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GOD'S GOOD MAN
A Simple Love Story
TO
THE LIVING ORIGINAL
OF
"THE REVEREND JOHN WALDEN"
AND HIS WIFE
THIS SIMPLE LOVE STORY
IS
AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED
"THERE WAS A MAN SENT FROM GOD WHOSE NAME WAS JOHN."
NEW TESTAMENT
The last breath of a long winter had blown its final farewell
across the hills,—the last frost had melted from the broad, low-lying
fields, relaxing its iron grip from the clods of rich, red-brown
earth which, now, soft and broken, were sprouting thick with the
young corn's tender green. It had been a hard, inclement season. Many
a time, since February onward, had the too-eagerly pushing buds of
trees and shrubs been nipped by cruel cold,—many a biting east wind
had withered the first pale green leaves of the lilac and the
hawthorn,—and the stormy caprices of a chill northern. Spring had
played havoc with all the dainty woodland blossoms that should,
according to the ancient 'Shepherd's Calendar' have been flowering
fully with the daffodils and primroses. But during the closing days
of April a sudden grateful warmth had set in,—Nature, the divine
goddess, seemed to awaken from long slumber and stretch out her arms
with a happy smile,—and when May morning dawned on the world, it
came as a vision of glory, robed in clear sunshine and girdled with
bluest skies. Birds broke into enraptured song,—young almond and
apple boughs quivered almost visibly every moment into pink and white
bloom,—cowslips and bluebells raised their heads from mossy corners
in the grass, and expressed their innocent thoughts in sweetest
odour—and in and through all things the glorious thrill, the
mysterious joy of renewed life, hope and love pulsated from the
Creator to His responsive creation.
It was May-time;—a real 'old-fashioned' English May, such as
Spenser and Herrick sang of:
"When all is yclad
With blossoms; the ground with grass, the woodes
With greene leaves; the bushes with blossoming buddes,"
and when whatever promise our existence yet holds for us, seems far
enough away to inspire ambition, yet close enough to encourage fair
dreams of fulfilment. To experience this glamour and witchery of the
flowering-time of the year, one must, perforce, be in the country.
For in the towns, the breath of Spring is foetid and feverish,—it
arouses sick longings and weary regrets, but scarcely any positive
ecstasy. The close, stuffy streets, the swarming people, the high
buildings and stacks of chimneys which only permit the narrowest
patches of sky to be visible, the incessant noise and movement, the
self-absorbed crowding and crushing,—all these things are so many
offences to Nature, and are as dead walls of obstacle set against the
revivifying and strengthening forces with which she endows her freer
children of the forest, field and mountain. Out on the wild heathery
moorland, in the heart of the woods, in the deep bosky dells, where
the pungent scent of moss and pine-boughs fills the air with
invigorating influences, or by the quiet rivers, flowing peacefully
under bending willows and past wide osier-beds, where the kingfisher
swoops down with the sun-ray and the timid moor-hen paddles to and
from her nest among the reeds,—in such haunts as these, the advent of
a warm and brilliant May is fraught with that tremor of delight which
gives birth to beauty, and concerning which that ancient and
picturesque chronicler, Sir Thomas Malory, writes exultantly: "Like as
May moneth flourisheth and flowerth in many gardens, so in likewise
let every man of worship flourish his heart in this world!"
There was a certain 'man of worship' in the world at the particular
time when this present record of life and love begins, who found
himself very well-disposed to 'flourish his heart' in the Maloryan
manner prescribed, when after many dark days of unseasonable cold and
general atmospheric depression, May at last came in rejoicing. Seated
under broad apple-boughs, which spread around him like a canopy
studded with rosy bud-jewels that shone glossy bright against the
rough dark-brown stems, he surveyed the smiling scenery of his own
garden with an air of satisfaction that was almost boyish, though his
years had run well past forty, and he was a parson to boot. A gravely
sedate demeanour would have seemed the more fitting facial expression
for his age and the generally accepted nature of his calling,—a kind
of deprecatory toleration of the sunshine as part of the universal
'vanity' of mundane things,—or a condescending consciousness of the
bursting apple-blossoms within his reach as a kind of inferior earthy
circumstance which could neither be altered nor avoided.
The Reverend John Walden, however, was one of those rarely gifted
individuals who cannot assume an aspect which is foreign to
temperament. He was of a cheerful, even sanguine disposition, and his
countenance faithfully reflected the ordinary bent of his humour.
Seeing him at a distance, the casual observer would at once have
judged him to be either an athlete or an ascetic. There was no
superfluous flesh about him; he was tall and muscular, with well-
knit limbs, broad shoulders, and a head altogether lacking in the
humble or conciliatory 'droop' which all worldly-wise parsons
cultivate for the benefit of their rich patrons. It was a
distinctively proud head,—almost aggressive,—indicative of strong
character and self-reliance, well-poised on a full throat, and set
off by a considerable quantity of dark brown hair which was
refractory in brushing, inclined to uncanonical curls, and
plentifully dashed with grey. A broad forehead, deeply-set, dark-
blue eyes, a straight and very prominent nose, a strong jaw and
obstinate chin,—a firmly moulded mouth, round which many a sweet and
tender thought had drawn kindly little lines of gentle smiling that
were scarcely hidden by the silver-brown moustache,—such, briefly,
was the appearance of one, who though only a country clergyman, of
whom the great world knew nothing, was the living representative of
more powerful authority to his little 'cure of souls' than either the
bishop of the diocese, or the King in all his majesty.
He was the sole owner of one of the smallest 'livings' in
England,— an obscure, deeply-hidden, but perfectly unspoilt and
beautiful relic of mediaeval days, situated in one of the loveliest of
woodland counties, and known as the village of St. Rest, sometimes
called 'St. Est.' Until quite lately there had been considerable
doubt as to the origin of this name, and the correct manner of its
pronouncement. Some said it should be, 'St. East,' because, right
across the purple moorland and beyond the line of blue hills where
the sun rose, there stretched the sea, miles away and invisible, it
is true, but nevertheless asserting its salty savour in every breath
of wind that blew across the tufted pines. 'St. East,' therefore,
said certain rural sages, was the real name of the village, because
it faced the sea towards the east. Others, however, declared that the
name was derived from the memory of some early Norman church on the
banks of the peaceful river that wound its slow clear length in
pellucid silver ribbons of light round and about the clover fields
and high banks fringed with wild rose and snowy thorn, and that it
should, therefore, be 'St. Rest,' or better still, 'The Saint's
Rest.' This latter theory had recently received strong confirmation
by an unexpected witness to the past,—as will presently be duly seen
and attested.
But St. Rest, or St. Est, whichever name rightly belonged to it,
was in itself so insignificant as a 'benefice,' that its present
rector, vicar, priest and patron had bought it for himself, through
the good offices of a friend, in the days when such purchases were
possible, and for some ten years had been supreme Dictator of his tiny
kingdom and limited people. The church was his,—especially his, since
he had restored it entirely at his own expense,—the rectory, a lop-
sided, half-timbered house, built in the fifteenth century, was
his,—the garden, full of flowering shrubs, carelessly planted and
allowed to flourish at their own wild will, was his,—the ten acres
of pasture-land that spread in green luxuriance round and about his
dwelling were his,—and, best of all, the orchard, containing some
five acres planted with the choicest apples, cherries, plums and
pears, and bearing against its long, high southern wall the finest
peaches and nectarines in the county, was his also. He had, in fact,
everything that the heart of a man, especially the heart of a
clergyman, could desire, except a wife,—and that commodity had been
offered to him from many quarters in various delicate and diplomatic
ways,—only to be as delicately and diplomatically rejected.
And truly there seemed no need for any change in his condition. He
had gone on so far in life,—'so far!' he would occasionally remind
himself, with a little smile and sigh,—that a more or less solitary
habit had, by long familiarity, become pleasant. Actual loneliness he
had never experienced, because it was not in his nature to feel
lonely. His well-balanced intellect had the brilliant quality of a
finely-cut diamond, bearing many facets, and reflecting all the hues
of life in light and colour; thus it quite naturally happened that
most things, even ordinary and common things, interested him. He was
a great lover of books, and, to a moderate extent, a collector of
rare editions; he also had a passion for archaeology, wherein he was
sustained by a certain poetic insight of which he was himself
unconscious. The ordinary archaeologist is generally a mere Dry-as-
Dust, who plays with the bones of the past as Shakespeare's Juliet
fancied she might play with her forefathers' joints, and who eschews
all use of the imaginative instinct as though it were some deadly
evil. Whereas, it truly needs a very powerful imaginative lens to
peer down into the recesses of bygone civilisations, and re-people
the ruined haunts of dead men with their shadowy ghosts of learning,
art, enterprise, or ambition.
To use the innermost eyes of his soul in such looking backward down
the stream of Time, as well as in looking forward to that 'crystal
sea' of the unknown Future, flowing round the Great White Throne
whence the river of life proceeds, was a favourite mental occupation
with John Walden. He loved antiquarian research, and all such
scientific problems as involve abstruse study and complex
calculation,—but equally he loved the simplest flower and the most
ordinary village tale of sorrow or mirth recounted to him by any one
of his unlessoned parishioners. He gave himself such change of air
and scene as he thought he required, by taking long swinging walks
about the country, and found sufficient relaxation in gardening, a
science in which he displayed considerable skill. No one in all the
neighbourhood could match his roses, or offer anything to compare
with the purple and white masses of violets which, quite early in
January came out under his glass frames not only perfect in shape and
colour, but full of the real 'English' violet fragrance, a benediction
of sweetness which somehow seems to be entirely withheld from the
French and Russian blooms. For the rest, he was physically sound and
morally healthy, and lived, as it were, on the straight line from
earth to heaven, beginning each day as if it were his first
life-opportunity, and ending it soberly and with prayer, as though it
were his last.
To such a mind and temperament as his, the influences of Nature,
the sublime laws of the Universe, and the environment of existence,
must needs move in circles of harmonious unity, making loveliness out
of commonness, and poetry out of prose. The devotee of what is
mistakenly called 'pleasure,'—enervated or satiated with the sickly
moral exhalations of a corrupt society,—would be quite at a loss to
understand what possible enjoyment could be obtained by sitting
placidly under an apple-tree with a well-thumbed volume of the wisdom
of the inspired pagan Slave, Epictetus, in the hand, and the eyes
fixed, not on any printed page, but on a spray of warmly- blushing
almond blossom, where a well-fed thrush, ruffling its softly speckled
breast, was singing a wild strophe concerning its mate, which, could
human skill have languaged its meaning, might have given ideas to a
nation's laureate. Yet John Walden found unalloyed happiness in this
apparently vague and vacant way. There was an acute sense of joy for
him in the repeated sweetness of the thrush's warbling,—the light
breeze, stirring through a great bush of early flowering lilac near
the edge of the lawn, sent out a wave of odour which tingled through
his sensitive blood like wine,—the sunlight was warm and comforting,
and altogether there seemed nothing wrong with the world, particularly
as the morning's newspapers had not yet come in. With them would
probably arrive the sad savour of human mischief and muddle, but till
these daily morbid records made their appearance, May-day might be
accepted as God made it and gave it,—a gift unalloyed, pure, bright
and calm, with not a shadow on its lovely face of Spring. The Stoic
spirit of Epictetus himself had even seemed to join in the general
delight of nature, for Walden held the book half open at a page
whereon these words were written:
"Had we understanding thereof, would any other thing better beseem
us than to hymn the Divine Being and laud Him and rehearse His
gracious deeds? These things it were fitting every man should sing,
and to chant the greatest and divinest hymns for this, that He has
given us the power to observe and consider His works, and a Way
wherein to walk. If I were a nightingale, I would do after the manner
of a nightingale; if a swan, after that of a swan. But now I am a
reasoning creature, and it behooves me to sing the praise of God; this
is my task, and this I do, nor as long as it is granted me, will I
ever abandon this post. And you, too, I summon to join me in the same
song."
