<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<p>Miss Marsham was accustomed to recognise that it was the brief career of
Cynthia Griffiths that first induced her to consider the question of her
own retirement.</p>
<p>It is certain that the school was never again quite as it had been
before her advent. The Cynthia Griffiths term remained a school date
from which to reckon as the nation reckons from the Jubilee. In an
American school Cynthia Griffiths must have been at least a disturbing
element—in the staid English establishment, with its curious mixture of
modern pedagogy and Early Victorian training, she was seismic.</p>
<p>With their usual adaptability, the new girls, as they accustomed
themselves subduedly to the strange atmosphere, had found nothing to
cavil at in the school arrangements. They had not thought it incongruous
to come from Swedish exercises to prolonged and personal daily prayers,
kneeling for ten minutes at a time while their head mistress wrestled
with Deity. It might have bored girls of sixteen and eighteen to learn
their daily Bible verse, and recite it alternately with the Kindergarten
and Lower School, but it never occurred to them to protest, any more
than they were likely to object to the little note-book which each girl
carried, with its printed list of twenty-five possible crimes, and the
dangling pencil wherewith, at tea-time, to mark herself innocent or
guilty. The hundred and one rules that Edith Marsham had found useful in
the youth of her seminary, forty years before, and that time had
rendered obsolete, irritating, or merely unintelligible, were
nevertheless endured with entire good nature by her successions of
pupils. Alwynne and her contemporaries might fume in private and Clare
shrug her shoulders in languid tolerance,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></span> but nobody thought it worth
while to question directly the entire sufficiency of a bygone system to
the needs of the new century's hockey-playing generations.</p>
<p>But a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump.</p>
<p>What, if you please, is an old lady to do? An old lady, declining on her
pleasant seventies, owning sixty, not a day more, traditionally
awe-inspiring and unapproachable, whose security lies in the legends
that have grown up of the terrors of her eye and tongue, when Young
America clamours at her intimidating door? Young America, calm-eyed,
courteous, coaxing, squatting confidentially at the feet of Authority,
demanding counsel and comfort. Useless for harried Authority to suggest
consultation with equally harried assistants. Young America, with a
charming smile and the prettiest of gestures, would rather talk it over
quietly with Authority's self. Authority, who is the very twin of her
dear old Grannie at home, will be sure to understand. Such fusses about
nothing all day and every day! Can it be that Authority expects her to
keep her old bureau tidy, when she's had a maid all her life? Young
America will be married as soon as she quits Europe (follows a
confidential sketch of the more promising of Young America's best boys),
and have her own maid right on. Can Authority, as a matter of cold
common-sense, see any use in bothering over cupboards for just three
months or so? If so—right! Young America will worry along somehow, but
it seemed kind of foolish, didn't it? Or could Young America hire a
girl—like she did in Paris? Anyway it was rough luck on the lady in the
glasses to get an apoplexy every day, as Authority might take it was the
case at present. Another point—could Authority, surveying matters
impartially, see any harm in running down town when she was out of
candy? It only meant missing ten minutes French, and if there was one
thing Young America (lapsing suddenly, with bedazing fluency, into that
language) was sure of, it was French. These English-French classes meant
well—but, her God! how they were slow!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</SPAN></span> There had been—Young America
confessed it with candid regret—some difficulties with the cute little
mark-books. Young America had mislaid three in a fortnight. She just put
them down, and they lay around awhile, and then they weren't there. Some
of the ladies had been real annoyed. And once on the subject of
mark-books, did Authority really mean that she was to chalk it up each
time she was late for breakfast, or said "Darn it," or talked in class?
Would, in her place, Authority be able to keep tally? Couldn't Young
America just mark off the whole concern and be done with it? Young
America apologised for worrying Authority with these quaint
matters—but, on her honour, every lady in the school seemed to have
gone plum crazy about them.... They just sat around and yapped at her.
