“Thou hast found ....
Thy cocoas and bananas, palms and yams,
And homestall thatched with leaves.”
The walls of the house were, to an
Englishwoman, a curiosity. They were made of
reeds; three layers or thicknesses of them being placed
different ways, and bound and laced together with sinnet;
the strong braid made of the fibre of the cocoanut-husk.
It was this braid, woven in and out, which produced
the pretty mosaic effect Eleanor had observed upon
the outside. Mr. Rhys took her to a doorway, where
she could examine from within and from without this
novel construction; and explained minutely how it
was managed.
“This looks like a foreign land,”
said Eleanor. “You had described it, and
I thought I had imagined it; but sight and feeling
are quite a different matter.”
“I did not describe it to you?”
“No O no; you described it to aunt
Caxton.”
He drew her back a step or two and
laid her hand upon the post of the door.
“What is this?” said Eleanor.
“That is a piece of the stem of the palm-fern.”
“And these are its natural mouldings
and markings! It is like elegant carved work!
It is natural, is it not?” she said suddenly.
“Certainly. The natives
do execute very marvellous carving in wood, with tools
that would drive a workman at home to despair; but
I have not learned the art. Come here the
pillars that hold up the roof of your house are of
the same wood.”
A double row of pillars through the
whole length of the house gave it stability; they
were stems of the same palm fern, and as they had been
chosen and placed with a careful eye to size and position,
the effect of them was not at all inelegant.
The building itself was of generous length and width;
and with a room cut off at each end, as the fashion
was, the centre apartment was left of really noble
proportions; broad, roomy, and lofty; with its palm
columns springing up to its high roof of thatch.
Standing beside one of them, Eleanor looked up and
declared it a beautiful room.
“Do not look at the doors and
windows,” said Mr. Rhys. “I did not
make those they were sent out framed.
I had only the pleasure of putting them in.”
“And how did that agree with all your other
work?”
“Well,” he said decidedly. “That
was my recreation.”
“There is the prettiest mixture
of wild and tame in this house,” said Eleanor,
speaking a little timidly; for she was conscious all
the while how little Mr. Rhys was thinking of anything
but herself. “Are these mats made here?”
“Pure Fijian!”
The one at which Eleanor was looking,
her eyes having fallen to the floor, was both large
and elegant. It was very substantially and neatly
made, and had a border fancifully wrought all round
it, a few inches in width. The pattern of the
border was made with bits of worsted and little white
feathers. This mat covered all the centre of the
room; under it the whole floor was spread with other
and coarser ones; and others of a still different
manufacture lined the walls of the room.
“One need not want a prettier
carpet,” said Eleanor, keeping her eyes on the
mat. Mr. Rhys put his arm round her and drew her
off to one side of the room, where he made her pause
before a large square space which was sunk a foot
deep in the earth and bordered massively with a frame
of logs of hard wood.
“What do you think of that?”
“Mr. Rhys, what is it?”
“You would not take it for a fireplace?”
he said with a comical look.
“But is it a fireplace?”
“That is what it is intended
for. The Fijians make their fireplaces in this
manner.”
“And you are a Fijian, I suppose.”
“So are you.”
“But Mr. Rhys, can a fireplace
of this sort be useful in an English house?”
“No. But in a Fijian house
it may as I have proved. The natives
would have a wooden frame here, at one side, to hold
cooking vessels. You do not need that, for you
have a kitchen.”
“With a fireplace like this?”
“Yes,” he said, with a
smile that had some raillery in it, which Eleanor
would not provoke.
“Suppose you come and look at
something that is not Fijian,” he went on.
“You must vary your attention.”
He drew her before a little unostentatious
piece of furniture, that looked certainly as if it
was made out of a good bit of English oak. What
it was, did not appear; it was very plain and rather
massively made. Now Mr. Rhys produced keys, and
opened first doors; then a drawer, which displayed
all the characteristic contents and arrangements of
a lady’s work-box on an extended scale.
Love’s work; Eleanor could see her adopted mother
in every carefully disposed supply of needles and
silks and braids and glittering Sheffield ware, and
the thousand and one appliances and provisions for
one who was to be at a very large distance from Sheffield
and every home source of needle furniture. Love
recognized love’s work, as Eleanor looked into
the drawer.
“Now you are ready to say this
is a small thread and needle shop,” said Mr.
Rhys; “but you will be mistaken if you do.
Look further.”
And that she might, he unlocked a
pair of smaller inner doors; the little piece of furniture
developed itself immediately into a capital secretary.
As thoroughgoing as the work-box, but still more comprehensive,
here were more than mere materials and conveniences
for writing; it was a depository for several small
but very precious treasures of a scientific and other
kinds; and even a few books lay nestling among them,
and there was room for more.
“What is this!” Eleanor
exclaimed when she had got her breath.
“This is Mrs. Caxton!
I do not know whether she expected you to turn sempstress
immediately for the colony or whether she
intended you for another vocation, as I do.”
“She sent this from England!”
“It was made by nobody worse
than a London cabinet-maker. I did not know whether
you would choose to have it stand in this place, or
in the only room that can properly be called your
own. Come in here; the other part
of the house is, you will find, pretty much public.”
“Even your study?”
“That is no exception, sometimes. I am
a public man, myself.”
