During the half hour bestowed on lunch
the weather apparently devoted itself to falsifying
Mrs. Devereux’s prediction, and raising Pollie
to the position of a prophetess. It is a curious
fact that in Australia few people are weather-wise.
No one can tell, for instance, with any certainty,
when it will rain. No one can say with precision
when it will not rain. All other forms of weather,
be it understood, are immaterial. Rain means
everything peace, plenty, prosperity, the
potentiality of boundless wealth; the want of it losses
and crosses, sin, suffering, and starvation.
For nearly two years the hearts of the dwellers in
that vast pastoral region had been made sick with
hope deferred. Now, without warning, with no
particular indication of change from the long, warm
days and still, cloudless nights that seemed as if
they would never end, that earth would gradually become
desiccated into a grave of all living creatures, suddenly
it commenced to rain as if to reproduce the Noachian
deluge.
The larger creeks bore a turgid tide,
level with their banks, on the surface of which tree-stems
and branches, with differing samples of debris,
whirled floating down.
As the hours passed by with no abatement
of violence in the falling of the rain or the fury
of the storm, in which the wind had arisen, and raged
with tempestuous fury in the darkened sky, a feeling
of awe and alarm crept over the minds of the two women.
‘There is not a soul about the
place, I believe,’ said Mrs. Devereux; ’Mr.
Gateward is away, and every man and boy with him.
During all the years I have been here I have never
seen such a storm. Poor Bertram! I hope
he has taken shelter somewhere. This cold rain
is enough to kill him, with such thin clothing as
he has on. But of course he will stay at Baradeen;
it would be madness to come on.’
’He said that he would be home
to-night, wet or dry. Those were his last words,
and he’s rather obstinate. Haven’t
you remarked that, mother?’
‘I am afraid he is. It
runs in the blood,’ the elder remarked, with
a sigh. ’But there will be no danger unless
the Wawanoo Creek is up. It never rises unless
the river does, and there’s not rain enough for
that.’
‘There seems rain enough for
anything,’ said the girl, shuddering. ’Hark!
how it is pouring down now. It will be dark in
an hour. I do wish Bertram was home.’
The creek alluded to was a ravine
of considerable size and depth, which, serving as
one of the anabranches of the river, was rarely filled
except in flood time, when it acted as a canal for
the purpose of carrying off the superfluous water.
Now it was almost dry, and apparently would remain
so. It could be distinctly seen from the windows
of the room where they were sitting.
At a sudden cry from the girl Mrs.
Devereux went to the window. ’What a wonder
of wonders!’ she said; ’the Wawanoo is
coming down. The paling fence in the flat has
been carried away.’
The fence alluded to was a high and
close palisade across a portion of the flat, down
which ran one of the channels of the said Wawanoo Creek.
An unusual body of rain, falling apparently during
one of the thunder-showers, had completely submerged
the valley, which, narrowing above the said fence,
and being dammed back by it, finally overbore it,
and rushed down the main channel of the creek in a
yeasty flood.
‘The creek will be twenty feet
deep where the road crosses it now,’ said Pollie.
’If he comes to it he will have to swim.
He will never think of its being so deep, and he might
be drowned. I knew something would happen.
What a lucky thing he took Guardsman!’
As she spoke her mother pointed to
a spot where the track crossed the creek. The
road itself was now plainly marked as a sepia-coloured,
brown line winding through the grassless, herbless,
grey levels of the drought-stricken waste. A
horseman was riding at speed along the clearly printed
track, through the misty lines of fast-falling rain.
‘It is Bertram coming back,’
cried Pollie. ’I know Guardsman’s
long stride; how he is throwing the dirt behind him!
I wouldn’t mind the ride myself if I had an
old habit on. It must be great fun to be as wet
as he must be, and to know one cannot be any worse.
Do you think he will try to swim the creek?’
‘He does not seem to dream of
pulling up,’ said Mrs. Devereux. ’Very
likely he thinks it can’t be deep when he crossed
dry-shod this morning.’