"A wonderfully 'advanced' Christian way of looking at life, for a
pagan slave of the time of Nero!" thought Walden, as his eyes
wandered from the thrush on the almond tree, back to the volume in
his hand,—"With all our teaching and preaching, we can hardly do
better. I wonder—-"
Here his mind became altogether distracted from classic lore, by
the appearance of a very unclassic boy, clad in a suit of brown
corduroys and wearing hob-nailed boots a couple of sizes too large
for him, who, coming suddenly out from a box-tree alley behind the
gabled corner of the rectory, shuffled to the extreme verge of the
lawn and stopped there, pulling his cap off, and treading on his own
toes from left to right, and from right to left in a state of
sheepish hesitancy.
"Come along,—come along! Don't stand there, Bob Keeley!" And
Walden rose, placing Epictetus on the seat he vacated—"What is it?"
Bob Keeley set his hob-nailed feet on the velvety lawn with
gingerly precaution, and advancing cap in hand, produced a letter,
slightly grimed by his thumb and finger.
"From Sir Morton, please sir! Hurgent, 'e sez."
Walden took the missive, small and neatly folded, and bearing the
words 'Badsworth Hall' stamped in gold at the back of the envelope.
Opening it, he read:
"Sir Morton Pippitt presents his compliments to the Reverend John
Walden, and having a party of distinguished guests staying with him
at the Hall, will be glad to know at what day and hour this week he
can make a visit of inspection to the church with his friends."
A slight tinge of colour overspread Walden's face. Presently he
smiled, and tearing up the note leisurely, put the fragments into one
of his large loose coat pockets, for to scatter a shred of paper on
his lawn or garden paths was an offence which neither he nor any of
those he employed ever committed.
"How is your mother, Bob?" he then said, approaching the stumpy
urchin, who stood respectfully watching him and awaiting his
pleasure.
"Please sir, she's all right, but she coughs 'orful!"
"Coughs 'orful, does she?" repeated the Reverend John, musingly;
"Ah, that is bad!—I am sorry! We must—let me think!—yes, Bob, we
must see what we can do for her—eh?"
"Yes, sir," replied Bob meekly, turning his cap round and round and
wondering what 'Passon' was thinking about to have such a 'funny
look' in his eyes.
"Yes!" repeated Walden, cheerfully, "We must see what we can do for
her! My compliments to Sir Morton Pippitt, Bob, and say I will
write."
"Nothink else, sir?"
"Nothing—or as you put it, Bob, 'nothink else'! I wish you would
remember, my dear boy,"—and here he laid his firm, well-shaped hand
protectingly on the small brown corduroy shoulder,—"that the word
'nothing' does not terminate in a 'k.' If you refer to your
spelling-book, I am sure you will see that I am right. The
Educational authorities would not approve of your pronunciation, Bob,
and I am endeavouring to save you future trouble with the Government.
By the way, did Sir Morton Pippitt give you anything for bringing his
note to me?"
"Sed he would when I got back, sir."
"Said he would when you got back? Well,—I have my doubts, Bob,—I
do not think he will. And the labourer being worthy of his hire, here
is sixpence, which, if you like to do a sum on your slate, you will
find is at the rate of one penny per mile. When you are a working man,
you will understand the strict justice of my payment. It is three
miles from Badsworth Hall and three back again,—and now I come to
think of it, what were you doing up at Badsworth?"
Bob Keeley grinned from ear to ear.
"Me an' Kitty Spruce went up on spec with a Maypole early, sir!"
John Walden smiled. It was May morning,—of course it was!—and in
the village of St. Rest the old traditional customs of May Day were
still kept up, though in the county town of Riversford, only seven
miles away, they were forgotten, or if remembered at all, were only
used as an excuse for drinking and vulgar horse-play.
"You and Kitty Spruce went up on spec? Very enterprising of you
both, I am sure! And did you make anything out of it?"
"No, sir,—there ain't no ladies there, 'cept Miss Tabitha,—onny
some London gents,—and Sir Morton, 'e flew into an orful passion—
like 'e do, sir,—an' told us to leave off singin' and git out,—
'Git off my ground,' he 'ollers—'Git off!'—then jest as we was a
gittin' off, he cools down suddint like, an' 'e sez, sez 'e: 'Take a
note to the dam passon for me, an' bring a harnser, an' I'll give yer
somethink when yer gits back.' An' all the gents was a-sittin' at
breakfast, with the winders wide open an' the smell of 'am an' eggs
comin' through strong, an' they larfed fit to split theirselves, an'
one on 'em tried to kiss Kitty Spruce, an' she spanked his face for
'im!"
The narration of this remarkable incident, spoken with breathless
rapidity in a burst of confidence, seemed to cause the relief
supposed to be obtained by a penitent in the confessional, and to
lift a weight off Bob Keeley's mind. The smile deepened on the
'Passon's' face, and for a moment he had some difficulty to control
an outbreak of laughter, but recollecting the possibly demoralising
effect it might have on the more youthful members of the community,
if he, the spiritual director of the parish, were reported to have
laughed at the pugnacious conduct of the valiant Kitty Spruce, he
controlled himself, and assumed a tolerantly serious air.
"That will do, Bob!—that will do! You must learn not to repeat all
you hear, especially such objectionable words as may occasionally be
used by a—a—a gentleman of Sir Morton Pippitt's high standing."
And here he squared his shoulders and looked severely down an the
abashed Keeley. Anon he unbent himself somewhat and his eyes twinkled
with kindly humour: "Why didn't you bring the Maypole here?" he
enquired; "I suppose you thought it would not be as good a 'spec as
Badsworth Hall and the London gents—eh?"
Bob Keeley opened his round eyes very wide.
"We be all comin' 'ere, sir!" he burst out: "All on us—ever so
many on us! But we reckoned to make a round of the village first and
see how we took on, and finish up wi' you, sir! Kitty Spruce she be a-
keepin' her best ribbin for comin' 'ere—we be all a-comin' 'fore
twelve!"
Walden smiled.
"Good! I shall expect you! And mind you don't all sing out of tune
when you do come. If you commit such an offence, I shall—let me
see!—I shall make mincemeat of you!—I shall indeed! Positive
mincemeat!—and bottle you up in jars for Christmas!" And he nodded
with the ferociously bland air of the giant in a fairy tale, whose
particular humour is the devouring of small children. "Now you had
better get back to Badsworth Hall with my message. Do you remember
it? My compliments to Sir Morton Pippitt, and I will write."
He turned away, and Bob Keeley made as rapid a departure as was
consistent with the deep respect he felt for the 'Passon,' having
extracted a promise from the butcher boy of the village, who was a
friend of his, that if he were 'quick about it,' he would get a drive
up to Badsworth and back again in the butcher's cart going there for
orders, instead of tramping it.
The Reverend John, meanwhile, strolled down one of the many winding
garden paths, past clusters of daffodils, narcissi and primroses,
into a favourite corner which he called the 'Wilderness,' because it
was left by his orders in a more or less untrimmed, untrained
condition of luxuriantly natural growth. Here the syringa, a name
sometimes given by horticultural pedants to the lilac, for no reason
at all except to create confusion in the innocent minds of amateur
growers, was opening its white 'mock orange' blossoms, and a mass of
flowering aconites spread out before him like a carpet of woven gold.
Here, too, tufts of bluebells peeked forth from behind the moss-grown
stems of several ancient oaks and elms, and purple pansies bordered
the edge of the grass. A fine old wistaria grown in tree-form, formed
a natural arch of entry to this shady retreat, and its flowers were
just now in their full beauty, hanging in a magnificent profusion of
pale mauve, grapelike bunches from the leafless stems. Many roses, of
the climbing or 'rambling' kind, were planted here, and John Walden's
quick eye soon perceived where a long green shoot of one of those was
loose and waving in the wind to its own possible detriment. He felt in
his pockets for a bit of roffia or twine to tie up the straying
stem,—he was very seldom without something of the kind for such
emergencies, but this time he only groped among the fragments of Sir
Morton Pippitt's note and found nothing useful. Stepping out on the
path again, he looked about him and caught a glimpse of a stooping,
bulky form in weather- beaten garments, planting something in one of
the borders at a little distance.
"Bainton!" he called.
The figure slowly raised itself, and as slowly turned its head.
"Sir!"
"Just come here and tie this rose up, will you?"
The individual addressed approached at a very deliberate pace,
dragging out some entangled roffia from his pocket as he came and
severing it into lengths with his teeth. Walden partly prepared his
task for him by holding up the rose branch in the way it should go,
and on his arrival assisted him in the business of securing it to the
knotty bough from which it had fallen.
"That looks better!" he remarked approvingly, as he stepped back
and surveyed it. "You might do this one at the same time while you are
about it, Bainton."
And he pointed to a network of 'Crimson rambler' rose-stems which
had blown loose from their moorings and were lying across the grass.
"This place wants a reg'ler clean out," remarked Bainton then, in
accents of deep disdain, as he stooped to gather up the refractory
branches: "It beats me altogether, Passon, to know what you wants wi'
a forcin' bed for weeds an' stuff in the middle of a decent garden.
That old Wistaria Sinyens (Sinensis) is the only thing here that is
worth keeping. Ah! Y'are a precious sight, y'are!" he continued,
apostrophising the 'rambler' branches—"For all yer green buds ye
ain't a-goin' to do much this year! All sham an' 'umbug, y'are!—all
leaf an' shoot an' no flower,—like a great many people I knows
on—ah!—an' not so far from this village neither! I'd clear it all
out if I was you, Passon,—I would reely now!"
Walden laughed.
"Don't open the old argument, Bainton!" he said good-humouredly;
"We have talked of this before. I like a bit of wild Nature
sometimes."
"Wild natur!" echoed Bainton. "Seems to me natur allus wants a bit
of a wash an' brush up 'fore she sits down to her master's table;—
an' who's 'er master? Man! She's jest like a child comin' out of a
play in the woods, an' 'er 'air's all blown, an' 'er nails is all
dirty. That's natur! Trim 'er up an' curl 'er 'air an' she's worth
looking at. Natur! Lor', Passon, if ye likes wild natur ye ain't got
no call to keep a gard'ner. But if ye pays me an' keeps me, ye must
'spect me to do my duty. Wherefore I sez: why not 'ave this 'ere
musty-fusty place, a reg'ler breedin' 'ole for hinsects, wopses,
'ornits, snails an' green caterpillars—ah! an' I shouldn't wonder if
potato-fly got amongst 'em, too!—why not, I say, have it cleaned
out?"
"I like it as it is," responded Walden with cheerful
imperturbability, and a smile at the thick-set obstinate-looking
figure of his 'head man about the place' as Bainton loved to be
called. "Have you planted out my phloxes?"
"Planted 'em out every one," was the reply; "Likewhich the Delphy
Inums. An' I've put enough sweet peas in to supply Covint Garden
market, bearin' in mind as 'ow you sed you couldn't have enough on
'em. Sir Morton Pippitt's Lunnon valet came along while I was a-
doin' of it, an' 'e peers over the 'edge an' 'e sez, sez 'e: 'Weedin'
corn, are yer?' 'No, ye gowk,' sez I! 'Ever seen corn at all 'cept in
a bin? Mixed wi' thistles, mebbe?' An' then he used a bit of 'is
master's or'nary language, which as ye knows, Passon, is
chice—partic'ler chice. 'Evil communications c'rupts good manners'
even in a valet wot 'as no more to do than wash an' comb a man like a
'oss, an' pocket fifty pun a year for keepin' of 'is haristocratic
master clean. Lor'!—what a wurrld it is!—what a wurrld!"
He had by this time tied up the 'Crimson rambler' in orderly
fashion, and the Reverend John, stroking his moustache to hide a
smile, proceeded to issue various orders according to his usual daily
custom.
"Don't forget to plant some mignonette in the west border, Bainton.
Not the giant kind,—the odour of the large blooms is rough and
coarse compared with that of the smaller variety. Put plenty of the
'common stuff' in,—such mignonette as our grandmothers grew in their
gardens, before you Latin-loving horticultural wise-acres began to try
for size rather than sweetness."
Bainton drew himself up with a quaint assumption of dignity, and by
lifting his head a little more, showed his countenance fully,—a
countenance which, though weather-worn and deeply furrowed, was a
distinctly intelligent one, shrewd and thoughtful, with sundry little
curves of humour lighting up its native expression of saturnine
sedateness.
