Moore's good spirits were still with him when he rose next morning. He and
Joe Scott had both spent the night in the mill, availing themselves of certain
sleeping accommodations producible from recesses in the front and back counting-
houses. The master, always an early riser, was up somewhat sooner even than
usual. He awoke his man by singing a French song as he made his toilet
'Ye're not custen dahm, then, maister?' cried Joe.
'Not a stiver, mon garçon - which means, my lad: get up, and we'll take
a turn through the mill before the hands come in, and I'll explain my future
plans. We'll have the machinery yet, Joseph. You never heard of Bruce,
perhaps?'
'And th' arrand (spider)? Yes, but I hev. I've read th' history o' Scotland,
and happen knaw as mich on't as ye; and I understand ye to mean to say ye'll
persevere.'
'I scorn the insinuation Joe! I a Flemish! Have I a Flemish face! Have I a
Flemish face - the clumsy nose standing out, the mean forehead falling back, the
pale blue eyes "è fleur de tête"? Am I all body and no legs, like a
Flamand? But you don't know what they are like, those Netherlanders. Joe, I'm an
Anversois. My mother was an Anversoise, though she came of French lineage, which
is the reason I speak French.'
'But your father war Yorkshire, which maks ye a bit Yorkshire too; and
onybody may see ye're akin to us, ye're so keen o' making brass, and getting
forrards.'
'Joe, you're an impudent dog; but I've always been accustomed to a boorish
sort of insolence from my youth up. The "classe ouvrière"; that is, the
working people in Belgium bear themselves brutally towards their employers; and
by brutally, Joe, I mean brutalement - which, perhaps, when properly translated,
should be roughly.'
'We allus speak our minds i' this country; and them young parsons and grand
folk fro' London is shocked at wer "incivility;" and we like weel enough to gi'e
'em summat to be shocked at, 'cause it's sport to us to watch 'em turn up the
whites o' their een, and spreed out their bits o' hands, like as they're flayed
wi' bogards, and then to hear 'em say, nipping off their words short like,
"Dear! dear! Whet seveges! How very corse!"'
'You are savages, Joe. You don't suppose you're civilised, do you?'
'Middling, middling, maister. I reckon 'at us manufacturing lads i' th' north
is a deal more intelligent, and knaws a deal more nor th' farming folk i' th'
south. Trade sharpens wer wits; and them that's mechanics like me is forced to
think. Ye know, what wi' looking after machinery and sich like, I've getten into
that way that when I see an effect, I look straight out for a cause, and I oft
lig hold on't to purpose; and then I like reading, and I'm curious to knaw what
them that reckons to govern us aims to do for us and wi' us. And there's many
'cuter nor me; there's many a one amang them greasy chaps 'at smells o' oil, and
amang them dyers wi' blue and black skins that has a long head, and that can
tell what a fooil of a law is, as well as ye or old Yorke and a deal better nor
soft uns like Christopher Sykes o' Whinbury, and greet hectoring nowts like
yond' Irish Peter, Helstone's curate.'
'You think yourself a clever fellow, I know, Scott.'
'Ay! I'm fairish. I can tell cheese fro' chalk, and I'm varry weel aware that
I've improved sich opportunities as I have had, a deal better nor some 'at
reckons to be aboon me; but there's thousands i' Yorkshire that's as good as me,
and a two-three that's better.'
'You're a great man - you're a sublime fellow; but you're a prig, a conceited
noodle with it all, Joe! You need not to think that because you've picked up a
little knowledge of practical mathematics, and because you have found some
scantling of the elements of chemistry at the bottom of a dyeing vat, that
therefore you're a neglected man of science; and you need not to suppose that
because the course of trade does not always run smooth, and you, and such as
you, are sometimes short of work and of bread, that therefore your class are
martyrs, and that the whole form of government under which you live is wrong.
And, moreover, you need not for a moment to insinuate that the virtues have
taken refuge in cottages and wholly abandoned slated houses. Let me tell you, I
particularly abominate that sort of trash, because I know so well that human
nature is human nature everywhere, whether under tile or thatch, and that in
every specimen of human nature that breathes, vice and virtue are ever found
blended, in smaller or greater proportions, and that the proportion is not
determined by station. I have seen villains who were rich, and I have seen
villains who were poor, and I have seen villains who were neither rich nor poor,
but who had realised Agar's wish, and lived in fair and modest competency. The
clock is going to strike six. Away with you, Joe, and ring the mill bell.'