‘Oh, look!’ cried the
girl, with a long-drawn inspiration. ’He
has ridden straight in without stopping. What
a plunge! They are both over head and ears in
it. But Guardsman swims well. Mr. Gateward
told me he saw him in the last flood, when he was
only a colt. I can see his head; how he shakes
it! Gallant old fellow! And there is Bertram
sitting as quietly as if he was on dry land.
They will be carried down lower, but it is good shelving
land on this side. Now they are out, rather staggering,
but safe. Thank God for that! Oh, mother
are you not glad?’
As Bertram and the brown made joint
entrance to the square opposite the stable-yard, dripping
like a sea-horse bestridden by a merman, he saw a
feminine figure in the verandah of the barracks gesticulating
wildly to him, and in a fashion demanding to be heard.
’Mother says you are to come
in directly and change your clothes and take something
hot, and not to stay out a moment longer than you can
help.’
‘I must see Guardsman made snug
first,’ answered the young man, with the same
immovable quiet voice, in which not the slightest inflection
betrayed any hint of unusual risk. ’I really
couldn’t answer it to my conscience to turn
him out to-night. I won’t be long, however.’
‘When it does rain here
it rains hard, I must admit!’ said Mr. Devereux
an hour afterwards, as, completely renovated and very
carefully attired, he presented himself at dinner.
’Could not have imagined such a transformation
scene of earth and sky. The plain has become a
gigantic batter pudding, and the ludicrous attempt
at a brook the Wawanoo Creek is
a minor Mississippi. I thought the old horse would
have been swept right down once.’
’You will find our rivers and
some other Australian matters are not to be laughed
at,’ answered Pollie, with a heightened colour.
’But mother and I are too glad to see you back
safe to scold you for anything you might say to-night.’
‘Really I feel quite heroic,’
he answered, with a smile which was rarely bestowed
with so much kindness; ’I suppose people are
drowned now and then.’
‘I should think so,’ said
Pollie. ’Do you remember that poor young
Clarence, from Amhurst, two or three years ago?
He was very anxious to get to the Bindera station,
where they were having a party; he was told the creek
was dangerous, but would try. His horse got caught
in a log or something, and came over with him.
He was drowned, and carried into the Bindera house
next morning a corpse.’
’Very sad. But men must
drop in life’s battle now and then. There
would be too many of us fellows else “crawling
between earth and heaven,” as Hamlet says.’
‘What a cold-blooded way to
talk!’ said Pollie; ’but of course you
really do not think so. Think of quitting life
suddenly with all its pleasures.’
‘Pleasures?’ replied Mr.
Devereux abruptly. ’Yes! I daresay
very young persons look at it in that light.
After all it’s quite a lottery like other games
of pitch and toss. Sometimes the backers have
it all their own way. Then comes a “fielder’s”
year, and the first-named are obliterated.’
’Then do you really think life
is only another name for a sort of Derby Day on a
large scale, or a Grand National?’ demanded Pollie,
with a shocked expression of countenance ’at
the end of which one man is borne in a shining hero,
aglow with triumph, while another breaks his neck
over the last leap, or loses fame and fortune irrevocably;
and that neither can help the appointed lot?’
Her cousin regarded her for a moment
with a fixed and searching gaze. Then a ripple
of merriment broke over his features, and a rarely
seen expression of frank admiration succeeded to the
ordinary composure of his visage. ’I don’t
go quite as far as that.
“There’s a divinity
that shapes our ends,
Rough-hew them how we will.”
But I am afraid few of us live as
if we thought so. That ever I should have found
myself in Australia was at one time so unlikely, so
all but impossible, that I may well believe in the
interposition of a Ruler of Events.’
‘I believe they’ve had
rain,’ is the usual answer to him who ‘speirs’
in Australia as to the pastoral welfare of a particular
province, district, or locality. It is unnecessary
to say more. ’Man wants but little here
below’ is comparatively true; but a short supply
of the aqueous fluid on land parallels in its destructive
effects the over abundance at sea. When the rain
is withheld for a year or two years, as the case may
be, losses accumulate, and ruin stalks on apace.
