THE DUCHESS OF HAMPTONSHIRE
By the Quiet Gentleman
Some fifty years ago, the then Duke
of Hamptonshire, fifth of that title, was incontestibly
the head man in his county, and particularly in the
neighbourhood of Batton. He came of the ancient
and loyal family of Saxelbye, which, before its ennoblement,
had numbered many knightly and ecclesiastical celebrities
in its male line. It would have occupied a painstaking
county historian a whole afternoon to take rubbings
of the numerous effigies and heraldic devices
graven to their memory on the brasses, tablets, and
altar-tombs in the aisle of the parish-church.
The Duke himself, however, was a man little attracted
by ancient chronicles in stone and metal, even when
they concerned his own beginnings. He allowed
his mind to linger by preference on the many graceless
and unedifying pleasures which his position placed
at his command. He could on occasion close the
mouths of his dependents by a good bomb-like oath,
and he argued doggedly with the parson on the virtues
of cock-fighting and baiting the bull.
This nobleman’s personal appearance
was somewhat impressive. His complexion was
that of the copper-beech tree. His frame was
stalwart, though slightly stooping. His mouth
was large, and he carried an unpolished sapling as
his walking-stick, except when he carried a spud for
cutting up any thistle he encountered on his walks.
His castle stood in the midst of a park, surrounded
by dusky elms, except to the southward; and when the
moon shone out, the gleaming stone façade, backed
by heavy boughs, was visible from the distant high
road as a white spot on the surface of darkness.
Though called a castle, the building was little fortified,
and had been erected with greater eye to internal
convenience than those crannied places of defence to
which the name strictly appertains. It was a
castellated mansion as regular as a chessboard on
its ground-plan, ornamented with make-believe bastions
and machicolations, behind which were stacks of battlemented
chimneys. On still mornings, at the fire-lighting
hour, when ghostly house-maids stalk the corridors,
and thin streaks of light through the shutter-chinks
lend startling winks and smiles to ancestors on canvas,
twelve or fifteen thin stems of blue smoke sprouted
upwards from these chimney-tops, and spread into a
flat canopy on high. Around the site stretched
ten thousand acres of good, fat, unimpeachable soil,
plentiful in glades and lawns wherever visible from
the castle-windows, and merging in homely arable where
screened from the too curious eye by ingeniously-contrived
plantations.
Some way behind the owner of all this
came the second man in the parish, the rector, the
Honourable and Reverend Mr. Oldbourne, a widower, over
stiff and stern for a clergyman, whose severe white
neckcloth, well-kept gray hair, and right-lined face
betokened none of those sympathetic traits whereon
depends so much of a parson’s power to do good
among his fellow-creatures. The last, far-removed
man of the series altogether the Neptune
of these local primaries was the curate,
Mr. Alwyn Hill. He was a handsome young deacon
with curly hair, dreamy eyes so dreamy that
to look long into them was like ascending and floating
among summer clouds a complexion as fresh
as a flower, and a chin absolutely beardless.
Though his age was about twenty-five, he looked not
much over nineteen.
The rector had a daughter called Emmeline,
of so sweet and simple a nature that her beauty was
discovered, measured, and inventoried by almost everybody
in that part of the country before it was suspected
by herself to exist. She had been bred in comparative
solitude; a rencounter with men troubled and confused
her. Whenever a strange visitor came to her
father’s house she slipped into the orchard and
remained till he was gone, ridiculing her weakness
in apostrophes, but unable to overcome it. Her
virtues lay in no resistant force of character, but
in a natural inappetency for evil things, which to
her were as unmeaning as joints of flesh to a herbivorous
creature. Her charms of person, manner, and
mind, had been clear for some time to the Antinous
in orders, and no less so to the Duke, who, though
scandalously ignorant of dainty phrases, ever showing
a clumsy manner towards the gentler sex, and, in short,
not at all a lady’s man, took fire to a degree
that was wellnigh terrible at sudden sight of Emmeline,
a short time after she was turned seventeen.
