To thee, dear maid, each kindly wile
Was known, that elder sisters know,
To check the unseasonable smile,
With warning hand and serious brow.
From dream to dream with her to rove,
Like fairy nurse with hermit child;
Teach her to think, to pray, to love,
Make grief less bitter, joy less wild.
LINES ON A MONUMENT AT LICHFIELD.
Sir Matthew Fleet's visit seemed like a turning-point with the May
family, rousing and giving them revived hopes. Norman began to shake
off his extreme languor and depression, the doctor was relieved from
much of the wearing suffering from his hurt, and his despondency as
to Margaret's ultimate recovery had been driven away. The experiment
of taking her up succeeded so well, that on Sunday she was fully
attired, "fit to receive company." As she lay on the sofa there
seemed an advance toward recovery. Much sweet coquetry was expended
in trying to look her best for her father; and her best was very
well, for though the brilliant bloom of health was gone, her cheeks
had not lost their pretty rounded contour, and still had some
rosiness, while her large bright blue eyes smiled and sparkled. A
screen shut out the rest of the room, making a sort of little parlour
round the fire, where sundry of the family were visiting her after
coming home from church in the afternoon. Ethel was in a vehement
state of indignation at what had that day happened at school. "Did
you ever hear anything like it! When the point was, to teach the
poor things to be Christians, to turn them back, because their hair
was not regulation length!"
"What's that! Who did?" said Dr. May, coming in from his own room,
where he had heard a few words.
"Mrs. Ledwich. She sent back three of the Cocksmoor children this
morning. It seems she warned them last Sunday without saying a word
to us."
"It is the same in effect," said Ethel, "to turn them from school;
for if they did try to go alone, the pew-openers would drive them
out."
"It is a wretched state of things!" said Dr. May, who never wanted
much provocation to begin storming about parish affairs. "When I am
churchwarden again, I'll see what can be done about the seats; but
it's no sort of use, while Ramsden goes on as he does."
"Now my poor children are done for!" said Ethel. "They will never
come again. And it's horrid, papa; there are lots of town children
who wear immense long plaits of hair, and Mrs. Ledwich never
interferes with them. It is entirely to drive the poor Cocksmoor
ones away--for nothing else, and all out of Fanny Anderson's
chatter."
"Didn't I tell you, Margaret, how, as soon as Flora knew what Mrs.
Ledwich was going to do, she went and told her this was the
children's only chance, and if we affronted them for a trifle, there
would be no hope of getting them back. She said she was sorry, if we
were interested for them, but rules must not be broken; and when
Flora spoke of all who do wear long hair unmolested, she shuffled and
said, for the sake of the teachers, as well as the other children,
rags and dirt could not be allowed; and then she brought up the old
story of Miss Boulder's pencil, though she has found it again, and
ended by saying Fanny Anderson told her it was a serious annoyance to
the teachers, and she was sure we should agree with her, that
something was due to voluntary assistants and subscribers."
"I am afraid there has been a regular set at them," said Margaret,
"and perhaps they are troublesome, poor things."
"As if school-keeping were for luxury!" said Dr. May. "It is the
worst thing I have heard of Mrs. Ledwich yet! One's blood boils to
think of those poor children being cast off because our fine young
ladies are too grand to teach them! The clergyman leaving his work
to a set of conceited women, and they turning their backs on
ignorance, when it comes to their door! Voluntary subscribers,
indeed! I've a great mind I'll be one no longer."
"Oh, papa, that would not be fair--"began Ethel; but Margaret knew he
would not act on this, squeezed her hand, and silenced her.
"One thing I've said, and I'll hold to it," continued Dr. May; "if
they outvote Wilmot again in your Ladies' Committee, I'll have no
more to do with them, as sure as my name's Dick May. It is a scandal
the way things are done here!"
"Papa," said Richard, who had all the time been standing silent,
"Ethel and I have been thinking, if you approved, whether we could
not do something towards teaching the Cocksmoor children, and
breaking them in for the Sunday-school."
What a bound Ethel's heart gave, and how full of congratulation and
sympathy was the pressure of Margaret's hand!
"What did you think of doing?" said the doctor. Ethel burned to
reply, but her sister's hand admonished her to remember her compact.
Richard answered, "We thought of trying to get a room, and going
perhaps once or twice a week to give them a little teaching. It
would be little enough, but it might do something towards civilising
them, and making them wish for more."