"I suppose y'are alludin' to the F.R.H.'s, Passon," he said; "They
all loves Latin, as cats loves milk; howsomever, they never knows 'ow
to pronounce it. Likewhich myself not bein' a F.R.H. nor likely to be,
I'm bound to confess I dabbles in it a bit,—though there's a chap wot
I gets cheap shrubs of, his Latin's worse nor mine, an' 'e's got all
the three letters after 'is name. 'Ow did 'e get 'em? By reason of
competition in the Chrysanthum Show. Lor'! Henny fool can grow ye a
chrysanthum as big as a cabbage, if that's yer fancy,- -that ain't
scientific gard'nin'! An' as for the mignonette, I reckon to agree wi'
ye, Passon—the size ain't the sweetness, likewhich when I married, I
married a small lass, for sez I: 'Little to carry, less to keep!' An'
that's true enough, though she's gained in breadth, Lor' love
'er!—wot she never 'ad in heighth. As I was a-sayin', the chap wot I
gets shrubs of, reels off 'is Latin like chollops of mud off a garden
scraper; but 'e don't understand it while 'e sez it. Jes' for show,
bless ye! It all goes down wi' Sir Morton Pippitt, though, for 'e sez,
sez 'e: 'MY cabbages are the prize vegetable, grown by Mr. Smogorton
of Worcester, F.R.H.' 'E's got it in 'is Catlog! Hor!—hor!—hor!
Passon, a bit o' Latin do go down wi' some folks in the gard'nin'
line—it do reely now!"
"Talking of Sir Morton Pippitt," said Walden, disregarding his
gardener's garrulity, "It seems he has visitors up at the Hall."
"'E 'as so," returned Bainton; "Reg'ler weedy waifs an' strays o'
'umanity, if one may go by out'ard appearance; not a single firm,
well-put-down leg among 'em. Mos'ly 'lords' and 'sirs.' Bein' so jes'
lately knighted for buildin' a 'ospital at Riversford, out of the
proceeds o' bone meltin' into buttons, Sir Morton couldn't a' course,
be expected to put up wi' a plain 'mister' takin' food wi' 'im."
"Well, well,—whoever they are, they want to see the church."
"Seems to me a sight o' folks wants to see the church since ye
spent so much money on it, Passon," said Bainton somewhat resentfully;
"There oughter be a charge made for entry."
Walden smiled thoughtfully; but there was a small line of vexation
on his brow.
"They want to see the church," he repeated, "Or rather Sir Morton
wants them to 'inspect' the church;"—and then his smile expanded and
became a soft mellow laugh; "What a pompous old fellow it is! One
would almost think he had restored the church himself, and not only
restored it, but built it altogether and endowed it!" He turned to go,
then suddenly bethought himself of other gardening matters,—
"Bainton, that bare corner near the house must be filled with
clematis. The plants are just ready to bed out. And look to the
geraniums in the front border. By the way, do you see that straight
line along the wall there,—where I am pointing?"
"Yes, sir!" dutifully rejoined Bainton, shading his eyes from the
strong sun with one grimy hand.
"Well, plant nothing but hollyhocks there,—as many as you can cram
in. We must have a blaze of colour to contrast with those dark yews.
See to the jessamine and passion-flowers by the porch; and there is a
'Gloire' rose near the drawing-room window that wants cutting back a
bit." He moved a step or two, then again turned: "I shall want you
later on in the orchard,—the grass there needs attending to."
A slow grin pervaded Bainton's countenance.
"Ye minds me of the 'Oly Scripter, Passon, ye does reely now!" he
said—"Wi' all yer different orders an' idees, y'are behavin' to me
like the very moral o' the livin' Wurrd!"
Walden looked amused.
"How do you make that out?"
"Easy enough, sir,—'The Scripter moveth us in sun'ry places'!
Hor!- hor!-hor!—"and Bainton burst into a hoarse chuckle of mirth,
entirely delighted with his own witticism, and walked off, not
waiting to see whether its effect on his master was one of offence or
appreciation. He was pretty sure of his ground, however, for he left
John Walden laughing, a laugh that irradiated his face with some of
the sunshine stored up in his mind. And the sparkle of mirth still
lingered in his eyes as, crossing the lawn and passing the seat where
the volume of Epictetus lay, now gratuitously decorated by a couple of
pale pink shell-like petals dropped from the apple- blossoms above it,
he entered his house, and proceeding to his study sat down and wrote
the following brief epistle:
"The Reverend John Walden presents his compliments to Sir Morton
Pippitt, and in reply to his note begs to say that, as the church is
always open and free, Sir Morton and his friends can 'inspect' it at
any time provided no service is in progress."
Putting this in an envelope, he sealed and stamped it. It should go
by post, and Sir Morton would receive it next morning. There was no
need for a 'special messenger,' either in the person of Bob Keeley,
or in the authorised Puck of the Post Office Messenger-service.
"For there is not the slightest hurry," he said to himself: "It
will not hurt Sir Morton to be kept waiting. On the contrary, it will
do him good. He had it all his own way in this parish before I came,—
but now for the past ten years he has known what it is to 'kick
against the pricks' of legitimate Church authority. Legitimate Church
authority is a fine thing! Half the Churchmen in the world don't use
it, and a goodly portion of the other half misuse it. But when you've
got a bumptious, purse-proud, self-satisfied old county snob like Sir
Morton Pippitt to deal with, the pressure of the iron hand should be
distinctly exercised under the velvet glove!"
He laughed heartily, throwing back his head with a sense of
enjoyment in his laughter. Then, rising from his desk, he turned
towards the wide latticed doors of his study, which opened into the
garden, and looked out dreamily, as though looking across the world
and far beyond it. The sweet mixed warbling of birds, the thousand
indistinguishable odours of flowers, made the air both fragrant and
musical. The glorious sunshine, the clear blue sky, the rustling of
the young leaves, the whispering swish of the warm wind through the
shrubberies,—all these influences entered the mind and soul of the
man and aroused a keen joy which almost touched the verge of sadness.
Life pulsated about him in such waves of creative passion, that his
own heart throbbed uneasily with Nature's warm restlessness; and the
unanswerable query which, in spite of his high and spiritual faith had
often troubled him, came back again hauntingly to his mind,—"Why
should Life be made so beautiful only to end in Death?"
This was the Shadow that hung over all things; this was the one
darkness he and others of his calling were commissioned to transfuse
into light,—this was the one dismal end for all poor human creatures
which he, as a minister of the Gospel was bound to try and represent
as not an End but a Beginning,—and his soul was moved to profound
love and pity as he raised his eyes to the serene heavens and asked
himself: "What compensation can all the most eloquent teaching and
preaching make to men for the loss of the mere sunshine? Can the
vision of a world beyond the grave satisfy the heart so much as this
one perfect morning of May!"
An involuntary sigh escaped him. The beating wings of a swallow
flying from its nest under the old gabled eaves above him flashed a
reflex of quivering light against his eyes; and away in the wide
meadow beyond, where the happy cattle wandered up to their fetlocks
in cowslips and lush grass, the cuckoo called with cheerful
persistence. One of old Chaucer's quaintly worded legends came to his
mind,—telling how the courtly knight Arcite,
"Is risen, and looketh on the merrie daye
All for to do his observance to Maye,—
And to the grove of which that I you told,
By aventure his way he gan to hold
To maken him a garland of the greves,
Were it of woodbind or of hawthorn leaves,
And loud he sung against the sunny sheen,—
'O Maye with all thy flowers and thy green,
Right welcome be thou, faire, freshe, Maye!
I hope that I some green here getten may!"
Smiling at the antique simplicity and freshness of the lines as
they rang across his brain like the musical jingle of an old-world
spinet, his ears suddenly caught the sound of young voices singing at
a distance.
"Here come the children!" he said; and stepping out from his open
window into the garden, he again bent his ear to listen. The
tremulous voices came nearer and nearer, and words could now be
distinguished, breaking through the primitive quavering melody of
'The Mayers' Song' known to all the country side since the thirteenth
century:
"Remember us poor Mayers all.—
And thus do we begin,
To lead our lives in righteousness,
Or else we die in sin.
We have been rambling all this night,
And almost all this day,
And now returning back again,
We bring you in the May.
The hedges and trees they are so green,
In the sunne's goodly heat,
Our Heavenly Father He watered them
With His Heavenly dew so sweet.
A branch of May we have brought you—-"
Here came a pause and the chorus dropped into an uncertain murmur.
John Walden heard his garden gates swing back on their hinges, and a
shuffling crunch of numerous small feet on the gravel path.
A sweet flute-like treble responded to this emphatic adjuration,
singing alone, clear and high,
"A branch of May—-" and then all the other voices chimed in:
"A branch of May we have brought you
And at your door it stands,
'Tis but a sprout,
But 'tis budded out
By the work of our Lord's hands!"
And with this, a great crown of crimson and white blossoms, set on
a tall, gaily-painted pole and adorned with bright coloured ribbons,
came nid-nodding down the box-tree alley to the middle of the lawn
opposite Walden's study window, where it was quickly straightened up
and held in position by the eager hands of some twenty or thirty
children, of all sizes and ages, who, surrounding it at its base,
turned their faces, full of shy exultation towards their pastor,
still singing, but in more careful time and tune:
"The Heavenly gates are open wide,
Our paths are beaten plain,
And if a man be not too far gone,
He may return again.
The moon shines bright and the stars give light
A little before it is day,
So God bless you all, both great and small,
And send you a merrie May!"
For a moment or two Walden found himself smitten by so strong a
sense of the mere simple sensuous joy of living, that he could do no
more than stand looking in silent admiration at the pretty group of
expectant young creatures gathered round the Maypole, and huddled, as
it were, under its cumbrous crown of dewy blossoms, which showed
vividly against the clear sky, while the long streamers of red, white
and blue depending from its summit, trailed on the daisy- sprinkled
grass at their feet.
Every little face was familiar and dear to him. That awkward lad,
grinning from ear to ear, with a particularly fine sprig of flowering
hawthorn in his cap, was Dick Styles;—certainly a very different
individual to Chaucer's knight, Arcite, but resembling him in so far
that he had evidently gone into the woods early, moved by the same
desire: "I hope that I some green here getten may!" That tiny girl,
well to the front, with a clean white frock on and no hat to cover her
tangle of golden curls, was Baby Hippolyta,—the last, the very last,
of the seemingly endless sprouting olive branches of the sexton, Adam
Frost. Why the poor child had been doomed to carry the name of
Hippolyta, no one ever knew. When he, Walden, had christened her, he
almost doubted whether he had heard the lengthy appellation aright,
and ventured to ask the godmother of the occasion to repeat it in a
louder voice. Whereupon 'Hip-po-ly-ta' was uttered in such strong
tones, so thoroughly well enunciated, that he could no longer mistake
it, and the helpless infant, screaming lustily, left the simple
English baptismal font burdened with a purely Greek designation. She
was, however, always called 'Ipsie' by her playmates, and even her
mother and father, who were entirely responsible for her name in the
first instance, found it somewhat weighty for daily utterance and
gladly adopted the simpler sobriquet, though the elders of the village
generally were rather fond of calling her with much solemn unction:
'Baby Hippolyta,' as though it were an elaborate joke. Ipsie was one
of the loveliest children in the village, and though she was only
two-and-a-half years old, she was fully aware of her own charms. She
was pushed to the front of the Maypole this morning, merely because
she was pretty,—and she knew it. That was why she lifted the extreme
edge of her short skirt and put it in her mouth, thereby displaying
her fat innocent bare legs extensively, and smiled at the Reverend
John Walden out of the uplifted corners of her forget-me-not blue
eyes. Then there was Bob Keeley, more or less breathless with
excitement, having just got back again from Badsworth Hall, his friend
the butcher boy having driven him to and from that place 'in a jiffy'
as he afterwards described it,—and there was a very sparkling,
smiling, vivacious little person of about fifteen, in a lilac cotton
frock, who wore a wreath of laburnum on her black curls, no other
than Kitty Spruce, generally alluded to in the village as 'Bob
Keeley's gel';—and standing near Baby Hippolyta, or 'Ipsie,' was the
acknowledged young beauty of the place, Susie Prescott, a slip of a
lass with a fair Madonna-like face, long chestnut curls and great,
dark, soft eyes like pansies filled with dew. Susie had a decided
talent for music,—she sang very prettily, and led the village choir,
under the guidance of Miss Janet Eden, the schoolmistress. This
morning, however, she was risking the duties of conductorship on her
own account, and very sweet she looked in her cheap white nuns-veiling
gown, wearing a bunch of narcissi carelessly set in her hair and
carrying a flowering hazel-wand in her hand, with which she beat time
for her companions as they followed her bird-like carolling in the
'Mayers' Song.' But just now all singing had ceased,—and every one of
the children had their round eyes fixed on John Walden with a mingling
of timidity, affection and awe that was very winning and pretty to
behold.
Taking in the whole picture of nature, youth and beauty, as it was
set against the pure background of the sky, Walden realised that he
was expected to say something,—in fact, he had been called upon to
say something every year at this time, but he had never been able to
conquer the singular nervousness which always overcame him on such
occasions. It is one thing to preach from a pulpit to an assembled
congregation who are prepared for orthodoxy and who are ready to
listen with more or less patience to the expounding of the same,—
but it is quite another to speak to a number of girls and boys all
full of mirth and mischief, and as ready for a frolic as a herd of
young colts in a meadow. Especially when it happens that most of the
girls are pretty, and when, as a clergyman and director of souls, one
is conscious that the boys are more or less all in love with the
girls,—that one is a bachelor,—getting on in years too;—and that-
-chiefest of all—it is May-morning! One may perhaps be conscious of
a contraction at the heart,—a tightening of the throat,—even a
slight mist before the eyes may tease and perplex such an one—who
knows? A flash of lost youth may sting the memory,—a boyish craving
for love and sympathy may stir the blood, and may make the gravest
parson's speech incoherent,—for after all, even a minister of the
Divine is but a man.
At any rate the Reverend John found it difficult to begin. The
round forget-me-not eyes of Baby Hippolyta stared into his face with
relentless persistency,—the velvet pansy-coloured ones of Susie
Prescott smiled confidingly up at him with a bewildering youthfulness
and unconsciousness of charm; and the mischief-loving small boys and
village yokels who stood grouped against the Maypole like rough fairy
foresters guarding magic timber, were, with all the rest of the
children, hushed into a breathless expectancy, waiting eagerly for
'Passon' to speak. And 'Passon' thereupon began,—in the lamest,
feeblest, most paternally orthodox manner:
"My dear children—"
"Hooray! Hooray! Three cheers for 'Passon'! Hooray!"
Wild whooping followed, and the Maypole rocked uneasily, and began
to slant downward in a drunken fashion, like a convivial giant whom
strong wine has made doubtful of his footing.
"Take care, you young rascals!" cried Walden, letting sentiment,
orthodoxy and eloquence go to the winds,—"You will have the whole
thing down!"
Peals of gay laughter responded, and the nodding mass of bloom was
swiftly pulled up and assisted to support its necessary horizontal
dignity. But here Baby Hippolyta suddenly created a diversion. Moved
perhaps by the consciousness of her own beauty, or by the general
excitement around her, she suddenly waved a miniature branch of
hawthorn and emitted a piercing yell.
"Passon! Tum 'ere! Passon! Tum 'ere!"
There was no possibility of 'holding forth' after this. A. short
address on the brevity of life, as being co-equal with the evanescent
joys of a Maypole, would hardly serve,—and a fatherly ambition as to
the unbecoming attitude of mendi-cancy assumed by independent young
villagers carrying a great crown of flowers round to every house in
the neighbourhood, and demanding pence for the show, would scarcely be
popular. Because what did the 'Mayers' Song say:
"The Heavenly gates are opened wide, Our paths are beaten plain;
And if a man be not too far gone, He may return again."
And the 'Heavenly gates' of Spring being wide open, the Reverend
John, thought his special path was 'beaten plain' for the occasion;
and not being 'too far gone' either in bigotry or lack of heart, John
did what he reverently imagined the Divine Master might have done when
He 'took a little child and set it in the midst." He obeyed Baby
Hippolyta's imperious command, and to her again loudly reiterated
"Passon! Tum 'ere!" he sprang forward and caught her up in his arms,
kissing her rosy cheeks heartily as he did so. Seated in 'high exalted
state' upon his shoulder. 'Ipsie' became Hippolyta in good earnest, so
thoroughly aware was she of her dignity, while, holding her as lightly
and buoyantly as he would have held a bird, the Reverend John turned
his smiling face on his young parishioners.
"Come along, boys and girls!" he exclaimed,—"Come and plant the
Maypole in the big meadow yonder, as you did last year! It is a
holiday for us all to-day,—for me as well as for you! It has always
been a holiday even before the days when great Elizabeth was Queen of
England, and though many dear old customs have fallen into disuse with
the changing world, St. Rest has never yet been robbed of its May-day
festival! Be thankful for that, children!—and come along;— but move
carefully!—keep order,—and sing as you come!"
Whereupon Susie Prescott lifted up her pretty voice again and her
hazel wand baton at the same moment, and started the chorus with the
verse:
"We have been rambling all this night, And almost all this day; And
now returning back again, We bring you in the May!"
And thus carolling, they passed through the garden moving meadow-
wards, Walden at the head of the procession,—and Baby Hippolyta
seated on his shoulder, was so elated with the gladsome sights and
sounds, that she clasped her chubby arms round 'Passon's' neck and
kissed him with a fervour that was as fresh and delightful as it was
irresistibly comic.
Bainton, making his way along the southern wall of the orchard, to
take a 'glance round' as he termed it, at the condition of the wall
fruit-trees before his master joined him on the usual morning tour of
inspection, stopped and drew aside to watch the merry procession
winding along under the brown stems dotted with thousands of red buds
splitting into pink-and-white bloom; and a slow smile moved the
furrows of his face upward in various pleasant lines as he saw the
'Passon' leading it with a light step, carrying the laughing 'Ipsie'
on his shoulder, and now and again joining in the 'Mayers' Song' with
a mellow baritone voice that warmed and sustained the whole chorus.
"There 'e goes!" he said half aloud—"Jes' like a boy!—for all the
wurrld like a boy! I reckon 'e's got the secret o' never growin' old,
for all that 'is 'air's turnin' a bit grey. 'Ow many passons in this
'ere neighbrood would carry the children like that, I wonder? Not one
on 'em!—though there's a many to pick an' choose from—a darned sight
too many if you axes my opinion! Old Putty Leveson, wi's bobbin' an'
'is bowin's to the east—hor!—hor!—hor!—a fine east 'e's got in 'is
mouldy preachin' barn, wi' a whitewashed wall an' a dirty bit o'
tinsel fixed up agin it—he wouldn't touch a child o' ourn, to save
'is life—though 'e's got three or four mean, lyin' pryin' brats of
'is own runnin' wild about the place as might jest as well 'ave never
been born. And as for Francis Anthony, the 'igh pontiff o' Riversford,
wi's big altar-cloak embrided for 'im by all the poor skinny spinsters
wot ain't never 'ad no chance to marry—'e'd see all the children
blowed to bits under the walls of Jericho to the sound o' the trumpets
afore 'e'd touch 'em! Talk o' saints!—I'm not very good at
unnerstannin' that kind o' folk, not seein' myself 'owever a saint
could manage to get on in this mortal wurrld; but I reckon to think
there's a tollable imitation o' the real article in Passon Walden—the
jolly sort o' saint, o' coorse,— not the prayin', whinin', snuffin'
kind. 'E's been doin' nothin' but good ever since 'e came 'ere, which
m'appen partly from 'is not bein' married. If 'e'd gotten a wife, the
place would a' been awsome different. Not but wot 'e ain't a bit
cranky over 'is, flowers 'isself. But I'd rather 'ave 'im fussin'
round than a petticut arter me. A petticut at 'ome's enough, an' I
ain't complainin' on it, though it's a bit breezy sometimes,—but a
petticut in the gard'nin' line would drive me main wild—it would
reely now!"
And still smiling with perfect complacency, he watched the Maypole
being carried carefully along the space of grass left open between
the fruit trees on either side of the orchard, and followed its
bright patch of colour and the children's faces and forms around it,
till it entirely disappeared among the thicker green of a clump of
elms that bordered the 'big meadow,' which Walden generally kept
clear of both crops and cattle for the benefit of the village sports
and pastimes.
He was indeed the only land-owner in the district who gave any
consideration of this kind to the needs of the people. St. Rest was
surrounded on all sides by several large private properties, richly
wooded, and possessing many acres of ploughed and pasture land, but
there was no public right-of-way across any single one of them, and
every field, every woodland path, every tempting dell was rigidly
fenced and guarded from 'vulgar' intrusion. None of the proprietors
of these estates, however, appeared to take the least personal joy or
pride in their possessions. They were for the most part away in London
for 'the season' or abroad 'out' of the season,—and their extensive
woods appeared to exist chiefly for the preservation of game, reared
solely to be shot by a few idle louts of fashion during September and
October, and also for the convenience and support of a certain land
agent, one Oliver Leach, who cut down fine old timber whenever he
needed money, and thought it advisable to pocket the proceeds of such
devastation.
Scarcely in one instance out of a hundred did the actual owners of
property miss the trees sufficiently to ask what had become of them.
So long as the game was all right, they paid little heed to the rest.
The partridges and the pheasants thrived, and so did Mr. Oliver Leach.
He enjoyed, however, the greatest unpopularity of any man in the
neighbourhood, which was some small comfort to those who believed in
the laws of compensation and justice. Bainton was his particular enemy
for one, and Bainton's master, John Walden, for another. His
long-practised 'knavish tricks' and the malicious delight he took in
trying to destroy or disfigure the sylvan beauty of the landscape by
his brutish ignorance of the art of forestry, combined with his own
personal greed, were beginning to be well- known in St. Rest, and it
is very certain that on May-morning when the youngsters of the village
were abroad and, to a great extent, had it all their own way, (aided
and abetted in that way by the recognised authority of the place, the
minister himself,) he would never have dared to show his hard face and
stiffly upright figure anywhere, lest he should be unmercifully
'guyed' without a chance of rescue or appeal.
With the disappearance of the Maypole into the further meadow,
Bainton likewise disappeared on his round of duty, which, as he had
declared, moved him 'in sundry places,' and for a little while the
dove-like spirit of Spring brooded in restful silence over the quiet
orchard and garden.
The singing of the May-day children had now grown so faint and far
as to be scarcely audible,—and the call of the cuckoo shrilling
above the plaintive murmur of the wood pigeons, soon absorbed even
the echo of the young human voices passing away. A light breeze
stirred the tender green grass, shaking down a shower of pink almond
bloom as it swept fan-like through the luminous air,—a skylark half
lost in the brilliant blue, began to descend earthwards, flinging out
a sparkling fountain of music with every quiver of his jewel- like
wings, and away in the sheltered shade of a small hazel copse, the
faint fluty notes of a nightingale trembled with a mysterious
sweetness suggestive of evening, when the song should be full.
More than an hour elapsed, and no living being entered the
seclusion of the parson's garden save Nebbie, the parson's rough
Aberdeen terrier, who, appearing suddenly at the open study-window,
sniffed at the fair prospect for a moment, and then, stepping out with
a leisurely air of proprietorship lay down on the grass in the full
sunshine. A wise-looking dog was Nebbie,—though few would have
thought that his full name was Nebuchadnezzar. Only the Reverend John
knew that. Nebbie was perfectly aware that the children had come with
the Maypole, and that his master had accompanied them to the big
meadow. Nebbie also knew that presently that same master of his would
return again to make the circuit of the garden in the company of
Bainton, according to custom,—and as he stretched his four hairy paws
out comfortably, and blinked his brown eyes at a portly blackbird
prodding in the turf for a worm within a stone's throw of him, he was
evidently considering whether it would be worth his while, as an
epicurean animal, to escort these two men on their usual round on
such a warm pleasant morning. For it was a dog's real lazy day,—a day
when merely to lie on the grass was sufficient satisfaction for the
canine mind. And Nebbie, yawning extensively, and stretching himself a
little more, closed his eyes in a rapture of peace, and stirred his
tail slightly with one, two, three mild taps on the soft grass, when a
sudden clear whistle caused him to spring up with every hair bristling
on end, fore-paws well forward and eyes wide open.
"Nebbie! Nebbie!"