The severity of the acknowledged droughts, not merely
accidental drynesses, is comparative, and is often
matter of conversation.
‘This is the worst drought known
for many years,’ was remarked to a young but
war-worn pioneer.
‘Pretty well, but not equal
to that of 187-,’ he made answer.
‘Why do you think so?’
‘When that drought commenced,’
he said slowly, ’we had nine thousand head of
cattle on our run on the Darwin. When it broke
up we mustered sixteen hundred, and on foot too:
we had not had a horse to ride for eighteen months.’
From such merciless disaster was Corindah
now saved. Prosperity was assured for at least
two years, as well to that spacious property which
comprehended 290,000 acres (and not a bad one among
them, as Mr. Gateward was fond of asserting) as to
a hundred similar pastoral leaseholds from the Macquarie
to the Darr. An entirely new state of matters
had suddenly arisen. In all directions telegraphic
messages were speeding through space, withdrawing
this lot of 20,000 ewes or that of a thousand store
bullocks from sale; while eager forecasting operators
like Mr. Jack Charteris had swept up the supply of
saleable sheep, and left their more cautious comrades
lamenting their inability to purchase except at prices
which ‘left no margin,’ the alternative
being to have tens of thousands of acres of waving
prairie ‘going to waste’ for want of stock
to eat it. The face of Nature had indeed changed.
Within a fortnight the arid dusty plains, so barren
of aspect, were carpeted with a green mantle, wondrously
vivid of hue and rapid of growth. The creek ran
musically murmuring towards the river, which itself
‘came down,’ a tawny, turbid stream bank
high, and in places overflowing into long dry lagoons
and lakelets. Even the birds of the air seemed
to be apprised of the wondrous atmospheric change.
Great flocks of wild-fowl soared in, migrating from
undreamed of central wastes. The lakelets and
the river reaches were alive with the heron and the
egret. The bird of the wilderness, with giant
beak and sweeping wing, was there in battalions; while
the roar of wings when a cloud of wild-fowl rose from
water was like a discharge of artillery.
Bertram Devereux was, in his heart,
truly astonished at the wondrous change wrought in
the outward appearance of the region, in the manner
and bearing of the dwellers therein, in the tone of
the leading newspapers, in everybody’s plans,
position, and prospects, which had been wrought by
so simple and natural an agent. He, however, carefully
preserved his ordinary incurious, impassive immobility,
and after casually remarking that this was evidently
one of the lands known to the author of the Arabian
Nights, and that somebody had been rubbing the
magic lamp, and commanded a genie to fetch a few million
tons of water from Ireland or Upper India, where it
was superfluous, and deliver it here, made no other
observation, but rode daily with Mr. Gateward over
the sodden, springing pastures, wading through the
overflowing marshes, and swimming the dangerous creeks
‘where ford there was none,’ as if he
had always expected the West Logan to be akin to the
west of Ireland as to soil and climate, and was not
disappointed in his expectation.
On the morning after the flood Harold
Atherstone had betaken himself to the metropolis,
only to be forestalled by Jack Charteris in his rapid
and comprehensive purchases of stock. Doubtless
other pastoral personages had been duly informed by
the magic wire of the momentous change, but even then,
such had been the terror, the suffering, the dire
endurance of every evil of a twofold ruin, that numbers
of owners were found willing to sell their advertised
sheep at a very slight advance upon the pre-pluvial
prices. So might they be assured of the solvency
and security which they had dreaded would never be
theirs again. So might they again lay their heads
on their pillow at night, thanking God for all His
mercies, and for the safety of the future of those
dear to them. So might they again be enabled
to go forth among their fellow-men, strong in the
consciousness that the aching dread, the long-deferred
hope, the dark despair slowly creeping on like some
dimly seen but implacable beast of prey, were things
of the past, phantoms and shadows to be banished for
ever from their unhaunted lives.