The partition wall of this room was
nicely lined with mats; the door was like a piece
of the wall, swinging to noiselessly, but Mr. Rhys
shewed Eleanor how she could fasten it securely on
the inside. Eleanor had been taken into this
room on her first arrival; but had then been unable
to see anything. Now her eyes were in requisition.
Here there was even more attention paid to comfort
and appearances than in the dining-room. In the
simplest possible manner; but somebody had been at
work there who knew that elegance is attainable without
the help of opulence; and that eye and hand can do
what money cannot. Eye and hand had been busy
everywhere. Very pretty and soft native mats were
on the floor; the windows were shaded with East Indian
jalousies; and not only personal convenience
but tastes were regarded in the various articles of
furniture and the arrangement of them. Good sense
was regarded too. Camp chairs and tables were
useful for packing and moving, as well as neat to
the eye; white draperies relieved their simplicity;
shelves were hung against the wall in one place for
books, and filled; and in the floor stood an easy
chair of excellent workmanship, into which Mr. Rhys
immediately put Eleanor. But she started up to
look at it.
“Did aunt Caxton send all these
things?” she said with a tear in her eye.
“She has sent almost too many.
These are but the beginning, Look here, Eleanor.”
He opened a door at one end of the
room, hidden under mat hangings like the other, which
disclosed a large space lined with shelves; several
articles reposing on them, and on the floor below sundry
chests and boxes.
“This is your storeroom.
Here you may revel in the riches you do not immediately
wish to display. This is yours; I have a storeroom
on my own part.”
“And what is in those chests and boxes, Mr.
Rhys?”
“I don’t know! except
that it is aunt Caxton again. You will find tablecloths
and napkins I can certify that for
I stumbled upon them; but I thought they had best
not see the light till their owner came. So I
locked them up and here are the keys.”
“And who put up all these nice shelves?”
“Your head carpenter.”
“And have you been doing all this for me?”
said Eleanor.
He laughed and took her in his arms
again, looking at her with that mixture of expressions.
“I wish I could give you some of my content!”
he said.
“I do not want it!” said Eleanor laughing.
“Is that declaration entirely generous?”
Eleanor had no mind, like a wise woman,
to answer this question; but she was held under the
inspection of an eye that she knew of old clear and
keen beyond all others to untie the knot of anybody’s
meaning. She flushed up very much and tried to
turn it off, for she saw he had a mind to have the
answer.
“You do not want me to give
account of every idle word after that fashion?”
she said lightly.
“Hush hush,”
he said, with a gravity that had much sweetness in
it. “I cannot have you speak in that way.”
“I will not ”
said Eleanor, suddenly much more sober than he was.
“There are too many that have
the habit of using their Master’s words to point
their own sentences. Do not let us use it.
Come to my study you did not see it before
dinner, I think.”
Eleanor was glad he could smile again,
for at that minute she could not. She felt whirled
back to Plassy, and to Wiglands, to the time of their
old and very different relations. She could not
realize the new, nor quietly understand her own happiness;
and a very fresh vivid sense of his character made
her feel almost as much awe of him as affection.
That was according to old habit too. But if she
felt shy and strange, she was the only one; for Mr.
Rhys was in a very gay mood. As they went through
the dining-room he stopped to shew and display to her
numerous odd little contrivances and arrangements;
here a cupboard of rustic, and very pretty too, native
work; or at least native materials. There a more
sophisticated beaufet, which had come from Sydney by
Mrs. Caxton’s order. “Dear Mrs. Caxton!”
said Mr. Rhys, “she has forgotten
nothing. I am only in astonishment what she can
have found to fill your new invoice of boxes.”
“Why there are not many,” said Eleanor.
He looked at her and laughed.
“You will be doing nothing but unpacking for
days to come,” he said. “I have done
what I never thought I should do married
a rich wife.”
“Why aunt Caxton sends the things
quite as much to you as to me.”
“Does she?”
“I am sure, if anybody is poor, I am.”
“If that speech means me,”
said Mr. Rhys with a little bit of provokingness in
the corners of his mouth, “I don’t
take it. I do not feel poor; and never did.
Not to-day certainly, with whole shiploads coming
in.”
“I do not know of a single unnecessary thing
but your microscope.”
“Have you brought that?”
he said with a change of tone. “It would
be just like Mrs. Caxton to come out and make us a
visit some day! I cannot think of anything else
she could give us, that she has not given. Look
at my book-cases.”
Eleanor did, thinking of their owner.
They were of plainest construction, but so made that
they would take to pieces in five minutes and become
packing cases with the books packed, all ready for
travel; or at pleasure, as now, stand up in their place
in the study in the form of very neat bookcases.
They were not large; a Fijian missionary’s library
had need be not too extensive; but Eleanor looked
over their contents with hurried delight.
The rest of the room also spoke of
Mrs. Caxton; in light neat tables and chairs and other
things. Here too, though not a hand’s turn
had apparently been wasted, everything, simple as
it was, had a sort of pleasantness of order and fitness
which left the eye gratified. Eleanor read that
and the meaning of it. Here were contrivances
again that Mr. Rhys had done; shelves, and brackets,
and pins to hang things; nothing out of use, but all
so contrived as to give a certain elegant effect to
this plain work-room. Even the book and paper
disorder was not that of a careless man. Still
it was not like the room at the other end of the house.
