<p>November 20th.—Last night we had ten degrees of
frost (Fahrenheit), and I went out the first thing this morning to see
what had become of the tea-roses, and behold, they were wide awake and
quite cheerful—covered with rime it is true, but anything but black
and shrivelled. Even those in boxes on each side of the verandah steps
were perfectly alive and full of buds, and one in particular, a Bouquet
d'Or, is a mass of buds, and would flower if it could get the least
encouragement. I am beginning to think that the tenderness of tea-roses is
much exaggerated, and am certainly very glad I had the courage to try them
in this northern garden. But I must not fly too boldly in the face of
Providence, and have ordered those in the boxes to be taken into the
greenhouse for the winter, and hope the Bouquet d'Or, in a sunny place
near the glass, may be induced to open some of those buds. The greenhouse
is only used as a refuge, and kept at a temperature just above freezing,
and is reserved entirely for such plants as cannot stand the very coldest
part of the winter out of doors. I don't use it for growing anything,
because I don't love things that will only bear the garden for three or
four months in the year and require coaxing and petting for the rest of
it. Give me a garden full of strong, healthy creatures, able to stand
roughness and cold without dismally giving in and dying. I never could see
that delicacy of constitution is pretty, either in plants or women. No
doubt there are many lovely flowers to be had by heat and constant
coaxing, but then for each of these there are fifty others still lovelier
that will gratefully grow in God's wholesome air and are blessed in return
with a far greater intensity of scent and colour.</p>
<p>We have been very busy till now getting the permanent beds into order and
planting the new tea-roses, and I am looking forward to next summer with
more hope than ever in spite of my many failures. I wish the years would
pass quickly that will bring my garden to perfection! The Persian Yellows
have gone into their new quarters, and their place is occupied by the
tearose Safrano; all the rose beds are carpeted with pansies sown in July
and transplanted in October, each bed having a separate colour. The purple
ones are the most charming and go well with every rose, but I have white
ones with Laurette Messimy, and yellow ones with Safrano, and a new red
sort in the big centre bed of red roses. Round the semicircle on the south
side of the little privet hedge two rows of annual larkspurs in all their
delicate shades have been sown, and just beyond the larkspurs, on the
grass, is a semicircle of standard tea and pillar roses.</p>
<p>In front of the house the long borders have been stocked with larkspurs,
annual and perennial, columbines, giant poppies, pinks, Madonna lilies,
wallflowers, hollyhocks, perennial phloxes, peonies, lavender, starworts,
cornflowers, Lychnis chalcedonica, and bulbs packed in wherever bulbs
could go. These are the borders that were so hardly used by the other
gardener. The spring boxes for the verandah steps have been filled with
pink and white and yellow tulips. I love tulips better than any other
spring flower; they are the embodiment of alert cheerfulness and tidy
grace, and next to a hyacinth look like a wholesome, freshly tubbed young
girl beside a stout lady whose every movement weighs down the air with
patchouli. Their faint, delicate scent is refinement itself; and is there
anything in the world more charming than the sprightly way they hold up
their little faces to the sun. I have heard them called bold and
flaunting, but to me they seem modest grace itself, only always on the
alert to enjoy life as much as they can and not afraid of looking the sun
or anything else above them in the face. On the grass there are two beds
of them carpeted with forget-me-nots; and in the grass, in scattered
groups, are daffodils and narcissus. Down the wilder shrubbery walks
foxgloves and mulleins will (I hope) shine majestic; and one cool corner,
backed by a group of firs, is graced by Madonna lilies, white foxgloves,
and columbines.</p>
<p>In a distant glade I have made a spring garden round an oak tree that
stands alone in the sun—groups of crocuses, daffodils, narcissus,
hyacinths, and tulips, among such flowering shrubs and trees as Pirus
Malus spectabilis, floribunda, and coronaria; Prunus Juliana, Mahaleb,
serotina, triloba, and Pissardi; Cydonias and Weigelias in every colour,
and several kinds of Crataegus and other May lovelinesses. If the weather
behaves itself nicely, and we get gentle rains in due season, I think this
little corner will be beautiful—but what a big "if" it is! Drought
is our great enemy, and the two last summers each contained five weeks of
blazing, cloudless heat when all the ditches dried up and the soil was
like hot pastry. At such times the watering is naturally quite beyond the
strength of two men; but as a garden is a place to be happy in, and not
