It is, indeed, strangely easy in the
great world for a man to lose his importance, and
from having been the target for all eyes and the subject
of all conversation, to step from his place, or find
it so taken by some rival that it would seem, judging
from the general obliviousness to him, that he had
never existed. But few years before no fashionable
gathering would have been felt complete had it not
been graced by the presence of the young and fascinating
Lovelace, Sir John Oxon. Women favoured him,
and men made themselves his boon companions; his wit
was repeated; the fashion of his hair and the cut
of his waistcoat copied. He was at first rich
and gay enough to be courted and made a favourite;
but when his fortune was squandered, and his marriage
with the heiress came to naught, those qualities which
were vicious and base in him were more easy to be
seen. Besides, there came new male beauties and
new dandies with greater resources and more of prudence,
and these, beginning to set fashion, win ladies’
hearts, and make conquests, so drew the attention of
the public mind that he was less noticeable, being
only one of many, instead of ruling singly as it had
seemed that by some strange chance he did at first.
There were indeed so many stories told of his light
ways, that their novelty being worn off and new ones
still repeated, such persons as concerned themselves
with matters of reputation either through conscience
or policy, began to speak of him with less of warmth
or leniency.
“’Tis not well for a matron
with daughters to marry and with sons to keep an eye
to,” it was said, “to have in her household
too often a young gentleman who has squandered his
fortune in dice and drink and wild living, and who
’twas known was cast off by a reputable young
lady of fortune.”
So there were fine ladies who began
to avoid him, and those in power at Court and in the
world who regarded him with lessening favour day by
day! In truth, he had such debts, and his creditors
pressed him so ceaselessly, that even had the world’s
favour continued, his life must have changed its aspect
greatly. His lodgings were no longer the most
luxurious in the fashionable part of the town, his
brocades and laces were no longer of the richest,
nor his habit of the very latest and most modish cut;
he had no more an equipage attracting every eye as
he drove forth, nor a gentleman’s gentleman
whose swagger and pomp outdid that of all others in
his world. Soon after the breaking of his marriage
with the heiress, his mother had died, and his relatives
being few, and those of an order strictly averse to
the habits of ill-provided and extravagant kinsmen,
he had but few family ties. Other ties he had,
’twas true, but they were not such as were accounted
legal or worthy of attention either by himself or
those related to him.
So it befell that when my Lady Dunstanwolde’s
lacquey could not find him at his lodgings, and as
the days went past neither his landlady nor his creditors
beheld him again, his absence from the scene was not
considered unaccountable by them, nor did it attract
the notice it would have done in times gone by.
“He hath made his way out of
England to escape us,” said the angry tailors
and mercers—who had besieged his door in
vain for months, and who were now infuriated at the
thought of their own easiness and the impudent gay
airs which had befooled them. “A good four
hundred pounds of mine hath he carried with him,”
said one. “And two hundred of mine!”
“And more of mine, since I am a poor man to whom
a pound means twenty guineas!” “We are
all robbed, and he has cheated the debtors’ prison,
wherein, if we had not been fools, he would have been
clapped six months ago.”
“Think ye he will not come back,
gentlemen?” quavered his landlady. “God
knows when I have seen a guinea of his money—but
he was such a handsome, fine young nobleman, and had
such a way with a poor body, and ever a smile and
a chuck o’ the chin for my Jenny.”
“Look well after poor Jenny
if he hath left her behind,” said the tailor.
He did not come back, indeed; and
hearing the rumour that he had fled his creditors,
the world of fashion received the news with small disturbance,
all modish persons being at that time much engaged
in discussion of the approaching nuptials of her ladyship
of Dunstanwolde and the Duke of Osmonde. Close
upon the discussions of the preparations came the
nuptials themselves, and then all the town was agog,
and had small leisure to think of other things.
For those who were bidden to the ceremonials and
attendant entertainments, there were rich habits and
splendid robes to be prepared; and to those who had
not been bidden, there were bitter disappointments
and thwarted wishes to think of.
“Sir John Oxon has fled England
to escape seeing and hearing it all,” was said.
“He has fled to escape something
more painful than the spleen,” others answered.
“He had reached his rope’s end, and finding
that my Lady Dunstanwolde was not of a mind to lengthen
it with her fortune, having taken a better man, and
that his creditors would have no more patience, he
showed them a light pair of heels.”
Before my Lady Dunstanwolde left her
house she gave orders that it be set in order for
closing for some time, having it on her mind that she
should not soon return. It was, however, to
be left in such condition that at any moment, should
she wish to come to it, all could be made ready in
two days’ time. To this end various repairs
and changes she had planned were to be carried out
as soon as she went away from it. Among other
things was the closing with brickwork of the entrance
to the passage leading to the unused cellars.
