<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1 class="faux">The Flower-Patch Among the Hills</h1>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="maintitle">
The Flower-Patch<br/>
Among the Hills<br/><br/><br/><br/><br/><br/><br/></div>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i-004.jpg" width-obs="358" height-obs="515" alt="Flora Klickmann" /></div>
<hr class="chap" />
<div class="maintitle">The Flower-Patch<br/>
Among the Hills</div>
<div class="center"><b><br/><br/><br/>
By<br/>
<span class="author">FLORA KLICKMANN</span><br/>
<span class="authorof">Editor of<br/>
“The Girl’s Own Paper and Woman’s Magazine”</span><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<small>NEW YORK</small><br/>
Frederick A. Stokes Company<br/>
Publishers</b><br/></div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="copyright">
<small>PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY</small><br/>
<span class="smcap">William Clowes and Sons, Limited</span>,<br/>
<small>STAMFORD STREET, LONDON, S.E.</small><br/></div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="center">
<b>Dedicated to<br/>
My Husband</b><br/><br/><br/><br/></div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="verse">There twice a day the Severn fills;</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">The salt sea-water passes by,</span></div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">And hushes half the babbling Wye,</span></div>
<div class="verse">And makes a silence in the hills.</div>
<div class="sig"><i>In Memoriam.</i></div>
</div></div>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>I<br/> <small>Just to Explain</small></h2>
<h3>I. Who Everybody is</h3>
<p>Virginia and her sister Ursula are my most
intimate friends. Virginia—really quite a harmless
girl—imagines she has a scientific bias.
Ursula—domesticated to the backbone—led a
strenuous life in the pursuit of experimental
psychology, till she switched off to wash hospital
saucepans.</p>
<p>It will be so obvious that I scarcely need
add: What little common sense the trio possesses
is centred in ME.</p>
<p>Abigail is my housemaid; her title to fame
is the fact that she is the only servant I have
ever been able to induce to remain more than
a fortnight at one stretch in the country. The
others, including those who are orphans, always
have a parent who suddenly breaks its leg—after
they have been about ten days away—and wires
for them to come home at once.</p>
<p>The cook has discovered a number of cousins
in the Naval Division at the Crystal Palace
(detachments of which pass my London house
hourly, while many units partake of my cake
and lemonade), and, of course, you can’t neglect
your relatives in war time.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“You never know whether that’ll be the last
time you’ll see them,” she says, waving a tearful
tea-towel at all and sundry who march past.
Naturally, <i>she</i> doesn’t care to be away from
town for many days at a time.</p>
<p>The parlourmaid was interested in a member
of the L.C.C. Fire Brigade, when he enlisted,
and incidentally married someone else—unfortunately
the very week she was away with me.
This has given her a marked distaste for the
simple pleasures of rural life.</p>
<p>Abigail is unengaged. “What I ask is:
What better off are you if you are?” she
inquires of space. “Take my sister, now, with
eight children, and——” But as I am not
taking anyone with eight children just now,
the sister’s biography is neither here nor there.</p>
<p>Abigail is a willing, kindhearted girl. Also
she has a mania for trying to arrange every
single household ornament in pairs. She would
be invaluable to anyone outfitting a Noah’s
Ark.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>As for the other people who walk through
these pages, they do not appertain exclusively to
one district. I have had two cottages, one
beyond Godalming, in Surrey, the other high
up among the hills that border the river Wye.
Some of the country folk live in the one village,
some in the other; but the scenery, the little<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span>
wild things, and the garden are all related to the
cottage that overlooks Tintern Abbey.</p>
<h3>II. Why the Cottage is</h3>
<p>I took a cottage in the country on a day when
I had got to the fag-end of the very last straw,
and felt I could not endure for another minute
the screech of the trains, the honking of motors,
the clanging of bells, the clatter of milk-carts,
the grind-and-screel of electric cars, the ever-ringing
telephone, the rattle and roar of the
general traffic, the all-pervading odour of petrol,
and the many other horrors that make both
day and night hideous in our great city, and
reduce the workers to nervous wreckage.</p>
<p>The cottage has been so arranged that not
one solitary thing within its walls shall bear
any relation to the city left far behind; and
nothing is allowed to remind the occupants of
the business rush, the social scramble, and the
electric-light-type of existence that have become
integral parts of modern life in towns.</p>
<p>Here, to keep my idle hands from mischief,
I made me a Flower-patch.</p>
<h3>III. Why this Book is</h3>
<p>I was viciously prodding up bindweed out of
the cottage garden, with the steel kitchen poker,
when the telegraph boy opened the gate.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Unhinging my back, and inducing it into
the upright with painful care, I read a message
from my office to the effect that there was some
hitch in regard to the American copyright of a
certain article I had passed for press before
leaving; this would necessitate it being thrown
out of the magazine that month. Would I
wire back what should go in its place, as the
machines were at a standstill?</p>
<p>Under ordinary circumstances I should merely
have waved a hand, and instantly a suitable
substitute would have been on the machines
with scarcely a perceptible pause—that is, if I
had been in London. But such is the witchery
of the Flower-patch, that no sooner do I get
inside the gate than I forget every mortal thing
connected with my office. And try how I would,
I couldn’t recall what possible articles I had
already in hand that would make exactly six
pages and a quarter—the length of the one held
over.</p>
<p>And because I could think of nothing else
on the spur of the moment, I threw down the
poker (it was red-rust, alas, when I chanced
upon it a week later) and went indoors and
wrote about the cottage and the hills.</p>
<p>When it was published in the magazine,
readers very kindly wrote by the bagful begging
for a continuation. It has been continuing—with
perennial requests for more—for some time<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span>
now. This only shows how generously tolerant
of editors are the readers of periodical literature.</p>
<p>Virginia merely sniffs, “What won’t people
buy!”</p>
<p>I don’t think she need have put it so baldly
as that.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>If by some miraculous chance there should
be any profits from the sale of this book, I
intend to devote them to the purchase of a cow
(or hen, if it doesn’t run to a cow), to aid the
national larder. I shall call it “the Memorial
Cow,” in memory of those who have been good
enough to assist in its purchase.</p>
<p>Should any reader wish to have the cow (or
hen) named specially after him—or her—self
this could doubtless be arranged. Particulars
on application to the publisher.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>II<br/> <small>About Getting There</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">We</span> always consider that emancipation takes
place at one exact spot on the Great Western
Railway; the only difficulty is that Virginia and
I never agree as to which is the exact spot.</p>
<p>Virginia insists that the air suddenly changes
just beyond Chepstow Station, where we change
from the London and South Wales main line
to the local train that, two or three times a day
(week-days only), runs through our particular
Valley, like a small boy’s toy affair.</p>
<p>This train, which makes up in black smoke
for what it lacks of other dignity, steams out of
the main line junction with an important snort
and rumble; over the bridge it goes, and the
stranger would imagine it was well under way.
But no; it then comes to a standstill at the
point where the main line and the Valley line
meet, in order that the gentleman who lives—we
presume—in the signal-box (but who is
always standing on the railway line when we
see him) may hand to our engine-driver a metal
staff—some sort of a key, they tell me, which is
said to unlock the single railway line. I don’t
pretend to understand the process myself. I
only know that our engine-driver looks lovingly
at it as though it were the apple of his eye (I’ve<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span>
craned my head out of the window, that’s how
I know), and clasps it to his chest, until he gets
to the first station on the Valley line, where he
hands it over to the station-master, who, in turn,
gives him another one, to which he clings just
as pathetically.</p>
<p>In this leisurely way we proceed up the
Valley.</p>
<p>It wouldn’t have any deep significance, but
for the fact that Virginia maintains it is the first
key that unlocks the imprisoned Ego within her,
and sets her soul free from the trammels and
shackles and cobwebs and chains, hampering,
warping, and enmeshing her, that have been
riveted by the blighting tendencies of London
(and a lot more to the same effect). She says
she feels the fetters burst directly that key is
handed over, for she knows then that the train
is beyond the possibility of making a mistake,
and getting back on to the London main line
again instead of the single pair of Valley rails.</p>
<p>Then it is that the air becomes fresher than
ever. The primroses that grow all up the rocks,
just beyond the signal-box, are very much finer
than those on the junction side; the Sweet
Betsey (alias red valerian) starts to drape the
ledges with rosy-crimson as soon as the signalman
walks back up the wooden steps to his
cabin. And Virginia herself becomes a different
being, though opinions are painfully divided as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>
to whether the change is for the better or for
the worse.</p>
<p>She says she feels just like the Lord Mayor,
or the Speaker in the House of Commons, with
a myrmidon going on ahead of her bearing the
mace.</p>
<p>We just let her talk on when she gets lightheaded
like this. After all, this Rod of Office
which the engine-driver cherishes is what Virginia
waits for through four hours of express train—six
if you go by a slow one. And the spot
where he receives it on the line is where she
develops a beatific smile of wondrous amiability.</p>
<p>For me, the chains snap a little further on.</p>
<p>After the driver has received his Key of
Office the train meanders peacefully through
west country orchards, placid meadows, and
tawny-gold cornfields; past grey-brown haystacks;
past little cottages, each with its pig-sty
and scratting hens, and a clothes-line displaying
pinafores and sundry other garments only
mentioned <i>sotto voce</i> in the paper pattern section
of ladies’ papers. Small, hatless, yellow-haired
children, gathering daisies or cowslips in adjoining
fields, wave at us as we go by.</p>
<p>Then the engine braces itself for a mighty
effort, and gives a business-like shriek on its
whistle (this is the great exploit of the whole
journey) as it plunges into a very long, dark,
clattering tunnel, cut through solid rock. Here<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
we sit in the breathless darkness for several
minutes, to emerge finally upon scenery so
unlike that we left behind at the entrance to
the tunnel as to suggest that we had entered
another country.</p>
<p>Gone are the cornfields, the gentle undulations,
gone the farms and cottages, the hayricks
and barns. Almost in sheer precipices the rocks
rise up from the rushing winding river in the
valley below, clothed from summit to base with
forest trees. The train, now an insignificant
atom on the face of Nature, puffs vigorously
along a ledge cut half-way up the face of these
giant hills.</p>
<p>From the windows on one side of the train
you look down upon a world of rocks, trees and
water, to the Horse Shoe bend, where the river
turns and twists and doubles back on itself again.
Not a house is in sight.</p>
<p>The windows on the other side show more
grey rocks rising up out of sight, with trees
growing where you would scarcely think they
could find root-hold, much less food to live and
thrive on. And where it is bare stone, and there
are no trees, the scarred and jagged surface of
the rocks—due to far-away earth-rends and more
modern rock-slides—is lovingly swathed and
festooned with trails of Travellers’ Joy and ivy
and bryony; while ferns and foxgloves, wild
strawberries and Mother of Millions flourish on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
the narrow ledges, and sprout out from sheltered
crannies—such a mist of delicate loveliness
veiling all that is grim and cold and hard.</p>
<p>Even the wooden posts, from which wire is
stretched to fence off the railway company’s land
from the adjoining woods, are entirely covered
with a living mosaic of small-leaved ivy, patterned,
with no two scrolls alike, in a way that human
hand could never copy.</p>
<p>Below there is always the river, that swirls
and rushes noisily at low tide over its weirs. A
heron stands motionless on a grey-green moss-covered
boulder near the bank. He looks up at
the little train; but it is too far away to worry
him. He, and a kite circling high overhead, are
the only signs of life to be seen as one passes
along. Yet the whole earth is teeming with
small folk, furred and feathered; the rarest of
butterflies are glinting over the rocks; the otter
is hiding down in the river-pools; and from time
to time a salmon leaps into the air, a flash, a
streak of silver, and a series of eddying ripples—that
is all.</p>
<p>This is the spot where, for me, a new life
begins; where unconsciously I draw my breath
with a deep intake, and suddenly feel the past
slipping from me; the noise and din, the sordidness
and care of the city fade into the background
and become nothing more substantial than some
remote nightmare.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Here in this Valley of Peace and Quietness
my dreams become realities. And best of all,
here God seems to lay His Hand on tired heart
and tired brain; and I find myself saying, “This
is the rest wherewith ye may cause the weary to
rest, and this is the refreshing.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>We had just witnessed the presentation of
the first key. As usual, Virginia and I had
been arguing—no, that isn’t the right word; I
never argue; I merely discuss things intelligently.
At any rate, we had been exchanging views
(that differed) as to the exact place where we
noticed the great change come over ourselves in
particular, and things in general. As we didn’t
get any nearer a final settlement we appealed to
Ursula, who was sitting silent, with a far-away
look in her eyes, as of one engaged in bridging
space and measuring the stars.</p>
<p>She came back to earth, however, at our
question, and said she was absolutely sure the
moment of <i>her</i> great transformation was when
she got hold of a cup of proper domestic tea, as
distinct from the indigestive railway variety.
Indeed, for the past few minutes she had been
entirely absorbed in the mental contemplation of
the meal she hoped Abigail would soon be
preparing. Even then she could smell the
sizzling ham and the frying eggs and the buttered
toast we should have on arrival.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>We were in the sulphurous depths of the
tunnel at the moment. Naturally I was hurt.
As I said to her, I knew my board was frugal,
and my viands simple, modest, unaffected and
unassuming, but at least they didn’t smell like
<i>that!</i></p>
<p>Fortunately she hadn’t much time to explain
what she did and what she didn’t mean, for we
came out of the tunnel into the panorama of
hills and silence; no one ever talks much just
here, save the braying type of tourist.</p>
<p>Besides, there is the “Abbey” to watch for.
No matter how many times you may see that,
you always wait expectantly for the moment
when you catch the first glimpse of the wonderful
grey ruin.</p>
<p>The abbey-makers of the olden days not
only knew how to build, but they also knew
how to “place” their beautiful structures. And
the setting of our Abbey is as nearly perfect as
anything can be in this world.</p>
<p>The steep hills recede a little bit just at one
bend of the river, leaving room for a broad green
meadow between the water and the uprising
steeps. Here the Abbey was placed: a babbling
river in the foreground, dark larch-covered hills
in the background. Surely it is no fanciful
exaggeration to think that the beauty all around
them must have influenced the men who raised
that wonderful poem in stone!</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I would like to take you into the Abbey and
show you the beautiful views that can be seen
from every ruined window, each one a framed
picture in itself; the spray of oak-leaves carved
on one piece of stone, the live snapdragons
growing out of buttresses, the graceful spring of
each slender arch, the perfect proportions of
the whole building, for, despite the cruel wreckage
it suffered in the past, it is still the most lovely
Gothic ruin in England.</p>
<p>But to-day we can’t stay.</p>
<p>The train hurries on, through another short
tunnel, over a bridge spanning the river and a
talkative weir, and then into our station.</p>
<p>In the summer there is a good deal of bustle
in this station, which is the haunt of many
tourists. I am told that five out of every ten
visitors are from the United States. No American
thinks of “doing” England without seeing our
valley, which is famous for its scenery and its
ruins. Thus you always find a number of
women in trim “shirt-waists,” and wearing large
chiffon veils on the top of their hats at angles
quite unknown to the English woman, sitting
on the platform about train time, writing the
usual budget of picture postcards.</p>
<p>But we aren’t “foreigners” (as the natives
style everyone who doesn’t belong to their
village). That is one of the many charms of
arriving at this station. Here no one regards us<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>
merely as passengers who can’t find their luggage;
or, passengers who have changed where they
had no business to; or, passengers who expect
the local porter to know by heart all the railway
connections and times of return trains throughout
the British Isles. Neither are we among the
people who look suspiciously at every wagonette
driver, certain that he is going to overcharge,
and uncertain as to which is likely to overcharge
the least. We have no anxieties concerning the
truth of the advertised merits of the various
hotels, and apartments to let, in the village.</p>
<p>We “belong.”</p>
<p>There is a sense of home-coming in our
arrival. The porters actually rush forward to
help with our luggage, and the station-master
raises his cap.</p>
<p>Old Bob—who occupies the doubly proud
position of being the only one among the fly
proprietors who displays a pair of steeds attached
to his vehicle, while he is also the one who
usually drives what he describes as “the
e-light-y”—is waiting with his wagonette (and
pair, don’t forget) and a cart for the luggage.</p>
<p>It really is comforting to be claimed by
someone at the end of a journey, if it be but the
wagonette driver. I feel so solitary, such an
orphan, when I chance to arrive alone at some
strange place in quest of a holiday, possibly unknown
to a single person but the landlady-to-be.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span>
Don’t you know the sinking feeling that comes
over you as you look round upon the crowds of
people, some scrambling in, and some scrambling
out of the train; every face a blank so far as
you are concerned? No one to trouble whether
you ever get any further, or whether you remain
in that jostling turmoil for ever.</p>
<p>You almost wish you could get into the train
and go back to town again; you reflect that
there at least the butcher knows you, and the
people next door, and the crossing-sweeper at
the corner.</p>
<p>You revive after having some tea, but it is
possible to spend a very doleful, homesick quarter
of an hour between the time you get out of the
train and the time you sit down to a meal in
some strange room, whose painful unlikeness to
the ones you live in accentuates your loneliness.</p>
<p>But that never happens to us in our Valley.
Before we have got out of our compartment,
Abigail is already on the platform and holding a
levee consisting of two porters, the signalman,
the assistant engine-driver from a goods train in
the siding, and old Bob’s nephew, who drives
the cart. All lend a hand as she proceeds to
marshal the luggage, and with a peremptory
wave of her umbrella, directs its disposal.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Of course there really isn’t much luggage.
That is one of the advantages of retreating to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
your own secluded cottage; being off the beaten
track as we are, there is no necessity to take
many “toilettes”—either demi or semi—or a
large variety of lounge robes, or matinées, or
boudoir negligées, or rest frocks, or tea-gowns,
or cocoa-coats, or evening wraps built of chiffon,
and really necessary, handy things of that sort.
All we take with us is just a few clothes to
wear.</p>
<p>On one occasion Virginia did bring down a
long “article” (I don’t know what else to call it)
composed of about ten yards of white net,
embroidered here and there with large beads, an
artificial rose sewn on to one corner of the
curtain-like thing, a gilt-metal fringe suggestive
of shoelace tags all around the edges. She
couldn’t quite understand how she came by it,
she said. She remembered an energetic ultra-elegant
shop-assistant, somewhere, displaying it
before her, with the information that it was a
“slumber swirl,” and assuring her, condescendingly,
that it was the very latest, and absolutely
sweet, and just the thing for outdoors in the
summer. Virginia said she agreed with her, she
was sure; knowing her own sweet and plastic
disposition, she would certainly have agreed with
her; she was thankful to say she wasn’t one of
those people who perpetually disagree with other
people. But—she had no recollection of having
attached her name and address to the wisp, much<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span>
less of having paid for it! Still, the energetic
damsel had sent it home—and here it was!</p>
<p>Ursula, after one glance at the confection,
hastily turned her eyes away and announced
that, for her part, she didn’t consider it—well,
quite adequate!</p>
<p>Her sister explained that it wasn’t supposed
to be worn <i>that</i> way; and she arranged herself
with closed eyes on the sofa to show us how it
would look when draped over her—head and all—as
she rested in the hammock. It took a lot
of adjusting so as to avoid getting some knobbly
bead motif just under her ear, and to prevent the
shoe-lace tags attacking the under-side of the face.
And when she had at last found a spot of unembellished
net on which to lay her rose-leaf cheek,
she was afraid to move for fear of splitting the
frail net.</p>
<p>Ursula merely snorted.</p>
<p>When next I saw the “slumber swirl,” part
of it had been converted into a meat-safe of
irreproachable moral character, Ursula having
utilised the frame of our getting-worn-out one
for the purpose.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>No; our luggage is only trifling, and only
consists of just what we need. Abigail takes
mine and her own to Paddington in a bus, which
also picks up the luggage of the other two girls
<i>en route</i>. Individually, the details do not seem<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>
much, but I confess, when I see it dumped all
together on the platform, the aggregate looks
somewhat nondescript.</p>
<p>There will be four large hat-boxes (or five if
Abigail brings more than one); anything from
three to seven trunks; Abigail’s collapsible straw
basket; a bundle of umbrellas and sunshades;
the dog, in his travelling basket; a chip basket
containing pots of mysterious seedlings Virginia
has been specially raising in town (which usually
get upset once or twice on the way, and have
been known to turn out docks). There is sure
to be a cardboard box for one of Abigail’s best
Jap silk Sunday frocks that she doesn’t want to
get crushed; a string bag containing Abigail’s
novels and snippety weeklies, her crochet, a few
oranges, two bananas, some chocolate, and whatever
other refreshment she will need on the
journey; a brown-paper parcel holding a few
articles of wearing apparel, also belonging to
Abigail, that she only remembered at the last
minute, and cook did up for her.</p>
<p>Then Ursula is sure to bring some contribution
to the larder—perhaps tomatoes and a cake.
Naturally, there is our lunch basket; and I,
personally, never feel complete unless I have my
leather dispatch-box beside me. I also take a
suit-case containing my mackintosh—in case it
rains when I arrive—books and papers which I
never read, knitting, and similar necessities for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span>
the journey; it is also useful as a final receptacle
for oddments I omitted to pack elsewhere.
Virginia and Ursula bring similar suit-cases, for
similar reasons.</p>
<p>Sometimes Abigail springs surprises on us at
the last minute. “Whatever have you there?”
I asked one day, as she joined us on the Paddington
platform, a jangling parcel in one hand that
sounded like a badly cracked bell, and a large
protrusion—silent, fortunately—embraced in the
other arm.</p>
<p>“Oh, this is just a new zinc pail” (shaking
the musical packet), “we need an extra one; and
I’ve put in a little iron shovel, as I want one for
my kitchen scuttle: and there’s a nutmeg grater
too; the one down there is getting rusty. And
<i>this</i>” (nodding towards her chest) “is an enamel
washing-up bowl. Our big one down there
leaks.”</p>
<p>And she proceeded serenely on her way to
the accompaniment of iron shovel clink-clanging
against zinc pail, with the nutmeg-grater tintinnabulating
cheerfully in a higher key—and
evidently pleased at the public interest she was
arousing.</p>
<p>Not that her surprises are always so useful.
On one occasion I noticed she had brought two
collapsible straw baskets, but concluded she had
some very special new frocks for the flower show.
The porter disposed of the luggage—while<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span>
Abigail was looking the bookstall over. When
she returned and found both baskets missing, she
rushed to the guard’s van. Soon things were
being dragged out again, Abigail excitedly urging
haste. The guard helped, Abigail assisting with
much conversation.</p>
<p>Eventually she lugged one basket up to her
own compartment, scorning the help of the
penitent porter. As she passed my compartment,
a heartrending “mee-au” came from the basket.</p>
<p>“What in the world—!!—!!!” I began.</p>
<p>“It’s only Angelina,” Abigail explained.
“She hasn’t seemed well lately. I thought a
change of air might do her good. Only it gave
me a bit of a fright when I found they’d put her
in the van, thinking she was luggage!”</p>
<p>(Incidentally, Angelina is <i>my</i> cat.)</p>
<p>Being my own place and not someone else’s
we are going to, it occasionally happens that
there are items of furnishing that need to go
down, a mirror, for instance, that is too large to
pack in a trunk. Strictly speaking, the railway
company might be within their rights if they
argued that such things could not legitimately
be called passenger’s luggage; but Virginia said,
with regard to the mirror—4 feet × 2—that if
they objected to take it, she should tell them
every woman is entitled to carry a mirror among
her personal luggage.</p>
<p>Fortunately no one so far has objected to any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
of the details of our <i>impedimenta</i>, so long as the
excess charges are promptly paid. We usually
go down with the same guard. I tell him what
the contraband is. He carries the parcel off
majestically, assuring me that his one eye won’t
leave it all the way down, no matter where the
other may be focused; and he begs me to have
no anxiety as to its safety. I haven’t. I know
from long experience that the guards and officials
on the G.W.R. have elevated politeness and
courtesy from a mere duty to a fine art.</p>
<p>Sometimes I almost wish they wouldn’t take
quite such care of our things! There was the
brown pitcher, for instance. I had been wanting
a very large one for fetching the water from the
spring outside the cottage gate. Of course, I
know you can get big enamel jugs (painted
duck-egg blue, or anything else in the art line
that you fancy); but the latter seems so strident,
so townified, so newly-rich, so over-dressed, when
you see them beside our moss-grown wooden
spout, where the mountain spring splashes down
into a stony hollow, among ferns and long mosses.
The sturdy but humble brown pitcher tones in
better with the pale yellow sand in the bottom of
the hollow, the browns and greys and greens of
the stones and growing things all round. The
very water falls into it with a mellow musical
sound, instead of the hollow tinny ring that the
enamelled creature gives forth.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But I couldn’t see one in the village shop as
big as I required. Ursula, however, ran against
the very thing unexpectedly in town. The only
difficulty was the packing, so she decided to
carry it just as it was. Virginia expressed a
sincere hope that she would at least tie a pale
blue bow on the handle.</p>
<p>She got it safely as far as Paddington, but
here an iron pillar suddenly ran alongside and
torpedoed the pitcher—so she said—knocking a
small but very business-like hole clean through
its bulging side. Then the question arose: What
was she to do with the remnants? The train
was due to start in two minutes, so she hadn’t
time to inquire for the station dust-bin.</p>
<p>Virginia suggested that she should try to
induce the bookstall boy to accept it as payment
for a packet of milk chocolate; failing that, she
had better put an advertisement in the paper
offering a wonderful specimen of antique Roman
pottery in exchange for a sable motoring coat, or
a cartload of white mice.</p>
<p>What she did do was to leave it tidily on the
nearest seat, with the intention of bestowing
sixpence on the first porter she could waylay if
he would make himself responsible for its after
career. But apparently every employee at
Paddington Station had enlisted.</p>
<p>The whistle was blown, and the train started
to move slowly, just as the vigilant eye of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
guard fell upon the disabled crock. His face
lighted up. He seized it, rushed to the moving
compartment containing Ursula. “Madam,” he
gasped, “you have forgotten this,” and he thrust
it into her arms.</p>
<p>She didn’t dare try to leave it behind any
more!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Then there was the fish. It was on an
occasion when Virginia was coming down by
herself, and thus lacked the restraining, and
more practical, hand of Ursula. Now, as I have
already hinted, Virginia is an intelligent girl.
She can tell you exactly how many million tons
of certain chemicals could be excavated from
the very bottom of Vesuvius (if only they could
manage to put the fire out, of course), and how,
if these million tons were applied to the land in
Mars, as artificial manure, the wheat crop they
would produce in one year—if only you could
raise their temperature a few hundred degrees,
and this could easily be done if you transfer—by
wireless—the heat that isn’t needed in Vesuvius
to Mars (or is it the moon?), where they do
want it—why, then—(where was I?)—Oh, yes,
the wheat crop they would harvest per annum
would be sufficient to feed the whole of the
inhabitants of this planet of ours, and several
others thrown in, for—I forgot how many dozen
years.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Yes, she is a very bright girl, just as well
informed on any other subject you like to
mention—excepting fish! There she draws a
woeful blank: she has no more notion how to
tell fresh fish at sight than a baby!</p>
<p>Still, she is generous in her intentions, and as
no one ever thinks of journeying to the cottage
without taking something in the eatable line—it
is only right to take a little present when you go
to stay with friends, isn’t it?—Virginia cast about
as to what she could bring. Game has no
attraction—we have plenty of that. Fish, on
the contrary, is a rarity. Although our river is
full, we seldom see fish at the cottage, excepting
a very over-due variety that a man peddles round
occasionally.</p>
<p>So she decided on fish—alas! And hastened
into the first fishmonger’s she saw and ordered a
dozen pairs of soles. She maintains that wasn’t
what she meant to ask for. It was oysters she
wanted to bestow on me, and she went in with
the definite intention of purchasing a dozen
oysters. At that moment, however, her mind
was somewhat pre-occupied with a scientific invention
she was thinking out, whereby no woman
need ever again handle a broom or carpet-sweeper
or anything of that kind.</p>
<p>It was a simple device, consisting of a vacuum
between the layers of leather on the bottom of
the shoe, and some sort of a suction arrangement<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span>
whereby you drew up the dust from the carpet
(or wherever you walked) just by stepping on it.
You would clear as you go, and instead of a
person trailing dirt up and down the stairs by
walking straight in from the garden and up to
the top attic, they would really be giving the
stair carpet what would be equal to a good
brushing.</p>
<p>Moreover, not only would spring cleaning
be banished for ever—when her invention was
perfected—but your shoes would never more
need mending. The dust collected in the shoe,
being subject to so many cubic inches of pressure
due to the person standing on top of the shoe,
would become so compressed and self-adhesive
as to offer a direct resistance to the friction set
up between boot and alien matter trodden upon,
equal to the inverse ratio of—I haven’t the
faintest notion what! But I dare say you can
follow her line of argument. She herself says
she is always lucid and concise.</p>
<p>At any rate, I remember she said that it was
terribly hard to be the mother of a huge family
of boys, who not only trailed dust and dirt into
the house at all times and seasons, but also wore
out innumerable pairs of boots into the bargain.
Whereupon I reminded her that neither of us
need worry personally about that just yet!</p>
<p>She agreed, but said that did not alter her
desire to benefit her day and generation, and to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>
rid the world of “the Burden of the Broom.”
And she was meditating on this, and thinking of
all the leather we had wasted by letting it wear
off the bottoms of our boots, when she saw
the fish shop, and though she <i>thought</i> a dozen
“oysters,” what she <i>said</i> was a dozen “pairs of
soles”—and, of course, I would recognise that
the mistake wasn’t her fault; it was entirely due
to the psychological action of the subconscious
something that connected soles with boots, etc.</p>
<p>Anyhow, the result was that she paid cheerfully
for such a collection of fish as I hope I may
never see again. And how happy that fishmonger
must have been, when the transaction was completed,
only those who got a whiff of the fish can
estimate.</p>
<p>Virginia admitted that she thought the price
seemed a lot for a dozen oysters (soles were two
shillings a pound at the time), and the bag seemed
heavy. Also, she confessed that it was a trifle
more than she had intended to spend on a present
for me at that moment, though she, being a real
lady, would have been the last to mention it if I
hadn’t. No, she hadn’t thought to look at what
he put in; she merely told him to pack them up
very securely, as she was going on a long railway
journey. She didn’t know they were soles till
she glanced at the bill in the train. She consoled
me with the information that fish has the most
wonderful phosphorescent properties, invaluable<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span>
in the case of brain-fag; and she should see that
I ate it all!</p>
<p>After a few miles of the journey the soles
grew a little noisy in the rack. You don’t want
to look a gift-horse in the mouth—truth to tell,
I didn’t want to look at that particular gift at all.
But I had to open both windows.</p>
<p>At our first stop, Reading, when the guard
came to the door and politely inquired, “Are
you ladies all right? Can I get you anything?”
I asked him if he would be so good as to take
charge of the big rush bag. I suggested that he
could tie it on to the back buffer at the very end
of the train. I assured him it was nothing that
would hurt. But he only smiled, and said he had
plenty of room in his own compartment; the
basket would be quite safe there, no one would
touch it. I could quite believe it!</p>
<p>When he came down the platform at Swindon
he looked very pale and out of sorts, I thought.
Conscience-stricken, I pressed a shilling into his
hand, and begged him to get himself a good cup
of tea. He said he would, and certainly seemed
to have revived when next he passed.</p>
<p>We got it home, eventually, without Abigail
detecting it—I wanted to save Virginia’s face
before the handmaiden—as we took the basket,
wrapped up in my mackintosh, in the wagonette
with us, Abigail following behind in the luggage-cart.
She did say later, however, that she wished<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</SPAN></span>
that pedlar and his awful kippers and bloaters
could be suppressed by law. He had evidently
just been round, she said, and she could smell
his wretched fish all the way as she drove up.
We didn’t tell her what we had hidden in the
old barn.</p>
<p>We buried them darkly at dead of night.
The only soft spot we could find, that admitted
of a good-sized trench being dug without much
trouble, was the moist earth beside the brook in
the lower orchard.</p>
<p>Next morning, at breakfast-time, when the
small dog ran in to greet us, his nose and paws
showed signs of active service as he joyfully
dabbed brown mud on the front of our fresh
print frocks, and waggled his tail with the air of
a dog who is conscious of heroic achievements.
Abigail followed him with the bacon-dish, which,
in her excitement, she tried to balance on the top
of the coffee-pot.</p>
<p>“You’d never believe what a high tide
there has been in the brook!” she began. “A
spring tide, I should think. It’s washed up
hundreds and hundreds and <i>hundreds</i> of large
fish on to the bank. Never saw such a thing in
my life before. First I knew of it was slipping
on one on the kitchen hearthrug. Dandie had
brought one in—wanted me to grill it for his
breakfast, I suppose! Then I found he’d carried
one up to the mat outside your bedroom door,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</SPAN></span>
and just dropped a few others here and there
about the house. So I went out to see where
he got ’em from. Judging by the smell, they
must have lain there for weeks. Wish I’d been
here with a net at the time. I’ve never caught
a live fish in my life, though I’ve often tried to
fish in the pond on Peckham Rye.”</p>
<p>Naturally we expressed great interest, and
suggested immediate cremation in the kitchener.</p>
<p>Later on, the handy man was decidedly
sceptical. His grandfeyther had once caught a
trout in that brook (only he gave long biographical,
geographical and historical details,
which proved that it wasn’t that brook at all);
but he hadn’t a-seed any hisself a-coming down.</p>
<p>Abigail scornfully pointed out that high tides
came <i>up</i>, and these fish had been washed <i>up</i>
from the river, which is 700 feet below; and she
flapped one as evidence before his astonished
eyes.</p>
<p>Seeing is believing in our village!</p>
<p>To this day Abigail’s tales, to cook and co.
and her friends at home, of how she goes out
and catches soles as large as plaice in our own
brook, and boils them for supper, equal any fish
stories ever told!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>But to return to the luggage and ourselves,
which I left waiting at our little station.</p>
<p>While the luggage is being stowed into the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</SPAN></span>
vehicles, we take stock of the platform, that
seems to fancy itself the pivot of the universe!
Everybody that is going away scrambles into
the train with precipitate haste, as though they
were trying to catch a train on the Tube, or a
sprinting motor-bus in the Strand! although
they know quite well that the peaceful old
engine—already twenty-five minutes behind
time—won’t think of stirring again until it has
had a ten minutes’ nap!</p>
<p>Those who have just arrived seem equally in
a hurry to get somewhere else, and they try to
squeeze three thick out of the small station
gate—only to plant themselves in the path just
outside for a long gossip with the first person
they see.</p>
<p>There are women with empty baskets returning
from market, and women seeing off friends,
each carrying a huge “bookey” of flowers, built
up in the approved style, from the back: first
a big background rhubarb leaf, or something
equally green and spacious, then some striped
variegated grass—gardeners’ garters, we call it;
also some southernwood—better known as Old
Man’s Beard; tall flowers like foxgloves, phlox,
Japanese anemones, early dahlias and sunflowers
follow; the shorter stems of pinks, calceolarias,
sweet williams and roses are the next in succession;
finishing off with some gorgeous pansies
and a very fat cabbage rose with a short stem<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</SPAN></span>
(that persists in tumbling out), a piece of sweetbriar,
and a few silver and gold everlasting
flowers down low in the front. If you have a
geranium in your window, etiquette demands
that you add the best spray—as a special
offering—to the bunch, telling your friend all
about the way you got that geranium cutting,
and the trouble you had to rear it.</p>
<p>You know the sort of complacent well-packed
bunches that are the result of this combination.
Not artistic, of course, according to town
standards, but, all the same, they are dears; and
I always feel I want every one I see.</p>
<p>The station itself is a flower garden. And
even in the space outside, where the motor-cars
await the rich, and the wagonettes and carts
await the nearly-poor, primroses and violets and
cowslips and bluebells grow thick on the banks.</p>
<p>Naturally the arrival of the train is a matter
of local importance, and if you happen to be
near the station about train-time you go in and
sit on the platform just to see who comes or
goes.</p>
<p>And how well everybody looks, and sturdy,
and brown, after the pale anæmic faces we have
left in town! You think how happy they must
all be here in the fresh air and the sunshine. So
they ought to be, and so most of them could be,
if only they kept a look-out for happiness, and
seized all that came their way. But human<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</SPAN></span>
nature the world over seems to love to contemplate
the tragic, or at least to pity itself!
The result is that every other person you meet
in our village will tell you a tale of woe as highly-coloured
as anything you hear in town.</p>
<p>“How do you do?” I inquired, last time I
arrived, of a comfortable healthy-looking woman,
who had just been seeing her daughter off by
train. Her husband is a steady man, in regular
work. She owns the cottage she lives in, and a
pig, and has no difficulty in supplying the wants
of her family, which are few.</p>
<p>“Oh, I’m not up to much, m’m,” she began.
“Things is so hard nowadays, and no one gives
<i>we</i> a bit o’ help. There’s that Jane Price, <i>she</i>
got a pound of tea, and a hundudweight of coal,
and a red flannel petticut, from the lady of the
manor at Christmas, and <i>she</i> be a widder with
on’y her children. But <i>I</i> on’y got some tea and
a petticut (not a nice colour red neither), no coal
nor nothing, and thur I’ve got <i>he</i> to keep as well
as the children, and in course I need it wuss’n
her do!”</p>
<p>Further along the platform I spoke to the
wife of a small farmer, a healthy soul, with
nothing much to worry her. But she didn’t
intend to be behindhand with trouble! Other
people found plenty to moan about; she wasn’t
to be outdone.</p>
<p>“You’ve heard of the awful time I’m having<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</SPAN></span>
with my husband? Fell down in the wood and
broke his leg in four places! Suffers terrible, he
does.”</p>
<p>I expressed sympathy, and asked how long
he had been in bed.</p>
<p>“Oh, he isn’t in bed; can’t spare the time to
lay up, with the haymaking just on. He’s
cutting the five-acre field to-day. He gets
about, but he has an abundation of pain at
nights. Yes, you’re right. Very active he is,
there’s no keeping him still. He’ll walk to his
own funeral, <i>he</i> will.”</p>
<p>Actually the man had a touch of rheumatism!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Finally we are settled in the fly, piled up
with the lighter luggage, while Abigail and old
Bob’s nephew follow in the cart.</p>
<p>To the stranger who has never been in our
Valley before, the drive to the Cottage is a thing
of wonder; to those of us who do the journey
many times in the course of the year new
beauties are always revealing themselves, and
the whole scene seems more lovely each time we
look upon it, if that be possible.</p>
<p>The station is on the river level, down in the
green depths of the Valley. But you cannot go
many yards on level ground, as the hills on
either side of the river are steep, with nothing
but the narrowest footpath in places, between
their precipitous sides and the fast-rushing water.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</SPAN></span>
In many cases the cottage-gardens on the hill-side
have to be kept up with walls of stone—as
one sees the vineyards built up on steep hill-sides
in vine-growing districts—otherwise the rains
and swollen brooks would wash the earth down,
in the winter, into the river below.</p>
<p>The horses start the ascent as soon as they
leave the station, and pass through the small
village, which shows a curious medley in the
way of architecture. In the wall of an old
cow-house there is a Gothic window, built
probably with stones taken from the ruined
Abbey; all the windows of one cottage bear an
ecclesiastical stamp. Before the beautiful ruin
was carefully guarded as it is now, people must
have gone and helped themselves as they pleased
to carved stonework and any fragment that
they could make use of; and thus you may find
an exquisite bit of carved stone in a most
ordinary three-roomed dwelling. Some of the
cottages and barns may have been part of the
Abbey property; at any rate one comes on
architectural surprises in the most unexpected
places.</p>
<p>But even though in this district man’s handiwork
has achieved wondrous things, it is the
work of Nature that claims the attention.</p>
<p>The Abbey seems a huge pile when you
stand under its roofless walls; but once you start
to ascend the hills, everything takes on new<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</SPAN></span>
proportions. No longer are you shut in by two
high green hill-walls, the higher you go the
smaller become the hills that are nearest to you,
as they reveal far greater giants behind them.
The blue Welsh mountains rise up, still further
beyond again.</p>
<p>Below, the river winds and loses itself,
seeming to come to an abrupt end against a
barrier of dark green slopes; but it evidently
finds a way out, for it is seen further on in the
far distance, a silver, gleaming band, still winding,
and still guarded by mountains that now are
tinged with the purply-blue tone that Nature
uses for her distant effects.</p>
<p>The lanes through which we pass are miracles
of loveliness, with their ferns and flowers and
birds and butterflies. But I think one’s overwhelming
thought is of the grandeur of the
distances. One is always looking away to the
far-off, to the farms and small homesteads dotted
at rare intervals on far heights and among the
forests; to the peaks beyond peaks; to the light
playing on miles of birch and oak; to the
shadowy coombes where hills drop down into
other valleys.</p>
<p>I have always noticed, when I am bringing
anyone for the first time from the station to my
house, that, though I point out the roadside
springs and waterfalls, the glory of the hedges,
the rose-coloured honeysuckle that grows over<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</SPAN></span>
one cottage, smothering roof, chimneys and all,
the visitors do not expend so much admiration
on any of this, it is always the inexplicable
mystery of the hills that holds them. Every
five minutes takes one higher, and reveals a
further panorama. Beautiful as are the lesser
things, lovely as is the old ruined Abbey, the
human and the near seem to slip away from you
as you look across the deep chasm where the
river lies below, to the vastness on the other side.
There is a power, a force born of great heights
and great spaces, that cannot be explained, but is
surely felt by all who have not mortgaged their
soul to mammon. There was a depth of mystic
meaning in the words of the shepherd poet, even
in the world’s young days, when he wrote: “I
will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence
cometh my help.”</p>
<p>It takes you about an hour to drive up to
the cottage, and by this time the lane has grown
so narrow—and so bumpy!—that you marvel the
horses have ever got you there at all. But
when you have reached the little white gate you
stand and look in silence. A new touch is added
to the landscape. You are now high enough to
look over the tops of some of the intervening
hills, and there away beyond, between a dip in
the hills, you see a gleaming band of silver, the
waters of the Channel.</p>
<p>Some people consider no scenery perfect<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</SPAN></span>
unless there is a railway in the foreground to
take them back to town as soon as possible.
Some artists always want a touch of scarlet to
complete any picture. Myself, I always think a
glimpse of water is needed to make a beautiful
view absolutely satisfying. At my cottage I am
doubly blessed! I can see the river in the
Valley below, and beyond there is the Channel,
towards which that river is ever hurrying.</p>
<p>During the drive up, the small white dog
with brown ears, sits on the box seat, dividing
his time between shrieking Billingsgate insults
to every local dog (I blush for his manners.
And he looks so refined too!) and licking old
Bob’s face. Not that he has any particular
affection for our driver, but he gets quite
hysterical when he sees the countryside and
scents the rabbits; and old Bob is the handiest
recipient for his overwhelming gratitude. A
few dogs trail after us through the village, telling
him—and one another—what they will do when
they get hold of him; but they fall back when
it comes to the hill; and our own treasure looks
triumphantly ahead for new dogs to revile;
deluding himself with the idea that he has slain
all behind him, and left their corpses in the
road! Occasionally he ceases to be a bullying
war-dog, and becomes almost human; then he
suddenly looks round at us, wags his tail all he
knows how, and gives a little whimper that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span>
plainly says, “Isn’t it good to be here again!”
And we all agree.</p>
<p>It <i>is</i> good to see the hills, and the valleys,
the sturdy trees, and the tender little ferns
growing out of the walls. Best of all, it is good
to see the small white gate, and the red-tiled
roof, and the blue smoke curling up, oh, so
peacefully, from the cottage chimney. It is
good to see the flowers smothering the walls
and the garden beds; and very good to greet
one’s own furniture again, one’s own rooms,
one’s own familiar things—no matter how humble
they may be.</p>
<p>For months we have clean forgotten that the
living-room window requires two thumps if it is
to be got open; yet without a moment’s hesitation
Ursula pulls off her gloves the moment
we enter the door, makes straight for the
window, and gives it the requisite couple of
vigorous bangs, so as to let in the evening scent
of the honeysuckle that is thick about the porch.
For months, it may be, we have forgotten
entirely that the lid of the biggest brown teapot
has a knack of tumbling off into the teacup,
unless it is held on while one pours. And yet,
the moment I take up that teapot again, instinctively
my hand grips the lid.</p>
<p>There is an indefinable spirit of welcome in
all these little familiar things—so commonplace
and feeble and stupid they would seem to outsiders;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span>
yet to us they imply that “we belong.”
