<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<p>I think my lady was not aware of Mr. Horner’s views on education (as
making men into more useful members of society), or the practice to which he
was putting his precepts in taking Harry Gregson as pupil and protégé; if,
indeed, she were aware of Harry’s distinct existence at all, until the
following unfortunate occasion. The anteroom, which was a kind of
business-place for my lady to receive her steward and tenants in, was
surrounded by shelves. I cannot call them book-shelves, though there were many
books on them; but the contents of the volumes were principally manuscript, and
relating to details connected with the Hanbury property. There were also one or
two dictionaries, gazetteers, works of reference on the management of property;
all of a very old date (the dictionary was Bailey’s, I remember; we had a
great Johnson in my lady’s room, but where lexicographers differed, she
generally preferred Bailey).</p>
<p>In this antechamber a footman generally sat, awaiting orders from my lady; for
she clung to the grand old customs, and despised any bells, except her own
little hand-bell, as modern inventions; she would have her people always within
summons of this silvery bell, or her scarce less silvery voice. This man had
not the sinecure you might imagine. He had to reply to the private entrance;
what we should call the back door in a smaller house. As none came to the front
door but my lady, and those of the county whom she honoured by visiting, and
her nearest acquaintance of this kind lived eight miles (of bad road) off, the
majority of comers knocked at the nail-studded terrace-door; not to have it
opened (for open it stood, by my lady’s orders, winter and summer, so
that the snow often drifted into the back hall, and lay there in heaps when the
weather was severe), but to summon some one to receive their message, or carry
their request to be allowed to speak to my lady. I remember it was long before
Mr. Gray could be made to understand that the great door was only open on state
occasions, and even to the last he would as soon come in by that as the terrace
entrance. I had been received there on my first setting foot over my
lady’s threshold; every stranger was led in by that way the first time
they came; but after that (with the exceptions I have named) they went round by
the terrace, as it were by instinct. It was an assistance to this instinct to
be aware that from time immemorial, the magnificent and fierce Hanbury
wolf-hounds, which were extinct in every other part of the island, had been and
still were kept chained in the front quadrangle, where they bayed through a
great part of the day and night and were always ready with their deep, savage
growl at the sight of every person and thing, excepting the man who fed them,
my lady’s carriage and four, and my lady herself. It was pretty to see
her small figure go up to the great, crouching brutes thumping the flags with
their heavy, wagging tails, and slobbering in an ecstacy of delight, at her
light approach and soft caress. She had no fear of them; but she was a Hanbury
born, and the tale went, that they and their kind knew all Hanburys instantly,
and acknowledged their supremacy, ever since the ancestors of the breed had
been brought from the East by the great Sir Urian Hanbury, who lay with his
legs crossed on the altar-tomb in the church. Moreover, it was reported that,
not fifty years before, one of these dogs had eaten up a child, which had
inadvertently strayed within reach of its chain. So you may imagine how most
people preferred the terrace-door. Mr. Gray did not seem to care for the dogs.
It might be absence of mind, for I have heard of his starting away from their
sudden spring when he had unwittingly walked within reach of their chains: but
it could hardly have been absence of mind, when one day he went right up to one
of them, and patted him in the most friendly manner, the dog meanwhile looking
pleased, and affably wagging his tail, just as if Mr. Gray had been a Hanbury.
We were all very much puzzled by this, and to this day I have not been able to
account for it.</p>
<p>But now let us go back to the terrace-door, and the footman sitting in the
antechamber.</p>
<p>One morning we heard a parleying, which rose to such a vehemence, and lasted
for so long, that my lady had to ring her hand-bell twice before the footman
heard it.</p>
<p>“What is the matter, John?” asked she, when he entered,</p>
<p>“A little boy, my lady, who says he comes from Mr. Horner, and must see
your ladyship. Impudent little lad!” (This last to himself.)</p>
<p>“What does he want?”</p>
<p>“That’s just what I have asked him, my lady, but he won’t
tell me, please your ladyship.”</p>
<p>“It is, probably, some message from Mr. Horner,” said Lady Ludlow,
with just a shade of annoyance in her manner; for it was against all etiquette
to send a message to her, and by such a messenger too!</p>
<p>“No! please your ladyship, I asked him if he had any message, and he said
no, he had none; but he must see your ladyship for all that.”</p>
<p>“You had better show him in then, without more words,” said her
ladyship, quietly, but still, as I have said, rather annoyed.</p>
<p>As if in mockery of the humble visitor, the footman threw open both battants of
the door, and in the opening there stood a lithe, wiry lad, with a thick head
of hair, standing out in every direction, as if stirred by some electrical
current, a short, brown face, red now from affright and excitement, wide,
resolute mouth, and bright, deep-set eyes, which glanced keenly and rapidly
round the room, as if taking in everything (and all was new and strange), to be
thought and puzzled over at some future time. He knew enough of manners not to
speak first to one above him in rank, or else he was afraid.</p>
<p>“What do you want with me?” asked my lady; in so gentle a tone that
it seemed to surprise and stun him.</p>
<p>“An’t please your ladyship?” said he, as if he had been deaf.</p>
<p>“You come from Mr. Horner’s: why do you want to see me?”
