<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
<p style="text-align: right">July 13th.</p>
<p>I like to watch the Belgian hares eating their trifolium or
pea-pods or grass; graceful, gentle things they are, crowding
about Mr. Heaven, and standing prettily, not greedily, on their
hind legs, to reach for the clover, their delicate nostrils and
whiskers all a-quiver with excitement.</p>
<p>As I look out of my window in the dusk I can see one of the
mothers galloping across the enclosure, the soft white lining of
her tail acting as a beacon-light to the eight infant hares
following her, a quaint procession of eight white spots in it
glancing line. In the darkest night those baby creatures
could follow their mother through grass or hedge or thicket, and
she would need no warning note to show them where to flee in case
of danger. “All you have to do is to follow the white
night-light that I keep in the lining of my tail,” she
says, when she is giving her first maternal lectures; and it
seems a beneficent provision of Nature. To be sure, Mr.
Heaven took his gun and went out to shoot wild rabbits to-day,
and I noted that he marked them by those same self-betraying
tails, as they scuttled toward their holes or leaped toward the
protecting cover of the hedge; so it does not appear whether
Nature is on the side of the farmer or the rabbit . . .</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p59b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Mr. Heaven . . . went out to shoot wild rabbits" src="images/p59s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>There is as much comedy and as much tragedy in poultry life as
anywhere, and already I see rifts within lutes. We have in
a cage a French gentleman partridge married to a Hungarian lady
of defective sight. He paces back and forth in the pen
restlessly, anything but content with the domestic
fireside. One can see plainly that he is devoted to the
Boulevards, and that if left to his own inclinations he would
never have chosen any spouse but a thorough Parisienne.</p>
<p>The Hungarian lady is blind of one eye, from some stray shot,
I suppose. She is melancholy at all times, and occasionally
goes so far as to beat her head against the wire netting.
If liberated, Mr. Heaven says that her blindness would only
expose her to death at the hands of the first sportsman, and it
always seems to me as if she knows this, and is ever trying to
decide whether a loveless marriage is any better than the
tomb.</p>
<p>Then, again, the great, grey gander is, for some mysterious
reason, out of favour with the entire family. He is a noble
and amiable bird, by far the best all-round character in the
flock, for dignity of mien and large-minded common-sense.
What is the treatment vouchsafed to this blameless husband and
father? One that puts anybody out of sorts with virtue and
its scant rewards. To begin with, the others will not allow
him to go into the pond. There is an organised cabal
against it, and he sits solitary on the bank, calm and resigned,
but, naturally, a trifle hurt. His favourite retreat is a
tiny sort of island on the edge of the pool under the alders,
where with his bent head, and red-rimmed philosophic eyes he
regards his own breast and dreams of happier days. When the
others walk into the country twenty-three of them keep together,
and Burd Alane (as I have named him from the old ballad) walks by
himself. The lack of harmony is so evident here, and the
slight so intentional and direct, that it almost moves me to
tears. The others walk soberly, always in couples, but even
Burd Alane’s rightful spouse is on the side of the
majority, and avoids her consort.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p61b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Out of favour with the entire family" src="images/p61s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>What is the nature of his offence? There can be no
connubial jealousies, I judge, as geese are strictly monogamous,
and having chosen a partner of their joys and sorrows they cleave
to each other until death or some other inexorable circumstance
does them part. If they are ever mistaken in their choice,
and think they might have done better, the world is none the
wiser. Burd Alane looks in good condition, but Phœbe
thinks he is not quite himself, and that some day when he is in
greater strength he will turn on his foes and rend them,
regaining thus his lost prestige, for formerly he was king of the
flock.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>Phœbe has not a vestige of sentiment. She just
asked me if I would have a duckling or a gosling for dinner; that
there were two quite ready—the brown and yellow duckling,
that is the last to leave the water at night, and the white
gosling that never knows his own ’ouse. Which would I
’ave, and would I ’ave it with sage and onion?</p>