Nebbie was nothing if not thoroughbred, and the voice of his master
was, despite all considerations of sleep and sunshine, to him as the
voice of the commanding officer to a subaltern. He was off like a
shot at a tearing pace, nose down and tail erect, and in less than a
minute had scented Walden in the shrubbery, which led by devious
windings down from the orchard to the banks of the river Rest, and
there finding him, started frantically gambolling round and round
him, as though years had parted man and dog from one another, instead
of the brief space of an hour. Walden was smiling to himself, and his
countenance was extremely pleasant. Nebbie, with the quaint conceit
common to pet animals, imagined that the smile was produced specially
for him, and continued his wild jumps and barks till his red tongue
hung a couple of inches out of his mouth with excess of heat and
enthusiasm.
"Nebbie! Nebbie!" said the Reverend John, mildly; "Don't make such
a noise! Down, lad, down!"
Nebbie subsided, and on reaching the river bank, squatted on his
haunches, with his tongue still lolling out, while he watched his
master step on a small floating pier attached by iron chains and
posts to the land, and bend therefrom over into the clear water,
looking anxiously downward to a spot he well knew, where hundreds of
rare water-lilies were planted deep in the bed of the stream.
"Nymphea Odorata,"—he murmured, in the yearning tone of a lover
addressing his beloved;—"Nymphea Chromatella—now I wonder if I
shall see anything of them this year! The Aurora Caroliniana must
have been eaten up by water-rats!"
Nebbie uttered a short bark. The faintest whisper of 'rats'
seriously affected his nerves. He could have told his master many a
harrowing story of those mischievous creatures swimming to and fro in
the peaceful flood, tearing with their sharp teeth at the lily roots,
and making a horrible havoc of all the most perfect buds of promise.
The river Rest itself was so clear and bright that it was difficult to
associate rats with its silver flowing,—yet rats there were, hiding
among the osiers and sedges, frightening the moorhens and
reed-warblers out of their little innocent lives. Nebbie caught and
killed them whenever he could,—but he had no particular taste for
swimming, and he was on rather 'strained relations' with a pair of
swans who, with a brood of cygnets kept fierce guard on the opposite
bank against all unwelcome intrusion.
His careful examination of the lily beds done, John Walden sprang
back again from the pier to the land, and there hesitated a moment.
His eyes rested longingly on a light punt, which, running half out of
a rustic boathouse, swayed suggestively on the gleaming water.
"I wish I had time,—" he said, half aloud, while Nebbie wagging
his tail violently, sat waiting and expectant. The river looked
deliciously tempting. The young green of the silver birches drooping
above its shining surface, the lights and shadows rippling across it
with every breath of air,—the skimming of swallows to and fro,—the
hum of bees among the cowslips, thyme and violets that were pushing
fragrantly through the clipped turf,—were all so many wordless
invitations to him to go forth into the fair freedom of Nature.
"The green trees whispered low and mild, It was a sound of joy!
They were my playmates when a child, And rocked me in their arms so
wild! Still they looked on me and smiled As if I were a boy!"
Such simple lines,—by Longfellow too, the despised of all the Sir
Oracles of criticism,—yet coming to Walden's memory suddenly, they
touched a chord of vivid emotion.
"And still they whispered soft and low! Oh, I could not choose but
go!"
he hummed half under his breath, and then with a decided movement
turned from the winding river towards the house.
"No, Nebbie, it's no use," he said aloud, addressing his
four-footed comrade, who thereupon got up reluctantly and began to
trot pensively beside him—"We mustn't be selfish. There are a
thousand and one things to do. There is dinner to be served to the
children at two o'clock—there is Mrs. Keeley to call upon—there are
the school accounts to be looked into,—" here he glanced at his
watch— " Good Heavens!—how time flies! It is half-past eleven! I
shall have to see Bainton later on."
He hurried his steps and was just in sight of his study window,
when he was met by his parlourmaid, a neat, trim young woman who
rejoiced in the euphonious name of Hester Rockett, and who said as she
approached him:
"If you please, sir, Mrs. Spruce."
His genial face fell a little, and he heaved a short sigh.
"Mrs. Spruce? Oh, Lord!—I mean, very well! Show her in, Hester.
You are sure she wants to see me? Or is it her girl Kitty she is
after?"
"She didn't mention Kitty, sir," replied Hester demurely; "She said
she wished to see you very particular."
"All right! Show her into my study, and afterwards just go round to
the orchard and tell Bainton I will see him when he's had his dinner.
I know I sha'n't get off under an hour at least!"
He sighed again, then smiled, and entered the house, Nebbie
sedately following. Arrived in his own quiet sanctum, he took off his
soft slouched hat and seated himself at his desk with a composed air
of patient attention, as the door was opened to admit a matronly-
looking lady with a round and florid countenance, clad in a
voluminous black gown, and wearing a somewhat aggressive black
bonnet, 'tipped' well forward, under which her grey hair was
plastered so far back as to be scarcely visible. There was a certain
aggrieved dignity about her, and a generally superior tone of self-
consciousness even in the curtsey which she dropped respectfully, as
she returned Walden's kindly nod and glance.
"Good morning, Mrs. Spruce!"
"Good morning, sir! I trust I see you well, sir?"
"Thank you, Mrs. Spruce, I am very well."
"Which is a mercy indeed!" said Mrs. Spruce fervently; "For we
never knows from one day to another whether we may be sound or
crippled, considering the diseases which now flies in the air with the
dust in the common road, as the papers tell us,—and dust is a thing
we cannot prevent, do what we may, for the dust is there by the will
of the Almighty, Who made us all out of it."
She paused. John Walden smiled and pointed to a chair,
"Won't you sit down, Mrs. Spruce?"
"Thank you kindly, sir!" and Mrs. Spruce accordingly plumped into
the seat indicated with evident relief and satisfaction. "I will
confess that it is a goodish step to walk on such a warm morning."
"You have come straight from the Manor?" enquired Walden, turning
over a few papers on his desk, and wondering within himself when the
good woman was going to unburden herself of her business.
"Straight from the Manor, sir, yes,—and such a heat and moil I
never felt on any May morning, which is most onwholesome, I am sure.
A cold May and a warm June is what I prefers myself,—but when you
get the cuckoo and the nightingale clicketin' together in the woods
on the First of May, you can look out for quarrelsome weather at
Midsummer, leastways so I have heard my mother often say, and she was
considered a wise woman in her time, I do assure you!"
Here Mrs. Spruce untied her bonnet-strings and flung them apart,—
she likewise loosened the top button of her collar and heaved a deep
sigh. Again the Reverend John smiled, and vaguely balanced a
penholder on his fore-finger.
"I daresay your mother was quite right, Mrs. Spruce! Indeed, I
believe all our mothers were quite right in their day. All the same,
I'm glad it's a fine May morning', for the children's sakes. They are
all down in the big meadow having a romp together. Your little Kitty
is with them, looking as bright as a May blossom herself."
Mrs. Spruce straightened herself up, patted her ample bosom, with
one hand, and threw her bonnet-strings still further back.
"Kitty's a good lass," she said, "though a bit mettlesome and wild;
but I'm not saying anything again her. The Lord forbid that I should
run down my own flesh and blood! An' she's better than most gels of
her age. I wouldn't grudge her a bit of fun while she's got it in
her,—Heaven knows it'll be soon gone out of her when she marries,
which nat'rally she will do, sooner or later. Anyhow, she's all I've
got,—which is a marvel how the Lord deals with some of us, when you
see a little chidester of a woman like Adam Frost's wife with
fifteen, boys and girls, and me with only one nesh maid."
Walden was silent. He was not disposed to argue on such marvels of
the Lord's way, as resulted in endowing one family with fifteen
children, and the other with only a single sprout, such as was
accorded to the righteous Jephthah, judge of Israel.
"Howsomever," continued Mrs. Spruce, "Kitty's welcome to jump round
the Maypole till she's wore her last pair of boots out, if so be it's
your wish, Mr. Walden,—and many thanks to you, sir, for all your
kindness to her!"
"Don't mention it, Mrs. Spruce!" said Walden amicably, and then,
determining to bring the worthy woman sharply round to the real
object of her visit, he gave a side-glance at the clock. "Is there
anything you want me to do for you this morning? I'm rather busy—"
"Beggin' your pardon, I'm sure, sir, for troubling you at all!—
knowin' as I do that what with the moithering old folks and the
maupsing young ones, your 'ands is always full. But when I got the
letter this morning, I says to my husband, William—'William,' says
I, very loud, for the poor creature's growing so deaf that by and by
I shall be usin' a p'lice whistle to make him 'ear me—'William,'
says I, 'there is only one man in this village who's got the right to
give advice when advice is asked for. Of course there's no call for us
to follow advice, even when we gets it,—howsomever, it's only
respectable for decent church-going folks to see the minister of the
parish whenever there's any fear of our makin' a slip of our souls and
goin' wrong. Therefore, William,' says I, shaking him By the arm to
make the poor silly fool understand me, 'it's to Passon Walden I'm
goin' this mornin' with this letter,—to Passon Walden, d'ye 'ear?'
And he nodded his head wise-like, for all the world as though there
were a bit of sense in it, (which there ain't), and agrees with
me;—for the Lord, knows, if William doesn't, that it may make an
awsome change for him as well as for me. And I do confess I've been
took back."
Following as best he could the entangled thread of the estimable
lady's discourse, Walden grasped the fact, albeit vaguely, that some
unexpected letter with unexpected news in it had arrived to trouble
the Spruces' domestic peace. Suppressing a slight yawn, he
endeavoured to assume the proper show of interest which every village
parson is expected to display on the shortest notice concerning any
subject, from the birth of the latest baby parishioner, to the death
of the earliest sucking pig.
"I'm sorry you're in trouble, Mrs. Spruce," he said kindly; "What
letter are you speaking of? You see I don't quite understand—"
"Which it's not to be expected you should, sir!" replied Mrs.
Spruce with an air of triumph,—"Considerin' as you wer'n't here when
she left, and the Manor has been what you may call a stately 'ome of
England deserted as most stately 'omes are, for more'n ten years, you
couldn't be expected to understand!"
The Reverend John looked as he felt, completely mystified. He
'wasn't here when she left.' Who was 'she'? With all his naturally
sweet temper he began to feel slightly irritated.
"Really, Mrs. Spruce," he said, endeavouring to throw an inflection
of sternness into his mellow voice, "I must ask you to explain
matters a little more clearly. I know that the Manor has been
practically shut up ever since I've been here,—that you are the
housekeeper in charge, and that your husband is woodman or forester
there,—but beyond this I know nothing. So you must not talk in
riddles, Mrs. Spruce,"—here his kind smile shone out again—"Even as
a boy I was never good at guessing them! And I am getting old now."
"So you are, sir—so you are!" agreed Mrs. Spruce sympathetically;
"And 'tis a shame for me to come worryin' of you,—for no one more
truly than myself can feel pity for the weariness of the flesh, when
'tis just a burden to the bones and no pleasure in the carryin' of
it, though you don't put much of it on, Passon Walden, you don't, I
do assure you! But it's Gospel truth that some folks wears thin like
a knife, while others wears thick like a pig, and there is no
stopping them,—either way bein' the Lord's will,—but I'm feelin'
real okkard myself to have put you about, Passon, only as I said,
I've been took back,—and here's the letter, sir, which if you will
kindly glance your hi over, you will tell me whether I've done the
right thing to call on my way down here and get in a couple of
scrubbers at eighteen-pence a day, which is dear, but they won't come
for less, jest to get some of the rough dirt off the floors afore
polishin', which polishin' will have to be done whether we will or no,
for the boards are solid oak, and bein' ancient take the shine
quickly, which is a mercy, for this day week is none too far off,
seein' all that's put upon me suddint."
Here, being short of breath, she paused, and fumbling in a large
black calico pocket which hung loosely at her side, attached to her
ample waist by a string, she drew out with great care a rather large,
square-looking missive, and then rising from her chair with much
fluttering of her black gown and mysterious creaking sound, as of
tight under-wear strained to breaking point, she held it out toward
Walden, who had durng her last oratorical outburst unconsciously put
his hand to his head in a daze of bewilderment.
"There is the letter sir," she continued, in the tone of one who
should say: 'There is the warrant for execution'—"'Short and sweet,'
as the farmer's wife said when she ate the pig's tail what dropped off
while the animal was a-roastin'."