again asked she, a little more loudly.</p>
<p>“An’t please your ladyship, Mr. Horner was sent for all on a sudden
to Warwick this morning.”</p>
<p>His face began to work; but he felt it, and closed his lips into a resolute
form.</p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“And he went off all on a sudden like.”</p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“And he left a note for your ladyship with me, your ladyship.”</p>
<p>“Is that all? You might have given it to the footman.”</p>
<p>“Please your ladyship, I’ve clean gone and lost it.”</p>
<p>He never took his eyes off her face. If he had not kept his look fixed, he
would have burst out crying.</p>
<p>“That was very careless,” said my lady gently. “But I am sure
you are very sorry for it. You had better try and find it; it may have been of
consequence.</p>
<p>“Please, mum—please your ladyship—I can say it off by
heart.”</p>
<p>“You! What do you mean?” I was really afraid now. My lady’s
blue eyes absolutely gave out light, she was so much displeased, and, moreover,
perplexed. The more reason he had for affright, the more his courage rose. He
must have seen,—so sharp a lad must have perceived her displeasure; but
he went on quickly and steadily.</p>
<p>“Mr. Horner, my lady, has taught me to read, write, and cast accounts, my
lady. And he was in a hurry, and he folded his paper up, but he did not seal
it; and I read it, my lady; and now, my lady, it seems like as if I had got it
off by heart;” and he went on with a high pitched voice, saying out very
loud what, I have no doubt, were the identical words of the letter, date,
signature and all: it was merely something about a deed, which required my
lady’s signature.</p>
<p>When he had done, he stood almost as if he expected commendation for his
accurate memory.</p>
<p>My lady’s eyes contracted till the pupils were as needle-points; it was a
way she had when much disturbed. She looked at me and said—</p>
<p>“Margaret Dawson, what will this world come to?” And then she was
silent.</p>
<p>The lad, beginning to perceive he had given deep offence, stood stock
still—as if his brave will had brought him into this presence, and
impelled him to confession, and the best amends he could make, but had now
deserted him, or was extinct, and left his body motionless, until some one else
with word or deed made him quit the room. My lady looked again at him, and saw
the frowning, dumb-foundering terror at his misdeed, and the manner in which
his confession had been received.</p>
<p>“My poor lad!” said she, the angry look leaving her face,
“into whose hands have you fallen?”</p>
<p>The boy’s lips began to quiver.</p>
<p>“Don’t you know what tree we read of in Genesis?—No! I hope
you have not got to read so easily as that.” A pause. “Who has
taught you to read and write?”</p>
<p>“Please, my lady, I meant no harm, my lady.” He was fairly
blubbering, overcome by her evident feeling of dismay and regret, the soft
repression of which was more frightening to him than any strong or violent
words would have been.</p>
<p>“Who taught you, I ask?”</p>
<p>“It were Mr. Horner’s clerk who learned me, my lady.”</p>
<p>“And did Mr. Horner know of it?”</p>
<p>“Yes, my lady. And I am sure I thought for to please him.”</p>
<p>“Well! perhaps you were not to blame for that. But I wonder at Mr.
Horner. However, my boy, as you have got possession of edge-tools, you must
have some rules how to use them. Did you never hear that you were not to open
letters?”</p>
<p>“Please, my lady, it were open. Mr. Horner forgot for to seal it, in his
hurry to be off.”</p>
<p>“But you must not read letters that are not intended for you. You must
never try to read any letters that are not directed to you, even if they be
open before you.”</p>
<p>“Please, may lady, I thought it were good for practice, all as one as a
book.”</p>
<p>My lady looked bewildered as to what way she could farther explain to him the
laws of honour as regarded letters.</p>
<p>“You would not listen, I am sure,” said she, “to anything you
were not intended to hear?”</p>
<p>He hesitated for a moment, partly because he did not fully comprehend the
question. My lady repeated it. The light of intelligence came into his eager
eyes, and I could see that he was not certain if he could tell the truth.</p>
<p>“Please, my lady, I always hearken when I hear folk talking secrets; but
I mean no harm.”</p>
<p>My poor lady sighed: she was not prepared to begin a long way off in morals.