All these but lately altered circumstances
were distinctly in favour of a quick and decisive
operator, as was Harold Atherstone when he ’saw
his way.’ Not a plunger like Jack Charteris,
he was firm and rapid of evolution when he had distinctly
demonstrated his course of action. So when he
returned to Maroobil after a month’s absence,
he had as many sheep on the road, at highly paying
prices, as would keep that ‘well-known fattening
station’ and Corindah besides in grass-eaters
for many a month to come. Mrs. Devereux was full
of gratitude towards him for managing her delegated
business so safely and promptly, and again and again
declared that there was no living man like Harold Atherstone.
He was always to be relied on in the hour of need.
He never made mistakes, or was taken in, or forgot
things, or procrastinated, like other men. When
he said he would do a thing, that thing was done, if
it was in the compass of mortal man to do it.
‘In short,’ said Pollie,
before whom and for whose benefit and edification
this effusive statement was made, ’in short,
he is perfection a man without a fault.
What a pity it is that paragons are never attractive!’
‘Beware of false fires, my darling,’
said the tender mother ’misleading
lights of feeling apart from reason, which are apt
to wreck the trusting, and to end in despairing darkness.’
Among the visitors to Corindah, who
made at least a bi-monthly call, was the Honourable
Hector MacCallum, M.L.C.
He was a prosperous bachelor, verging
on middle age, with several good stations, and an
enviable power of leaving them in charge of managers
and overseers, while he disported himself in the pleasantest
spots of the adjacent colonies, or indeed wheresoever
he listed sometimes even in Tasmania, where
he was famed for his picnics, four-in-hand driving,
and liberality in entertaining. In that favoured
isle, where maidens fair do so greatly preponderate,
Mr. MacCallum might have brought back a wife from
any of his summer trips; and few would have asserted
that the damsel honoured by his choice was other than
among the fairest and sweetest of that rose-garden
of girls.
But then something always prevented
him. He wanted to go to New Zealand. It
was impossible to settle down before he had seen the
wonders of that wonderland the pink-and-white
terraces, the geysers, the paradisiacal gardens, the
Eves that flitted through the ‘rata’ thickets,
the fountains that dripped and flashed through the
hush of midnight. Something was always incomplete.
He would come again. And more than one fair cheek
grew pale, and bright eyes lost their lustre, ere the
inconstant squatter prince was heralded anew.
But now it seemed as if the goodly
fish, which had so often drawn back and disappeared,
was about to take the bait.
Mr. MacCallum’s visits were
apparently accidental. He happened to be in that
part of the country, and took the opportunity of calling.
He was on his way to Melbourne or Sydney, and was
sure he could execute a commission for Mrs. Devereux
or Miss Pollie. This, of course, involved a visit
on the way back. He was a good-looking, well-preserved
man, so that his forty odd years did not put him at
much disadvantage, if any, when he came into competition
with younger men. Indeed, it is asserted by the
experienced personages of their own sex that young
girls are in general not given to undervalue the attentions
of men older than themselves. It flatters their
vanity or gratifies their self-esteem to discover
that their callow charms and undeveloped intellects,
so lately emancipated from the prosaic thraldom of
the schoolroom, suffice to attract men who have seen
the world have, perhaps, borne themselves
‘manful under shield’ in the battlefield
of life, have struck hard in grim conflicts where
quarter is neither given nor received, and been a
portion of the great ‘passion-play’ of
the universe. They look down upon their youthful
admirers as comparatively raw and inexperienced, like
themselves. Theirs is a career of hope and expectation
all to come, like their own. They like and esteem
them, perhaps take their parts in rehearsals of the
old, old melodrama. But in many cases it is not
till they see at their feet the war-worn soldier,
the scarred veteran who has tempted fate so often
in the great hazards of the campaign, who has shared
the cruel privations, the deadly hazards of real life that
the imaginative heart of woman fills up all the spaces
in the long-outlined sketch of the hero and the king,
the lord and master of her destiny, to whom she is
henceforth proud to yield worship and loving service.