It is part of the all-pervading rest that we find
among these hills, that we go on from just
where we left off last time. We don’t have to
start afresh, or get acquainted with the place, or
learn anything new. There is a great charm in
returning to familiar scenes that is missed by
those who are always rushing off on some new
quest. True, they may find interest in another
direction; but I think with most of us—excepting
when we are very young and very inexperienced—the
homing instinct is strong.</p>
<p>I have laid my battered brain on pillows in
some of the largest hotels in the world; but I
have never known in any of them the peaceful
rest that is to be found in the cottage bedroom,
despite its sloping roof. I’m not saying that
there is nothing whatever to disturb one there—all
too often Mr. and Mrs. Starling (several of
them) persist in building under the tiles just
above my head, and the various families demand
breakfast at 3.30. Yet I even get to sleep
through this.</p>
<p>There is one thing, however, that always
wakes me and calls me in a most peremptory
manner to get up, and that is the return of the
swallows one morning in April or May, when the
sites are being chosen for the new nests under
the eaves. It is such a sweet little chatter, such
a bubbling over of comment and advice and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span>
reminiscence, as they get their first beakful of
mud, and start to lay the foundation-stone of
the nest.</p>
<p>What do they say? I often wonder. They
seem to talk the whole time, and explain to each
other the excellent residential qualities of their
various positions. One thing I am sure they say—and
they twitter it over and over again—I
know they mean it, though I don’t understand
their language; for the homing instinct is strong
in them, as it is in all of Nature’s children; and
as I listen to them in the early morning, I can
almost hear their words, “Isn’t it good to be
here again?”</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>III<br/> <small>At the Sign of the Rosemary Bush</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">When</span> the cottage was originally built—about
one hundred and thirty years ago—it was probably
just two rooms upstairs, one going out of the
other, and a kitchen and scullery downstairs. In
the intervening years, however, one owner has
added on a couple of rooms on one side, and
another has put on two more and a pantry round
the corner, and so on, till it is difficult to say
exactly what type of dwelling it really is.</p>
<p>There is a proper front door somewhere
about the place, only no one ever seems to find
it; the path leading to it from the main gate
unobtrusively hides itself among the fir-trees,
wandering round at the rear of the house, and
under some low apple-trees—of course, no one
who wasn’t familiar with the geography of the
estate would think of exploring such an out-of-the-way,
narrow, grass-grown trail. No, they
would naturally follow along the irregularly-flagged
broad path that is kept by the handy man
fairly free from weeds (except some little ferns
that will peep up at the edge, no matter what
he does to them, and a saucy white violet that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</SPAN></span>
has planted itself right in the very middle of the
walk and blooms vigorously).</p>
<p>Along this path most people go, whether
they carry their best sunshade, a bead bag and
a silver card-case, or are merely delivering two
half-pounds of butter done up in dock leaves, and
a cream-coloured duck wrapped up in a coarse
white tea-cloth with his liver tucked under his
wing, a big bunch of fresh sage stuck in his
mouth—“and, please, mother’s put in a couple
o’ onions in case you didn’t happen to have
none.”</p>
<p>This broad path leads to a corner in the architectural
conglomeration where there are two
doors at right angles—one moderately respectable
and one smaller and shabbier. If you carry a
silver card-case, you knock at the respectable-looking
door—which promptly admits you into
the scullery: if you are merely someone anxious
to dispose of a few eggs or wanting to borrow
a little flour, you knock more humbly at the
shabby door—to find you are battering at the
coal-house.</p>
<p>Abigail deals with callers according to their
status: the silver card-cases are invited, in dulcet
tones, to retrace their steps along the broad path
and take the narrow one to the front door.
Sometimes they do exactly as they are told; but
more often, alas! they espy yet another door,
which they promptly make for, and this one<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span>
precipitates them right into the living-room
and on top of me, no matter what I may be
doing.</p>
<p>Inside the cottage it is a similar jumble.
You think you have found the living-room all
right, when you come in from the garden, only
to pull up in a large pantry, like a small room,
with shelves full of delicious mysteries in glass
jars and jampots and pickle bottles.</p>
<p>You open a door in the living-room, thinking
it is the one leading out into the back hall, to
find yourself confronted with a very steep and
narrow stone staircase, which is one way of
getting upstairs! Of course you get used to it
all in a few days, and eventually cease to tumble
down over the odd step that is obligingly placed
here and there in dark spots, wherever the floor
level changes in the halls or landings. But to
those who are not native-born it is a wee bit
confusing at first.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>The living-room was originally the kitchen.
It has a large fireplace with an oven, and wide
hobs whereon you can stand a kettle or anything
else you want to keep hot. It has a crane, too—only
we daren’t cook our dinner in a pot
suspended from it, because I don’t want Abigail
to give notice. We have therefore to content
ourselves with giving the crane an occasional
swing.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The mantelpiece—of oak that is black with
age—has two shelves, the upper one projecting
beyond the lower, which has a frill of chintz
beneath. Higher up still there is an ancient rack
for holding a couple of guns, and there are cupboards
on each side, also of black oak, that must
have been put there when the house was built.</p>
<p>But I think the thing that delights my heart
above everything else in this room is the huge
dresser.</p>
<p>When you start with a room like this—I
forgot to mention that there are oak rafters,
with hooks for home-fed hams—it is easy to
make it cosy. The big wooden settle keeps off
draughts, some chairs that belonged to my great-grandparents
are far more comfortable than anything
I could buy nowadays, with the wood
worn to that smooth polish that can only be
attained by generations of handling.</p>
<p>The oak dower chest is heavily carved, though
its iron hinges and locks suggest a prison door
for solidity and size; still it is a handy receptacle
for the miscellaneous collection of MSS. and
papers that haunts me wherever I go!</p>
<p>I do not expect everybody to admire this
style of room. There was one caller (who came
out of sheer curiosity) who, after gazing around
the living-room, with manifest disapproval, at
last said, “You really could make this into quite
a nice little drawing-room if you had those old<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</SPAN></span>
rafters and beams done away with, and a proper
ceiling put. Then you could easily have a nice
tiled modern stove in place of that dreadfully
old-fashioned fireplace, with those great hobs.
And if you moved the dresser into the kitchen,
and——” So she went on, winding up with the
encouraging assurance, “And you would hardly
know the place when you had got it all done.”</p>
<p>With one voice we said we could quite
believe it.</p>
<p>People so often fail to realise that both a
country cottage decked out in imitation of a
town villa, and a town villa decked out in
imitation of a country cottage, are equally
unsatisfying. In each case the fake and insincerity
of the schemes jar.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>If it isn’t bothering you too much, I should
like you to look at the ornaments—these, as
much as anything else, give the room its “unlikeness”
to anything you see in the city. Here is
a lovely fat fish in a glass case among reeds and
grasses. On the walls are antlers of the fallow
deer. Then there is a framed sampler, and likewise
some wonderful needlework of a bygone age
when needlework was an art.</p>
<p>On the mantelpiece shelves are china cottages
and castles, an old china mill with a wonderful
mill stream, on which are china ducks, each the
size of the mill-wheel! Then Red Riding Hood,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span>
in a little sprigged pinafore, carrying a dear little
basket, and patting affectionately a most engaging,
friendly-looking wolf, is always admired.
Timothy’s grandmother (a dignified-looking
matron), teaching little Timothy out of the
Bible, is a relic from the days when Scriptural
subjects were among the ornaments found in
most households. “Going to Market” and
“Returning from Market” are a choice pair of
china subjects, showing the lady riding behind
her husband on a prancing steed that would do
credit to Rotten Row.</p>
<p>Mary and her little Lamb is one of the
prettiest in the collection, only she lost one of
her arms over fifty years ago! There are various
cows and sheep (some with blue ribbons round
the neck), and other quaint china oddities.</p>
<p>Then there is a beautiful hen sitting on a
most symmetrically woven (china) straw nest
packed full of eggs (each one, in proportion to
the hen, is the size of an ostrich egg). The hen
(eggs and all) can be lifted up, using her head,
poor thing, as the handle, and then you find she
is the cover to an oval dish. I always intend—should
any members of our Royal Family get
stranded on these hills, and drop in unexpectedly
to tea—to serve them with a poached egg in this
identical dish.</p>
<p>And you must not overlook the shining brass
candlesticks, some tall and stately, some squat,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span>
with square trays and extinguishers, that have
been winking and glinting in the light for a
century now—and are still shining; nor the
brass and horn lantern hanging from a beam.
A lantern is an absolute necessity on these
rugged hills when there is no moon.</p>
<p>How friendly the old brass things are! Just
look at the warming-pan with its bright sun-face.
I have no doubt modern radiators and
hot-water pipes are a boon to those who do not
mind headaches and dried-up air—but do they
<i>look</i> as warm and comforting as the gleaming
warming-pan?</p>
<p>That reminds me of the first time Abigail
came down from London. She looked at the
warming-pan with interest, as she had never seen
one before. The weather was cold, and hot-water
bottles were the order of the night in
town.</p>
<p>When I returned from an evening stroll with
some guests, she met me with an anxious face.
“If you please, miss, will you kindly show me
how you keep the water inside that warming-pan?
I can’t get it to stay inside nohow when
I start to lift it!”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>I wonder if you have ever seen a dresser like
this one? The oak shelves forming the upper
part are built into a deep recess in the wall, one
above the other, up to the rafters, and all set<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span>
back in the thickness of the wall—and you can
see how thick these walls are from the window-ledge,
which is fifteen inches deep. But they
need to be solid, for the winter storms that
thrash across these hills show scant consideration
for present-day building methods; and a modern
“bijou bungalow” would probably be found
scattered about the next parish, if it ever lived
long enough to get its roof on!</p>
<p>The dresser is closely hung with jugs and
mugs and cups, willow-pattern plates and dishes
make a good deal of white and blue against the
walls, which are a full buttercup yellow, while
a collection of ancient china teapots, with some
square willow-pattern vegetable dishes and a tall
Stilton cheese dish with two big sunflowers on
it, occupy the wider ledge at the bottom.</p>
<p>Here are some uncommon specimens of
lustre jugs. This is a rare lustre mug, brown
with green bars outside, and a purple band
inside. A lustre pepper-box stands on one of
the dresser ledges, and salt-cellars of glass, so
heavy as to suggest paper-weights.</p>
<p>Do you know the fascination of old English
mugs? On this dresser they range from a tiny
mug in Rockingham ware, only an inch and
a half high, to noble things that suggest long
draughts of home-made herb beer! There are
mugs with bunches of flowers on them, others
with conventional bands or designs, some with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span>
landscapes, some with butterflies, some with
words of wisdom to be imbibed by the youthful
along with the milk.</p>
<p>Jugs, again, are most alluring, once you get
a mania for them! One of my jugs is of brown
earthenware, smothered with a raised design
showing a trailing grape-vine, with big bunches
of grapes here and there. Two other jugs that
belonged to a bygone ancestress are apparently
made of a white stone wall, with the most
natural-looking ivy creeping up it and displaying
bunches of berries. Jug-makers of the past gave
so much interest to their goods by reason of this
raised work, instead of being content to transfer
a flat design as they do now. One white jug has
off-standing deer around it, grazing among trees.
Another has a hunt in full progress, horses and
riders, dogs and all—though it always hurts me
to see the running hare.</p>
<p>A real, proper dresser is a useful bit of furniture,
provided it has plenty of hooks. It holds
such a quantity of things. I have all sorts of
odd cups and saucers on mine, relics of past
treasures that have somehow survived the hand
of the hired washer-up; little bits that remind
me of all sorts of pleasant things, such as tea-services
my mother had when I was little, some
that have belonged to other relatives.</p>
<p>In passing, I may say that a dresser of this
sort is a great incentive to good works. Many a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
relation, on looking at it, has said, “<i>I</i> have an
old jug that belonged to your great, no, your
great-great-aunt; I shall give it to you, as you
like things of that sort.”</p>
<p>Or another time it will be: “<i>What</i> a collection
of odd cups! Good gracious, if a little thing
like <i>that</i> amuses you, I’ll turn out a lot I have
stored away somewhere, glad to get rid of them;
it only annoys me to look at them, as it reminds
me how all the rest of the set got smashed. You
can have them and welcome.”</p>
<p>There has been a good deal of this sort of
“give and take” about the furnishing of this
cottage. And it is so much more interesting to
me as the owner to know the history of the
various items, than if I had merely bought
antiques by the houseful, as I have known some
people do. In the latter case, a room is so apt
to look like nothing but an old curiosity shop;
as it is, the things all seem to “belong,” just as
much as we do.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>But I mustn’t weary you with a catalogue
of household furnishings, though I know, if you
could actually <i>see</i> the china and the little bedrooms,
with white, washable handwork everywhere,
and wonderful old patchwork and
knitted quilts, you would love it all. The Bird
room is the general favourite, with its unique
crochet; there are swallows flying across the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>
curtain-tops, swans sailing among bulrushes on
the washstand splash, wild geese flying above the
tree-tops at another window, ducks swimming
sedately along towel-ends, more swallows (in
cross-stitch this time) on a table-cover, parrots
(in darned filet) on the dressing-table cloth, while
seagulls float along a frieze, a glass case of rare
birds is over the mantelpiece, and a large wool-work
pheasant, balancing itself ingeniously on the
top of a small basket of grapes, and endeavouring
to look as though it were quite its natural habitat,
is framed, and hangs on the wall. I don’t think
the far-back relative who worked it had much of
an eye for proportion, however!</p>
<p>On the mantelpiece stands a sedate row of
china fowls, a marble fountain basin in the
centre, with white pigeons basking around the
edge.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Just one other room you must look into—the
sitting-room, because I want you to see my dolls’
things. Yes, I know it sounds imbecile, but I
never had a dolls’ house. When I was young, the
rest of us were brothers, and it wasn’t considered
economical, therefore, to present a toy that would
only be serviceable to one out of the bunch.
Besides which, in those days children didn’t
immediately get what they stamped for. So I
had to go without the thing I yearned for
above all others. But you may be sure I took<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
care of what dolls’ things did chance to come
my way.</p>
<p>Dolls themselves were very scarce, but I had
several sets of dolls’ tea-things, given by discerning
aunts, and here they are, in a funny old
glass cupboard in the corner of the sitting-room.
One is a very small set, with teeny pink rosebuds
on it; another is a larger set, that my small
friends drank tea out of (and occasionally smashed
a cup for me). There are two dinner services,
one in plain white—a round soup tureen, a gravy
boat, a square vegetable dish, with some remaining
plates and dishes; the other a gorgeous affair,
with Dickens scenes on each plate—one dozen
meat and six soup plates, with dishes and tureens
galore, and oh! such lovely china soup and sauce
ladles, all <i>en suite</i>.</p>
<p>These dolls’ things seem to affect people in
different ways. Some look at them with eyes that
go back to their own childhood, and memories that
recall similar treasures that they wanted when
they, too, were little, and did—or did not—get.
Such people know exactly why I value these
things. They handle them lovingly, but don’t
say much.</p>
<p>But there are others who gaze at the dolls’
china (and the little wooden animals, and the
glass slipper I was certain Cinderella wore, and
the china grand piano, and the dolls’ brass fender,
and all the other oddments), and then look at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span>
me in blank astonishment. It is evidently
incomprehensible to them that any sane woman,
in these days of strenuous intellectuality, can
hoard such childish rubbish. And I am powerless
to explain my reasons.</p>
<p>Occasionally, however, light breaks across one
of these amazed countenances, and a woman will
suddenly exclaim: “<i>I</i> have part of a dolls’ dinner
service somewhere in the attic at home, I believe.
I shall get it out, and put it in <i>my</i> china cabinet.
It looks quite smart, doesn’t it?”</p>
<p>To which I reply: “Yes; and I hear they
are going to be <i>much</i> worn this season.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>All the decorations in the house are on the
most homely lines, one room has each deep
window-ledge filled with seashells and coral. If
you want silver boxes and cut-glass scent-bottles
in the bedroom, you must bring them yourself.
<i>We</i> think the wooden dressing-table looks all that
can be desired, clothed in a blue-glazed lining
petticoat, with white dotted muslin on top. And
who could want a silver-backed hand-glass, when
they have the chance of using one that has its
back encrusted with small seashells!</p>
<p>There are plenty of pictures all over the
house, many of them without frames. Haulage
is an expensive matter on these hills, and we
always take this into consideration. Several of
the rooms have friezes made of brown paper, to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
which have been affixed a series of coloured
plates. The charm of this arrangement is that
you can take down the old frieze and put up a
new one—or stick a fresh picture over some old
one—as often as you please.</p>
<p>All pictures, however, show beautiful views
of outdoor scenery: heather-clad hills, flowering
gardens, snow-covered peaks, and rolling waves.
Whether they are original paintings that famous
artists have given me, or plates from art magazines,
they are all views of large spaces, and
induce big, restful thoughts.</p>
<p>Some cards that hang on the bedroom walls
have been singled out again and again by my
friends for special commendation. I happened
to see them one day when I was going round the
Book Saloon of the R.T.S. in St. Paul’s Churchyard.
One special favourite has these lines on
it (possibly you know them?):—</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="center">GOOD NIGHT.</div>
<div class="verse">Sleep sweet within this quiet room,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Oh thou! whoe’er thou art,</span></div>
<div class="verse">And let no mournful yesterday</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Disturb thy peaceful heart;</span></div>
<div class="verse">Nor let to-morrow scare thy rest</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">With dreams of coming ill;</span></div>
<div class="verse">Thy Maker is thy changeless friend,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">His love surrounds thee still.</span></div>
<div class="verse">Forget thyself and all the world,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Put out each feverish light;</span></div>
<div class="verse">The stars are watching overhead,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sleep sweet, Good Night, Good Night.</span></div>
</div></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Another, bought the same day, is entitled:—</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="center">A QUIET RESTING PLACE.</div>
<div class="verse">And so I find it well to come</div>
<div class="verse">For deeper rest to this still room;</div>
<div class="verse">For here the habit of the soul</div>
<div class="verse">Feels less the outer world’s control,</div>
<div class="verse">And from the silence multiplied</div>
<div class="verse">By these still forms on every side,</div>
<div class="verse">The world that time and sense has known</div>
<div class="verse">Falls off and leaves us God alone.</div>
</div></div>
<p>For the Flower room, Canon Langbridge’s
delightful book, <i>Restful Thoughts for Dusty
Ways</i>, supplied me with a verse:—</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="center">HEAVEN COVERS ALL.</div>
<div class="verse">When the world’s weight is on thy mind,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">And all its black-winged fears affright,</span></div>
<div class="verse">Think how the daisy draws her blind,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">And sleeps without a light.</span></div>
</div></div>
<p>And for the Bird room, I have on the wall
W. C. Bryant’s beautiful poem, “Lines to a
Waterfowl.” You will remember these verses:—</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 4em;">There is a Power whose care</span></div>
<div class="verse">Teaches thy way along that pathless coast,</div>
<div class="verse">The desert and illimitable air—</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 4em;">Lone wandering, but not lost.</span></div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 4em;">He who, from zone to zone,</span></div>
<div class="verse">Guides through the boundless sky thy certain flight,</div>
<div class="verse">In the long way that I must tread alone</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 4em;">Will lead my steps aright.</span></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>On more than one occasion visitors have
thanked me for having left them these goodnight
thoughts.</p>
<p>Of course, being a cottage in the midst of a
flower-patch, we never run short of flowers, and
you find plenty indoors. When they are in
bloom, however, I always like to put a bunch of
white moss rose-buds (one of my favourite flowers)
in a blue mug on a visitor’s dressing-table.</p>
<p>But whatever the flowers, it is our custom to
welcome all guests with rosemary, for I have
discovered that the scent of it (even the sight of
it) is a certain cure for the divers maladies caused
by overdoses of unsatisfactory dressmakers, cooks
who give notice every month, much boredom in
crowded unventilated drawing-rooms, and all the
many varieties of restlessness that have been
invented to help women to kill time. It has
also been known to prove efficacious in cases of
people prone to overwork.</p>
<p>At any rate, if you come to visit me you will
find a vase with sprigs of rosemary on the deep
window-ledge in your room; and few of my
friends go away without taking a slip from the
gnarled bush by the door to plant in less congenial
surroundings.</p>
<p>I believe Shakespeare said that rosemary
typifies remembrance; Virginia unblushingly
improves on Shakespeare by insisting that it
means the remembrance of peace.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>IV<br/> <small>Miss Quirker—Incidentally</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">Every</span> visit to the cottage seems prefaced
with a scramble. Either the work at the office
suddenly does itself up in a tangle, or the
domestic arrangements show signs of incipient
paralysis, which it takes all my available energy
to avert, or else it is people who inflict themselves
upon me when I’m at my final gasp
without a moment, or a single company smile,
to spare for anybody. And of all the three
forms of irritation, the uninvited people are the
worst; for they always seem to absorb the last
bit of vitality left me, which I had hoped would
just carry me over the journey.</p>
<p>There is Miss Quirker, for instance. You
don’t know Miss Quirker? How I envy you!</p>
<p>I can best describe her as a lady well over
forty (or more), who apparently hasn’t anything
at all to do, and who does it thoroughly well.
She has a couple of very decided and conspicuous
gifts—one is the ability to waste the time and
dissipate the amiable qualities of every individual
whose path she crosses; and the other is a
positive genius for saying the wrong thing.</p>
<p>I was near the window writing for all I was
worth, when she knocked at the door and inquired<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span>
for me, adding, “I see she is busy writing, but if
you tell her who it is, I know she’ll see <i>me</i>.” Of
course I had to see her.</p>
<p>She entered the room with a kittenish little
rush and scuffle, that is by no means the happiest
form of affectation for a tall, largely-built woman,
well over forty (or more).</p>
<p>“Ah! I’ve found you in at last” (with a
roguish wag of a stiff finger in a size too small
glove). “I was determined to see you, dear,
though Abigail always looks so forbidding at
the door. I met Miss Virginia shopping just
now, and I asked if you were at home. She
said you were <i>frightfully</i> busy, nearly off your
head with work, as you were leaving town the
first thing in the morning. So I said at once:
Then of course I must go round and call on
her this very afternoon.</p>
<p>“She said she wasn’t sure that you’d be in if
I did, but I said I should chance it—it’s such
an age since we’ve met—why, not since your
engagement was announced! Now, just give
me an account of yourself, and tell me all about
everything.</p>
<p>“I would have asked Miss Virginia, but I
never think she is at all cordial, or perhaps
I should say—sympathetic. Indeed, I don’t think
she really knew me at first. I was right in her
path, yet she seemed to look through me! But
I took a seat next to her at the lace counter,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span>
and spoke to her. By the way, is she deaf? It
was so strange that she didn’t seem to hear a
quarter of the questions I asked her about you,
so I really got next to <i>no</i> information from her.
It was so funny sometimes that I almost laughed—I’ve
<i>such</i> a sense of humour, you know. For
instance, when I asked her what she thought of
your <i>fiancé</i> (you know you’ve never introduced
me to him yet!) and was it her idea of a suitable
match, and was he tall or short, she replied:
‘I think it wonderful value considering, and it
should wear well; the size is five yards round,
so I had better have six yards to allow for
corners.’ And, do you know, I was some minutes
before I realised that she wasn’t talking about
his waist measure, but an afternoon tea-cloth for
which she was buying the lace. She evidently
hadn’t heard a word I had said. And so I raised
my voice and asked her what part he had come
from, as I knew he didn’t go to <i>our</i> church. She
just looked at me and replied: ‘Cluny; I always
think Cluny lace washes so well, don’t you?’</p>
<p>“You see, I got absolutely <i>nothing</i> out of her.
In fact, I wondered, dear, whether—of course, I
know you don’t mind me speaking quite frankly—whether
there had been any little rift—er—you
understand; of course I know you’ve a
wonderful fund of patience, only those two girls
always seem to be with you, and though I’m
sure you wouldn’t tell them so, yet anyone with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span>
the very <i>slightest</i> tact might see that they aren’t
wanted. And of course. . . .</p>
<p>“Oh, well, I’m glad to hear you <i>do</i> think as
much of them as ever. I shouldn’t have thought
it; but you needn’t mind telling <i>me</i> if there <i>had</i>
been a little coolness. I’m fairly sharp at seeing
through a stone wall. And I always have said
that—personally, mind you—I never knew two
girls less. . . .</p>
<p>“Of course, we won’t discuss them if you’d
rather not. As you know, I am the very last
one to want to introduce a disagreeable topic.
We’ll talk about you. Turn round to the light,
and let me see how you are looking. My <i>dear!</i>
but you do look ill!! I don’t know <i>when</i> I’ve
seen you look so utterly washed out and
anæmic. . . .</p>
<p>“You never felt better in your life? Well,
I’m glad to hear it, I’m sure. Oh, I see what it
is, it’s that blue dress you are wearing that gives
you that aged and sallow look—a very trying
colour, isn’t it? I don’t think anyone ought to
wear that colour, but those with very clear
young-looking complexions, and then it looks
charming. It always suited me. By the way,
did Madame Delphine make that dress? . . . I
thought so, I knew it the minute I saw you.
It’s a queer thing, but I have never yet seen
anyone look even passable in a dress that she
has made. You can’t exactly say that it doesn’t<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
fit, can you? It’s a something—I don’t know
how to express it—about her gowns that always
strikes me as—well, you know what I mean,
don’t you? And that dress you’ve got on looks
just like that! I know you won’t mind <i>me</i>
speaking quite plainly; you see, I’ve known you
for so long, and I’m not one to flatter, I never
was. What we need in this world is absolute
sincerity; don’t you agree with me? And I
always think it’s the kindest thing when you see
a friend in anything that makes her look plainer
than ever, to tell her so at once, then she knows
just exactly what she looks like. And, after all,
other people are the best judges as to what suits
us. We can’t see ourselves. Mrs. Ridley was
saying at the Guild ‘At Home’ at the Archdeacon’s
the other day, she thought you were
so wise to stick to that way you do your hair;
she said she thought it suited you, considering
that. . . .”</p>
<p>Here I did manage to interpolate a sarcastic
regret that they couldn’t find a more interesting
topic of conversation!</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, we <i>had</i> other more interesting
things to talk about, dear, but Mrs. Archdeacon
had your photo on the table, and the Archdeacon
said something about you, I forget what—nothing
of any importance—and that was the only reason
we mentioned you. I said I thought perhaps
you did it that way because it was a little thin<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
just there. . . . Oh, I know you used to have a
lot of hair, dear; but some people’s hair <i>does</i>
come out, and a pad doesn’t look so well anywhere
else. . . .</p>
<p>“It’s all your own hair? You don’t wear—— Well,
I <i>am</i> surprised! I should <i>never</i> have
thought it!! I don’t mean that it looks much
in any case, but I always concluded that you
wore——</p>
<p>“Oh, how delightful! I’ll confess I was
longing for a cup of tea. . . . Yes, three lumps
and plenty of milk. I always say it makes up
for any deficiencies in the tea, if one has lots of
milk. . . . China tea, is it? I thought so. I
dare say it’s all right for those who like it. And,
of course, if you tell people what it is, they
understand why it <i>looks</i> so poor. . . .</p>
<p>“On <i>no</i> account; don’t <i>think</i> of having some
Indian tea made specially for me. I can quite
well make this do, because I’m going straight
home after I leave you, and tea will be waiting
for me, and I shall have a <i>good</i> cup first
thing. . . .</p>
<p>“Yes, I think I will have another sandwich,
even though it is the third time of asking. These
make me think of the Guild ‘At Home’ last
week. You ought to have been there. The
Archdeacon makes such a delightful host <i>and</i>
the sandwiches!—well, I can’t <i>tell</i> you what they
were like; literally hundreds and hundreds of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span>
them, and such delicious filling; all cut in their
own kitchen, too. You really should get Mrs.
Archdeacon to tell you what her cook put in
them; you’d never touch one of these ordinary
ones again, once you had tasted hers.</p>
<p>“But what I <i>would</i> like to know is, what
does she do with all the crusts? Mrs. Ridley
thought that perhaps they made them up into
savoury puddings; only, as I said to her: How
about those with fish in them? She said that
perhaps they kept them separate when cutting;
but I know the shuffling ways of cooks better than
that! I never kept one, and I never will. . . .</p>
<p>“I must certainly try the cake if you made
it yourself. I seldom get time to do any cooking
myself, though I’m a very good hand at cakes.
But you’ve secretaries to take everything off
your hands; you must have lots of spare time.”</p>
<p>(A moment’s pause while she tries the cake.)</p>
<p>“Have you ever used the Busy Bee Flour
Sifter? No? Then I should strongly advise
you to get one. I should think <i>that</i> might help
you to make a lighter cake; or do you think
you put in enough baking powder? But there,
some people have a light hand with cakes, and
some haven’t. I don’t think anything makes
any difference if you haven’t. It’s just like
plants, isn’t it—they always grow well for those
who love them. <i>Your</i> ferns aren’t looking very
bright, are they? . . .</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Oh, don’t you like the ends of the fronds
rubbed? . . . I see, they were given you by
your <i>fiancé</i>, and naturally they are the apple of
your eye. That reminds me, you haven’t shown
me his portrait yet. I’m longing to see it. . . .</p>
<p>“Is <i>that</i> the gentleman! Well! he’s the very
last man in the world I should have chosen for
you! Not a bit like what I pictured. . . .</p>
<p>“No, I don’t mean that there’s anything
<i>wrong</i> with him, only—er—he doesn’t look a
scrap like the man <i>you</i> would become engaged
to. . . .</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t know that I can exactly
describe the type of man I expected. I thought
he would be tall and——</p>
<p>“He is? Over six feet? Well, he doesn’t
look it from his photo, does he? . . .</p>
<p>“That’s true; a vignetted head doesn’t show
the full height. But apart from that, I expected
an artistic sort of man. . . .</p>
<p>“He is? Really! And then I should have
pictured him rather—er—well, Napoleonic, and
with that far-away poetic fire in his eyes that
carries you off your feet to untold heights. . . .</p>
<p>“No, of course I don’t mean an aviator! I
mean a—but it isn’t easy to put it into words;
only you can’t think how disap—how surprised
I am to see a little man. . . .</p>
<p>“Of course, I remember you did say he was
tall and well made. But there, handsome is as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span>
handsome does; and, after all, I’ve heard that it
is often the plainest and most uninteresting-looking
men that turn out the best in the end.
I can only hope that it will be so in your——</p>
<p>“Why, I declare! Here’s Miss Virginia!
How d’y’do? We’ve been talking about you
all the afternoon. Well, I really <i>must</i> be going,
and I simply won’t listen to any of your persuasions
to stay longer. I’ve brightened her up
nicely, Miss Virginia; she was looking ever so
gloomy when I called. Good-bye, dear. <i>Good</i>-bye,
Miss Virginia.”</p>
<p class="right">
<i>Exit Miss Quirker.</i><br/></p>
<p>What we said after she had gone had better
not be recorded! My own remarks may not
have been <i>quite</i> cordial; but I know that Virginia’s
were even worse—if that were possible.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>But though visitations such as these, when
bestowed upon me at the eleventh hour, always
reduce me mentally to a sort of bran-mash (and
Virginia says she can’t see why anybody need
bother a government to <i>import</i> pulp nowadays,
considering the state of her brain, to say nothing
of those of other people who shall be nameless),
the sight of the garden makes me human once
more, and by sunset the silence of the hills
has so restored my soul, that the sun seldom,
if ever, goes down upon my wrath.</p>
<p>After tea, there will probably be two hours<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span>
of daylight for watering the garden. Even
though the sun has dropped behind the opposite
hills, it is light up here on the hill-top long after
the valley has gone to sleep; and when the sun
has really set, there is a long and lovely twilight.</p>
<p>Indoors and out there is absolute peace.
The grandfather’s clock ticks with that slow
deliberation that is so soothing; even the
preliminary rumble it gives before striking is
never irritating—you feel it is a concession due
to advanced age.</p>
<p>Through the open window float in the scents
of thousands of flowers that are feeling unspeakably
grateful for the liberal watering the girls
have been giving them; you cannot distinguish
any one in particular; one moment you think
it is the sweet briar, then you are sure it is the
white lilies, then the breeze brings the breath
of the honeysuckles that are climbing trees and
hedges, till the whole air is laden with perfume.</p>
<p>Up the garden white dresses are seen among
the borders.</p>
<p>“There, I believe we’ve done everything but
that upper bed of hollyhocks, and they won’t
hurt for to-night.” Virginia sounds as though
she had been working hard.</p>
<p>“Now the tent,” calls out Ursula. And we
all make a stampede to the bottom of the lower
orchard, and with a few dexterous turns the
tent is down and folded up; for though the trees<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span>
may be motionless now, the wind springs up at
any moment on these hills, and once you hear it
soughing in the tops of the big fir-trees in the
garden you will realise the advantage of having
the tent indoors!</p>
<p>As you saunter up the garden, back to the
house, crushing the sweet-odoured black peppermint
in the grass underfoot, the stars seem very
near. The cottage looks like a toy, with the
light shining from each little window. And as
you cross the threshold into the living-room, the
log fire flashes and gleams (a fire is acceptable
up here after sundown, even in the summer),
and everything smiles with such a cosy welcome,
till brass candlesticks and cups and jugs and the
homely willow patterns on the dresser, all seem
to say, “We are so glad you’ve come.”</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>V<br/> <small>The Geography of the Flower-Patch</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">The</span> first night at this cottage you may lie
awake, if you are a stranger to these hills, almost
awed by the silence. Gradually you realise that
the silence is not actual absence of sound. In
May and early June the nightingales trill in the
trees around; or you will hear the owls calling
to one another in the woods—a trifle weird if
you do not know what it is. At another time
it is the corn-crake; or the wind brings you the
bleating of lambs down in the valley. As you
listen longer, you hear the tinkle, tinkle of the
little spring that tumbles out of a small spout
into a ferny well outside the garden gate.</p>
<p>You take a final look out of the window to
where, miles away in the distance, a lighthouse
flashes at fixed intervals. It seems strangely
companionable, even though it is so far off.
And then you close your eyes—unconscious that
you have fallen asleep—only to open them again
in a minute, as you think. Someone is speaking.</p>
<p>You detect Ursula’s voice in a stage whisper
through the keyhole.</p>
<p>“I say—aren’t you ever going to get up?”</p>
<p>You rub your eyes. It certainly is morning!
And you such a poor sleeper, possibly one of
those who “never had a wink of sleep all night,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>
and such horrid dreams.” The plaintive voice
continues at the keyhole:</p>
<p>“I planted out nine hundred and thirty-seven
wallflower seedlings yesterday, and I want to
cover them up with fern before the sun gets
too strong. If you’ll get up you can gather
the bracken, while I creep around on all fours
covering them up. See? Virginia is busy
thinning out the turnips. And SHE is never
any good at getting up early, you know!”</p>
<p>I regret to say this last scornful reference is
to me!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>And now when you look out of the little
bedroom window again, to the accompaniment
of an early cup of tea, what a change has taken
place since yesterday! Last night the ranges of
opposite hills, with the sun setting behind them,
looked vague and mysterious with shadows.
This morning the sun is full on them, but now
there is another mystery—or so it seems to those
who see it for the first time.</p>
<p>Instead of looking down into the green tree-clad
valley to where the river winds along at the
base of the steep hills, you now look down on to
a bank of solid white—the mist that rises up
at night and fills the lower part of the valley,
reminding one of the mist that went up from
the earth in the first Garden, “and watered the
whole face of the ground.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>With the sun on it, the mist gives back a
dazzling light. And then slowly, slowly, the
whole white bank in the valley lifts silently and
wonderfully; up and up it goes in a solid mass,
and as the higher parts of the hills, which were
previously in sunshine, are temporarily hidden
by the uprising mass, so the lower part of the
valley gradually becomes visible, first only a strip
at the very bottom, then more and more as the
white curtain is raised. Finally the white mass
disappears and joins its fellows in the sky above,
a fragment of cloud lingering sometimes a little
below the summit of the highest hill. If the
day is going to be fine, this last trail of silvery
cloud disappears, and then the sun lights up the
woods and the upland meadows, showing you
distant cottages and far-off farmhouses where
you saw nothing but tremulous shadows the
night before.</p>
<p>However often one looks upon this sight, the
marvel never lessens, and the “simple scientific
explanation,” which every learned person who
visits this cottage pours over the breakfast-table,
is quite unnecessary. Scientific explanations are
admirable for cities, but when we set foot on
these hills, it is just sufficient for us that Nature
“is.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>One drawback about this cottage is the fact
that one’s poetic thoughts and soulful dreams<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span>
are constantly being interrupted by things
material, more especially those appertaining to
food! And even as you are gazing out of the
window at the glorious scenery all around you,
there arises the odour of frizzling ham (that
originally ran about, uncooked, in a field lower
down), fried potatoes (the good old-fashioned
sort done in the frying-pan), coffee, and other
hungry things; and you find to your surprise
that a substantial breakfast is on the table by
eight o’clock, though (and this is where guests
bless their hostess) no one need get up to breakfast,
if they prefer to have it in bed, for very
tired people come here sometimes.</p>
<p>But it does not matter what nervous wrecks
Virginia and Ursula may have landed at the
door overnight, the first morning sees them up
with the lark and out gardening; and one of the
earliest sounds you hear is the clink of the brown
pitcher on the stones, as Virginia sets it down
after filling it at the little spring outside the
garden gate. This is a thirsty garden; it is
everywhere on the slope, remember, and is composed
of the lightest soil imaginable with rock
everywhere beneath. As fast as you put water
on it, it runs away downhill; hence, a moment’s
leisure, morning or evening, always means some
pitchers of water for the garden.</p>
<p>All the cottages on the hillside seem to have
been built in the same way. Someone evidently<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span>
hunted about for a few feet of land where it was
slightly less sloping than the rest, and within
reach of a spring of water, and this plot he
levelled a bit by excavating the big boulders and
smaller stones which make up our substratum,
and often the top-stratum too. Then if the piece
of land wasn’t quite large enough, he cut away
part of the hill behind, banking it up with some
of the biggest of the boulders, to keep it from
tumbling down on to the piece he had cleared.</p>
<p>Next he excavated more rocky pieces from
the up-and-down land around his clearing; this
gave him a bit of clean ground for a garden, and
also provided him with enough stone to build his
habitation. Any stone he might have over he
made into a wall around his plot, by the simple
process of piling one piece on top of another.
That, apparently, is all man does to the place.
Then Nature sets to work; and, oh, what festoons
of loveliness she flings over all!</p>
<p>As several different owners have had a hand
at my particular cottage, the garden has been
extended in various directions, but always requiring
stone walls to prop it up. Hence you
get a moderately level patch, with a drop of
four or six feet over the edge of the garden-bed.</p>
<p>A few rough stone steps take you down to
the next level, where there is another bit of
garden, the steps themselves sprouting in every
chink, with wild strawberry, primroses, ferns,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</SPAN></span>
columbines, and a stray Canterbury bell. In
this way the cottage is surrounded with steps
going up or going down, with a flower-bed
running along here, and some more a few feet
lower down; another terrace of flowers and
some more steps (nearly smothered with big
periwinkle, these are) take you down to an
absurd lawn, that some enterprising person
levelled up so delightfully on the tilt that
neither chair nor table will remain where you
place it! If they roll far enough, they go over
the edge of the lawn, a drop of about twenty
feet, into the lower orchard! Nevertheless, this
lawn is popular, because it is edged at one side
with white and pink moss rose-trees.</p>
<p>Thus perhaps you can picture it—big beds
and little beds, some running one way, some
spreading out in another direction; sometimes
large patches where flowers grow by the quarter-acre;
sometimes little scraps and corners no
bigger than a hearth-rug, where we managed to
dig out some more stones, and make a further
bit of clearing. But everywhere you go there
are the big plateaux or little terraces supported
by massive grey stone walls, which vary from
two to twenty feet in height, according to the
amount of hillside they are required to prop
up.</p>
<p>And how these walls bloom! Ivy and moss
and ferns seem to love them, for all the local walls<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</SPAN></span>
sprout ferns without any apparent provocation,
and the walls about this garden are no exception.</p>
<p>But, in addition, white arabis hangs over in
cascades, in the spring, and you see then why
the country people call it “Snow-on-the-Mountains”;
and mingling with the white is the
exquisite mauve variety; wallflowers of lovely
colouring, rose pink, deep purple, pale primrose,
bright orange, as well as the richly-streaked
brown-and-yellow flowers, bloom gaily on the
rocky ledges; snapdragons flower later, with
nasturtiums, and even some blue-eyed forget-me-nots
have sown themselves up there, and bloom
with the rest. Honesty plants have established
themselves in the crevices; masses of wild Herb
Robert have been allowed to remain; and
carpeting everything are all manner of sedums,
and Alpine and ice plants, some with grey-green
foliage and ruby-coloured stems, some with
white flowers, some with crimson; and in the
hottest places there are clumps of houseleeks
looking sturdy and homely.</p>
<p>Certain weeks in the year the tops of some of
the walls are a golden mass when the yellow
stonecrop is in bloom; but whatever the season,
there is always something to look at—something
holding up a brave head and preaching as loudly
as ever a plant can preach of the advantages of
making the best of your surroundings.</p>
<p>Does the wall face a sunless north? Very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</SPAN></span>
well; out come the ferns and up creeps the ivy;
the Rock Stonecrop, with its blue-green stems
and leaves (looking almost like a huge moss) fills
every shady spot it can find, seemingly appearing
from nowhere.</p>
<p>Is the wall sunny? All right; the wallflowers
laugh at you, pinks climb over the top edge, just
to see what is going on down below; one baking
spot supports a mass of sage about a yard and a
half in diameter, a smother of blue flowers in the
summer; no one planted it, it just came! A
red ribis has hooked itself in at one spot; what
it lives on I don’t know; while white, mauve and
purple Honesty seeds itself everywhere, making
a brave show of colour in the spring. In fact,
white and mauve are the prevailing colours on
the walls in April.</p>
<p>Later on you may expect—and will find—anything;
for annuals and bi-annuals seed themselves,
continually dropping the seed to a lower
level; hence there is always a self-planted garden
bed at the base of each wall, reminiscent of what
was growing above the season before.</p>
<p>On the shady side of one wall, we have made
a moss garden—it was Virginia’s idea, and she
takes a very special pride in it, adding new sorts
whenever she finds them. Hence you will sometimes
find her coming home from a ramble,
carrying a huge stone with her, or lugging along
a veritable boulder. In this way she brings the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</SPAN></span>
moss home, local habitation and all, annexing
any stone she sees (a wild stone, of course, not
a tame one from someone’s garden wall) that
bears a promising crop of some new variety.</p>
<p>As a result, she fairly bulges with pride whenever
she exhibits the moss garden, and explains
how much of it is her own particular handiwork.</p>
<p>We have not yet settled whether she ought
to pay me rent for my wall that she uses for her
moss garden, or I ought to pay her wages for
moss-gardening my wall.</p>
<p>One characteristic of this garden is an ever-changing
show of colour. It varies according to
the season, but whatever the time of year there
are usually gorgeous splashes of colour that
make you stand and wonder.</p>
<p>Do not forget that this is only a cottage
garden, even though it is a roomy one. I hope
you are not picturing to yourself an orthodox
country-house garden, with expanses of well-kept
lawns, with proper-looking beds of geraniums,
and lordly pampas grass at intervals, and well-groomed
rose-bushes in tidy beds, and correct
herbaceous borders, and beds of begonias and
heliotropes planted out from the greenhouses,
and all the other nice-mannered, polite flowers
that every well-paid, certificated gardener conscientiously
insists on planting in exactly the
same way all the country over.</p>
<p>This garden grows a little of everything, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</SPAN></span>
a great deal of some things, and when you look
at it you might easily imagine that everything
had planted itself just where it pleased. The
garden is not tidy, for the things are constantly
growing over each other, and then out across
the paths. Moreover, it lacks someone there all
the time to keep it tidy; the ministrations of
the handy man are decidedly erratic. But at
least it is bright, always bright, and you can
pick as many flowers as you please—handfuls,
armfuls, apronfuls—with no fear of an autocratic
gardener glaring at you; and the flowers will
never be missed.</p>
<p>In the spring wallflowers predominate, every
colour that the modern varieties produce.