one where you want to meet a dozen curious eyes at every turn, I should
not like to have more than these two, or rather one and a half—the
assistant having stork-like proclivities and going home in the autumn to
his native Russia, returning in the spring with the first warm winds. I
want to keep him over the winter, as there is much to be done even then,
and I sounded him on the point the other day. He is the most
abject-looking of human beings—lame, and afflicted with a hideous
eye-disease; but he is a good worker and plods along unwearyingly from
sunrise to dusk.</p>
<p>"Pray, my good stork," said I, or German words to that effect, "why don't
you stay here altogether, instead of going home and rioting away all you
have earned?"</p>
<p>"I would stay," he answered, "but I have my wife there in Russia."</p>
<p>"Your wife!" I exclaimed, stupidly surprised that the poor deformed
creature should have found a mate—as though there were not a
superfluity of mates in the world—"I didn't know you were married?"</p>
<p>"Yes, and I have two little children, and I don't know what they would do
if I were not to come home. But it is a very expensive journey to Russia,
and costs me every time seven marks."</p>
<p>"Seven marks!"</p>
<p>"Yes, it is a great sum."</p>
<p>I wondered whether I should be able to get to Russia for seven marks,
supposing I were to be seized with an unnatural craving to go there.</p>
<p>All the labourers who work here from March to December are Russians and
Poles, or a mixture of both. We send a man over who can speak their
language, to fetch as many as he can early in the year, and they arrive
with their bundles, men and women and babies, and as soon as they have got
here and had their fares paid, they disappear in the night if they get the
chance, sometimes fifty of them at a time, to go and work singly or in
couples for the peasants, who pay them a pfenning or two more a day than
we do, and let them eat with the family. From us they get a mark and a
half to two marks a day, and as many potatoes as they can eat. The women
get less, not because they work less, but because they are women and must
not be encouraged. The overseer lives with them, and has a loaded revolver
in his pocket and a savage dog at his heels. For the first week or two
after their arrival, the foresters and other permanent officials keep
guard at night over the houses they are put into. I suppose they find it
sleepy work; for certain it is that spring after spring the same thing
happens, fifty of them getting away in spite of all our precautions, and
we are left with our mouths open and much out of pocket. This spring, by
some mistake, they arrived without their bundles, which had gone astray on
the road, and, as they travel in their best clothes, they refused utterly
to work until their luggage came. Nearly a week was lost waiting, to the
despair of all in authority.</p>
<p>Nor will any persuasions induce them to do anything on Saints' days, and
there surely never was a church so full of them as the Russian Church. In
the spring, when every hour is of vital importance, the work is constantly
being interrupted by them, and the workers lie sleeping in the sun the
whole day, agreeably conscious that they are pleasing themselves and the
Church at one and the same time—a state of perfection as rare as it
is desirable. Reason unaided by Faith is of course exasperated at this
waste of precious time, and I confess that during the first mild days
after the long winter frost when it is possible to begin to work the
ground, I have sympathised with the gloom of the Man of Wrath, confronted
in one week by two or three empty days on which no man will labour, and
have listened in silence to his remarks about distant Russian saints.</p>
<p>I suppose it was my own superfluous amount of civilisation that made me
pity these people when first I came to live among them. They herd together
like animals and do the work of animals; but in spite of the armed
overseer, the dirt and the rags, the meals of potatoes washed down by weak
vinegar and water, I am beginning to believe that they would strongly
object to soap, I am sure they would not wear new clothes, and I hear them
coming home from their work at dusk singing. They are like little children
or animals in their utter inability to grasp the idea of a future; and
after all, if you work all day in God's sunshine, when evening comes you
are pleasantly tired and ready for rest and not much inclined to find
fault with your lot. I have not yet persuaded myself, however, that the
women are happy. They have to work as hard as the men and get less for it;
they have to produce offspring, quite regardless of times and seasons and
the general fitness of things; they have to do this as expeditiously as
possible, so that they may not unduly interrupt the work in hand; nobody
helps them, notices them, or cares about them, least of all the husband.
