CONTRAST.
“Lady Theobald will put a stop
to it,” was the general remark. “It
will certainly not occur again.”
This was said upon the evening of
the first gathering upon Miss Belinda’s grass-plat,
and at the same time it was prophesied that Mr. Francis
Barold would soon go away.
But neither of the prophecies proved
true. Mr. Francis Barold did not return
to London; and, strange to say, Lucia was seen again
and again playing croquet with Octavia Bassett, and
was even known to spend evenings with her.
Perhaps it might be that an appeal
made by Miss Belinda to her ladyship had caused her
to allow of these things. Miss Belinda had, in
fact, made a private call upon my lady, to lay her
case before her.
“I feel so very timid about
every thing,” she said, almost with tears, “and
so fearful of trusting myself, that I really find it
quite a trial. The dear child has such a kind
heart—I assure you she has a kind heart,
dear Lady Theobald,—and is so innocent of
any intention to do wrong—I am sure she
is innocent,—that it seems cruel to judge
her severely. If she had had the benefit of such
training as dear Lucia’s. I am convinced
that her conduct would have been most exemplary.
She sees herself that she has faults: I am sure
she does. She said to me only last night, in
that odd way of hers,—she had been sitting,
evidently thinking deeply, for some minutes,—and
she said, ’I wonder if I shouldn’t be nicer
if I were more like Lucia Gaston.’ You
see what turn her mind must have taken. She admires
Lucia so much.”
“Yesterday evening at dinner,”
said Lady Theobald severely, “Lucia informed
me that she admired your niece. The feeling
seems to be mutual.”
Miss Belinda colored, and brightened visibly.
“Did she, indeed?” she
exclaimed. “How pleased Octavia will be
to hear it! Did she, indeed?” Then, warned
by a chilliness, and lack of response, in her ladyship’s
manner, she modified her delight, and became apologetic
again. “These young people are more—are
less critical than we are,” she sighed.
“Octavia’s great prettiness”—
“I think,” Lady Theobald
interposed, “that Lucia has been taught to feel
that the body is corruptible, and subject to decay,
and that mere beauty is of small moment.”
Miss Belinda sighed again.
“That is very true,” she admitted deprecatingly;
“very true indeed.”
“It is to be hoped that Octavia’s
stay in Slowbridge will prove beneficial to her,”
said her ladyship in her most judicial manner.
“The atmosphere is wholly unlike that which
has surrounded her during her previous life.”
“I am sure it will prove beneficial
to her,” said Miss Belinda eagerly. “The
companionship of well-trained and refined young people
cannot fail to be of use to her. Such a companion
as Lucia would be, if you would kindly permit her
to spend an evening with us now and then, would certainly
improve and modify her greatly. Mr. Francis Barold
is—is, I think, of the same opinion; at
least, I fancied I gathered as much from a few words
he let fall.”
“Francis Barold?” repeated
Lady Theobald. “And what did Francis Barold
say?”
“Of course it was but very little,”
hesitated Miss Belinda; “but—but I
could not help seeing that he was drawing comparisons,
as it were. Octavia was teaching Mr. Poppleton
to play croquet; and she was rather exhilarated, and
perhaps exhibited more—freedom of manner,
in an innocent way,—quite in an innocent,
thoughtless way,—than is exactly customary;
and I saw Mr. Barold glance from her to Lucia, who
stood near; and when I said, ‘You are thinking
of the contrast between them,’ he answered,
‘Yes, they differ very greatly, it is true;’
and of course I knew that my poor Octavia could not
have the advantage in his eyes. She feels this
herself, I know. She shocked me the other day,
beyond expression, by telling me that she had asked
him if he thought she was really fast, and that she
was sure he did. Poor child! she evidently did
not comprehend the dreadful significance of such terms.”
“A man like Francis Barold does
understand their significance,” said Lady Theobald;
“and it is to be deplored that your niece cannot
be taught what her position in society will be if
such a reputation attaches itself to her. The
men of the present day fight shy of such characters.”
This dread clause so impressed poor
Miss Belinda by its solemnity, that she could not
forbear repeating it to Octavia afterward, though it
is to be regretted that it did not produce the effect
she had hoped.
“Well, I must say,” she
observed, “that if some men fought a little shyer
than they do, I shouldn’t mind it. You always
do have about half a dozen dangling around,
who only bore you, and who will keep asking you to
go to places, and sending you bouquets, and asking
you to dance when they can’t dance at all, and
only tear your dress, and stand on your feet.
If they would ‘fight shy,’ it would be
splendid.”
To Miss Belinda, who certainly had
never been guilty of the indecorum of having any member
of the stronger sex “dangling about” at
all, this was very trying.
“My dear,” she said, “don’t
say ‘you always have;’ it—it
really seems to make it so personal.”
Octavia turned around, and fixed her
eyes wonderingly upon her blushing countenance.
For a moment she made no remark, a marvellous thought
shaping itself slowly in her mind.
“Aunt Belinda,” she said at length, “did
nobody ever”—
“Ah, no, my dear! No, no,
I assure you!” cried Miss Belinda, in the greatest
possible trepidation. “Ah, dear, no!
Such—such things rarely—very
rarely happen in—Slowbridge; and, besides,
I couldn’t possibly have thought of it.
I couldn’t, indeed!”
She was so overwhelmed with maidenly
confusion at the appalling thought, that she did not
recover herself for half an hour at least. Octavia,
feeling that it would not be safe to pursue the subject,
only uttered one word of comment,—
“Gracious!”