Ursula’s remark that she had planted over nine
hundred seedlings was well within the mark. A
thousand or two of wallflower seedlings do not
go very far in this garden, because at one time
of the year the place appears to be a waving
mass of wallflowers from end to end.</p>
<p>And have you any idea what the scent is
like when you have thousands of wallflowers
smiling on a sunny spring morning?</p>
<p>But there are all sorts of oddments, some
things you do not expect and some things you
do. The cowslip bed is very pretty. Here are
yellow, orange, copper-coloured and mahogany
brown cowslips; pale-coloured oxlips, and polyanthuses
in as many shades as the wallflowers,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</SPAN></span>
from rosy red to dark purple-brown with every
petal edged with bright yellow as though they
had been buttonholed round.</p>
<p>There is no need to cultivate primroses in
the garden beds, for the two orchards are thick
with them; where there are also large patches of
wild snowdrops with crowds of wild daffodils,
and dancing wind-flowers—or wood anemones;
while tall spikes of the pale mauve spotted orchises
grow in the grass around the edge near the walls.</p>
<p>Before the wallflowers have finished flowering
the tulips are out, the old-fashioned “cottage
tulips,” many of them, tall and with large cup-like
flowers—pink and crimson, brown and
yellow, showy “parrots,” and delicate mauve
feathered with white, purple-black, deep maroon;
such a brilliant army those tulips make, with
hundreds of them in bloom at once.</p>
<p>Before the tulip petals have fallen, the peonies
have opened out great heavy heads of flowers
that can’t keep upright. The scarlet oriental
poppies with their blue-black centres make masses
of colour that have to be kept very much to
themselves or they kill every other flower within
reach; these are therefore planted near the
clumps of white irises, and the deep blue and
pure white perennial lupins, that make a
beautiful show all down one border.</p>
<p>Speaking of lupins reminds me of the tree-lupins.
Virginia brought some harmless-looking<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</SPAN></span>
little plants with her one year, remembering my
love for lupins.</p>
<p>“These are tree-lupins,” she said. “I’m sure
I don’t know what they will grow into, but the
man said they were just like lupins, only much
more so; therefore I bought them. Don’t blame
<i>me</i> if they die.”</p>
<p>She planted them comfortably and cosily in
a bed along with white foxgloves and pink pentstemons,
all the members of this happy family
looking about the same size.</p>
<p>The following year when Virginia visited the
cottage she asked, “Where are my tree-lupins?”
She was shown great bushes each the size of a
round dining-table, and each holding aloft hundreds
of yellow spikes, and filling the air with
the scent of a bean-field. There were the tree-lupins
all right! But where were the foxgloves
and pentstemons?</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Perhaps you think there must be large, dull
spaces when the wallflowers cease blooming,
but in between the wallflower plants are others
coming on, and by the time the wallflowers have
finished—and are ready to be pulled up—these
beds are filling with sweet williams and snapdragons.
The young plants were there, and
they come into bloom as the wallflowers finish.
And then, where only a short time before there
were beds all purples and yellows and browns,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</SPAN></span>
you have now reds and pinks and every shade
of rosy tint that the bright eyes of the sweet
williams can produce.</p>
<p>The snapdragons once played a joke on the
garden. I was ordering some seeds from Sutton’s,
and said, “I want some very hardy snapdragons,
that will stand being planted in the windiest part
of the garden where nothing of any height will
grow.” The seeds were guaranteed to grow in
the most uprooting of hurricanes.</p>
<p>In due time the seedlings appeared above
ground, and Ursula devoted several back-aching
evenings to planting them out into the windswept
beds. By the middle of the following
summer those jaunty snapdragons had each
grown six feet high, and there, waving in that
exposed place, where any well-conducted plant
would have sternly refused to grow more than
a foot high, was a plantation of great flowers,
each tied to a stout stake like hollyhocks, and
the blooms seemed to have outgrown their
normal size just as the rest of the plants had
done.</p>
<p>Of course, people came from ever so far to
gaze at these snapdragons; and unbelievers
surreptitiously pulled out tape-measures and
two-foot rules, and one and all, after meditating
seriously on the subject, and looking at it from
all points of view, would finally shake their heads
and say, “Well, I’ll just tell you what it is—the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</SPAN></span>
place evidently suits them.” We never got any
further than that!</p>
<p>By every law and reason known to properly-trained
gardeners and horticulturists, this garden
ought to be able to produce nothing but low-growing
flowers and shrubs. Every local resident
kindly volunteered this information directly he
or she set eyes on the cottage; they said it was
too high up, too bleak in winter, too exposed, too
dry, too rocky, or too glaringly sunny—for anything
above six inches high to have a chance
in it.</p>
<p>And yet Nature goes on laughing at the
pessimists, and so do those who tend this flower-patch.
And the columbines, yellow, pink, pale
blue, purple, and white, send up tall heads of
flower. The coreopsis plants grow so big and
bushy they have to be staked. The cornflowers,
a streak of blue at the end of the cabbage bed,
are taller than the broad beans adjoining. Then
there are the hollyhocks and the larkspurs—these
hold their heads as high as anyone could desire,
and the tall red salvias are not far behind. The
foxgloves are also a brave sight (though I do not
include in this category those that are buried
under the tree-lupins!).</p>
<p>Of course, there are low-growing things in the
garden as well as the more lofty-minded. There
is one bed that is a ramping mass of giant
mimulus of various colours. Convolvulus minor<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</SPAN></span>
spreads about the ground in one of the white lily
beds; and eschscholtzias cover the earth for
another row of lilies. Pansies rove about at their
own sweet will in this garden, and the old-fashioned
white pinks and the pink variety spread
themselves out over the big stones that edge the
borders.</p>
<p>The mignonette bed has a row of lavenders
at the side, and mounds of nasturtiums grow
where the earth is too rocky and barren to
support anything else.</p>
<p>Naturally, there are hedges of sweet peas;
sometimes they are heavy with flowers, sometimes
the slugs or birds settle the matter at the
beginning of the season. One hedge runs along
at the back of the herb garden, and the herbs
have so spread themselves out that the sweet
peas were getting swamped. Virginia has been
cutting them back.</p>
<p>Do you know what the scent of cut herbs is
like on a hot summer day, with sweet peas in the
background? In this herb garden there is sage,
with its lovely blue flowers, lemon thyme, silver
thyme, savory, hyssop, lavender, rosemary, rue,
balm, marjoram, black peppermint, spearmint
and parsley.</p>
<p>In this bed also grows the old-time bergamot,
with its heavily-scented leaves and lovely tufts of
crimson flowers.</p>
<p>But though one part of the garden is set<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></span>
apart for herbs and another for vegetables, you
must not imagine that they are only to be found
there. Fine clumps of parsley have planted
themselves in among the annual larkspurs; mint
persists in running riot among the pink and
white mallows (but the mint family never remains
quietly at home); a sturdy scarlet runner
comes up, year after year, beside a great bush of
gum cistus, which makes me think it might be
treated as a perennial; it seems impossible to
get the artichokes to part company with the
Michaelmas daisies, while raspberry canes shoot
up among the old-fashioned red fuchsia bushes;
radishes are flourishing like the green bay-tree
underneath the sweetbriar; a regiment of
pickling onions is living on most neighbourly
terms with a row of cup-and-saucer Canterbury
bells; and as for rhubarb—well, what can you
expect when one man, whom I employed for a
brief spell, remarked:</p>
<p>“You’ll see where I’ve put in that thur special
rubbub, miss, because I’ve planted a traveller’s
joy a-top of he to mark the spot.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Cupid’s Border is another section of this
garden that may interest you. Here you naturally
find Love-in-a-mist and Love-lies-bleeding.
The flowers which the country folks call Love-lockets
dangle pink and white from their graceful
curving stems; (alas, in catalogues and places<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span>
where they know, this plant is merely regarded
as dielytra). In this border you of course find
forget-me-nots “that grow for happy lovers”;
bachelor’s buttons, too, hold up their heads in a
very sprightly manner, and please notice that
they are getting nearer and nearer to the clump
of Sweet Betsy. But the bachelor’s buttons
have a rival, for the other side of Sweet Betsy
stands lad’s love—and though not so showy as
the bachelor’s buttons, lad’s love claims to be
of more solid worth. I leave them to settle the
matter between themselves, however; I’m not
one to interfere in such affairs.</p>
<p>At the other side of the border stands a
maiden’s blush rose, and gallantly waving beside
it is a clump of Prince’s Feather (sometimes referred
to in common parlance as “they laylock
bushes”). At the edge of the border you
naturally find heartsease, not the stiff, over-developed
article of modern flower-shows, but
the old-fashioned sort, all streaks and splashes of
rich purple and yellow.</p>
<p>There is no time now to go round the vegetable
garden—not that this can be regarded as
an entirely separate part of the estate, for the
vegetables have got mixed up in a terribly haphazard
way with the rest of things, as I hinted
just now. The potato-plot, for instance, has a
border of golden wallflowers all round and
double daisies at the edge, with a row of giant<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</SPAN></span>
sunflowers, hollyhocks, and clumps of honesty at
the back.</p>
<p>This mixture is partly in the nature of a
compromise. The gentleman who wields the
spade has to be taken into account. No matter
who he is, no matter how often he discharges
me and I have to beg yet someone else to
“oblige” me, it is always the same, the tiller
of the soil regards space given over to flowers
as a grievous waste, not to say an indication of
feeble-mindedness! Therefore he inserts a row
of vegetables or seeds whenever I happen to
have cleared out some flowering plants and left
a morsel of space <i>pro tem.</i> It seems a prevailing
idea among the non-qualified working classes, in
rural districts, that the cultivation of flowers
ranks about on a level with doing the washing—work
derogatory to a man and only fit for
women!</p>
<p>To the credit of the handy man I must say
that on one occasion he did kindly present me
with a load of pig manure. He put it on the
flower garden the day before we arrived, as a
pleasant surprise, which it certainly was! Next
day we all had relatives with broken legs, who
needed our immediate return to town.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Nevertheless the vegetables play their part,
and assume no small importance, in due course;
for it is another unwritten law of this cottage<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</SPAN></span>
that visitors shall go out and select the day’s
vegetables, and cut them with the dew on; of
course, if they are superlatively lazy, they can
meanly get some early riser to do it for them;
also they can confer together, or each can gather
her own choice.</p>
<p>Hence you will see Virginia or Ursula in a
large hat that is all brim, with basket on arm,
and wearing an apron (not a lacy, frilly muslin
thing, but a good-sized, well-made, old-fashioned
lilac print apron), going up the garden and
gathering broad beans, cutting young cauliflowers,
or “curly greens,” or turnip tops, or
a marrow, forking up potatoes, pulling carrots,
collecting lettuces, spring onions, cress and other
salading—all according to the season.</p>
<p>And if it should chance that you have never
yourself put on a big apron, and cut your own
vegetables before the dew is off them, then
Virginia will be truly sorry for you.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>There is plenty of time to be lazy, however;
and a hot summer day means long leisure in this
garden; for when the sun is high the brown
pitcher rests (though the brown teapot does not)
until the fir-trees throw shadows from the west.</p>
<p>All day you can sit in the shade at the
bottom of the garden, looking up the hill at
the wonderful mass of colour before you. Along
the ridge of the cottage roof perches a row of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</SPAN></span>
swallows, chirping and chattering in their usual
way. The starlings, who have built under the
tiles, are ordering their respective families to
cease clamouring for more, explaining that
hunting caterpillars is hot work. Most other
birds are quiet when the sun is fiercest, but over
all the garden there is the hum, hum of thousands
of industrious bees, while literally hundreds of
white butterflies keep up a perpetual flutter over
the tall blue spikes of bloom on the lavender
bushes.</p>
<p>Even the small white dog with the brown
ears ceases to tear about the garden, and bark
at nothing in a consequential way; he just lies
down on the edge of somebody’s dress, and hangs
out a little pink tongue for air.</p>
<p>This is the time when the flower-patch among
the hills spells <span class="smcap">Rest</span>.</p>
<p>An old woman passing up the lane a few nights
ago paused at the gate. “How them pinnies
do blow, miss!” she said, gazing admiringly
at a clump of peonies. Then she added—</p>
<p>“Ain’t it strange, now, that it do take a
woman to make a flower garden? A man ain’t
no good at that; he simply can’t help hisself
a-running to veg’tables!”</p>
<p>But after thinking this over, and despite all
that strong-minded womankind tells me to the
contrary, I cannot really believe that there is
such total depravity in the other sex!</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>VI<br/> <small>That Jane Price!</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">When</span> Abigail announced, “Mrs. Price says
can you spare a minute to see her, please,
ma’am,” you would have known by the toss of
her nose that the lady-caller was not very <i>nearly</i>
related to the aristocracy.</p>
<p>As a matter of fact, Mrs. Price, or “that
Jane Price,” as she is more usually styled, is
held in no great esteem in our village. Yet
everything is said to fulfil some useful purpose,
and if Mrs. Price does nothing else, at least she
and her family serve as conspicuous moral
warnings and give us something to throw up
our hands about at intervals, when we exclaim:</p>
<p>“<i>Did</i> you <small>EVER</small>!!”</p>
<p>She is a widow of ample and well-fed proportions,
owning her cottage, some bees and a
pig, and apparently getting a fairly good living
out of doing remarkably little sewing. If, under
a mistaken sense of duty, you strive to encourage
local industry, and seek to engage her services,
she has to consider before she consents to undertake
the bit of sewing you offer her to do, at
three times the amount you would have to pay
for having it done in town. And as often as
not she replies that she “really <i>can’t</i> oblige you”
this time, as she’s got a “spell” on cruel bad,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>
that has gone all down her back to her knees,
making her head feel nohow.</p>
<p>You turn away not even worried about her
condition, since she seems as cheerful as a daisy
and as comfortably complacent as a cow. And
you also know, even though you may have been
acquainted with the lady only a few months,
that however cruel the spell may be, and
however long it may last and prevent her
working, her children will be some of the most
elaborately dressed in the Sunday school, and
from the cottage door there will radiate the
most appetising of odours as regularly as the
mealtimes come round.</p>
<p>How it is that she manages to do so well
with so little visible means of subsistence, only a
stranger would stop to inquire. The residents
know only too well that her pockets are large;
that the shawl she invariably wears on weekdays
has voluminous folds; that her carrying and
stowing-away capacity is almost worthy of a
professional conjurer. Kleptomania (to give it
as refined a name as we can) is her besetting sin.
Unfortunately her family follow in her footsteps.</p>
<p>Mrs. Price seems to have a positive gift for
turning everything to profitable account; and
her methods of raising money are as ingenious
as they are varied.</p>
<p>Knowing her idiosyncrasies, I asked Abigail
where she was at the moment.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“In the kitchen, sitting in my wicker easy-chair,”
Abigail replied, still with elevated nose.
“She just walked right in and plumped herself
down.”</p>
<p>Whereupon I indicated, by dumb pantomime,
that she was on no account to be left there without
personal oversight; and Abigail intimated,
by means of nods and becks and wreathèd
scowls, that she was keeping her left eye on the
visitor, over her shoulder, even while she was
talking to me. We both knew that all was fish
that came to Mrs. Price’s net, and she would
negotiate with absolute impartiality a piece of
soap, a duster, or a half-crown, should they lie
in her way.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Not long before, Miss Bretherton, the
Rector’s niece, a middle-aged lady who keeps
house for him, had tried to give one of the
Price girls—Esmeralda by name—a good start
in life, taking her into the rectory kitchen. But
things disappeared with such alarming rapidity
during the first month she was in residence, that
she had to be sent back home again.</p>
<p>She left on a Saturday after middle-day
dinner. In the afternoon the house was observing
the all-pervading quiet that was customary on
Saturdays while the Rector was in his study
preparing for Sunday.</p>
<p>Miss Bretherton, requiring something in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span>
dining-room that adjoined the study, went in on
tiptoe so as not to disturb him, when, to her
amazement, she came upon the discharged
Esmeralda sitting on the floor beside an open
sideboard cupboard where some jars of pickles
were stored, ladling out pickled walnuts as fast
as she could into one of the maternal pudding
basins. Seeing Miss Bretherton, she just picked
up her basin, walnuts and all, and hastily retired
the same way that she had come, through the
French window.</p>
<p>Now, obviously her ex-mistress—over fifty
years of age and liable to rheumatism—couldn’t
chase after her in house-slippers and minus a
bonnet, seeing it was raining; so the bereft lady
just closed the sideboard door and communed
with her own feelings, womanfully stifling her
desire to burst into the study and tell the Rector
about it, even though it was his Saturday silence
time.</p>
<p>Next morning, Sunday, just as she was
buttoning her gloves, preparatory to crossing
the rectory lawn by the short cut to the church,
the cook came to her with the agitated inquiry:
Had the mistress done anything with the leg of
mutton left by the butcher yesterday morning?</p>
<p>No, of course not! Why should she? etc.</p>
<p>Well, they hunted high and they hunted
low, and the church bell gave its final peremptory
clang when they were still hunting, but no leg<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span>
of mutton was found either in the master’s boot
cupboard, or under the bed in the spare room,
or in the bookcase in the library, or in the woodshed,
or in any other of the equally likely places
which they searched. Indeed, no one had ever
expected that it would be found once its absence
was discovered; they just looked darkly at each
other and murmured, “That Esmeralda, of
course.” Cook declares that her mistress added
“the good-for-nothing baggage” under her
breath; but I can’t credit that of Miss Bretherton,
who always manages to maintain a wonderful
calm and self-restraint under the most trying
circumstances.</p>
<p>At any rate, she told cook they must have
fried ham and eggs for dinner—if you ever heard
of such a thing on a Sunday at the rectory!
and the Archdeacon of Saskatchewan preaching
in the morning on behalf of the C.M.S. too!</p>
<p>Moreover, Miss Bretherton was ten minutes
late for church, a thing never known before in
the memory of the oldest inhabitant; and then,
still more remarkable, instead of waiting to speak
to people after church, she set off at a terrific
pace for Mrs. Price’s cottage, and walked in to
find the kitchen full of a delightful aroma, and a
fine leg of mutton just being taken from the
roasting-jack by Esmeralda and placed on the
table, which was already adorned with a saucer
containing pickled walnuts.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Miss Bretherton knew better than to say,
“That’s my leg of mutton.” Our village understands
all about “having the law on ’un,” if
anyone upsets their feelings in any way. Therefore,
swallowing hard, and determining for the
hundredth time not to lose her temper, she said,
“Where did you get that leg of mutton from,
Mrs. Price?”</p>
<p>Had the woman replied, “From the butcher,”
that would have been fairly incriminating,
because, of course, we don’t require more than
one sheep a week for home consumption in the
village, and, as everybody knows, each sheep has
only two legs, and it wouldn’t require a Sherlock
Holmes to track those two legs any week in the
year. As it happened, this week’s other leg had
gone to my house. Had Mrs. Price claimed it
as her own, she would have been undone.</p>
<p>But she was too shrewd for that; she
promptly replied, with a look of surprised
innocence at such a strange question being
asked by Miss Bretherton at such a time—</p>
<p>“That leg of mutton, do you mean, miss?”
(as though there was a meat market to choose
from!) “Yes; ain’t it a fine one; it weighs
seven pound, if it weighs an ounce.” (Miss B.
knew that; she had studied the butcher’s ticket
only that morning.) “I couldn’t get it into the
oven, so we had to roast it afore the fire. I
expect you find the kitchen a bit ’ot. But as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span>
I was saying” (Miss B. had to press her lips
together very hard), “it ain’t often as I get a
windfall like this, but my brother-in-law come
up to see us yesterday from Penglyn, and he
brought it me for a birthday present; that’s why
I had to send ’Sm’ralder round to the rectory
in the afternoon to fetch my pudding basin as
she’d left behind—the one she brought round
that day with some new-laid eggs in, what I
give her for a present for cook’s mother who
were bad.”</p>
<p>Miss Bretherton pressed her lips still tighter,
and walked out. She knew the brother-in-law
wouldn’t speak to “that Jane” if he met her in
the same lane—such was the love between the
two families—much less bring her a leg of
mutton; besides, he had none too many joints
for his own family. She also knew that cook’s
mother had not been ill, and if she had, it
wouldn’t have been Mrs. Price who would have
supplied the new-laid eggs.</p>
<p>But she also knew the futility of attempting
to circumvent a woman of this type, and she
hated to have her stand there and tell still more
untruths, the children hovering round.</p>
<p>So she returned silently, and served the ham
and eggs, and listened while the Archdeacon
explained the difference between Plain Cree and
Swampy Cree (which, he was surprised to find,
she had hitherto confused in her mind, or at best<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>
regarded as one and the same language) with all
the Christian grace and forbearance she could
muster.</p>
<p>Only once did this nearly give out, and that
was when, after she had apologised to their guest
for such frugal fare and had briefly outlined the
reason for the same, the Rector looked with his
usual absent-minded benignity through his
glasses at his plate, and said—</p>
<p>“Well, my dear, I hadn’t noticed any difference:
I thought this was what we usually have
for dinner on Sundays.”</p>
<p>Just think of it! And for the Archdeacon
to go home and tell his wife! So like a man!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>This much as a general survey of Mrs.
Price’s characteristics. She doesn’t make an
idyllic picture, I admit, nor seem likely to be in
the running for a stained glass window in the
Parish Room. But then villages no less than
towns are made up of varied assortments of
human nature—and don’t forget we are none
of us perfect.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, making all allowances for
human frailty, you don’t wonder that I wasn’t
anxious for Mrs. Price to have the free run of
my kitchen, and Abigail, remembering that
she had left her purse on the dresser, hurried
back.</p>
<p>I finished the letter I was writing, and then<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span>
went out to see her. As I approached, I could
hear her:</p>
<p>“‘Sally,’ he says, ‘don’t let the kids fergit
me,’ and then ’e was gone. It’s this new disease
they’ve got from America—the ‘germs,’ they
calls it—and they do say as ’e makes a beautiful
corpse, though I shouldn’t never have thought it
of ’e, the Prices being none of them pertickerlelly
well favoured, even if he was me own
pore husband’s brother. But thur, thur, I
say speak nothing but good of them what’s
gone.”</p>
<p>She rose when I appeared, and, with a good
deal of side-tracking on to irrelevant matters,
chiefly connected with the excellence of her own
children, she explained that her late husband’s
brother had just died “over to Penglyn,” a little
town fifteen miles away across the hills, and in a
most un-get-at-able corner of the county.</p>
<p>The funeral was to-morrow, and neither she
nor the family of the deceased had a scrap of
black, “leastways, exceptin’ this bonnet, which
don’t look really respeckful to ’im as is gone,
being me own husband’s own brother.” I admit
the item that had been placed upon her head—whether
for use or adornment it was hard to
decide—resembled a jaded hen’s nest more than
anything else! The rest of her attire consisted
of a green skirt, a crimson blouse, and a very
light fawn coat (portions of costumes that had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span>
started life in considerably higher social circles in
the village), and a purple crochet scarf.</p>
<p>Dimly it occurred to me that I had not seen
Mrs. Price in bright colours before, for although
she never wore the conventional widow’s weeds,
she was usually in something black or dark; the
matrons in our village haven’t gone in for skittish
skirts or glaring colour-combinations as yet! I
concluded, however, that her black clothes were
too shabby. She was saying—</p>
<p>“And I didn’t know where to turn, m’m.
Everybody saying they hadn’t none when I
called, and there didn’t seem to be a soul left to
go to, and that pore dear sister-in-law of mine—leastways
same as, being me poor husband’s
brother’s wife—with not a scrap to put on ’cept
his best overcoat what she’s cuttin’ down for one
of the boys.</p>
<p>“And then I bethought me of you, it come to
me all of a suddint. I put down the pan of
’taters I was peeling and come straight up.
’Sm’ralder says to me, ‘But, mother, you can’t
wear that ole bonnet up to <i>that</i> house!’ But I
says to her, ‘It’s certain I can’t wear what I
haven’t got, and the Queen haven’t sent me one
of her done-with crowns yet.’ So I just come
as best I could.”</p>
<p>I was a little surprised to hear that she had
been refused at every door, for, irrespective of
personal reputation, the better-off residents are<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
always very good to any of the villagers who may
be in want or in trouble; indeed, we have only
one mean woman among us, she who once
remarked to a paid lady-companion, newly-arrived
from a freezingly cold journey, and badly
in need of a cup of tea to eke out her skimpy
cold-mutton-bone lunch: “I’m sure you will
enjoy a glass of water. We have really <i>beautiful</i>
water here. Pray help yourself when<i>ever</i> you
like.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Still, it was possible no one had had any
black.</p>
<p>I meditated a moment on my own wardrobe
and Mrs. Price’s capacious waist-measure!
Virginia’s things would be still less use, as she is
the size of a sylph.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I haven’t anything that would fit
you in the way of a skirt,” I began, “but I’ve a
large winter jacket if you don’t think it will be
too warm for June.”</p>
<p>“Oh, thank you, m’m. It’s only the first
week in June. I’m a <i>very</i> chilly person” (no one
looking at her buxom proportions would have
thought so!), “and a thick jacket is just what
I’m needin’ terrible bad. And if you had a skirt,
it ’ud be jest the size for my pore dear sister-in-law.
Ah, I can feel for her, being a widow
myself, and left with them children. She said to
me on’y yesterday, ‘Jane, do try to get me a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span>
black skirt from anywhere, if on’y you can.’ She
says——”</p>
<p>“But you told me just now that you hadn’t
seen her since before her husband died,” blurted
in Abigail, forgetful of her usual good manners,
and begrudging to see the family wardrobe being
disbursed in this way, as she rather regarded my
coats and skirts as her perquisites.</p>
<p>Mrs. Price turned full upon Abigail that
look of surprised innocence that stood her in such
good stead. “She said it in a letter she writ me
yesterday,” she replied with dignified composure.</p>
<p>Finally I told her I would look her out something
if she sent Esmeralda up for it in the
evening. Mrs. Price lingered to recite further
tales of woe to Abigail, till she, kind girl, in spite
of her private estimate of the lady, bestowed on
her a pair of black lisle thread gloves, as she
spoke so pathetically about having to go to the
funeral with bare hands and not being able to
afford any gloves.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>When Virginia came in from “sticking”
sweet peas in the garden, I told her about Mrs.
Price.</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t consider her a worthy object
for charity as a rule,” she remarked. “But at
the same time, if Fate kindly supplies me with
an opportunity to get rid of that big black hat of
mine that I’ve never liked and never intend to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span>
wear again, I’m not the one to disregard it,
especially as it will save my carrying that huge
hat-box back to town. But whether she or the
‘sister-in-law-same-as’ wears it, either will find it
good weight for the money.”</p>
<p>So we left the winter jacket, and the hat, and
a black blouse Ursula added to the parcel, and
my black cloth skirt for the sister-in-law, against
Esmeralda should come for them. And then we
started out to make some calls.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Passing Miss Primkins’ house, we just stopped
to leave a book I had promised to lend her.
Miss Primkins is a pleasant middle-aged lady,
of very small independent means, who lives in a
cottage by herself. The door stood open as
usual. She looked over the stairs when I
knocked, then explained that she would be down
in a moment if we would go in.</p>
<p>“I’ve been turning out things in the box-room—in
order to find a little black for that Mrs.
Price. Her husband’s brother has just died, and
the funeral is to be to-morrow, and she says no
one in the place has any black in hand. So she
came and asked me if I would mind <i>lending</i> her
a black mantle!—<i>lending</i> it to her indeed!</p>
<p>“I asked her what she had done with that black
dolman I gave her not three months ago—you
remember that dolman trimmed with black lace
that I was rather fond of? I bought it—oh, it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</SPAN></span>
must be at least ten years ago—for my uncle’s
funeral. It was trimmed with two bands of
crêpe, one about four inches deep, and the other
three inches, or perhaps two-and-three-quarters;
very stylish it looked, too. Then I had the crêpe
taken off and some black silk put on it—very
good ottoman silk it was—that had originally
been part of a black silk dress belonging to my
sister. Next I had it covered with fancy net
with velvet appliqué for a change—not that I
liked it, or would have thought of having it done
had I known what it was going to cost. But
they do take you in so at those town shops; why,
I could have got a new dolman for what it cost
to cover that one! And then it lasted no time,
used to catch in everything, so I had next to no
wear out of that.</p>
<p>“I had it taken off, and the dolman <i>thoroughly</i>
turned—every bit; and the dressmaker put on
some fringe, a sort of wavy fringe; but I had to
have it taken off, because that Gladys Price,
when she came home for a holiday, had on a silk
coat trimmed with fringe exactly like it, so there
again I got taken in, as you might say.</p>
<p>“After that, I put my brown fur trimming on
it, but for the winter only; and then for the
summer I put on some deep black lace. I
hadn’t had that lace on more than six months
when I gave her the dolman. (I remember quite
well sitting up late that night to pick the lace<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</SPAN></span>
all off it.) Altogether, you can’t say I had so
much wear out of any of it, and it was a constant
expense. And yet, would you <i>credit</i> it, when I
asked her what she had done with it, she said it
had ‘wored out’! Why, <i>I</i> could have had it
another ten years in good use, without its being
‘wored out.’ She’s a thriftless woman, that’s
what she is. Still, I suppose it isn’t for us to
judge her.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>We had to hurry on. I wanted to call on
Miss Bretherton, who had sprained her ankle
and needed commiseration. We found her in
that state of suppressed and bottled-up-in-a-Christian-manner
irritation that is common to
very active women who are suddenly tied to a
chair with some of their machinery out of gear;
and, like most other women under similar conditions,
she was trying to do ten times as much
as she ought to have done, in order to prove to
everybody that there was nothing the matter
with her.</p>
<p>“You’ll just have to come into the midst of
all this muddle,” she sighed, “for I can’t move
myself into another room.”</p>
<p>“Sorting things for a jumble sale?” I
inquired, looking at sundry piles of garments
strewn about her.</p>
<p>“It almost amounts to that; though I really
started out to get a few things together for a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</SPAN></span>
woman in the village who seems to be rather
needy at the moment, that Jane Price. Her
brother-in-law has just died—you remember
Zebadiah Price, who lived at Briar Bush Cottage
before they took a little place at Penglyn? We
lost sight of them after they left here—it’s such
a cross-country place they’ve gone to. I’m rather
surprised they haven’t asked the Rector to bury
him, he thought a good deal of Zebadiah; but
all the same I’m glad they haven’t, for it takes
you the best part of a day to cover that fifteen
miles, and he has a slight cold. It seems she’s
going to the funeral to-morrow.</p>
<p>“I admit there are several women in the
parish I should feel a greater pleasure in helping—she
does try my patience at times—but I felt I
ought to do what I can in this particular case,
as she doesn’t seem able to get any black from
anyone else. Everybody says they gave theirs
to the last jumble sale, she tells me, though <i>I</i>
didn’t see any of it!</p>
<p>“She is wanting some for Zebadiah’s family
too; they are left in bad straits, she says. I was
only too glad to find that she and her sister-in-law
have buried the hatchet at last; they’ve been
at loggerheads for years; she really spoke very
nicely about it. She said the older she got the
more she felt life was too short to spend it in
quarrelling, and at a time like this she thought
bygones should be bygones. I don’t like to misjudge<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</SPAN></span>
the woman,” Miss Bretherton continued
with a sigh. “Sometimes she seems so anxious
to do right. Her bringing up was against her.
And yet——” And then the Rectoress closed
her lips firmly determined to say no uncharitable
thing, even about “that Jane Price.”</p>
<p>I’m afraid I didn’t think too highly of
Mrs. Price at that moment. I remembered the
parcels of black garments waiting at my house
and again at Miss Primkins’. Moreover, Mrs.
Price’s occasional lapses into fervent piety
annoyed me very much, because I suspected
they were developed for my benefit. She always
gave me a long recital of woes and financial
difficulties whenever she saw me, and invariably
finished up with, “But thur, thur, I don’t let it
worry me, for I always say, ‘The Lord will
provide.’” I much objected to her taking the
Name in vain in this manner, more especially as
it generally happened that she gave Providence
every assistance in the matter by helping herself
to anything that lay within reach of her hand!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>We did not stay long at the rectory, as I
wanted to call on the lady of the manor. She
kept us waiting a few minutes before she
appeared; but explained, as she apologised for
the delay, “I’ve just turned out five trunks,
two cupboards, and four chests of drawers—and
goodness knows how many more I should have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</SPAN></span>
set upon if you hadn’t come! It’s a pastime
that seems to grow upon one like taking to
drink or gambling—the more you have the more
you want!</p>
<p>“I only meant to look through one chest for
a black bonnet I thought I had put there—I’m
trying to find some funeral wear for that
Mrs. Price. Her husband’s brother has died,
Zebadiah Price; they live over the hills at
Penglyn. While he was alive, she hadn’t a good
word to say for his wife; but now he’s gone,
her conscience seems to worry her, and she says
she feels the very least she can do is ‘to show
respeck to the remains,’ and she wants to help
his family. So I’ve been going over a good deal
of ancient history in my search for garments
calculated to show a sufficiency of respect. She
said she was afraid that what she had on might
give a wrong impression.”</p>
<p>“If she wore the same set of glad rags that
she had on when she came to see us, likewise
asking for mourning,” Virginia interpolated,
“she’d give the impression of a ragged rainbow
gone wrong and turned inside out, rather than a
funeral.”</p>
<p>“Oh, she’s been to you, has she? She told
me she couldn’t think of making so bold as to
intrude her troubles on other people, and only
came to me because she knew I had been so
kind to Zebadiah years ago when he was ill;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</SPAN></span>
and added that my clothes always suited her so
well!”</p>
<p>When we got outside, Virginia suggested
with a twinkle that we should call on a few
more people. We did, and at every house we
were met with the sad intelligence of Zebadiah
Price’s death and his sister-in-law’s quest for
suitably respectful apparel.</p>
<p>Surely Royalty could not have been more
universally mourned—in our village, at any rate!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Next Sunday we were rather puzzled on
entering the church to see an ample lady clad
in the most resplendent of widow’s weeds, sitting
in solitary state in the very front row—a seat
usually patronised only by the halt and maimed.</p>
<p>Her dress and mantle were of dull black silk
trimmed with crêpe about a quarter of a yard in
depth. True, it was not quite new, but its
cut and style were unmistakable; anyone who
possessed such a dress could afford to wear it
even after its first newness had worn off; it
stamped the wearer as a lady of means. A long
weeper, black kid gloves, and a black-bordered
handkerchief completed all we could see of the
lady. We could only conclude that the distinguished
stranger must be very deaf indeed, to
take the front seat.</p>
<p>By this time all the congregation as it came
in was interested. Such a stylish stranger would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</SPAN></span>
naturally attract attention. She kept her head
devoutly bent, and used the handkerchief frequently;
we couldn’t see her face. She might
have been a peeress-in-waiting, judging by the
dignity and decorum of her bearing.</p>
<p>It was just as the Rector was repeating the
opening sentences that the resplendent one turned
round to see the effect she was making on the
congregation, and behold—that Mrs. Price!</p>
<p>I am afraid I only just saved myself from
making the time-honoured remark, “<i>Did</i> you
<small>EVER</small>!”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>“But what I want to know is this,” said Miss
Primkins (as several of us walked together along
the high road after church, leaving Mrs. Price
giving details of the funeral, and the innumerable
wreaths, to her friends). “Where did she get
those weeds from? There isn’t a widow among
us, nor a relative of a widow, so far as I know.
Now who gave them to her?”</p>
<p>But we none of us knew. It certainly looked
suspiciously as though Mrs. Price had used the
poor late Zebadiah as an excuse for dragging the
whole county!</p>
<p>I wasn’t surprised that she herself had donned
fresh weeds, for as we are remarkably healthy
upon these hills, we are apt to make the most
of a funeral when it chances our way, and the
opportunity to wear mourning, carrying with it,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</SPAN></span>
as it does, a certain personal distinction, is not to
be passed over lightly.</p>
<p>On one occasion I remember meeting a
farmer’s wife on Sunday morning in deep black
(that had done duty for several previous family
bereavements), weeping into her handkerchief as
she went along the road to church. We stopped
to inquire about her trouble.</p>
<p>“My poor old mother’s gone at last,” she
sobbed. We were truly sorry for her grief, and
asked when she had died.</p>
<p>“Well, I ’spect it would be about three or
four this morning; that’s the time they usually
go. I had a letter last night saying as how they
didn’t reckon she’d live the night. So she’ll be
gone by now. My poor mother! I’ll never see
her again!” and she wept afresh.</p>
<p>I’m glad to say the mother is still alive, and
very flourishing.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>It was about a fortnight later that Virginia
gave me the wildly-exciting information, culled
from the local paper, that some Roman remains
had just been excavated. I murmured “Oh!”
in that absent-minded way people will do when
their thoughts are called off the subject of What
shall we have for the midday meal? to higher
things.</p>
<p>I was thinking like this: “I did intend to
have steak and kidney pudding, but as the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</SPAN></span>
butcher is late, there won’t be time to cook it;
there isn’t enough cold tongue—at least, that
knobbly end part is no use—we have plenty of
eggs in the house, so we must just make out with
that soup left over from yesterday and omelettes;
or we might easily have——”</p>
<p>“Either a viaduct or an amphitheatre or a
villa; they aren’t sure as yet which it is,” went
on Virginia. “You read about it yourself; it’s
awfully interesting. There; in that column—see?
‘Roman Remains at Penglyn.’”</p>
<p>“At Penglyn? It can’t be Zebadiah,” I
commented; “he wasn’t as old as <i>that!</i>”</p>
<p>Nevertheless, we aren’t particular to a few
hundred years in our village. For I remember
last year an old woman telling me, “Have you
heard, m’m, of the great news in the village?
The Black Prince is staying at the Inn! Yes,
to be sure! And he seems to understand our
language beautiful, he do; though they say he
does speak the foreign to a gentleman what’s
staying there with him. The only thing I was
surprised about was to see how young he do
look, considering of his age. Why, I remember
hearing tell about him when I was at school!”
Later on I found the historic potentate was a
harmless Indian law-student.</p>
<p>Virginia kept on about the Roman excavations,
and announced her intention of going to
see them. I protested that I wasn’t going to be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</SPAN></span>
hauled across a stony mountainous region in a
wagonette, and then change twice by slow train,
an hour or so to wait at each change, and ditto
to get back, all to see a few brick walls, when
the garden so badly needed weeding.</p>
<p>She was indignant, said she should prefer to
go alone to having unsympathetic and uninformed
society; reminded me of the histories of nations
that had been found embedded in brick walls,
waxed eloquent on the subject of the Egyptian
hieroglyphics and the Rosetta Stone, skipped
lightly from the pointed apex of the Pyramids
to the significance of the flat roofs of Thibet,
examined the walls of the buried cities in central
Asia, and before I had fully realised that I was
really travelling in the East, I found that she
was examining the designs on the Aztec pottery
of ancient Mexico.</p>
<p>Fearing that we should have this sort of thing
straight on end for a week, I said we would go
next day, weather permitting, if only she would
help me decide whether to have the omelette
plain, or a cheese omelette, or would they prefer
macaroni cheese? I have found in the past that
the crystallisation of thought necessary to follow
Virginia, when she is in an informing mood,
creates a vacuum, and then I get a cold in my
head.</p>
<p>I also inquired whether she would prefer to
drive all the way, or go by train.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She replied, still with her eyes glued to the
interesting newspaper treatise on antiquarian
relics, that she would rather I settled these minor
details, adding that she always liked to leave the
arrangement of everything to me, as it gave
her such opportunities to point out to me the
feebleness of my methods and ideas.</p>
<p>I decided to go with her, simply because I
knew that unless she had some firm, restraining
force beside her, she would go and buy that
Roman viaduct, amphitheatre, or villa, and order
it to be sent home; and, for all I knew, she
might give <i>my</i> address in a fit of wandering-mindedness,
and what should <i>I</i> do with it when
it arrived? You can’t pack an amphitheatre
away in the empty pigsty, and all the other
space was occupied with seedlings and things!</p>
<p>Besides, she has no bump of locality (neither
have I, for the matter of that); but I thought
it would look better if two of us were arrested
for wandering about without any visible means
of subsistence; at least, I could say I was her
keeper.</p>
<p>Next morning we inquired of the barometer
as to the weather prospects. By the way, that
barometer is a unique treasure. V. and U. gave
it to me one birthday; I had long been craving
one that was a genuine antique. There was no
doubt about this one—its antiquity, I mean; for
the rest, until you get on speaking terms<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span>
with it, I admit that it does seem a trifle
ambiguous.</p>
<p>But I’m not one to look a gift horse in the
mouth, so I’ll say no more on this point, save
that we tapped it vigorously; whereupon the
long hand flew wildly round and round one way,
while the short hand did a whirligig, equally
excitedly, in the opposite direction.</p>
<p>We waited till they both got tired of spinning
round, and then, as the long hand pointed to
“Much Rain,” with leanings towards “Stormy,”
we knew we could rely on a very fine day.</p>
<p>But we tapped it once again, just to make
sure it knew its own mind. After it had wiggled
giddily round as before, the long hand stopped
midway between “Set Fair” and “Very Dry.”
Of course that confirmed our former calculations,
and we got out our new summer hats, and left
our umbrellas at home. Virginia had worn <i>her</i>
new hat indoors most of the previous day, in
order to get her money’s worth out of it, because
she said she never got her money’s worth
out of any of her garments, save her raincoat
and her umbrella. [N.B.—Is an umbrella a
garment?]</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>It was market day when we got there, and
all the town was of course wending its way
either to or from the market-place. One of the
very first people we ran against was Mrs.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span>
Zebadiah Price; but, to our surprise, she was
wearing neither my black cloth skirt nor Ursula’s
black blouse. On the contrary, she was in quite
gay attire—a brown coat and skirt, a blue blouse,
a lace collar, a string of pearls as large as
marbles, and a tuscan straw hat trimmed with
roses and purple geraniums. I had known her
in the past, when she lived in the village; so I
stopped and spoke to her.</p>
<p>“I was so very sorry to hear of your sad
trouble,” I began. Yet the subdued tones I
used and felt necessary to the occasion seemed
curiously out of place beside all that market-day
finery.</p>
<p>“Yes, thank you, m’m; it did upset me
awful,” she said, looking very woe-begone.</p>
<p>“I’m sure it did,” I said feelingly.</p>
<p>“You wouldn’t believe how I fretted over
’un. Seems kind o’ foolish I s’pose when I’ve
got the children. But I got that attached
to ’un.”</p>
<p>“I can <i>quite</i> understand it,” I murmured
sympathetically. “After all, children can’t take
the place of the one that is gone.”</p>
<p>“No, m’m; that’s what I say.”</p>
<p>“And it was very sudden, wasn’t it?”</p>
<p>“Yes’m; taken bad and gone in a few hours,”
she continued. “And that was the second I
lost in two months. I don’t have no luck
somehow.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“The second in two months!” I repeated in
surprise.</p>
<p>“Yes’m, and I feel that downhearted about
it, I don’t think I’ll go in for another. I said so
only last night to my husband.”</p>
<p>“Your husband?” I echoed again. It was
beginning to sound like bigamy!</p>
<p>“He said at the time he thought the £15 I
give was a swindle for the brindled cow.”</p>
<p>“The brindled cow?” I said feebly. I really
didn’t know what else to say. Virginia need not
have laughed!</p>
<p>Then I rallied my senses. “But I thought
you had trouble about a fortnight ago—your
husband, Zebadiah Price—I heard——”</p>
<p>“My Zeb? About a fortnight ago? Let’s
see?”—thoughtfully turning her left eye in
the direction of the church spire, and thereby
tilting her hat askew. “Ah, I expect you mean
about last February; to be sure, he did have a
touch of this ’ere influenza; and he were a bit
queer for a couple of days, he were: but that
was nothing to my losing my calf!”</p>
<p>“I’m glad it was no worse,” I said heartily.