It was now the middle of the month of February; by six o'clock therefore dawn
was just beginning to steal on night, to penetrate with a pale ray its brown
obscurity, and give a demi-translucence to its opaque shadows. Pale enough that
ray was on this particular morning: no colour tinged the east, no flush warmed
it. To see what a heavy lid day slowly lifted, what a wan glance she flung along
the hills, you would have thought the sun's fire quenched in last night's
floods. The breath of this morning was chill as its aspect; a raw wind stirred
the mass of night-cloud, and showed, as it slowly rose, leaving a colourless,
silver-gleaming ring all round the horizon, not blue sky, but a stratum of paler
vapour beyond. It had ceased to rain, but the earth was sodden, and the pools
and rivulets were full.
The mill-windows were alight, the bell still rung loud, and now the little
children came running in, in too great a hurry, let us hope, to feel very much
nipped by the inclement air; and indeed, by contrast, perhaps the morning
appeared rather favourable to them than otherwise, for they had often come to
their work that winter through snowstorms, through heavy rain, through hard
frost.
Mr. Moore stood at the entrance to watch them pass. He counted them as they
went by. To those who came rather late he said a word of reprimand, which was a
little more sharply repeated by Joe Scott when the lingerers reached the work-
rooms. Neither master nor overlooker spoke savagely. They were not savage men
either of them, though it appeared both were rigid, for they fined a delinquent
who came considerably too late. Mr. Moore made him pay his penny down ere he
entered, and informed him that the next repetition of the fault would cost him
twopence.
Rules, no doubt, are necessary in such cases, and coarse and cruel masters
will make coarse and cruel rules, which, at the time we treat of at least, they
used sometimes to enforce tyrannically; but though I describe imperfect
characters (every character in this book will be found to be more or less
imperfect, my pen refusing to draw anything in the model line), I have not
undertaken to handle degraded or utterly infamous ones. Child-torturers, slave
masters and drivers, I consign to the hands of jailers. The novelist may be
excused from sullying his page with the record of their deeds.
Instead, then, of harrowing up my reader's soul and delighting his organ of
wonder with effective descriptions of stripes and scourgings, I am happy to be
able to inform him that neither Mr. Moore nor his overlooker ever struck a child
in their mill. Joe had, indeed, once very severely flogged a son of his own for
telling a lie and persisting in it; but, like his employer, he was too
phlegmatic, too calm, as well as too reasonable a man, to make corporal
chastisement other than the exception to his treatment of the young.
Mr. Moore haunted his mill, his mill-yard, his dyehouse, and his warehouse
till the sickly dawn strengthened into day. The sun even rose, at least a white
disc, clear, tintless, and almost chill-looking as ice, peeped over the dark
crest of a hill, changed to silver the livid edge of the cloud above it, and
looked solemnly down the whole length of the den, or narrow dale, to whose
strait bounds we are at present limited. It was eight o'clock; the mill lights
were all extinguished; the signal was given for breakfast; the children,
released for half an hour from toil, betook themselves to the little tin cans
which held their coffee, and to the small baskets which contained their
allowance of bread. Let us hope they have enough to eat; it would be a pity were
it otherwise.
And now at last Mr. Moore quitted the mill-yard, and bent his steps to his
dwelling-house. It was only a short distance from the factory, but the hedge and
high bank on each side of the lane which conducted to it seemed to give it
something of the appearance and feeling of seclusion. It was a small,
whitewashed place, with a green porch over the door; scanty brown stalks showed
in the garden soil near this porch, and likewise beneath the windows - stalks
budless and flowerless now, but giving dim prediction of trained and blooming
creepers for summer days. A grass plat and borders fronted the cottage. The
borders presented only black mould yet, except where, in sheltered nooks, the
first shoots of snowdrop or crocus peeped, green as emerald, from the earth. The
spring was late; it had been a severe and prolonged winter; the last deep snow
had but just disappeared before yesterday's rains; on the hills, indeed, white
remnants of it yet gleamed, flecking the hollows and crowning the peaks; the
lawn was not verdant, but bleached, as was the grass on the bank, and under the
hedge in the lane. Three trees, gracefully grouped, rose beside the cottage.
They were not lofty, but having no rivals near, they looked well and imposing
where they grew. Such was Mr. Moore's home - a snug nest for content and
contemplation, but one within which the wings of action and ambition could not
long lie folded.