The mats that floored and lined it were coarser; there
were no jalousies at the windows; and no easy
chair anywhere. One thing it had like the other;
a storeroom cut off from it. This was a large
one, like Eleanor’s, and filled. His money-drawer,
Mr. Rhys called it. All sorts of articles valued
by the natives were there; Mrs. Caxton had taken care
to send a large supply. These were to serve the
purposes of barter. Mr. Rhys displayed to Eleanor
the stores of iron tools, cotton prints, blankets,
and articles of clothing, that were stowed away there;
stowed away with an absolute order and method which
again she looked at as significant of one side at
least of Mr. Rhys’s character. He amused
himself with displaying everything; shewed her the
whole of the new and strangely appointed establishment
over which she had come to preside, so far at least
as the house contained it; and when he had brought
her to something like an apparent share in his own
gay mood, at last placed her in a camp chair in the
dining-room, which he had set in the middle of the
floor, and opened the door of the house. It gave
Eleanor a lovely view. The plantations had been
left open, so that the eye had a fair range down to
the river and to the opposite shore, where another
village stood. It was seen under bright sunshine
now. Mr. Rhys let her look a moment, then shut
the door, and came and sat down before her, taking
both her hands in his own; and Eleanor knew from a
glance at his face that the same thoughts were working
within him that had wrought that moved look before
dinner when she first came. She felt
her colour mounting; it tried her to be silent under
his eye in that way.
“Mr. Rhys, do you remember preaching
to me one day at Plassy when we were out
walking?”
“Yes,” he said with a half laugh.
“I wish you would do it again.”
“I will preach you a sermon every morning if
you like.”
“No, but now. I wish you
would, so as to make me realize that you are the same
person.”
“I am not the same person at all!” he
said.
“Why are you not?” said Eleanor opening
her eyes at him.
“In those days I was your pastor
and friend simply. The difference is, that I
have acquired the right to love you take
care of you and scold you.”
“It seems to me that last was
a privilege you exercised occasionally in those times,”
said Eleanor archly.
“Not at all! In those days
I was a poor fellow that did not dare say a word to
you.”
Eleanor’s recollections were
of sundry exceptions to this rule, so marked and prominent
in her memory that she could not help laughing.
“O Mr. Rhys, don’t you remember ”
“What?” said he with the utmost gravity.
But Eleanor had stopped, and coloured now brilliantly.
“It seems that your recollections
are of a questionable character,” he said.
Eleanor did not deny it.
“What is it you wish me not to remember?”
“It was a time when you said
I was very wrong,” said Eleanor meekly, “so
do not call it back.”
He bent forward to kiss her, which
did not steady Eleanor’s thoughts at all.
“Do you want preaching?” he said.
“Yes indeed! It will do me good.”
“I will give you some words
to think of, that I lived in all yesterday. ‘Beloved
of God.’ They are wonderful words, that
Paul says belong to all the saints; and they were
about me yesterday like a halo of glory, from morning
to night.”
Now Eleanor was all right; now she
recognized Mr. Rhys and herself, and listened to every
word with her old delight in them. Now she could
use her eyes and look at him, though she well saw
that he was considering her with that full, moved
tenderness that she had felt in him all day; even
when he was talking and thinking of other things he
did not cease to remember her.
“Eleanor, what do you know about
the meaning of those words?”
“Little!” she said. “And yet,
a little.”
“You know that we were
Gentiles, carried away unto these dumb idols or
after others in our own hearts as helplessly
as the poor heathen around us. But we have got
the benefit of that word, ’I will
call them my people, which were not my people; and
her beloved, which was not beloved.’”
“Yes!”
“Then look at our privileges ’The
beloved of the Lord shall dwell in safety by him;
and the Lord shall cover him all the day long, and
he shall dwell between is shoulders.’ Heavenly
security; unearthly joy; a hiding-place where the
troubles of earth cannot reach us.”
Mr. Rhys left his position before
Eleanor at this, and with a brow all alight with its
thoughts began to pace up and down in front of her;
just as he had done at Plassy, she remembered.
She ventured not a word. Her heart was very full.
“Then look how we are bidden
to increase our rejoicing and to delight ourselves
in the store laid up for us; we are not only safe and
happy, but fed with dainties. All things are
ready; Christ says he will sup with us; and we are
bidden ’Eat, O friends; drink, yea,
drink abundantly, O beloved.’ ’He
that cometh to me shall never hunger, and he that
believeth on me shall never thirst.’
“And then, Eleanor, if we are
the elect of God, holy and beloved, what bowels of
mercies should be in us; how precious all other beloved
of him should be to us; how we should be constrained
by his love. Are you? I am. I am willing
to spend and be spent for these people among whom we
are. I am sure there are many, many children of
God among them, come and coming. I seek no better
than to labour for them. It is the delight of
my soul! Eleanor, how is it with you?”
He had stood still before her during
these last words, and now sat down again, taking her
hands and looking with his undeceivable gaze into her
face.
“I desire the same thing.
I dare not say, I desire it as strongly as you do, but
it is my very wish.”
“Is it for the love of Christ or
for love of these poor creatures? or for any other
reason?”
“I can hardly separate the first
two,” said Eleanor, looking a little wistfully.
“The love of Christ is at the bottom of it all.”
“There is no other motive,”
he said; “no other that will do the work; nothing
else that will work true love to them. But when
I think of my Master I am willing to do
or be anything, I think, in his service!”
He quitted her hands and began slowly
walking up and down again.
“Mr. Rhys,” said Eleanor, “what
can I do?”
“Are you ready to encounter
disagreeablenesses, and hardships, and privations,
in the work?”
“Yes; and discouragements.”
“There are no such things.
There ought to be no such things. I never feel
nor have felt discouraged. That is want of faith.
Do you remember, Eleanor, ‘The clouds are the
dust of his feet?’ Think our eyes
are blinded by the dust, we look at nothing else,
and we do not see the glory of the steps that are
taken.”
“That is true. O Mr. Rhys, that is glorious!”
“Then you are not afraid?
I forewarn you, little annoyances are sometimes harder
to bear than great ones. It is one of the most
trying things that I have to meet,” said Mr.
Rhys standing still with a funny face, “to
have Ra Mbombo’s beard sweep my plate when I
am at dinner.”
“What does he do that for?”
“He is so fond of me.”
“That is being too fond, certainly.”
“It is an excess of affectionate
attention, he gets so close to me that
we have a community of things. And you will have,
Eleanor, some days, a perpetual levee of visitors.
But what is all that, for Christ?”
“I am not afraid,” said Eleanor with a
most unruffled smile.
“I wrote to frighten you.”
“But I was not frightened.
Are things no better in the islands than when you
wrote?”
“Changing changing
every day; from darkness to light, and from the power
of Satan to God. Literally. There are heathen
temples here, in which a few years ago if a woman
or a child had dared cross the threshold they would
have been done to death immediately. Now those
very temples are used as our schools. On our way
to the chapel we shall pass almost over a place where
there used to be one of the ovens for cooking human
bodies; now the grass and wild tomatoes are growing
over it. I can take you to house after house,
where men and women used to be eaten, where now if
you stand to listen you may hear hymns of praise to
Jesus and prayer going up in his name. Praise
the Lord! It is grand to be permitted to live
in Fiji now!”
Eleanor was hushed and silent a few
minutes, while Mr. Rhys walked slowly up and down.
Then she spoke with her eyes full of sympathetic tears.
“Mr. Rhys, what can I do?”
“What you have to do at present,”
he said with a change of tone, “is to take care
of me and learn the language, both languages,
I should say! And in the mean while you had better
take care of your pins,” he stooped
as he spoke, to pick up one at her feet and presented
it with comical gravity. “You must remember
you are not in England. Here you could not spend
pin-money even if you had it.”
“If I were inclined to be extravagant,”
said Eleanor laughing at him, “your admonition
would be thrown away; I have brought such quantities
with me.”
“Of pins?”
“Yes.”
“I hope you will not ever use them!”
“Why not?”
“I do not see what a properly made dress has
to do with pins.”
But at this confession of masculine
ignorance Eleanor first looked and then laughed and
covered her face, till he came and sat down again and
by forcible possession took her hands away.
“You have no particular present
occasion to laugh at me,” he said. “Eleanor,
what made you first willing to quit England and go
anywhere?”
The answer to this was first an innocent
look, and then an extreme scarlet flush. She
could not hide it, with her hands prisoners; she sat
in a pretty state of abashment. A slight giving
way of the mouth bore witness that he read and understood
it, though his immediate words were reassuringly grave
and unchanged in tone.
“I remember, you did not comprehend
such a thing as possible, at one time. When was
that changed? You used to have a great fear.”
“I lost part of that at Plassy.”
“Where did you lose the rest of it, Eleanor?”
“It was in London.”
He saw by the light in Eleanor’s
eyes, which looked at him now, that there was something
behind. Yet she hesitated.
“Sealed lips?” said he
bending forward again to her face. “You
must unseal them, Eleanor.”
“Do you want me to tell you
all that?” she asked questioningly.
“I want you to tell me everything.”
“It is only a long story.”
“Do not make it short.”
An easy matter! to go on and tell
it with her two hands prisoners, and those particularly
clear eyes looking into her face. It served to
shew the grace that belonged to Eleanor, the way that
in these circumstances she began what she had to say.
Where another woman would have been awkward, she spoke
with the simple sweet poise of manner that had been
the admiration of many a company, and that made Mr.
Rhys now press the little hands closer in his own.
A little evident shy reluctance only added to the
grace.
“It is a good while ago I
felt, Mr. Rhys, that I wanted, just that
which makes one willing to go anywhere and do anything;
though not for that reason. I expected to live
in England always. I wanted to know more of Christ.
I wanted it, not for work’s sake but for happiness’
sake. I was a Christian, I suppose; but I knew I
had seen and felt that there were things, there
was a height of Christian life and attainment, that
I had not reached; but where I had seen other people,
with a light upon their brows that I knew never shined
upon mine. I knew whence it came I
knew what I wanted more knowledge of Christ,
more love of him.”
“When was this?”
“It is a good while ago.
It is it was, time seems so confused
to me! I know it was the winter after you
went away. I think it was near the spring.
We were in London.”
“Yes.”
“I was cold at the heart of
religion. I was not happy. I knew what I
wanted more love to Christ.”
“You did love him.”
“Yes; but you know what it is
just to love him a little. I went as duty bade
me; but the love of him did not make all duty happy.
I had seen you live differently I saw others and
I could not be content as I was.
“We were in town then.
One night I sat up all night, and gave the whole night
to it.”
“To seeking Jesus?”
“I wanted to get out of my coldness and find
him!”
“And you found him?”
“Not soon. I spent the
night in it. I prayed and I walked
the floor and prayed and I shed a great
many tears over the Bible. I felt as if I must
have what I wanted but I could not seem
to get any nearer to it. The whole night passed
away and I had wearied myself and
I had got nothing.
“The dawn was just breaking,
when I got up from my knees the last time. I
was almost giving up in despair. I had done all
I could what could I do more? I went
to the window and opened it. The light was just
creeping up in the sky there was a little
streak of brightness along the horizon, or of light
rather, but it was the herald of brightness. I
felt desolate and tired, and like giving up hope and
quest together. The dull grey canopy overhead
seemed just like my heart. I cannot tell you
how enviously I looked at the eastern dawn, wishing
the light would break upon my own horizon. I
shall never forget it. It was dusky yet down
in the streets and over the housetops; the city had
not waked up in our quarter; it was still yet, and
the breath of the morning’s freshness came to
me and revived me and mocked me both at once.
I could have cried for sadness, if I had not been
too down-hearted and weary.
“While I stood there, hearing
the morning’s promise, I suppose, without knowing
it there came up from the streets somewhere
below me, and near, the song of a chimney-sweep.
I can never tell you how it came! It came but
not yet; at first I only knew what he was singing by
the notes of the air; but the next verse he began
came up clear and strong to me at the window.
He was singing those words
“’Twas a heaven below
My Redeemer to know;
And the angels could do nothing more,
Than to fall at his feet,
And the story repeat,
And the Lover of sinners adore.’
“I thought, it seemed that a
band of angels came and carried those words up past
my window! And the dawn came in my heart.
I cannot tell you how, I seemed to see
everything at once. I saw what a heaven below
it is, to know the love of Christ. I think my
heart was something like the Ganges when the tide
is coming in. I thought, if the angels could
do nothing more than praise him, neither could I!
I fell at his feet then I do not think
I have ever really left them since not for
long at a time; and since then my great wish has been
to be allowed to glorify him. I have had no fears
of anything in the way.”
Eleanor had not been able to get through
her “long story” without tears; but they
came very much against her will. She could not
see, yet somehow she felt the strong sympathetic emotion
with which she was listened to. She could hear
it, in the subdued intonation of Mr. Rhys’s
words.
“‘Keep yourselves in the
love of God.’ How shall we do it, Eleanor?”
She answered without raising her eyes “’The
Lord is good unto them that wait for him.’”
“And, ‘if ye keep my commandments,
ye shall abide in my love.’”
There was silence a moment.
“That commandment must take
me away for a while, Eleanor.” She looked
up.
“I thought,” he said,
with his sweet arch smile, “I might take so much
of a honeymoon as one broken day but there
is a poor sick man a mile off who wants me; and brother
Balliol has had the schooner affairs to attend to.
I shall be gone an hour. Will you stay here? or
shall I take you to the other house?”
“May I stay here?”
“Certainly. You can fasten
the door, and then if any visiters come they will
think I am not at home. I will give Solomon directions.”
“Who is Solomon?”
“Solomon is I will
introduce him to you!” and with a very bright
face Mr. Rhys went off into his study, coming back
again in a moment and with his hat. He went to
a door opposite that by which Eleanor had entered
the house, and blew a shrill whistle.
“Solomon is my fast friend and
very faithful servant,” he said returning to
Eleanor. “You saw him at dinner but
it is time he should know you.”
In came Solomon; a very black specimen
of the islanders, in a dress something like that which
Eleanor had noticed on the man in the canoe.
Solomon’s features were undeniably good, if somewhat
heavy; they had sense and manliness; and his eye was
mildly quiet and genial in its expression. It
brightened, Eleanor saw, as he listened to Mr. Rhys’s
words; to which she also listened without being able
to understand them, and wondering at the warm feeling
of her cheeks. Solomon’s gratulations were
mainly given with his face, for all the English words
he could get out were, “glad see Misi
Risi” Mr. Rhys laughed and dismissed
him, and went off himself.
Eleanor was half glad to be left alone
for a time. She fastened the door, not for fear,
but that her solitude might not be intruded upon;
then walked up and down over the soft mats of the centre
room and tried to bring her spirits to some quiet
of realization. But she could not. The change
had been so sudden, from her wandering state of uncertainty
and expectation to absolute content and rest, of body
and mind at once, that her mental like her actual
footing seemed to sway and heave yet with the upheavings
that were past. She could not settle down to
anything like a composed state of mind. She could
not get accustomed yet to Mr. Rhys in his new character.
As the children say, it was “too good to be
true.”
A little unready to be still, she
went off again into the room specially prepared for
her, where the green jalousies shaded the
windows. One window here was at the end; a direction
in which Eleanor had not looked. She softly raised
the jalousies a little, expecting to see just
the waving bananas and other plants of the tropical
garden that surrounded the house; or perhaps servants’
offices, about which she had a good deal of curiosity.
Instead of that, the window revealed
a landscape of such beauty that Eleanor involuntarily
pulled up the blind and sat entranced before it.
No such thing as servants or servants’ offices.
A wide receding stretch of broken country, rising
in the distance to the dignity of blue precipitous
hills; a gorge of which opened far away, to delight
and draw the eye into its misty depth; a middle distance
of lordly forest, with patches of clearing; bits of
tropical vegetation at hand, and over them and over
it all a tropical sky. In one direction the view
was very open. Eleanor could discern a bit of
a pathway winding through it, and once or twice a
dark figure moving along its course. This was
Vuliva! this was her foreign home! the region where
darkness and light were struggling foot by foot for
the mastery; where heathen temples were falling and
heathen misery giving place to the joy of the gospel,
but where the gospel had to fight them yet. Eleanor
looked till her heart was too full to look any longer;
and then turned aside to get the only possible relief
in prayer.
The hour was near gone when she went
to her window again. The day was cooling towards
the evening. Well she guessed that this window
had been specially arranged for her. In everything
that had been done in the house she had seen that
same watchful care for her pleasure and comfort.
There never was a house that seemed to be so love’s
work; Mr. Rhys’s own hand had most manifestly
been everywhere; and the furniture that Mrs. Caxton
had sent he had placed. But Mrs. Caxton had not
sent all. Eleanor’s eye rested on a dressing-table
that certainly never came from England. It was
pretty enough; it was very pretty, even to her notions;
yet it had cost nothing, and was as nearly as possible
made of nothing. Yes, for she looked; the frame
was only some native reeds or canes and a bit of board;
the rest was white muslin drapery, which would pack
away in a very few square inches of room, but now hung
in pretty folds around the glass and covered the frame.
Eleanor just looked and wondered; no more; for the
hour was up, and she went to her window and raised
the jalousies again. She was more quiet now,
she thought; but her heart throbbed with the thought
of Mr. Rhys and his return.
She looked over the beautiful wild
country, watching for him. The light was fair
on the blue hills; the sea-breeze fluttered the leaves
of the cocoanut trees and waved the long thick leaves
of the banana. She heard no other sound near
or far, till the quick swift tread she was listening
for came to her ear. Nobody was to be seen; but
the step was not to be mistaken. Eleanor got
to the front door and had it open just in time to
see him come.
They stood then together in the doorway,
for the view was fair on the river side too.
The opposite shore was beautiful, and the houses of
the heathen village had a great interest for Eleanor,
aside from their effect as part of the landscape;
but her shyness was upon her again, and she had a
thorough consciousness that Mr. Rhys did not see how
the light fell on either shore. At last he put
his arm round her and drew her up to his side, saying,
“And so you did not get my letters
in Sydney. Poor little dove!”
It struck Eleanor with a curious pleasure,
these words. They would have been true, she knew,
in the lips of no other mortal, as also certainly
to no other mortal would it have occurred to use them.
She was not the sort of person by any means to whom
such an appellation would generally be given.
To be sure her temper was of the finest, but then also
it had a body to it. Yet here she knew it was
true; and he knew; it was spoken not by any arrogance,
but by a purely frank and natural understanding of
their mutual natures and relations. She answered
by a smile, exceeding sweet and sparkling, as well
as conscious, to the face that was looking down at
her with a little bit of provoking archness upon its
gravity; and their lips met in a long sealing kiss.
Husband and wife understood each other.
Perhaps Mr. Rhys knew it, for it seemed
as if his lips could hardly leave hers; and Eleanor’s
face was all manner of lights.
“What has become of Alfred?”
he asked, in an irrelevant kind of manner, by way
of parenthesis.
“I have not seen him hardly since
you left England. He is not under mamma’s
care now.”
“And my friend Julia? You
have told me but a mite yet about everybody.”
“Julia is your friend still.
But Julia I have not seen her in a long,
long time.”
“How is that?”
“Mamma would not let me.
O Mr. Rhys! we have been kept apart.
I could not even see her when I came away.”
“Why?”
“Mamma she was afraid of my influence
over her.”
“Is it possible!”
“Julia was going on well setting
her face to do right. Now I do not
know how it will be. Even our letters are overlooked.”
“I need not ask how your mother
is. I suppose she is trying to save one of her
daughters for the world.”
Eleanor’s thoughts swept a wide
course in a few minutes; remembered whose hand instrumentality
had saved her from such a fate and had striven for
Julia. With a sigh that was part sorrow and part
gratitude, Eleanor laid her head softly on Mr. Rhys’s
shoulder. With such tenderness as one gives to
a child, and yet rarer, because deeper and graver,
she was made at home there.
“Don’t you want to take a walk to the
chapel?”
“O yes!” But she was held fast
still.
“And shall we give sister Balliol
the pleasure of our company to tea, as we come back?”
“If you please if you like.”
“I do not like it at all,”
said Mr. Rhys frankly “but I suppose
we must.”
“Think of finding the restraints
of society even in Fiji!” said Eleanor trying
to laugh, as she brought her bonnet and they set out.
“You must find them everywhere unless
you live to please yourself;” said Mr. Rhys,
with his sweet grave look; and Eleanor was consoled.
