<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
<p class="p2">Meanwhile Sir Cradock Nowell had found, at
the peaceful Rectory, a tumult nearly as bad as
that which he had left in his own household. In
a room which was called by others the book–room,
by herself “the library”, Miss Eudoxia sat half
choked, in a violent fit of hysterics, Amy and fat
Jemima doing their utmost to console her and
bring her round. Sir Cradock had little experience
of women, and did the worst thing he could
have done—that is to say, he stood gazing.</p>
<p>“Amy”, groaned Miss Eudoxia—“Amy, if you
donʼt want to kill me, get him out of the room, my
child”.</p>
<p>“Go, go, go”! cried Amy, in desperation.
“Canʼt you see, godpapa, that we shall do better
without you; oh, ever, ever so much”?</p>
<p>Sir Cradock Nowell felt a longing to box pretty
Amyʼs ears; he had always loved his godchild,
Amy, and chastened her accordingly. He now<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</SPAN></span>
loved Amy best in the world, next to his pet son,
Clayton. To tell the truth, he had bathed himself
in the sunset–glow of match–making, all the way
down the chase. Clayton, proclaimed the heir and
all that, should marry Amy Rosedew; what could
it matter to him about money, and where else
would he find such a maiden? Then, in the
course of a few more years—so soon as ever there
were five, or, say at the most six children—he, Sir
Cradock, would make over the management of the
property; that is, if he felt tired of it, and they
were both very steady. And what of Cradock,
you planning father, what of your other son,
Cradock? In faith, he must do for a parson.</p>
<p>Sir Cradock retired in no small flurry, and went
to the garden to look for Jem. Miss Eudoxia
became at once unconscious, as she ought to have
been long ago; and thenceforth she would never
acknowledge that she had seen the intruder at all;
or, indeed, that there had been one. However, it
cured her, for a very long time, of those sad
attacks of hysteria.</p>
<p>This present attack was the natural result of a
violent conflict with Amy, who was not going to
be trampled upon, even by Aunt Doxy. It appears
that, early in the afternoon, the good aunt began
to wonder what on earth was become of her niece.
Of course she could not be at the school, because
Wednesday was a half–holiday; she was not in the
library, nor in the back–kitchen, nor even out at
Pincherʼs kennel. No, nor even in the garden,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</SPAN></span>
although she had a magnificent lot of bulbs to
plant, for which she had saved up ever so much of
her little pocket–money. “Well”, said Miss Eudoxia,
who was thirsting for her gossip, which she
always held after lunch—“well, I must say this is
<i>most</i> inconsiderate of her. And I promised John
to take her to the park, and how am I to get ready?
Girls are not what they used to be, though Amy is
such a good girl. They read all sorts of trashy
books, and then they go eloping”.</p>
<p>That last idea sent the good aunt in hot haste to
Amyʼs bedroom; and who should be there, sitting
by the window, with a small book in her hand, but
beautiful Amy herself.</p>
<p>“Well”! cried Miss Eudoxia, heavily offended;
“indeed, I <i>am</i> surprised. So this is what you prefer,
is it, to your own auntʼs conversation? And, I
declare, what a colour you have! And panting,
as if you had asthma! Let me see that book this
moment, miss”!</p>
<p>“To be sure, Aunt Eudoxia”, said Amy, rather
indignantly; “but you need not be in a pet, you
know”.</p>
<p>“Oh, neednʼt I, indeed, when you read such
books as this! Oh, what will your poor father say?
And <i>you</i> to have a class in the Sunday–school”!</p>
<p>Of all the grisly horrors produced to make the
travellerʼs hair creep, one of the most repulsive and
glaring was in Amyʼs delicate hand. A hideous
ape, with an open razor, was about to cut a young
ladyʼs throat. Chuckling, he drew her fair neck<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</SPAN></span>
to the blade by her dishevelled hair. At her feet
lay an elderly woman, dead; while a man with a
red cap was gazing complacently in at the window.