Its air of modest comfort seemed to possess no particular attraction for its
owner. Instead of entering the house at once, he fetched a spade from a little
shed and began to work in the garden. For about a quarter of an hour he dug on
uninterrupted. At length, however, a window opened, and a female voice called to
him, --
He threw down his spade, and entered the house. The narrow passage conducted
him to a small parlour, where a breakfast of coffee and bread and butter, with
the somewhat un-English accompaniment of stewed pears, was spread on the table.
Over these viands presided the lady who had spoken from the window. I must
describe her before I go any farther.
She seemed a little older than Mr. Moore - perhaps she was thirty-five, tall,
and proportionately stout; she had very black hair, for the present twisted up
in curl-papers, a high colour in her cheeks, a small nose, a pair of little
black eyes. The lower part of her face was large in proportion to the upper; her
forehead was small and rather corrugated; she had a fretful though not an ill-
natured expression of countenance; there was something in her whole appearance
one felt inclined to be half provoked with and half amused at. The strangest
point was her dress - a stuff petticoat and a striped cotton camisole. The
petticoat was short, displaying well a pair of feet and ankles which left much
to be desired in the article of symmetry.
You will think I have depicted a remarkable slattern, reader; not at all.
Hortense Moore (she was Mr. Moore's sister) was a very orderly, economical
person. The petticoat, camisole, and curl-papers were her morning costume, in
which, of forenoons, she had always been accustomed to 'go her household ways'
in her own country. She did not choose to adopt English fashions because she was
obliged to live in England; she adhered to her old Belgian modes, quite
satisfied that there was a merit in so doing.
Mademoiselle had an excellent opinion of herself - an opinion not wholly
undeserved, for she possessed some good and sterling qualities; but she rather
over-estimated the kind and degree of these qualities; and quite left out of the
account sundry little defects which accompanied them. You could never have
persuaded her that she was a prejudiced and narrow-minded person; that she was
too susceptible on the subject of her own dignity and importance, and too apt to
take offence about trifles; yet all this was true. However, where her claims to
distinction were not opposed, and where her prejudices were not offended, she
could be kind and friendly enough. To her two brothers (for there was another
Gérard Moore besides Robert) she was very much attached. As the sole
remaining representatives of their decayed family, the persons of both were
almost sacred in her eyes. Of Louis, however, she knew less than of Robert. He
had been sent to England when a mere boy, and had received his education at an
English school. His education not being such as to adapt him for trade, perhaps,
too, his natural bent not inclining him to mercantile pursuits, he had, when the
blight of hereditary prospects rendered it necessary for him to push his own
fortune, adopted the very arduous and very modest career of a teacher. He had
been usher in a school, and was said now to be tutor in a private family.
Hortense, when she mentioned Louis, described him as having what she called 'des
moyens,' but as being too backward and quiet. Her praise of Robert was in a
different strain, less qualified: she was very proud of him; she regarded him as
the greatest man in Europe; all he said and did was remarkable in her eyes, and
she expected others to behold him from the same point of view; nothing could be
more irrational, monstrous and infamous than opposition from any quarter to
Robert, unless it were opposition to herself.
Accordingly, as soon as the said Robert was seated at the breakfast-table,
and she had helped him to a portion of stewed pears, and cut him a good-sized
Belgian tartine, she began to pour out a flood of amazement and horror at the
transaction of last night, the destruction of the frames.
'Quelle ideé! to destroy them. Quelle action honteuse! On voyait bien
que les ouvriers de ce pays étaient à la fois bêtes et
méchants. C'était absolument comme les domestiques anglais, les
servantes surtout: rien d'insupportable comme cette Sara, par exemple!'
'She looks clean and industrious,' Mr. Moore remarked.
'Looks! I don't know how she looks, and I do not say that she is altogether
dirty or idle, mais elle est d'une insolence! She disputed with me a quarter of
an hour yesterday about the cooking of the beef; she said I boiled it to rags,
that English people would never be able to eat such a dish as our bouilli, that
the bouillon was no better than greasy warm water, and as to the choucroute, she
affirms she cannot touch it! That barrel we have in the cellar - delightfully
prepared by my own hands - she termed a tub of hog-wash, which means food for
pigs. I am harassed with the girl, and yet I cannot part with her lest I should
get a worse. You are in the same position with your workmen, pauvre cher
frère!'
'I am afraid you are not very happy in England, Hortense.'