It occurred one afternoon at the corner
of a shrubbery between the castle and the rectory,
where the Duke was standing to watch the heaving of
a mole, when the fair girl brushed past at a distance
of a few yards, in the full light of the sun, and
without hat or bonnet. The Duke went home like
a man who had seen a spirit. He ascended to the
picture-gallery of his castle, and there passed some
time in staring at the bygone beauties of his line
as if he had never before considered what an important
part those specimens of womankind had played in the
evolution of the Saxelbye race. He dined alone,
drank rather freely, and declared to himself that
Emmeline Oldbourne must be his.
Meanwhile there had unfortunately
arisen between the curate and this girl some sweet
and secret understanding. Particulars of the
attachment remained unknown then and always, but it
was plainly not approved of by her father. His
procedure was cold, hard, and inexorable. Soon
the curate disappeared from the parish, almost suddenly,
after bitter and hard words had been heard to pass
between him and the rector one evening in the garden,
intermingled with which, like the cries of the dying
in the din of battle, were the beseeching sobs of
a woman. Not long after this it was announced
that a marriage between the Duke and Miss Oldbourne
was to be solemnized at a surprisingly early date.
The wedding-day came and passed; and
she was a Duchess. Nobody seemed to think of
the ousted man during the day, or else those who thought
of him concealed their meditations. Some of
the less subservient ones were disposed to speak in
a jocular manner of the august husband and wife, others
to make correct and pretty speeches about them, according
as their sex and nature dictated. But in the
evening, the ringers in the belfry, with whom Alwyn
had been a favourite, eased their minds a little concerning
the gentle young man, and the possible regrets of the
woman he had loved.
‘Don’t you see something
wrong in it all?’ said the third bell as he
wiped his face. ’I know well enough where
she would have liked to stable her horses to-night,
when they have done their journey.’
’That is, you would know if
you could tell where young Mr. Hill is living, which
is known to none in the parish.’
‘Except to the lady that this
ring o’ grandsire triples is in honour of.’
Yet these friendly cottagers were
at this time far from suspecting the real dimensions
of Emmeline’s misery, nor was it clear even to
those who came into much closer communion with her
than they, so well had she concealed her heart-sickness.
But bride and bridegroom had not long been home at
the castle when the young wife’s unhappiness
became plainly enough perceptible. Her maids
and men said that she was in the habit of turning
to the wainscot and shedding stupid scalding tears
at a time when a right-minded lady would have been
overhauling her wardrobe. She prayed earnestly
in the great church-pew, where she sat lonely and insignificant
as a mouse in a cell, instead of counting her rings,
falling asleep, or amusing herself in silent laughter
at the queer old people in the congregation, as previous
beauties of the family had done in their time.
She seemed to care no more for eating and drinking
out of crystal and silver than from a service of earthen
vessels. Her head was, in truth, full of something
else; and that such was the case was only too obvious
to the Duke, her husband. At first he would only
taunt her for her folly in thinking of that milk-and-water
parson; but as time went on his charges took a more
positive shape. He would not believe her assurance
that she had in no way communicated with her former
lover, nor he with her, since their parting in the
presence of her father. This led to some strange
scenes between them which need not be detailed; their
result was soon to take a catastrophic shape.
One dark quiet evening, about two
months after the marriage, a man entered the gate
admitting from the highway to the park and avenue which
ran up to the house. He arrived within two hundred
yards of the walls, when he left the gravelled drive
and drew near to the castle by a roundabout path leading
into a shrubbery. Here he stood still.
In a few minutes the strokes of the castle-clock resounded,
and then a female figure entered the same secluded
nook from an opposite direction. There the two
indistinct persons leapt together like a pair of dewdrops
on a leaf; and then they stood apart, facing each
other, the woman looking down.
‘Emmeline, you begged me to
come, and here I am, Heaven forgive me!’ said
the man hoarsely.
‘You are going to emigrate,
Alwyn,’ she said in broken accents. ’I
have heard of it; you sail from Plymouth in three
days in the Western Glory?’
‘Yes. I can live in England
no longer. Life is as death to me here,’
says he.
’My life is even worse worse
than death. Death would not have driven me to
this extremity. Listen, Alwyn I have
sent for you to beg to go with you, or at least to
be near you to do anything so that it be
not to stay here.’
‘To go away with me?’ he said in a startled
tone.