Honour was, to her, second nature, and she had never tried to find out on what
principle its laws were based. So, telling the lad that she wished to see Mr.
Horner when he returned from Warwick, she dismissed him with a despondent look;
he, meanwhile, right glad to be out of the awful gentleness of her presence.</p>
<p>“What is to be done?” said she, half to herself and half to me. I
could not answer, for I was puzzled myself.</p>
<p>“It was a right word,” she continued, “that I used, when I
called reading and writing ‘edge-tools.’ If our lower orders have
these edge-tools given to them, we shall have the terrible scenes of the French
Revolution acted over again in England. When I was a girl, one never heard of
the rights of men, one only heard of the duties. Now, here was Mr. Gray, only
last night, talking of the right every child had to instruction. I could hardly
keep my patience with him, and at length we fairly came to words; and I told
him I would have no such thing as a Sunday-school (or a Sabbath-school, as he
calls it, just like a Jew) in my village.”</p>
<p>“And what did he say, my lady?” I asked; for the struggle that
seemed now to have come to a crisis, had been going on for some time in a quiet
way.</p>
<p>“Why, he gave way to temper, and said he was bound to remember, he was
under the bishop’s authority, not under mine; and implied that he should
persevere in his designs, notwithstanding my expressed opinion.”</p>
<p>“And your ladyship—” I half inquired.</p>
<p>“I could only rise and curtsey, and civilly dismiss him. When two persons
have arrived at a certain point of expression on a subject, about which they
differ as materially as I do from Mr. Gray, the wisest course, if they wish to
remain friends, is to drop the conversation entirely and suddenly. It is one of
the few cases where abruptness is desirable.”</p>
<p>I was sorry for Mr. Gray. He had been to see me several times, and had helped
me to bear my illness in a better spirit than I should have done without his
good advice and prayers. And I had gathered from little things he said, how
much his heart was set upon this new scheme. I liked him so much, and I loved
and respected my lady so well, that I could not bear them to be on the cool
terms to which they were constantly getting. Yet I could do nothing but keep
silence.</p>
<p>I suppose my lady understood something of what was passing in my mind; for,
after a minute or two, she went on:—</p>
<p>“If Mr. Gray knew all I know,—if he had my experience, he would not
be so ready to speak of setting up his new plans in opposition to my judgment.
Indeed,” she continued, lashing herself up with her own recollections,
“times are changed when the parson of a village comes to beard the liege
lady in her own house. Why, in my grandfather’s days, the parson was
family chaplain too, and dined at the Hall every Sunday. He was helped last,
and expected to have done first. I remember seeing him take up his plate and
knife and fork, and say with his mouth full all the time he was speaking:
‘If you please, Sir Urian, and my lady, I’ll follow the beef into
the housekeeper’s room;’ for you see, unless he did so, he stood no
chance of a second helping. A greedy man, that parson was, to be sure! I
recollect his once eating up the whole of some little bird at dinner, and by
way of diverting attention from his greediness, he told how he had heard that a
rook soaked in vinegar and then dressed in a particular way, could not be
distinguished from the bird he was then eating. I saw by the grim look of my
grandfather’s face that the parson’s doing and saying displeased
him; and, child as I was, I had some notion of what was coming, when, as I was
riding out on my little, white pony, by my grandfather’s side, the next
Friday, he stopped one of the gamekeepers, and bade him shoot one of the oldest
rooks he could find. I knew no more about it till Sunday, when a dish was set
right before the parson, and Sir Urian said: ‘Now, Parson Hemming, I have
had a rook shot, and soaked in vinegar, and dressed as you described last
Sunday. Fall to, man, and eat it with as good an appetite as you had last
Sunday. Pick the bones clean, or by—, no more Sunday dinners shall you
eat at my table!’ I gave one look at poor Mr. Hemming’s face, as he
tried to swallow the first morsel, and make believe as though he thought it
very good; but I could not look again, for shame, although my grandfather
laughed, and kept asking us all round if we knew what could have become of the
parson’s appetite.”</p>
<p>“And did he finish it?” I asked.</p>
<p>“O yes, my dear. What my grandfather said was to be done, was done
always. He was a terrible man in his anger! But to think of the difference
between Parson Hemming and Mr. Gray! or even of poor dear Mr. Mountford and Mr.
