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<h1> ELIZABETH AND HER GERMAN GARDEN </h1>
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<h2> By "Elizabeth", AKA Marie Annette Beauchamp </h2>
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<h2> ELIZABETH AND HER GERMAN GARDEN </h2>
<p>May 7th.—I love my garden. I am writing in it now in the late
afternoon loveliness, much interrupted by the mosquitoes and the
temptation to look at all the glories of the new green leaves washed half
an hour ago in a cold shower. Two owls are perched near me, and are
carrying on a long conversation that I enjoy as much as any warbling of
nightingales. The gentleman owl says [[musical notes occur here in the
printed text]], and she answers from her tree a little way off, [[musical
notes]], beautifully assenting to and completing her lord's remark, as
becomes a properly constructed German she-owl. They say the same thing
over and over again so emphatically that I think it must be something
nasty about me; but I shall not let myself be frightened away by the
sarcasm of owls.</p>
<p>This is less a garden than a wilderness. No one has lived in the house,
much less in the garden, for twenty-five years, and it is such a pretty
old place that the people who might have lived here and did not,
deliberately preferring the horrors of a flat in a town, must have
belonged to that vast number of eyeless and earless persons of whom the
world seems chiefly composed. Noseless too, though it does not sound
pretty; but the greater part of my spring happiness is due to the scent of
the wet earth and young leaves.</p>
<p>I am always happy (out of doors be it understood, for indoors there are
servants and furniture) but in quite different ways, and my spring
happiness bears no resemblance to my summer or autumn happiness, though it
is not more intense, and there were days last winter when I danced for
sheer joy out in my frost-bound garden, in spite of my years and children.
But I did it behind a bush, having a due regard for the decencies.</p>
<p>There are so many bird-cherries round me, great trees with branches
sweeping the grass, and they are so wreathed just now with white blossoms
and tenderest green that the garden looks like a wedding. I never saw such
masses of them; they seemed to fill the place. Even across a little stream
that bounds the garden on the east, and right in the middle of the
cornfield beyond, there is an immense one, a picture of grace and glory
against the cold blue of the spring sky.</p>
<p>My garden is surrounded by cornfields and meadows, and beyond are great
stretches of sandy heath and pine forests, and where the forests leave off
the bare heath begins again; but the forests are beautiful in their lofty,
pink-stemmed vastness, far overhead the crowns of softest gray-green, and
underfoot a bright green wortleberry carpet, and everywhere the breathless
silence; and the bare heaths are beautiful too, for one can see across
them into eternity almost, and to go out on to them with one's face
towards the setting sun is like going into the very presence of God.</p>
<p>In the middle of this plain is the oasis of birdcherries and greenery
where I spend my happy days, and in the middle of the oasis is the gray
stone house with many gables where I pass my reluctant nights. The house
is very old, and has been added to at various times. It was a convent
before the Thirty Years' War, and the vaulted chapel, with its brick floor
worn by pious peasant knees, is now used as a hall. Gustavus Adolphus and
his Swedes passed through more than once, as is duly recorded in archives
still preserved, for we are on what was then the high-road between Sweden
and Brandenburg the unfortunate. The Lion of the North was no doubt an
estimable person and acted wholly up to his convictions, but he must have
sadly upset the peaceful nuns, who were not without convictions of their
own, sending them out on to the wide, empty plain to piteously seek some
life to replace the life of silence here.</p>
<p>From nearly all the windows of the house I can look out across the plain,
with no obstacle in the shape of a hill, right away to a blue line of
distant forest, and on the west side uninterruptedly to the setting sun—nothing
but a green, rolling plain, with a sharp edge against the sunset. I love
those west windows better than any others, and have chosen my bedroom on
that side of the house so that even times of hair-brushing may not be
entirely lost, and the young woman who attends to such matters has been
taught to fulfil her duties about a mistress recumbent in an easychair
before an open window, and not to profane with chatter that sweet and
solemn time. This girl is grieved at my habit of living almost in the
garden, and all her ideas as to the sort of life a respectable German lady
should lead have got into a sad muddle since she came to me. The people
round about are persuaded that I am, to put it as kindly as possible,
exceedingly eccentric, for the news has travelled that I spend the day out
of doors with a book, and that no mortal eye has ever yet seen me sew or
cook. But why cook when you can get some one to cook for you? And as for
sewing, the maids will hem the sheets better and quicker than I could, and
all forms of needlework of the fancy order are inventions of the evil one
for keeping the foolish from applying their heart to wisdom.</p>
<p>We had been married five years before it struck us that we might as well
make use of this place by coming down and living in it. Those five years
were spent in a flat in a town, and during their whole interminable length
I was perfectly miserable and perfectly healthy, which disposes of the
ugly notion that has at times disturbed me that my happiness here is less
due to the garden than to a good digestion. And while we were wasting our
lives there, here was this dear place with dandelions up to the very door,
all the paths grass-grown and completely effaced, in winter so lonely,
with nobody but the north wind taking the least notice of it, and in May—in
all those five lovely Mays—no one to look at the wonderful
bird-cherries and still more wonderful masses of lilacs, everything
glowing and blowing, the virginia creeper madder every year, until at
last, in October, the very roof was wreathed with blood-red tresses, the
owls and the squirrels and all the blessed little birds reigning supreme,
and not a living creature ever entering the empty house except the snakes,
which got into the habit during those silent years of wriggling up the
south wall into the rooms on that side whenever the old housekeeper opened
the windows. All that was here,—peace, and happiness, and a
reasonable life,—and yet it never struck me to come and live in it.