“‘Twill make the servants’
part more wholesome and less damp and draughty,”
she said; “and if I should sell the place, will
be to its advantage. ’Twas a builder with
little wit who planned such passages and black holes.
In spite of all the lime spread there, they were ever
mouldy and of evil odour.”
It was her command that there should
be no time lost, and men were set at work, carrying
bricks and mortar. It so chanced that one of
them, going in through a back entrance with a hod
over his shoulder, and being young and lively, found
his eye caught by the countenance of a pretty, frightened-looking
girl, who seemed to be loitering about watching, as
if curious or anxious. Seeing her near each
time he passed, and observing that she wished to speak,
but was too timid, he addressed her—
“Would you know aught, mistress?” he said.
She drew nearer gratefully, and then
he saw her eyes were red as if with weeping.
“Think you her ladyship would
let a poor girl speak a word with her?” she
said. “Think you I dare ask so much of
a servant—or would they flout me and turn
me from the door? Have you seen her? Does
she look like a hard, shrewish lady?”
“That she does not, though all
stand in awe of her,” he answered, pleased to
talk with so pretty a creature. “I but
caught a glimpse of her when she gave orders concerning
the closing with brick of a passage-way below.
She is a tall lady, and grand and stately, but she
hath a soft pair of eyes as ever man would wish to
look into, be he duke or ditcher.”
The tears began to run down the girl’s cheeks.
“Ay!” she said; “all
men love her, they say. Many a poor girl’s
sweetheart has been false through her—and
I thought she was cruel and ill-natured. Know
you the servants that wait on her? Would you
dare to ask one for me, if he thinks she would deign
to see a poor girl who would crave the favour to be
allowed to speak to her of—of a gentleman
she knows?”
“They are but lacqueys, and
I would dare to ask what was in my mind,” he
answered; “but she is near her wedding-day, and
little as I know of brides’ ways, I am of the
mind that she will not like to be troubled.”
“That I stand in fear of,”
she said; “but, oh! I pray you, ask some
one of them—a kindly one.”
The young man looked aside.
“Luck is with you,” he said. “Here
comes one now to air himself in the sun, having naught
else to do. Here is a young woman who would
speak with her ladyship,” he said to the strapping
powdered fellow.
“She had best begone,”
the lacquey answered, striding towards the applicant.
“Think you my lady has time to receive traipsing
wenches.”
“’Twas only for a moment
I asked,” the girl said. “I come
from—I would speak to her of—of
Sir John Oxon—whom she knows.”
The man’s face changed. It was Jenfry.
“Sir John Oxon,” he said.
“Then I will ask her. Had you said any
other name I would not have gone near her to-day.”
Her ladyship was in her new closet
with Mistress Anne, and there the lacquey came to
her to deliver his errand.
“A country-bred young woman,
your ladyship,” he said, “comes from Sir
John Oxon—”
“From Sir John Oxon!” cried Anne, starting
in her chair.
My Lady Dunstanwolde made no start,
but turned a steady countenance towards the door,
looking into the lacquey’s face.
“Then he hath returned?” she said.
“Returned!” said Anne.
“After the morning he rode home
with me,” my lady answered, “’twas
said he went away. He left his lodgings without
warning. It seems he hath come back. What
does the woman want?” she ended.
“To speak with your ladyship,”
replied the man, “of Sir John himself, she says.”
“Bring her to me,” her ladyship commanded.
The girl was brought in, overawed
and trembling. She was a country-bred young
creature, as the lacquey had said, being of the simple
rose-and-white freshness of seventeen years perhaps,
and having childish blue eyes and fair curling locks.
She was so frightened by the grandeur
of her surroundings, and the splendid beauty of the
lady who was so soon to be a duchess, and was already
a great earl’s widow, that she could only stand
within the doorway, curtseying and trembling, with
tears welling in her eyes.
“Be not afraid,” said
my Lady Dunstanwolde. “Come hither, child,
and tell me what you want.” Indeed, she
did not look a hard or shrewish lady; she spoke as
gently as woman could, and a mildness so unexpected
produced in the young creature such a revulsion of
feeling that she made a few steps forward and fell
upon her knees, weeping, and with uplifted hands.
“My lady,” she said, “I
know not how I dared to come, but that I am so desperate—and
your ladyship being so happy, it seemed—it
seemed that you might pity me, who am so helpless
and know not what to do.”
Her ladyship leaned forward in her
chair, her elbow on her knee, her chin held in her
hand, to gaze at her.
“You come from Sir John Oxon?” she said.
Anne, watching, clutched each arm of her chair.
“Not from him, asking
your ladyship’s pardon,” said the child,
“but—but—from the country
to him,” her head falling on her breast, “and
I know not where he is.”
“You came to him,”
asked my lady. “Are you,” and her
speech was pitiful and slow—“are
you one of those whom he has—ruined?”