The back of the volume was relieved by a ghost, a
deathʼs head, and a pair of cross–bones.</p>
<p>“Well”! said Miss Eudoxia. Her breath was
gone for a long while, and she could say nothing
more.</p>
<p>“I know the cover is ugly, aunt, but the inside
is so beautiful. Oh, and so very wonderful! I
canʼt think how any one ever could imagine such
splendid horrible things. Oh, so clever, Aunt
Doxy; and full of things that make me tingle,
as if my brain were gone to sleep. And I want
to ask papa particularly about galvanizing the
mummy”.</p>
<p>“Indeed; yes, galvanizing! and pray does your
father know of your having this horrible book”?</p>
<p>“No; but I mean to tell him, the moment I
have got to the end of it”.</p>
<p>“Good child, and most dutiful! When you
have swallowed the poison, youʼll tell us”.</p>
<p>“Poison indeed, Aunt Eudoxia! How dare you
talk to me like that? Do you dare to suppose that
I would read a thing that was unfit for me”?</p>
<p>“No, I donʼt think you would, knowingly. But
you are not the proper judge. Why did you not
ask your father or me, before you began this
book”?</p>
<p>“Because I thought you wouldnʼt let me read it”.</p>
<p>“Well, that does beat everything. Candid impudence,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</SPAN></span>
I call that, perfectly candid insolence”!
Aunt Doxyʼs throat began to swell; there was weak
gorge in the family. Meanwhile, Miss Amy, who
all the time had been jerking her shoulders and
standing upright, in a manner peculiarly her own—Amy
felt that her last words required some
explanation. She had her fatherʼs strong sense of
justice, though often pulled crooked by womanhood.</p>
<p>“You know well enough what I mean, aunt,
though you love to misrepresent me so. I mean
that you would not let me read it, not because it
was wrong (which it isnʼt), but for fear of making
me nervous. And upon that subject, at least, I
think I have a right to judge for myself”.</p>
<p>“Oh, I dare say; you, indeed! And pray who
lent you that book? Unless, indeed, in your self–assertion,
you went to a railway and bought it”.</p>
<p>“That is just the sort of thing I would rather
die than tell, after all the fuss you have made
about it”.</p>
<p>“Thank you; I quite perceive. A young
gentleman—not to be betrayed—<i>scamp</i>, whoever
he is”. It was Clayton Nowell who had lent the
book.</p>
<p>“Is he indeed? I wish you were only half as
upright and honourable”.</p>
<p>Hereupon Miss Eudoxia, who had dragged her
niece down to the book–room, with dialogue all down
the stairs, muttered something about her will, that
she had a little to leave, though not much, but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</SPAN></span>
honestly her own—God knew—and down she went
upon the chair, with both hands to her side. At
the sequel, as we have seen, Sir Cradock Nowell
assisted, and took little for his pains.</p>
<p>After this, of course, there was a great reconciliation.
For they loved each other thoroughly;
and each was sure to be wild with herself for
having been harsh to the other. They agreed that
their eyes were much too red now to go and see
the nascent fireworks.</p>
<p>“A gentlemanʼs party to–night; my own sweet
love, how glad I am! I ought to know better, Amy
dearest; and they have never sent the goulard.
I ought to know, my own lovey pet, that we can
trust you in everything”.</p>
<p>“No, aunty dear, you oughtnʼt. I am as obstinate
as a pig sometimes; and I wish you would
box my ears, aunt. I hope my hair wonʼt be right
for a month, dearest aunt, where you pulled it;
and as for the book, I have thrown it into the
kitchen–fire long ago, though I do wish, darling
aunt, you could have read about the descent into
the Mäelstrom. I declare my head goes round ever
since! What amazing command of language!
And he knows a great deal about cooking”.</p>
<p>James Pottles, groom and gardener, who even
aspired to the hand, or at any rate, to the lips, of
the plump and gaudy Jemima, was not at all the
sort of fellow you would appreciate at the first
interview. His wits were slow and mild, and had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</SPAN></span>
never yet been hurried, for his parents were unambitious.