Looking back I am astonished, and can in no way account for the tardiness
of my discovery that here, in this far-away corner, was my kingdom of
heaven. Indeed, so little did it enter my head to even use the place in
summer, that I submitted to weeks of seaside life with all its horrors
every year; until at last, in the early spring of last year, having come
down for the opening of the village school, and wandering out afterwards
into the bare and desolate garden, I don't know what smell of wet earth or
rotting leaves brought back my childhood with a rush and all the happy
days I had spent in a garden. Shall I ever forget that day? It was the
beginning of my real life, my coming of age as it were, and entering into
my kingdom. Early March, gray, quiet skies, and brown, quiet earth;
leafless and sad and lonely enough out there in the damp and silence, yet
there I stood feeling the same rapture of pure delight in the first breath
of spring that I used to as a child, and the five wasted years fell from
me like a cloak, and the world was full of hope, and I vowed myself then
and there to nature, and have been happy ever since.</p>
<p>My other half being indulgent, and with some faint thought perhaps that it
might be as well to look after the place, consented to live in it at any
rate for a time; whereupon followed six specially blissful weeks from the
end of April into June, during which I was here alone, supposed to be
superintending the painting and papering, but as a matter of fact only
going into the house when the workmen had gone out of it.</p>
<p>How happy I was! I don't remember any time quite so perfect since the days
when I was too little to do lessons and was turned out with sugar on my
eleven o'clock bread and butter on to a lawn closely strewn with
dandelions and daisies. The sugar on the bread and butter has lost its
charm, but I love the dandelions and daisies even more passionately now
than then, and never would endure to see them all mown away if I were not
certain that in a day or two they would be pushing up their little faces
again as jauntily as ever. During those six weeks I lived in a world of
dandelions and delights. The dandelions carpeted the three lawns,—they
used to be lawns, but have long since blossomed out into meadows filled
with every sort of pretty weed,—and under and among the groups of
leafless oaks and beeches were blue hepaticas, white anemones, violets,
and celandines in sheets. The celandines in particular delighted me with
their clean, happy brightness, so beautifully trim and newly varnished, as
though they too had had the painters at work on them. Then, when the
anemones went, came a few stray periwinkles and Solomon's Seal, and all
the birdcherries blossomed in a burst. And then, before I had a little got
used to the joy of their flowers against the sky, came the lilacs—masses
and masses of them, in clumps on the grass, with other shrubs and trees by
the side of walks, and one great continuous bank of them half a mile long
right past the west front of the house, away down as far as one could see,
shining glorious against a background of firs. When that time came, and
when, before it was over, the acacias all blossomed too, and four great
clumps of pale, silvery-pink peonies flowered under the south windows, I
felt so absolutely happy, and blest, and thankful, and grateful, that I
really cannot describe it. My days seemed to melt away in a dream of pink
and purple peace.</p>
<p>There were only the old housekeeper and her handmaiden in the house, so
that on the plea of not giving too much trouble I could indulge what my
other half calls my <i>fantaisie</i> <i>dereglee</i> as regards meals—that
is to say, meals so simple that they could be brought out to the lilacs on
a tray; and I lived, I remember, on salad and bread and tea the whole
time, sometimes a very tiny pigeon appearing at lunch to save me, as the
old lady thought, from starvation. Who but a woman could have stood salad
for six weeks, even salad sanctified by the presence and scent of the most
gorgeous lilac masses? I did, and grew in grace every day, though I have
never liked it since. How often now, oppressed by the necessity of
assisting at three dining-room meals daily, two of which are conducted by
the functionaries held indispensable to a proper maintenance of the family
dignity, and all of which are pervaded by joints of meat, how often do I
think of my salad days, forty in number, and of the blessedness of being
alone as I was then alone!</p>
<p>And then the evenings, when the workmen had all gone and the house was
left to emptiness and echoes, and the old housekeeper had gathered up her
rheumatic limbs into her bed, and my little room in quite another part of