The walk to the church was not very
long, and she could have desired it longer. The
river shore, and the view on the other side, and the
village by which they passed, the trees and the vegetable
gardens and the odd thatched roofs everything
was pretty and new to Eleanor’s eyes. They
passed all they had seen in coming from the landing
that morning, taking this time a path outside the
mission premises. Past the house with the row
of pillars in front, which Eleanor learned was a building
for the use of the various schools. A little further
on stood the chapel. It was neat and tasteful
enough to please even an English eye; and indeed looked
more English than foreign on a distant view; and standing
there in the wilderness, with its little bell-tower
rising like a witness for all that was good in the
midst of a heathen land, the feelings of those who
looked upon it had need be very tender and very deep.
“This chapel is dear to our
eyes,” said Mr. Rhys. “Everything
is, that costs such pains. This poor people have
made it; and it is one of the best pieces of work
in Fiji. It was all done by the labour of their
hearts and hands.”
“That seems to be the style
of carpentry in this country,” said Eleanor.
“The chief made up his mind
on a good principle that for a house of
the true God, neither time nor material could be too
precious. On that principle they went to work.
The timber used in the building is what we call green-heart the
best there is in Fiji. To find it, they had to
travel over many a mile of the country; and remember,
there are no oxen here, no horses; they had no teams
to help them. All must be done by the labour
of the hands. I think there were about eighty
beams of green-heart timber needed for the house some
of them twelve and some of them fifty feet long.
In about three months these were collected; found
and brought in from the woods and hills, sometimes
from ten miles away. While the young men were
doing this, the old men at home were all day beating
cocoanut husk, to separate the fibre for making sinnet.
All day long I used to hear their beaters going; it
was good music; and when at the end of every few days
the woodcutters came home with their timber so
soon as they were heard shouting the news of their
coming there was a general burst and cry
and every creature in the village set off to meet
them and help drag the logs home. Women and children
and all went; and you never saw people so happy.
“Then the building was done
in the same spirit. Many a time when I was busy
with them, overlooking their work, I have heard them
chanting to each other words from the Bible band
against band. One side would sing ’But
will God indeed dwell on the earth? Behold, the
heaven of heavens cannot contain thee; how much less
this house that I have builded.’ Then
the other side would answer, ’The Lord hath chosen
Zion; he hath desired it for his habitation.’
I cannot tell you how sweet it was. There was
another chant they were very fond of. A few would
begin with Solomon’s petition ’Have
thou respect unto the prayer of thy servant, and to
his supplication, O Lord my God, to hearken unto the
cry and to the prayer, which thy servant prayeth before
thee to-day: that thine eyes may be open toward
this house night and day, even toward the place of
which thou hast said, My name shall be there:
that thou mayest hearken unto the prayer which thy
servant shall make toward this place,’ and
here a number of the other builders would join in
with their cry ’Hearken unto the prayer
which thy servant shall make!’ And so in the
next verse, when it came near the end the others would
join in ’And when thou hearest, forgive!’ ”
“I should think you would love
it!” said Eleanor, with her eyes full of tears.
“And I should think the Lord would love it.”
“Come in, and see how it looks on the inside.”
The inside was both simple and elegant,
after a quaint fashion; for it was Fijian elegance
and Fijian simplicity. A double row of columns
led down the centre of the building; they looked like
mahogany, but it was only native wood; and the ornamental
work at top which served for their capitals, was done
in sinnet. Over the doors and windows triangular
pédiments were elaborately wrought in black with
the same sinnet. The roof was both quaint and
elegant. It was done in alternate open and close
reed-work, with broad black lines dividing it; and
ornamental lashings and bandings of sinnet were used
about the fastenings and groinings of spars and beams.
Then the wings of the communion rail were made of
reed-work, ornamented; the rail was a beautiful piece
of nut timber, and the balusters of sweet sandal wood.
The whole effect exceeding pretty and graceful, though
produced with such simple means.
“Mr. Ruskin ought to have had
this as an illustration of his ’Lamp of Sacrifice,’”
said Eleanor. “How beautiful! ”
“The ‘Lamp of Truth,’
too,” said Mr. Rhys. “It is all honest
work. That side was done by our heathen neighbours.
The heathen chief sent us his compliments, said he
heard we were engaged in a great work, and if we pleased
he would come and help us. So he did. They
built that side of the wall and the roof.”
“Did they do it well?”
“Heartily.”
“Do they come to attend worship in it?”
“The chapel is a great attraction.
Strangers come to see if not to worship, and
then we get a chance to tell the truth to them.”
“And Mr. Rhys, how is the truth prospering generally?”
“Eleanor, we want men! and
that seems to be all we want. My heart feels
ready to break sometimes, for the want of helpers.
I am glad of brother Amos coming very glad! but
we want a hundred where we have one. It is but
a few weeks since a young man came over from one of
the islands, a large and important island, bringing
tidings that a number of towns there had given up
heathenism all wanting teachers and
there were no teachers for them. In one place
the people had built a chapel; they had gone so far
as that; it was at Koroivonu and they gathered
together the next Sunday after it was finished, great
numbers of the people, filled the chapel and stood
under some bread-fruit trees in front of it, and stood
there waiting to have some one come and tell them
the truth and there was no one. My
heart is ready to weep blood when I think of these
things! The Tongan who came with the news came
with his eyes full of tears. And this is no strange
nor solitary case of Koroivonu.”
