<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
<p style="text-align: right">July 14th.</p>
<p>We are not wholly without the pleasures of the town in Barbury
Green. Once or twice in a summer, late on a Saturday
afternoon, a procession of red and yellow vans drives into a
field near the centre of the village. By the time the vans
are unpacked all the children in the community are surrounding
the gate of entrance. There is rifle-shooting, there is
fortune-telling, there are games of pitch and toss, and swings,
and French bagatelle; and, to crown all, a wonderful orchestrion
that goes by steam. The water is boiled for the
public’s tea, and at the same time thrilling strains of
melody are flung into the air. There is at present only one
tune in the orchestrion’s repertory, but it is a very good
tune; though after hearing it three hundred and seven times in a
single afternoon, it pursues one, sleeping and waking, for the
next week. Phœbe and I took the Square Baby and went
in to this diversified entertainment. There was a small
crowd of children at the entrance, but as none of them seemed to
be provided with pennies, and I felt in a fairy godmother mood, I
offered them the freedom of the place at my expense.</p>
<p>I never purchased more radiant good-will for less money, but
the combined effect of the well-boiled tea and the boiling
orchestrion produced many village nightmares, so the mothers told
me at chapel next morning.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>I have many friends in Barbury Green, and often have a
pleasant chat with the draper, and the watchmaker, and the
chemist.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p74b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="The freedom of the place at my expense" src="images/p74s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>The last house on the principal street is rather an ugly one,
with especially nice window curtains. As I was taking my
daily walk to the post-office (an entirely unfruitful expedition
thus far, as nobody has taken the pains to write to me) I saw a
nursemaid coming out of the gate, wheeling a baby in a
perambulator. She was going placidly away from the Green
when, far in the distance, she espied a man walking rapidly
toward us, a heavy Gladstone bag in one hand. She gazed
fixedly for a moment, her eyes brightening and her cheeks
flushing with pleasure,—whoever it was, it was an
unexpected arrival;—then she retraced her steps and,
running up the garden-path, opened the front door and held an
excited colloquy with somebody; a slender somebody in a nice
print gown and neatly-dressed hair, who came to the gate and
peeped beyond the hedge several times, drawing back between peeps
with smiles and heightened colour. She did not run down the
road, even when she had satisfied herself of the identity of the
traveller; perhaps that would not have been good form in an
English village, for there were houses on the opposite side of
the way. She waited until he opened the gate, the nursemaid
took the bag and looked discreetly into the hedge, then the
mistress slipped her hand through the traveller’s arm and
walked up the path as if she had nothing else in the world to
wish for. The nurse had a part in the joy, for she lifted
the baby out of the perambulator and showed proudly how much he
had grown.</p>
<p>It was a dear little scene, and I, a passer-by, had shared in
it and felt better for it. I think their content was no
less because part of it had enriched my life, for happiness, like
mercy, is twice blessed; it blesses those who are most intimately
associated in it, and it blesses all those who see it, hear it,
feel it, touch it, or breathe the same atmosphere. A
laughing, crowing baby in a house, one cheerful woman singing
about her work, a boy whistling at the plough, a romance just
suspected, with its miracle of two hearts melting into
one—the wind’s always in the west when you have any
of these wonder-workers in your neighbourhood.</p>
<p>I have talks too, sometimes, with the old parson, who lives in
a quaint house with “<i>Parva Domus Magna Quies</i>”
cut into the stone over the doorway. He is not a preaching
parson, but a retired one, almost the nicest kind, I often
think.</p>
<p>He has been married thirty years, he tells me; thirty years,
spent in the one little house with the bricks painted red and
grey alternately, and the scarlet holly-hocks growing under the
windows. I am sure they have been sweet, true, kind years,
and that his heart must be a quiet, peaceful place just like his
house and garden.</p>
<p>“I was only eleven years old when I fell in love with my
wife,” he told me as we sat on the seat under the
lime-tree; he puffing cosily at his pipe, I plaiting grasses for
a hatband.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p77b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Puffing cosily at his pipe" src="images/p77s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>“It was just before Sunday-school. Her mother had
dressed her all in white muslin like a fairy, but she had stepped
on the edge of a puddle, and some of the muddy water had
bespattered her frock. A circle of children had surrounded
her, and some of the motherly little girls were on their knees
rubbing at the spots anxiously, while one of them wiped away the
tears that were running down her pretty cheeks. I
looked! It was fatal! I did not look again, but I was
smitten to the very heart! I did not speak to her for six
years, but when I did, it was all right with both of us, thank
God! and I’ve been in love with her ever since, when she
behaves herself!”</p>
<p>That is the way they speak of love in Barbury Green, and oh!
how much sweeter and more wholesome it is than the language of
the town! Who would not be a Goose Girl, “to win the
secret of the weed’s plain heart”? It seems to
me that in society we are always gazing at magic-lantern shows,
but here we rest our tired eyes with looking at the stars.</p>
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