“Oh, dear Mrs. Graham!”
said my neighbour Mrs. Jones to me one day, “what
shall I do for good help? I am almost worried
out of my senses. I wish somebody would invent
a machine to cook, wash, scrub, and do housework in
general. What a blessing it would be! As
for the whole tribe of flesh and blood domestics,
they are not worth their salt.”
“They are all poorly educated,”
I replied, “and we cannot expect much of them.
Most of them have nearly every thing to learn when
they come into our houses, and are bad scholars into
the bargain. But we must have patience.
I find it my only resource.”
“Patience!” ejaculated
Mrs. Jones, warmly. “It would require more
patience than Job ever possessed to get along with
some of them.”
“And yet,” said I, “we
accomplish little or nothing by impatience. At
least such is my experience.”
“I don’t know, ma’am,”
replied Mrs. Jones. “If you go to being
gentle and easy with them, if you don’t follow
them up at every point, you will soon have affairs
in a pretty condition! They don’t care
a fig for your comfort nor interest-not
they! In fact, more than half of them would,
a thousand times, rather make things disagreeable
for you than otherwise.”
“I know they are a great trial,
sometimes,” I answered, not feeling at liberty
to say to my visitor all I thought. “But
we must endeavour to bear it the best we can.
That is my rule; and I find, in the long run, that
I get on much better when I repress all exhibition
of annoyance at their carelessness, short-comings,
neglect, or positive misdeeds, than I do when I let
them see that I am annoyed, or exhibit the slightest
angry feeling.”
Not long after this, we accepted an
invitation to take tea with Mr. and Mrs. Jones, and
I then had an opportunity of seeing how she conducted
herself towards her domestics. I was in no way
surprised, afterwards, that she found difficulty in
getting along with servants.
Soon after my husband and myself went
in, and while we were sitting in the parlour, Mrs.
Jones had occasion to call a servant. I noticed
that, when she rung the bell, she did so with a quick
jerk; and I could perceive a tone of authority in
the ting-a-ling of the bell, the sound of which was
distinctly heard. Nearly two minutes passed before
the servant made her appearance, in which time the
bell received a more vigorous jerk. At last she
entered, looking flushed and hurried.
“What’s the reason you
did not come when I first rung?” inquired our
lady hostess, in a severe tone.
“I-I-came
as quick as I could,” replied the girl, with
a look of mortification at being spoken to before
strangers.
“No, you didn’t!
It’s your custom to wait until I ring twice.
Now let this be the last time!”
And then, in a low voice, Mrs. Jones
gave the direction for which she had summoned her.
“Such a set!” ejaculated
the lady, as the girl left the room. Her words
were intended to reach other ears besides ours; and
so they did. “That girl,” she continued,
addressing me, “has a habit of making me ring
twice. It really seems to give them pleasure,
I believe, to annoy you. Ah, me! this trouble
with servants is a never ending one. It meets
you at every turn.”
And, for some time, she animadverted
upon her favourite theme-for such it appeared
to be,-until her husband, who was evidently
annoyed, managed to change the subject of discourse.
Once or twice she came back to it before tea-time.
At last the tea bell rung, and we
ascended to the dining-room. We were but fairly
seated, when a frown darkened suddenly on the brow
of our hostess, and her hand applied itself nervously
to the table-bell.
The girl who had set the table came
up from the kitchen.
“There is no sugar in the bowl,”
said Mrs. Jones sharply. “I wish you would
learn to set the table while you are about it.
I’m sure I have spoken to you often enough.”
As the girl took the sugar-bowl to
fill it, the frown left the face of our hostess, and
she turned to me with a bland smile, and asked whether
I used sugar and cream in my tea. I replied in
the affirmative; but did not smile in return, for
I could not. I knew the poor girl’s feelings
were hurt at being spoken to in such a way before
strangers, and this made me extremely uncomfortable.
“Do you call this cream?”
was the angry interrogation of Mrs. Jones, as the
girl returned with the sugar, pushing towards her the
cream-jug, which she had lifted from the table as she
spoke.
“Yes, ma’am,” was replied.
“Look at it, and see, then.”
“It’s the cream,” said the girl.
“If that’s cream, I never
want to see milk. Here! take it away and bring
me the cream.”
The girl looked confused and distressed.
But she took the cream-jug and went down-stairs with
it.
“That’s just the way they
always do!” said Mrs. Jones; leaning back in
her chair. “I really get out of all patience,
sometimes.”
In a little while the girl returned.
“It’s the cream, ma’am,
as I said. Here’s the milk.”
And she presented two vessels.
Mrs. Jones took both from her hands
with an ill-natured jerk. Sure enough, it was
as the girl had said.
“Such cream!” fell from
the lips of our hostess, as she commenced pouring
it into the cups already filled with tea.
The girl went down-stairs to take
back the milk she had brought up, but she was scarcely
at the bottom of the stairs, when the bell was rung
for her.
“Why don’t you stay here?
What are you running off about?” said Mrs. Jones,
as she came in hurriedly. “You know I want
you to wait on the table.”
And so it was during the whole meal.
The girl was not once spoken to except in a tone of
anger or offensive authority.
I was no longer surprised that Mrs.
Jones found it difficult to keep good domestics, for
no one of feeling can long remain with a woman who
speaks to them always in a tone of command, or who
reproves them in the presence of visitors.
My husband was very severe upon Mrs.
Jones after we returned home. “No lady,”
said he, “ever spoke in anger or reproof to a
domestic before a visitor or stranger. Nothing
more surely evinces a vulgar and unfeeling mind.”
I did not attempt to gainsay his remark,
for he expressed but my own sentiment. So far
from uttering a reproof in the presence of a visitor,
I am careful not to speak to my domestics about any
fault even in the presence of my husband. They
have a certain respect for themselves, and a certain
delicacy of feeling, which we should rather encourage
than break down. Nearly all domestics are careful
to appear as well as possible in the eyes of the head
of the family, and it hurts them exceedingly to be
reproved, or angrily spoken to, before him. This
every woman ought to know by instinct, and those who
do not are just so far deficient in the aggregate of
qualities that go to make up the true lady.
I was by no means surprised to hear
from Mrs. Jones, a few days afterwards, that the “good-for-nothing
creature” who waited upon the table on the occasion
of our taking tea at her house, had gone away and
left her. I thought better of the girl for having
the spirit to resent, in this way, the outrage committed
upon her feelings. Domestics have rights and
feelings; and if people were to regard these more,
and treat them with greater kindness and consideration
than they do, there would be fewer complaints than
there are at present. This is my opinion, and
I must be pardoned for expressing it.