Allowing this brilliant simile to pass without comment, Walden took
the thick, creamy-white object she offered and found himself
considering it with a curious disfavour. It was a strictly
'fashionable' make of envelope, and was addressed in a particularly
bold and assertive hand-writing to
MRS. SPRUCE, Housekeeper, Abbot's Manor, St. Rest.
Opening it, the Reverend John read as follows:
"Miss Vancourt begs to inform Mrs. Spruce that she will arrive at
Abbot's Manor on the 7th inst., to remain there in residence. Mrs.
Spruce is requested to engage the necessary household servants, as
Miss Vancourt will bring none except the groom in charge of her two
hunters."
Over and over again Walden read this curt and commonplace note,
with a sense of irritation which he knew was perfectly absurd, but
which, nevertheless, defied all reason. The paper on which it was
written was thick and satiny,—and there was a faint artificial odour
of violets about it which annoyed him. He hated scented notepaper.
Deliberately he replaced it in its envelope, and holding it for a
moment as he again studied the superscription, he addressed the
expectant Mrs. Spruce, who had re-seated herself and was waiting for
him to speak.
"Well, Mrs. Spruce, I don't think you need any advice from me on
such a simple matter as this," he said slowly. "Your duty is quite
plain. You must obey orders. Miss Vancourt is, I suppose, the
mistress of Abbot's Manor?"
"She is, sir,—of course it all belongs to Miss Maryllia—"
"Miss—what?" interrupted Walden, with a sudden lightening of his
dark blue eyes.
"Maryllia, sir. It is a kind of family name, pronounced 'Ma-rill-
yer,'" explained Mrs. Spruce with considerable pomposity; "Many folks
never gets it right—it wants knowledge and practice. But if you
remember the pictures in the gallery at the Manor, sir, you may call
to mind one of the ancestresses of the Vancourts, painted in a vi'let
velvet; ridin' dress and holdin' a huntin' crop, and the name
underneath is 'Mary Ella Adelgisa de Vaignecourt' and it was after
her that the old Squire called his daughter Maryllia, rollin' the two
fust names, Mary Elia, into one, as it were, just to make a name what
none of his forebears had ever had. He was a queer man, the old
Squire—he wouldn't a-cared whether the name was Christian or
heathen."
"I suppose not." said the Reverend John carelessly, rising and
pushing back his chair with a slightly impatient gesture; whereupon
Mrs. Spruce rose too, and stood 'at attention,' her loosened bonnet-
strings flying and her large black calico pocket well in evidence to
the front of her skirt.
"Here's your letter, Mrs. Spruce;" and as she took it from his hand
with a curtsey he continued: "There is evidently nothing for it but
to get the house in order by the day appointed and do your best to
please the lady. I can quite understand that you feel a little
worried at having to prepare everything so quickly and
unexpectedly,—but after all, you must have often thought that Miss
Vancourt's return to her old home was likely to happen at any time."
"Which I never did, sir!" declared Mrs. Spruce emphatically, "No,
sir, never! For when the old Squire died, she was jest a slip of
fifteen and her uncle, the Squire's own twin brother, what had
married an American heiress with somethin' like a hundred million of
money, so I'm told, took her straight away and adopted her like, and
the reg'ler pay for keepin' up the Manor and grounds has been sent to
us through a Bank, and so far we've got nothin' to complain of bein'
all strictly honourable both ways, but of Miss Vancourt we never heard
a thing. And Mr. Oliver Leach he is the agent of the property, and he
ain't never said a word,—and we think, me and my husband, that he
don't know nothin' of her comin' back, and should we tell him, sir? Or
would you reckon that we'd better keep a still tongue in our heads
till she do come? For there's no knowin' why or wherefore she's
comin',—though we did hear her poor uncle died two years ago, and we
wondered where she and her aunt with the hundred million was got
to—but mebbe she'll change her mind and not come, after all?"
"I should certainly not count upon that, if I were you, Mrs.
Spruce," said Walden decisively; "Your business is to keep everything
in order for the lady's arrival; but I don't think,—I really don't
think, you are at all bound to inform Mr. Oliver Leach of the matter.
He will no doubt find out for himself. or receive his orders direct
from Miss Vancourt." Here he paused. "How old did you say she was
when, she went away from home?"
"Fifteen, sir. That was nigh eleven years ago,—just one week after
the Squire's funeral, and a year afore you came here, sir. She's
gettin' on for seven-and-twenty now."
"Quite a woman, then," said Walden lightly; "Old enough to know her
own mind at any rate. Do you remember her?"
"Perfectly well, sir,—a little flitterin' creature all eyes and
hair, with a saucy way of tossin' her curls about, and a trick of
singin' and shoutin' all over the place. She used to climb the pine
trees and sit in them and pelt her father with the cones. Oh, yes,
sir, she was a terrible child to rule, and it's Gospel truth there
was no ruling her, for the governesses came and went like the
seasons, one in, t'other out. Ay, but the Lord knows I'll never
forget the scream she gave when the Squire was brought home from the
hunting field stone dead!"
Here John Walden turned his head towards her with an air of more
interest than he had yet shown.
"Ah!—How was that?" he enquired.
"He was killed jumpin' a fence;" went on Mrs. Spruce; "A fine,
handsome gentleman,—they say he'd been wild in his youth; anyhow he
got married in London to a great Court beauty, so I've been told. And
after the wedding, they went travelling allover the world for a year
and a half, and just when they was expected 'ome Mrs. Vancourt died
with the birth of the child, and he and the baby and the nurses all
came back here and he never stirred away again himself till death took
him at full gallop,—which is 'ow he always wished to die. But poor
Miss Maryllia—" And Mrs. Spruce sighed dolefully— "'Twas hard on
her, seein' him ride off so gay and well and cheery in the early
mornin' to be brought home afore noon a corpse! Ay, it was an awsome
visitation of the Lord! Often when the wind goes wimblin' through the
pines near the house I think I 'ear her shriek now,—ay, sir!—it was
like the cry of somethin' as was havin' its heart tore out!"
Walden stood very silent, listening. This narrative was new to him,
and even Mrs. Spruce's manner of relating it was not without a
certain rough eloquence. The ancient history of the Vancourts he knew
as well as he knew the priceless archaeological value of their old
Manor-house as a perfect gem of unspoilt Tudor architecture,— but
though he had traced the descent of the family from Robert Priaulx de
Vaignecourt of the twelfth century and his brother Osmonde Priaulx de
Vaignecourt who had, it was rumoured, founded a monastery in the
neighbourhood, and had died during a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, he
had ceased to follow the genealogical tree with much attention or
interest when the old Norman name of De Vaignecourt had degenerated
into De Vincourt and finally in the times of James I. had settled down
into Vancourt. Yet there was a touch of old-world tragedy in Mrs.
Spruce's modern history of the young girl's shriek when she found
herself suddenly fatherless on that fatal hunting morning.
"And now," continued Mrs. Spruce, coaxing one bonnet-string at a
time off each portly shoulder with considerable difficulty; "I s'pose
I must be goin', Passon Walden, and thank you kindly for all! It's a
great weight off my mind to have told you just what's 'appened, an'
the changes likely to come off, and I do assure you I'm of your
opinion, Passon, in letting Oliver Leach shift for himself, for if so
be Miss Vancourt has the will of her own she had when she was a gel, I
shouldn't wonder if there was rough times in store for him! But the
Lord only knows what may chance to all of us!" and here she heaved
another dismal sigh as she tied the refractory bonnet-strings into a
bow under her fat chin. "It's right-down sinful of me to be wishin'
rough times to any man, seein' I'm likely in for them myself, for a
person's bound to be different at nigh seven-and-twenty to what she
was at fifteen, and the modern ways of leddies ain't old ways, the
Lord be merciful to us all! And I do confess, Passon, it's a bit
upsettin' at my time of life to think as how I've lived in Abbot's
Manor all these years, and now for all I can tell, me and William may
have to shift. And where we'll go, the Lord only knows!"
"Now don't anticipate misfortune, Mrs. Spruce!" said Walden,
beginning to shake off the indescribable feeling of annoyance against
which he had been fighting for the past few minutes and resuming his
usual quiet air of cheerfulness; "Miss Vancourt is not likely to
dismiss you unless you offend her. The great thing is to avoid
offence,—and to do even more than your strict duty in making her old
home look its best and brightest for her return and—" Here he
hesitated for a moment, then went on—"Of course if I can do anything
to help you, I will."
"Thank you, sir, I'm sure most kindly," said Mrs. Spruce curtseying
two or three times in a voluminous overflow of gratitude. "I shall
take the liberty of asking you to step up during the week, to see how
things appears to you yourself. And as for servants, there's no gels
old enough at the school for servants, so I'll be goin' to Riversford
with the carrier's cart to-morrow to see what I can do. Ah, It's an
awsome mission I'm goin' on; there ain't no gels to be got of the old
kind, as far as I can make out. They all wants to be fine leddies
nowadays and marry 'Merican millionaires."
"Not quite so bad as that, I think, Mrs. Spruce!" laughed Walden,
holding open the door of the study for her to pass out, as a broad
hint that the interview must be considered at an end.—"There are
plenty of good, industrious, intelligent girls in England ready and
willing to enter domestic service, if we make it worth their while,-
-and I'm sure no one can teach YOU anything in that line! Good-
morning, Mrs. Spruce!"
"Good-morning, sir,—and you'll step up to the Manor when
convenient some afternoon?"
"Certainly, if you wish it. Whenever convenient to yourself, Mrs.
Spruce."
Mrs. Spruce curtseyed again at the respect for her own importance
which was implied in Walden's last sentence, and slowly sidled out,
the 'Passon' watching her with a smile as she trotted down the
passage from his study to a door which led to the kitchen and
basement.
"Now she'll go and tell all her story again to Hester and the
cook," he said to himself; "And how she will enjoy herself to be sure!
Bless the woman, what a tongue she has! No wonder her husband is
deaf!"
He re-seated himself at his desk, and taking up a bundle of
accounts connected with the church and the school, tried to fix his
attention on them, but in vain. His mind wandered. He was obliged to
own to himself that he was unreasonably irritated at the news that
Abbot's Manor, which had been so long a sort of unoccupied 'show'
house, was again to be inhabited,—and by one who was its rightful
owner too. Ever since he had bought the living of St. Rest he had been
accustomed to take many solitary walks through the lovely woods
surrounding the Vancourts' residence, without any fear of being
considered a trespasser,—and he had even strolled through the wide,
old-fashioned gardens with as little restraint as though they had
belonged to himself, Mrs. Spruce, the housekeeper, being the last
person in the world to forbid her minister to enter wherever he
would. He had passed long hours of delightful research in the old
library, and many afternoons of meditation in the picture gallery,
where the portrait of the lady in the 'vi'let velvet,' Mary Elia
Adelgisa de Vaignecourt, had often caught his eye and charmed his
fancy when the setting sun had illumined its rich colouring and had
given life to the face, half-petulant, half-sweet, which pouted forth
from the old canvas like a rose with light on its petals. Now all
these pleasant rambles were finished. The mistress of Abbot's Manor
would certainly object to a wandering parson in her house and grounds.
Probably she was a very imperious, disagreeable young woman,—full of
the light scorn, lack of sentiment and cheap atheism common to the
'smart' lady of a decadent period, and if it were true that she had
been for so many years in the charge of an American aunt with a
'hundred millions,' the chances were ten to one that she would be an
exceedingly unpleasant neighbour.
He gave a short impatient sigh.
"Ah, well! I only hope she will put a stop to the felling of the
fine old trees in her domain," he said half aloud,—"If no one else
in the village has the pluck to draw her attention to the
depredations of Oliver Leach, I will. But, so far as other matters
go,—my walks in the Manor woods are ended! Yes, Nebbie!" and he
gently patted the head of the faithful animal, who, with inborn
sagacity instinctively guessing that his master was somewhat annoyed,
was clambering with caressing forepaws against his knee. "Our rambles
by the big elms and silvery birches and under the beautiful tall pines
are over, Nebbie! and we shouldn't be human if we weren't just a
trifle sorry! Sir Morton Pippitt is bad enough as a neighbour, but
he's a good three miles off at Badsworth Hall, thank Heaven!—whereas
Abbot's Manor is but a quarter of an hour's walk from this gate. We've
had pleasant times in the dear old- fashioned gardens, Nebbie, you and
I, but it's all over! The mistress of the Manor is coming home,—and
I'm positively certain, Nebbie,—yes, old boy!—positively certain
that we shall both detest her!"