Gray. Mr. Mountford would never have withstood me as Mr. Gray did!”</p>
<p>“And your ladyship really thinks that it would not be right to have a
Sunday-school?” I asked, feeling very timid as I put time question.</p>
<p>“Certainly not. As I told Mr. Gray. I consider a knowledge of the Creed,
and of the Lord’s Prayer, as essential to salvation; and that any child
may have, whose parents bring it regularly to church. Then there are the Ten
Commandments, which teach simple duties in the plainest language. Of course, if
a lad is taught to read and write (as that unfortunate boy has been who was
here this morning) his duties become complicated, and his temptations much
greater, while, at the same time, he has no hereditary principles and
honourable training to serve as safeguards. I might take up my old simile of
the race-horse and cart-horse. I am distressed,” continued she, with a
break in her ideas, “about that boy. The whole thing reminds me so much
of a story of what happened to a friend of mine—Clément de Créquy. Did I
ever tell you about him?”</p>
<p>“No, your ladyship,” I replied.</p>
<p>“Poor Clément! More than twenty years ago, Lord Ludlow and I spent a
winter in Paris. He had many friends there; perhaps not very good or very wise
men, but he was so kind that he liked every one, and every one liked him. We
had an apartment, as they call it there, in the Rue de Lille; we had the
first-floor of a grand hôtel, with the basement for our servants. On the
floor above us the owner of the house lived, a Marquise de Créquy, a widow.
They tell me that the Créquy coat-of-arms is still emblazoned, after all these
terrible years, on a shield above the arched porte-cochère, just as it was
then, though the family is quite extinct. Madame de Créquy had only one son,
Clément, who was just the same age as my Urian—you may see his portrait
in the great hall—Urian’s, I mean.” I knew that Master Urian
had been drowned at sea; and often had I looked at the presentment of his bonny
hopeful face, in his sailor’s dress, with right hand outstretched to a
ship on the sea in the distance, as if he had just said, “Look at her!
all her sails are set, and I’m just off.” Poor Master Urian! he
went down in this very ship not a year after the picture was taken! But now I
will go back to my lady’s story. “I can see those two boys playing
now,” continued she, softly, shutting her eyes, as if the better to call
up the vision, “as they used to do five-and-twenty years ago in those
old-fashioned French gardens behind our hôtel. Many a time have I watched
them from my windows. It was, perhaps, a better play-place than an English
garden would have been, for there were but few flower-beds, and no lawn at all
to speak about; but, instead, terraces and balustrades and vases and flights of
stone steps more in the Italian style; and there were jets-d’eau, and
little fountains that could be set playing by turning water-cocks that were
hidden here and there. How Clément delighted in turning the water on to
surprise Urian, and how gracefully he did the honours, as it were, to my dear,
rough, sailor lad! Urian was as dark as a gipsy boy, and cared little for his
appearance, and resisted all my efforts at setting off his black eyes and
tangled curls; but Clément, without ever showing that he thought about himself
and his dress, was always dainty and elegant, even though his clothes were
sometimes but threadbare. He used to be dressed in a kind of hunter’s
green suit, open at the neck and half-way down the chest to beautiful old lace
frills; his long golden curls fell behind just like a girl’s, and his
hair in front was cut over his straight dark eyebrows in a line almost as
straight. Urian learnt more of a gentleman’s carefulness and propriety of
appearance from that lad in two months than he had done in years from all my
lectures. I recollect one day, when the two boys were in full romp—and,
my window being open, I could hear them perfectly—and Urian was daring
Clément to some scrambling or climbing, which Clément refused to undertake, but
in a hesitating way, as though he longed to do it if some reason had not stood
in the way; and at times, Urian, who was hasty and thoughtless, poor fellow,
told Clément that he was afraid. ‘Fear!’ said the French boy,
drawing himself up; ‘you do not know what you say. If you will be here at
six to-morrow morning, when it is only just light, I will take that
starling’s nest on the top of yonder chimney.’ ‘But why not
now, Clément?’ said Urian, putting his arm round Clément’s neck.
‘Why then, and not now, just when we are in the humour for it?’
