I spoke of my lady a line or two back.
Now the Diamond could never have been in our house,
where it was lost, if it had not been made a present
of to my lady’s daughter; and my lady’s
daughter would never have been in existence to have
the present, if it had not been for my lady who (with
pain and travail) produced her into the world.
Consequently, if we begin with my lady, we are pretty
sure of beginning far enough back. And that,
let me tell you, when you have got such a job as mine
in hand, is a real comfort at starting.
If you know anything of the fashionable
world, you have heard tell of the three beautiful
Miss Herncastles. Miss Adelaide; Miss Caroline;
and Miss Julia this last being the youngest
and the best of the three sisters, in my opinion;
and I had opportunities of judging, as you shall presently
see. I went into the service of the old lord,
their father (thank God, we have got nothing to do
with him, in this business of the Diamond; he had
the longest tongue and the shortest temper of any man,
high or low, I ever met with) I say, I went
into the service of the old lord, as page-boy in waiting
on the three honourable young ladies, at the age of
fifteen years. There I lived till Miss Julia married
the late Sir John Verinder. An excellent man,
who only wanted somebody to manage him; and, between
ourselves, he found somebody to do it; and what is
more, he throve on it and grew fat on it, and lived
happy and died easy on it, dating from the day when
my lady took him to church to be married, to the day
when she relieved him of his last breath, and closed
his eyes for ever.
I have omitted to state that I went
with the bride to the bride’s husband’s
house and lands down here. “Sir John,”
she says, “I can’t do without Gabriel
Betteredge.” “My lady,” says
Sir John, “I can’t do without him, either.”
That was his way with her and that was how
I went into his service. It was all one to me
where I went, so long as my mistress and I were together.
Seeing that my lady took an interest
in the out-of-door work, and the farms, and such like,
I took an interest in them too with all
the more reason that I was a small farmer’s
seventh son myself. My lady got me put under
the bailiff, and I did my best, and gave satisfaction,
and got promotion accordingly. Some years later,
on the Monday as it might be, my lady says, “Sir
John, your bailiff is a stupid old man. Pension
him liberally, and let Gabriel Betteredge have his
place.” On the Tuesday as it might be,
Sir John says, “My lady, the bailiff is pensioned
liberally; and Gabriel Betteredge has got his place.”
You hear more than enough of married people living
together miserably. Here is an example to the
contrary. Let it be a warning to some of you,
and an encouragement to others. In the meantime,
I will go on with my story.
Well, there I was in clover, you will
say. Placed in a position of trust and honour,
with a little cottage of my own to live in, with my
rounds on the estate to occupy me in the morning,
and my accounts in the afternoon, and my pipe and
my Robinson Crusoe in the evening what
more could I possibly want to make me happy?
Remember what Adam wanted when he was alone in the
Garden of Eden; and if you don’t blame it in
Adam, don’t blame it in me.
The woman I fixed my eye on, was the
woman who kept house for me at my cottage. Her
name was Selina Goby. I agree with the late William
Cobbett about picking a wife. See that she chews
her food well and sets her foot down firmly on the
ground when she walks, and you’re all right.
Selina Goby was all right in both these respects,
which was one reason for marrying her. I had
another reason, likewise, entirely of my own discovering.
Selina, being a single woman, made me pay so much a
week for her board and services. Selina, being
my wife, couldn’t charge for her board, and
would have to give me her services for nothing.
That was the point of view I looked at it from.
Economy with a dash of love. I put
it to my mistress, as in duty bound, just as I had
put it to myself.
“I have been turning Selina
Goby over in my mind,” I said, “and I think,
my lady, it will be cheaper to marry her than to keep
her.”
My lady burst out laughing, and said
she didn’t know which to be most shocked at my
language or my principles. Some joke tickled her,
I suppose, of the sort that you can’t take unless
you are a person of quality. Understanding nothing
myself but that I was free to put it next to Selina,
I went and put it accordingly. And what did Selina
say? Lord! how little you must know of women,
if you ask that. Of course she said, Yes.