Why Mr. MacCallum did not marry all
this time he owned to thirty-seven, and
his enemies said he was more like forty-five the
dwellers in the country towns on the line of march
exhausted themselves in conjecturing. The boldest
hazarded the guess that he might have an unacknowledged
wife ‘at home.’ Others averred that
he was pleasure-loving, of epicurean, self-indulgent
tastes, having neither high ambition nor religious
views. They would be sorry to trust Angelina
or Frederica to such a guardianship. Besides,
he was getting quite old. In a few years there
would be a great change in him. He had aged a
good deal since that last trip of his to Europe, when
he had the fever in Rome. Of course he was wealthy,
but money was not everything, and a man who spent the
greater part of the year at his club was not likely
to make a particularly good husband.
The object of all this criticism,
comment, and secret exasperation was a squarely built,
well-dressed man, slightly above the middle height,
and with that indefinable ease of manner and social
tact that travel, leisure, and the possession of an
assured position generally produce. He was kindly,
amusing, invariably polite, and deferential to women
of all ages; and there were few who did not acknowledge
the charm of his manner, even when they abused him
in his absence, or deceived him for their own purposes.
In spite of all he was popular, was the Honourable
Hector, a man of wide and varied experience, of a bearing
and general tournure which left little to be
desired. In the matter of courtship he knew sufficiently
well that it was injudicious to force the running;
that a waiting race was his best chance. He took
care never to prolong his visit; always to encircle
himself with some surrounding of interest during his
stay at Corindah. He pleased Pollie and her mother
by being in possession of the newest information on
all subjects in which he knew they were interested.
He was good-natured and bon camarade with the
young men, at the same time in a quiet way exhibiting
a slight superiority as of one whose sphere
was larger, whose possessions, interests, opportunities,
and prospects generally, placed him upon a different
plane from that with which the ordinary individual
must be contented. This, of course, rendered
more effective the habitual deference which he invariably
yielded to both the ladies whom he wished to propitiate,
rightly deeming that all the avenues to Pollie’s
heart were guarded by the mental presentment of her
mother.
‘Really, we quite miss Mr. MacCallum
when he leaves Corindah,’ said Pollie one day,
as she watched the well-appointed mail-phaeton and
high-bred horses which that gentleman always affected,
disappearing in the distance. ’He’s
most amusing and well-informed; his manners are so
finished really, there is hardly anything
about him that you could wish altered.’
’So clever and practical, too,
said Mrs. Devereux. ’He showed me in a
few minutes how he was going to lay out the garden
at the new house at Wanwondah. Really, it will
be the most lovely place. And the irrigation
is from a plan of his own.’
‘It’s almost a pity to
be so extravagant there, isn’t it?’ said
her daughter. ’He told me he never saw
it except in the winter and spring. He always
spends the summer in some other colony. This year
he will go to the hot springs of Waiwera, and see
all that delicious North Island, and those unutterably
lovely pink-and-white terraces. How I should like
to go!’
‘Quite easy,’ said Harold
Atherstone, who had been standing by the mantlepiece
apparently in a fit of abstraction. ’You’ve
to say “yes” to the Honourable Hector’s
unspoken prayer, and he’ll take you there, or
to the moon, when Mr. Cook discovers a practicable
route. He’s not more than twenty years
older than you are hardly that.’
’So you think I am likely to
marry for the new house at Wanwondah Crossing-place?’
retorted Pollie. ’Also for the power of
going away and leaving all you stupid people to be
roasted and boiled during the long dismal summer?
Poor things! what would you do without me to tease
you all? But it’s a strange peculiarity
of society, I believe, that a girl can never make
any personal remark but invariably the next idea suggested
to her by her friends is, “Whom is she trying
to marry?” That being so, why shouldn’t
I marry Mr. MacCallum? Not that he has ever asked
me.’
’But he will you
know he will and if you allow yourself to
be carried away by dreams of luxury and unlimited
power of travel, which is more likely, you will regret
it once only that is, all your life after.’
‘But say you are not serious,
my darling,’ said her mother, with a half-alarmed
look. ’Really, I will take you to Tasmania,
or even New Zealand, though it’s dreadfully
rough anywhere, rather than you should
be tempted to act against your better judgment.
Mr. MacCallum is extremely nice and suitable but
he is far too old for you.’
‘I don’t see that at all,’
replied the young lady petulantly. ’I like
some one I can look up to. All women do.