‘Because we De Créquys are poor, and my mother cannot afford me another
suit of clothes this year, and yonder stone carving is all jagged, and would
tear my coat and breeches. Now, to-morrow morning I could go up with nothing on
but an old shirt.’</p>
<p>“‘But you would tear your legs.’</p>
<p>“‘My race do not care for pain,’ said the boy, drawing
himself from Urian’s arm, and walking a few steps away, with a becoming
pride and reserve; for he was hurt at being spoken to as if he were afraid, and
annoyed at having to confess the true reason for declining the feat. But Urian
was not to be thus baffled. He went up to Clément, and put his arm once more
about his neck, and I could see the two lads as they walked down the terrace
away from the hotel windows: first Urian spoke eagerly, looking with imploring
fondness into Clément’s face, which sought the ground, till at last the
French boy spoke, and by-and-by his arm was round Urian too, and they paced
backwards and forwards in deep talk, but gravely, as became men, rather than
boys.</p>
<p>“All at once, from the little chapel at the corner of the large garden
belonging to the Missions Etrangères, I heard the tinkle of the little bell,
announcing the elevation of the host. Down on his knees went Clément, hands
crossed, eyes bent down: while Urian stood looking on in respectful thought.</p>
<p>“What a friendship that might have been! I never dream of Urian without
seeing Clément too—Urian speaks to me, or does something,—but
Clément only flits round Urian, and never seems to see any one else!”</p>
<p>“But I must not forget to tell you, that the next morning, before he was
out of his room, a footman of Madame de Créquy’s brought Urian the
starling’s nest.”</p>
<p>“Well! we came back to England, and the boys were to correspond; and
Madame de Créquy and I exchanged civilities; and Urian went to sea.”</p>
<p>“After that, all seemed to drop away. I cannot tell you all. However, to
confine myself to the De Créquys. I had a letter from Clément; I knew he felt
his friend’s death deeply; but I should never have learnt it from the
letter he sent. It was formal, and seemed like chaff to my hungering heart.
Poor fellow! I dare say he had found it hard to write. What could he—or
any one—say to a mother who has lost her child? The world does not think
so, and, in general, one must conform to the customs of the world; but, judging
from my own experience, I should say that reverent silence at such times is the
tenderest balm. Madame de Créquy wrote too. But I knew she could not feel my
loss so much as Clément, and therefore her letter was not such a
disappointment. She and I went on being civil and polite in the way of
commissions, and occasionally introducing friends to each other, for a year or
two, and then we ceased to have any intercourse. Then the terrible Revolution
came. No one who did not live at those times can imagine the daily expectation
of news—the hourly terror of rumours affecting the fortunes and lives of
those whom most of us had known as pleasant hosts, receiving us with peaceful
welcome in their magnificent houses. Of course, there was sin enough and
suffering enough behind the scenes; but we English visitors to Paris had seen
little or nothing of that,—and I had sometimes thought, indeed, how even
death seemed loth to choose his victims out of that brilliant throng whom I had
known. Madame de Créquy’s one boy lived; while three out of my six were
gone since we had met! I do not think all lots are equal, even now that I know
the end of her hopes; but I do say that whatever our individual lot is, it is
our duty to accept it, without comparing it with that of others.</p>
<p>“The times were thick with gloom and terror. ‘What next?’ was
the question we asked of every one who brought us news from Paris. Where were
these demons hidden when, so few years ago, we danced and feasted, and enjoyed
the brilliant salons and the charming friendships of Paris?</p>
<p>“One evening, I was sitting alone in Saint James’s Square; my lord
off at the club with Mr. Fox and others: he had left me, thinking that I should
go to one of the many places to which I had been invited for that evening; but
I had no heart to go anywhere, for it was poor Urian’s birthday, and I
had not even rung for lights, though the day was fast closing in, but was
thinking over all his pretty ways, and on his warm affectionate nature, and how
often I had been too hasty in speaking to him, for all I loved him so dearly;
and how I seemed to have neglected and dropped his dear friend Clément, who
might even now be in need of help in that cruel, bloody Paris. I say I was
thinking reproachfully of all this, and particularly of Clément de Créquy in
connection with Urian, when Fenwick brought me a note, sealed with a
coat-of-arms I knew well, though I could not remember at the moment where I had
seen it. I puzzled over it, as one does sometimes, for a minute or more, before
I opened the letter. In a moment I saw it was from Clément de Créquy. ‘My
mother is here,’ he said: ‘she is very ill, and I am bewildered in
this strange country. May I entreat you to receive me for a few minutes?’
The bearer of the note was the woman of the house where they lodged. I had her
brought up into the anteroom, and questioned her myself, while my carriage was
being brought round. They had arrived in London a fortnight or so before: she
had not known their quality, judging them (according to her kind) by their
dress and their luggage; poor enough, no doubt. The lady had never left her
bed-room since her arrival; the young man waited upon her, did everything for
her, never left her, in fact; only she (the messenger) had promised to stay
within call, as soon as she returned, while he went out somewhere. She could
hardly understand him, he spoke English so badly. He had never spoken it, I
dare say, since he had talked to my Urian.”</p>
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