'It is my duty to be happy where you are, brother; but otherwise there are
certainly a thousand things which make me regret our native town. All the world
here appears to me ill-bred (mal-élevé). I find my habits considered
ridiculous. If a girl out of your mill chances to come into the kitchen and find
me in my jupon and camisole preparing dinner (for you know I cannot trust Sarah
to cook a single dish), she sneers. If I accept an invitation out to tea, which
I have done once or twice, I perceive I am put quite into the background; I have
not that attention paid me which decidedly is my due. Of what an excellent
family are the Gérards, as we know, and the Moores also! They have a right
to claim a certain respect, and to feel wounded when it is withheld from them.
In Antwerp I was always treated with distinction; here, one would think that
when I open my lips in company I speak English with a ridiculous accent, whereas
I am quite assured that I pronounce it perfectly.'
'Hortense, in Antwerp we were known rich; in England we were never known but
poor.'
'Precisely, and thus mercenary are mankind. Again, dear brother, last Sunday,
if you recollect, was very wet; accordingly I went to church in my neat black
sabots, objects one would not indeed wear in a fashionable city but which in the
country I have ever been accustomed to use for walking in dirty roads. Believe
me, as I paced up the aisle, composed and tranquil, as I am always, four ladies,
and as many gentlemen, laughed and hid their faces behind their prayer-
books.'
'Well, well I don't put on the sabots again. I told you before I thought they
were not quite the thing for this country.'
'But, brother, they are not common sabots, such as the peasantry wear. I tell
you, they are sabots noirs, très propres, très convenables. At Mons
and Leuze - cities not very far removed from the elegant capital of Brussels -
it is very seldom that the respectable people wear anything else for walking in
winter. Let any one try to wade the mud of the Flemish chaussées in a pair
of Paris brodequins, on m'en dirait des nouvelles!'
'Never mind Mons and Leuze and the Flemish chaussées; do at Rome as the
Romans do. And as to the camisole and jupon, I am not quite sure about them
either. I never see an English lady dressed in such garments. Ask Caroline
Helstone.'
'Caroline! I ask Caroline? I consult her about my dress? It is she who on all
points should consult me. She is a child.'
'She is eighteen, or at least seventeen - old enough to know all about gowns,
petticoats, and chaussures.'
'Do not spoil Caroline, I entreat you, brother. Do not make her of more
consequence than she ought to be. At present she is modest and unassuming: let
us keep her so.'
'She does not. She appreciates me better than any one else here; but then she
has more intimate opportunities of knowing me. She sees that I have education,
intelligence, manner, principles - all, in short, which belongs to a person well
born and well bred.'
'For fond I cannot say. I am not one who is prone to take violent fancies,
and, consequently, my friendship is the more to be depended on. I have a regard
for her as my relative; her position also inspires interest, and her conduct as
my pupil has hitherto been such as rather to enhance than diminish the
attachment that springs from other causes.'
'To me she behaves very well; but you are conscious, brother, that I have a
manner calculated to repel over-familiarity, to win esteem, and to command
respect. Yet, possessed of penetration, I perceive dearly that Caroline is not
perfect, that there is much to be desired in her.'
'Give me a last cup of coffee, and while I am drinking it amuse me with an
account of her faults.'
'Dear brother, I am happy to see you eat your breakfast with relish, after
the fatiguing night you have passed. Caroline, then, is defective; but with my
forming hand and almost motherly care she may improve. There is about her an
occasional something - a reserve, I think - which I do not quite like, because
it is not sufficiently girlish and submissive; and there are glimpses of an
unsettled hurry in her nature, which put me out. Yet she is usually most
tranquil, too dejected and thoughtful indeed sometimes. In time, I doubt not, I
shall make her uniformly sedate and decorous, without being unaccountably
pensive. I ever disapprove what is not intelligible.'
'I don't understand your account in the least. What do you mean by "unsettled
hurries," for instance?'
'An example will, perhaps, be the most satisfactory explanation. I sometimes,
you are aware, make her read French poetry by way of practice in pronunciation.
She has in the course of her lessons gone through much of Corneille and Racine,
in a very steady, sober spirit, such as I approve. Occasionally she showed,
indeed, a degree of languor in the perusal of those esteemed authors, partaking
rather of apathy than sobriety; and apathy is what I cannot tolerate in those
who have the benefit of my instructions; besides, one should not be apathetic in
studying standard works. The other day I put into her hands a volume of short
fugitive pieces. I sent her to the window to learn one by heart, and when I
looked up I saw her turning the leaves over impatiently, and curling her lip,
absolutely with scorn, as she surveyed the little poems cursorily. I chid her.