When England's great Queen, Victoria the Good; was still enjoying
her first happy years of wedded life, and society, under her gentle
sway, was less ostentatious and much more sincere in its code of
ethics than it is nowadays, the village of St. Rest, together with
the adjacent post-town of Riversford, enjoyed considerable importance
in county chronicles. Very great 'county personages' were daily to be
seen comporting themselves quite simply among their own tenantry, and
the Riversford Hunt Ball annually gathered together a veritable galaxy
of 'fair women and brave men' who loved their ancestral homes better
than all the dazzle and movement of town, and who possessed for the
most part that 'sweet content' which gives strength to the body and
elasticity to the mind. There was then a natural gaiety and
spontaneous cheerfulness in English country life that made such a life
good for human happiness; and the jolly Squires who with their 'dames'
kept open house and celebrated Harvest Home and Christmas Festival
with all the buoyancy and vigour of a sane and healthful manhood
undeteriorated by any sickly taint of morbid pessimism and indifferent
inertia, were the beneficent rulers of a merrier rural population than
has ever been seen since their day. Squire Vancourt the elder,
grandfather of the present heiress of Abbot's Manor, had been a
splendid specimen of 'the fine old English gentleman, all of the olden
time,' and his wife, one of the handsomest, as well as one of the
kindest-hearted women that ever lived, had been justly proud of her
husband, devoted to her children, and a true friend and benefactress
to the neighbourhood. Her four sons, two of whom were twins, all great
strapping lads, built on their vigorous father's model, were
considered the best- looking young men in the county, and by their
fond mother were judged as the best-hearted; but, as it often happens,
Nature was freakish in their regard, and turned them all out wild
colts of a baser breed than might have been expected from their
unsullied parentage. The eldest took to hard drinking and was killed
at steeple-chasing; the second was drowned while bathing; one of the
twins, named Frederick, the younger by a few minutes, after nearly
falling into unnameable depths of degradation by gambling with
certain 'noble and exalted' personages of renown, saved himself, as
it were, by the skin of his teeth, through marriage with a rich
American girl whose father was blessed with unlimited, oil-mines. He
was thereby enabled to wallow in wealth with an impaired digestion
and shattered nervous power, while capricious Fate played him her
usual trick in her usual way by denying him any heirs to his married
millions. His first-born brother, Robert, wedded for love, and chose
as his mate a beautiful girl without a penny, whose grace and charm
had dazzled the London world of fashion for about two seasons, and
she had died at the age of twenty in giving birth to her first child,
the girl whom her father had named Maryllia.
All these chances and changes of life, however, occurring to the
leading family of the neighbourhood had left very little mark on St.
Rest, which drowsed under the light shadow of the eastern hills by
its clear flowing river, very much as it had always drowsed in the
old days, and very much as it would always do even if London and
Paris were consumed by unsuspected volcanoes. The memory of the first
'old Squire,'—who died peacefully in his bed all alone, his wife
having passed away two years before him, and his two living twin sons
being absent,—was frequently mixed with stories of the other 'old
Squire' Robert, the elder twin, who was killed in the hunting
field,—and indeed it often happened that some of the more ancient and
garrulous villagers were not at all sure as to which was which. The
Manor had been shut up for ten years,—the Manor 'family' had not been
heard of during all that period, and the tenantry's recollection of
their late landlord, as well as of his one daughter, was more vague
and confused than authentic. The place had been 'managed' and the
cottage rents collected by the detested agent Oliver Leach, a fact
which did not sweeten such remembrance of the Vancourts as still
existed in the minds of the people.
However, nothing in the general aspect and mental attitude of the
village had altered very much since the early thirties, except the
church. That from a mere ruin, had under John Walden's incumbency
become a gem of architecture, so unique and perfect as to be the
wonder and admiration of all who beheld it, and whereas in the early
Victorian reign a few people stopped at Riversford because it was a
county town and because there was an inn there where they could put
up their horses, so a few people now went to St. Rest, because there
was a church there worth looking at. They came by train to
Riversford, where the railway line stopped, and then took carriage or
cycled the seven miles between that town and St. Rest to see the
church; and having seen it, promptly went back again. For one of the
great charms of the little village hidden under the hills was that no
tourist could stay a night in it, unless he or she took one spare
room—there was only one—at the small public-house which sneaked
away up round a corner of the street under an archway of ivy, and
pushed its old gables through the dark enshrouding leaves with a
half-surprised, half-propitiatory air, as though somewhat ashamed of
its own existence. With the exception of this one room in this one
public-house, there was no accommodation for visitors. Never will the
rash cyclist who ventured once to appeal to the sexton's wife for
rooms in her cottage, forget the brusqueness of his reception:
"Rooms!" And Mrs. Frost, setting her arms well akimbo, surveyed the
enquirer scornfully through an open doorway, rendered doubly inviting
by the wealth of roses clambering round it. "Be off, young man! Where
was you a-comin' to? D'ye think a woman wi' fifteen great boys and
girls in an' out of the 'ouse all day, 'as rooms for payin' guests!"
And here Mrs. Frost, snorting at the air in irrepressible disdain,
actually snapped her fingers in her would-be lodger's face. "Rooms
indeed! Go to Brighting!"
Whereupon the abashed wheelman went,—whether to Brighton, as the
irate lady suggested, or to a warmer place unmentionable history
sayeth not. But St. Rest remained, as its name implied, restful,—
and the barbaric yell of the cheap tripper, together with the equally
barbaric scream of the cheap tripper's 'young lady' echoed chiefly
through modernised and vulgarised Riversford, where there were
tea-rooms and stuffy eating-houses and bad open-air concerts, such as
trippers and their 'ladies' delight in,—and seldom disturbed the
tranquil charm of the tiny mediaeval village dear to a certain few
scholars, poets and antiquarians who, through John Walden, had
gradually become acquainted with this 'priceless bit' as they termed
it, of real 'old' England and who almost feared to mention its
existence even in a whisper, lest it should be 'swarmed over' by
enquiring Yankees, searching for those everlasting ancestors who all
managed so cleverly to cross the sea together in one boat, the
Mayflower.
There is something truly pathetic as well as droll in the anxiety
of every true American to prove himself or herself an offshoot from
some old British root of honour or nobility. It would be cruel to
laugh at this instinct, for after all it is only the passionate
longing of the Prodigal Son who, having eaten of the husks that the
swine did eat, experienced such an indigestion at last, that he said
'I will arise and go to my father.' And it is quite possible that an
aspiring Trans-Atlantic millionaire yearning for descent more than
dollars, would have managed to find tracks of a Mayflower pedigree in
St. Rest, a place of such antiquity as to be able to boast a chivalric
'roll of honour' once kept in the private museum at Badsworth Hall
before the Badsworth family became extinct, but now, thanks to Walden,
rescued from the modern clutch of the Hall's present proprietor, Sir
Morton Pippitt, and carefully preserved in an iron box locked up in
the church, along with other documents of value belonging to the
neighbourhood. On this were inscribed the names of such English
gentlemen once resident in the district, who had held certain
possessions in France at the accession of Henry II. in 1154. Besides
the 'roll of honour' there were other valuable records having to do
with the Anglo-French campaigns in the time of King John, and much
concerning those persons of St. Rest and Riversford who took part in
the Wars of the Barons.
Whatever there was of curious or interesting matter respecting the
village and its surroundings had been patiently ferreted out by John
Walden, who had purchased the living partly because he knew it to be
a veritable mine for antiquarian research, and one likely to afford
him inexhaustible occupation and delight. But there were, of course,
other reasons for his settling down in so remote a spot far from the
busy haunts of men,—reasons which, to his own mind, were perfectly
natural and simple, though on account of his innate habit of
reticence, and disinclination to explain his motives to others, they
were by some supposed to be mysterious. In his youth he had been one
of the most brilliant and promising of University scholars, and all
those who had assisted to fit him for his career in the Church, had
expected great things of him. Some said he would be a Bishop before
he was thirty; others considered that he would probably content
himself with being the most intellectual and incisive preacher of his
time. But he turned out to be neither one nor the other. A certain
Henry Arthur Brent, his fellow student at College and five years his
senior, had, with apparent ease, outstripped him in the race for
honour, though lacking in all such exceptional slowly off towards the
vegetable garden where his 'under gardeners' as he called three or
four sturdy village lads employed to dig and hoe, constantly required
his supervision.
Meanwhile Walden, leaving his own grounds, entered the churchyard,
walking with softly reverent step among the little green mounds of
earth, under which kind eyes were closed, and warm hearts lay cold,
till, reaching the porched entrance of the church itself, he paused,
brought to a halt by the sound of voices which were pitched rather
too loud for propriety, considering the sacredness of the
surroundings.
"That eastern window is crude—very crude!" said a growlingly
robust baritone; "I suppose the reverend gentleman could not secure
sufficient subscriptions to meet the expense of suitable stained
glass?"
"Unfortunately Mr. Walden is a very self-opinionated man," replied
a smooth and oily tenor, whose particular tone of speech Walden
recognised as that of the Reverend 'Putty' Leveson, the minister of
Badsworth, a small scattered village some five or six miles 'on the
wrong side of Badsworth Hall,' as the locality was called, owing to
its removed position from the county town of Riversford. "He would
not accept outside advice. Of course these columns and capitals are
all wrong,—they are quite incongruous with early Norman walls,—but
when ignorance is allowed to have its own way, the effect is always
disastrous."
"Always—always,—my dear sir—always!" And the voice or Sir Morton
Pippitt, high pitched and resonant, trolled out on the peaceful air;
"The fact is, the church could have been much better done, had I been
consulted! The whole thing was carried out in the most brazen manner,
under my very nose, sir, under my very nose!—without so much as a 'by
your leave'! Shocking, shocking! I complained to the Bishop, but it
was no use, for it seems that he has a perfect infatuation for this
man Walden—they were college friends or something of that kind. As
for the sarcophagus here, of course it ought in the merest common
decency to have been transferred to the Cathedral of the diocese. But
you see the present incumbent bought the place;—the purchase of
advowsons is a scandal, in my opinion— however this man got it all
his own way, more's the pity!—he bought it through some friend or
other—and so—"
"So he could do as he liked with it!" said a mild, piping falsetto;
"And so far, he has made it beau-ti-ful!—beau-ti-ful!" carved with
traceries of natural fruit and foliage, which were scarcely injured
by the devastating mark of time. But rough and sacrilegious hands had
been at work to spoil and deface the classic remains of the time-worn
edifice, and some of the lancet windows had been actually hewn out and
widened to admit of the insertion of modern timber props which
awkwardly supported a hideous galvanised iron roof, on the top of
which was erected a kind of tin hen-coop in which a sharp bell clanged
with irritating rapidity for Sunday service. Outside, the building was
thus rendered grotesquely incongruous,—inside it was almost
blasphemous in its rank ugliness. There were several rows of narrow
pews made of common painted deal,—there was a brown stone font and a
light pine-wood pulpit—a small harmonium stood in one corner,
festooned by a faded red woollen curtain, and a general air of the
cheap upholsterer and jerry-builder hovered over the whole concern.
And the new incumbent, gazing aghast at the scene, was triumphantly
informed that "Sir Morton Pippitt had been generous enough to roof and
'restore' the church in this artistic manner out of his own pocket,
for the comfort of the villagers," and moreover that he actually
condescended to attend Divine service under the galvanised iron roof
which he had so liberally erected. Nay, it had been even known that
Sir Morton had on one or two occasions himself read the Lessons in the
absence of the late rector, who was subject to sore throats and was
constantly compelled to call in outside assistance.
