<p>December 7th.—I have been to England. I went for at least a month
and stayed a week in a fog and was blown home again in a gale. Twice I
fled before the fogs into the country to see friends with gardens, but it
was raining, and except the beautiful lawns (not to be had in the
Fatherland) and the infinite possibilities, there was nothing to interest
the intelligent and garden-loving foreigner, for the good reason that you
cannot be interested in gardens under an umbrella. So I went back to the
fogs, and after groping about for a few days more began to long
inordinately for Germany. A terrific gale sprang up after I had started,
and the journey both by sea and land was full of horrors, the trains in
Germany being heated to such an extent that it is next to impossible to
sit still, great gusts of hot air coming up under the cushions, the
cushions themselves being very hot, and the wretched traveller still
hotter.</p>
<p>But when I reached my home and got out of the train into the purest,
brightest snow-atmosphere, the air so still that the whole world seemed to
be listening, the sky cloudless, the crisp snow sparkling underfoot and on
the trees, and a happy row of three beaming babies awaiting me, I was
consoled for all my torments, only remembering them enough to wonder why I
had gone away at all.</p>
<p>The babies each had a kitten in one hand and an elegant bouquet of pine
needles and grass in the other, and what with the due presentation of the
bouquets and the struggles of the kittens, the hugging and kissing was
much interfered with. Kittens, bouquets, and babies were all somehow
squeezed into the sleigh, and off we went with jingling bells and shrieks
of delight. "Directly you comes home the fun begins," said the May baby,
sitting very close to me. "How the snow purrs!" cried the April baby, as
the horses scrunched it up with their feet. The June baby sat loudly
singing "The King of Love my Shepherd is," and swinging her kitten round
by its tail to emphasise the rhythm.</p>
<p>The house, half-buried in the snow, looked the very abode of peace, and I
ran through all the rooms, eager to take possession of them again, and
feeling as though I had been away for ever. When I got to the library I
came to a standstill,—ah, the dear room, what happy times I have
spent in it rummaging amongst the books, making plans for my garden,
building castles in the air, writing, dreaming, doing nothing! There was a
big peat fire blazing half up the chimney, and the old housekeeper had put
pots of flowers about, and on the writing-table was a great bunch of
violets scenting the room. "Oh, how good it is to be home again!" I sighed
in my satisfaction. The babies clung about my knees, looking up at me with
eyes full of love. Outside the dazzling snow and sunshine, inside the
bright room and happy faces—I thought of those yellow fogs and
shivered. The library is not used by the Man of Wrath; it is neutral
ground where we meet in the evenings for an hour before he disappears into
his own rooms—a series of very smoky dens in the southeast corner of
the house. It looks, I am afraid, rather too gay for an ideal library; and
its colouring, white and yellow, is so cheerful as to be almost frivolous.
There are white bookcases all round the walls, and there is a great
fireplace, and four windows, facing full south, opening on to my most
cherished bit of garden, the bit round the sun-dial; so that with so much
colour and such a big fire and such floods of sunshine it has anything but
a sober air, in spite of the venerable volumes filling the shelves.