’Yes, yes or under
your direction, or by your help in some way!
Don’t be horrified at me you must
bear with me whilst I implore it. Nothing short
of cruelty would have driven me to this. I could
have borne my doom in silence had I been left unmolested;
but he tortures me, and I shall soon be in the grave
if I cannot escape.’
To his shocked inquiry how her husband
tortured her, the Duchess said that it was by jealousy.
’He tries to wring admissions from me concerning
you,’ she said, ’and will not believe that
I have not communicated with you since my engagement
to him was settled by my father, and I was forced
to agree to it.’
The poor curate said that this was
the heaviest news of all. ’He has not
personally ill-used you?’ he asked.
‘Yes,’ she whispered.
‘What has he done?’
She looked fearfully around, and said,
sobbing: ’In trying to make me confess
to what I have never done, he adopts plans I dare not
describe for terrifying me into a weak state, so that
I may own to anything! I resolved to write to
you, as I had no other friend.’ She added,
with dreary irony, ’I thought I would give him
some ground for his suspicion, so as not to disgrace
his judgment.’
‘Do you really mean, Emmeline,’
he tremblingly inquired, ’that you that
you want to fly with me?’
’Can you think that I would
act otherwise than in earnest at such a time as this?’
He was silent for a minute or more.
‘You must not go with me,’ he said.
‘Why?’
‘It would be sin.’
’It cannot be sin, for
I have never wanted to commit sin in my life; and
it isn’t likely I would begin now, when I pray
every day to die and be sent to Heaven out of my misery!’
‘But it is wrong, Emmeline, all the same.’
‘Is it wrong to run away from the fire that
scorches you?’
‘It would look wrong, at any rate, in this case.’
‘Alwyn, Alwyn, take me, I beseech
you!’ she burst out. ’It is not right
in general, I know, but it is such an exceptional instance,
this. Why has such a severe strain been put
upon me? I was doing no harm, injuring no one,
helping many people, and expecting happiness; yet trouble
came. Can it be that God holds me in derision?
I had no supporter I gave way; and now
my life is a burden and a shame to me . . . Oh,
if you only knew how much to me this request to you
is how my life is wrapped up in it, you
could not deny me!’
‘This is almost beyond endurance Heaven
support us,’ he groaned. ’Emmy,
you are the Duchess of Hamptonshire, the Duke of Hamptonshire’s
wife; you must not go with me!’
‘And am I then refused? Oh,
am I refused?’ she cried frantically. ‘Alwyn,
Alwyn, do you say it indeed to me?’
’Yes, I do, dear, tender heart!
I do most sadly say it. You must not go.
Forgive me, for there is no alternative but refusal.
Though I die, though you die, we must not fly together.
It is forbidden in God’s law. Good-bye,
for always and ever!’
He tore himself away, hastened from
the shrubbery, and vanished among the trees.
Three days after this meeting and
farewell, Alwyn, his soft, handsome features stamped
with a haggard hardness that ten years of ordinary
wear and tear in the world could scarcely have produced,
sailed from Plymouth on a drizzling morning, in the
passenger-ship Western Glory. When the
land had faded behind him he mechanically endeavoured
to school himself into a stoical frame of mind.
His attempt, backed up by the strong moral staying
power that had enabled him to resist the passionate
temptation to which Emmeline, in her reckless trustfulness,
had exposed him, was rewarded by a certain kind of
success, though the murmuring stretch of waters whereon
he gazed day after day too often seemed to be articulating
to him in tones of her well-remembered voice.
He framed on his journey rules of
conduct for reducing to mild proportions the feverish
regrets which would occasionally arise and agitate
him, when he indulged in visions of what might have
been had he not hearkened to the whispers of conscience.
He fixed his thoughts for so many hours a day on
philosophical passages in the volumes he had brought
with him, allowing himself now and then a few minutes’
thought of Emmeline, with the strict yet reluctant
niggardliness of an ailing epicure proportioning the
rank drinks that cause his malady. The voyage
was marked by the usual incidents of a sailing-passage
in those days a storm, a calm, a man overboard,
a birth, and a funeral the latter sad event
being one in which he, as the only clergyman on board,
officiated, reading the service ordained for the purpose.