“Why, Mrs. Jane Price told me she was coming
to the funeral.”</p>
<p>“<i>Jane!</i>” ejaculated Mrs. Zebadiah. “Jane
Price said she was coming to <i>his</i> funeral? Not
if I know’d it, and it had been me very own
even, she wouldn’t; the <i>hussy</i>—begging your<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span>
pardon, m’m, for using sech a word. She knows
better than to try to put so much as a shoenail
of her foot inside our door. She never aren’t and
she never shan’t. Though for brazenness there
ain’t their beat in the county. Why, p’raps
you’ve heard how that there Gladys Price has
started an ole clothes shop in the town here,
right under our very nose, and my husband as respected
as he is. There it is for everybody to read
over the door—‘<span class="smcap">G. Price</span>. Ladies and Gents’
Hemporium’—whatever that may be! Coming
to his funeral, indeed! It makes me <i>broil!</i>” And
Mrs. Z. went off fairly sizzling with indignation.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>When we had duly found (after long search)
and surveyed the Roman remains (which consisted
of three upright stones, something like
those used for kerbstones in the streets, and
stood in the middle of a very boggy field), and
had failed to decide whether they were the
viaduct, the amphitheatre, or the villa, I
suggested a speedy return to the station, as
it was now coming down a steady drizzle,
with indications of still more to follow. But
Virginia said—</p>
<p>“I’d like, while we’re here, just to have a
look into the hemporium window, to see what
she has marked that hat of mine.”</p>
<p>When we reached it, behold, it was like
taking a regretful look back into the past, for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</SPAN></span>
most of the garments there displayed we had
formerly known when they walked our village
street in decorous Sunday glory. And they
included: a grey cloth coat of mine that had
disappeared most mysteriously; a long silk scarf
of Ursula’s that, so far, she had never missed;
and a bead-bag I had often admired when
carried by the lady of the manor, and which, we
felt sure, she had never given away.</p>
<p>“Talk about excavating Roman remains!” I
exclaimed; but Virginia’s conversational powers
were only equal to “<i>Did</i> you <small>EVER</small>!”</p>
<p>And we damply faded away in the direction
of the station.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>VII<br/> <small>Just Being Neighbourly</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">Those</span> superior Londoners who know nothing
at first hand about Nature “unimproved,” the
type who find complete satisfaction for soul,
body and mind at some loud and crowded seaside
resort, sometimes say to me: “I can’t think
how you can endure the terrible isolation of the
country—with absolutely nothing to look at, no
one to say a word, nobody to take the slightest
interest in you, dead or alive. Well, <i>I</i> should
go out of my mind in such solitariness! But
then, I am <i>so</i> human; I do like a little life,” etc.</p>
<p>I don’t attempt to convert such people.
After all, they are just as much entitled to their
views as I am to mine. Besides, I am only too
thankful that they keep away from our hills, and
disport themselves in an environment more in
keeping with their personal tastes. We don’t
want the blatant woman, or the overdressed
(which nowadays means underdressed) woman,
or the artificial woman, or the woman who “likes
a little life”; our hills would never suit them
as a background, either mentally or otherwise.
Why, we have neither a music-hall nor a picture
palace for I don’t know <i>how</i> many miles round!
A benighted spot, isn’t it!</p>
<p>But when they reproach us with having no
one to say a word, and nobody to take the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</SPAN></span>
slightest interest in our doings—well, I <i>could</i>
say many things! But I merely assure them
that we are nothing if not neighbourly!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>I took my sewing and went down to the
bottom of the lower orchard. It was a warm
day, but not too hot to sit out of doors at eleven
in the morning, provided one found a shelter
from the sun overhead. As I have explained
before, my cottage is on a steep hillside, the
whole earth runs either up or down. In only a
few favoured spots can you place a chair—and
sit on it—with any degree of certainty; and even
then you probably have to level up the back, or
the front, by putting some flat stones under two
of the legs. The slope of the hill faces south;
hence we get all the sun there is.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>The bottom of the lower orchard was just the
place for such a day. A wall with overhanging
tangles of honeysuckle and ivy, and an oak-tree
that spread big arms well over the wall, gave
just the shade one needed from the blazing sun.
I put the wicker chair with its back to the wall—and
such a comfort a wall is anywhere out of
doors when you want to sit down.</p>
<p>The view from this spot is very restful on a
summer’s day: the hot south is behind; one
faces the cooler, glareless northern sky above
the hill that rises before one.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>This orchard is but sparsely populated with
fruit-trees, and most of these are very old. There
are some huge pear-trees that rise tall and fairly
straight, suggestive of rather well-fed poplars.
There are some twisted, rugged apple-trees,
every branch and twig presenting a wonderful
study in silver and grey and green filigree, where
the lichens have spread and revelled unmolested
for many a year. The lichens are so marvellously
beautiful, it always takes me quite a time to get
down to the lower wall; there is so much to
look at on the way. The delicate fronds, that
seem closely related in their appearance to the
hoarfrost designs on the winter windows, show
such a variety of different cluster-schemes. They
decorate the odd corners, and throw beauty over
the hard knots and gnarls, till I sometimes think
they are among the most exquisite things Nature
has ever produced—only while I am thinking
this, I come upon something else equally
beautiful.</p>
<p>Even on a hot day, when most of the mosses
and lichens have faded in the glare and drought,
we still find the silvery-grey tracery flourishing on
the shady side of the apple-trees, and on the pieces
of branches that were snapped off and blown down
into the long grass by the equinoctial gales. I
usually gather up an armful of these branches,
with their delicate pencil studies on a darker
background, and carry them down to the bottom<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></span>
of the orchard with me—only to wonder why I
didn’t leave them where they were till I returned,
as I have to carry them back up the hill again
presently!</p>
<p>It may seem weakly sentimental to those
who do not understand, but I confess that,
much as I love the smell of burning applewood,
it always gives me a real pain to put
on the fire twigs that are ornamented with moss
or lichen. It seems heartless to destroy such
beauty, even though there is “plenty more
where that came from,” as people sometimes
tell me.</p>
<p>In the summer I put the pieces of the grey-green
branches, that I gather up about the
orchard, in the empty hearths and grates.</p>
<p>Many of the old trees originally planted in
the lower orchard have died or been blown down;
the wind takes a heavy toll from these heights;
we can’t have pergolas and rose arches up here,
as they can lower down in the valley, unless we
fasten them to very firm foundations.</p>
<p>As no previous owner in this happy-go-lucky
district thought it worth whiles to put new stock
in the place of the fruit-trees that have come
down, there are plenty of open spaces, and comparatively
little to obstruct the view as you sit
against the bottom wall and look up the hillside.
I am afraid this orchard is more ornamental than
useful, for the pears are the hard bitter sort used<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></span>
for making perry, a drink that is very popular
locally; and the apples are the equally uninteresting-to-the-taste
cider variety. Yet they are
so exceptionally beautiful, as the fruit turns
crimson and yellow and golden brown, that the
trees become a glory of colour in fruit-gathering
time.</p>
<p>After all there is excuse for ornament without
specific use, if a thing be very, <i>very</i> ornamental—and
the orchard certainly is that.</p>
<p>The sun reaches well under the trees, where
the wild flowers and grasses make a softly waving
sea of colour. Of course, I know the grass ought
to be kept cut, so as to prevent undue nourishment
being taken from the earth for the support
of “mere weeds.” But we pretend that it is
properly cropped by “Hussy;” she is the mild-eyed
dusky Jersey, belonging to the farmeress
who supplies our milk, and is so-called, because
she has a playful habit of kicking over the pail.</p>
<p>Occasionally she is turned in and roams about
at meditative leisure, to the indignation of the
small dog, who regards her as a hated rival. But
once the fruit appears, she has to be removed;
either she chokes herself with pears, or else they
don’t agree with the butter; or various other
things. Even a cow seems a complicated problem
when you own a real one; and though I have
only had cow-anxieties secondhand, so to speak,
my acquaintance with “Hussy” has led me to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span>
wonder whether, on the whole, a tin of milk is a
more sure and certain investment for sixpence-halfpenny.</p>
<p>But even when the orchard has a tenant, it is
surprising how little damage she seems to do to
the wild flowers. This is all the more remarkable
if you have ever seen what devastation one
simple-minded cow is capable of, if it indulges
in but a ten minutes’ revel in your flower-garden!
“Hussy” seems to eat carefully round
the flowers, leaving the whole plant intact, which
is more than a mowing machine will do, despite
its much vaunted up-to-dateness. Civilisation
has still a lot to learn.</p>
<p>Every season has its special flower show in
this orchard. I only wish I could get the same
never-failing succession of flowers in my garden
that Nature does in hers.</p>
<p>On this particular July day the large field
scabious was perhaps the most noticeable flower;
its mauve-blue blossoms high above all the rest;
its long stalks always determining to out-top
everything else that grows in the delightful
medley.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>“Please, ma’am, I’ve brought you some
flowers,” said a little pinafored girl to me one
day, when I had just arrived. She is an especial
favourite of mine, and lives in a cottage along
my lane. This is her way of just being neighbourly.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</SPAN></span>
In her hand was a large bunch of
scabious and grasses.</p>
<p>“These are very pretty,” I said. “What do
you call them?”</p>
<p>“Please, ma’am, I call them ‘Queen Mary’s
Pincushions,’” she said shyly.</p>
<p>The country names for the flowers are often
so much more interesting than the ones you find
attached to them in books. After all, “Queen
Mary’s Pincushion” has something real and
understandable about it for just ordinary people
like myself; whereas <i>Scabiosa arvensis</i> (its proper
name) doesn’t stir my heart the least little bit.
It was easy to see the process by which the child
had got the name—the flowers are wonderfully
like plump round pincushions, with the stamens
for the pins: but anything so delicately beautiful
would not be suitable for aught save a royal
lady’s dressing-table; hence Queen Mary was, of
course, the one to whom they were dedicated.</p>
<p>And isn’t the name “Lady’s Laces” most
suggestive? That is what we call the white
filmy flowers of the hedge-parsley. I seldom
see a fine white lace evening gown without
thinking of the soft mist of white over green
that surprises us in June, and smothers the
orchard when the Lady’s Laces suddenly burst
into billows of bloom.</p>
<p>Some of the local names are more material
and prosaic than idealistic, however. There is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</SPAN></span>
another flower that grows all about the orchard,
in close company with the scabious; it has
bunches of bright yellow flowers of the daisy
family, growing in compact heads at the top of a
tall stem. I am very fond of this flower; it gleams
sunshine all over the place; but I don’t care to
call it <i>Senecio Jacobœa</i>, which is its proper name;
it’s so mortifying when people look at you puzzled
and inquiring, and then ask, with a patient sigh,
if you would mind <i>spelling</i> it! I never could spell.</p>
<p>Neither do I care for its other slightly less
official name, “Common Ragwort.” So one day
when an old man was passing, who is fairly well-up
in flowers, I asked him if he could tell me
the name of this Sunshine plant. To which he
replied—</p>
<p>“Wealluscallsemards’m.”</p>
<p>I didn’t ask him to spell it, because I don’t
fancy he can spell any better than I can. I
merely said, “I don’t think I <i>quite</i> caught the
name?”</p>
<p>“I said ‘’<small>ARDS</small>,’ Mum; (<i>crescendo</i>) ‘<b>’ARDS</b>.’
We allus calls ’em that ’cos they’re so ’ard to
pull up.”</p>
<p>I thanked him, and still, in secret, call them
the Sunshine flowers—though I admit that
Virginia, having recently set out gaily to rectify
my shocking laxity in the matter of the proper
cultivation of an orchard, at last decided herself
to call them “’Ards.” She found that the act<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></span>
of sitting down violently and unexpectedly so
many times in the course of trying to pull up a
few innocent-looking plants, wore her out more
than it did the ’ards; so she gave it up at length,
and there they remain until this day!</p>
<p>Intermingling with Queen Mary’s Pincushions
and the Sunshine flowers is a rosy purple flower
that blends delightfully with the other two;
Knapweed is one of its names; it looks something
like a thistle bloom at a distance, but it is
really a relation of the Sweet Sultan that grows
in the garden beds, I believe.</p>
<p>Then there are Harebells dancing in the
wind on the top of little grassy mounds; so frail
they look—yet “Hussy” never seems to walk
on them! Ragged Robins flutter pink petals
beside a little brook that runs down at the side
of the orchard; and here are also big blue forget-me-nots,
with bright yellow centres.</p>
<p>But there is one thing about this orchard
that very few people have discovered, and that
is the host of sweet-smelling things that you
walk on or rub against, as you carry the wicker-chair
down to the bottom wall.</p>
<p>Do you know what it is like to walk on
Pennyroyal and Sweet Basil? Have you ever
stood still suddenly and said, “What <i>is</i> it?” as
a delicious aromatic scent added itself to all the
other lovely scents floating around?</p>
<p>I discovered a whole world of beautiful scents<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</SPAN></span>
in among the orchard grass. The Pennyroyal
was most unsuspicious-looking, till I stepped on
it. (I didn’t mean to step on it; but then one
must walk <i>somewhere!</i>) Next I found out the
Sweet Basil, with its unobtrusive pink flowers.</p>
<p>Still I hadn’t found it all; a little later I came
upon some wild mint beside the brook. The
tansy I had long been friendly with; the scent
of it seems to fit in so exactly with a hot summer
day; and the wild thyme that grows on a sunny
bank at one side of the orchard you couldn’t
possibly miss, the bees have so much to say
about it. Bushes of balm, that have possibly
strayed away from the garden, are always at
hand, to rub a leaf when desired.</p>
<p>But I think of all my favourites, the black
peppermint has first place. I shall never
forget the day I first discovered its dark shoots
pushing up undaunted among the grass; not
but what I had a long-standing friendship with
peppermint—in my first childhood, as bull’s-eyes;
in my second childhood, as peppermint creams.</p>
<p>But I hadn’t the slightest notion what it was
like in its natural state. When once I found it,
I soon realised that it stood alone among all the
scented wonders. I put some of it at various
corners about the garden, because I found it
has remarkable healing powers. No matter how
dispirited you may be or out of joint with the
world, it is only necessary to take a leaf, rub it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</SPAN></span>
and sniff it, whereupon the world smiles again,
and you realise that, in spite of all, it is good to
be alive. You will understand, therefore, how
essential it is to have it in handy places, so that
weary people, even if they do not know of its
unique qualities, may rub against it in passing,
and unconsciously come under its spell.</p>
<p>It dies down in the winter, but when spring
comes we always look eagerly for the first purple-black
shoots pushing up cheerily from the soil.</p>
<p>It has only one fault; it suffers from zeal
without discretion. It will not keep within
proper bounds. At the present moment I am
wondering whether it is better to dig up the
bergamot or rout out the peppermint; they are
having a hand-to-hand fight for supremacy in
one particular flower corner.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>I am afraid my needlework was a mere
matter of form that morning. Who could glue
their eyes to a piece of hemstitching with the
whole earth fairly dancing with colour and light
around them? I faintly (but not very earnestly)
wished that I had brought knitting instead of
sewing, because that doesn’t need to be looked
at, and you can keep up a semblance of respectable
industry while you are watching all the
wild things.</p>
<p>I had been feeling rather aggravated with a
woman who had written commiserating with my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</SPAN></span>
odd predilection for being “buried” in a spot
where there was “positively nothing to be seen.”
She was really pitying me! Well, I pitied her
back, and pitied her hard; had she only known
it, she would have been aggravated too. So at
least we were quits. She had said that, for her
part, she should simply die in such an unsociable
place. I took care to be just as sorry for her as
she was for me: it was a slight satisfaction to
me! It was at this moment that I heard voices
of two women talking in the lane, hidden from
view by the orchard wall.</p>
<p>“How’s yourself, Mrs. Blake?”</p>
<p>“Only middling.” (We always start our
conversations with lugubriousness; it seems
indecorous to parade health and happiness before
our neighbours!) “I’m in a tearing hurry. I’ve
just been to the doctor’s to see if he can’t give
me something for my poor Jim’s tooth. It do
pester him something cruel. I promised him I’d
run all the way there and back; he’ll be raving
till I get back.”</p>
<p>“Ah, he won’t get no peace till he has it
out, I reckon.”</p>
<p>“The doctor says why don’t he have ’em
out and get some new ’uns? But I call it
waste. Look at my sister’s husband: cost him
a guinea his did! Of course, he got a complete
set top and bottom for that, fifty-three teeth
altogether I believe he told me, and as natural<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</SPAN></span>
as you please, I’ll own. But seeing as of course
he’s got to take ’em out to eat, I call it spending
just for show, even if they do give you a good
mouthful for your money.”</p>
<p>“By the way, speaking of teeth reminds me—only
I can’t stop to tell you all about it now,
as the children’ll be in from school at half-past
twelve, and I haven’t started the dinner yet—but
I’ve just heard that poor Mrs. Jeggins over
to Brownbrook’s gone.”</p>
<p>“Pore thing! Is she though?”</p>
<p>“Yes, your mentioning Jim’s tooth made me
think of it. They fancy it started with a tooth
in her case too; for she had faceache turrible bad
about six months ago, her husband told me.
And then it just went all over her like. The
doctor simply couldn’t do nothing with it. He
tried every mortal bottle he had in his surgery,
and gave her some out of every single one, and
<i>yet</i> she died! But there, I s’pose it had to be!”</p>
<p>“I heeard tell from her sist’r-’n-law as she
drank somethin’ awful; but, mind you, if it’s a
lie, ’taint my lie; it’s her lie as told me. And I
don’t at all hold with repeating a thing like that.
But in any case, I shouldn’t think it was her
tooth! I expect she et something that didn’t
agree with her.”</p>
<p>“Well, maybe; as I always say, you can’t be
too careful what you eat nowadays. The dinner
they’ve got up there smells tasty, don’t it?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Yes; it’s roast duck.”</p>
<p>“Duck, is it? I didn’t know they’d had a
duck <i>this</i> week. Who did they get it from?”</p>
<p>“Sarah Ann Perkins—that old brown one of
hers.”</p>
<p>“The <i>brown</i> one! How much did she ask
for it?”</p>
<p>“Four-and-six.” (An audible chuckle.)
“Yes, <i>four-and-six</i>, if you believe me! Fancy
her having the face to ask it for that <i>brown</i>
duck! But there, those that can afford to pay
may just as well do so for those who can’t.”</p>
<p>“Just as well. But—<i>four-and-six!</i> And she
won’t finish it up neither; doesn’t care for cold
poultry, I’m told; she’ll have a fair slice from
the breast, but that’s all; never allows it to be
seen in the dining-room a second time. And
there’s only the two of them there now. Still,
that Abigail’s a hearty eater! My husband was
up there a-fixing a tile that had got loosish on
the roof, and he told me what she et that day.
A gammon rasher and an egg and four slices of
bread and butter and a piece of fried bread out
of the frying-pan and two cups of coffee—half
milk—and some jam for breakfast. He was just
a-going up the ladder past the kitchen window
at the time; and when he come down, finding
as he needed a bit of cement, she was having
lunch of bread and cheese and a cup o’ tea out
of her lady’s teapot—she always has a cup of tea<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</SPAN></span>
between ’leven and twelve—and he’d smoked his
pipe right out afore she’d finished. And when he
come down again at dinner-time she was having
a dinner fit for a growed man just come home
from the cattle market—made him hungry to see
her, it did; he hung about a bit looking for his
jack-knife, as he wanted something to measure
with. And at tea-time he went in for a drop o’
water to mix the cement, and she was having
potted meat and toast—butter, too, not dripping
toast, if you ever did. But, of course, she
relishes the good vittles she gets in a country
place like ourn. So different to the stuff you get
in a town.”</p>
<p>“You’re right there; but they do have a
sight o’ things down from London. There was
a box with ‘Army and Navy Stores’ writ on
it that was so heavy, it was all old Bob could
do to get it on his shoulder, with our Tom
to give him a hand. Old Bob said he’d been
reading in the papers what awful waste there is
in some o’ the army camps and how the food
gets throw’d away or sold by the cartload, to
get rid of it, but he didn’t know it was going
on in the navy too—wicked, I call it. They
thought it must be tinned things, it were such a
weight, but they couldn’t make out for sure,
though they rattled it ever so hard to see; it was
packed up awful tight.”</p>
<p>“Taters weigh heavy, but it wouldn’t be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</SPAN></span>
they; she’s got plenty, what with new ones
coming on soon, and a large box left still of the
old ones; I saw them in the scullery last time I
was there. I’m going to ask if I can have ’em,
I’m so short for the pig. It might have been
soap and soda and hearthstone, though; they all
weighs heavy.”</p>
<p>“That’s true. Still, I know for certain she has
a heap of queer things sent down, because when
I was in Jane Price’s the other day, she had a pot
of something called ‘tunny fish,’ whatever that
may be, on the dresser. I asked her what it was.
She told me she was passing here one day and
thought she heard someone calling her name; so
she stepped inside and looked around. No one
was there, but she chanced to pass the back door,
and there on the top of the dustbin she saw this
pot. She brought it away with her just to ask
our Tom if he knew what it was; but he says
they don’t catch it about here; never heeard tell
on it. Still, those sort of things aren’t like a
nice piece of fat bacon to my taste, to say
nothing of duck; though I like a bit more picking
on mine than they’ll be on that <i>brown</i> one, I
reckon.”</p>
<p>“D’you know, I expect they’re cooking it
now to have it cold for the company’s supper to-night,
because in any case they don’t <i>need</i> it
to-day. They had two chops and a shoulder of
lamb and some gravy beef on Saturday. I met the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</SPAN></span>
boy taking it up, and asked him what he had.
They’d have the chops that day, and the lamb
roast on Sunday, and cold Monday; and it’s only
Tuesday now, and they can’t have finished it up—it
was a fair-sized one; and there’s the gravy
beef soup. You may depend it’s for the
visitors.”</p>
<p>“Oh! I didn’t know she was expecting company?
It won’t be Miss Virginia and her sister,
because they’re abroad. She asked my husband
to call for her afternoon letters as he was passing
the post-office yesterday, and he brought ’em up,
and there was a postcard with a picture on it of
some foreign place, and it said, ‘This is our hotel;
enjoying ourselves immensely; expect to be here
a fortnight.’ And there was something written
at the bottom that I couldn’t make out, but it
might have been a ‘V,’ or a ‘U,’ only it was
smudged so’s you couldn’t see <i>what</i> it was. So
it was sure to be from them.”</p>
<p>“No, it wasn’t they two; ’twasn’t their trunks.”</p>
<p>“More than one trunk, is there? Then
they’re going to stay a little while. My Buff
Orpingtons have started to lay again; that’s
lucky. How many do you say were coming?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know for certain, but I fancy it must
be three, because there were two blankets, one
single-bed and one double, hanging in the sun
when I came past yesterday, and Abigail was
polishing the downstairs winders, and she’d got<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</SPAN></span>
clean cutt’ns to the little room over the kitchen,
as well as in the sittin’-room. Not that there
was any need to put up clean cutt’ns, that I can
see; those in the sittin’-room had only been up
two months, and the upstairs ones were new last
time she was down here; you could tell they
were new, the muslin hung so stiff. I take it a
cutt’n isn’t properly washed if it don’t last six
months at least. But she’s very pertickler about
cutt’ns. Abigail told my Mabel, that in London
they don’t never dream of keeping a cutt’n up
more than a month, and often th’whole lot is
changed in a fortnight; and just think, the
winders is done <i>every week!</i> Send me crazy, it
would! I don’t think it’s healthy to be as finnicky
clean as that; why, you’re always opening
winders and letting in draughts. And now this
morning I see she’s got the cutt’ns down in the
Flower room——”</p>
<p>“The Flower room? Which be that?”</p>
<p>“Oh, it’s the name they’ve give the one on
the right at the top o’ the stairs. It’s got a new
laylock paper on the wall, and she’s got a new
bedspread, white, with bunches of laylock all
about it, and a bit o’ eeliertrope sateen hangs
down behind the head of the bed to keep the
draught off, though it ’ud be far more sense to
shut the winder, <i>I</i> say, for that sateen’s faded
dretful in the folds already. I was only noticing
it th’other day, when my cousin was up from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</SPAN></span>
Woolv’ampton, and I took her over the house. . . .
Oh, yes, Mrs. Widow’ll lend me the key
any time” (Mrs. Widow is my caretaker), “and
it do make a bit of a change to take anyone to.
My cousin said at the time she’d never buy a
bedspread like that; the colour’s so fleeting.
Besides, she wouldn’t have a white ground in
any case, it’s always in the wash. She’s made
herself a <i>lovely</i> spread, she was telling me, out of
a pair of old long curtains, just cutting out the
bad places and then dyeing it a deep coffee
colour with a little cold tea; makes it last like
anything. I say the same; them white spreads
never pay for themselves. Though I rather like
the one she’s got with roses on—Hannah
Craddock was a-washing of it one day when I
dropped in” (Hannah is the village laundress),
“that was the last time Miss Ursula was down,
because Hannah was doing of her blouses that
week, and my Mabel was very taken with one
that had bits of crochet let in all about, and
points of it up the sleeves just here, and my
Mabel tried to copy it, only Hannah had promised
it home that very afternoon, so we’re waiting for
it to come again, as Mabel can’t get the yoke
quite right. I’m sorry it isn’t them who’s
coming. She wants to get it finished afore
she goes to London next month.”</p>
<p>“Did you see the name on the trunks?
Now you mention it, I saw the boy taking a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</SPAN></span>
telegraft up to the house yesterday—no, the day
before.”</p>
<p>“It was my husband told me about it, when
he looked in home just now, and his sight being
so poor, he couldn’t see the name” (in spite of
the Educational Authorities many of the men in
our village cannot read, but by courtesy it is
always referred to as poor sight!), “so he asked
the station-master if he should drop ’em anywhere,
as he had got her ladyship’s cart there.
He is helping at the Manor House to-day. He’d
just taken some hay to the station, and it seemed
a real waste o’ good time to do nothing with it
coming back. But the station-master said they
was for up here, and old Bob was taking ’em up
as the ladies wouldn’t have the fly; said they’d
<i>pefer</i> to walk. And, would you believe it, he
never so much as thought to ask how many
there were. Still, I’ll soon find out and let you
know. I’ll go up and ask Abigail if she can
oblige me with the loan of a little salt. I’ve a
couple of ducks myself as I’d be glad to get four-and-six
apiece for if——”</p>
<p>At this moment Abigail appeared at the
cottage door, and the gong reverberated and
echoed as she gave it a vigorous hammering,
calculated to wake me up wherever I might be.</p>
<p>“Good gracious, that’s for her one o’clock
dinner!” exclaimed both the women in one
breath, and fled in opposite directions, presumably<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</SPAN></span>
to minister to the raving and the
ravenous!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>As the conversation had implied, the duck
was tough and inadequate; but it was a certain
satisfaction to me—as I sought about in vain for
a fairly good slice from the breast of the skinny
carcase—to reflect that I hadn’t paid for it as
yet. I was out when the youthful Perkins had
delivered it.</p>
<p>For the rest, I didn’t attach any value to the
women’s gossip. Once you have any real footing
in a rural district, and have become part and
parcel of the country-side, you soon learn that
one impossibility is “terrible isolation.” From
rosy morn till dewy eve one or another woman
is engaged in lengthy gossip with any other she
meets, and in nearly every case the topic of
exhaustive conversation will be the doings of
somebody else; moreover, the less that is actually
known about the third and absent party the
more two and two will add up to nineteen.</p>
<p>In the main, I have seldom found such
gossips either spiteful or slanderous. They
consider it being neighbourly to keep count
of your sayings and doings.</p>
<p>There were two items in the women’s chatter
that were enlightening, however. I had always
suspected that Mrs. Price knew where certain
items from my store cupboard had gone one<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</SPAN></span>
winter’s night when the cottage was uninhabited
and the kitchen window forced. I doubt if there
was another person in the place who would have
done it. Still I was glad to have the mystery
cleared up.</p>
<p>I was not surprised to hear that all and sundry
had the run of my house when I wasn’t there.
The Englishwoman who occupies any house of
more than six rooms, we will say (which she can
keep clean her unaided self), knows that she never
can call any room her own, excepting the one she
chances to be in at the moment—and not even
that one if the British workman happens to be in
the ascendant! It is one of the compensations
of life that the smaller our habitation, the more
we ourselves get out of it personally—a kind of
“intensive” interest. Whereas the larger our
domains, the more imposing our houses, the
more numerous our rooms, the more they are
monopolised by other people—paid assistants for
the most part—to the exclusion of ourselves.</p>
<p>In my own very humble way I soon realised
that even my country cottage and its contents
were only my own so long as I could sit on
them, so to speak. I early discovered that my
sheets and pillow-cases, my towels and tablecloths,
were not allowed to lead a life of idle,
selfish exclusiveness in my absences. Mrs.
Widow’s enterprising married daughter quickly
furnished a room at her own cottage over an<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</SPAN></span>
outhouse which had hitherto been used as a
lumber garret; this she could always let in the
summer, when the big houses in the neighbourhood
were full up with visitors and extra rooms
were needed.</p>
<p>Of course, at times I proved exceedingly tiresome,
and turned up at inconvenient moments.
But in such an emergency neighbours would
assist her with the loan of a sheet here and
there and a towel or two, if mine had to be
returned hastily. I have always found the poor
most ready to help each other—especially when
it was a case of “doing” someone who was a
little better off.</p>
<p>No, I was not surprised that Mrs. Widow
graciously bestowed my door-key on her friends
in search of an afternoon’s recreation; but I <i>was</i>
just a trifle curious to know how they had got
hold of the lilac bedspread, seeing that it was put
away in a cupboard that possessed—so I prided
myself—a unique lock; and it had never been
used yet—at least, not by me!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>After dinner I wrestled womanfully with the
overpowering desire to go down the orchard
again and do nothing; but a shower seemed
threatening, and I decided to answer letters and
correct proofs indoors. I told myself I would
put in a full afternoon at really solid work, and
would even carry it right on into the night, if<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</SPAN></span>
need be, without a moment’s cessation save for
the conventional nourishment—this, in order to
clear up some of my arrears, and to enable me
to garden the whole of next day with a perky
conscience.</p>
<p>“How <i>do</i> you kill time on a wet day in the
country?” people sometimes ask me. It’s simple
enough. Here is the recipe:</p>
<p>* Draw up a chair to the table; get out ink
and pens from one of the aged oak cupboards
beside the fireplace. Open the dresser drawers
and haul out stacks of unanswered queries from
magazine readers, the office staff, printers, block-makers,
artists, authors, and from people of
whom I know nothing (friends and relatives
gave me up long ago!).</p>
<p>Next, take the heavy lid right off the oak
chest (hinges were broken fifty years ago, so it
won’t lift up properly), dive in for armfuls of
MSS., proofs, photographs, diagrams, sketches;
place same on table; proceed to hunt among
same for some one particular thing I feel I ought
to deal with at that particular moment (though it
may have lain unhonoured and unsung for weeks);
can’t find it anywhere. Go through everything
again, this time classifying matter slightly by
putting it in piles around me on the floor; still
can’t find it, but unearth much else that ought
to have been attended to long ago but wasn’t.</p>
<p>Decide to search upstairs; turn out trunks,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</SPAN></span>
turn out cupboards, turn out drawers (incidentally
discover and meditate upon various things needing
mending); forget what I <i>was</i> looking for;
go on searching for it; remember presently, and
eventually run it to earth in my blotting-book
downstairs, where, if I had had any sense, I
should have looked in the first instance. Breathe
freely, sit down—rather exhausted—to serious
work.</p>
<p>A tap at the door; “May I come in?”
Enter visitor No. 1. And then they follow in
quick succession.</p>
<p>Finally, Abigail kindly undertakes to tidy up
my papers “without disturbing a single thing!”*</p>
<p>Next day (if still wet) you repeat from * to *,
as they tell us in the crochet patterns.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>I had just got settled to work on the missing-and-now-discovered
letter, when Abigail tapped
and entered.</p>
<p>“I’m sorry to trouble you, ma’am, but could
you spare me one of those Missionary books?”
pointing to a shelf containing a selection of the
annual reports of religious and philanthropic
societies.</p>
<p>Now for some time past I had been trying to
interest Abigail—who is a church member—in
foreign missions. I rather prided myself that I
had done it tactfully, not forcing it upon her,
but just arousing her interest by taking her to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</SPAN></span>
attractive meetings. I found that she had even
gone to one on her own account. Hence I was
naturally pleased to find that she was anxious to
follow up the subject; but as I did not consider
an ordinary official report, with its small print,
and balance-sheets and monotonous lists of subscribers,
the type of literature best calculated
to enthuse the novice, I reached down a small
volume of bright stories of girl-life in India, well
illustrated and prettily got-up.</p>
<p>“Here is just the very thing,” I said. But she
took it reluctantly, dubiously, turning it about
and looking it over in a dissatisfied manner.</p>
<p>“No,” she said, “it’s one like that I want,”
pointing to a solid tome issued by one of the
most revered of our missionary societies. “Can
I have that one?”</p>
<p>“Certainly,” I acquiesced, though it was an
out-of-date report, and I knew the other book
would have suited her better.</p>
<p>“Yes, that’s just right,” she said cheerfully,
as I handed it to her. “That other’d be too
thin; it’s to go under the back leg of the side
table in the kitchen, where the stone floor’s
broken. I’ve used one like this regular since last
summer, but it’s getting shabby. I thought a
new one would smarten us up a bit.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>I remember on one occasion being at a
missionary meeting for young people, at which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</SPAN></span>
there was a remarkably fine speaker from the
foreign mission field. He said that if any felt
they had a call to take part in the work in any
way, he would be pleased to see them at the
close. When the meeting was over, a small boy
approached the platform. “Please can I speak
to you, sir?”</p>
<p>“Certainly, my lad,” said the speaker, shaking
him warmly by the hand. “Now, what is it?
You can talk quite frankly to me.”</p>
<p>“Well, I wondered if—er——”</p>
<p>“Have no hesitation, my boy, in asking me
anything you like.”</p>
<p>“Well, do you happen to have any foreign
postage stamps?”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Just as I had settled down again, somewhat
chastened, to my much neglected work, there
was a knock at the door, and the lady of the
manor was shown in.</p>
<p>“I see you’re busy,” she began; “but I won’t
keep you a moment. I only want to ask you if
you’re expecting Miss Virginia and her sister this
afternoon? No? Oh, I <i>am</i> sorry! I did hope
they were coming. But, anyhow, whoever it is,
do you think they would help to-morrow at the
Sale of Work? Two visitors I was expecting
have failed me, and I’ve no one possible for the
picture post-cards or the pinafores. They needn’t
know anything about it, you know; it only wants<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</SPAN></span>
someone who can reckon up that seven penny
cards comes to sevenpence, and that’s one and
ninepence change out of half-a-crown, and that
sort of thing. Now, do you think your friends
would help?”</p>
<p>“But I’ve no friends coming,” I said.</p>
<p>“<i>Haven’t</i> you? Why, I quite understood—— I
was calling on Miss Primkins just now (she’s
jam and jelly, you know), and I asked her if she
couldn’t put it on the pinafores—it would look
quite decorative, and in this way I should save
a stall; even then we shall be very crowded.
Mrs. Blake had just been in to say she couldn’t
spare Miss Primkins the duck she had ordered,
because you had visitors arriving to-day and
would want a pair for Sunday.”</p>
<p>“Oh!! Well, I’m not having visitors, neither
am I having the ducks. But I’ll come down
myself to-morrow, if that’s any help, and keep
one eye on the pinafores and one on the picture
postcards. And I think my mental arithmetic
will be just right for the change you give.”</p>
<p>“But, don’t you remember, you’ve already
promised to look after the bookstall? You sent
us that big box of books months ago, with some
of your own books in—which I want you to
autograph, by the way. So I was going to ask
you if at the same time you’d manage the jumble
corner—the two things would go very well
together.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I agreed with her heartily.</p>
<p>“Oh, you <i>know</i> I don’t mean anything like
<i>that!</i>” she added hastily. “I only meant that
you could more easily turn from selling lovely
books, to dispose of one of your own done-with-but-still-charming
coats and skirts, for instance,
than if you had to cut up for the refreshment
stall, and return with buttery fingers to respond
to the rush there will be for your autograph.”</p>
<p>“Add the postcards to the books,” I said,
trying to be equally amiable, “and Abigail will
gladly run the jumble corner; she will be smarter
at it than you or I.”</p>
<p>Abigail appeared as soon as her ladyship had
gone. The farmeress who supplied us with milk
was waiting in the kitchen to know if I wanted
extra milk morning and evening in future, on
account of company; as, if so, she would save it
specially. She was experiencing a shortage of
milk, “Hussy” having run dry, and “Clover,”
for some unknown reason that I hadn’t time to
listen to, not doing her lactic duty as befitted
her station in life.</p>
<p>Emphatically I said that I should not want
any extra milk—and a few other things.</p>
<p>I resumed my work.</p>
<p>Ten minutes later there was yet another
interruption. This time it was the owner of the
Buff Orpingtons, who had arrived at the back
door to inquire if I was wanting any eggs—she’d<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</SPAN></span>
brought eight with her, and expected another
one to-night, which she’d send up—her hens had
just started laying again, etc.</p>
<p>I fairly blessed the individual who had first
set going the fable that I was expecting visitors.</p>
<p>I told Abigail that it was a matter of perfect
indifference to me whether all the fowls in the
district did, or did not, accommodatingly lay
nine, or even ten, eggs for my especial benefit;
but what did matter to me was whether I could,
or could not, get nine or even ten minutes of
uninterrupted peace, in order to finish my letters
before the postman arrived. (He always calls
obligingly at five o’clock for my afternoon mail.)
And I requested that she would kindly take in
any and everything that came during the next
hour (so long as it didn’t need paying for!);
only, for pity’s sake, would she cease opening
that door and seeking advice on the subject.</p>
<p>After that I was left severely alone. From
time to time I heard voices in the rear; there
was one very loud series of bumps and bangs—I
concluded it was the missionary report being
introduced to the table. But I worked on, and
had just sealed up my last budget of proofs, and
addressed it to the printers, when the postman
appeared. I heaved a sigh at the amount of
stuff he carried away. The shower had passed
over without even damping the blossoms. I
would have some tea, and then start watering.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The postman was speaking to someone at the
gate. No, it wasn’t Abigail. I heard him say,
“Yes; this is Rosemary Cottage.” I was
gathering up my papers as footsteps dragged
themselves along the path—“dragged” is the
only word for it—and before I had time to step
outside to see who was there, two female forms,
one ample and one spare, made for the door
opening into the living-room, precipitated themselves
into the room, and sank into the nearest
chairs, in the last stages of panting exhaustion;
while the ample one, in a coat and skirt of a
large black and white plaid, buttoned and piped
with cerise, exclaimed—</p>
<p>“At last! Well, of all the out-of-the-way
forsaken places! We’ve been tramping nearly
all day, trying to get here from that wretched
station! We must have walked miles—<i>miles</i>—up
and down hill, only it was <i>all</i> uphill; we
found ourselves in woods with no possibility of
ever getting out again; we got into lanes that
ended nowhere, and when we got there it was
the wrong place; we tried to take a short cut
across some fields, and got stuck in a bog; we
met a flock of wild cows, and the top of that
hedge positively ran into me like needles. When
we did chance to find a house, hoping it was
yours, it never was; the people always told us
to go on and ask further directions at the next
house we came to, but each time there wasn’t<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</SPAN></span>
another house. Why ever didn’t we take that
fly at the station! But there, he could never
have driven us over all the huge stone walls
we’ve had to climb! We’ve been walking for
hours on end—<i>hours</i>—haven’t we, dear?”</p>
<p>“Dear” nodded feebly. She was leaning
back in the easy-chair with closed eyes. Her
hat—of a remarkable shape—was trimmed with
what looked like a kitchen flue-brush standing
straight upright at the back; at least, it would
have been upright if her hat hadn’t shifted
askew; at the moment the flue-brush was
inclining towards her left ear. Her costume
was mustard colour, with spasms of black. She
must have been <i>very</i> pleased with it when she
bought it, otherwise she could never have induced
herself to get inside it!</p>
<p>I soon found that the ample one did not
require any reply other than the feeble nod, as
it would have impeded her eloquence. She
went on—</p>
<p>“I think, if you don’t mind, we won’t go
upstairs till we’ve had some tea. We are
absolutely prostrate, aren’t we, dear?” The
flue-brush dipped slightly. “Could we have
some tea at once?”</p>
<p>“Certainly,” I said with alacrity. I had
already decided that tea was the only possible
way to relieve the strain of the situation, and I
rang the bell.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Abigail, after one comprehensive glance at
the callers, fetched my very best afternoon tea-cloth,
which she displayed on the table to the
utmost advantage, that not an Irish inlet or a
bit of lace border should be lost on the visitors.
When she does not approve of any callers, or
does not consider them quite in keeping with
the family traditions, she invariably makes a
terrific splash in front of them, getting out the
special silver and the finest china, and serving
with an air of withering superiority, as though
she said, “Behold! this is how <i>we</i> live every
day; very different from what <i>you’ve</i> been accustomed
to!”</p>
<p>The tiresomeness of it is that when intimate
friends call, who really matter, the handmaiden
treats the tea-table most casually; they evidently
don’t count if they are known to be above
reproach!</p>
<p>From the look she gave the strangers, I knew
we should have it all, and we did! She was
wonderfully quick in getting both the tea and
her smartest cap and apron. She put as much
silver as she could squeeze on the table; she got
out some egg-shell china plates for the bread and
butter, and the old cut-glass for the preserves.
She opened new jars of plum, black-currant,
strawberry and raspberry jam; she turned out
preserved ginger into a blue Chinese bowl; she
put lemon-curd into a quaint brown dish, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span>
honey in a lustre saucer. She hunted out all
the cake we possessed, and opened a tin of
apricots; she mashed up sardines with Worcester
sauce, and heaped it on pale lettuce leaves, and
she garnished some thin slices of ham most
artistically with lemon and cucumber and
flowering sprigs of rosemary. All this while
the ample one was explaining to me how
marvellously things were managed in London,
the miles you could ride in a motor-bus for
twopence, the cleanliness and speed and safety
of the Tube, the ever-recurring convenience of
a halfpenny in a tramcar, and the luxury of a
taxi; and then more moans to think of the miles
they had covered without meeting either motor-bus,
Tube, tramcar or taxi.</p>
<p>When the table seemed on the very verge of
breaking down with its abundance, and they had
just drawn up their chairs, Abigail asked in
clear tones that the visitors were bound to hear,
“Would you wish me to bring in the cold duck,
madam?” (“Madam” indicates company;
“ma’am” is ordinary every-day.) I wasn’t
exactly anxious to bestow my to-morrow’s dinner
on the strangers, for I had reckoned to make the
duck do for twice; but, of course, under the
circumstances, I was bound to ask sweetly, “Oh,
would you care for a little roast duck? It’s
<i>cold</i>,” I added, by way of disqualifying the joint
a little in their eyes. Fortunately they preferred<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</SPAN></span>
ham, but it was satisfactory that at least they
knew we had roast duck in the larder.</p>
<p>After sitting up and taking a little nourishment,
the wilted ones revived perceptibly, and
even began to be gracious. I am afraid I am not
very fond of the graciousness of that type of
woman; she does get it so mixed up with
patronage. But I buoyed myself up with the
thought that perchance I was entertaining angels
unawares—though they didn’t look like it!</p>
<p>The ample one continued to be voluble. I
did not interrupt her with questions, because I
find it is usually as well to let a situation explain
itself; it usually does in time. Besides, I didn’t
quite know what to say. I couldn’t exactly ask,
“Who are you? where have you come from?
and why have you singled me out for this
particular visitation?” Yet the longer I waited,
the more awkward it became to open inquiries.</p>
<p>“You have a very well-trained maid, I see,”
the large plaid continued, “that is to say, for
the country”—with emphasis, to show me that
there were obvious deficiencies, only she was
willing to make allowances for them. “It’s the
first thing I always notice in a house. We are
used to such excellent service—<i>most excellent</i>
service, aren’t we, dear?”</p>
<p>Dear agreed, but not very heartily; she
seemed to ponder for a moment before she said
her customary “Yes.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“That is one reason why I always hesitate
about leaving home.” (How I wished she’d
hesitated a little longer! The sun was getting
behind the fir-trees, and I did so want to start
watering!) “You have some garden, I see, but
it wants planning, doesn’t it? I wish you could
see ours at home; it would give you some ideas.
We have a man in occasionally; but we always
superintend him ourselves. I’ll tell you how we
have it arranged. In the centre is a square
lawn, and in the middle of this we have a round
bed with scarlet geraniums in the centre, and a
ring of calceolarias round them, and then outside
that, at the edge of the bed, you understand, all
round, you know, we have lobelias, little blue
flowers, you know. You’ve no idea how bright
and effective it is. And then in the border
all round the garden by the fences, we have
standard roses about a couple of yards apart,
and a row of scarlet geraniums. It’s so bright,
and doesn’t cost so much when you buy them by
the dozen.</p>
<p>“Your ceiling is very low, isn’t it?—still,
for a cottage, it isn’t a bad-sized room; and I
see you’ve made the best of it with your little
bits of things put about.” I do wish you could
have heard the charming, indulgent condescension
with which she said “your little bits of
things”! “Though I don’t think I’ve ever seen
yellow walls before—very <i>quaint</i>, of course, but—er—rather<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</SPAN></span>
peculiar. Don’t you think so,
dear?”</p>
<p>Dear said she did. But I don’t know why,
seeing that she was carrying about more yellow
on her mustard person than I had in the whole
of the house!</p>
<p>“I <i>wish</i> you could see our <i>lovely</i> dining-room
at home,” the plaid continued. I murmured
inarticulations, as there was a pause where I
was evidently intended to say something. “It
has a dark red paper on the wall. We have just
furnished it with fumed oak. I think fumed
oak is <i>so</i> artistic. We have a most <i>handsome</i>
sideboard that will only just stand across one
end of the room. I don’t mind telling you that
it cost fifty pounds originally, but as the people
to whom it belonged were a little unfortunate,
we got it—well, we didn’t give quite that much
for it; but you’d never know. It was just as
good as new. And we have aspidistras and a
<i>beautiful</i> palm in copper flower-pots—really
exquisite works of art they are; and they go so
well with the fumed oak, don’t they, dear?”</p>
<p>By the time I had been taken over their
<i>beautiful</i> drawing-room, we had finished tea—happily,
for I already saw a <i>beautiful</i> best bedroom
suite looming ahead.</p>
<p>Having made a most excellent, not to say
solid, meal, the voluble one shoved her chair
back and said—</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“I feel all the better for that cup of tea.