"Ma cousine," said she, "tout cela m'ennuie à la mort." I told her this was
improper language. "Dieu!" she exclaimed, "Il n'y a donc pas deux lignes de
poësie dans toute la littérature française?" I inquired what she
meant. She begged my pardon with proper submission. Ere long she was still. I
saw her smiling to herself over the book. She began to learn assiduously. In
half an hour she came and stood before me, presented the volume, folded her
hands, as I always require her to do, and commenced the repetition of that short
thing by Chénier, "La Jeune Captive." If you had heard the manner in which
she went through this, and in which she uttered a few incoherent comments when
she had done, you would have known what I meant by the phrase "unsettled hurry."
One would have thought Chénier was more moving than all Racine and all
Corneille. You, brother, who have so much sagacity, will discern that this
disproportionate preference argues an ill-regulated mind; but she is fortunate
in her preceptress. I will give her a system, a method of thought, a set of
opinions; I will give her the perfect control and guidance of her feelings.'
'Be sure you do, Hortense. Here she comes. That was her shadow passed the
window, I believe.'
'Ah! truly. She is too early - half an hour before her time. - My child, what
brings you here before I have breakfasted?'
This question was addressed to an individual who now entered the room, a
young girl, wrapped in a winter mantle, the folds of which were gathered with
some grace round an apparently slender figure.
'I came in haste to see how you were, Hortense, and how Robert was too. I was
sure you would be both grieved by what happened last night. I did not hear till
this morning: my uncle told me at breakfast'
'Ah! it is unspeakable. You sympathise with us? Your uncle sympathises with
us?'
'My uncle is very angry; but he was with Robert, I believe, was he not? - Did
he not go with you to Stilbro' Moor?'
'Yes, we set out in very martial style, Caroline; but the prisoners we went
to rescue met us half-way.'
'I generally return at seven. Do you wish me to be at home earlier?'
'Try rather to be back by six. It is not absolutely dark at six now, but by
seven daylight is quite gone.'
'And what danger is to be apprehended, Caroline, when daylight is gone? What
peril do you conceive comes as the companion of darkness for me?'
'I am not sure that I can define my fears, but we all have a certain anxiety
at present about our friends. My uncle calls these times dangerous. He says,
too, that mill-owners are unpopular.'
'And I one of the most unpopular? Is not that the fact? You are reluctant to
speak out plainly, but at heart you think me liable to Pearson's fate, who was
shot at - not, indeed, from behind a hedge, but in his own house, through his
staircase window, as he was going to bed.'
'Anne Pearson showed me the bullet in the chamber-door,' remarked Caroline
gravely, as she folded her mantle and arranged it and her muff on a side-table.
'You know,' she continued, 'there is a hedge all the way along the road from
here to Whinbury, and there are the Fieldhead plantations to pass; but you will
be back by six - or before?'
'Certainly he will,' affirmed Hortense. 'And now, my child, prepare your
lessons for repetition, while I put the peas to soak for the puree at
dinner.'
'You suspect I have many enemies, then, Caroline,' said Mr. Moore, 'and
doubtless you know me to be destitute of friends?'
'Not destitute, Robert. There is your sister, your brother Louis, whom I have
never seen; there is Mr. Yorke, and there is my uncle besides, of course, many
more.'
Robert smiled. 'You would he puzzled to name your "many more,"' said he. 'But
show me your exercise-book. What extreme pains you take with the writing! My
sister, I suppose, exacts this care. She wants to form you in all things after
the model of a Flemish school-girl. What life are you destined for, Caroline?
What will you do with your French, drawing, and other accomplishments, when they
are acquired?'
'You may well say, when they are acquired; for, as you are aware, till
Hortense began to teach me, I knew precious little. As to the life I am destined
for, I cannot tell. I suppose to keep my uncle's house till --' she
hesitated.
'No. How harsh to say that! I never think of his dying. He is only fifty-
five. But till - in short, till events offer other occupations for me.'
'A remarkably vague prospect! Are you content with it?'
'I used to be, formerly. Children, you know, have little reflection, or
rather their reflections run on ideal themes. There are moments now when I am
not quite satisfied.'
'You come to the point, Lina: you too, then, wish to make money?'
'I do. I should like an occupation; and if I were a boy, it would not be so
difficult to find one. I see such an easy, pleasant way of learning a business,
and making my way in life.'
'I could be apprenticed to your trade - the cloth trade. I could learn it of
you, as we are distant relations. I would do the counting-house work, keep the
books, and write the letters, while you went to market. I know you greatly
desire to be rich, in order to pay your father's debts; perhaps I could help you
to get rich.'