<p>Now, had I found a duckling on the table at dinner I should
have eaten it without thinking at all, or with the thought that
it had come from Barbury Green. But eat a duckling that I
have stoned out of the pond, pursued up the bank, chased behind
the wire netting, caught, screaming, in a corner, and carried
struggling to his bed? Feed upon an idiot gosling that I
have found in nine different coops on nine successive
nights—in with the newly-hatched chicks, the half-grown
pullets, the setting hen, the “invaleed goose,” the
drake with the gapes, the old ducks in the pen?—Eat a
gosling that I have caught and put in with his brothers and
sisters (whom he never recognises) so frequently and regularly
that I am familiar with every joint in his body?</p>
<p>In the first place, with my own small bump of locality and
lack of geography, I would never willingly consume a creature who
might, by some strange process of assimilation, make me worse in
this respect; in the second place, I should have to be ravenous
indeed to sit down deliberately and make a meal of an intimate
friend, no matter if I had not a high opinion of his
intelligence. I should as soon think of eating the Square
Baby, stuffed with sage and onion and garnished with green
apple-sauce, as the yellow duckling or the idiot gosling.</p>
<p>Mrs. Heaven has just called me into her sitting-room,
ostensibly to ask me to order breakfast, but really for the
pleasure of conversation. Why she should inquire whether I
would relish some gammon of bacon with eggs, when she knows that
there has not been, is not now, and never will be, anything but
gammon of bacon with eggs, is more than I can explain.</p>
<p>“Would you like to see my flowers, miss?” she
asks, folding her plump hands over her white apron.
“They are looking beautiful this morning. I am so
fond of potted plants, of plants in pots. Look at these
geraniums! Now, I consider that pink one a perfect bloom;
yes, a perfect bloom. This is a fine red one, is it not,
miss? Especially fine, don’t you think? The
trouble with the red variety is that they’re apt to get
“bobby” and have to be washed regularly; quite bobby
they do get indeed, I assure you. That white one has just
gone out of blossom, and it was really wonderful. You could
’ardly have told it from a paper flower, miss, not from a
white paper flower. My plants are my children nowadays,
since Albert Edward is my only care. I have been the mother
of eleven children, miss, all of them living, so far as I know; I
know nothing to the contrary. I ’ope you are not
wearying of this solitary place, miss? It will grow upon
you, I am sure, as it did upon Mrs. Pollock, with all her
peculiar fancies, and as it ’as grown upon us.—We
formerly had a butcher’s shop in Buffington, and it was
naturally a great responsibility. Mr. Heaven’s nerves
are not strong, and at last he wanted a life of more quietude,
more quietude was what he craved. The life of a retail
butcher is a most exciting and wearying one. Nobody
satisfied with their meat; as if it mattered in a world of
change! Everybody complaining of too much bone or too
little fat; nobody wishing tough chops or cutlets, but always
seeking after fine joints, when it’s against reason and
nature that all joints should be juicy and all cutlets tender;
always complaining if livers are not sent with every fowl, always
asking you to remember the trimmin’s, always wanting their
beef well ’ung, and then if you ’ang it a minute too
long, it’s left on your ’ands! I often used to
say to Mr. Heaven, yes many’s the time I’ve said it,
that if people would think more of the great ’ereafter and
less about their own little stomachs, it would be a deal better
for them, yes, a deal better, and make it much more comfortable
for the butchers!”</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p65b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="The life . . . is a most exciting and wearying one" src="images/p65s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>Burd Alane has had a good quarter of an hour to-day.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p66.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="His spouse took a brief promenade with him" src="images/p66.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>His spouse took a brief promenade with him. To be sure,
it was during an absence of the flock on the other side of the
hedge so that the moral effect of her spasm of wifely loyalty was
quite lost upon them. I strongly suspect that she would not
have granted anything but a secret interview. What a petty,
weak, ignoble character! I really don’t like to think
so badly of any fellow-creature as I am forced to think of that
politic, time-serving, pusillanimous goose. I believe she
laid the egg that produced the idiot gosling!</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />