughed.
So near people came to it; and Eleanor
covered up her troublesome thoughts within her own
heart, and gave Mr. Esthwaite the benefit of that
impenetrable coolness and sweetness of manner which
a good while ago had used to bewitch London circles.
In the effort to hide her real thoughts and feelings
she did not quite accommodate it to the different
latitude of New South Wales; and Mr. Esthwaite was
a good deal struck and somewhat bewildered.
“You have mistaken your calling,”
he said one evening, standing before Eleanor and considering
her.
“Do you think so?”
“There! Yes, I do. I think you were
born to govern.”
“I am sadly out of my line then,” said
Eleanor laughing.
“Yes. You are. That
is what I say. You ought to be this minute a
duchess or a governor’s lady or
something else in the imperial line.”
“You mistake my tastes, if you think so.”
“I do not mistake something
else,” muttered Mr. Esthwaite; and then Mr.
Amos entered the room.
“Here, Amos,” said he,
“you have made an error in judging of this lady she
is no more fit to go a missionary than I am. She she
goes about with the air of a princess!”
Mrs. Esthwaite exclaimed, and Mr.
Amos took a look at the supposed princess’s
face, as if to reassure or inform his judgment.
Apparently he saw nothing to alarm him.
“I am come to prove the question,”
he said composedly; then turning to Eleanor, “I
have heard at last of a schooner that is going to Fiji,
or will go, if we desire it.”
This simple announcement shot through
Eleanor’s head and heart with the force of a
hundred pounder. An extreme and painful flush
of colour answered it; nobody guessed at the pain.
“What’s that?” exclaimed
Mr. Esthwaite getting up again and standing before
Mr. Amos, “you have found a vessel,
you say?”
“Yes. A small schooner, to sail in a day
or two.”
“What schooner? whom does she belong to?
Lawsons, or Hildreth?”
“To nobody, I think, but her
master. I believe he sails the vessel for his
own ends and profits.”
“What schooner is it? what name?”
“The ‘Queen Esther,’ I think.”
“You cannot go in that!”
said Mr. Esthwaite turning off. “The ’Queen
Esther’! I know her. She’s
not fit for you; she’s a leaky old thing, that
that man Hawkins sails on all sorts of petty business;
she’ll go to pieces some day. She ain’t
sea-worthy, I don’t believe.”
“It is not as good a chance
as might be, but it is the first that has offered,
and the first that is likely to offer for an unknown
time,” Mr. Amos said, looking again to Eleanor.
“When does she sail?”
“In two days. She is small,
and not in first-rate order; but the voyage is not
for very long. I think we had better go in her.”
“Certainly. How long is the voyage, regularly?”
“A fortnight in a good ship,
and a month in a bad one,” struck in Mr. Esthwaite.
“You’ll never get there, if you depend
on the ‘Queen Esther’ to bring you.”
“We go to Tonga first,”
said Mr. Amos. “The ‘Queen Esther’
sails with stores for the stations at Tonga and the
neighbourhood; and will carry us further only by special
agreement; but the master is willing, and I came to
know your mind about it.”
“I will go,” said Eleanor.
“Tell Mrs. Amos I will meet her on board when?”
“Day after to-morrow morning.”
“Very well. I will be there.
Will she take the additional lading of my boxes?”
“O yes; no difficulty about that. It’s
all right.”
“How can I do with the things
you have stored for me?” Eleanor said to Mr.
Esthwaite. “Can the schooner take them too?”
“What things?”
“Excuse me perhaps
I misunderstood you. I thought you said you had
half your warehouse, one loft of it, taken up with
things for me?”
“Those things are gone, long
ago,” said Mr. Esthwaite, in a dogged kind of
mood which did not approve of the proposed journey
or conveyance.
“Gone?”
“Yes. According to order.
Mrs. Caxton wrote, Forward as soon as possible; so
I did.”
Again Eleanor’s brow and cheeks
and her very throat were covered with a rush of crimson;
but when Mr. Amos took her hand on going away its
touch made him ask involuntarily if she were well?
“Perfectly well,” Eleanor
answered, with something in her manner that reminded
Mr. Amos, though he could not tell why, of the charge
Mr. Esthwaite had brought. Another look into
Eleanor’s eyes quieted the thought.
“Your hand is very cold!” he said.
“It’s a sign of” Mr.
Esthwaite would have said “fever,” but
Eleanor had composedly faced him and he was silent;
only busied himself in shewing Mr. Amos out, without
a word that he ought not to have spoken. Mr.
Amos went home and told his wife.
“I think she is all right,”
he said; “but she does not look to me just as
she did before we landed. I dare say she has had
a great deal of admiration here ”
“I dare say she feels bad,” said good
Mrs. Amos.
“Why?”
“If you were not a man, you
would know,” Mrs. Amos said laughing. “She
is in a very trying situation.”
“Is she? O, those letters!
It is unfortunate, to be sure. But there must
be some explanation.”
“The explanation will be good
when she gets it,” Mrs. Amos remarked. “I
hope somebody who is expecting her is worthy of her.
Poor thing! I couldn’t have done it, I
believe, even for you.”