'Yes, Caroline. Poverty is necessarily selfish, contracted, grovelling,
anxious. Now and then a poor man's heart, when certain beams and dews visit it,
may swell like the budding vegetation in yonder garden on this spring day, may
feel ripe to evolve in foliage, perhaps blossom; but he must not encourage the
pleasant impulse; he must invoke Prudence to check it, with that frosty breath
of hers, which is as nipping as any north wind.'
'When I speak of poverty, I do not so much mean the natural, habitual poverty
of the working-man, as the embarrassed penury of the man in debt; my grub-worm
is always a straitened, struggling, care-worn tradesman.'
'Cherish hope, not anxiety. Certain ideas have become too fixed in your mind.
It may be presumptuous to say it, but I have the impression that there is
something wrong in your notions of the best means of attaining happiness, as
there is in --' Second hesitation.
'The faults of my manner are, I think, only negative. I am not proud. What
has a man in my position to be proud of? I am only taciturn, phlegmatic, and
joyless.'
'As if your living cloth-dressers were all machines like your frames and
shears. In your own house you seem different.'
'To those of my own house I am no alien, which I am to these English clowns.
I might act the benevolent with them, but acting is not my forte. I find them
irrational, perverse; they hinder me when I long to hurry forward. In treating
them justly I fulfil my whole duty towards them.'
'Ah!' said the monitress, shaking her head and heaving a deep sigh. With this
ejaculation, indicative that she perceived a screw to be loose somewhere, but
that it was out of her reach to set it right, she bent over her grammar, and
sought the rule and exercise for the day.
'I suppose I am not an affectionate man, Caroline; the attachment of a very
few suffices me.'
'If you please, Robert, will you mend me a pen or two before you go?'
'First let me rule your book, for you always contrive to draw the lines
aslant. There now. And now for the pens. You like a fine one, I think?'
'Such as you generally make for me and Hortense; not your own broad
points.'
'If I were of Louis's calling I might stay at home and dedicate this morning
to you and your studies, whereas I must spend it in Sykes's wool-warehouse.'
As he finished mending the pens, a horse, saddled and bridled, was brought up
to the garden-gate.
'There, Fred is ready for me; I must go. I'll take one look to see what the
spring has done in the south border, too, first.'
He quitted the room, and went out into the garden ground behind the mill. A
sweet fringe of young verdure and opening flowers - snowdrop, crocus, even
primrose - bloomed in the sunshine under the hot wall of the factory. Moore
plucked here and there a blossom and leaf, till he had collected a little
bouquet. He returned to the parlour, pilfered a thread of silk from his sister's
work-basket, tied the flowers, and laid them on Caroline's desk.
'Thank you, Robert. It is pretty; it looks, as it lies there, like sparkles
of sunshine and blue sky. Good-morning.'
He went to the door, stopped, opened his lips as if to speak, said nothing,
and moved on. He passed through the wicket, and mounted his horse. In a second
he had flung himself from the saddle again, transferred the reins to Murgatroyd,
and re-entered the cottage.
'I forgot my gloves,' he said, appearing to take something from the side-
table then, as an impromptu thought, he remarked, 'You have no binding
engagement at home perhaps, Caroline?'
'I never have. Some children's socks, which Mrs. Ramsden has ordered, to knit
for the Jew's basket; but they will keep.'
'Jew's basket be - sold! Never was utensil better named. Anything more Jewish
than it - its contents and their prices - cannot be conceived. But I see
something, a very tiny curl, at the corners of your lip, which tells me that you
know its merits as well as I do. Forget the Jew's basket, then, and spend the
day here as a change. Your uncle won't break his heart at your absence?'
'The old Cossack! I dare say not,' muttered Moore. Then stay and dine with
Hortense; she will be glad of your company. I shall return in good time. We will
have a little reading in the evening. The moon rises at half-past eight, and I
will walk up to the rectory with you at nine. Do you agree?'
Moore lingered yet two minutes. He bent over Caroline's desk and glanced at
her grammar, he fingered her pen, he lifted her bouquet and played with it; his
horse stamped impatient; Fred Murgatroyd hemmed and coughed at the gate, as if
he wondered what in the world his master was doing. 'Good-morning,' again said
Moore, and finally vanished.
Hortense, coming in ten minutes after, found, to her surprise, that Caroline
had not yet commenced her exercise.