"I have reconnoitred, and I think I know a cottage with a tolerable
kitchen, which I dare say we might hire for an afternoon for
sixpence."
Ethel, unable to bear it any longer, threw herself forward, and
sitting on the ground at her father's feet, exclaimed, "Oh, papa!
papa! do say we may!"
"What's all this about?" said the doctor, surprised.
"Oh! you don't know how I have thought of it day and night these two
months!"
"What! Ethel, have a fancy for two whole months, and the whole house
not hear of it!" said her father, with a rather provoking look of
incredulity.
"Richard was afraid of bothering you, and wouldn't let me. But do
speak, papa. May we?"
She clasped her hands in ecstasy. "Thank you! thank you, papa! Oh,
Ritchie! Oh, Margaret!" cried she, in a breathless voice of
transport.
"You have worked yourself up to a fine pass," said the doctor,
patting the agitated girl fondly as she leaned against his knee.
"Remember, slow and steady."
"Sufficient guarantee," said her father, smiling archly as he looked
up to his son, whose fair face had coloured deep red. "You will keep
the Unready in order, Ritchie."
"He does," said Margaret; "he has taken her education into his hands,
and I really believe he has taught her to hold up her frock and stick
in pins."
"And to know her right hand from her left, eh, Ethel? Well, you
deserve some credit, then. Suppose we ask Mr. Wilmot to tea, and
talk it over."
"Oh, thank you, papa! When shall it be? To-morrow?"
"Yes, if you like. I have to go to the town-council meeting, and am
not going into the country, so I shall be in early."
"If you would help us," said Ethel, with an odd shy manner; "we meant
to make what we have go as far as may be, but mine is only fifteen
and sixpence."
"Well, you must make interest with Margaret for the turn-out of my
pocket to-morrow."
"Thank you, we are very much obliged," said the brother and sister
earnestly, "that is more than we expected."
"Ha! don't thank too soon. Suppose to-morrow should be a blank day!"
"Oh, it won't!" said Ethel. "I shall tell Norman to make you go to
paying people."
"There's avarice!" said the doctor. "But look you here, Ethel, if
you'll take my advice, you'll make your bargain for Tuesday. I have
a note appointing me to call at Abbotstoke Grange on Mr. Rivers, at
twelve o'clock, on Tuesday. What do you think of that, Ethel? An
old banker, rich enough for his daughter to curl her hair in bank-
notes. If I were you, I'd make a bargain for him."
"If he had nothing the matter with him, and I only got one guinea out
of him!"
Ethel ran up to her room, hardly able to believe that the mighty
proposal was made; and it had been so readily granted, that it seemed
as if Richard's caution had been vain in making such a delay, that
even Margaret had begun to fear that the street of by-and-by was
leading to the house of never. Now, however, it was plain that he
had been wise. Opportunity was everything; at another moment, their
father might have been harassed and oppressed, and unable to give his
mind to concerns, which now he could think of with interest, and
Richard could not have caught a more favourable conjuncture.
Ethel was in a wild state of felicity all that evening and the next
day, very unlike her brother, who, dismayed at the open step he had
taken, shrank into himself, and in his shyness dreaded the discussion
in the evening, and would almost have been relieved, if Mr. Wilmot
had been unable to accept the invitation. So quiet and grave was he,
that Ethel could not get him to talk over the matter at all with her,
and she was obliged to bestow all her transports and grand projects
on Flora or Margaret, when she could gain their ears, besides conning
them over to herself, as an accompaniment to her lessons, by which
means she tried Miss Winter's patience almost beyond measure. But
she cared not--she saw a gathering school and rising church, which
eclipsed all thought of present inattentions and gaucheries. She
monopolised Margaret in the twilight, and rhapsodised to her heart's
content, talking faster and faster, and looking more and more
excited. Margaret began to feel a little overwhelmed, and while
answering "yes" at intervals, was considering whether Ethel had not
been flying about in an absent inconsiderate mood all day, and
whether it would seem unkind to damp her ardour, by giving her a hint
that she was relaxing her guard over herself. Before Margaret had
steeled herself, Ethel was talking of a story she had read, of a
place something like Cocksmoor. Margaret was not ready with her
recollection, and Ethel, saying it was in a magazine in the drawing-
room chiffonier, declared she would fetch it.