the house had been set ready, how reluctantly I used to leave the friendly
frogs and owls, and with my heart somewhere down in my shoes lock the door
to the garden behind me, and pass through the long series of echoing south
rooms full of shadows and ladders and ghostly pails of painters' mess, and
humming a tune to make myself believe I liked it, go rather slowly across
the brick-floored hall, up the creaking stairs, down the long whitewashed
passage, and with a final rush of panic whisk into my room and double lock
and bolt the door!</p>
<p>There were no bells in the house, and I used to take a great dinner-bell
to bed with me so that at least I might be able to make a noise if
frightened in the night, though what good it would have been I don't know,
as there was no one to hear. The housemaid slept in another little cell
opening out of mine, and we two were the only living creatures in the
great empty west wing. She evidently did not believe in ghosts, for I
could hear how she fell asleep immediately after getting into bed; nor do
I believe in them, "mais je les redoute," as a French lady said, who from
her books appears to have been strongminded.</p>
<p>The dinner-bell was a great solace; it was never rung, but it comforted me
to see it on the chair beside my bed, as my nights were anything but
placid, it was all so strange, and there were such queer creakings and
other noises. I used to lie awake for hours, startled out of a light sleep
by the cracking of some board, and listen to the indifferent snores of the
girl in the next room. In the morning, of course, I was as brave as a lion
and much amused at the cold perspirations of the night before; but even
the nights seem to me now to have been delightful, and myself like those
historic boys who heard a voice in every wind and snatched a fearful joy.
I would gladly shiver through them all over again for the sake of the
beautiful purity of the house, empty of servants and upholstery.</p>
<p>How pretty the bedrooms looked with nothing in them but their cheerful new
papers! Sometimes I would go into those that were finished and build all
sorts of castles in the air about their future and their past. Would the
nuns who had lived in them know their little white-washed cells again, all
gay with delicate flower papers and clean white paint? And how astonished
they would be to see cell No. 14 turned into a bathroom, with a bath big
enough to insure a cleanliness of body equal to their purity of soul! They
would look upon it as a snare of the tempter; and I know that in my own
case I only began to be shocked at the blackness of my nails the day that
I began to lose the first whiteness of my soul by falling in love at
fifteen with the parish organist, or rather with the glimpse of surplice
and Roman nose and fiery moustache which was all I ever saw of him, and
which I loved to distraction for at least six months; at the end of which
time, going out with my governess one day, I passed him in the street, and
discovered that his unofficial garb was a frock-coat combined with a
turn-down collar and a "bowler" hat, and never loved him any more.</p>
<p>The first part of that time of blessedness was the most perfect, for I had
not a thought of anything but the peace and beauty all round me. Then he
appeared suddenly who has a right to appear when and how he will and
rebuked me for never having written, and when I told him that I had been
literally too happy to think of writing, he seemed to take it as a
reflection on himself that I could be happy alone. I took him round the
garden along the new paths I had had made, and showed him the acacia and
lilac glories, and he said that it was the purest selfishness to enjoy
myself when neither he nor the offspring were with me, and that the lilacs
wanted thoroughly pruning. I tried to appease him by offering him the
whole of my salad and toast supper which stood ready at the foot of the
little verandah steps when we came back, but nothing appeased that Man of
Wrath, and he said he would go straight back to the neglected family. So
he went; and the remainder of the precious time was disturbed by twinges
of conscience (to which I am much subject) whenever I found myself wanting
to jump for joy. I went to look at the painters every time my feet were
for taking me to look at the garden; I trotted diligently up and down the
passages; I criticised and suggested and commanded more in one day than I
had done in all the rest of the time; I wrote regularly and sent my love;
but I could not manage to fret and yearn. What are you to do if your
conscience is clear and your liver in order and the sun is shining?</p>
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