The ship duly arrived at Boston early in the month
following, and thence he proceeded to Providence to
seek out a distant relative.
After a short stay at Providence he
returned again to Boston, and by applying himself
to a serious occupation made good progress in shaking
off the dreary melancholy which enveloped him even
now. Distracted and weakened in his beliefs
by his recent experiences, he decided that he could
not for a time worthily fill the office of a minister
of religion, and applied for the mastership of a school.
Some introductions, given him before starting, were
useful now, and he soon became known as a respectable
scholar and gentleman to the trustees of one of the
colleges. This ultimately led to his retirement
from the school and installation in the college as
Professor of rhetoric and oratory.
Here and thus he lived on, exerting
himself solely because of a conscientious determination
to do his duty. He passed his winter evenings
in turning sonnets and elegies, often giving his thoughts
voice in ‘Lines to an Unfortunate Lady,’
while his summer leisure at the same hour would be
spent in watching the lengthening shadows from his
window, and fancifully comparing them with the shades
of his own life. If he walked, he mentally inquired
which was the eastern quarter of the landscape, and
thought of two thousand miles of water that way, and
of what was beyond it. In a word he was at all
spare times dreaming of her who was only a memory
to him, and would probably never be more.
Nine years passed by, and under their
wear and tear Alwyn Hill’s face lost a great
many of the attractive characteristics which had formerly
distinguished it. He was kind to his pupils and
affable to all who came in contact with him; but the
kernel of his life, his secret, was kept as snugly
shut up as though he had been dumb. In talking
to his acquaintances of England and his life there,
he omitted the episode of Batton Castle and Emmeline
as if it had no existence in his calendar at all.
Though of towering importance to himself, it had filled
but a short and small fragment of time, an ephemeral
season which would have been wellnigh imperceptible,
even to him, at this distance, but for the incident
it enshrined.
One day, at this date, when cursorily
glancing over an old English newspaper, he observed
a paragraph which, short as it was, contained for
him whole tomes of thrilling information rung
with more passion-stirring rhythm than the collected
cantos of all the poets. It was an announcement
of the death of the Duke of Hamptonshire, leaving behind
him a widow, but no children.
The current of Alwyn’s thoughts
now completely changed. On looking again at
the newspaper he found it to be one that was sent him
long ago, and had been carelessly thrown aside.
But for an accidental overhauling of the waste journals
in his study he might not have known of the event for
years. At this moment of reading the Duke had
already been dead seven months. Alwyn could
now no longer bind himself down to machine-made synecdoche,
antithesis, and climax, being full of spontaneous specimens
of all these rhetorical forms, which he dared not utter.
Who shall wonder that his mind luxuriated in dreams
of a sweet possibility now laid open for the first
time these many years? for Emmeline was to him now
as ever the one dear thing in all the world.
The issue of his silent romancing was that he resolved
to return to her at the very earliest moment.
But he could not abandon his professional
work on the instant. He did not get really quite
free from engagements till four months later; but,
though suffering throes of impatience continually,
he said to himself every day: ’If she has
continued to love me nine years she will love me ten;
she will think the more tenderly of me when her present
hours of solitude shall have done their proper work;
old times will revive with the cessation of her recent
experience, and every day will favour my return.’
The enforced interval soon passed,
and he duly arrived in England, reaching the village
of Batton on a certain winter day between twelve and
thirteen months subsequent to the time of the Duke’s
death.
It was evening; yet such was Alwyn’s
impatience that he could not forbear taking, this
very night, one look at the castle which Emmeline had
entered as unhappy mistress ten years before.
He threaded the park trees, gazed in passing at well-known
outlines which rose against the dim sky, and was soon
interested in observing that lively country-people,
in parties of two and three, were walking before and
behind him up the interlaced avenue to the castle
gateway. Knowing himself to be safe from recognition,
Alwyn inquired of one of these pedestrians what was
going on.
’Her Grace gives her tenantry
a ball to-night, to keep up the old custom of the
Duke and his father before him, which she does not
wish to change.’
‘Indeed. Has she lived
here entirely alone since the Duke’s death?’
’Quite alone. But though
she doesn’t receive company herself, she likes
the village people to enjoy themselves, and often has
’em here.’