To all this information John Walden said nothing. He was not
concerned with Sir Morton Pippitt or any other county magnate in the
management of his own affairs. A fortnight after his arrival he
quietly announced to his congregation that the church was about to be
entirely restored according to its original lines of architecture, and
that a temporary building would be erected on his, Walden's, own land
for the accommodation of the people during such time as the
restoration should be in progress. This announcement brought about
Walden's first acquaintance with his richest neighbour, Sir Morton
Pippitt. That gentleman having been accustomed to have his own way in
everything concerning St. Rest, for a considerable time, straightway
wrote, expressing his 'surprise and indignation' at the mere
assumption that any restoration was required for the church beyond
what he, Sir Morton, had effected at his own expense. The number of
parishioners was exceedingly small,— too small to warrant any further
expenditure for enlarging a place of worship which mental ability as
he possessed, and was now Bishop of the very diocese in which he had
his little living. University men said he had 'stood aside' in order
to allow Brent to press more swiftly forward, but though this was a
perfectly natural supposition on the part of those who knew something
of Walden's character, it was not correct. Walden at that time had
only one object in life,— and this was to secure such name and fame,
together with such worldly success as might delight and satisfy the
only relative he had in the world, his sister, a beautiful and
intelligent woman, full of an almost maternal tenderness for him, and
a sweet resignation to her own sad lot, which made her the victim of a
slow and incurable disease. So long as she lived, her brother threw
himself into his work with intensity and ardour; but when she died
that impulse withered, as it were, at its very root. The world became
empty for him, and he felt that from henceforth he would be utterly
companionless. For what he had seen of modern women, modern marriage
and modern ways of life, did not tempt him to rashly seek refuge for
his heart's solitude in matrimony. Almost immediately following the
loss of his sister, an uncle of whom he had known very little, died
suddenly, leaving him a considerably large fortune. As soon as he came
into possession of this unexpected wealth, he disappeared at once from
the scene of his former labours,—the pretty old house in the
University town, with its great cedars sloping to the river and its
hallowed memories of the sister he had so dearly loved, was sold by
private treaty,—his voice was heard no more in London pulpits, where
it had begun to carry weight and influence,—and he managed to obtain
the then vacant and obscure living of St. Rest, the purchase of the
advowson being effected, so it was said, privately through the good
offices of his quondam college friend, Bishop Brent. And at St. Rest
he had remained, apparently well contented with the very simple and
monotonous round of duty it offered.
When he had first arrived there, he found that the church consisted
of some thick stone walls of the early Norman, period, built on a
cruciform plan, the stones being all uniformly wrought and close-
jointed,—together with a beautiful ruined chancel divided from the
main body of the building by massive columns, which supported on
their capitals the fragments of lofty arches indicative of an
architectural transition from the Norman to the Early Pointed English
style. There were also the hollow slits of several lancet windows, and
one almost perfect pierced circular window to the east, elaborately
And here he whirled round on his only daughter, an angular and
severely-visaged spinster; "Look at this fool!—this staring ape! All
the sauce on the carpet! Wish he had to pay for it! He'll take an hour
to get a cloth and wipe it up! Why did you engage such a damned ass,
eh?"
Miss Tabitha preserved a prudent silence, seeing that the butler, a
serious-looking personage with a resigned-to-ill-usage demeanour, was
already engaged in assisting the hapless footman to remove the remains
of the spilt condiment, from the offended gaze of his irate master.
"Like his damned impudence!" broke out Sir Morton again, resuming
with some reluctance his seat at the breakfast table, and chopping at
the fried bacon on his plate till the harder bits flew far and
wide,—"'Happy to reimburse me!'—the snivelling puppy! Why the devil
he was allowed to sneak into this living, I don't know! The private
purchase of advowsons is a scandal—a disgraceful scandal! Any Tom,
Dick or Harry can get a friend to buy him a benefice in which to make
himself a nuisance! Done under the rose,—and called a 'presentation'!
All humbug and hypocrisy! That's why we get impudent dogs like this
beast Walden settling down in a neighbourhood whether we like it or
not!"
Miss Tabitha munched some toast slowly with a delicate regard for
her front teeth, which had cost money. There was no one in the room
to suggest to Sir Morton that it is a pity some law is not in
progress to prevent the purchase of historic houses by vulgar and
illiterate persons of no family;—which would be far more a benefit
to the land at large than the suppression of privately purchased
benefices. For the chances are ten to one that the ordained minister,
who, by his own choice secures a Church living for himself, is likely
at least to be a well-educated gentleman, interested in the work he
has himself elected to do,—whereas the illiterate individual who buys
an historic house simply for self- glorification, will probably be no
more than a mere petty and pompous tyrant over the district which that
particular house dominates.
Badsworth Hall, a fine sixteenth-century pile, had, through the
reckless racing and gambling propensities of the last heir, fallen
into the hands of the Jews. On the fortunate demise of the young
gentleman who had brought it to this untimely end, it was put up for
sale with all its contents. And Sir Morton Pippitt,—a rich colonial,
whose forebears were entirely undistinguished, but who had made a
large fortune by a bone-melting business, which converted the hoofs,
horns and (considering that some years ago it had been a mere roofless
ruin, and that the people had been compelled to walk or drive to
Riversford in order to attend church at all on Sundays) Sir Morton
thought was now very comfortable and satisfactory. In fact, Sir Morton
concluded, "Mr. Walden would be very ill-advised if he made any
attempt to raise money for such a useless purpose as the 'entire
restoration' of the church of St. Rest, and Mr. Walden might as well
be at once made aware that Sir Morton himself would not give a penny
towards it." To which somewhat rambling and heated epistle John Walden
replied with civil stiffness as follows:
"The Rev. John Walden presents his compliments to Sir Morton
Pippitt, and in answer to his letter begs to say that he has no
intention of raising any subscription to defray the cost of restoring
the church, which in its present condition is totally unfit for Divine
service. Having secured the living, Mr. Walden will make the
restoration the object of his own personal care, and will also be
pleased to reimburse Sir Morton Pippitt for any outlay to which he may
have been put in erecting the galvanised roof and other accessories
for the immediate convenience of the parishioners who have, he
understands, already expressed their sense of obligation to Sir Morton
for kindly providing them with such temporary shelter from the changes
of the weather as seemed to be humanely necessary."
This calm epistle when received at Badsworth Hall, had the effect
of a sudden stiff breeze on the surface of hitherto quiet waters. Sir
Morton Pippitt in a brand-new tweed suit surmounted by a very high,
clean, stiff shirt-collar, was sitting at breakfast in what was
formerly known as the 'great Refectory,' a memory of the days when
Badsworth had been a large and important monastery, but which was now
turned into a modern-antique dining-room,—and as he read, with the
aid of his gold-rimmed spectacles, the curt, chill, severely polite
letter of the 'new parson' he flew into a sudden violent passion.
"Damn the fellow!" he spluttered, jumping up in haste and striking
out an arm towards the very direction in which a mild young footman
was just approaching him with a bottle of Worcester sauce on a
tray,—"Damn him!"
The footman staggered back in terror, and the Worcester sauce
reeled over drunkenly on to the carpet.
"There you go, you clumsy, gaping idiot!" roared Sir Morton,
growing purple with increasing fury. "Tabitha!" called 'The Riversford
Gazette.' If Sir Morton had a pig killed, the fact was duly notified
to an admiring populace in the 'Riversford Gazette.' If he took a
prize in cabbages at the local vegetable and flower show, the
'Riversford Gazette' had a column about it. If he gave a tennis-
party, there were two columns, describing all the dresses of the
ladies, the prowess of the 'champions' and the 'striking and jovial
personality' of Sir Morton Pippitt. And if the fact of that 'striking
and jovial personality' were not properly insisted upon, Sir Morton
went himself to see the editor of the 'Riversford Gazette,' an
illiterate tuft-hunting little man,—and nearly frightened him into
fits. He had asserted himself in this kind of autocratic fashion ever
since he had purchased Badsworth, when he was still in his
forties,—and it may be well imagined that at the age of sixty he was
not prepared to be thwarted, even in a matter wherein he had no real
concern. The former rector of St. Rest, an ailing, nervous and
exceedingly poor creature, with a large family to keep, had been only
too glad and ready to do anything Sir Morton Pippitt wished, for the
sake of being invited to dine at the Hall once a week,—it was
therefore a very unexpected and disagreeable experience for the
imperious Bone-melter to learn that the new incumbent was not at all
disposed to follow in the steps of his predecessor, but, on the
contrary, was apparently going to insist on having his own way with as
much emphasis as Sir Morton Pippitt himself.
"I shall soon bring that fellow to his senses," declared Sir
Morton, on the eventful morning which first saw the gage of battle
thrown down; "I shall teach him that, parson or no parson, he will
have to respect my authority! God bless my seoul! Does he think I'm
going to be dictated to at my time of life?"
He addressed these observations to his daughter, Miss Tabitha
Pippitt, but whether she heard them or not was scarcely apparent. At
any rate, she did not answer. Having finished her breakfast, she
pulled out some knitting from an embroidered bag hanging at her side
and set her needles clicketing, while her father, redder in the face
and more implacable of mood than ever, went out to see what he could
do to save his galvanised iron roof from the hand of the spoiler.
But, as he might have known, if his irascibility had allowed him to
weigh the pros and cons of the situation, his 'authority' was of no
avail. An angry letter to the Bishop of the diocese only drew forth a
curt reply from the Bishop's secrebones of defunct animals into a
convenient mixture wherewith to make buttons and other useful
articles of hardware, bought it, as the saying goes, 'for a mere
song.' Through his easy purchase he became possessed of the Badsworth
ancestry, as shown in their pictures hanging on the dining-room walls
and in the long oak-panelled picture gallery. Lady Madeline Badsworth,
famous for her beauty in some remote and chivalrous past, gazed down
at Sir Morton while he sat at meals, suggesting to the imaginative
beholder a world of scorn in her lovely painted eyes,—and a heroic
young Badsworth who had perished at the battle of Marston Moor, stood
proudly out of one of the dark canvases, his gauntleted hand on the
hilt of his sword and a smile of pained wrath on his lips, as one who
should say, beholding the new possessor of his ancient home 'To such
base uses must we come at last!'
Surrounded by gold-framed Badsworths, young and old, Sir Morton ate
his fried bacon and 'swilled' his tea, with a considerable noise in
swallowing, getting gradually redder in the face as he proceeded with
his meal. He was by no means a bad-looking old gentleman,—his sixty
years sat lightly upon his broad shoulders, and he was tall and well
set up, though somewhat too stout in what may be politely called the
'lower chest' direction. His face was plump, florid and clean-shaven,
and what hair he still possessed was of a pleasantly- bright silver
hue. The first impression he created was always one of kindness and
benevolence,—the hearts of women especially invariably went out to
him, and murmurs of 'What a dear old man!' and 'What a darling old
man!' frequently escaped lips feminine in softest accents. He was very
courtly to women,—when he was not rude; and very kind to the
poor,—when he was not mean. His moods were fluctuating; his rages
violent; his temper obstinate. When he did not succeed in getting his
own way, his petulant sulks resembled those of a spoilt child put in a
corner, only they lasted longer. There was one shop in Riversford
which he had not entered for ten years, because its owner had
ventured, with trembling respect, to contradict him on a small matter.
Occasionally he could be quite the 'dear darling old man' his lady
admirers judged him to be,—but after all, his servants knew him best.
To them, 'Sir Morton was a caution.' And that is precisely what he
was; the definition entirely summed up his character. He had one great
passion,—the desire to make himself 'the' most important person in
the county, and to be written about in the local paper, a hazy and
often ungrammatical organ For the chancel appeared to demand special
reverence, from the nature of a wonderful discovery made in it during
the work of restoration,—a discovery which greatly helped to sustain
and confirm the name of both church and village as 'St. Rest,' and to
entirely disprove the frequently-offered suggestion that it could
ever have been meant for 'St. East.' And this is how the discovery
happened.
One never-to-be-forgotten morning when the workmen were hewing away
at the floor of the chancel, one of their pickaxes came suddenly in
contact with a hard substance which gave back a metallic echo when
the blow of the implement came down upon it. Working with caution,
and gradually clearing away a large quantity of loose stones, broken
pieces of mosaic and earth, a curious iron handle was discovered
attached to a large screw which was apparently embedded deep in the
ground. Walden was at once informed of this strange 'find' and
hastened to the spot to examine the mysterious object. He was not
very long in determining its nature.
"This is some very ancient method of leverage," he said, turning
round to the workmen with an excitement he could barely conceal;
"There is something precious u