Indeed, I should never be surprised if they skipped down from their
places, and, picking up their leaves, began to dance.</p>
<p>With this room to live in, I can look forward with perfect equanimity to
being snowed up for any time Providence thinks proper; and to go into the
garden in its snowed-up state is like going into a bath of purity. The
first breath on opening the door is so ineffably pure that it makes me
gasp, and I feel a black and sinful object in the midst of all the
spotlessness. Yesterday I sat out of doors near the sun-dial the whole
afternoon, with the thermometer so many degrees below freezing that it
will be weeks finding its way up again; but there was no wind, and
beautiful sunshine, and I was well wrapped up in furs. I even had tea
brought out there, to the astonishment of the menials, and sat till long
after the sun had set, enjoying the frosty air. I had to drink the tea
very quickly, for it showed a strong inclination to begin to freeze. After
the sun had gone down the rooks came home to their nests in the garden
with a great fuss and fluttering, and many hesitations and squabbles
before they settled on their respective trees. They flew over my head in
hundreds with a mighty swish of wings, and when they had arranged
themselves comfortably, an intense hush fell upon the garden, and the
house began to look like a Christmas card, with its white roof against the
clear, pale green of the western sky, and lamplight shining in the
windows.</p>
<p>I had been reading a Life of Luther, lent me by our parson, in the
intervals between looking round me and being happy. He came one day with
the book and begged me to read it, having discovered that my interest in
Luther was not as living as it ought to be; so I took it out with me into
the garden, because the dullest book takes on a certain saving grace if
read out of doors, just as bread and butter, devoid of charm in the
drawing-room, is ambrosia eaten under a tree. I read Luther all the
afternoon with pauses for refreshing glances at the garden and the sky,
and much thankfulness in my heart. His struggles with devils amazed me;
and I wondered whether such a day as that, full of grace and the
forgiveness of sins, never struck him as something to make him relent even
towards devils. He apparently never allowed himself just to be happy. He
was a wonderful man, but I am glad I was not his wife.</p>
<p>Our parson is an interesting person, and untiring in his efforts to
improve himself. Both he and his wife study whenever they have a spare
moment, and there is a tradition that she stirs her puddings with one hand
and holds a Latin grammar in the other, the grammar, of course, getting
the greater share of her attention. To most German Hausfraus the dinners
and the puddings are of paramount importance, and they pride themselves on
keeping those parts of their houses that are seen in a state of perpetual
and spotless perfection, and this is exceedingly praiseworthy; but, I
would humbly inquire, are there not other things even more important? And
is not plain living and high thinking better than the other way about? And
all too careful making of dinners and dusting of furniture takes a
terrible amount of precious time, and—and with shame I confess that
my sympathies are all with the pudding and the grammar. It cannot be right
to be the slave of one's household gods, and I protest that if my
furniture ever annoyed me by wanting to be dusted when I wanted to be
doing something else, and there was no one to do the dusting for me, I
would cast it all into the nearest bonfire and sit and warm my toes at the
flames with great contentment, triumphantly selling my dusters to the very
next pedlar who was weak enough to buy them. Parsons' wives have to do the
housework and cooking themselves, and are thus not only cooks and
housemaids, but if they have children—and they always do have
children—they are head and under nurse as well; and besides these
trifling duties have a good deal to do with their fruit and vegetable
garden, and everything to do with their poultry. This being so, is it not
pathetic to find a young woman bravely struggling to learn languages and
keep up with her husband? If I were that husband, those puddings would
taste sweetest to me that were served with Latin sauce. They are both
severely pious, and are for ever engaged in desperate efforts to practise
what they preach; than which, as we all know, nothing is more difficult.
He works in his parish with the most noble self-devotion, and never loses
courage, although his efforts have been several times rewarded by
disgusting libels pasted up on the street-corners, thrown under doors, and
even fastened to his own garden wall. The peasant hereabouts is past
belief low and animal, and a sensitive, intellectual parson among them is
really a pearl before swine. For years he has gone on unflinchingly,
filled with the most living faith and hope and charity, and I sometimes
wonder whether they are any better now in his parish than they were under
his predecessor, a man who smoked and drank beer from Monday morning to
Saturday night, never did a stroke of work, and often kept the scanty
congregation waiting on Sunday afternoons while he finished his
postprandial nap. It is discouraging enough to make most men give in, and
leave the parish to get to heaven or not as it pleases; but he never seems
discouraged, and goes on sacrificing the best part of his life to these
people when all his tastes are literary, and all his inclinations towards
the life of the student. His convictions drag him out of his little home
at all hours to minister to the sick and exhort the wicked; they give him
no rest, and never let him feel he has done enough; and when he comes home
weary, after a day's wrestling with his parishioners' souls, he is
confronted on his doorstep by filthy abuse pasted up on his own front
door. He never speaks of these things, but how shall they be hid?
Everybody here knows everything that happens before the day is over, and
what we have for dinner is of far greater general interest than the most
astounding political earthquake. They have a pretty, roomy cottage, and a
good bit of ground adjoining the churchyard. His predecessor used to hang
out his washing on the tombstones to dry, but then he was a person
entirely lost to all sense of decency, and had finally to be removed,
preaching a farewell sermon of a most vituperative description, and
hurling invective at the Man of Wrath, who sat up in his box drinking in
every word and enjoying himself thoroughly. The Man of Wrath likes
novelty, and such a sermon had never been heard before. It is spoken of in
the village to this day with bated breath and awful joy.</p>
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