‘Kind-hearted, as always!’ thought Alwyn.
On reaching the castle he found that
the great gates at the tradesmen’s entrance
were thrown back against the wall as if they were never
to be closed again; that the passages and rooms in
that wing were brilliantly lighted up, some of the
numerous candles guttering down over the green leaves
which decorated them, and upon the silk dresses of
the happy farmers’ wives as they passed beneath,
each on her husband’s arm. Alwyn found
no difficulty in marching in along with the rest, the
castle being Liberty Hall to-night. He stood
unobserved in a corner of the large apartment where
dancing was about to begin.
’Her Grace, though hardly out
of mourning, will be sure to come down and lead off
the dance with neighbour Bates,’ said one.
‘Who is neighbour Bates?’ asked Alwyn.
’An old man she respects much the
oldest of her tenant-farmers. He was seventy-eight
his last birthday.’
‘Ah, to be sure!’ said Alwyn, at his ease.
‘I remember.’
The dancers formed in line, and waited.
A door opened at the farther end of the hall, and
a lady in black silk came forth. She bowed, smiled,
and proceeded to the top of the dance.
‘Who is that lady?’ said
Alwyn, in a puzzled tone. ’I thought you
told me that the Duchess of Hamptonshire ’
‘That is the Duchess,’ said his informant.
‘But there is another?’
‘No; there is no other.’
‘But she is not the Duchess
of Hamptonshire who used to ’
Alwyn’s tongue stuck to his mouth, he could
get no farther.
‘What’s the matter?’
said his acquaintance. Alwyn had retired, and
was supporting himself against the wall.
The wretched Alwyn murmured something
about a stitch in his side from walking. Then
the music struck up, the dance went on, and his neighbour
became so interested in watching the movements of this
strange Duchess through its mazes as to forget Alwyn
for a while.
It gave him an opportunity to brace
himself up. He was a man who had suffered, and
he could suffer again. ’How came that person
to be your Duchess?’ he asked in a firm, distinct
voice, when he had attained complete self-command.
’Where is her other Grace of Hamptonshire?
There certainly was another. I know it.’
’Oh, the previous one!
Yes, yes. She ran away years and years ago with
the young curate. Mr. Hill was the young man’s
name, if I recollect.’
‘No! She never did. What do you
mean by that?’ he said.
’Yes, she certainly ran away.
She met the curate in the shrubbery about a couple
of months after her marriage with the Duke. There
were folks who saw the meeting and heard some words
of their talk. They arranged to go, and she
sailed from Plymouth with him a day or two afterward.’
‘That’s not true.’
’Then ’tis the queerest
lie ever told by man. Her father believed and
knew to his dying day that she went with him; and so
did the Duke, and everybody about here. Ay,
there was a fine upset about it at the time.
The Duke traced her to Plymouth.’
‘Traced her to Plymouth?’
’He traced her to Plymouth,
and set on his spies; and they found that she went
to the shipping-office, and inquired if Mr. Alwyn Hill
had entered his name as passenger by the Western
Glory; and when she found that he had, she booked
herself for the same ship, but not in her real name.
When the vessel had sailed a letter reached the Duke
from her, telling him what she had done. She
never came back here again. His Grace lived by
himself a number of years, and married this lady only
twelve months before he died.’
Alwyn was in a state of indescribable
bewilderment. But, unmanned as he was, he called
the next day on the, to him, spurious Duchess of Hamptonshire.
At first she was alarmed at his statement, then cold,
then she was won over by his condition to give confidence
for confidence. She showed him a letter which
had been found among the papers of the late Duke,
corroborating what Alwyn’s informant had detailed.
It was from Emmeline, bearing the postmarked date
at which the Western Glory sailed, and briefly
stated that she had emigrated by that ship to America.
Alwyn applied himself body and mind
to unravel the remainder of the mystery. The
story repeated to him was always the same: ’She
ran away with the curate.’ A strangely
circumstantial piece of intelligence was added to
this when he had pushed his inquiries a little further.
There was given him the name of a waterman at Plymouth,
who had come forward at the time that she was missed
and sought for by her husband, and had stated that
he put her on board the Western Glory at dusk
one evening before that vessel sailed.