Margaret knew what it was to expect her visitors to return "in one
moment," and with a "now-or-never" feeling she began, "Ethel, dear,
wait," but Ethel was too impetuous to attend. "I'll be back in a
twinkling," she called out, and down she flew, in her speed whisking
away, without seeing it, the basket with Margaret's knitting and all
her notes and papers, which lay scattered on the floor far out of
reach, vexing Margaret at first, and then making her grieve at her
own impatient feeling.
Ethel was soon in the drawing-room, but the right number of the
magazine was not quickly forthcoming, and in searching she became
embarked in another story. Just then, Aubrey, whose stout legs were
apt to carry him into every part of the house where he was neither
expected nor wanted, marched in at the open door, trying by dint of
vehement gestures to make her understand, in his imperfect speech,
something that he wanted. Very particularly troublesome she thought
him, more especially as she could not make him out, otherwise than
that he wanted her to do something with the newspaper and the fire.
She made a boat for him with an old newspaper, a very hasty and frail
performance, and told him to sail it on the carpet, and be Mr.
Ernescliffe going away; and she thought him thus safely disposed of.
Returning to her book and her search, with her face to the cupboard,
and her book held up to catch the light, she was soon lost in her
story, and thought of nothing more till suddenly roused by her
father's voice in the hall, loud and peremptory with alarm, "Aubrey!
put that down!" She looked, and beheld Aubrey brandishing a great
flaming paper--he dropped it at the exclamation--it fell burning on
the carpet. Aubrey's white pinafore! Ethel was springing up, but in
her cramped, twisted position she could not do so quickly, and even
as he called, her father strode by her, snatched at Aubrey's merino
frock, which he crushed over the scarcely lighted pinafore, and
trampled out the flaming paper with his foot. It was a moment of
dreadful fright, but the next assured them that no harm was done.
"Ethel!" cried the doctor, "Are you mad? What were you thinking of?"
Aubrey, here recollecting himself enough to be frightened at his
father's voice and manner, burst into loud cries; the doctor pressed
him closer on his breast, caressed and soothed him. Ethel stood by,
pale and transfixed with horror. Her father was more angry with her
than she had ever seen him, and with reason, as she knew, as she
smelled the singeing, and saw a large burnt hole in Aubrey's
pinafore, while the front of his frock was scorched and brown. Dr.
May's words were not needed, "What could make you let him?"
"Didn't see! Didn't look, didn't think, didn't care! That's it,
Ethel. 'Tis very hard one can't trust you in a room with the child
any more than the baby himself. His frock perfect tinder! He would
have been burned to a cinder, if I had not come in!"
Aubrey roared afresh, and Dr. May, kissing and comforting him,
gathered him up in his left arm, and carried him away, looking back
at the door to say, "There's no bearing it! I'll put a stop to all
schools and Greek, if it is to lead to this, and make you good for
nothing!"
Ethel was too much terrified to know where she was, or anything, but
that she had let her little brother run into fearful peril, and
grievously angered her father; she was afraid to follow him, and
stood still, annihilated, and in despair, till roused by his return;
then, with a stifled sob, she exclaimed, "Oh, papa!" and could get no
further for a gush of tears.
But the anger of the shock of terror was over, and Dr. May was sorry
for her tears, though still he could not but manifest some
displeasure. "Yes, Ethel," he said, "it was a frightful thing," and
he could not but shudder again. "One moment later! It is an escape
to be for ever thankful for--poor little fellow!--but, Ethel, Ethel,
do let it be a warning to you."
"I know I have," said Ethel, choked. "If I could but--"
"Poor child," said Dr. May sadly; then looking earnestly at her,
"Ethel, my dear, I am afraid of its being with you as--as it has been
with me;" he spoke very low, and drew her close to him. "I grew up,
thinking my inbred heedlessness a sort of grace, so to say, rather
manly--the reverse of finikin. I was spoiled as a boy, and my Maggie
carried on the spoiling, by never letting me feel its effects. By
the time I had sense enough to regret this as a fault, I had grown
too old for changing of ingrain, long-nurtured habits--perhaps I
never wished it really. You have seen," and his voice was nearly
inaudible, "what my carelessness has come to--let that suffice at
least, as a lesson that may spare you--what your father must feel as
long as he lives."
He pressed his hand tightly on her shoulder, and left her, without
letting her see his face. Shocked and bewildered, she hurried
upstairs to Margaret. She threw herself on her knees, felt her arms
round her, and heard her kind soothing, and then, in broken words,
told how dreadful it had been, and how kind papa had been, and what
he had said, which was now the uppermost thought. "Oh, Margaret,
Margaret, how very terrible it is! And does papa really think so?"