He knows the world of society, letters, politics not
only of these colonies either. Most other girls
would perhaps the phrase is vulgar “jump
at him.” Besides, he is most amusing.
Not a mere talker, but full of crisp, pleasant expressions
and suggestions. He is a new magazine, with the
leaves uncut. Not like some people, gloomy and
abstracted half the time.’
‘You don’t see him
when he’s off colour excuse my slang,’
answered the young man. ’He is not always
amusing, people say. But that’s not my
affair. If age and experience are the valued qualities,
I’m sorry I was not born a generation earlier.
And now I must say good-bye; I’m wanted at the
back-block Inferno, and have no idea when I shall see
you again.’
‘If you are not here this day
fortnight,’ said the young lady, with a solemn
and tragic expression, ‘and at tea-time, see
to it.’
’But there’s all sorts
of trouble at Ban Ban. The dogs are showing up.
All the sheep have to come in. There are no shepherds
to be got. My working overseer is laid up with
acute rheumatism. How can I ’
‘Shepherd or no shepherd,’
persisted the girl, ’rain or shine rheumatism
or not this day fortnight, or you will take
the consequence.’
‘I suppose I must manage it,’
quoth the unfortunate young man. ’Do you
remember your Ivanhoe: “Gurth, the
son of Beowulf, is the born thrall of Cedric of Rotherwood”?
Seems to me that villenage is not extinct, even in
this colonial and democratic community.’
‘And a very good thing too,’
retorts this haughty, undisciplined damsel. ’The
feudal system had an amazing deal of good about it.
I don’t see why we shouldn’t revive it
out here.’
‘Looks rather it at present!’
grumbled Harold. ’Good-bye, Mrs. Devereux.
Fortunately the rain’s general, so we can stand
a good deal of oppression and intimidation.’
’In the spring
a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts
of
love,’
sang the laureate. And the parallel
is sound. Of course it always rains in spring
in England.
But suppose it didn’t as
in Australia? He would find that things went
differently. The ‘wanton lapwing’
would not get himself another crest, and the poet
would have to furnish himself with another example.
In the absence of rain we can assure
our readers that things are much otherwise, even with
the dumb and feathered tribes. The wild-fowl do
come down in a serious, philosophical sort of way.
But what they do in effect is this:
They say ’We have
ciphered this thing out, and have come to the conclusion
that it is not going to rain, that it will be a dry
spring. That being the case, we are not going
to pair, or build, or lay eggs, or going through the
ordinary foolishness, in anticipation of rain and
certain other adjuncts to matrimony, which will
not come.
And they do not pair.
How are such things managed?
Who teaches the birds of the air? How do they
know it is going to keep dry?
Yet the results are as I state.
There is no young family to provide for, no presents,
no trousseaux and a very good thing, too,
under the circumstances.
So with the social and amatory enterprises
of the human inhabitants of the dry country; the phenomenon
of six inches of rain or otherwise makes all the difference.
Mr. Oldhand had promised to build his youngest son
Dick a new cottage at the Bree Bree station, which
he had managed for him successfully for several years,
after which Dick’s marriage with Mary Newcome
was to take place, they having been engaged, as was
well known to the neighbours here, for the last three
years. But the season ‘set in dry.’
Dick had a bad lambing, and lost sheep besides.
So the cottage can’t be built this year, the
marriage is put off, and Dick’s manly countenance
wears an air of settled gloom.
Ergo, it follows that immediately
upon the supervening of a period of unexampled prosperity,
consequent upon the abnormal rainfall which ‘ran’
Wawanoo Creek in half an hour, and narrowly escaped
devoting Bertram Devereux to the unappeased deities
of the waste as a befitting sacrifice, proposals of
marriage were thick in the air, and matrimonial offers
became nearly as plentiful as bids for store sheep.
When Hector MacCallum therefore, as
became him, gallantly took the lead as representative
of the marrying pastoral section, no one wondered.