Young America was genuinely scared. She had thought a heart-to-heart
chat with Authority ought to put things right. She would be real
grateful to Authority for fixing things....</p>
<p>And so, with the odd curtsey she had learned among "the Dutchies," as
she called her German pensionat, and a hearty kiss on either cheek,
Young America, affable as ever, beamed upon Authority and withdrew.</p>
<p>Authority felt as if it had been out in a high wind. Instinctively it
clutched at its imposing head-dress. All was in place. Authority lay
back in its chair and gasped fishily.</p>
<p>But Miss Vigers, frenzied into confession of inability to deal with the
situation—got scant sympathy.</p>
<p>"What am I to do? I hate troubling you—I am sure, though, it's a relief
to us all to have you back. Of course, if you had been at home she would
never have been admitted.... You would have realised the
unsuitability—but it was not my decision.... Miss Hartill.... But what
am I to do? I flatter myself I can control our English girls—but these
Americans! Open defiance, Miss Marsham! Her room! She refuses to attend
to it. She comes and goes when she chooses. She treats me, positively,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</SPAN></span>
as an equal. Her influence is unspeakable! It must be stopped! Ten
minutes late for breakfast—oh, every day! Once, I could excuse. And on
the top of it all to offer me chocolates! I must ask you to punish her
severely.... Keep her in? Miss Marsham, I did.... I sent her to her
room. Miss Marsham, will you believe me? When I went up to her later,
she was fast asleep! On the bed! In the daytime!! Without taking off the
counterpane!!! Miss Marsham, I leave the matter to you!"</p>
<p>She paused for the comments her tale deserved. But to outraged
Authority, it had called up a picture—an impudent picture of Young
America, curled kitten-fashion on its austere white pallet—pink cheek
on rounded arm, guileless eyes opening sleepily under a sour and
scandalised gaze.</p>
<p>Henrietta started. She could not believe her ears.</p>
<p>Benevolently—unmistakably—Authority had chuckled.</p>
<p>But the scandal was short-lived. Before the term was over: before
Henrietta had braced herself to her usual resource, a threat of
resignation, or Miss Marsham, hesitating between the devil of her
protesting subordinates and the deep sea of Young America's unshakable
conviction that in her directress she had an enthusiastic partisan,
could allow her maid to suggest to her that she needed a change, the end
had arrived.</p>
<p>Cynthia, as Alwynne had surmised, found ten weeks of an English private
school more than enough for her; and an imperious telegram had summoned
her docile parents.</p>
<p>She departed as she had come, in a joyous flurry. The school mourned,
and the Common-room, in its relief, sped the parting guest with a
cordiality that was almost effusive.</p>
<p>A remark of Henrietta's, as the mistress sat over their coffee on the
afternoon of Cynthia's departure, voiced the attitude of the majority to
its late pupil.</p>
<p>"I'm thankful," Miss Vigers was unusually talkative, "deeply thankful
that she's gone. An impossible young woman. Oh, no—you couldn't call
her a girl. Would any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</SPAN></span> girl—any English girl—conceivably behave as she
has? They have begun to imitate her, of course. That was to be expected.
She demoralised the school. It will take me a month to get things
straight. I have three children in bed to-day. Headaches? Fiddlesticks!
Over-eating! I suppose you heard that there was a midnight feast last
night?"</p>
<p>The Common-room opened its eyes.</p>
<p>"I'm not astonished. A farewell gathering, I suppose! I'm sure it's not
the first," said Clare, her eyes alight with amusement. "But go on. How
did you find it out?"</p>
<p>"Miss Marsham informed me of it," said Henrietta, with desperate
calmness. "It appears that Cynthia asked her permission. Miss
Marsham—er—contributed a cake. Seed!"</p>
<p>Clare gurgled.</p>
<p>"This is priceless. Did she tell you? I wonder she had the face."</p>
<p>Henrietta grew pink.</p>
<p>"No. Cynthia herself. She—er—offered me a slice. She had the
impertinence—the entirely American impertinence—to come to my
room—after midnight—to borrow a tooth-glass. To eat ices in. It
appeared that they were short of receptacles."</p>
<p>"Ices?" came the chorus.</p>
<p>"Her mother provided them, I believe. In a pail," said Henrietta
stiffly.</p>
<p>"Did you lend the tooth-glass?" asked Clare.</p>
<p>Henrietta coughed.</p>
<p>"It was difficult to refuse. She had bare feet. I did not wish her to
catch cold."</p>
<p>Clare turned away abruptly. Her shoulders shook.</p>
<p>"I do not wish to be unjust. I do not think she was intentionally
insubordinate." Henrietta fingered one of the tall pink roses that had
appeared on her desk that morning. "I believe she meant well."</p>
<p>"She was a dear!" said the little gym mistress.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"She was an impossible young woman," retorted Henrietta with spirit. "At
the same time——"</p>
<p>"At the same time?" Clare spoke with unusual friendliness.</p>
<p>"She certainly had a way with her," said Henrietta.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</SPAN></span></p>
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