"How can he, can he bear it"" said Ethel, clasping her hands. "Oh!
it is enough to kill one--I can't think why it did not!"
"He bears it," said Margaret, "because he is so very good, that help
and comfort do come to him. Dear papa! He bears up because it is
right, and for our sakes, and he has a sort of rest in that perfect
love they had for each other. He knows how she would wish him to
cheer up and look to the end, and support and comfort are given to
him, I know they are; but oh, Ethel! it does make one tremble and
shrink, to think what he has been going through this autumn,
especially when I hear him moving about late at night, and now and
then comes a heavy groan--whenever any especial care has been on his
mind."
Ethel was in great distress. "To have grieved him again!" said she,
"and just as he seemed better and brighter! Everything I do turns
out wrong, and always will; I can't do anything well by any chance."
"Well, I suppose it is part of his nature, and that you have
inherited it, but--"Margaret paused, and Ethel exclaimed:
"He said his was long-nurtured; yes, Margaret, you guessed right, and
he said he could not change it, and no more can I."
"Surely, Ethel, you have not had so many years. You are fifteen
instead of forty-six, and it is more a woman's work than a man's to
be careful. You need not begin to despair. You were growing much
better; Richard said so, and so did Miss Winter."
"What's the use of it, if in one moment it is as bad as ever? And
to-day, of all days in the year, just when papa had been so very,
very kind, and given me more than I asked."
"Do you know, Ethel, I was thinking whether dear mamma would not say
that was the reason. You were so happy, that perhaps you were thrown
off your guard."
"I should not wonder if that was it," said Ethel thoughtfully. "You
know it was a sort of probation that Richard put me on. I was to
learn to be steady before he spoke to papa, and now it seemed to be
all settled and right, and perhaps I forgot I was to be careful
still."
"I think it was something of the kind. I was a little afraid before,
and I wish I had tried to caution you, but I did not like to seem
unkind."
"I wish you had," said Ethel. "Dear little Aubrey! Oh, if papa had
not been there! And I cannot think how, as it was, he could contrive
to put the fire out, with his one hand, and not hurt himself.
Margaret it was terrible. How could I mind so little! Did you see
how his frock was singed?"
"Yes, papa showed it to me. How can we be thankful enough! One
thing I hope, that Aubrey was well frightened, poor little boy."
"I know! I see now!" cried Ethel; "he must have wanted me to make
the fire blaze up, as Richard did one evening when we came in and
found it low; I remember Aubrey clapping his hands and shouting at
the flame; but my head was in that unhappy story, and I never had
sense to put the things together, and reflect that he would try to do
it himself. I only wanted to get him out of my way, dear little
fellow. Oh, dear, how bad it was of me! All from being uplifted,
and my head turned, as it used to be when we were happier. Oh! I
wish Mr. Wilmot was not coming!"
Ethel sat for a long time with her head hidden in Margaret's pillows,
and her hand clasped by her good elder sister. At last she looked up
and said, "Oh, Margaret, I am so unhappy. I see the whole meaning of
it now. Do you not? When papa gave his consent at last, I was
pleased and set up, and proud of my plans. I never recollected what
a silly, foolish girl I am, and how unfit. I thought Mr. Wilmot
would think great things of it--it was all wrong and self-satisfied.
I never prayed at all that it might turn out well, and so now it
won't."
"Dearest Ethel, I don't see that. Perhaps it will do all the better
for your being humbled about it now. If you were wild and high
flying, it would never go right."
"I wish Mr. Wilmot was not coming to-night," said Ethel again. "It
would serve me right if papa were to say nothing about it."
Ethel lingered with her sister till Harry and Mary came up with
Margaret's tea, and summoned her, and she crept downstairs, and
entered the room so quietly, that she was hardly perceived behind her
boisterous brother. She knew her eyes were in no presentable state,
and cast them down, and shrank back as Mr. Wilmot shook her hand and
greeted her kindly.
Mr. Wilmot had been wont to come to tea whenever he had anything to
say to Dr. or Mrs. May, which was about once in ten or twelve days.
He was Mary's godfather, and their most intimate friend in the town,
and he had often been with them, both as friend and clergyman,
through their trouble--no later than Christmas Day, he had come to
bring the feast of that day to Margaret in her sick-room. Indeed, it
had been chiefly for the sake of the Mays that he had resolved to
spend the holidays at Stoneborough, taking the care of Abbotstoke,
while his brother, the vicar, went to visit their father. This was,
however, the first time he had come in his old familiar way to spend
an evening, and there was something in the resumption of former
habits that painfully marked the change.