Speculation and conjecture doubtless, were evoked as
to where the many-stationed Sultan might deign to
cast his coveted kerchief. In despite of inter-provincial
jealousies, however, no one was much astonished when
reliable information was disseminated to the effect
that he had been on a visit of nearly a week to Corindah,
had been seen driving Mrs. and Miss Devereux to points
of interest in the neighbourhood in his mail-phaeton,
that his groom’s livery was more resplendent
than ever, and that the famous chestnuts had been replaced
by a team of brown horses, admirably matched, thorough-bred,
and said to be the most valuable turn-out in work
on this side of the line. Acidulated persons,
as usual, made exclamation to the effect that ’they
never could see what there was in that girl; some people
had wonderful luck; boldness and assurance seemed
to take better than any other qualities with the men
nowadays,’ and so on. But when gradually
it oozed out that there was no triumphant proclamation
of engagement after all, that Mr. MacCallum was going
to England, could not be back for two or three years,
etc. all of which certainly pointed
to the fact of his proposals having been declined,
impossible as such a fact would appear the
clamour of the hard-to-please contingent rose loud
and high. ’What did the girl want?
Was she waiting for a prince of the blood? After
having befooled all the men within her reach, from
Jack Charteris to the parson, and ending up with a
man old enough to be her father, and who certainly
should have known better, was it not heartless and
indecent to treat him as she had done? Would not
the whole district cry shame upon her, and she be
left lamenting in a few years, deserted by every one
that had any sense? A vinegary old maid in the
future it would be all her own fault, and
that of her mother’s ridiculous vanity and indulgence.’
All unknowing or careless of these
arrows of criticism, the free and fearless maiden
pursued her career. Mr. MacCallum had, at a well-chosen
moment, made his effort and pressed with practised
persistence for a favourable answer. But in vain.
Under other conditions, men of his age and attributes
have been frequently successful, to the wrath and
astonishment of younger rivals. But circumstances
have been in their favour. Poverty, ignorance
of the world, ambition on the part of the girl’s
friends, gratitude, have all or each conspired in such
case to turn the scale in favour of the wealthy and
adroit, if mature, wooer. And so the contract,
often a fairly happy one, is concluded.
But in this case Love, the lord of
all, had fair play for once. Pollie had distinctly
made up her mind, since she was conscious of possessing
such a faculty, that she would never marry any one
unless she was in love with him ardently, passionately,
romantically, without any manner of doubt. People
might come and try to please. She could not help
that. It was hardly in her nature to be cold
or rude to anybody. But as to marrying any one
she only liked, she would die first.
She liked, she respected, she in every
way approved of Mr. MacCallum; but no! She was
much honoured, flattered, and pleased, and really shrank
from the idea of giving him so much pain. Mr.
MacCallum exaggerated his probable agonies in such
a way that a weaker woman might probably have given
in from sheer pity. But as to marrying
him, it was out of the question. Her answer was
‘No,’ and nothing could ever alter it.
So the Honourable Hector had to depart
in a more disappointed and disgusted frame of mind
than had happened to His Royal Highness for many a
day. Drought, debts, dingoes, travelling sheep,
were all as nothing to this crowning disaster.
Everything else being so flourishing, it was a thunderbolt
out of a blue sky, crushing his equanimity and self-satisfaction
to the dust.
Not his happiness, however. A
middle-aged bachelor with a good digestion and enviable
bank balance is not whatever the sensational
novelist may assert usually slaughtered
by one such miscalculation. He does not like
it, of course. He fumes and frets for a week or
two, and probably says, ‘Confound the girl!
I thought she really liked me.’ Then he
falls back upon the time-honoured calculation a
most arithmetically correct one of those
‘other fish in the sea.’ Claret has
a soothing effect. The Club produces alleviating
symptoms. And the Laird of Cockpen either marries
the next young lady on his list, or, departing to far
lands, discovers that the supply of Calypsos and Ariadnes
is practically unlimited.
MacCallum, like a shrewd personage,
as he was, held his tongue and took the next mail
for Europe, reappearing within two years with an exceedingly
handsome and lady-like wife, who did full justice to
his many good qualities, was very popular, and made
Wanwondah quite the show country-house of the neighbourhood.