After several days of search about
the alleys and quays of Plymouth Barbican, during
which these impossible words, ’She ran off with
the curate,’ became branded on his brain, Alwyn
found this important waterman. He was positive
as to the truth of his story, still remembering the
incident well, and he described in detail the lady’s
dress, as he had long ago described it to her husband,
which description corresponded in every particular
with the dress worn by Emmeline on the evening of
their parting.
Before proceeding to the other side
of the Atlantic to continue his inquiries there, the
puzzled and distracted Alwyn set himself to ascertain
the address of Captain Wheeler, who had commanded the
Western Glory in the year of Alwyn’s
voyage out, and immediately wrote a letter to him
on the subject.
The only circumstances which the sailor
could recollect or discover from his papers in connection
with such a story were, that a woman bearing the name
which Alwyn had mentioned as fictitious certainly did
come aboard for a voyage he made about that time;
that she took a common berth among the poorest emigrants;
that she died on the voyage out, at about five days’
sail from Plymouth; that she seemed a lady in manners
and education. Why she had not applied for a
first-class passage, why she had no trunks, they could
not guess, for though she had little money in her
pocket she had that about her which would have fetched
it. ’We buried her at sea,’ continued
the captain. ’A young parson, one of the
cabin-passengers, read the burial-service over her,
I remember well.’
The whole scene and proceedings darted
upon Alwyn’s recollection in a moment.
It was a fine breezy morning on that long-past voyage
out, and he had been told that they were running at
the rate of a hundred and odd miles a day. The
news went round that one of the poor young women in
the other part of the vessel was ill of fever, and
delirious. The tidings caused no little alarm
among all the passengers, for the sanitary conditions
of the ship were anything but satisfactory. Shortly
after this the doctor announced that she had died.
Then Alwyn had learnt that she was laid out for burial
in great haste, because of the danger that would have
been incurred by delay. And next the funeral
scene rose before him, and the prominent part that
he had taken in that solemn ceremony. The captain
had come to him, requesting him to officiate, as there
was no chaplain on board. This he had agreed
to do; and as the sun went down with a blaze in his
face he read amidst them all assembled: ’We
therefore commit her body to the deep, to be turned
into corruption, looking for the resurrection of the
body when the sea shall give up her dead.’
The captain also forwarded the addresses
of the ship’s matron and of other persons who
had been engaged on board at the date. To these
Alwyn went in the course of time. A categorical
description of the clothes of the dead truant, the
colour of her hair, and other things, extinguished
for ever all hope of a mistake in identity.
At last, then, the course of events
had become clear. On that unhappy evening when
he left Emmeline in the shrubbery, forbidding her to
follow him because it would be a sin, she must have
disobeyed. She must have followed at his heels
silently through the darkness, like a poor pet animal
that will not be driven back. She could have
accumulated nothing for the journey more than she
might have carried in her hand; and thus poorly provided
she must have embarked. Her intention had doubtless
been to make her presence on board known to him as
soon as she could muster courage to do so.
Thus the ten years’ chapter
of Alwyn Hill’s romance wound itself up under
his eyes. That the poor young woman in the steerage
had been the young Duchess of Hamptonshire was never
publicly disclosed. Hill had no longer any reason
for remaining in England, and soon after left its shores
with no intention to return. Previous to his
departure he confided his story to an old friend from
his native town grandfather of the person
who now relates it to you.
A few members, including the Bookworm,
seemed to be impressed by the quiet gentleman’s
tale; but the member we have called the Spark who,
by the way, was getting somewhat tinged with the light
of other days, and owned to eight-and-thirty walked
daintily about the room instead of sitting down by
the fire with the majority and said that for his part
he preferred something more lively than the last story something
in which such long-separated lovers were ultimately
united. He also liked stories that were more
modern in their date of action than those he had heard
to-day.
Members immediately requested him
to give them a specimen, to which the Spark replied
that he didn’t mind, as far as that went.
And though the Vice-President, the Man of Family,
the Colonel, and others, looked at their watches,
and said they must soon retire to their respective
quarters in the hotel adjoining, they all decided to
sit out the Spark’s story.