As my time drew nearer, and there
got to be talk of my having a new coat for the ceremony,
my mind began to misgive me. I have compared notes
with other men as to what they felt while they were
in my interesting situation; and they have all acknowledged
that, about a week before it happened, they privately
wished themselves out of it. I went a trifle
further than that myself; I actually rose up, as it
were, and tried to get out of it. Not for nothing!
I was too just a man to expect she would let me off
for nothing. Compensation to the woman when the
man gets out of it, is one of the laws of England.
In obedience to the laws, and after turning it over
carefully in my mind, I offered Selina Goby a feather-bed
and fifty shillings to be off the bargain. You
will hardly believe it, but it is nevertheless true she
was fool enough to refuse.
After that it was all over with me,
of course. I got the new coat as cheap as I could,
and I went through all the rest of it as cheap as I
could. We were not a happy couple, and not a miserable
couple. We were six of one and half-a-dozen of
the other. How it was I don’t understand,
but we always seemed to be getting, with the best of
motives, in one another’s way. When I wanted
to go up-stairs, there was my wife coming down; or
when my wife wanted to go down, there was I coming
up. That is married life, according to my experience
of it.
After five years of misunderstandings
on the stairs, it pleased an all-wise Providence to
relieve us of each other by taking my wife. I
was left with my little girl Penelope, and with no
other child. Shortly afterwards Sir John died,
and my lady was left with her little girl, Miss Rachel,
and no other child. I have written to very poor
purpose of my lady, if you require to be told that
my little Penelope was taken care of, under my good
mistress’s own eye, and was sent to school and
taught, and made a sharp girl, and promoted, when old
enough, to be Miss Rachel’s own maid.
As for me, I went on with my business
as bailiff year after year up to Christmas 1847, when
there came a change in my life. On that day, my
lady invited herself to a cup of tea alone with me
in my cottage. She remarked that, reckoning from
the year when I started as page-boy in the time of
the old lord, I had been more than fifty years in her
service, and she put into my hands a beautiful waistcoat
of wool that she had worked herself, to keep me warm
in the bitter winter weather.
I received this magnificent present
quite at a loss to find words to thank my mistress
with for the honour she had done me. To my great
astonishment, it turned out, however, that the waistcoat
was not an honour, but a bribe. My lady had discovered
that I was getting old before I had discovered it
myself, and she had come to my cottage to wheedle
me (if I may use such an expression) into giving up
my hard out-of-door work as bailiff, and taking my
ease for the rest of my days as steward in the house.
I made as good a fight of it against the indignity
of taking my ease as I could. But my mistress
knew the weak side of me; she put it as a favour to
herself. The dispute between us ended, after
that, in my wiping my eyes, like an old fool, with
my new woollen waistcoat, and saying I would think
about it.
The perturbation in my mind, in regard
to thinking about it, being truly dreadful after my
lady had gone away, I applied the remedy which I have
never yet found to fail me in cases of doubt and emergency.
I smoked a pipe and took a turn at Robinson Crusoe.
Before I had occupied myself with that extraordinary
book five minutes, I came on a comforting bit (page
one hundred and fifty-eight), as follows: “To-day
we love, what to-morrow we hate.” I saw
my way clear directly. To-day I was all for continuing
to be farm-bailiff; to-morrow, on the authority of
Robinson Crusoe, I should be all the other
way. Take myself to-morrow while in to-morrow’s
humour, and the thing was done. My mind being
relieved in this manner, I went to sleep that night
in the character of Lady Verinder’s farm bailiff,
and I woke up the next morning in the character of
Lady Verinder’s house-steward. All quite
comfortable, and all through Robinson Crusoe!
My daughter Penelope has just looked
over my shoulder to see what I have done so far.
She remarks that it is beautifully written, and every
word of it true. But she points out one objection.
She says what I have done so far isn’t in the
least what I was wanted to do. I am asked to tell
the story of the Diamond and, instead of that, I have
been telling the story of my own self. Curious,
and quite beyond me to account for. I wonder
whether the gentlemen who make a business and a living
out of writing books, ever find their own selves getting
in the way of their subjects, like me? If they
do, I can feel for them. In the meantime, here
is another false start, and more waste of good writing-paper.
What’s to be done now? Nothing that I know
of, except for you to keep your temper, and for me
to begin it all over again for the third time.