Ethel, on coming in, found Flora making tea, her father leaning back
in his great chair in silence, Richard diligently cutting bread, and
Blanche sitting on Mr. Wilmot's knee, chattering fast and
confidentially. Flora made Harry dispense the cups, and called every
one to their places; Ethel timidly glanced at her father's face, as
he rose and came into the light. She thought the lines and hollows
were more marked than ever, and that he looked fatigued and mournful,
and she felt cut to the heart; but he began to exert himself, and to
make conversation, not, however, about Cocksmoor, but asking Mr.
Wilmot what his brother thought of his new squire, Mr, Rivers.
"He likes him very much," said Mr. Wilmot. "He is a very pleasing
person, particularly kind-hearted and gentle, and likely to do a
great deal for the parish. They have been giving away beef and
blankets at a great rate this Christmas."
"One daughter, about Ethel's age, is there with her governess. He
has been twice married, and the first wife left a son, who is in the
Dragoons, I believe. This girl's mother was Lord Cosham's daughter."
So the talk lingered on, without much interest or life. It was
rather keeping from saying nothing than conversation, and no one was
without the sensation that she was missing, round whom all had been
free and joyous--not that she had been wont to speak much herself,
but nothing would go on smoothly or easily without her. So long did
this last, that Ethel began to think her father meant to punish her
by not beginning the subject that night, and though she owned that
she deserved it, she could not help being very much disappointed.
At length, however, her father began: "We wanted you to talk over a
scheme that these young ones have been concocting. You see, I am
obliged to keep Richard at home this next term--it won't do to have
no one in the house to carry poor Margaret. We can't do without him
anyway, so he and Ethel have a scheme of seeing what can be done for
that wretched place, Cocksmoor."
"Indeed!" said Mr. Wilmot, brightening and looking interested. "It
is sadly destitute. It would be a great thing if anything could be
done for it. You have brought some children to school already, I
think. I saw some rough-looking boys, who said they came from
Cocksmoor."
This embarked the doctor in the history of the ladies being too fine
to teach the poor Cocksmoor girls, which he told with kindling
vehemence and indignation, growing more animated every moment, as he
stormed over the wonted subject of the bad system of management--
ladies' committee, negligent incumbent, insufficient clergy,
misappropriated tithes--while Mr. Wilmot, who had mourned over it,
within himself, a hundred times already, and was doing a curate's
work on sufferance, with no pay, and little but mistrust from Mr.
Ramsden, and absurd false reports among the more foolish part of the
town, sat listening patiently, glad to hear the doctor in his old
strain, though it was a hopeless matter for discussion, and Ethel
dreaded that the lamentation would go on till bedtime, and Cocksmoor
be quite forgotten.
After a time they came safely back to the project, and Richard was
called on to explain. Ethel left it all to him, and he with rising
colour, and quiet, unhesitating, though diffident manner, detailed
designs that showed themselves to have been well matured. Mr. Wilmot
heard, cordially approved, and, as all agreed that no time was to be
lost, while the holidays lasted, he undertook to speak to Mr. Ramsden
on the subject the next morning, and if his consent to their schemes
could be gained, to come in the afternoon to walk with Richard and
Ethel to Cocksmoor, and set their affairs in order. All the time
Ethel said not a word, except when referred to by her brother; but
when Mr. Wilmot took leave, he shook her hand warmly, as if he was
much pleased with her. "Ah!" she thought, "if he knew how ill I have
behaved! It is all show and hollowness with me."
She did not know that Mr. Wilmot thought her silence one of the best
signs for the plan, nor how much more doubtful he would have thought
her perseverance, if he had seen her wild and vehement. As it was,
he was very much pleased, and when the doctor came out with him into
the hall, he could not help expressing his satisfaction in Richard's
well-judged and sensibly-described project.
"Ay, ay!" said the doctor, "there's much more in the boy than I used
to think. He's a capital fellow, and more like his mother than any
of them."
"He is," said Mr. Wilmot; "there was a just, well-weighed sense and
soberness in his plans that put me in mind of her every moment."
Dr. May gave his hand a squeeze, full of feeling, and went up to tell
Margaret. She, on the first opportunity, told Richard, and made him
happier than he had been for months, not so much in Mr. Wilmot's
words, as in his father's assent to, and pleasure in them.