It took him a long time to consider,
and a long time again to express himself, which he
did with a roll of his tongue. None the less for
that, Jem Pottles was quoted all over the village as
a sayer of good things. No conclusion was thought
quite safe, at least by the orthodox women, until it
had been asked with a knowing look—“And what
do Jem Pottles say of it”? Feeling thus his
responsibility, and the gravity of his opinion, Jem
grew slower than ever, and had lately contracted a
habit of shutting one eye as he cogitated. As
cause and effect always act and react, this added
enormously to his repute, until Mark Stote the
gamekeeper, and Reuben Cuff the constable, ached
and itched with jealousy of that “cock–eyed, cock–headed
boy”.</p>
<p>Sir Cradock found Jem quite at his leisure,
sweeping up some of the leaves in the shrubbery,
and pleasantly cracking the filberts which he discovered
among them. These he peeled very carefully,
and put them in the pocket of his stable
waistcoat, ready for Jemima by–and–by. He swished
away very hard with the broom the moment he saw
the old gentleman, and touched his hat in a way
that showed he could scarcely spare time to do it.</p>
<p>“What way, my lad, do you think it likely your
master will come home to–day”?</p>
<p>This was just the sort of question upon which
Jem might commit himself, and lose a deal of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</SPAN></span>
prestige; so he pretended not to hear it, and
brushed the very ground up. These tactics, however,
availed him not, for Sir Cradock repeated
his inquiry in a tone of irritation. Jem leaned his
chin on the broom–handle, and closed one eye deliberately.</p>
<p>“Well, he maight perhaps come the haigher road,
and again a maight come the lower wai, and Iʼve a
knowed him crass the chase, sir, same as might be
fram alongside of Meester Garnetʼs house. There
never be no telling the wai, any more than the
time of un. But itʼs never no odds to me”.</p>
<p>“And which way do you think the most likely
now”?</p>
<p>“Not to say ‘now’, but bumbai laike. If so be
a cooms arly, a maight come long of the haigher
road as goes to the ‘Jolly Foresters;’ and if a
comʼth middlin’ arly, you maight rackon may be
on the town wai; but if he cometh unoosial late,
and a heap of folks be sickenin’ or hisself hath
pulled a book out, a maight goo round by Westacot,
and come home by Squire Garnetʼs wai”. Rich in
alternatives, Jem Pottles opened the closed eye,
and shut the open one.</p>
<p>“What a fool the fellow is”! said Sir Cradock
to himself; “Iʼll try the first way, at any rate. For
if John is so late, I could not stop for him, with
all those people coming. How I wish we were free
from strangers to–night, with all these events in
the family! But perhaps, if we manage it well,
it will carry it off all the better”.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Sir Cradock Nowell was in high spirits as he
started leisurely for a saunter along the higher
road. This was the road which ran eastward, both
from the Hall and the Rectory, into the depth of
the forest. In all England there is no lovelier
lane, if there be one to compare with it. Many of
the forest roads are in fault, because they are too
open. You see too far, you see too much, and you
are not truly embowered. In a forest we do not
want long views, except to rejoice in the amplitude.
And a few of those, just here and there, enlarge
the great enjoyment. What we want, as the main
thing of all, as the staple feeling, is the deep,
mysterious, wondering sense of being swallowed
up, and knowing it: swallowed up, not as we are
in catacombs, or wine–vaults, or any railway tunnel;
but in our own motherʼs love, with God around us
everywhere. To many of us, perhaps to most, so
placed at fall of evening, there is a certain awe, a
dread which overshades enjoyment. If so, it
springs in part at least from our unnatural nature;
that is to say, the education which teaches us so
very little of the things around us.</p>
<p>How the arches spring overhead, and the brown
leaves flutter among them! In and out, and
through and through, across and across, with delicacy,
veining the very shadows. For miles we
may wander beneath them, and see no two alike.
How, for fear of wearying us, after infinite twists
and turns—but none of them contortions—after
playing across the heavens, and sweeping away<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</SPAN></span>
the sunshine, now in this evening light they hover,
and rustle like the skirts of death. Is there one
of them with its lichen–mantle copied from its
neighbourʼs? Is there one that has borrowed a
line, a character, even a cast of complexion from
its own brother rubbing against it? Their arms
bend over us as we walk, we are in their odour and
influence, we know that, like the Magi of old, they
adore only God and His sun; and, when we come
out from under them, we never ask why we are
sad.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</SPAN></span></p>
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