Now, I think, if you’ll show us the way, we’ll go
upstairs and have a good wash, and make ourselves
presentable—not that you dress much for
dinner, I suppose?”</p>
<p>I conclude I, too, was all the better for my
cup of tea, for I felt myself warming to the
work—and I led the way washstandwards most
cordially. I didn’t take them out into the hall
to the more modern staircase, I opened the door
in the corner of the room, and revealed the steep
stone stairs; and you should have heard their
gurgles and squeals.</p>
<p>“Oh, dearest, <i>do</i> look. <i>Isn’t</i> it primitive?
And do you go up and down this every day?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no,” I couldn’t help replying. “We
only use this when visitors are here. On
ordinary occasions we get in and out of the bedroom
windows, and hop down the honeysuckle.”</p>
<p>She drew herself up reprimandingly; she
evidently wished me to understand that, though
she was willing to treat me as an equal so long
as I behaved myself, she couldn’t allow any
undue familiarity on my part.</p>
<p>“I don’t suppose <i>you</i> would see anything
unusual in such an approach to the upper storeys,
having been used to it all your life,” she said
distantly; “but accustomed as <i>we</i> are to our
magnificent staircase at home—wide enough to
drive up a carriage and pair, isn’t it, dear?”—</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Er—nearly——” (Dear was the more
truthful of the two, I fancy.)</p>
<p>“—And our beautiful pile carpet, in rich reds
and blues, and the thickest of stair-pads underneath,
till you would think you were walking
on real Turkey carpet, this naturally strikes
us as—how shall I put it so as not to hurt your
feelings?—as—as very humorous, you know!”</p>
<p>“I quite understand,” I said, as we entered
my bedroom.</p>
<p>She walked straight over to the window and
looked out.</p>
<p>“Not a house to be seen anywhere,” she
exclaimed dismally, “whichever way you look;
nothing in sight but those everlasting tree-covered
hills.”</p>
<p>As she seemed inclined for a lengthy soliloquy,
I poured out some water and indicated the soap-dish,
as politely as I knew how, to Dear, who
had taken off her hat and coat, and seemed
almost grateful for my attentions. I noticed
that Abigail had been up and had adorned the
towel-horse with my finest damask towels with
embroidered ends, and had got out a rare and
treasured bedspread made entirely of lace, that
had just been sent me as a present from Venice,
and had put it over the bed in place of the old-world
patchwork quilt that I infinitely prefer in
the cottage; it was so much more in keeping
with the surroundings.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The ample one turned with a sigh from the
depressing outlook that was so deficient in motor-buses
and halfpenny car rides and taxis and
houses, and said, evidently striving to make the
best of a bad job, “At any rate you’ve tried to
make it look as nice as you can inside. Do you
know, I rather like that bedspread”—as though
conveying a real favour on the article in question.
“It reminds me of an <i>exquisite</i> bedspread we
have at home something like it, only ours is
linen, with shamrocks on it in solid embroidery.”
And she flung down her coat and other <i>impedimenta</i>
on the top of the lace in a way that made
me tremble for its safety. “It’s <i>something</i> like
ours—don’t you think so, dear?”</p>
<p>Dear had her face in the soft delicious lather
of the rainwater, and didn’t reply.</p>
<p>“But”—at this point transformation came
over the black and white plaid—“I’ve only just
noticed it! This is a <i>double</i> bed! Look, dear,
it’s a <small>DOUBLE</small> bed! And I most distinctly said
in my letter it was imperative that we have two
single beds; the same room would do, I said—no
need to go to the expense of two rooms—but
on no account a double bed. As I can’t possibly
rest unless I have the bed to myself—I’m a <i>very</i>
light sleeper, whereas my friend sleeps rather
heavily, not to say—er—sonorously, don’t you,
dear?—I must simply insist that you have this
bed taken down and two single ones put up in its<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</SPAN></span>
place. Had I <i>seen</i> the rooms before I engaged
them I shouldn’t have taken a place with such a
desolate outlook; but as we’ve had the expense
of coming here, I don’t mind staying if you
undertake to have the beds changed; and they
must both be feather beds, too. Now, can you
do this?”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I can’t!” I said. “But if——”</p>
<p>“There can be no ifs; I put everything
quite clearly in my letter. I’ve got a copy of it
here. I wrote——”</p>
<p>“My dear lady, if you will sit down in that
easy-chair, we’ll make everything still clearer.”
She was beginning to prance around the room.</p>
<p>Dear, unmoved, was having a very thorough
wash. So the light sleeper sank into the chair
and rummaged in her hand-bag, presumably for
the copy of the letter in question.</p>
<p>I tried to speak as lightly and soothingly as
possible, for she was fairly bursting with indignation!
“Now, please understand that I am
delighted to give a meal to any wayfarer who,
like yourself, arrives hungry and tired at my
door. I’m glad for them to come in and have a
rest, and even a wash and brush up, if they want
it. But, when an absolute stranger, of whom I
know nothing, demands my own bed, and my
feather bed into the bargain, then I must protest!
That feather bed is one of my most cherished
possessions!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“But you expected me?”—sitting bolt
upright.</p>
<p>“I certainly did not!”</p>
<p>“Didn’t I write and tell you we would arrive
to-day?”</p>
<p>“I’ve neither heard of you, nor from you, in
my life before!”</p>
<p>“But this is Rosemary Cottage?”</p>
<p>“It is.”</p>
<p>“Then you <i>must</i> be Miss Flabbers!”—with
an air of finality.</p>
<p>“I’m sorry, but I’m <i>not!</i>”</p>
<p>At this, Dear dropped the soap with a sudden
splosh into the water and looked round in frozen
astonishment. (The merest wraith of it remained
two hours later when Abigail emptied the water.
It was a new cake, too!)</p>
<p>At the name of Flabbers, light came.
Miss Flabbers is a gentlewoman in somewhat
reduced circumstances, who lives in a cottage a
good mile and a half away. Presumably she
was going to add to her income by taking in
boarders.</p>
<p>“If it’s Miss Flabbers whom you are wanting,”
I continued, filling up a painful silence, “her
house is called Rose May Cottage. I expect
you got the names confused in your mind.”</p>
<p>“There! It’s all <i>your</i> fault,” said the ample
one, turning irritably to her companion; “you
said it was Rose May Cottage when you read<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</SPAN></span>
the first letter: but I said that was an absurd
name, and it must be Rosemary it was intended
for—country people <i>do</i> write so badly. I do
<i>wish</i>, dear, you would be careful to be more
accurate; if only you had said the right name I
might have been saved all this trouble—and
expense, because of course I shall <i>insist</i> on
paying for our tea——” (she didn’t though!)
“and think how many miles I’ve walked, and
now I suppose I’ve to do it all again. How I
wish I’d listened to that old man at the station
and gone with——”</p>
<p>She paused suddenly and threw up her hands;
and then there arose that cry common to all
womankind the world over, when they are weary
with their pilgrimage, footsore and travel-stained;
the cry that must have rent the air in the olden
days when Sarai trailed after Abram across the
plains of Mamre, even as it sounds to-day from
Yokohama to Land’s End:</p>
<p>“<i>Where’s our luggage?</i>”</p>
<p>There was a perceptible gasp—and then,
“Yes; <i>where’s our luggage?</i>” faintly echoed
Dear, as she nervously clutched her gloves with
feverish haste and pinned them on her head,
and then wildly tried to get her arms into her
hat.</p>
<p>“I expect it’s reposing peacefully in Miss
Flabbers’ best bedroom,” I said assuringly. “At
any rate it isn’t <i>here!</i>” as I saw signs that they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</SPAN></span>
were going to crawl under the bed in search of
it. “The man would be sure to deliver it there,
and——”</p>
<p>Abigail knocked at the door and asked if she
could speak to me for a minute.</p>
<p>When I got outside she said, “There’s a
person downstairs wants to see you <i>particular</i>,
ma’am, or I wouldn’t have disturbed you.”
Abigail divides all her sex into two classes,
“persons” and “ladies,” and no one is more
careful than she to see that “persons” don’t
think more highly of themselves than their social
status warrants.</p>
<p>I found a pleasant-faced woman who lives in
a cottage near Miss Flabbers. “Please, ma’am,
Miss Flabbers has lost two ladies rather suddint,
and I wondered if you’d chanced to set eyes on
’em? Miss Flabbers is <i>that</i> worrit as never was;
expected ’em by the eleven train, and I misdoubt
me if the cutlets won’t be a bit heavy by now,
though she’s had ’em over a saucepan of hot
water ever since. She’s so upset she don’t know
what to do, yet she can’t go out to look for ’em
in case they turns up meanwhile. I thought it
’ud be just neighbourly if I went out for her and
hunted around. I know they come by that
train, for I see’d ’em myself at the station,
puffeck ladies you’d have took ’em for, only they
wouldn’t have a fly. They’re not friends, no,
nor boarders, no, she wouldn’t think of having<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</SPAN></span>
boarders, so reserved as she is; they’re what’s
called paying guests. I know, because my son’s
got a friend in the <i>Hargus</i> office, and he told
him about an adver-<i>tise</i>ment she put in, only
you wouldn’t have known it was her, being only
X Y Z on it, but the people at the <i>Hargus</i> knew
as the X Y Z meant her, though <i>how</i> they
should know puzzles me, and they send on the
letters to her. But she’s kep’ it very private;
no one knew they was coming, so I wouldn’t
dream of mentioning X Y Z to a soul. I’ve
tracked ’em up here. Everybody all over the
Common and even up to the Crag Farm has
a-seed them, they’ve scoured the county for
miles round. You’d be sure to rekernize them
once you’d saw them——”</p>
<p>I should think so! E’en the slight harebell
raised its head and stared after them
whenever they passed it that afternoon, I’m
certain.</p>
<p>By dint of shouting above her talking I
managed to get her to hear that I had them safe
and sound; and should be everlastingly grateful
if she would take them off my hands and place
them in the safe keeping of Miss Flabbers.</p>
<p>Then I fetched them down and introduced
the neighbourly soul, who, you could see, felt
elated at the distinction of being the one to take
such costumes in tow.</p>
<p>“Better go out of the back door,” I said,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</SPAN></span>
“and up the garden to the top gate; it will save
you a few steps.”</p>
<p>And then the ample one turned and said icily,
“I suppose we must thank you for what you
have done; but I <i>do</i> think you should have told
us <i>sooner</i> who you were.” Yet I hadn’t told
them even then!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>It was as they were going out of the back
door that Dear amazed us by falling unexpectedly
to her knees and affectionately clasping a dark
object that I had not seen in the dim recess of
the lobby.</p>
<p>“<i>Here’s</i> our trunks!” she shrieked hysterically.</p>
<p>And then both those women glared things
unspeakable at me. They knew now, what they
had only suspected before, that I was a deeply-dyed
villainess with designs on them and their
property.</p>
<p>“What’s this? Why wasn’t I told about
it?” I inquired of Abigail, who, naturally, was
not missing a word.</p>
<p>“Old Bob brought them while you were
busy. He said they were for here, so of course
I took them in, madam, as you said you were
not to be disturbed,” with an injured sniff, “and
I’ve had no opportunity to tell you since.”</p>
<p>The two, true to the instincts of their sex, had
promptly seated themselves on the trunks, and I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</SPAN></span>
feared they had no intention of budging unless
the trunks went with them. But the neighbourly
person was anxious to be on the move;
she wanted the <i>kudos</i> of walking through the
village with them in the broad daylight, so she
said—</p>
<p>“They’ll be all right; my ’usband’ll come
round for them soon as we get back. Now
don’t you worrit the least little bit.”</p>
<p>Thus they were got off at last.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>“Puffeck ladies,” I said to myself as I seized
the brown pitcher and the water-can, and went
out to the spring.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>VIII<br/> <small>Merely to be Prepared</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">I couldn’t</span> have been asleep many minutes
(though, when I come to think of it, no one
ever is, in London), because I had waited up
till eleven for Abigail.</p>
<p>It was like this: the day before, cook had
asked me if she might stay out till eleven that
night, as she wanted to go and see an old lady
in whose employ she had once been. The old
lady was seriously ill; she couldn’t get her off
her mind; and she felt she ought to give her
what little pleasure she could, as she wouldn’t
be likely to get over it.</p>
<p>I begged her to take the whole afternoon;
such affection was really touching. I saw myself
in a few years’ time, decrepit, aged, and infirm,
being visited by a crowd of devoted retainers,
who murmured one to another:</p>
<p>“She had her faults, goodness knows, but
at least we will scatter seeds of kindness!”</p>
<p>In any case, I was pleased for cook to take
some extra time, as she is invariably home early—the
Naval Division at the Crystal Palace have
to be under glass by nine o’clock.</p>
<p>She thanked me, but declined the afternoon,
as she thought half-past nine or ten in the evening
would suit the old lady best; she was in a
West End nursing home. It seemed late to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</SPAN></span>
visit one who was so aged and so ill, but, of
course, I gave the extended leave.</p>
<p>She returned at 10.55, looking very bright, a
bunch of roses in her coat-belt, a box of chocolates
dangling from her finger, and a programme
in her hand.</p>
<p>Yes, thank you; she had had a lovely time.
The old lady?—er—oh, yes! she was getting on
nicely, thank you.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Next day, Abigail came to me, also asking
for an eleven o’clock leave. It transpired that
she was expecting a little orphan cousin to arrive
that night from Blackpool; <i>such</i> a sad affair—child
left without a father when it was only four
years old—she was eight now. No, she hadn’t
ever seen the little cousin, but she felt it was
such a distressing case that it was her duty to
do what she could.</p>
<p>I hinted that eleven o’clock at night seemed
rather late for one who was so young and so
orphaned to be up and about, and likewise
offered her the afternoon. But she said the
train didn’t arrive sooner, and the trains were
often late. So I gave her till 11.0 p.m. to
welcome the pitiful orphan.</p>
<p>She also arrived in at night looking radiant.
Under her mackintosh she was wearing a pink
chiffon dress, edged with swansdown; a bandeau
of sparkles was on her hair, a horseshoe of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</SPAN></span>
same make adorning the back of her head; she
carried a fan, and some flowers that had evidently
been worn on the dress.</p>
<p>I am glad to say that she, too, had enjoyed
herself immensely, and the desolate relative had
been most pleased to make her acquaintance.</p>
<p>After that I retired.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>And then I conclude it was the bang that did
it; at any rate, the whole household woke with
a start, and with one accord the feminine portion
precipitated itself downstairs and on to the front
door mat, and peered out into the dark road in
the hope of seeing <i>something!</i></p>
<p>The masculine element, being gifted with a
faculty for keeping cool, calm and collected in
any emergency, stayed to gather up a few wraps
and rugs and overcoats and anything else he
could lay his hands on in the dark (including his
disreputable old gardening jacket), which he
brought down and distributed among us, as we
had not stopped for much in the way of clothing.</p>
<p>At that moment Virginia and Ursula rushed
along the road from their own house and joined
us. Virginia was clad in a nightdress, with a
mackintosh over it and a sumptuous pale blue
kimono (covered with brown and black flying
herons) on the top of the mac. Ursula was
wearing her heliotrope dressing-gown, an ostrich
feather boa, and an eiderdown quilt.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>They both apologised for calling so late
(it was past midnight), but said they felt they
should just like to talk things over.</p>
<p>While I was bidding them welcome, Miss
Quirker (from round the corner) appeared; likewise
Miss Thresher (a secondary-school mistress)
and her friend Mrs. Brash, who share a flat near
by; and in the rear came Mrs. Ridley, the
doctor’s widow from across the road.</p>
<p>They all said they had come because they
could see “it” better from my house, which
stands on a high point, overlooking London one
way, and Kent from the other side.</p>
<p>Each caller was grateful for the loan of a
blanket.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, in far less time than it takes to
write all this, fire-engines and ambulances, and
policemen and motor-cars and pedestrians
appeared as by magic from nowhere and went
tearing along the road. Yet, crane our necks as
we would, not a glimpse could we catch of “it.”</p>
<p>Miss Quirker—who always seems to have
special and exclusive information about everything—said
the creature was exactly over her
bedroom chimney when the bomb was dropped;
she heard a strange whirring noise (described
most graphically), and turned on the electric
light for company; then there was a <i>brilliant</i>
flash in the sky (yes, she could see it above the
electric light), and the bomb fell—she was sure<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</SPAN></span>
it was in her back garden. She looked very
pleased with herself and superior, to think that
she had been singled out by Fate for this special
and distinctive visitation.</p>
<p>The man of the house, after bidding us stay
just where we were as he wouldn’t be gone a
minute, hied him buoyantly down the road in
company with neighbouring masculines—to find
the bomb, I suppose. He soon returned, however,
with the exceedingly flat information that
a gas explosion had occurred in a house further
along, though they couldn’t tell whether it was
due to the geyser or the cooking-range, as they
couldn’t find either.</p>
<p>[Later on, the remains of a geyser and part
of a porcelain bath were picked up about six
miles off, in the Walworth Road; and I understand
that the police at Sevenoaks found the
remnants of an alien gas-stove wandering about
in a suspicious manner, and promptly interned
it. But this is by the way.]</p>
<p>“Only a gas explosion!” exclaimed everybody
in doleful disappointment. Mrs. Brash certainly
looked relieved; but then she is a very nervous
little woman with a weak heart.</p>
<p>“Well, I call it <i>too</i> bad!” said Virginia.
“Every solitary relative, friend, and acquaintance
I possess, even to the third and fourth generation,
has had a Zepp cross ‘right over their very road’;
and every person I’ve met during the last twelve<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</SPAN></span>
months boasts and brags of the way they’ve had
them ‘exactly above their heads.’ And yet, do
what I will, I can’t get a sight of even the tail
of one.”</p>
<p>“Just my case,” said everybody else in chorus;
“I seem to be the only one in London who
hasn’t seen one.”</p>
<p>But Miss Thresher cut short our bemoanings
over the hardness of our lot, by saying in her
head-mistress voice—</p>
<p>“I’m afraid an excess of untutored imagination
is one of the weaknesses of this age. We,
however, can console ourselves with the knowledge
that at least we are <i>truthful;</i> and truth,
after all, is the greater asset”—looking witheringly
at Miss Quirker.</p>
<p>I replied, “How about some hot coffee?”
It was the most appropriate remark that I could
think of on the spur of the moment.</p>
<p>Cook promptly offered to get it, while I went
after tea-gowns and dressing-gowns and similar
symbols of propriety for our shivering guests,
who looked a trifle nondescript now that the
lights were on. The man of the house had
returned to assist at the explosion.</p>
<p>If Miss Thresher hoped that her last remark
would quelch Miss Quirker, she was mistaken
nothing can suppress that lady, and nothing is
sacred to her. She will stalk up to your secret
cupboard, no matter how boldly you may have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</SPAN></span>
labelled it “strictly private,” and drag out into
broad daylight the most disreputable skeleton
you keep in it, the one you packed away at the
very back of the top shelf—and then be pained
at your ingratitude!</p>
<p>As I entered the room with an armful of
apparel I heard her saying to Miss Thresher,
“Why don’t you put a flounce on the bottom?
Those cheap flannelettes always shrink in the
wash. . . . Oh, flannel is it? . . . Really! no
one would ever think you gave that much for it,
would they? At any rate I couldn’t sleep if I
didn’t have them right down around my feet.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>To change the subject I asked Virginia why
she had put her mac. on under her kimono, when
obviously the correct order would have been to
wear it outside.</p>
<p>She said she concluded it was sheer genius
and originality made her do it, for she had never
worn such a combination in her life before; and
the same must have applied to Ursula, for, looking
back on a varied and chequered career, she
could never remember seeing her sister, even
once, promenading the highway in an eiderdown
before.</p>
<p>At the same time, she inquired why it was
that <i>I</i> had stood for a quarter of an hour on that
doormat, clasping feverishly to my chest a pair
of satin slippers and a bath towel, and clinging<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</SPAN></span>
pathetically to a bedroom candlestick; when
obviously any candle would have blown out had
I attempted to light it, and the bedroom slippers
would have been more usefully employed on my
shoeless feet; while as for the bath towel. . . !</p>
<p>The coffee came at that moment. I remembered
that some time ago the kitchen had
been very interested in an article in one of the
dailies, giving various directions as to what
should be done in the case of bombs overhead.
I forget a good deal of it, but I remember you
had to lay mattresses all over the top floors before
you came downstairs, and you had to dip a cloth
in hyposulphate of something, and hold it to
your nose as you came down to seek a place of
safety.</p>
<p>The servants were rather taken with the
mattress idea, said how simple it was, and that,
as they had five mattresses between them, they
would cover a good deal of floor space. I even
generously offered them the two off my own bed,
if they would come down and fetch them as soon
as the Zepps were heard, so long as they undertook
to place them carefully above <i>my</i> head.</p>
<p>When Abigail brought in the trays, I asked
how many mattresses she had laid down.</p>
<p>“I never gave ’em a thought,” she owned up;
“my two legs seemed all that mattered, for I was
sure I saw the Zeppelin-thing looking straight
in at my bedroom window—such sauce!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Untutored imagination again!” murmured
Ursula in my ear.</p>
<p>Nervous little Mrs. Brash said that was just
the difficulty; when it actually came to the point
you could think of nothing that you ought to
remember. Wouldn’t it be well to talk the
subject over and decide a few things—merely
to be prepared—now that there was a group of
us together.</p>
<p>Miss Thresher, who loves the importance of
being in any sort of office, enthused over the
idea; said we had better have a committee
meeting there and then; to be forewarned was
to be forearmed, she told us, with an impressive
air of wisdom. She said she would be Minute
Secretary, and we must draw up schedules
stating definitely and clearly what a woman
ought to do, first by way of preparation
beforehand, and secondly when the crisis actually
arrived.</p>
<p>Miss Quirker endorsed this, and remarked in
an aggrieved tone (in my direction) that she
should have thought the women’s papers would
have dealt comprehensively with so important a
subject long ago. She added, however, that she
thought “crisis” was far too respectable a name
to give them; had she not been a staunch Churchwoman,
she would have called them something
far more vividly appropriate. I didn’t hear the
end of this, because I slipped away to find the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</SPAN></span>
man of the house, as I had heard him return
indoors.</p>
<p>Opening the study door, my eyes fell on such
an upheaval that for the moment I felt certain
a gas explosion must have been at work there.
But no! He explained (turning out yet another
drawer) that he was only looking for some
insurance policies, as he wasn’t quite certain
what was the attitude of the companies towards
geysers. I pointed out that it didn’t matter as
we hadn’t one; but he went on looking, and his
face wore that tense expression seen on most
men when hunting for the family screwdriver,
or the pair of black gloves kept for funerals.
Having found the policies at last (in the drawer
where they had always been kept, by the way),
I left him in peace, to peruse them at his leisure.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>The Ladies’ Committee was well under way
when I returned to the dining-room, and as is
the correct thing at such gatherings, everybody
was talking at once and on the most diverse
topics. I consider myself rather great on ladies’
committees; I’ve even occupied the proud
position of being in the chair, on occasion. And
the more I see of them the more I am lost in
admiration of the courage, versatility, and insuppressibility
of my sex.</p>
<p>Why, there’s no man living who could trail
as many totally irrelevant topics across the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</SPAN></span>
agenda, and in defiance of a politely pleading
chairwoman too, as can the littlest and frailest
woman at any ladies’ committee you like to
name.</p>
<p>As it was, the only one who seemed within a
hundred miles of Zeppelins was poor Mrs. Brash,
who was explaining to Mrs. Ridley—</p>
<p>“It isn’t that I mind dying: we all have to
die <i>some</i> day: but I do prefer to die <i>whole</i>.”</p>
<p>Of course the doctor’s widow pooh-poohed
this as nonsense, and asked severely what would
become of surgeons if everybody felt like <i>that!</i></p>
<p>Miss Thresher couldn’t find a suitable heading
for her schedule, till Ursula suggested “Antizeptics.”
Mrs. Ridley thought the medical
profession might not approve of the unprofessional
use of the word; but it was accepted by the
majority, and then we all settled down wholeheartedly
to attack the problem from every
point of view—which included, among other
things, borax as a preventive for moth, Queen
Mary’s graciousness, a comparison of the respective
merits of local butchers, economising on
corsets, and the War Loan.</p>
<p>Perhaps you can’t see how these came in,
but it was simple enough. Miss Quicker said
that, after all, explosions that you thought were
Zeppelins weren’t so bad if they enabled you to
get such good coffee as mine; and might she
have a third lump of sugar, please? it was such<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</SPAN></span>
a treat to get a really sweet cup of coffee; she
had given up sugar at home as she was economising
on it.</p>
<p>Being the hostess, I couldn’t exactly tell her
that I, too, was trying to economise on mine.</p>
<p>From the high price of sugar we naturally
floated on to the ruinous tendencies of butcher’s
meat, and Mrs. Brash explained the trouble she
had with her butcher because he wouldn’t send
home all the bones.</p>
<p>Mrs. Ridley had similar harrowments to
relate about her butcher, but his vice took the
form of sticking to the trimmings from the joints,
which she was sure he sold at a good price for
soap-making, now that fat was so scarce and
soap likely to be dear. She knew it because—as
she reminded us—she was the treasurer of the
“Women’s League for Encouraging the Troops
to Wash,” and it came very hard on their funds.
What it would cost them for the cakes of soap
they were going to send out no one would
believe! (No, they hadn’t sent any yet; but of
course they were going to, when they got enough
members, and, by the way, would <i>I</i> join?)</p>
<p>She didn’t mind a fair charge, of course (we
all murmured agreement). War was war, and
we must expect to pay something extra to help
the King keep going; he had his family to
provide for like any other man. Neither did she
grudge one solitary penny that went to Lord<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</SPAN></span>
Kitchener (hearty applause). No, indeed! But
what made her blood boil was to feel that she
was actually washing her hands with her own
ribs—and at one-and-threepence-halfpenny a
pound, too!</p>
<p>Virginia suggested she should try a rather
less heating soap; but she was drowned by
Miss Thresher, who said firmly, “Borax; that’s
what you ought to send to the troops. Not
only would it soften the water for them, poor
things—and no one knows better than I do
what awfully hard stuff that German water is;
nearly scraped my skin off when I went up the
Rhine two years ago—but they would find it so
useful to put in with their woollen things that
we’ve been knitting them, to keep out the
moth.”</p>
<p>My reminder that our troops were not as
yet, alas! drawing their water from German
cisterns was unnoticed; for the mere mention of
moth produced extraordinary animation. Was
borax good? Weren’t they a perfect nuisance?
and so on. I said I always put it in with my
furs, and never had a moth near them.</p>
<p>“I wonder if that’s what they put with
Queen Mary’s furs,” said Mrs. Brash. “I never
saw more lovely sables than those she had on
when she came to the hospital yesterday.”</p>
<p>Miss Thresher verified this last statement,
absolutely superb they were, and Miss Thresher<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</SPAN></span>
had a right to speak, for the Queen had bowed
straight at her, as she stood on the kerb, “as
near to her as I am to you.”</p>
<p>Miss Quirker said that for her part she didn’t
think there was another woman in the world so
gracious as Queen Mary—except of course
Queen Alexandra. She would bow to anyone
she saw, no matter <i>how</i> shabby they were.</p>
<p>Mrs. Brash hurriedly said what she so
much admired in Queen Alexandra was her
figure.</p>
<p>Miss Quirker continued, “Yes, and speaking
of corsets I want to tell you of another economy
besides doing without sugar to help the nation.
You should buy your corsets several sizes larger
than usual, and then when they are getting
worn, you can turn them upside down and wear
them the other way up. It’s so saving.”</p>
<p>Ursula said she quite believed it, because she
knew, if she turned her long corsets upside down,
they would reach high enough up to support the
military collar at the back of her neck, and thus
save boning.</p>
<p>I felt it was high time we got back to
“Antizeptics,” and suggested that we should
put something in the first column of the
schedule, which was headed: “Things to place
in readiness beforehand.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Brash announced that she wasn’t ever
going to take her clothes off any more till the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</SPAN></span>
war was over, if this was the sort of goings-on
we were to expect.</p>
<p>General opinion, however, was decidedly in
favour of, at any rate, removing the outside
frock, simply because we none of us saw any
prospect of ever being able to afford to buy a
new one.</p>
<p>Then we all said what we thought ought to
go into that column. Woollen undies, a fur-lined
coat, a thick dressing-gown, a raincoat, a
travelling rug, and all sorts of other things, were
to be placed <i>close to the bedside</i>. This was insisted
upon as a matter of the greatest importance;
otherwise, in the dark, we should never find
anything, and of course it wouldn’t be safe to
have a light.</p>
<p>Miss Thresher and Miss Quirker had a small
sub-committee on the subject of stockings—should
they be worn all night in bed? Miss
Thresher said obviously it was the only sensible
course. Miss Quirker objected that she should
kick hers off in her sleep in any case, hers was
such a delicate skin (as a child people had always
remarked on it), though probably women less
sensitive than herself might be able to endure
them. But if she lost hers among the bedclothes
she would never find them in the dark.</p>
<p>Eventually they compromised by agreeing to
safety-pin a pair to the front of the nightdress
(as they fasten your handkerchief to you in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</SPAN></span>
hospital), so that at least they would know where
to find them in case of precipitate flight.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the question, “Should hats be
worn?” necessitated Ursula and Mrs. Brash
going into another sub-committee on the lounge.
Mrs. Brash favoured a shawl—preferably white—being
draped over the head; it was more suited
to the <i>négligé</i> condition of the hair. This led her
to consult Ursula about the winter’s hat she was
evolving. She had had an <i>exceedingly</i> good white
and black crinoline hat the summer before last,
and the winter before last she had had a <i>very</i>
lovely violet velvet toque—the rich deep colour
favoured by Queen Alexandra.</p>
<p>Last winter she had taken the violet velvet
from the hat of the winter before, and put it
over the crinoline hat of the summer before (you
can follow this, I hope?), and everybody had
admired it. Now she proposed to return the
violet velvet to its original toque, only this time
she would smother it with some violets she had
by her, and she had a really beautiful little sable
skin which she proposed to put round the brim.
Did Miss Ursula think the violets and the fur
would combine well?</p>
<p>Ursula said she herself didn’t care for fur
and flowers in combination, because she always
associated sables with snowy northern regions,
whereas violets suggested soft spring days and
awakening woods and gardens.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Mrs. Brash, who had never thought of putting
things together in that way before, said how very
poetic it was. Then would Miss Ursula think
that quills would look better? After all, birds
and flowers went together.</p>
<p>Ursula agreed, and added that she had even
found the neighbours’ fowls scratting up the
white violets one day. Mrs. Brash seemed to
feel that was conclusive proof of the desirability
of the combination. And in that case, should
the quills tilt outwards or inwards? No, she
didn’t mean inside the hat, of course, but across
the top or off the head? . . . Yes, perhaps it
would be the best to tilt them backwards, and
she should fasten them with a large cameo that
had belonged to the late Mr. Brash’s mother
(prolific details as to the grasping character of
Mrs. Brash, senior, who had never given her a
thing except this cameo).</p>
<p>Finally, she aired her only anxiety—would
the shape of the winter-before-last toque still be
worn this winter? Ursula assured her that the
shapes of the winter-before-last will be worn till
the war is over, and by that time we shall have
become so attached to them that we shall refuse
to part with them.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>After we had collected a fairly comprehensive
pile of clothes—including most we possessed—and
placed it all close beside the bed, jewellery<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</SPAN></span>
came under discussion. Naturally no one wanted
to lose even the smallest tiara, and we were all
quite sure the Government wouldn’t include
jewellery in the insurance. So we collected our
trinkets and placed them on top of the garments.
It was astonishing how much we each seemed to
possess, and how careful we were to enumerate
it all. Mrs. Brash enlarged tearfully and at
great length on the diamond necklace her
late husband had given her.</p>
<p>This opened up a wider question. How
about silver plate? Yes, how about the silver?
each one echoed. Was it likely we were going
to hand over our teapots, shoelifts, candlesticks,
pin-boxes, spoons and forks, hair-brushes, entrée-dishes,
and photo-frames to the enemy? No,
indeed not! So we all lugged our plate-chests
to the bedside; though Miss Thresher said she
should put hers all into a laundry bag and hang
it on the bedpost; it would be easier to carry
that way.</p>
<p>Then a number of side issues cropped up.
Virginia had just invested in the War Loan;
there was her scrip. Mrs. Brash couldn’t think
of leaving behind the portrait of her great-grand-uncle,
the admiral (always thus referred
to, as though no other had ever existed), whereupon
we all remembered we had ancestral
portraits calling for preservation—after all, it
doesn’t look well if you haven’t!</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Miss Quirker decided she would take the
bedspread she had crocheted for their forthcoming
Red Cross bazaar (but didn’t intend to
give it to them now it was finished; it was far
too pretty. Besides, the secretary had only put
her name in small type among “other ladies
helping” below the stallholders, and just think
how she had slaved over that bazaar!).</p>
<p>Mrs. Ridley said that whatever else went,
she meant at all costs to save the presentation
clock given to her late husband by a very
celebrated patient, whose name she was not at
liberty to state. I’m inclined to think this was
mentioned as a set-off against Mrs. Brash’s
diamond necklace; the late Mr. Brash, though
an admirable husband, did not seem to have
generated anything remarkable in the way of
public esteem, whereas the late Dr. Ridley was
known to be anything but generous.</p>
<p>Mrs. Ridley had no diamonds; but the clock
was of solid granite, made on the model of a
pyramid. It was surmounted by a coy-looking
sphinx, representing about a quarter of a hundredweight
of bronze metal. Accompanying the
pyramid—one at each end of the mantelpiece—was
a pair of heavy granite obelisks (like
Cleopatra’s Needle, but just a size smaller). It
took both the servants to lift the clock every
time the mantelpiece was dusted, Mrs. Ridley
explained with pride. Besides, the obelisks were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</SPAN></span>
very useful to hang her knitting bag on, and so
appropriate too, with our brave lads out there
rallying round and defending the poor sphinx
from the Turks. (Virginia whispered in my ear,
it was no wonder the bronze lady looked so
cheerful.)</p>
<p>So of course these weighty items joined the
jewellery at the bedside.</p>
<p>Other valuables rapidly suggested themselves;
also more sordid things, such as matches and
candles, a tin of biscuits, and a small stove and
kettle, for use if we had to sit out in the road all
night gazing at a ruined home.</p>
<p>And of course we placed pails of sand and
buckets of water close at hand, to use if it should
be an incendiary bomb. (I hoped I shouldn’t
hop out of bed straight into the water!)</p>
<p>Here Ursula reminded me that the pile of sand
placed on the platform of our London station
several months (or was it years?) ago, for Anti-zeptic
treatment, was now sprouting luscious
grass; obviously the lawn-mower and garden-roller
must be added to the bedside museum.</p>
<p>But I told her afterwards, she had better
keep quiet if she lacks the ability to grasp the
strenuosity of any situation where a group of
conscientious women are conversing on the
subject of “doing something.” As it was, her
remark only incited Miss Quirker to spend a
tedious five minutes in explaining to her how<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</SPAN></span>
impossible it would be for a single woman, with
only one maid, to get the garden-roller upstairs,
and another ten in giving her recipes for exterminating
grass; while Mrs. Ridley went off at
a tangent on the shortage of gardeners, and the
advantages of paraffin over fish-oil as a lubricant
for mowing-machines.</p>
<p>I only succeeded in getting her back to the
agenda, by begging her to advise us, as she was
such an authority on paraffin, whether to take
an oil-stove or a spirit-lamp for the outdoor
encampment.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>At length, when any ordinary bedroom must
have been packed quite full, and suggestive of a
furniture depository, Virginia’s voice rose above
the babel—</p>
<p>“But what I want to know is, how am I ever
going to get into bed?”</p>
<p>“You may well ask!” said her sister.
“Look at the time! Just you come along home
with me. I’ll show you. Where’s my eiderdown?”</p>
<p>Miss Thresher besought them to stay a few
minutes longer, merely to decide what to do
when the Zeppelins actually arrived. But Ursula
said they had got all their work cut out to get
through the preparatory stages of the schedule.</p>
<p>So the Committee adjourned.</p>
<p>As they went out, a figure came out of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</SPAN></span>
kitchen side entrance and made for the coach-house,
carrying a big cardboard box.</p>
<p>“Is anything the matter, Abigail?” I asked.</p>
<p>“No’m! I’m only hiding all our best hats in
the stable; I expect they’ll be less likely to find
them there.”</p>
<p>“But the Zepps aren’t exactly like burglars!”
I said.</p>
<p>“No, I suppose they’re not,” she replied,
“but when a creature like that Kaiser gets
nosing about among <i>the stars</i>, as well as trying
to rampage all over the earth, there’s no telling
<i>what</i> he’ll be up to next. It’s as well to be
prepared.”</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>IX<br/> <small>Where the Road Led Over the Hills</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">Next</span> morning I was a wreck. Virginia and her
sister were the same.</p>
<p>For a week past I had realised that I was in
the last stage of mental and physical disrepair.
The midnight committee was the final straw.</p>
<p>As a rule, I stick at work in town till nerves
and brain refuse to hold out another day; then,
flinging my tools down, and leaving both my
office desk and my study table in a hopeless and
bewildering state of piled-up letters, MSS. and
proofs, I just fly—a goodly bale of arrears
following me by next post.</p>
<p>I had had practically no holiday owing to the
war, and had reached that forlorn and useless
frame of mind when I declared I was far too
busy to take one—a very mistaken notion for
anyone to have, by the way; it is surprising how
well most of us can be done without when we
do at last take a little time off duty!</p>
<p>However, I had just one faint glimmer of
common sense left me, and that told me to take
the first train going west next morning, which I
did, leaving Paddington (in company with
Virginia and Ursula, who had a holiday due to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</SPAN></span>
her from the hospital) in a warm close fog that
might imply a thunderstorm, or an early autumn,
or merely the ordinary airless carbonic-acid gloom
that is a distinguishing feature of London. Some
eminent authority has said that the air in London
hasn’t been changed for over a hundred years,
and I can quite believe it!</p>
<p>We found the cottage bathed in the glow of
the soft sunshine that is still summer, but that
brings with it the first touch of regret for the
good-bye that is near at hand. There had been
some soaking rains after a dry spell, and everything
in the garden was holding up bright,
refreshed leaves, and glowing flowers, one and all
assuring me that though they had a gasping time
a few weeks before, and had wondered from day
to day if they could manage to hold on till the
evening, things had now taken a glorious turn
for the better; and they were glad they hadn’t
given up, since I was so pleased to see them.</p>
<p>Several apologised for ragged washed-out
blossoms lower down their stem, but explained
that it was due to the rain, and that they were
sending up new ones to take the place of the
shabby ones as quickly as ever they could.</p>
<p>The dear things seemed to look at me with
such understanding sympathy; the pansies held
up their bright little faces just like a bevy of
inquiring children; the hollyhocks, I am sure,
turned round to look in my direction; the last<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</SPAN></span>
of the sweet peas threw out tender little fingers
to touch my arm as I passed beside their hedge;
the golden rod stretched its neck and tiptoed
lest I should miss it at the back of the border.</p>
<p>Haven’t you noticed that most flowers seem
to have faces? I don’t mean that you can trace
a direct resemblance to human features in them
as you can in the moon; but there is something
in the flowers that looks at you—something that
looks at you shyly, as the wild rose; or stares
at you boldly, like the marigold; or twinkles at
you gaily, like the cornflower and coreopsis; or
appears slightly inclined to frivolity, like the
larkspur and the ragged robin; or takes life with
solid seriousness, like the Canterbury bell; or
gives you the innocent look of a baby, like the
primrose; or beams at you with large-hearted
maternal kindness, like a big gloire de Dijon.</p>
<p>Most flowers, you will find, give you a look
with some definite characteristic—at least, so it
seems to me. Probably that is one reason why
they are so comforting and companionable.</p>
<p>And I was wanting something comforting
and companionable that day. I had overworked
and generally neglected the rules of common
sense, till I had got to that dismal pitch that
simply asks of blank space, “What’s the good
of anything?”</p>
<p>Then more questions began to worry me.</p>
<p>What had Christianity accomplished, seeing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</SPAN></span>
the way the Sermon on the Mount was being
trampled under foot by the instigators of this
war? After all, wasn’t might going to win, in
spite of all one believed of the supremacy of
right? Wasn’t the devil having things all his
own way now? What were Christians doing?
Had religion lost its power? What were the
churches doing? Was <i>anybody</i> doing <i>anything</i>
worth whiles?</p>
<p>Those who have let themselves run down
physically, and have neglected to take proper
meals, and have turned night into day, and have
tried systematically to cram a fortnight’s work
into every week, know exactly where one finds
oneself at the end of a few months.</p>
<p>And it is only the very exceptional people
who do not find their spiritual condition about
as jaded as their nerves after a course of this sort
of thing. We get to feel that we are ploughing
a very lone furrow, and it is only a step further
to the state of mind that says it isn’t worth
ploughing at all.</p>
<p>Personal experience has taught me that there
is only one cure for me when I get to this state
of nervous wreckage; and that is to get away
to the solitudes; to listen among the great
silences of the hills for the still small Voice
that has never failed those who wait for its
Message.</p>
<p>God’s methods of restoring weary humanity<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</SPAN></span>
are many and various. Sometimes He sees that
first and foremost, like Elijah, His tired children
need rest and food. And just as one of the
greatest terrors that can befall the worn-out
worker in a city is insomnia, so one of the
greatest boons that Nature in her quietudes
bestows is the ability to drop off into peaceful,
brain-mending oblivion.</p>
<p>So He giveth His beloved sleep.</p>
<p>Or it may be that He sees His children need
to be drawn away from the world for a while, in
order to talk face to face with Him. Sometimes
we have to be brought to a state of great weakness
before we will listen to His plea: “Come ye
yourselves apart and rest awhile.” We do not
always heed it when we are well and strong.
In the enforced quiet we can find time to turn
to Him.</p>
<p>And a sojourn with our Lord in the desert
has meant for many the feeding of five thousand
on the morrow.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>When I am badly in the depths, I know of
no surer way to restore my mind than a long
walk across the hills. Some people need human
companionship; but, personally, I can do very
well by myself under such circumstances (always
provided that I don’t meet a cow likewise on a
walking tour). I can pull myself together more
quickly if I don’t have to spend time and energy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</SPAN></span>
striving to be amiable and politely attentive to
someone.</p>
<p>I have often started out on a Sunday morning,
and walked on till I came upon some unknown
church that served as a useful end to my
pilgrimage. On one occasion I remember discovering
a small chapel hidden away among a
few homesteads in a pretty valley I unexpectedly
tumbled into. They were starting the first hymn
as I entered. There were nine of us all told,
including the preacher, the two ladies who raised
two different tunes simultaneously, and the
rugged-faced deacon or elder, who brought me a
hymnbook and, later, took the collection.</p>
<p>The singing was not a marked success at first,
owing partly to the divided opinion of the congregation
as to which tune they were really
singing; moreover, my entrance had momentarily
diverted attention and seemed to make all concerned
a trifle nervous. But at length the
preacher himself started a third tune that we
all knew and were able to join in; and a very
sincere and devout service followed.</p>
<p>I gathered from information impressed upon
us in the course of the sermon (probably for
my special benefit, as the handful of cottagers
assembled would assuredly know) that there was
to be a special collection that day on behalf of
some chapel fund.</p>
<p>When I told this to Ursula, who didn’t then<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</SPAN></span>
know so much about our hill-people as she does
now, she said, “Ah! I suppose that was why
only nine came!”</p>
<p>But, in reality, nine was not at all a poor
congregation for a tiny hamlet like this on a
Sunday morning. The mothers are mostly at
home getting dinner; the fathers are seeing to
the stock, and don’t reckon to get themselves
“cleaned up” till the afternoon. But in the
evening—then the little building would be
packed to the door.</p>
<p>In his final prayer the minister prayed so
earnestly that we might all be induced to give
with the greatest liberality, that I felt exceedingly
sorry I had only put a half-crown into my
glove when I started out, leaving my purse at
home.</p>
<p>The rugged elder looked studiously in the
opposite direction while I slipped the coin on to
the plate; somehow I hoped he wouldn’t be
too disappointed when he discovered that the
respectable-looking stranger had not given more
handsomely after the pleading of the preacher.