It is quite a usual thing to see them working in the fields in the
morning, and working again in the afternoon, having in the interval
produced a baby. The baby is left to an old woman whose duty it is to look
after babies collectively. When I expressed my horror at the poor
creatures working immediately afterwards as though nothing had happened,
the Man of Wrath informed me that they did not suffer because they had
never worn corsets, nor had their mothers and grandmothers. We were riding
together at the time, and had just passed a batch of workers, and my
husband was speaking to the overseer, when a woman arrived alone, and
taking up a spade, began to dig. She grinned cheerfully at us as she made
a curtesy, and the overseer remarked that she had just been back to the
house and had a baby.</p>
<p>"Poor, poor woman!" I cried, as we rode on, feeling for some occult reason
very angry with the Man of Wrath. "And her wretched husband doesn't care a
rap, and will probably beat her to-night if his supper isn't right. What
nonsense it is to talk about the equality of the sexes when the women have
the babies!"</p>
<p>"Quite so, my dear," replied the Man of Wrath, smiling condescendingly.
"You have got to the very root of the matter. Nature, while imposing this
agreeable duty on the woman, weakens her and disables her for any serious
competition with man. How can a person who is constantly losing a year of
the best part of her life compete with a young man who never loses any
time at all? He has the brute force, and his last word on any subject
could always be his fist."</p>
<p>I said nothing. It was a dull, gray afternoon in the beginning of
November, and the leaves dropped slowly and silently at our horses' feet
as we rode towards the Hirschwald.</p>
<p>"It is a universal custom," proceeded the Man of Wrath, "amongst these
Russians, and I believe amongst the lower classes everywhere, and
certainly commendable on the score of simplicity, to silence a woman's
objections and aspirations by knocking her down. I have heard it said that
this apparently brutal action has anything but the maddening effect
tenderly nurtured persons might suppose, and that the patient is soothed
and satisfied with a rapidity and completeness unattainable by other and
more polite methods. Do you suppose," he went on, flicking a twig off a
tree with his whip as we passed, "that the intellectual husband, wrestling
intellectually with the chaotic yearnings of his intellectual wife, ever
achieves the result aimed at? He may and does go on wrestling till he is
tired, but never does he in the very least convince her of her folly;
while his brother in the ragged coat has got through the whole business in
less time than it takes me to speak about it. There is no doubt that these
poor women fulfil their vocation far more thoroughly than the women in our
class, and, as the truest: happiness consists in finding one's vocation
quickly and continuing in it all one's days, I consider they are to be
envied rather than not, since they are early taught, by the impossibility
of argument with marital muscle, the impotence of female endeavour and the
blessings of content."</p>
<p>"Pray go on," I said politely.</p>
<p>"These women accept their beatings with a simplicity worthy of all praise,
and far from considering themselves insulted, admire the strength and
energy of the man who can administer such eloquent rebukes. In Russia, not
only may a man beat his wife, but it is laid down in the catechism and
taught all boys at the time of confirmation as necessary at least once a
week, whether she has done anything or not, for the sake of her general
health and happiness."</p>
<p>I thought I observed a tendency in the Man of Wrath rather to gloat over
these castigations.</p>
<p>"Pray, my dear man," I said, pointing with my whip, "look at that baby
moon so innocently peeping at us over the edge of the mist just behind
that silver birch; and don't talk so much about women and things you don't
understand. What is the use of your bothering about fists and whips and
muscles and all the dreadful things invented for the confusion of
obstreperous wives? You know you are a civilised husband, and a civilised
husband is a creature who has ceased to be a man.</p>
<p>"And a civilised wife?" he asked, bringing his horse close up beside me
and putting his arm round my waist, "has she ceased to be a woman?"</p>
<p>"I should think so indeed,—she is a goddess, and can never be
worshipped and adored enough."</p>
<p>"It seems to me," he said, "that the conversation is growing personal."</p>
<p>I started off at a canter across the short, springy turf. The Hirschwald
is an enchanted place on such an evening, when the mists lie low on the
turf, and overhead the delicate, bare branches of the silver birches stand
out clear against the soft sky, while the little moon looks down kindly on
the damp November world. Where the trees thicken into a wood, the
fragrance of the wet earth and rotting leaves kicked up by the horses'
hoofs fills my soul with delight. I particularly love that smell,—it
brings before me the entire benevolence of Nature, for ever working death
and decay, so piteous in themselves, into the means of fresh life and
glory, and sending up sweet odours as she works.</p>
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