Mr. Rhys walked the floor of the little
chapel, his features working, his breast heaving.
Eleanor sat thinking how little she could do how
much she would!
“You have native helpers ?” she
said gently.
“Praise the Lord for what they
are! but we want missionaries. We want help from
England. We cannot get it from the Colonies not
fast enough. Eleanor,” and he
stopped short and faced her “a few
months ago, to give you another instance, I was beholder
of such a scene as this. I was to preach to a
community that were for the first time publicly renouncing
heathenism. It was Sunday.” Mr.
Rhys spoke slowly, evidently exercising some control
over himself; how often Eleanor had seen him do that
in the pulpit!
“I stood on the shores of a
bay, reefed in from the ocean. I wish I could
put the scene before you! On the land side, one
of the most magnificent landscapes stretched back
into the country, with almost every sort of natural
beauty. Before me the bay, with ten large canoes
moored in it. An island in the bay, I remember,
caught the light beautifully; and beyond that there
was the white fence of breakers on the reef barrier.
The smallest of the canoes would hold a hundred men;
they were the fleet of Thakomban, one of Fiji’s
fiercest kings formerly, with himself and his warriors
on board.
“My preaching place was on what
had been the dancing grounds of a village. I
had a mat stretched on three poles for an awning such
a mat as they make for sails; and around
me were nine others prepared in like manner.
This was my chapel. Just at my left hand was a
spot of ground where were ten boiling springs; and
until that Sunday, one of them had been the due appointed
place for cooking human bodies. That was the
place and the preparation I looked at in the still
Sunday morning, before service time.
“At that time, the time appointed
for service, a drum was beat and the conch shell blown;
the same shell which had been used to give the war
call. Directly all those canoes were covered with
men, and they were plunging into the water and wading
to shore. These were Thakomban and his warriors.
Not blacked and stripped and armed for fighting, but
washed and clothed. They were stopping in that
place on their way somewhere else, and now coming
and gathering to hear the preaching. On the other
side came a procession from the village; and down every
hillside and along every path, I could see scattering
groups and lines of comers from the neighbouring country.
These were the heathen inhabitants, coming
up now to hear the truth and profess by a public act
of worship that they were heathens no longer.
They all gathered round me there under the mat awnings,
and sat on the grass looking up to hear, while I told
them of Jesus.”
Mr. Rhys’s voice was choked
and he broke off abruptly. Eleanor guessed how
he had talked to that audience; she could see it in
his flushing face and quivering lip. She could
not find a word to say, and let him lead her in silence
and slowly away from the chapel and towards the mission
house. Before entering the plantation again, Eleanor
stopped and said in a low voice,
“What can I do?”
He gave her a look of that moved sweetness
she had seen in him all day, and answered with his
usual abruptness,
“You can pray.”
“I do that.”
“Pray as Paul prayed for
your mother, and for Julia, and for Fiji, and for
me. Do you know how that was?”
“I know what some of his prayers were.”
“Yes, but I never thought how
Paul prayed, until the other day. You must put
the scattered hints together. Wait until we are
at home I will shew you.”
He pushed open the wicket and they
went in; and the rest of the evening Eleanor talked
to Mrs. Amos or to Mr. Balliol; she sheered off a little
from his wife. There was plenty of interesting
conversation going on with one and another; but Eleanor
had a little the sense of being to that lady an object
of observation, and drew into a corner or into the
shade as much as she could.
“Your wife is very handsome,
brother Rhys,” Mrs. Balliol remarked in an aside,
towards the end of the evening.
“That is hardly much praise
from you, sister Balliol,” he answered gravely.
“I know you do not set much store by appearances.”
“She is very young!”
Both looked over to the opposite corner
where Eleanor was talking to Mrs. Amos, sitting on
a low seat and looking up; a little drawn back into
the shade, yet not so shaded but that the womanly modest
sweetness of her face could be seen well enough.
Mr. Rhys made no answer.
“I judge, brother Rhys, that
she has been brought up in the great world,” Mrs.
Balliol went on, looking across to the ruffled sleeve.
“She is not in it now,” Mr. Rhys observed
quietly.
“No; she is in good
hands. But, brother Rhys, do you think our sister
understands exactly what sort of work she has come
to do here?”
“She is teachable,” he
answered with great imperturbability.
“Well, you will be able to train
her, if she wants it. I am glad to know she is
in such good hands. I think she has hardly yet
a just notion of what lies before her, brother Rhys.”
“When did you make your observations?”
“She was with me, you know you
left her with me this morning. We were alone,
and we had a little conversation.”
“Mrs. Balliol, do you think
a just notion of anything call be formed in
half an hour?”
His question was rather grave, and
the lady’s eyes wavered from meeting his.
She fidgeted a little.
“O you know best, of course,”
she said; “I have had very little opportunity I
only judged from the want of seriousness; but that
might have been from some other cause. You must
excuse me, if I spoke too frankly.”
“You can never do that to me,”
he said. “Thank you, sister Balliol.
I will take care of her.”
Mrs. Balliol was reassured. But
neither during their walk home nor ever after, did
Mr. Rhys tell Eleanor of this little bit of talk that
had concerned her.