But it was all I had.</p>
<p>After the service I lingered a moment to read
a quaint old tombstone in the church precincts.
The rest of the worshippers likewise lingered—respectful
but curious—in the road outside the
gate. The preacher had shaken hands with me
at the door; my rugged friend had been immersed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</SPAN></span>
in the duties of his office as steward, treasurer,
and church secretary combined. But now he
came out of the door, looked anxiously about,
and seeing me still there, made straight for me.
I concluded that he, too, was going to shake
hands, and possibly inquire if I was staying in
the neighbourhood. But what he actually said
was this—</p>
<p>“Excuse me, ma’am, but do you happen to
know what you put into the plate?”</p>
<p>“A half-crown,” I faltered, wondering whether
by any remote chance it was a bad one.</p>
<p>He nodded his head, and, opening his work-hardened
hand, displayed the morning’s collection—seven
pennies, three halfpennies, and my half-crown
on top.</p>
<p>“That’s right,” he nodded. And then,
lowering his voice, presumably to save my
feelings, he added, “But if ’twas a mistake, and
you didn’t mean to put in all that, <i>you can have
it back</i>.”</p>
<p>Do you know, it made a lump come in my
throat.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>I told Ursula about it at dinner, remarking
that it looked as though they hadn’t much faith
even though they had specially prayed for
generous giving.</p>
<p>Ursula said that in <i>her</i> opinion it looked as
though it was high time I presented to the ragbag<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</SPAN></span>
the hat I had worn that morning, since it
had been for months past a dejected object of
pity, though with her usual delicacy of feeling
she had, up to the present, refrained from telling
me so in plain English. But now, in all kindness
such as only a dear friend can show, she had
no hesitation in saying that she wasn’t at all
surprised that they mistook me for an old age
pensioner on the verge of bankruptcy.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>But I’ve been wandering again. To return
to that September day when I reached the
cottage as weary of life and as downhearted
about everything as any mortal could well be.
The whole world seemed out of joint. Yet in
my innermost soul I knew that religion was really
all right, and that it was I who had gone wrong.
But I refused to look at that aspect of it.</p>
<p>Next day I determined to give it all up, and
just meditated on my own funeral. I tried to
reckon up how many people I could really rely on
to send wreaths; it didn’t make me feel any the
less pessimistic when I decided there were only
four who could be counted upon as certainties,
and they included Virginia and Ursula!</p>
<p>And even one of these failed me; for when
I mentioned the matter to the girls, they
said: Surely I didn’t imagine they were going to
be so wasteful as to send <i>two</i> wreaths, when one
would do quite as well if both their names<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</SPAN></span>
appeared on the card attached? But they did
offer to make it a wreath of painted-white-tin
flowers, under a glass shade (regardless of
expense), if I preferred, suggesting that I might
get longer pleasure out of a wreath of this kind.</p>
<p>Getting no more consolation from them than
this, I said I would go for a walk. Virginia and
Ursula anticipated my wishes and declined to
accompany me. They had urgent work on hand
that was far too important to postpone for a
mere walk. It was the planting of onion seed.</p>
<p>The week before we had read in the papers
how imperative it was that everybody should
plant food crops in any available scrap of ground
they might possess, to help keep starvation at
bay.</p>
<p>We read the article eagerly.</p>
<p>I had several acres of land doing nothing in
particular at the moment, that I was only too
glad to use for a special crop of eatables against
the time of national famine. Without finishing
the article, we had started to discuss what would
be best to lay down, taking into account the
idiosyncrasies of our digestions.</p>
<p>“Green peas in the small field adjoining the
orchard,” Ursula had decided for me; and then
she proceeded: “Broad beans in half of the
upper garden; scarlet runners at the back of the
strawberry beds and along by the south wall;
the potato garden can now have carrots, parsnips,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span>
turnips and beets; the west garden must have
pickled cabbage (I mean the cabbage before it is
pickled), shallots, spring onions and pickling
onions, chives——”</p>
<p>“What <i>are</i> ‘chives’?” interrupted Virginia.</p>
<p>“I don’t know, but I’ve read the name somewhere.
Don’t interrupt me.”</p>
<p>“And fennel—that will come in handy for
fish—and leeks. In that piece of waste ground
beyond the barn I think we ought to plant
asparagus, because, after all, there is no need to
dispense with luxuries if you can grow them for
nothing, is there?</p>
<p>“And how would it be to plant maize all down
that bed where you had the Shirley poppies?
I should think the same aspect would suit the
two, and some green corn would be very nice.
I suppose, if you plant it now, it will be about
right in January or February, wouldn’t it? Or
you could sell it. It’s twopence halfpenny or
threepence a cob at the Stores. So if you had,
say, fifty plants, and if each produced—how
many <i>do</i> they produce on a plant? . . . Oh, well,
if you don’t know, let’s be on the safe side and
say one each—that would be a clear profit of—well,
at threepence each—let’s see, fifty pence is
four and twopence, and three times would be—twelve
and sixpence—say twelve shillings, allowing
sixpence for seed. So that would be well
worth trying, in case the moratorium never ends.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
Then there would have to be cabbages and
suchlike. How about digging up the orchard,
and——”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” said Virginia scornfully (she had
picked up the paper and read to the end of the
aforementioned article, which had proved very
enlightening). “And I suppose you expect it
all to grow under a couple of feet of snow. Let
me tell you that it is now too late to plant
anything but onions! He, she, or it, who wrote
this article, says so.”</p>
<p>I myself had been going to tell her, when I
could get a word in, that it was too late for most
of the things she had named.</p>
<p>But Ursula, who had never done any vegetable
gardening, was still sceptical. That was why I
suggested that we should consult the obliging
manager at Carter’s, in Queen Victoria Street,
as we often did over our gardening woes.</p>
<p>Just ahead of us in the shop, when we got
there, was an elderly gentleman who wanted
some grass seed; he asked if they would tell him
how to start a lawn next spring.</p>
<p>It was in the middle of the day—a very busy
time for a shop of this kind, when city men are
on their way to or from lunch, and seize a few
extra minutes to buy their seeds. The shop was
full—it looked as though every scrap of land
within the twelve-mile radius was going to be
put under cultivation—and the assistants had all<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span>
their work to serve everyone as quickly as they
wanted to be served.</p>
<p>The Elderly Gentleman was apparently the
only one who was not in a hurry; so he asked
the most minute questions, and the manager
gave him copious directions, from preparing the
ground at the start, right up to marking it off
for tennis, when it was in its prime (though,
judging by the small packet of seed the E. G.
had bought, the lawn would never support a
tennis-net).</p>
<p>Then by the time the shop was quite packed,
and when everything that was possible appeared
to have been said about planting and maintaining
a lawn—including keeping it free from moss, the
best way to trim the edges, the law with regard
to trespassing fowls, and the careful tying of
black cotton over the newly-planted seeds to
keep off the birds—the E. G. asked what
he should do when daisies came up? The
manager said patiently that his firm’s grass seeds
didn’t produce daisies; but as the E. G. seemed
to worry about daisies, he was told how to get
rid of daisies.</p>
<p>At last he really went, reluctantly, I admit;
but the other customers—who had all become so
engrossed in his lawn that they couldn’t remember
what they had come in to buy for themselves—heaved
a sigh of relief.</p>
<p>Slowly he made his way to the middle of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span>
wide crossing just in front of the shop. You
knew by his hesitating walk that there was
another question he had meant to ask, but he
couldn’t recall it for the moment.</p>
<p>Yes! He suddenly turned round briskly (and
nearly ended the lawn under a taxi), the shop-door
opened again, and an anxious voice inquired,
“What ought I to do if the birds get at the
seeds in spite of the black cotton and the bits of
white rag tied to them?”</p>
<p>The manager passed his hand across what
looked like an aching brow, and further braced
himself to do his duty; but a gentleman customer
came to the rescue by replying, “It is usual, in
such a case, sir, to buy another packet of grass
seed, and start all over again on exactly the same
lines as before, only you plant an extra reel of
black cotton this time.”</p>
<p>After this we were able to inquire of the
manager what crops he would advise us to plant
as our contribution to the nation’s larder, to say
nothing of our own.</p>
<p>“Onions,” he said, so promptly that one
would have thought others had asked the same
question. And then added—“Giant Rocca.”</p>
<p>I am not sure how many pounds of seed
Ursula immediately ordered; she proposed to
make it a present to me, and naturally wished to
be generous. Virginia says she believes she
heard her say a half-a-hundredweight. Anyhow,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</SPAN></span>
the obliging manager asked, with a slight cough,
how large a portion of ground we were intending
to cultivate, as half an ounce would be sufficient
for—I forget how many acres! So she reduced
her order to half a pound. She said she didn’t
want us to run short. (I don’t fancy we shall,
either!) Besides, she rather liked the name
“Giant Rocca.” It suggested something large
and strengthening wherewith to combat the foe.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>We hadn’t a moment’s rest after we arrived
at the cottage until the onion seed was well
underground. Ursula decided that it would be
really a blessing if I <i>would</i> go out—she could
then plant in peace.</p>
<p>The handy man being unable to “oblige” me
by doing a little work just then, she had decided
to plant the seeds herself.</p>
<p>At first she had made long troughs in which
to place the seed, sprinkling it very finely with
thumb and finger; but after half an hour of this
spine-breaking work she straightened her back
with difficulty, and decided that to “sow broadcast”
was more in accordance with Nature herself,
to say nothing of Biblical teaching. Hence we
had it broadcast.</p>
<p>Here I may say that we eventually had
Giant Roccas sown the length and breadth of
the vegetable garden, in between the rows of
spring greens, as well as in open spaces; also<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</SPAN></span>
they are sending up their spears between rows of
snapdragons; round standard rose-trees; in the
beds usually devoted to Darwin tulips; down
the narrow bed that has Persian irises in the
centre and double daisies at the edge; in the
rough bed of foxgloves at the back of the pigsty,
along the edge of the borders where sweet
alyssum bloomed in the summer; under the
damson tree where the ground is bare; along by
the south wall, where the sweet pea remains
were pulled up to make room for them; among
the raspberry canes; all over the potato-patch;
along with the carnation cuttings in the cold
frame; in little dibbles among the strawberry
plants; and I even found a few pots, each with
a bit of glass over the top, placed in the sunny
scullery window, which also proved to be “Giant
Roccas,” in case we should run short indoors.</p>
<p>When all these Roccas have attained to their
gigantic proportions, I fancy we shall be able to
scent that garden a mile or two away!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Still, the onions were only being planted the
day I set out for a walk, wandering just where
the road might chance to lead me. But you
have to take yourself with you, if you go for a
walk, and it is some time before you can get
away from yourself—if you can make out what
I mean by this.</p>
<p>I merely walked on and on, looking at the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</SPAN></span>
blackbirds gobbling down the red mountain ash
berries, till one gasped at their stowing-away
capacity; at the swallows practising their long
sweeping flights preparatory to leaving us; at
the ferns growing out of the shady side of the
walls; at a great patch of rich purple in the
corner of a field—that turned out to be a widespread
tangle of flowering vetch; at the beautiful
colour effect of massed heliotrope Michaelmas
daisies against the grey-green background of a
mossy fern-decked old stone wall; at the harebells
swinging in the wind; at the late foxgloves,
still poking beautiful spikes of colour through
the hedges; at the blackberries trailing over
everything; at the butterflies still flitting about,
or resting motionless with outspread wings where
they found a warm sunny stone, or gorging themselves
to repletion on some over-ripe pears that
had fallen by the roadside. There were several
lovely creatures with blue-black wings marked
with red, white and a little blue, who, like the
wasps, were actually intoxicated with pear juice!</p>
<p>A fox slunk across the road right in front
of me, and plunged into a wood; probably having
the time of his life just now, with most of
the hunt somewhere in France.</p>
<p>The springs were coming to life again, after
the heavy rain, and water burbled along at the
side of the lane, or tumbled out from the rocks
at the roadside in tiny waterfalls.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The orchard trees were flecked all over with
gold, or pale yellow, or bright crimson—surely
we never had a more abundant apple year than
this one.</p>
<p>It was such a wonderful afternoon: I was
bound to go on wandering.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>At last I came to the end of the lanes and
found myself on an open hilltop. As the fresh
bracing air met me full in the face, I began to
feel hungry. I looked at my watch: it was five
o’clock. I looked at the landscape, and realised
that, though I didn’t know where I was, I was
certainly miles away from any tea.</p>
<p>I paused and considered: Should I carefully
retrace my steps? That always seems a poor-spirited
way of getting home again, even though
you are lost! On all sides stretched an expanse
of hilly country, grey lichen-covered boulders,
yellow-flowered gorse, wiry mauve and purple
heather, and a wealth of green, and bronze, and
golden tinted bracken, with occasional woods
and larch plantations. There was a general hum
of bees and insects in the air, and a pheasant
rose from the ground close to me and flew with
a <i>whirr</i> into a little coppice near by.</p>
<p>A sign-board was lying on the ground by the
gate leading into the coppice. It was the worse
for wind and weather, but one could still read
the alarming warning, “Trespassers will be prosecuted!”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</SPAN></span>
Who would trespass, and who would
prosecute, on that wild bit of moorland, I wonder?
The only being in sight was a rabbit, sitting
motionless close beside the prostrate notice and
studying me silently with the air of a special
constable! Yet even he went off and left me
quite alone.</p>
<p>At that moment I caught sight of a chimney
over the spur of the hill. I felt convinced it
must be attached to a fireplace, and surely there
would be a kettle on that fire. I made a bee-line
for the place.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>To the eye of the town-dweller, hill and
moorland distances are apt to be deceptive; the
house proved to be much farther off than I had
at first imagined. But this gave added zest to
expedition; I determined to reach it though I
only arrived in time to put up there for the night.
A nearer view showed the cottage to be the
fag-end of a small hamlet lying snugly in the
protecting hollow of the hills.</p>
<p>When I actually entered the village, there
were so many pretty dwellings, and they all
looked equally inviting, that I was undecided
where to open an attack. However, I settled
on one that had a couple of hollyhocks, some late
pinks, and a black-currant bush growing out of
the top of the garden wall, while a free-and-easy
grape-vine, a tall monthly rose, and some clematis<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</SPAN></span>
waved arms of welcome to me from the front of
the cottage.</p>
<p>Just as I approached the gate, a pleasant-faced
woman came out of the door and walked down
the garden path between the French marigolds
that edged the flower-beds. She was the only
sign of life in the place (apart from a few belated
hens, who, being averse to early rising, I suppose,
had determined to take time by the forelock, and
were catching the historic early worm overnight).</p>
<p>I felt that the good lady’s appearance was a
distinct indication that Fate had decided I must
have my tea there. Nevertheless, there were
signs that she was bound on some important
errand; instead of the ordinary sun-bonnet or
battered hat that is the usual weekday headgear
among our hills, she had donned a carefully-brushed
though somewhat rusty black bonnet,
and a black beaded mantle of unquestionable
antiquity, both worn with the air of her Sunday
best.</p>
<p>“Good evening,” I began. “I’m sorry to
trouble you, but I wonder if you can tell me
where——”</p>
<p>“Th’ chapel?” replied the woman before I
could finish my sentence. “Why, of course you
can’t find ’un. But you jes’ come ’long wi’ me.
I’m going there meself, an’ though we’m a bit late,
it don’t matter; my man’ll be keeping a seat
fur me, and ther’ll be room, sure ’nough, for ’ee<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</SPAN></span>
to squeeze in too. I do al’ays tell ’un our chapel
didn’t oughter belong where ’tis. No place o’
worship was ever more hid out o’ road than ourn.
Yet my man do say ’tis clear ’nough to see ’un if
you’m comin’ ’long the <i>lower</i> road; for there ’tis
all to once. But as I say to him, the folk don’t
all a-come down ’long the lower road; an’ if you
come <i>up</i> ’long, why, there’s no chapel to be seen,
and then where’m you to? What I do say is,
the way o’ salvation oughter be so plain that th’
wayfarin’ man, though a <i>fool</i>, can’t lose un. An’
now here be you to prove me very words!”</p>
<p>The good soul was all this time trotting
energetically along what I concluded could not
be the lower road, since no chapel was in view.
I just followed, wondering what would happen
next! Meanwhile my companion talked, with
scarcely comma-pause for breath.</p>
<p>“But I’m glad I happen to be late, or you
might ha’ been wanderin’ around till you’re all
mizzy-mazed. Soon as I saw you comin’ up
’long, I said to father—I was jes’ settlin’ ’im
comfor’ble for th’ night—‘Father,’ I said, ‘here’s
a lady a-lookin’ fur the chapel, sure ’nough. I
shuden wonder a bit but what she’s come to
speak at th’ meeting. Like as not she’s a friend
of the minister, an’ ’pears she’s lost.’ I suppose
you belong to London, ma’am?” This with a
glance all over me to make sure there was no
local hall-mark.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“My home is in London,” I replied, “but
just at present I’m staying at Woodacres.”</p>
<p>“You’ve walked all the way from Woodacres?”
she exclaimed.</p>
<p>“Yes; and I’m terribly hungry,” I said,
hurriedly seizing my chance.</p>
<p>At this the kind hospitable soul was most
concerned, and insisted on our turning into a
relative’s house which we were passing at the
moment. The door stood open, though the
place seemed to be deserted.</p>
<p>“Myra,” she called out. A girl came downstairs
with some pocket-handkerchiefs in her
hand which she appeared to be marking in red.
There was a hurried whisper in a back room,
and quickly she brought in a glass of milk and
some bread and butter—for which I was truly
thankful.</p>
<p>“The lady do look wisht,” my companion
explained to the girl. “She’s walked from
Woodacres to hear the minister from London.
She lost her way, and so didn’t get in time for
the tea-meeting.”</p>
<p>I was interested in this item of information
about myself, but decided to let the unexpected
situation develop as it pleased.</p>
<p>We were soon walking along the road again,
my companion talking the whole time. Myra
was her niece, going to Bristol next week to
start in a draper’s shop. “She says ’tisn’t stylish<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</SPAN></span>
nowadays to let folks think as you does your
washing yourself, so she’s making sort o’ red
oughts and crosses in the corner, that the other
girls ’ll think as the washin’ was put out. <i>Put
out</i>, indeed!”—with utter scorn of voice—“‘Isn’t
it all <i>put out?</i>’ I asks her. How could they dry
’un else? I’ve no patience with such fangels—<i>that</i>
I haven’t! And isn’t this war dreadful?
I see in the paper I was a-readin’ to father
that that Kayser do call it a righteous war. <i>A
righteous war</i>—when he don’t even leave off
a-fighting of a Sunday!”</p>
<p>Just then we turned a corner, and the
maligned chapel certainly burst into view “all
to once.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>The first thing to attract attention, as we
neared the modest building, was a large board
above the front entrance, displaying the words
“Revival Meetings” in bold white letters pasted
on a red turkey twill background.</p>
<p>A hymn was progressing when we entered;
a seat had been reserved for the cottager by her
husband, and had been left in charge of his hat
(turned upside down and holding a red pocket-handkerchief
covered with large white spots),
while he himself distributed hymn books with
backs all suffering from spinal complaint in a
more or less acute form.</p>
<p>By dint of energetic compression on the part<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</SPAN></span>
of the good-natured occupants of the pew, room
was made for me as well as for my companion,
the owner of the hat electing to stand in the
aisle, as became a pillar of the church; the conspicuous
crease adorning each trouser-leg and
the back of his black coat proclaimed them his
best clothes, and gave additional evidence that
the meeting was of more than ordinary weekday
importance.</p>
<p>The place was packed to its utmost capacity.
I decided that I had never in my whole life heard
a harmonium more asthmatically out of tune
and at the same time I wished that the lamps
(which were economically turned down, daylight
being still visible) could only be raised, since the
odour of paraffin was not a refreshing ingredient
to add to the air of the already close room.
For on our hills, as in other places where fresh
air is most abundant, ventilation is the least
among the virtues practised by the natives.</p>
<p>The congregation took some slight adjustment
before all managed to wedge themselves
into the seats after the hymn. The general
shuffle and scuffle having subsided, a man on the
platform addressed the assembly.</p>
<p>“I am sorry to say our brother has not yet
arrived.”</p>
<p>The glow of expectancy on the faces of the
people suddenly vanished.</p>
<p>“We think he has made a mistake over the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</SPAN></span>
time of commencement; possibly he imagines it
is seven instead of six o’clock; but he is certainly
coming, or he would have telegraphed——”</p>
<p>The disappointed ones looked hopeful again.</p>
<p>“Two friends have driven off to meet him”—many
heads craned round in the direction of
the door, though the honoured pair were now a
couple of miles away—“and they will doubtless
bring him along as quickly as possible. I think
we may safely rely on him being here in about
half an hour.” All eyes now scanned the face
of the clock. “In the meanwhile, we will hold
a short Testimony meeting; and perhaps Brother
Wilson will first of all lead us in prayer.”</p>
<p>The man with the hymn-books, standing in
the aisle, responded. Without a moment’s halt
or hesitation he poured forth a torrent of mingled
appeal, confession, praise and request. He
touched on their week of services, on themselves
as a church, on the village and (according to his
view) its state of spiritual darkness; then he
went further afield and dealt with the whole of
England, the sailors on our warships, and the
soldiers on the battlefields. This thought led
him to mention the Colonies, the missionaries
labouring in foreign lands; and then he prayed
for the heathen who lived so far away that no
missionary had yet reached them. He concluded
with a plea for all backsliders and a pæan of
gratitude for those who were saved.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The congregation followed the long prayer
intently, punctuating every remark with “Amen,”
and many other expressions of assent, uttered
devoutly though fervently.</p>
<p>Then the one who presided asked all who
had received a blessing that week to testify to
the others of the great things that had befallen
them. He sat down. After a pause of but half
a minute, a woman rose, saying in a quiet voice—</p>
<p>“I feel I ought to take the earliest opportunity
of telling how good God has been to me. I came
to these meetings as hopeless as any human
being could very well be; but God has lifted the
load from my soul; and now, although I cannot
see any light ahead, He has shown me He is
near, and I am content to walk by faith. And
I know the light will come soon.”</p>
<p>She sat down, and the only sound that broke
the stillness was the voice of the chairman—</p>
<p>“Commit thy way unto the Lord; trust also
in Him; and He shall bring it to pass.”</p>
<p>A decrepit old man next hobbled to his feet.
His voice was feeble; but the peaceful look on
his wrinkled face, and the light that shone in his
eyes, carried wonderful conviction with them.
He was somewhat diffuse, but dwelt on all the
goodness that had fallen to his lot through life,
and his eager anticipation of the call that should
summon him Home.</p>
<p>When once the ice was broken, the people<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</SPAN></span>
followed one another as fast as they could. An
elderly woman sitting next to me rose to her
feet, steadying herself by holding on to the pew
in front with her work-worn hands, for she was
trembling. She spoke in a hesitating manner;
yet what she said had infinite pathos in it.
Would they remember in their prayers the lads
who were fighting so far away, some out of
reach of any services like these, that they might
not forget the God of their father and mother,
and that they might be brought back safely to
the old home again.</p>
<p>And the poor woman, who was evidently
much overwrought, just sat down and hid her
face in her handkerchief. I couldn’t help putting
my hand over hers in sympathy.</p>
<p>There were many other bowed heads in the
meeting by then—old, careworn women as well
as younger ones, old men in plenty, but so few
young fellows.</p>
<p>“Let us pray,” said the chairman. All eyes
were closed. There was a slight pause, and then
another voice full of wonderful restfulness sent
up a prayer to the Great Comforter on behalf of
all the mothers and fathers present, who night
and day were longing for their sons’ return, and
for the wives who with aching hearts were
hungering for news of the absent loved ones.
The prayer was very simple and unconventional,
just the asking of a boon from a Friend. But<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</SPAN></span>
the speaker understood the heartbreaks that were
in those suppressed sobs, and his words brought
comfort to many a lonely one that night.</p>
<p>When he ceased, the lamps were all raised,
and there on the rostrum was one of the greatest—if
not <i>the</i> greatest—of the preachers of our
times.</p>
<p>“The minister from London” had arrived.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>I was amazed when I saw him there—a man
who preached every Sunday to congregations
numbering several thousands; whose name was
the most powerful attraction that could be found
for a May meeting poster or a Convention programme;
a theologian whose lectures and
writings were followed with the closest attention
by hundreds of students.</p>
<p>As he stood up in that small village chapel,
the first thought that came into my mind was
something like this: What a waste to have such
a big man at a small meeting like this when he
could easily fill Albert Hall; and in any case he
will probably be right above their heads; he is
far too scholarly for these simple-minded uneducated
people. He will be quite lost on them.</p>
<p>What I forgot was the fact that after all it is
the Message that counts in such a case.</p>
<p>The famous preacher had a Message for
humanity; and he was great enough to be able
to deliver it in a way that would be understood<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</SPAN></span>
by anyone, rich or poor, educated or illiterate.
And he was wise enough to know that he might
be doing a big work in speaking to that handful
of people in that remote corner of England,
seeing that a chance visit had brought him into
the vicinity; therefore, when they had asked him
if he would speak at the revival meetings they
were holding, he had consented at once; and I
was not the only one who had reason to be
grateful to God for the preacher’s words that
night; mine was not the only heavy heart that
had come into the little chapel badly in need of
an uplift; I was not the only one who felt
almost alone in a losing cause, with all the old-time
beliefs tottering.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>He read from Revelation vii. in the Revised
Version:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>After these things I saw, and behold, a great multitude,
which no man could number, out of every nation, and of all
tribes and peoples and tongues, standing before the throne
and before the Lamb, arrayed in white robes, and palms in
their hands; and they cry with a great voice, saying,
Salvation unto our God which sitteth on the throne, and
unto the Lamb. . . .</p>
<p>And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, These
which are arrayed in the white robes, who are they, and
whence came they? And I say unto him, My lord, thou
knowest. And he said to me, These are they which come
out of the great tribulation, and they washed their robes, and
made them white in the blood of the Lamb. Therefore are
they before the throne of God; and they serve Him day and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</SPAN></span>
night in His temple: and He that sitteth on the throne shall
spread His tabernacle over them. They shall hunger no
more, neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun strike
upon them, nor any heat: for the Lamb which is in the
midst of the throne shall be their Shepherd, and shall guide
them unto fountains of waters of life: and God shall wipe
away every tear from their eyes.</p>
</div>
<p>There was a moment’s silence as he closed
his Bible. And then he began to talk to the
little crowd before him—not about the war, but
about much that the war is bringing, trouble,
sorrow, suffering, anxiety—great tribulation
indeed.</p>
<p>I am not going to make any attempt to give
you his sermon: merely to take isolated sentences
from a man’s address, and set them down
in cold print, deprived of the added strength and
meaning that voice and tone and emphasis and
context convey, is usually most unsatisfactory.</p>
<p>But I wish you could have been there and
seen the tense eager look on every face, as he
took us quickly and concisely over the great
crises that have befallen humanity in bygone
ages, when it has seemed again and again as
though Christianity has been dealt a staggering
blow—and yet in every case the result has been
the ultimate triumph of God, and the building
up of His people.</p>
<p>He reminded us how the darkest day in
the world’s history, when our Lord’s death<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</SPAN></span>
seemed to end all hope, all promise of His
Kingdom, was in reality the day of the greatest
victory.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>But I cannot give even a summary of his
address; I can only tell you of the effect it had
upon me, and I think there were many others
to whom Light came in a strangely vivid manner
that evening.</p>
<p>It seemed as though I was suddenly taken
right out of my own small petty troubles, and
shown a bigger view of the world than I had
ever seen in my widest imaginings before.
Things that had been perplexing, bewildering
before, seemed to fit in quite naturally into a
huge plan that was making for the ultimate
good of humanity. But more than all this, there
suddenly came that enheartening sense of being
no longer a unit, no longer one of a small company
fighting against overwhelming odds; I was
now one of a huge army that had been marching
on through all time, an army that will still be
adding and adding to its numbers, so long as the
world shall last.</p>
<p>I seemed to hear the trampling of the feet, the
great surge of the voices as they sang the old yet
ever new anthem—</p>
<p>“Salvation unto our God which sitteth on
the throne, and unto the Lamb. Blessing, and
glory, and wisdom, and thanksgiving, and honour,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</SPAN></span>
and power, and might, be unto our God for ever
and ever.”</p>
<p>Here was no room for doubt; no question as
to ultimate results; no misgivings; no apprehensions.
The final victory did not rest with
me; but I was privileged to take part in it if I
was willing to endure any hardships or tribulation
that might happen by the way. And even these
seemed so slight, not to be mentioned beside the
joy of the great triumph that was surely ahead.</p>
<p>The Vision comes to us all differently, at
different times, in a different manner; but
assuredly I had a glimpse then of the things that
are outside our everyday ken. I knew for an
absolute certainty that I was one of the greatest
army that can ever be mustered; I knew for an
absolute certainty that God is leading this army,
and that with Him there is no possibility of
failure, and that finally He will permit evil to be
banished and Good will prevail. I realised that
any afflictions we are called upon to bear here are
but for a moment. Nothing can hinder the
progress of the great multitude that no man can
number—Christ’s followers through all the ages.
In spite of all the tribulation—<i>because</i> of the
tribulation—they reach His throne at last, and
worship Him, while He wipes away the tears
that may have gathered by the way.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>My thoughts had journeyed far away from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</SPAN></span>
the little chapel and its earnest worshippers. I
was recalled by the preacher’s voice reciting his
closing sentence—</p>
<p>“And I saw, and I heard a voice of many
angels round the throne . . . and the number
of them was ten thousand times ten thousand,
and thousands of thousands; saying, with a
great voice, Worthy is the Lamb that hath
been slain to receive power, and riches, and
wisdom, and might, and honour, and glory, and
blessing.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>We stood up to sing the concluding hymn—one
that has for long been a great favourite of
mine—</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Coming, coming, yes, they are,</div>
<div class="verse">Coming, coming, from afar;</div>
<div class="verse">From the wild and scorching desert,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Afric’s sons of colour deep;</span></div>
<div class="verse">Jesu’s love has drawn and won them,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">At the cross they bow and weep.</span></div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Coming, coming, yes, they are,</div>
<div class="verse">Coming, coming, from afar;</div>
<div class="verse">From the Indies and the Ganges</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Steady flows the living stream</span></div>
<div class="verse">To love’s ocean, to His bosom,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Calvary their wond’ring theme.</span></div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Coming, coming, yes, they are,</div>
<div class="verse">Coming, coming, from afar;</div>
<div class="verse">From the Steppes of Russia dreary,</div>
<div class="verse"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</SPAN></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">From Slavonia’s scatter’d lands,</span></div>
<div class="verse">They are yielding soul and spirit</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Into Jesu’s loving hands.</span></div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Coming, coming, yes, they are,</div>
<div class="verse">Coming, coming, from afar;</div>
<div class="verse">From the frozen realms of midnight,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Over many a weary mile,</span></div>
<div class="verse">To exchange their soul’s long winter</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">For the summer of His smile.</span></div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Coming, coming, yes, they are,</div>
<div class="verse">Coming, coming, from afar:</div>
<div class="verse">All to meet in plains of glory,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">All to sing His praises sweet:</span></div>
<div class="verse">What a chorus, what a meeting,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">With the family complete!</span></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>And how that hymn was sung! It all seemed
part of the music of the Great Army. No longer
we thought primarily of the troops rallying to
the call of the Mother Country and coming from
the far ends of the world to fight in earthly
warfare; our souls saw farther than this—a
multitude out of every nation of all tribes and
peoples and tongues, ten thousand times ten
thousand, and thousands of thousands, all marching
under the banner of the Lord Jehovah.</p>
<p>I had received the answer to the questions I
had been asking earlier in the day: “What had
Christianity accomplished?” It had accomplished
<i>this:</i> It had enlisted this mighty stream
of humanity. We in that humble little chapel
were merely a small handful, but we belonged to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</SPAN></span>
that Great Army; we had only to march on,
trusting and worshipping God.</p>
<p>Was it possible that I had been picturing
myself one of a small force struggling for Right
that was in danger of being overmastered by
Might! Now, I saw ten thousand times ten
thousand, and thousands of thousands, on ahead
of me, and could even hear the tramp and the
singing of the tens of thousands that would
follow on after me.</p>
<p>Oh, it was wonderful to feel oneself in such a
mighty company!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>At the close, while I was exchanging greetings
with the preacher, my friend who had
brought me to the chapel busied herself in
finding someone who would be driving home in
my direction—the meeting had been attended
by people from many miles round. She discovered
that a farmer and his wife were driving
within a quarter of a mile of my cottage, and I
was placed in their trap, carefully wrapped up in
a warm Paisley shawl that had been produced
from somewhere, the night being described as
“a bit freshish, after all the dryth we’ve had.”</p>
<p>We didn’t talk much on the homeward
journey. My companions were thinking some
deep thoughts, I was certain, from the few
remarks they let drop. But we English do not
easily betray our hearts in public. Hence the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</SPAN></span>
farthest the farmer’s wife got was the remark,
“I’d dearly like to hear he again.” To which
her husband replied, “Ay! for sure.”</p>
<p>They told me the meetings had been much
blessed, but this one was the best of all. Oh,
yes, quite different from the others. No, the
usual congregation was not as large as this, only
about forty; the village was small. But people
had come from all over the hills this week;
to-day twenty had walked in from Brownbrook—that
was seven miles each way.</p>
<p>They went on without any connecting link
to say they felt sure the English would win.
There was no doubt in their minds about this,
one could see; and then the reason was clear.
“Our Tom’s there,” the woman explained to me,
as though I of course knew “Our Tom,” and his
presence at the front settled the matter.</p>
<p>And I thought of the many fathers and
mothers who were looking away across the
Straits, with just that pride and faith because
“Our Tom” is helping his country.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>At last we came to the little lane that turned
off from the turnpike-road, and led to my cottage,
and I said good-bye to my companions. The
small white dog with the brown ears had heard
my footsteps and had run out joyfully to meet
me; he had begun to be seriously concerned as
to whether he would ever get a proper meal<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</SPAN></span>
again! The night was certainly a bit freshish,
but a glorious moon was out, and the hills were all
high lights and deep shadows. I stopped a
moment at my own gate, to look down at the
old grey Abbey lying in the valley seven
hundred feet below. Everything was still and
peaceful. Only an owl called to another one in
the steep woods across the river, and a couple of
baby owls answered. An apple fell with a dull
thud whenever the wind drifted across the
orchard. It was so quiet, so restful; it was
difficult to think there was lurid war-fog away
beyond those hills.</p>
<p>Then suddenly, as I watched, I saw in the
distance a procession of swinging, twinkling
lights moving along a footpath that cut through
a wood and crossed a low spur of the hills.</p>
<p>For the moment I wondered what it was,
but in an instant I knew; it was the party from
Brownbrook on their homeward tramp, and
their lanterns were lighting them down the
rugged precipitous footpath that was lying in
deep shadow.</p>
<p>When they reached the level road they
started singing, their voices in beautiful harmony,
rising up and echoing again and again against
the steep hillsides.</p>
<p>Was I thinking of battlefields with a
saddened heart again? No, the cloud had lifted
from my soul; I could look for something<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</SPAN></span>
better, something more world-wide in its effects
than even this terrible war. And as I stood
thinking all this, the words came up to me that
they were singing, as they tramped along the
silent moonlit road, at the foot of the forest-clad
hills:</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="verse">“Coming, coming, yes, they are,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Coming, coming, from afar;</span></div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">All to meet in plains of glory,</span></div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">All to sing His praises sweet:</span></div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">What a chorus, what a meeting,</span></div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">With the family complete!”</span></div>
</div></div>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>X<br/> <small>The Little People of the Streams</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">Have</span> you ever heard the Little People of the
Streams singing in the night? I wonder!</p>
<p>Once you have heard their music you will
never forget it!</p>
<p>The first time I heard it was one February—shortly
after I had taken the cottage—the
season above all others when the brooks and
falls and mountain springs are over-full of water,
that hurries along at a great pace, tumbling over
rocks, dropping down into green wells and
grottos below, always galloping down hill till
finally it reaches the ever-rushing river in the
valley.</p>
<p>By day, each brook seems merely to be chatting
sociably to the banks and the long harts-tongue
ferns as it passes down, and you only hear one at
a time. But after dark, when most other sounds
have ceased, the voices of the streams seem to
grow marvellously in volume.</p>
<p>I was lying awake one night with the windows
open, listening literally to the sound of many
waters, and trying to disentangle them.</p>
<p>First I heard the spring outside my garden
gate as it scrambled down from the hillside above,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</SPAN></span>
splashing the overhanging greenery with light
spray, and finally pouring out of a little trough—dark
brown wood, closely enamelled with green
mosses—into a rocky pool, where it ceases its
swirl for half a minute, just while it gets its
breath, before rushing on down the hill, finding
its own way around, or over, all sorts of obstacles,
and resenting any interference of man.</p>
<p>Soon I could distinguish a second brook, that
serves a cottage a quarter of a mile further along
the lane, before it winds about and enters my
lower orchard. This had overflowed in the
orchard, and was having quite a gay time, running
skittishly out of the orchard gate and into
another lane, instead of pursuing its proper
course.</p>
<p>Next I was able to detach the conversation
of the small waterfall that drops about a hundred
feet from an overhanging ledge of rock into a
green cave under the hill, where mosses of
wonderful size abound, and yellow flags stand
guard at the entrance, with creeping jenny and
forget-me-nots just outside.</p>
<p>The sound always seems to increase as you
listen, and soon I detected the noise of the river as
it tears over successive weirs. If the tide is low
it is often a roar when you stand on the river
bank beside a weir; but up here on the heights
the noise is softened to a purling sound, that runs
like a never-ceasing ground-bass or pedal note<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</SPAN></span>
amid the fluctuating tones of the nearer
streams.</p>
<p>Other and more distant murmurings floated
in at the window; but one could never allocate
them all, for, excepting in the hottest weather,
this is in truth “a good land, a land of brooks of
water, of fountains and depths that spring out of
valleys and hills.”</p>
<p>I was thinking of this, when suddenly the
babbling of the water was drowned in the sound
of wonderful bells that rose upon the night air.
It was not from our village church; that
possesses only one bell, whose sound, unfortunately,
resembles nothing so much as a cracked
iron shovel struck with a pair of tongs: and
there is no other bell for miles around.</p>
<p>And yet there was no mistaking it. I could
distinctly hear the joyous clashing and clanging
of bells in a tall steeple.</p>
<p>It was no brazen banging; rather, some fairy
music, like the carillon at Malines (which I am
proud to remember I once played, though, alas!
I shall never play it again).</p>
<p>I listened in amazement; soon was added
the sound of voices, like subdued distant singing
in some vast cathedral, while the bells still clashed
outside. Yet it was never close at hand; it
always seemed to float to me from a distance.</p>
<p>I was sure I was not asleep, for I knew where
I was, and decided to get up and go to the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</SPAN></span>
window, when—the dog barked—(probably he
could hear a fox prowling around outside).
Instantly the spell was broken. I opened my
eyes; there was no sound but the murmuring
and burbling of the brooks.</p>
<p>Like a sensible person, I of course decided
that I had been dreaming.</p>
<p>Yet again and again have I heard the clanging
bells, with often the sound of an organ and
singing wafted through the open window. It
always comes when the streams are most impetuous
and when I am in that lotus-flowering
land that lies between awakeness and sleep.</p>
<p>The music is always enthrallingly happy, and
my only regret is that the bells and the singers
do not come a trifle nearer, so that I could
catch every note and jot it all down for future
reference.</p>
<p>I related my experiences to one or two
people; but this was all the information they
seemed able to give me:</p>
<p>“If I were you, I should run down to Margate
for a week or so, and leave all work behind.
Go to a nice bright boarding-house, where there
are lots of people, and enjoy yourself; and forget
about that wretched cottage. You’ve been overdoing
it lately. I had another friend just like
you—got a little peculiar, you know, and then—well,
I won’t tell you any more; don’t want
to make you nervous, of course, but—her mother<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</SPAN></span>
never got over it, and <i>so</i> well-connected, too—kept
three motors. You take my advice. I’ll
send you the name of a charming boarding-house
I know,” etc.</p>
<p>Then I kept my own counsel, and decided
that there were Little People living in the
streams, just as I had always liked to picture
them living in the flowers and under the mushrooms.
And the music I heard was the Little
People singing, and ringing all the harebells and
foxglove bells that grow along the banks of the
brooks.</p>
<p>I concluded that no one had ever heard them
but myself. But, to my surprise, one day I
found that others did know about these Little
People!</p>
<p>I was reading “The Forest,” by Stewart E.
White, where he describes his impressions and
experiences as he lay awake at night in a tent
on the banks of a Canadian river, when I came
upon the following, that in many points coincides
with my own sensations:—</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>“In such circumstances you will hear what the boatmen
call the voices of the rapids. Many people never hear them
at all. They speak very soft and low, and distinct, beneath
the steady roar and dashing, beneath even the lesser tinklings
and gurglings whose quality superimposes them over the
louder sounds. In the stillness of your hazy half-consciousness
they speak; when you bend your attention to
listen, they are gone, and only the tumults and the tinklings
remain.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“But in the moments of their audibility they are very
distinct. Just as often an odour will awake all a vanished
memory, so these voices, by the force of a large impressionism,
suggest whole scenes. Far off are the cling-clang-cling of
chimes and the swell-and-fall murmur of a multitude <i>en fête</i>,
so that subtly you feel the gray old town, with its walls, the
crowded market-place, the decent peasant crowd, the booths,
the mellow church building with its bells, the warm, dust-moted
sun. Or, in the pauses between the swish-dash-dashings
of the waters, sound faint and clear voices singing
intermittently, calls, distant notes of laughter, as though
many canoes were working against the current; only the
flotilla never gets any nearer, nor the voices louder. The
boatmen call these mist people the Huntsmen, and look
frightened. . . . Curiously enough, by all reports, they suggest
always peacefulness—a harvest field, a street fair, a Sunday
morning in a cathedral town, careless travellers—never the
turmoils and struggles. Perhaps this is the great Mother’s
compensation in a harsh mode of life.</p>
<p>“Nothing is more fantastically unreal to tell about,
nothing more concretely real to experience, than this undernote
of the quick water. And when you do lie awake at
night, it is always making its unobtrusive appeal. Gradually
its hypnotic spell works. The distant chimes ring louder
and nearer as you cross the borderland of sleep. And then
outside the tent some little woods noise snaps the thread.
An owl hoots, a whippoorwill cries, a twig cracks beneath
the cautious prowl of some night creature—at once the
yellow sunlit French windows puff away—you are staring at
the blurred image of the moon spraying through the texture
of your tent.”</p>
</div>
<p>Since reading this, I have spoken of the
matter to others with more courage; and
although the majority do not seem to have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</SPAN></span>
come across them, I have discovered several
people who have heard the Little People singing.</p>
<p>Some, indeed, have been kind enough to
attempt to give me a lucid explanation of what
they are pleased to call a very simple natural
phenomenon, and they prattle of enharmonics and
sound vibrations, of nodes and super-tones, in a
very impressive manner. One tells me the whole
thing is merely a psychological emotion vibrating
in sympathy with the acoustical environment.</p>
<p>I dare say.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Personally, I would just as soon leave it
unelucidated. There are certain moods in which
I do not want such things as nature, and love,
and beauty, and self-sacrifice explained. It is
enough for me that they are, and that I have
been permitted to enjoy them.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>And although I know that the Little People
are not necessarily wearing gauze wings and
white frocks and stars in their hair, as I pictured
them in my first childhood, I still like to think
that even in the brooks something is singing,
something rejoicing, something giving thanks for
the gift of life.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>XI<br/> <small>The Funeral of the Hero</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">It</span> was three months after the funeral of the
Village Hero. Now I come to think of it, I
haven’t mentioned the funeral before.</p>
<p>The hero, a porter at the little railway station,
enlisted very early in the campaign. Our village—in
the main—did nobly in the way of early
enlistment.</p>
<p>A quiet, retiring young fellow, he had never
singled himself out for any sort of notoriety,
though I, personally, had always remarked on
his unvarying courtesy and his willingness to do
everything he could to assist passengers.</p>
<p>The news of his death was the first thing to
bring the War actually home to our isolated
corner of the world.</p>
<p>People had known he was ill, because his
wife had been summoned to a military hospital
some weeks before, when his condition was
pronounced critical. But no one had really
anticipated the worst—till it came. And then
the word passed quickly from cottage to cottage:
“Poor Aleck’s gone!”</p>
<p>“Ay! You don’t say so! Ain’t it just like
they Huns to go and kill off the best of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</SPAN></span>
bunch,” said one woman who never had a good
word for the lad during his lifetime.</p>
<p>One and all agreed forthwith that proper
respect must be shown to “the remains”; and
those who didn’t intend to inconvenience themselves
by fighting, felt they were serving their
country nobly by seeing that poor Aleck had a
handsome funeral.</p>
<p>The news of his death reached the village on
Friday. On Saturday the older members of the
family selected the spot for his grave in the little
churchyard, as, of course, he must be buried near
his home.</p>
<p>By Sunday all the relatives to the remotest
generation wore deep mourning to church—thanks
to the superhuman efforts of the village
dressmaker, and numerous ready-mades purchased
in the nearest town.</p>
<p>The Rector was in a nursing-home in London
at the time, but the curate, though only newly
arrived, preached a moving sermon, extolling
the courage of the young man who had died
“with his face to the foe, braving the falling
shells and raining bullets in order to defend his
country.”</p>
<p>The sentiment was right—Aleck was willing
to do all that; but in reality he never got beyond
a training camp on the east coast, where, the air
proving too bleak for him after the mildness of
the west, he had gone down with pneumonia.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</SPAN></span>
The new curate didn’t know that, however,
and everybody said it was a beautiful sermon,
and went and told the poor mother about it,
as she had been too grief-stricken to go to
church.</p>
<p>So far the widow had not written herself;
but that wasn’t surprising; she would be too
broken down with trouble. Willing heads and
hands did all they could, however, to anticipate
her wishes.</p>
<p>They telegraphed to the former curate (now
the vicar of a crowded Lancashire parish) and
asked if he would conduct the funeral; he had
known the deceased from boyhood. He wired
back: “Yes; send day and hour.”</p>
<p>They sent to uncles and aunts and cousins
throughout Great Britain: all who could arrived
post haste on Monday. And what a gathering it
was of outstanding members of the clan! Those
who hadn’t recognised each other’s existence for
years now forgot their ancient feuds, while one
and all discovered such good qualities in the poor
lad, and were so anxious to insist on the nearness
of their relationship, that his death did not seem
altogether in vain.</p>
<p>I myself wrote a note to the widow, only
waiting to post it till I could get her address.</p>
<p>Miss Bretherton, the Rector’s niece, hurried
home from London to do what she could to
comfort the parents, who were aloof from the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</SPAN></span>
general excitement and knew only the sorrow of
the occasion.</p>
<p>While waiting for further details to arrive,
people made wreaths, and discussed how best the
engine could be draped in black.</p>
<p>As there was no letter by Tuesday morning,
and the vicar in Lancashire had again asked for
particulars, the self-constituted committee of
management decided to send a wire to the
widow. After composing—and then discarding—twenty-six
different messages, till the post-office
was threatened with a famine in telegram forms,
the post-mistress came to their assistance, and
suggested that the wording should be as brief
and as straightforward as possible, to save misunderstanding—and
expense. Eventually they
were all persuaded to agree to the following:</p>
<p>“What train will the coffin come by?
Reply paid.”</p>
<p>In about an hour the widow answered:</p>
<p>“Whose coffin? Don’t know what you
mean. Aleck nearly well.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>The whole village has had three points under
discussion ever since.</p>
<p>I. Who was it said he <i>was</i> dead?</p>
<p>II. Can a man be made to pay for his own
grave being dug when he refuses to occupy it?</p>
<p>III. And what is to become of the mourning
anyhow?</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>XII<br/> <small>Just a Little Piece of Griskin</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">I was</span> reminded of the funeral when I arrived at
the valley station one spring morning, by the
fact that it was “the remains” who opened the
carriage door for me and helped us out with
our things.</p>
<p>He was home for a few days’ leave, looking
very smart and upright in his uniform; and he
saluted (even though he permitted himself to
smile) when I gave him a half-crown, telling
him to buy himself a wreath.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>The white-painted garden gate had been
placed wide open by way of welcome. We had
left behind us, in town, weather that called itself
the end of March, but in reality ought to have
been January; we arrived at the little cottage
to find that the calendar had taken a leap
forward, for here it was like the end of April.
On the grey stone walls beside the gate clumps
of wallflowers were in bloom—masses of pale
primrose flowers mixed with those of a rich rose-purple
variety; only these two sorts had been
planted in the chinks of this particular wall. I
am sure the dear things nodded at us as we
entered.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>All over the garden were more wallflowers
bursting by the thousand into bloom. Some
beds were a mixture of clear bright yellow
flowers, combined with the sort that are a deep
mahogany, looking as though they were made
of velvet; other beds had a pretty rose-pink
variety; while on the top of more walls, and in
corners and patches about the garden, were the
old-fashioned “streaky” kinds, all aglow with
brown and yellow.</p>
<p>The long bed in front of the porch, given
over to cowslips, oxlips, polyanthus, auriculas,
and suchlike homely flowers, was very gay.
The polyanthus were a delightful medley of
claret colour, pink, brown, crimson, orange,
yellow, most of them looking as though the
edges of the petals had been buttonholed around
with silk of a contrasting colour. It seemed as
though the flowers in this bed fairly tip-toed as
we came along the path, and stretched their
necks as high as ever they could, from out of
their crinkled leaves, to show how remarkably
fine they were.</p>
<p>In the narrow beds under the cottage
windows double daffodils made plenty of colour,
and at the edge were clumps of primroses—various
shades of pink and crimson. These had
seeded over into the path, with the result that
baby primrose-plants were coming up cheerily
between the rough flagstones. The ordinary<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</SPAN></span>
yellow primrose was starring the grass all about
the orchard, where wild daffodils were swaying
by the hundred. The white flowers of the blackthorn
were like snowdrifts on the hedges.</p>
<p>It was so wonderful, after the bleak, cheerless
aspect of town, to come upon this world of
smiling growing things. The soft air, sweeping
over the hills, brought the scent of ploughed
fields and newly-turned earth, of bursting buds
and opening blossoms, with the ozone of the sea,
and the salt of the weed that lies on the rocks
around the lighthouse in the far-away distance.</p>
<p>There seemed to be an all-pervading peace
that laid hold of one’s very soul; and yet you
could not say it was really quiet, for birds were
giving rival concerts in every tree, and quite a
number were devoting their energies to saying
insulting things to the newcomers and the small
dog who had taken the liberty of encroaching on
their ancient heritage. They are not sufficiently
grateful for the fact that I leave my woods uncut,
and undisturbed, as bird sanctuaries.</p>
<p>Lambs were bleating in the valley meadows;
the spring gurgled cheerfully outside the gate as
it tumbled out of the spout into the pool below.</p>
<p>We stood in the garden for a moment to
take a good breath, and drink in as much of the
beauty as we could, when Virginia just touched
my arm and looked towards a long belt of trees—mostly
oak and fir—that runs down one side<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</SPAN></span>
of the garden and orchards, linking the larch
woods up above us with the birch and hazel
coppice down below—the coppice where the
nightingales sing, and the tiny wrens and the
tomtits build, and where the little dormouse
lives, who comes out from among the undergrowth,
with no apparent fear, when I stand in
the wood-path and softly whistle.</p>
<p>This barricade of trees was originally left
standing when the rest of the ground was cleared,
to screen the house from the winter gales. But
we have named it the Squirrels’ Highway.</p>
<p>Sure enough, as we stood there silent and
motionless, down came one little bushy tail from
the upper woods, followed by another, probably
his wife. They leapt from branch to branch, and
from tree to tree, nibbling a young oak shoot
here, sniffing delicately at a few leaves somewhere
else.</p>
<p>Little bright eyes looked down and saw the
strangers; but they had seen them before, and
no harm ever resulted—only lovely feasts of nuts
laid out on the tops of walls—so they just ran
on down their own highway, seeming as light as
feathers, and leaping and springing with indescribable
grace.</p>
<p>At last they got to the high wall that divides
the lower orchard from the birch and hazel
coppice, and they played along that wall, bright
spots of reddy-brown against the dark green of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</SPAN></span>
the ivy and the purple tone of the swelling birch
buds. All seemed gaiety and happiness, till a
third little bushy tail popped up over the wall
from the coppice—and then there were fireworks
indeed! I expect they were relations who
were not on cordial terms! We left them having
a whole-hearted hand-to-hand fight—which, I
must say, seems a much more satisfactory way
of settling a difference than either Zepp or
submarine methods.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Indoors the table had been laid for tea, preparatory
to our arrival, by Mrs. Widow, who, as
already mentioned, is the custodian of the house
in my absence. She gives an old-world curtsy
that is very disarming, and says, “I’m main glad
to see you back again, miss, and I hope you’ll
find everything to your liking.”</p>
<p>That, however, is as it may be.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, there is something about the
way that table is always laid that rejoices my
heart, even though I might not wish to have my
meals set in that pattern every day. The large
white cloth may not present the glass-like surface
of the town-laundered tablecloth, but at least it
is white, and—like the cottage sheets and towels
and pillow-cases—it holds the scents of the hillside
garden where it was hung out to dry; and
though the creases are somewhat ridgy and
insistent, and the cloth has been ironed a trifle<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</SPAN></span>
askew, I know several people who would rather
have tea off this tablecloth than the most
elaborate dinner and the finest napery that
London hotels can produce.</p>
<p>Knives and forks are placed with great precision
around the table at intervals, a cup and
saucer and plate beside each, the crockery never
by any chance matching! In the mathematical
centre a loaf of farmhouse bread stands on a
kitchen plate, flanked on one side—to the East,
as it were—by a large white jug holding a quart
of milk, and to the West, by the sugar basin.
The big brown teapot stands at the South Pole;
and a pudding-basin of new-laid eggs, laid by the
widow’s own fowls, are waiting, at the North
Pole, to be cooked. A small plate bearing a
dinner knife and half a pound of butter (which is
never put into the proper butter dish) is placed
at the South-West; this is balanced at the
South-East by a pot of home-made jam and a
tablespoon. Watercress and lettuce may grace
the table, though this will be according to the
season; but summer or winter, one feature is
never omitted, and that is a large kitchen jug full
of flowers, gathered by Mrs. Widow from her
own garden.</p>
<p>On the day I am writing about, the jug had
a brave handful of daffodils, a few sprays of red
ribis, dark-brown wallflowers, some small ivy,
with some short-stemmed polyanthus suffocating<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</SPAN></span>
in the centre of the big bunch. And it is
wonderful how much you can get crammed into
one jug when you try!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Abigail, having none of my weak-minded
leanings towards “the primitive,” scornfully
whisked the whole lot off the table, as soon as
Mrs. Widow had gone back to her own cottage,
and re-laid it on modern lines.</p>
<p>We did not hurry over the meal. Virginia
got on a lengthy dissertation as to the crying
need for fish forks with magnetised prongs that
would just draw the bones out of the fish, without
any preliminary search and scrutiny. I suggested
a radium tip to the prongs—I could think of
nothing that seemed more suitable—but she said
<i>that</i> might demolish fish and all, in which case
one would get no more personal satisfaction
out of the creature than one does when having
to eat it with its full complement of bones
intact.</p>
<p>I then ventured a suggestion that forks made
like an ordinary magnet would do, if the fish
were given steel drops in regular doses for a few
weeks before being caught, so as to get its bones
susceptible to the magnet. But Virginia was
very lofty, as she always is, about my scientific
explanations. I never heard her solution of the
problem, because the telegram boy arrived at the
moment, with a wire for Abigail, saying that her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</SPAN></span>
mother had broken her arm (a genuine case
this time!).</p>
<p>So she left by the next train, bewailing the
fact that her mother could not get compensation
from anyone, as she had given up a post of
housekeeper but three months before; if she
had only been in the situation still she could have
claimed £300 a year for life, Abigail thought—provided
the arm could only be induced to
remain broken.</p>
<p>Some people, especially her relatives, were
always unfortunate, she said, while others were
just the reverse. There was a cousin of a friend
of hers; he had been out of work for a year or
so before he got a job, and then the very first
day he met with an accident at the works and
had to have his leg amputated; and there he is
now, a gentleman for life, comfortably settled on
his compensation. Her people never had luck
like that. It did seem hard!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>“Are you awake?” Virginia’s voice lilted up
the stairs next morning.</p>
<p>Awake! why, sleep had been impossible in
that cottage for hours past!</p>
<p>For sheer undiluted racket, commend me to
two earnest-souled girls, who get up early, and
go about with a stealthy tread that creaks every
old board in the place, and commune with each
other in stage whispers that penetrate through<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</SPAN></span>
every crack in the floor, all on the pretext of
making the fire!</p>
<p>We had decided that we could manage very
well ourselves, without sending for anyone to
take Abigail’s place; and in order to forestall
me, the others had got up about cockcrow, and
then began such a whirligig below, that I just
lay still and endeavoured to allocate every fresh
noise.</p>
<p>They raked and shovelled at the grate, and
appeared to be scattering cinders all over the
place. They broke up applewood twigs with
resounding snaps, and argued as to the amount
required to set the fire going. Ursula said you
ought to put in handfuls till you got a good
crackling blaze; Virginia said that was a
childish, brainless way of doing it, to say
nothing of the chance of waste; by rights the
quantity of twigs employed ought to be strictly
in inverse ratio to the quantity of inflammable
gas contained in the coal. I dare say I should
have heard a good deal more as to the way to
assess the ignitable quality of coal, but fortunately
the fire burnt up quickly, and they gave
their attention to other domestic details.</p>
<p>They dashed about the brass fender; they
whacked the blacklead brush against the oven-door
at every turn; they set down the zinc pail
with a ringing thud, and then scoured the hearth
with zeal enough to take off half an inch of stone<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</SPAN></span>
surface; they polished the brass fire-irons with
some concoction of bath-brick and salt which
they invented on the spot, as they couldn’t find
any metal polish; they banged the hearthrug
out of doors till the surrounding hills reverberated
with the echoes; they rinked the carpet-sweeper
up and down till it made me dizzy to
listen; and as this was not thorough enough
for Ursula, she also got a short stiff brush and
apparently pommelled out any dust that might
be under the settle and in other obscure
corners; they dusted with equal energy, and
then went off into the kitchen to consult about
the breakfast menu, while the kettle chose the
opportunity to boil all over the fire, thereby
raising clouds of white ash that settled on
everything, and they said, “Oh, dear! Just
<i>look</i> at it.”</p>
<p>Finally, I heard the white cloth being flapped
over the table; cups and saucers and plates were
chinked and rattled off the dresser; knives and
forks and spoons jingled on to the table, and I
knew that breakfast was well under way. It
was just then that Virginia put her head through
the staircase-door to ask—in moderated tones
calculated not to disturb me should I still be
slumbering!—was I awake?</p>
<p>Hastily hopping out on to the rug, I replied
that I was “nearly dressed, and would be down
in a minute.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“No hurry,” she replied artlessly, “we’ve
only just come down ourselves, and are going to
see to breakfast. But what I want to know is:
Where do you keep your frying-pan?”</p>
<p>“Hanging on its proper nail in the kitchen,”
I replied.</p>
<p>“Well, it isn’t there. . . . No, it isn’t on the
saucepan shelf, either—we’ve hunted <i>everywhere</i>. . . .
But Abigail didn’t use it yesterday—don’t
you remember? We had boiled eggs, and
some of that cold ham we brought with us. . . .
All right, we can just as well have eggs
again. . . . That’s true, we shan’t want bacon,
with that pork coming for dinner; but be quick,
as the kettle’s boiling now. . . . Oh, it’s not a bit
of trouble.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Whether it was due to the sunshine, or to
the tonic of the air, or to the virtuous feeling
that always overtakes those who get up early in
the morning and disturb everyone else, I cannot
say; but at any rate Ursula announced that she
intended to start right in, immediately after
breakfast, and give the whole cottage a thorough
spring cleaning.</p>
<p>The domesticities of the morning seemed to
have whetted her appetite for such matters, and
she said she felt she must give the place a
“Dutch” turn-out, and have every shelf and
stool and all the pots and pans scrubbed and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</SPAN></span>
scoured and tilted out of doors to dry, as they
do in Holland.</p>
<p>Virginia said that she, too, felt a strong force—it
might be her sub-conscious self, or she might
have a dual personality, she couldn’t say which—within
her, impelling her to turn the house inside
out.</p>
<p>So I told them to go ahead; I’m the last one
to discourage anyone from doing my work for
me. I suggested, however, that for the first day
they should confine their attentions to the living-rooms
downstairs.</p>
<p>Of course, the reader of average intellect will
wonder what necessity there could be for any
such upheaval, seeing that the place would
obviously have been overhauled before we
arrived; but this brings me back to Mrs.
Widow. “A worthy body and an honest soul,”
the Rector said, when he originally recommended
her to me, all of which was quite true; but, alas,
thoroughness in regard to house-cleaning is not
her strong point.</p>
<p>When I first sought her out and broached
the subject of the caretaker I was requiring, she
listened in a non-committal way. I stated how
much a year I was willing to pay—naming an
exceptionally good sum—and explained that for
this money the house must be looked after in my
absence, and be got quite ready for me whenever
I should come down, while anything she might<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</SPAN></span>
do while I was “in residence” would be paid for
as an extra.</p>
<p>She showed no indecorous haste to secure the
appointment. She merely said she would talk
it over with her married daughter, and if she
thought any more of it she would let me know.
A few hours later she came to me, and said
casually that on second thoughts she didn’t mind
obliging me. (No one ever “works” for you in
our village, they merely “oblige.”) In the
interval, however, the whole village had gone
into committee on the subject, and everyone’s
advice had been sought, and very freely given.</p>
<p>Once more I went through the terms of the
agreement, and she said she quite understood.
Nevertheless, subsequent events led me to believe
that she regarded the annual wage in the light
of a retaining fee only, since most of the work
is always left to be done after I arrive, when
it will have to be paid for as a separate transaction
if it is more than Abigail can wrestle
with.</p>
<p>At the same time I can truly endorse the
Rector’s tribute to her honesty. If I were to
strew the floor with sovereigns or diamond
rings, I know I should find them on the mantelpiece
when next I returned, and she never
annexes anything permanently.</p>
<p>But the fact that one has a village-wide
reputation for honesty need not detract from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</SPAN></span>
one’s worldly prosperity—so long as one can
borrow with light-hearted frequency, and borrow
for indefinite periods, too! Mrs. Widow has
reduced borrowing to a fine art, but her honesty
is demonstrated by the fact that I have never
known her decline to return any of my possessions;
indeed, so scrupulous is she that she will
bring back the tin of metal polish, when it is
empty, explaining that she was quite sure I
wanted it to be used rather than wasted!</p>
<p>Abigail invariably spends the first couple of
days at the cottage in skirmishing and reclaiming
missing articles. Knowing all this, I was not
surprised when I heard the frying-pan was
minus; I also knew that time would reveal
other vacancies.</p>
<p>Had it been July or August, the preserving-pan—a
family treasure—would have been gone,
too. Mrs. Widow is always very solicitous for
its welfare about fruit-gathering time; she says
damp would easily hurt a really good preserving-pan,
so she takes it home with her to keep it dry.
Yet the poor thing will be left to face the
winter in my kitchen with never a thought
bestowed on its delicate constitution.</p>
<p>And it is just at jam-making time, too,
that my kitchen scales and weights require the
ameliorated atmosphere of Mrs. Widow’s cottage;
my own kitchen, with the midsummer sun upon
it all day, being obviously far too cold and damp<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</SPAN></span>
for such highly-strung <i>bric-à-brac</i> as one pound
and half-pound weights.</p>
<p>A town acquaintance once said to Virginia:
“I suppose Miss Klickmann goes down to her
cottage for poetic and literary inspiration?”</p>
<p>“Oh, dear, no!” was the reply. “She simply
goes down, as a mere matter of feminine curiosity,
to see what is left.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>“Where do you keep your tea-towels?”
Ursula began, as she prepared to wash up the
breakfast things.</p>
<p>“There ought to be a pile in one of the
drawers of the kitchen table,” I said. “They
are not there? Oh, well, they’ll come back
presently!”</p>
<p>While we were speaking, a small girl appeared
at the side door, holding in one hand a basket
containing a nice chunk of pork (wrapped in one
of my tea-towels), and in the other hand my
mincing-machine. This was Mrs. Widow’s
grandchild.</p>
<p>“If you please, ma’am, father’s killed the pig,
and mother thought you might like just a little
piece of griskin, and mother’s been taking care
of the mincer so’s it shan’t get rusty.”</p>
<p>An exchange of courtesies having been
effected by means of a bottle of pear-drops, the
small maid departed with her empty basket; the
mincer was restored to its proper niche in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</SPAN></span>
pantry, and we were at least one tea-towel to
the good.</p>
<p>I might mention that Mrs. Widow’s married
daughter had recently acquired considerable
local fame by making “faggots,” which were in
great demand. You know the dish?—a combination
of liver, pork, sage and onions, etc.,
baked in squares. Other people in the district
made faggots, too, but none could rival hers,
and orders came to her from many of the big
houses.</p>
<p>“No one ever manages to get them chopped
so beautifully fine as she does,” said Miss
Bretherton when recommending them to my
notice. “I advise you to try them.”</p>
<p>Still, whatever obligation there may have
been was offset, surely, by the piece of pork.
The griskin is the lean portion of some part of
the quadruped’s anatomy after the fat has been
cut off for curing. This joint—which we never
see in London—is always popular with us in the
country; so popular, that I had ordered a piece
only the day before from the butcher. It was
just the season when people were killing their
pigs, and the butcher had suggested griskin.
Still, it was easy to put the extra piece in salt,
and the flavour would only be improved thereby;
my one regret was that the butcher had sent a
very large joint, when I had particularly mentioned
that I only wanted a little piece.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I had originally intended to devote the day
to gardening, not to house-cleaning.</p>
<p>“Of course you keep a permanent gardener?”
people inquire of me. “I see; a general handy
man; it comes to the same thing; he will save
you all trouble.”</p>
<p>Those of my acquaintances who have never
had a place out of town to look after, always
conclude that country districts fairly bristle with
capable, willing men, and poor-but-honest, hard-working
women, all of them anxious to do my
work—and at a merely nominal wage too;
whereas one has the utmost trouble to get
either man or woman to do a day’s work at any
price. I pay the handy man the same wage per
day as I pay my thoroughly experienced London
gardener; and he can only manage to spare me
a small amount of his time at that price.</p>
<p>He knows very little about flowers, but he
weeds in an enlightened manner, and he understands
the elementary principles underlying
vegetable growing on a small scale. For the
most part the villagers bother very little about
their gardens, only cultivating just sufficient
ground for their immediate needs.</p>
<p>The unenlightened local method of dealing
with weeds is this. He-who-is-paid-to-garden
leaves them to grow to a fair height—especially
if no one is likely to be there for some weeks to
see them. Then, when they have absorbed a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</SPAN></span>
generous amount of nourishment from the
ground, and generally suffocated everything
small within their reach, he merely turns the
soil over, with the weeds on the underneath side,
draws a rake over the surface, and presto! you
have a nice tidy bed.</p>
<p>This method is known as “digging in.”</p>
<p>Of course, in twenty-four hours the good-natured
things start to poke cheerful noses
through the soil again. But that doesn’t matter.
Life is long, and the gardener is paid to clear
them away again.</p>
<p>There is an optional method, referred to as
“cleaning up the beds.” In that case, he leaves
the weeds to grow higher, more especially in
beds that are full of promising seedlings; in fact,
he doesn’t worry about them at all until there is
sudden and urgent reason why the garden should
present a kempt, well-cared-for appearance.</p>
<p>Then, the weeds being so healthy and luxuriant
that they would raise the face of creation a
couple of inches if he attempted to dig them in,
he simplifies matters by removing the surface of
the earth, weeds and seedlings and all; this he
wheels away in a barrow, perchance to lay it
down on some rough and rubbly bit of lane that
the road-menders have ignored.</p>
<p>When she-who-pays arrives, all expectation,
and inquires for the missing seedlings, the tiller
of the soil shakes his head lugubriously, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</SPAN></span>
refers to the recent plague of slugs (or thunderstorms,
or frost, or east winds, or whatever other
natural phenomena seem most convincing), and
says he had a hard job to save what is left in the
garden—this last in a martyr-like tone of voice,
indicating that though all his self-sacrificing
labour is passed over unrecognised, he himself
has the virtuous consciousness of having at least
done his simple duty, and what man can do more!</p>
<p>Now I come to think of it, there are many
different ways of gardening; that must be why
it is always interesting to go round the garden
with the gardener. When I say different
ways, I don’t mean such trifling divergencies
of method as landscape gardens versus intensive
culture, or tomatoes under glass versus gloxinias.
These primarily concern the pocket; the differences
that interest me are temperamental.</p>
<p>There is Miss Bretherton, for instance, a
most diligent and vigilant gardener. And yet
she never seems to me to get much genuine,
unalloyed pleasure out of her garden; she never
basks in its beauty—though for the matter of
that Miss Bretherton never basks anywhere! A
middle-aged woman who does her duty by a
scattered parish, conscientiously and thoroughly
and unremittingly, never has time for that sort
of dissipation! Miss Bretherton deals with her
garden much as she deals with the parish. At
best it is a case of striving to lead reluctant feet<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</SPAN></span>
in the paths of virtue, while by far the greater
part of her efforts is an unflagging wrestle with
original sin.</p>
<p>A walk round the rectory garden is usually
like this. Miss Bretherton always picks up a pair
of gardening scissors and a basket mechanically
as she steps out.</p>
<p>“What a wonderful glow of colour!” I
exclaim, as I bury my nose in a magnificent
Gloire de Dijon.</p>
<p>“But it is such a wretched thing for sending
up suckers,” Miss Bretherton replies. “I’m
always digging them up. Why, I declare there
is one a foot high,” giving it a drastic prod with
the scissors. “I thought I’d cut them all away
yesterday”; more prods till the sucker is finally
unearthed.</p>
<p>“And aren’t those hollyhocks tall!”</p>
<p>“Not nearly so fine as they would have been
if that red-spotty blight hadn’t attacked them.
Just look at these leaves!”</p>
<p>Snip, snip, snip! Off came a dozen or so.</p>
<p>I stop to admire the fairy flowers in the
Virginia stock, rosy carmine, lemon and mauve,
just opening in the sun.</p>
<p>“I don’t think there is anything sweeter for
a border,” I remark.</p>
<p>“The trouble with Virginia stock is that it
so soon looks untidy,” Miss Bretherton says
dispiritedly. “Do what I will, I can’t keep the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</SPAN></span>
edges tidy once that goes off bloom. I pull it
all out at last, and then that leaves a bare rough-dried
looking space with nothing in it.”</p>
<p>I praise the white lilies—such a stately row
of spotless beauty.</p>
<p>“I wish I could do something to hide that
raggedness at the bottom of the stems. They do
look so shabby. Excuse me, I see that Canterbury
bell has withered off—that’s the worst of
them. They all go at once so suddenly, and look
such a withered mass. I must cut off those dead
blooms, it may send up a second crop. But
there, if it does, they will only be small bells!”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>I’m not sure whether the handy man’s method
is temperamental, but I know it is very conversational,
if you can call it a conversation when
he insists on doing the whole of it himself. He
is an elderly bachelor; and Mrs. Widow once
explained the situation to me:</p>
<p>“You see, he ain’t never had no wife to talk
his head off for him, so he talks it off for hisself.”</p>
<p>I give him copious instructions whenever I
leave, which he promises to carry out; but no
matter what I may have asked him to do—whether
it was to nail up the yellow roses over
the front door, or to set lavender cuttings—it
all works out to the same thing in the end:
it is only the vegetables that are deemed worthy
of mention. The flowers are just tolerated<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</SPAN></span>
because—well, because I keep on putting them
in the ground, and you can’t expect practical
common-sense from a woman anyhow! But
after all, it isn’t reasonable to expect an untrained
cottager to make a garden different from
those he sees around.</p>
<p>You can understand, however, that we are
usually kept pretty busy from the moment we
arrive till the hour we go away.</p>
<p>But this particular morning gardening was
out of the question. The two girls started with
the spring-cleaning on most vigorous lines.
Virginia said the hygienic way was to place
everything that was movable out-of-doors, so
that, scientifically speaking, the sun’s rays could
penetrate every fibre and tissue, and neutralise
the harmful germs that would assuredly be
lurking by the million in every stick and shred
in a house as neglected as that one had been.</p>
<p>I objected to my cherished possessions being
referred to as sticks and shreds, and I said so,
with emphasis.</p>
<p>Ursula said if we were going to argue at that
length it would be the August Bank Holiday
before we got things back in their place again.
For her part, she regarded all that germ-business
as a harmless fairy-tale that was very suitable
and safe reading for a mild intellect like Virginia’s.
All the same, she quite agreed that everything
ought to be put outside, so as to give more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</SPAN></span>
elbow-room indoors; moreover, things that were
washed and scrubbed would, of course, dry
quicker in the sun.</p>
<p>So out they all came!</p>
<p>Then we saw how badly the boards around
the carpet needed re-staining, and we dispatched
Virginia to the village to see what she could get
in the way of oak or walnut floor-stain.</p>
<p>She returned with a large bottle of rheumatic
lotion. Miss Jarvis, who keeps the village shop,
hadn’t a bottle of stain left, but Virginia turned
over everything she had and decided on the
lotion, as it was thickish and a nice rich brown.
She bore it off, Miss Jarvis beseeching her to
remember it was for outward application only.</p>
<p>It wasn’t bad, only it flavoured the air rather
strongly for days.</p>
<p>Ursula’s labours were bearing much fruit.
To look at the scene outside the cottage, you
might have thought a distraint had been made
on the contents for rent. Chairs, tables, meat-safes,
crockery, saucepans, oak chests, pictures,
books, the warming-pan, brass candlesticks,
coal-scuttles, fenders, were all basking unblushingly,
and in the direst confusion, in the
sunshine.</p>
<p>What pained me most was to notice how the
furniture that had looked delightfully appropriate
in the subdued lights of indoors, became appallingly
shabby when subjected to the glare of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</SPAN></span>
day. I remarked that if I had confronted the
things on a London burglar’s barrow, I should
neither have recognised them nor have desired
to claim them.</p>
<p>Ursula tried to reassure me by reminding
me that the things were mostly very old, and
antique things are invariably shabby as well as
very valuable. Virginia contributed the consoling
information that she had noticed, whenever
people moved, they always left their good
furniture behind in the empty house, for they
only removed shabby-looking things.</p>
<p>I tried to feel duly proud of my possessions
once more; but all the same I suggested that
we should hurry on as fast as we could; I had a
strong conviction that if any of my county
neighbours called, they would probably be
more impressed with the disreputable appearance
of my belongings than with their priceless
antiquity.</p>
<p>Of course, people came while we were still in
chaos, as I knew they would. The first to arrive
was Miss Primkins, who apologised for calling
at such an hour, but she wanted to consult me
on a private matter, she was so very worried.
Was I busy? (with an inquiring glance at the
all-pervading marine-store). Naturally I said
I wasn’t.</p>
<p>The difficulty was to find a seat indoors to
accommodate us while we talked; it wasn’t<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</SPAN></span>
warm enough, as yet, to sit in the open. I
found two chairs in the china pantry—a fair-sized
apartment with a big window, even
though it is called a pantry—and here we
established ourselves, Miss Primkins reiterating
how kind she thought it of me to receive her
in this homely way, treating her just like one of
the family. I tried to make her understand,
however, that, as a general rule, it was not the
family custom to foregather in the crockery
cupboard!</p>
<p>She was a long while getting to the cause of
her worry. I wonder why it is that so many
women, when they start out to say anything,
wander about and deviate into innumerable side
channels and backwaters before they get to the
point?—but there, I do myself, so we won’t
follow up that line of thought.</p>
<p>Eventually, it transpired that when war was
declared, and the attendant moratorium, Miss
Primkins had hidden away what little gold she
had in the bottom of a coffee canister, with the
coffee put in again artlessly on top. Since then
she had added to her store of gold, till at last she
had £12 in all.</p>
<p>On hearing this I scented the trouble, and
began to commiserate: “You don’t mean to
say someone has stolen it! Who could it have
been?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no; it hasn’t been stolen—though<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</SPAN></span>
sometimes I almost wish—but there, I oughtn’t
to say that! No, the difficulty is that now I
don’t know how to get rid of it! I never
thought there was any harm in putting a little
by, in case anything happened, till I saw in the
papers that someone said” (lowering her voice)
“that those who hoard gold are traitors to
their country, and” (in a still more shocked
tone) “actually helping Germany! I’d never
had any such idea! Why, it’s the very last
thing I should wish to do!</p>
<p>“So I started unhoarding at once and took a
sovereign when next I went out to pay my little
grocery bill. Miss Jarvis wasn’t in the shop
herself—she wouldn’t have been so rude!—but
her assistant said, ‘Well, I never! Doesn’t it
seem odd to see a sovereign again! I can’t tell
you when I saw one last. I didn’t know there
was a solitary one left in the village! Wherever
did you get it from, Miss Primkins?’</p>
<p>“Do you know, I went hot and cold all over;
didn’t know what to do with myself, for fear she
should guess I’d been hoarding and helping the
country to be a traitor—no, I mean helping
Germany to be—well—you understand. I just
said quietly, with all the composure I could
muster, ‘I chanced to have it in my purse,’
because, after all, it wasn’t her business,
was it?”</p>
<p>I agreed that it wasn’t.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Then I thought I would change half a
sovereign—that would be smaller and look less
hoardingish—at the station, as I was going into
Chepstow to get some more wool for those socks
for Queen Mary. Would you believe it?—the
station-master said—you know his jocular
way—‘Why, Miss Primkins, what bank have
you been robbing? I haven’t had my hand
crossed with gold, I don’t know when! I’d
like to keep it myself, for luck, only the Prime
Minister would be down on me for hoarding, I
suppose.’</p>
<p>“My knees shook so I could hardly get into
the train. I decided I wouldn’t let anyone see
another bit of it; yet actually, when I was in
Mrs. Davis’s shop and getting out the money to
pay for the wool, if I didn’t take out another
half-sovereign in mistake for a sixpence!—I was
so unnerved, I suppose—and she said, ‘Just
fancy seeing a half-sovereign again! I thought
they were all called in. Wherever did you
light on that, Miss Primkins?’</p>
<p>“Now you can understand I’m at my wits’
end to know what to do with that money. I
can’t spend it without everyone knowing. If I
put it in my savings bank book, and so get it
back to the Government that way, I have to
hand it over the counter at the post office. You
know so much about business, can you suggest
anything?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I immediately offered to give the nervous,
worried lady Treasury notes in exchange.</p>
<p>“Oh, but I couldn’t let you incriminate
yourself like that,” she protested, “kind as it
is of you. There’s your reputation as well as
mine to be thought of.”</p>
<p>I explained, however, that it was easier to
dispose of an accusing golden sovereign in
London without arousing the suspicions of the
populace than it was in the country, and I said
I was sure my bank manager would oblige me
by receiving the gold for the good of the
country, knowing me to be an honest and
respectable Englishwoman.</p>
<p>“I never thought to be so thankful to see
the last of a sovereign,” she said, as she tucked
the paper notes into her handbag. “I’ve
scarcely slept all this week. Why, Germany
is the very last thing I would help!”</p>
<p>Mrs. Widow came in at the gate as Miss
Primkins went out; and, seeing the house all
turned out of windows, looked her surprise at
such goings on! She carried a frying-pan,
a long-handled broom, a double milk-boiler, an
egg-beater, and a lemon-squeezer, and explained
that they had kept beautifully dry in her kitchen,
whereas they would have been ruined if left to
get damp in an empty house. Parenthetically,
she hoped I would excuse her having used half
a dozen lemons I had left in the pantry last<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</SPAN></span>
time; she was afraid they would not keep; also
some sugar in a tin, that she dare say might have
melted away—and it seemed cruel to waste it
considering the price of sugar.</p>
<p>Of course I said she was quite welcome.</p>
<p>And, by the way, was I wanting a jar of
lemon curd? Her daughter had made some
that was really lovely, and she would not mind
obliging me by selling me a jar.</p>
<p>While she was describing the distinctive
merits of the lemon curd, and relating what
the lady of the manor had said in praise of
the jar she had purchased, a man-servant arrived
from the Manor House with a note and a basket,
which he handed to me (with a very superior air
that gave me to understand he was not in the
habit of carrying baskets, and was only doing
so now as a patriotic act in war time) across
the kitchen table that stood in the path and
blocked his further progress. While I read the
note, he fixed his eyes upon his boots, and
apparently looked neither to the right hand nor
to the left; yet I know that he catalogued
every item of those wretched domestic oddments
that were decorating the lawn and garden
path.</p>
<p>Mrs. Widow, possessed of a natural curiosity
that it is hard to circumvent, was loath to leave
without a glimpse of the contents of the basket.
But Virginia got her off by escorting her to the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</SPAN></span>
gate, and telling her that I had not been very
well in town.</p>
<p>“Ah! anybody could see that, miss,” said
Mrs. Widow feelingly, glancing in my direction.
“Don’t she just look ’aggard!” And then,
seeing a look of surprise on the face of Virginia—who
distinctly resented my being described as
haggard—she added hurriedly, “Leastways, I
mean ’andsome ’aggard, of course, miss.”</p>
<p>The lady of the manor had written to say
that a cold was keeping her indoors for a day or
two; but in the meanwhile, as they were busy
curing bacon at the home farm, she had had
them cut just a little piece of griskin, which she
was sure I should like, and was having it sent up
at once, etc.</p>
<p>The superior person left, carrying in one
hand an envelope addressed to his mistress,
which contained all the thanks I could muster,
and in the other a note to be left at the village
shop, asking Miss Jarvis to send me up a large
block of salt.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>“What shall you do with all the pork?”
Ursula inquired.</p>
<p>“I haven’t the faintest idea!” I said. “I
can’t bestow any of it on the poor because, no
matter which piece I gave away, Mrs. Widow’s
married daughter would be sure it was <i>her</i> gift I
had spurned, and would feel duly slighted.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Virginia broke in upon us breathlessly, her
arms full of pasteboard, soup tureen, hearthrug,
hassock, and fire-irons, which she had hastily
gathered up from the path. “The Rector’s
outside in the lane talking to some children.”</p>
<p>“And has <i>he</i> any basket in his hand?” asked
Ursula.</p>
<p>“No, he only appears to be carrying his
umbrella.”</p>
<p>“Thank goodness!” said Ursula fervently, as
she put the third flank of griskin in the coldest
larder.</p>
<p>By this time the next caller was coming up
the path, and though I could invite him to take
a seat in one of the armchairs that were now
inside, anything like order had not yet been
evolved from the chaos.</p>
<p>The Rector is loved by rich and poor alike,
by reason of his unselfishness, his absolute
sincerity and “other-worldliness.” He is now
well on in years, but neither distance nor weather
keeps him from visiting regularly all in his
wide-scattered parish. His calls are always
welcomed, though I admit I should have preferred
to see him any day other than the one in
question.</p>
<p>“I have come with a message from my niece,”
he began. “She told me to say that she is
sending up a small trifle—a little housewifely
notion of hers—for your kind acceptance. She<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</SPAN></span>
thought you might find it add a little variety to
the cottage menu. As a matter of fact, the
rectory pig has gone the way of most pigs! And
we said, the moment we heard you had arrived,
that we must get you to sample the home-grown
article, so she is sending you up just a little piece
of—— Ah, here it is, I expect”—as the
Rector’s handy man came in at the gate, carrying
the inevitable basket; and though the
contents were wrapped up in a spotless white
cloth, there was no need for one to be told what
he was bringing.</p>
<p>I tried to be as truly grateful as ever I could;
I told myself I must not think about the gift
itself, but must keep my mind focused on the
kind thought that had prompted the gift. Nevertheless,
the basket seemed very heavy as I carried
it into the larder, and added one more joint to
the goodly collection already assembled. And
as I went back into the living-room, I heard
Virginia warbling outdoors:</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="verse">“Not more than others I deserve,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">But Heaven has given me more.”</span></div>
</div></div>
<p>There is something singularly exasperating
about other people’s joyousness, when it is
purchased at one’s own expense!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>We were restoring the last jug to its proper
hook on the dresser, when once more we saw<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</SPAN></span>
Miss Primkins toiling up the steep garden
path.</p>
<p>She really felt terribly ashamed to be intruding
on me again; but she had just read in
the paper that the Prime Minister now said
everyone must save, and no one who was a true
patriot would spend more than was absolutely
necessary. Now what was the difference between
hoarding and saving? She did so want
to do the right thing; it was so little she could
do to help her country. Yet, for the life of her,
she couldn’t make out whether she ought to save
that £12 or spend it.</p>
<p>Would I mind explaining it to her? She
never could understand anything Prime
Ministers, or people like that, said nowadays;
so different from what it was in her young days.
When there was only Lord Salisbury and Mr.
Gladstone everything was so sensible and
straightforward. Her father used to say:
“Always believe Lord Salisbury; never believe
Mr. Gladstone”—or else it was the other way
round, she wasn’t sure which. Whereas now,
what with radicals, and coalitions, and territorials,
and boards of this, that, and the other,
her brain almost gave way trying to find out
who anybody was.</p>
<p>“And when at last I think I’ve got it
straightened out, I find there’s a lot of ‘antis,’
and it’s just the opposite thing they say you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</SPAN></span>
ought or ought not to do; or else you have to
begin at the other end and work backwards.
What a lot those Germans have to answer for!”</p>
<p>I offered my own simple political creed for
her guidance: “When the King or Lord
Kitchener says anything, then I know it’s all
right. When they hold their tongues, I know
it’s equally all right; and the rest I don’t worry
about!”</p>
<p>She said I had expressed her own views
entirely, only she never thought to put it so
concisely as that. What a wonderful thing it
was to have a brain like mine that grasped
things so clearly! She should just go on being
economical as her mother had always taught her
to be, until the King—or, possibly, Queen Mary—said
anything definite on the subject, then
people would know where they were.</p>
<p>“At least, you aren’t the only one bothered
about the question of hoarding,” I said. “I’m
also wrestling with the problem. Look here,”
and I led the way to the larder and gave details.
“I’ve been wondering whether, as I relieved
you of your hoard, you could assist me out with
mine! Will you accept a piece of griskin,
merely to get it off my premises?”</p>
<p>Miss Primkins was almost tearful in her
thanks. “It’s so strange you should have
thought to offer this,” she said in a sort of
broken hesitation, “because I’m going to Cardiff<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</SPAN></span>
by the first train to-morrow to see my sisters.
I always like to take them a little something,
you understand. They have big families, and
business is bad now; and, of course, coming
from the country—— Only eggs are so dear,
and fowls such a price; and just now—well, you
know—dividends aren’t coming in as they did,
and I’ve my three houses standing empty, and
such a big bill for repairs, and—— Only, of
course,” rallying herself, “I’m heaps better off
than those poor Belgians; but oh, I can’t tell
you how grateful I am to you for your kindness.
You see, I was keeping that £12 by me in case
I should be ill—we never know, do we?—or to
meet the rent if I should run short. Please
pardon my speaking of these things, only—you
understand,” and the poor lady blushed to think
she should have let herself refer to finances.</p>
<p>Yes, I understood. Rumour had already
reached me that Miss Primkins had only used
three hundredweight of coal through the whole
of the winter (of course, in our village everybody
knows how much everybody else buys of
everything), and she had been seen out in the
woods gathering sticks. She had cut her milk
down to a half-pint a day, and that was consumed
by Rehoboam (the cat). She seldom had
any meat, and practised all sorts of pitiful little
economies, living chiefly on the vegetables she
had grown in her garden. But she never let<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</SPAN></span>
anything interfere with a coin going into the
Sunday offertory, or her knitting for the troops;
and she gave a donation to the Red Cross Fund
as gladly as anyone.</p>
<p>It makes one’s heart ache to think how many
poor elderly ladies there are up and down the
land, who have lost what at best was but a very
modest meed of comfort, in the present financial
upheaval; and these have additional anxiety in
the fact that it would be torture to them were
their poverty paraded before the world. They
have not the physical strength to engage in
national work, though their spirits are valiant
enough for any self-sacrifice. So, since it is all
they can do for their country, they shoulder
their burdens uncomplainingly, keeping a frail
body alive on sugarless tea and sparsely-buttered
bread, while they knit long, long thoughts into
socks and comforters, if by any means they can
raise the money to purchase the wool.</p>
<p>No Fund is large enough to embrace such as
these; no charity could ever meet their case.
All the same they are part of the bulwark
strength of England, these dear, faithful women,
who in old age and feeble health hide their own
privations beneath a brave exterior, willing to
make any personal sacrifice rather than Might
should triumph over Right.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>“Miss Primkins!” I exclaimed, when I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</SPAN></span>
heard of the Cardiff visit, “I believe you’re the
good fairy who, I used to think, lived at the
entrance to the waterfall cave under the hill;
and I’m certain you’ve been sent up here for the
explicit purpose of relieving me of that meat!
If you’re going to Cardiff, it’s your clear duty to
take a griskin to each of your sisters—hearty-eating
boys, did you say? Good! That will
rid me of two! Well, you’ll find them at the
station in the morning waiting for the 9 o’clock
train—we’ll do them up to look like hothouse
grapes and pineapples.”</p>
<p>Of course she protested, but I remained
firm; as I told her, I wasn’t going to let slip
such a heaven-sent opportunity to get those
joints transported for life.</p>
<p>When Virginia and Ursula put them in the
railway carriage next morning, she asked if they
would mind, as they passed her house on their
way home, seeing if they could find Rehoboam;
he hadn’t come back for his milk, and she
couldn’t wait for him. They would find the
door-key under the fourth flower-pot on the right
hand window-sill; and if he was waiting on the
step (his usual custom about half-past nine)
would they be so kind as to give him the milk
that was in the larder? Then she need not
worry any more about him.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>They found Rehoboam as per schedule, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</SPAN></span>
gave him the milk. They couldn’t help seeing
that there was only a small piece of cold suet
pudding, a little blackberry jam, and one thin
slice of bacon in the larder.</p>
<p>When they got back we set to work on a
cooking crusade; and isn’t there a delightful
sense of freedom when you can do what you like
in your own kitchen, with no Abigail oversighting
your operations! We cooked some
griskin, and made pastry and cakes, and put
some eggs into pickle. (Do you know these?
hard-boiled eggs shelled when cold and put into
pickle vinegar; ready in a couple of days.)</p>
<p>Then when it got to within an hour of train
time, the girls went down and lit Miss Primkins’
fire, taking down a scuttle of coals for the
purpose; her outside coal-cellar being locked
fortunately gave us an excuse for not using up
hers. They also took some milk, three of my
finest potatoes, and other things.</p>
<p>By the time the train arrived, and Miss
Primkins was on a tired homeward walk, the
kettle was singing on the hob; three floury
potatoes—strained, but keeping hot in the saucepan—stood
beside the kettle; the supper table
was laid with cold griskin, a jam tart, and a
small spice cake, while in the larder stood two
sausage-rolls, a seed cake, and a jar containing
three eggs in course of pickling.</p>
<p>Of course the girls couldn’t resist ticketing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</SPAN></span>
the things “Virginia made this, so be cautious!
(Signed) Ursula,” and similar nonsense, hoping
thereby to divert Miss Primkins from the bald
truth, viz., that we were trying to smuggle
something into a bare cupboard!</p>
<p>Then, after rounding up Rehoboam, and
placing him on the hearthrug to give an air of
social welcome, they locked the door, putting
the key under the fourth flower-pot, and skipped
up the hill again by the woodland path, as Miss
Primkins turned into her little garden gate.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>XIII<br/> <small>When the Surgeon Crossed the Hills</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">Of</span> course, it seemed ridiculous for a sane and
moderately well brought-up individual to dress
herself to go out—and in a new hat, too—and,
then, simply because her dog happened to tumble
out of the window, to collapse on the hearthrug
like an anæmic concertina, while she draped her
head gracefully over the fender, with the plumes
of the said new hat resting resignedly on the
fire-irons.</p>
<p>It didn’t seem quite reasonable to want to
go to sleep like that. Still, as I showed signs
of doing it once more, after they had propped
me upright again, they decided to put me to
bed.</p>
<p>When I woke up, they told me I was ill.
That seemed ridiculous, too, and I said so; and
added that now I had had a little rest I intended
to get up and go to town—important appointment;
couldn’t possibly be spared, etc.</p>
<p>And they all said lots of things—you know
the kind of arguments your friends always bring
to bear on you if you chance to be just a little
out of sorts. I tried to make them understand
that I was indispensable to the well-being of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</SPAN></span>
London; that, though <i>they</i> might be in the
habit of shirking work under the slightest
pretext of a headache, <i>I</i> wasn’t that sort of a
person. I owed it to my conscience, as well as
to the world at large, to be at work in my office
within half an hour, penning words of wisdom
that should keep the universe on its proper
balance.</p>
<p>Ursula merely asked if I liked the milk with
the beaten egg <i>quite</i> cold or a trifle warm?</p>
<p>In the end I had to give in. They insisted
I was ill; and I admit I was feeling unusually
tired.</p>
<p>But as the weeks went by I did not get as
strong as I had hoped to do. I seldom got
farther than an easy-chair, and not always as far
as that. So at last I determined to try the cure
that hitherto had never failed me. Trunks were
packed, and they got me down by easy stages to
the cottage among the hills. I felt that if only
I could see the flowers and breathe the air that
blows way over from where the lighthouse blinks
in the channel, I should certainly pick up both
my strength and my courage.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>When I reached the cottage the autumn sun
was setting on hills that were a gorgeous blaze
of brilliant crimson, yellow, bright rust, gold,
pale lemon, chestnut brown, with the dark green
of yew-trees at intervals. I have never seen<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</SPAN></span>
colours like our autumn hillsides anywhere in the
world, though, of course, they can be matched
in places where the woods are made up of a wide
variety of different trees. After the murk of
London in October the glory of it all fairly
dazzled me.</p>
<p>The garden was lovely too, but in a wistful
sort of way. Snapdragons and zinnias and
eschscholtzias were blooming lustily; there were
still blossoms on the monthly rose bushes;
nasturtiums flaunted in odd corners, and made
splashes of brightness; the purple clematis over
the porch was in full flower; fuchsias, geraniums,
belated larkspurs, hollyhocks, and sweet alyssum
talked of summer not yet over; while peeping
out from crevices among the stones and nestling
at the roots of trees were primroses already in
flower; violets were blooming in the big bed by
the kitchen door, and the yellow jasmine was
smothered in bloom—such a curious mixture of
summer and spring overlapping, with no hint of
autumn and winter in between.</p>
<p>The fruit had not all been gathered in, and
the trees in the orchard were bowed down with
masses of crimson and pale green and golden
yellow and russet brown, with spots of colour
dotted about among the lush grass. It seemed
impossible that one could remain ill in such an
earthly paradise!</p>
<p>I was too tired with the journey to go round<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</SPAN></span>
the garden that day; I put it off till to-morrow.
Next day I was not equal to going out at all,
and the third day I did not get up.</p>
<p>The colours gradually faded from the hillsides;
the woods grew a purply-brown; the
white mists were later and later in rising from
the river in the valley below me. All day long
I lay in bed watching the sun move from east to
west across the mountains, while near at hand
tomtits and finches, jays and magpies, cheeky
robins and green and crimson woodpeckers
flitted about in the bare trees just outside my
windows.</p>
<p>One little wren used regularly to pay me a
morning call on the window-ledge; often she
flew right into the room. I liked to think she
came to ask how I was. Once I opened my
eyes to find a robin perched on the rail at the
bottom of the bed, eyeing me inquiringly. The
little wild things on these hills seem so friendly.</p>
<p>As soon as twilight fell the owls woke up the
adjoining wood, and called to other owls across
the ravine.</p>
<p>These were the only sounds to break the
silence.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>It is when you are ill, more than at any other
time, that you realise the human difference
between town and country. You can live all
your life, and then be ill and die, in London, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</SPAN></span>
the people next door—even those in the same
building—may know nothing about it.</p>
<p>I knew of a girl living in a block of small
flats occupied by women workers, and trying to
make a living by journalism, who lay dead in
her room for a week, and then was only
discovered by the caretaker because her rent was
overdue. No one had missed her, though there
were women going up and down stairs and in
and out of the rooms, all around her. The
isolation of the solitary woman in a crowded city
can be something awful.</p>
<p>It isn’t that town dwellers at heart are more
selfish than country folks; it is their mode of life
that is to blame.</p>
<p>London claims so much of one’s time and
energy for the doing of “most important” work,
and the pursuit of machine-made pleasure, till
next to nothing is left for the greatest of all
work and the greatest of all pleasure—merely
being kind.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Once it was known that I wasn’t getting better
and the local doctor had been summoned (he
lives in another village nearly four miles off),
kindnesses came from all directions, everybody
offering the best they had. If extra people
had been required to take turns sitting up at
night, any number were ready to come on duty.
One woman, who is exceedingly capable, though<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</SPAN></span>
an amateur masseuse, came to inquire if it
was a case where rubbing would be beneficial.
She brought a bottle of Elliman’s with her, in
case she could be of use, and offered to come
daily.</p>
<p>Did the Buff Orpingtons lay that priceless
treasure, an unexpected mid-winter egg? It
was promptly sent up by a small child, with a
kind hope from mother that the lady would be
able to take it.</p>
<p>I believe Sarah Ann Perkins would have
slain every duck she possessed (and have scorned
to take payment), if only there had been the
slightest chance of my once more eating that
fair slice from the breast!</p>
<p>A calf’s foot was needed for jelly. The
butcher hadn’t one, didn’t know who had; but
one arrived next day, though he had had to
scour the county for it.</p>
<p>Was anything required hurriedly from the
village shop? Everybody was willing to go and
fetch it, or Miss Jarvis would toil up with it
herself, after the shop was closed, rather than I
should be kept waiting, bringing up a bunch of
early violets from her garden at the same time.</p>
<p>One farmer’s wife trailed up the rough, wet
paths, with a little pigeon all ready for roasting,
in the hope that it might tempt me.</p>
<p>The handy man went out and shot an owl
because he was sure I must find all they hooters<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</SPAN></span>
a turr’ble noosance. Of course he didn’t know
how I love the owls, nor how companionable it
seemed to hear them calling to one another
through the long, long night. But probably the
kind thought behind his gun was of greater
worth than the bird he shot.</p>
<p>Yes, everybody was anxious to do something,
only there was so little they could do—till one
day Angelina lost herself! She had followed
Abigail in the afternoon to the village, where a
dog suddenly scared and chased her, and she
flew off into the woods.</p>
<p>Abigail hunted for her till the winter dusk
settled in, but no cat responded to her calls. So
she had to content herself with mentioning the
matter at each cottage in the vicinity, everyone
willingly undertaking to keep a look-out for the
missing cat. By the next afternoon every
youngster in the village was out scouting for
her, and saucers of milk were placed enticingly
outside doors.</p>
<p>But poor Angy was never seen again.</p>
<p>I missed her very much. She was only a
very ordinary tabby, but she was a large, comfortable,
homely sort of a cat; and she had
made it part of her daily programme to come
upstairs and jump softly on my bed with a
pleased little mew, and then settle herself down
beside me, where I could reach out my hand to
stroke her, while she purred soothingly the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</SPAN></span>
whole time. The little dog was too boisterously
demonstrative, in his joy at seeing me, to be
allowed in the room; but the more sedate and
gentle Angelina helped me to pass many a
weary hour.</p>
<p>When all search for her proved fruitless, the
kindly village people didn’t dismiss the matter
as done with. Forthwith there started a procession
from the village to my house, and about
every hour someone arrived with an offering. I
could hear their voices at the door below,
through the open bedroom window.</p>
<p>First it was a labouring man with a big
hamper: “My missus is so worrit about the
poor young lady losing her cat, so I’ve brought
up our Tom, if she’d care to accept him. He’s
a fust-class ratter—killed a big ’un in our barn
yesterday,” etc.</p>
<p>Then it was the piping voice of a small girl,
accompanied by two smaller: “Please, we’re so
sorry about the lady not having a pussy when
she’s poorly, and we’ve brought her our two
little kitties, an’ one has six toes!”</p>
<p>Next a bigger girl: “Gran says would miss
like one of our kittens? They’ll be able to leave
their mother next week, and I’ll bring the lot up
for her to choose from, if she’d like one.”</p>
<p>A boy arrived with a basket containing a fine
black cat. “Mother’s sent this for the lady.
Just you see how he’ll jump over my hand and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</SPAN></span>
stand on his hind legs!”—(a wild scramble
followed). “Here, Peter! here—come <i>back</i>—Pe-ter!
Puss, puss, puss! There now, I’ve
done it! Mother said as I wasn’t to open the
basket till I was inside the house! I ’spect he’s
back home again by now! But I’ll bring him
up again presently. The lady’ll love to have
him, he’s so knowing.”</p>
<p>Later, I heard a woman’s voice: “Poor <i>dear</i>
soul, it <i>do</i> seem hard; and the on’y cat she’ve got,
too! Well, we’ve six to our house, and she can
have all of ourn and welcome.”</p>
<p>As Virginia said, it was not quite so embarrassing
as griskins, because, at least, each had
four legs with which to get itself off home again.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>But it is weary work lying still day after day
till the weeks actually lengthen into months. I
kept on telling myself I was making headway,
but it was a poor pretence. I gave up thinking
about it at last, and wondered how I could best
endure the pain that no one seemed able to
relieve.</p>
<p>The autumn had now changed to winter, and
one morning I woke to see snow bearing down
the fir-trees and lying on the hills. The snow is
very beautiful when one is well and strong, and
able to go out in the crisp cold air and enjoy it;
but to me, penned in among the hills, miles away
from town and the advantages of up-to-date<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</SPAN></span>
civilisation, it gave a sudden sense of desolation.
It shut me off most effectually from the big
world I wanted so badly to see again. As I
looked out upon that snow, it seemed as though
I were buried already.</p>
<p>One desire swamped all others, and that was
the longing to get back to London where friends
would be around me, and specialists within easy
reach. And yet that appeared to be an utter
impossibility. It has always been a matter of
pride with me that my cottage is situated in one
of the most inaccessible spots in the British Isles;
I used to feel so happy in the thought that it
was only with the utmost difficulty that a vehicle
could be got near the garden gate. It gave me
such a sense of seclusion and delightful “far-away-ness”
after the crush and hustle of town
life.</p>
<p>But for once I wished I had been a wee bit
more accessible. I realised that there might be
certain advantages in having a good county road
close by whereon a helpless invalid could be
driven to the station without having every bone
in her body jolted to pieces! But it was too
late to do anything now.</p>
<p>Altogether it was two months before I let
anyone in town know how ill I really was; most
people thought I was merely taking a long rest.
Naturally it was at once suggested a specialist
should be sent for; but I said no. I was such a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</SPAN></span>
weak creature by this time, I felt I couldn’t bear
to hear the worst—I was almost sure there would
be a “worst” to hear—and that a specialist
wouldn’t diagnose my illness as merely overwork.
I insisted that I would rather be left to die
quietly. I know it sounds very cowardly, and
I <i>was</i> a coward at the time. But I think many
women will understand this condition of mind;
we do try so often to push back, with both our
hands, trouble of this sort, when we dimly see
it ahead.</p>
<p>The hale and hearty person will naturally
exclaim: “How perfectly ridiculous! How
much more sensible to have proper advice, and
then set to work to get strong again!” I know!
I have myself said this sort of thing to ill people
many a time in the past! But I learnt a lot of
things during that breakdown; among them,
that it is very easy to lay down the law as to
what should be done, and to act in a common-sense
manner, when one is well; but it is quite
another thing to follow one’s own good advice,
or, in fact, do anything one ought to do, when
one is too weak even to think!</p>
<p>Yet how often it happens that, in our direst
extremity, help comes when least expected! So
soon as it became known in town that I was
really seriously ill, there appeared among my
morning letters a note from one of London’s
most famous surgeons saying that he was coming<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</SPAN></span>
down on a friendly visit in a couple of days
“just to see if I can help you at all.”</p>
<p>I read the letter a second time, and then all
my fears vanished. Someone coming “to help”
me seemed so different from a formal consultation.
That phrase was better than reams of
ordinary sympathy, or kind inquiries, or professional
expressions. And then I felt so glad
that the matter had been taken out of my hands.
It seemed as though a weight was lifted from
my brain, and being a feeble as well as a foolish
creature, at first I put my head under the eiderdown
and had a weep—for sheer gratitude; but
a few minutes later I rubbed my eyes and felt I
was heaps better already!</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Yet the way was not entirely clear, even
though this busy, over-worked specialist was
offering to spend more than a day in journeying
right across England to the far-off cottage;
there was the snow to be reckoned with, and,
when it likes, the snow on our hills can
frustrate anybody’s best-laid plans. The sky
was very grey; I did hope no more would
fall, otherwise the roads would probably be
impassable.</p>
<p>Owing to the scarcity of trains in our valley,
the local doctor was to tap the main line some
miles away, and meet the great surgeon; and a
rich resident was kindly loaning a cherished new<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</SPAN></span>
car, as the doctor did not consider either of his
own motors worthy of the occasion.</p>
<p>But even he was dubious as he looked at the
heavy skies. He said he could manage to get the
car through eighteen inches of snow; but if it
were deeper than that——! I remembered
that only a couple of years before I had been
snowed up in the cottage with drifts six-foot
deep. The outlook wasn’t exactly encouraging.</p>
<p>Such heaps of tragedies seemed possible
within the next twenty-four hours. Suppose,
for instance, royalty should suddenly develop
some malady necessitating arms or legs being
amputated without delay——! I simply dared
not think about such a calamity; and even though
the specialist escaped a royal command, and
actually set off to catch the train that was to
bring him to our hill-country, there might be an
accident; London streets are beset with terrors;
I never realised till that moment how many
dangers a man must face between Wimpole
Street and Paddington Station! But I tried to
have faith that all would be well.</p>
<p>I heard a soft step in the room—every step
that came near me was softened nowadays. I
opened my eyes and saw Abigail beside my bed.</p>
<p>“Please, m’m, do you happen to know if the
specialist-doctor takes pepper?” she asked in the
half-whisper that she had adopted as her bedroom
voice.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“I haven’t the remotest idea,” I said; “but
why do you want to know?”</p>
<p>“Because we’ve just smashed the glass
pepper-box, and we haven’t another down here.
And I can’t exactly put it on the table in a
mustard-pot!”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>I watched for the snow, the eighteen inches
I was dreading; but the wind changed and it
didn’t fall. Instead, next morning found us
enveloped in a solid fog—the only fog we had
had this season. Hills and valleys were blotted
out as completely as though they had never
existed. The cottage seemed to stand in mid-air,
with nothing but grey unoccupied space
around it. And it was such a raw, penetrating
fog.</p>
<p>I just lay and watched the grey, blind world
outside the windows, and counted the half-hours
as the morning wore by. And isn’t it amazing
how long the very minutes can be when one is
right-down ill, and waiting for a doctor?</p>
<p>In a small isolated community like ours, one
excitement is made to do duty for a long while.
The impending visit of the surgeon from London
was soon the topic of general conversation. And
little white curtains were pulled aside from
cottage windows as the car, with the doctor and
a stranger, was seen coming down one hill and
over the bridge into the village in the valley,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</SPAN></span>
switchbacking again up the opposite hill to reach
the particular crag on which my cottage is
perched.</p>
<p>Owing to previous heavy rains, the lanes
were almost impassable in places; overflowing
brooks made rivers and swamps in most unexpected
spots. Thus it was that the car could
not come within half-a-mile of the cottage; it
had to be “beached” high and dry in somebody’s
farmyard, and the rest of the journey made on
foot. The walk is a positive fairyland dream in
summer; but on the bleak December day the
ferns and flowers were gone, and the withered
grass stalks rustled with a disconsolate wheeze,
while the pine-trees creaked and moaned in the
wind. It seemed an unkind, inhospitable sort of
a day to bring a busy, valuable man such a long,
cold distance.</p>
<p>At last I heard brisk footsteps coming down
the path to the door, scrunching the cones that
had fallen from the larches. Then a cheerful
voice was speaking, while great-coats were being
taken off down below. I shut my eyes, and felt
I need not worry any more.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>After all, we women are curious creatures!
We consult a specialist when we have some
weakness that won’t give way to ordinary treatment,
and then, when, out of his exceptional
knowledge and wide experience, he tells us what<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</SPAN></span>
will probably cure us, many of us immediately
beseech him to make it something else.</p>
<p>When the surgeon told me what course it
would be necessary to take if I was to be got on
to my feet again, I immediately began to state a
hundred reasons why I wished he would prescribe
something entirely different. He said he was
going to have me brought to London at once
and taken to a hospital. I knew that was the
very last thing I could endure. I have always
had an absolute terror lest I should ever have to
go into a hospital; and here I was confronted
with it face to face. I said I could <i>not</i> go into
one; whatever treatment was necessary must be
done in my own home. I didn’t want to be
among strangers and with nurses whom I had
never seen before; I wanted to be nursed by
people I knew. And as for chloroform, well, I
would gladly die first! such was the horror I
had of it. And I continued on these lines.</p>
<p>The surgeon listened very patiently and let
me have my say out. (Where in the world does
a man like this get his marvellous stock of
patience from!) He even agreed with most of
my arguments. Anæsthetics were disagreeable;
it certainly would be pleasanter to be in my own
home; and it might be nicer if I had only friends
around me, etc.</p>
<p>But, all the same, it was borne in upon me
that I might as well try to get the Sphinx to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</SPAN></span>
turn its head and nod over to a pyramid, as to
attempt to make the man who was talking to
me budge an eighth of an inch. And he wound
up by saying, “I am afraid, however, that it
will have to be a hospital—I’m so sorry—but I
want you to go into a private ward in Mildmay.
You shall have the best man in London to
administer the anæsthetic; and as for nurses—well,
if you don’t say they are some of the finest
women you have ever met, I shall be much
surprised.”</p>
<p>By this time I had my head under the eiderdown
again, and was howling away (quietly). I
was so truly sorry for myself!</p>
<p>The great man waited for a minute, and then,
as the sniffles didn’t stop, he said—</p>
<p>“Now just listen to me. You are in the
habit of writing heaps of good advice to people
when they are in trouble—telling them to have
faith when adversity comes, and to bear their
burdens bravely. Don’t you think you are a
most inconsistent person? Here you are, confronted
with something that is going to be a
trifle trying, and you immediately turn your face
to the wall, and say you prefer to die, without
so much as giving a solitary kick! Why,
Hezekiah isn’t in it, beside you! What is your
faith worth at this rate!”</p>
<p>Then for a good half-hour he sat and talked,
reminding me of our duty as professing Christians;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</SPAN></span>
of the wrong we do when we try to shuffle
away from our work; of God’s care for His
children individually, and of our foolishness in
doubting Him in times of trouble.</p>
<p>I had got to a very low ebb spiritually as
well as physically. Being cut off from the world
and so much alone, with only a pain to think
about, my outlook on life had become altogether
distorted. My soul was certainly in need of a
bracing up just then—and it got it.</p>
<p>One thing impressed me very much at this
time, viz., the marvellous power that lies in the
hands of those who can bring healing to the soul
as well as healing to the body. The most
devoted of God’s ministers have seldom such
power as this. They can bring messages of hope
and consolation, but they do not know how much
a sick person is able, physically, to stand in the
way of a strong spiritual tonic, and they seldom
dare administer one, even though they may think
it necessary.</p>
<p>But the doctor knows how much the patient
is equal to. And the man who has consecrated
to God’s service a life that is spent in mending
the poor broken bodies of humanity is surely
doing work that angels might envy; undoubtedly
God gives him power and opportunity that falls
to the lot of few other men.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>The December afternoon closed in early, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</SPAN></span>
the surgeon had once more to take a long, dreary
journey to get back to the urgent work waiting
for him in town. But he left behind him a far
more sane and sensible person than he had found
on his arrival.</p>
<p>When he had gone, after having made the
most comprehensive and detailed plans for my
removal, Abigail tiptoed into my room, her face
all aglow with excitement.</p>
<p>“I thought you’d like to know I heard the
specialist-doctor say, when I was bringing in the
sweets at lunch, that he didn’t know when he
had eaten roast chicken he had enjoyed so much.
I shall rub it into cook when we go home.
And I’d better let Sarah Ann Perkins know, as
we got it from her.”</p>
<p>“Take whatever is left, and keep it for a
souvenir,” I said. “And if you like to have the
carcase framed, I’ll pay for it.”</p>
<p>“You look better already,” she replied.</p>
<p>Thus the great man scattered cheeriness in
various directions; and Sarah Ann, a year later,
pridefully showed me the chicken’s wings a-top
her best Sunday bonnet.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>In just as much time as it took my London
doctor to come west to assume charge of me,
they got me under way.</p>
<p>“But how am I ever going to reach the
main road!” I wailed.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Perfectly easy,” said Ursula. “You are
going to be carried, and every masculine in the
place is willing to lend a hand.”</p>
<p>And so they did. One young man made
himself entirely responsible for my luggage,
going off with it by train, that there should be
no chance of any delay. A stalwart fisherman
and a sturdy young farmer carried me, in a chair,
straight up hill for half a mile to where a motor
was waiting on the county road.</p>
<p>Everybody was so gentle and quiet, and yet
very businesslike. They stood silently, with
their hats off, while I was put into the car. I
looked round on the hills, convinced that I was
looking at them for the last time, and felt
exactly as though I were present at my own
funeral!</p>
<p>Even the people in the village kept sympathetically
in the background, with the same
sort of respect one observes when a funeral
procession passes; though at the last house in
the village one dear kindly soul pulled her little
white curtains aside, waving her hand and
smiling encouragingly to me as we went by.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>XIV<br/> <small>In Mildmay Hospital—An Interlude</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">I don’t</span> think there is anything worse than the
sense of utter desolation that envelops you
when the hospital door finally closes on everybody
you know, and you are alone with total
strangers and unknown terrors ahead. The
dreariest moment of my whole life was when I
found myself alone in a private ward at Mildmay,
with no one whom I knew within call.</p>
<p>Yet was it mere chance, I wonder, that the
nurses at their prayers that day sang Matheson’s
beautiful hymn—“O Love, that wilt not let me
go”?</p>
<p>It came to me along the corridor, as I lay
staring at the ceiling. I tried, in my heart, to
sing it with them; but I gave it up when they
got to the verse—</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="verse">“O Joy, that seekest me through pain,</div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">I cannot close my heart to Thee;</span></div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I trace the rainbow through the rain,</span></div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And feel the promise is not vain,</span></div>
<div class="verse"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">That morn shall tearless be.”</span></div>
</div></div>
<p class="unindent">I couldn’t see the rainbow just then.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, I got to love that room as one
of the happiest spots on earth, for the sake of
the people whom I found there; and during the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</SPAN></span>
ten weeks I remained in it, I proved beyond all
chance of further doubt that when God seems to
be taking from us, He is in reality giving us
something better than all we could ever ask or
think. At the moment of the taking, perhaps,
our eyes are too dimmed to see this, but in the
fulfilment of time, when He wipes away our
tears, may it not be that, in addition to banishing
our sorrows, He will clear our vision, that we
may see how marvellously He made all things
work together for good?</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Next day I remarked, irritably, that I didn’t
like the green walls, and I thought the green
bedspread positively bilious.</p>
<p>The matron, looking at me with a twinkle
in her eyes, said, “Dear lady, you shall have
another bedspread this instant; and as soon as
you are well enough to be moved, we will
re-paint the walls whatever colour meets with
your approval;—we can’t do it while you are
in bed, can we? Meanwhile, I shall call you
‘Delicate Fuss’!”</p>
<p>(And “Delicate Fuss” I have remained ever
since.)</p>
<p>But there was such an amount of misery
bottled up inside me, some of it was obliged to
spill over, and I once more reiterated my desire
to die.</p>
<p>“That’s all right,” said the matron cheerfully;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</SPAN></span>
“but how about your tombstone? You
would like a really artistic one, wouldn’t you?
And being literary, surely you would wish to
edit what is to go on it. Now let us see what
we can scheme out.”</p>
<p>So we all settled to a discussion of shapes and
styles and suitable words. The nurses warmed
to the work, the ward sister came in to give her
views, and for the first time for weeks I found
myself smiling. Finally, it was unanimously
decided that the most appropriate and truthful
description would be these simple words—</p>
<p class="center">
<small>“SHE WAS PLAIN BUT OCCASIONALLY PLEASANT.”</small><br/></p>
<p>But the time came when I was beyond even
discussing tombstones; when I could not bear a
sound in the room and even quiet footsteps
jarred me. Then it was that I found out more
especially what the spirit of Mildmay stands for.
It was no mere perfunctory service that was
rendered the invalid. Doctors, matron, nurses
said nothing of the extra hours of work they put in
on my account; of the watching and the tending
when they were really supposed to be off duty.
It seemed wonderful that I, who had looked
forward to the inevitable with a terrible dread
of being lonely and among strangers, should
actually find myself, when the time came, surrounded
by friendly faces, and cared for by
people who had grown very dear to me.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>And fancy a hospital where they went to the
trouble of bandaging up the door-handles to
prevent noisy bangs; where they laid down
matting to deaden the sounds in the corridor;
where they fixed peremptory notices to the
doors, enjoining all and sundry to close them
quietly; where even the ward-maid constituted
herself dragoness-in-chief, for the time being,
watching and waiting, and then pouncing on any
unthinking person who might let a latch slip
through her fingers, or a house-porter who might
clatter a coal-scuttle.</p>
<p>Yet this—and a great deal more—is what
they did at Mildmay, just because one patient
was going through a bad time.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Thanks to all the care I received, I was at
last able to leave the hospital. Of course I was
glad to go out into the big world again—who
wouldn’t be, after lying all that time with no
other “view” visible from where I lay but three
chimney-pots? I was glad to think I was going
to be able to walk again, and take up my work
once more. But I felt genuine regret at having
to say good-bye to the people I had really grown
to love during my stay with them.</p>
<p>I shall never forget the morning that I was
taken away by a couple of nurses to the seaside.
The others came, in ones and twos, to say good-bye.
And in the midst of it, the great surgeon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</SPAN></span>
walked in—just to see what the patient was like
before she started.</p>
<p>“Now confess,” he said, “a hospital isn’t such
a bad place after all, is it?”</p>
<p>I agreed with him; but I couldn’t put into
words what a wonderfully good place I had
found it.</p>
<p>I could only think what a contrast was presented
between the poor, forlorn thing who
arrived those months before, and the still-very-wobbly,
but cheerfully-smiling, person who was
now driving away, while the nurses leaned out
of the upper windows and showered rice all over
the vehicle.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>XV<br/> <small>The Return to the Flower-Patch</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">And</span> because it is the correct thing to introduce
a wedding into the last chapter, I had better
mention the one I know most about.</p>
<p>I always did say that, whenever I married,
my wedding should be characterised by everything
appertaining to common sense; while all
the feebleness and foolishness and weakmindedness
I had noticed at other people’s weddings
would be entirely lacking. I have often remarked
how strange it is that otherwise sensible
people seem to lose all idea of proportion when
it comes to arranging a wedding; how they let
themselves be obsessed with clothes and furniture
and wedding presents that they don’t require; or
if they do require them, they might have been
dealt with on orderly systematic lines.</p>
<p>“Why need there be a chaos of garments in
the spare room and every wardrobe and chest of
drawers in the house just because one person is
going to be married?” I have said many a time.
Well, I’m not going to say it again. In fact,
the older I get the more I find life resolves itself
into one continual discovery that I needn’t have
said half the things that I did say in my first
youth.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But with regard to the wedding, I think I
started all right; it was as matters proceeded
that I was overtaken by the inevitable. I really
was too busy with arrears of work that accumulated
during my long illness to see to the
trousseau details <i>in extenso</i>, so I asked an intimate
friend if she would take this in hand for me—which
she kindly agreed to do. She had had
lots of experience, and her taste was exquisite;
so I knew matters were safe with her. She asked
me what frocks I already had. I replied, “Not
a rag fit to wear!”</p>
<p>“Then I’ll make a good selection, and have
them sent home for you to choose from,” she
replied, her face suffused with that joy-radiance
that invariably overtakes a woman who starts
out shopping with a blank cheque in her handbag.</p>
<p>She certainly did make a good selection; I
almost wished it hadn’t been quite so good, then
at least I should have known what to send back.
But as it was, every fresh box I opened, I exclaimed,
“Isn’t that lovely! I <i>must</i> have <i>that!</i>”
till presently the room was a billowy sea of
tissue paper and beautiful garments that looked
as though hands had never touched them. I
thought I was quite hardened and proof against
lures of this kind; but the snare of it simply
enmeshes you before you know where you are.
As my bedroom was soon full to overflowing, I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</SPAN></span>
said the rest of the things had better go into a
spare room. Very soon the spare rooms were
full too. And so we went on like that!</p>
<p>Why didn’t I put the things away in drawers
and wardrobes? Simply because every such
receptacle I possessed was full to distraction
before the trousseau things started to arrive!
Did you ever know a woman who possessed a
drawer or a wardrobe peg that wasn’t already
over full, and she pining for more space? So
for weeks we had to hop over piles of cardboard
boxes no matter what room we entered, and
scrabble up more bales of tissue paper and
things to make room on the sofa for the
friend who called to bring her good wishes in
person.</p>
<p>Still, I have always thought that a strong
argument in favour of a woman getting married
is the fact that she, presumably, comes in for
additional drawers and wardrobes. Hence I
looked forward to getting into my new home
with considerable satisfaction in view of the
purchase of extra furniture.</p>
<p>“Yes, I know it’s a bit crowded just now,” I
agreed, when Virginia suggested I should set up
a shop with “Modes et Robes” over the door,
because she had estimated that I shouldn’t need
to buy any tissue paper for eleven years and five
months. “But I shall have <i>heaps</i> of spare room
when I get into the new house; I really shan’t<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</SPAN></span>
know what to do with so many chests of
drawers!”</p>
<p>But alas! in spite of the additional furniture,
I am still squeezing things into drawers that
would be so much more useful if made of elastic
india-rubber instead of wood. And I am still
flattening garments into wardrobes that are so
bulgingly full that I wonder sometimes whether
the looking-glass will stand the inside pressure.
And still I don’t seem to have a rag fit to
wear.</p>
<p>But the moving process was even worse than
the trousseau. The very thought of it was
turning my brain to stone.</p>
<p>When I mentioned my quakings about the
moving to the Head of Affairs, he said airily,
“Don’t you give a solitary thought to <i>that</i>.
Just go away for a couple of days’ holiday, and
when you come back you will find everything as
right as can be in the new house. You don’t
need to touch a thing or pack an atom. The
men do <i>everything</i>. Now, why bother your head
with unnecessary worrying?” etc.</p>
<p>I seemed to think I had heard the same remark
made in the dim past when we removed
from one house to another in my early days. I
also remember that the brother of Virginia and
Ursula said the very same thing to them when
they moved, and they, acting on masculine
advice, had the greatest difficulty, ultimately, in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</SPAN></span>
ever finding any solitary thing they possessed
(including themselves) among the ruins. So I
decided to postpone the couple of days’ holiday
and face the worst.</p>
<p>There is no need to go into details about
that move. Those who have been through it
know exactly how many months it takes to find
such things as the corkscrew, the buttonhook,
the oil-can belonging to the sewing-machine,
the one hammer that has its head fixed on
firmly.</p>
<p>They know the joy with which you fall on
the missing sofa cushions when they are eventually
discovered done up with spare bedding in the
attic—that everyone has been too tired to undo;
and the affectionate greetings bestowed on the
hall clothes-brush when it is at length found—in
company with the dog’s whip—in a drawer one
has forgotten in a small table. Of course, it’s
very satisfactory when the perspiring gentleman
who has packed—and then unpacked again—all
the china comes to announce, “Not a single
piece is cracked or chipped, madam;” but when
you survey the piles of crockery and glass on
the kitchen dresser and table and window-ledge
and mantelpiece, that haven’t yet found an
abiding-place, and see the pantries full to overflowing,
a lurking thought comes that perhaps it
might have been an advantage if he <i>had</i> smashed
a few dozens of the multitudinous array of cups<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</SPAN></span>
and saucers and plates and dishes that seem
woefully superfluous at the moment!</p>
<p>As there seemed a good bit still to do, I said
I would dispense with the conventional “tour,”
proper to the occasion, and spend the time trying
to dispose of the twenty-seven British workmen,
supposed to be house-decorating, who were cheerfully
in possession (and apparently regarding their
posts as life appointments) when our goods arrived
at the door, despite our having let them live in
the house rent free for two months previously.</p>
<p>It was a little difficult to follow their twenty-seven
lines of argument as to why they should
remain with us permanently, with Abigail continually
at my elbow presenting a tradesman’s
card and explaining—</p>
<p>“Please, ma’am, this man says he served the
people who were here before; but I’ve told him
he’s the ninth fishmonger who has said that
to-day.”</p>
<p>Or else it would be, “There’s a man at the
door says he served the last people with groceries.
Can I tell him to run back and get some soap?
I can’t find where the men put our packets, and
it will be quicker than sending to the Stores. I
suppose you don’t happen to have seen it, m’m?
Cook and I have looked everywhere. But we’ve
found the anchovy sauce, and the carpet beater.
Where <i>do</i> you think they had packed them——”
and so on.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But I determined to do my wifely duty in
making a happy home for the man who had had
the courage to marry me.</p>
<p>I was politely attentive when interviewed by
a near-by magnate who was anxious to propose
the Head of Affairs for the Conservative Club.
I accepted particulars supplied me by the
secretary of the Golf Club, who felt we were the
very people the club needed. I tried to understand
when the gardener explained the peculiarities
of the greenhouse heating apparatus, and
the danger that would threaten if anyone but
himself entered the greenhouse.</p>
<p>I endured the postman knocking at the door
a dozen times a day to inquire if we lived there,
only to point out to us that we didn’t when we
had assured him that we did. I informed the
sweep that everything was quite satisfactory
thank you, and I should hope to have the
pleasure of meeting him again.</p>
<p>I accepted the coal man’s many reasons for
not having delivered the coal sooner; and I
thanked cook for the information that the policeman
said he or his mate would always be on
point duty at the corner whenever we wanted
him.</p>
<p>I filed half a bushel of tradesmen’s price lists
and laundry data.</p>
<p>I put the whole household on a milk-pudding
diet, rather than waste the numerous samples of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</SPAN></span>
milk left, by rival and mutually abusive dairymen,
in a row of cans at the side door.</p>
<p>And when a sumptuously apparelled resident
called to say that the previous occupant had
always contributed liberally to the local working
men’s brass band, I tried to look gratified to hear
of such generosity—though I had the presence of
mind to say I should not be at home on Saturday
evening when they proposed to serenade me in
the front garden.</p>
<p>Yes, it was a pleasant and peaceful couple of
days, and I dare say I should have been all the
better for the complete rest, had not the telephone
men and the gas stove men called
simultaneously with the electrical engineers (who
had been summoned to see why the electric light
sulked), and, with a unanimity of purpose that
was truly beautiful in a world so full of variance,
they all set to work to take up floor-boards,
in rooms and halls where the carpets and
lino had been laid—the twenty-seven standing
around and assisting with reminiscence and
anecdote.</p>
<p>Then it was that the Head of Affairs put
down a firm foot and insisted on the Flower-Patch.</p>
<p>At first Abigail was reluctant to leave such
bright scenes in the kitchen as she hadn’t known
for several years; but, remembering that a halo
of distinction surrounds the bearer of exclusive<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</SPAN></span>
information, no matter how unimportant, she set
off cheerfully next morning, and we followed a
day later.</p>
<p>She prided herself on the tactful way she
broke her news to the village.</p>
<p>“Hasn’t Miss Klickmann come down ’long
with ’ee?” inquired Mrs. Widow and the handy
man in unison.</p>
<p>“You’ll never see Miss Klickmann again,”
Abigail replied in funereal tones.</p>
<p>“Oh! You don’t tell me so! Poor <i>dear</i>
thing! though I knowed she wasn’t long for this
world,” and kind-hearted Mrs. Widow started
to mop her eyes with her apron. “Was it very
suddint at the last?”</p>
<p>“Very!” said the handmaiden. “Couldn’t
make up her mind till the very day before the
wedding.”</p>
<p>When they had grasped the true state of
affairs, and imbibed enough particulars to have
filled three newspaper columns, Mrs. Widow
hurried off home, and then on to the village,
likewise conscious of the halo of distinction. But
the handy man paused—</p>
<p>“I wish I’d er knowed a bit sooner,” he said,
“then I’d er made an arch with ‘Welcome’ on
it as large as you please. Yes, I’d er like to
have had an arch. But thur,”—after a moment’s
thought—“perhaps I’d better do a bit o’ weedin’
and cut the grass.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Thus it happened that I was once again going
along the road, over which they had carried me
only seven months before. It was cold and
cheerless then; now it was all flowers and
sunshine.</p>
<p>The kindly, motherly soul who lives in the
end house was at her gate now, watching for our
coming.</p>
<p>“Well there! Well there!” as the wagonette
stopped for me to speak to her. “I thought I
should never see you again”—and she grasped
my hand in her own, having first polished it on
her apron, which is always fresh and spotless.
“And now here you are. My dear, I’m <i>that</i> glad
to see you back, and I do hope you’ll be happy.”</p>
<p>The stalwart fisherman, standing on the river
bank, raised his cap—I hadn’t forgotten the
good work he had done for me. Miss Jarvis at
the village shop came to the door and waved her
hand—I remembered the box of violets and
moss and little ferns she had posted to the
hospital.</p>
<p>In the cottage itself kind hands had been
hard at work; it was simply a bower of wild
flowers. The walls inside were nearly smothered
with trophies of moon daisies, grasses and ferns,
and the same scheme of flowers was carried all
up the stairs. On the window ledge on the
landing were bowls of Sweet Betsy and cow
parsley—and such a pretty mixture the crimson<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</SPAN></span>
and the white flowers made. Upstairs the rooms
were gay with bowls of forget-me-nots and
buttercups. Downstairs it was wild roses and
honeysuckle, with mugs of red clover on the
mantelpieces. Being summer, the fire-grates
were at liberty, and these were filled with
branches of bracken, ivy, silvery honesty seeds,
and foxglove. Everything had such a delightfully
“misty” effect, by reason of the seeding
grasses that had been added lavishly to the
flowers.</p>
<p>The only garden flowers in the house were
some roses, in the centre of the dinner-table,
sent by Miss Jarvis (with some pale green young
lettuces) from her garden.</p>
<p>Outside the swallows were twittering, and,
like all the other birds, were fussing about their
small families. The distant hills were glowing
crimson by the acre where the timber had been
cut, I knew it was myriads and myriads of foxgloves.
Near at hand the Flower-Patch was a
mass of nodding blossoms, coupled, with a
choice variety of weeds. I wondered where I
had better begin, and how I should cope with
the bindweed, flaunting itself everywhere that
it had no business to be. Had I better start
the handy man on it at once, or would it be
better to set him to cut the hedges?</p>
<p>But even as I was planning out a good week’s
work for him, I saw him coming up the path, a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</SPAN></span>
picturesque figure in a blue jersey, a large, shady,
rush hat, and carrying, as signs of office, a pitch-fork,
a scythe, and a rake; and I heard his voice
in the garden speaking to the Head of Affairs:
“Good-day to ’ee, sir. I’m main glad to see ’ee,
for I calkerlate as how in future I takes my
orders from the master.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="copyright">
<span class="smcap">printed in great britain by<br/>
William Clowes and Sons, Limited,<br/>
stamford street, london, s.e.</span><br/></p>
<hr class="full" />
<div class='tnote'><div class='center'><b>Transcriber’s Notes:</b></div>
<p>Obvious punctuation errors repaired. Varied
hyphenation was retained as printed.</p>
<p>Page 32, “it” changed to “in” and word “on” added to text
(put in; she merely told him to pack them up
very securely, as she was going on a long railway)</p>
<p>Page 35, “georgeous” changed to “gorgeous” (with some gorgeous pansies)</p>
<p>Page 112, “crepe” changed to “crêpe” (trimmed with crêpe)</p>
<p>Page 173, “welome” changed to “welcome” (bidding them welcome)</p>
<p>Page 200, “is” changed to “in” (hesitation in saying that)</p>
</div>
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