The little suppliant looked up with widening orbs.
“How could that be, and he so
virtuous and pious a gentleman?” she faltered.
Then did my lady rise with a sudden movement.
“Was he so?” says she.
“Had he not been,” the
child answered, “my mother would have been afraid
to trust him. I am but a poor country widow’s
daughter, but was well brought up, and honestly—and
when he came to our village my mother was afraid,
because he was a gentleman; but when she saw his piety,
and how he went to church and sang the psalms and
prayed for grace, she let me listen to him.”
“Did he go to church and sing and pray at first?”
my lady asks.
“’Twas in church he saw
me, your ladyship,” she was answered. “He
said ’twas his custom to go always when he came
to a new place, and that often there he found the
most heavenly faces, for ’twas piety and innocence
that made a face like to an angel’s; and ’twas
innocence and virtue stirred his heart to love, and
not mere beauty which so fades.”
“Go on, innocent thing,”
my lady said; and she turned aside to Anne, flashing
from her eyes unseen a great blaze, and speaking in
a low and hurried voice. “God’s
house,” she said—“God’s
prayers—God’s songs of praise—he
used them all to break a tender heart, and bring an
innocent life to ruin—and yet was he not
struck dead?”
Anne hid her face and shuddered.
“He was a gentleman,”
the poor young thing cried, sobbing—“and
I no fit match for him, but that he loved me.
’Tis said love makes all equal; and he said
I was the sweetest, innocent young thing, and without
me he could not live. And he told my mother
that he was not rich or the fashion now, and had no
modish friends or relations to flout any poor beauty
he might choose to wed.”
“And he would marry you?”
my lady’s voice broke in. “He said
that he would marry you?”
“A thousand times, your ladyship,
and so told my mother, but said I must come to town
and be married at his lodgings, or ’twould not
be counted a marriage by law, he being a town gentleman,
and I from the country.”
“And you came,” said Mistress
Anne, down whose pale cheeks the tears were running—“you
came at his command to follow him?”
“What day came you up to town?”
demands my lady, breathless and leaning forward.
“Went you to his lodgings, and stayed you there
with him,—even for an hour?”
The poor child gazed at her, paling.
“He was not there!” she
cried. “I came alone because he said all
must be secret at first; and my heart beat so with
joy, my lady, that when the woman of the house whereat
he lodges let me in I scarce could speak. But
she was a merry woman and good-natured, and only laughed
and cheered me when she took me to his rooms, and
I sate trembling.”
“What said she to you?”
my lady asks, her breast heaving with her breath.
“That he was not yet in, but
that he would sure come to such a young and pretty
thing as I, and I must wait for him, for he would not
forgive her if she let me go. And the while
I waited there came a man in bands and cassock, but
he had not a holy look, and late in the afternoon I
heard him making jokes with the woman outside, and
they both laughed in such an evil way that I was affrighted,
and waiting till they had gone to another part of
the house, stole away.”
“But he came not back that night—thank
God!” my lady said—“he came
not back.”
The girl rose from her knees, trembling,
her hands clasped on her breast.
“Why should your ladyship thank
God?” she says, pure drops falling from her
eyes. “I am so humble, and had naught else
but that great happiness, and it was taken away—and
you thank God.”
Then drops fell from my lady’s
eyes also, and she came forward and caught the child’s
hand, and held it close and warm and strong, and yet
with her full lip quivering.
“’Twas not that your joy
was taken away that I thanked God,” said she.
“I am not cruel—God Himself knows
that, and when He smites me ’twill not be for
cruelty. I knew not what I said, and yet—tell
me what did you then? Tell me?”
“I went to a poor house to lodge,
having some little money he had given me,” the
simple young thing answered. “’Twas an
honest house, though mean and comfortless. And
the next day I went back to his lodgings to question,
but he had not come, and I would not go in, though
the woman tried to make me enter, saying, Sir John
would surely return soon, as he had the day before
rid with my Lady Dunstanwolde and been to her house;
and ’twas plain he had meant to come to his lodgings,
for her ladyship had sent her lacquey thrice with
a message.”
The hand with which Mistress Anne
sate covering her eyes began to shake. My lady’s
own hand would have shaken had she not been so strong
a creature.
“And he has not yet returned,
then?” she asked. “You have not seen
him?”
The girl shook her fair locks, weeping
with piteous little sobs.
“He has not,” she cried,
“and I know not what to do—and the
great town seems full of evil men and wicked women.
I know not which way to turn, for all plot wrong
against me, and would drag me down to shamefulness—and
back to my poor mother I cannot go.”
“Wherefore not, poor child?” my lady asked
her.
“I have not been made an honest,
wedded woman, and none would believe my story, and—and
he might come back.”
“And if he came back?” said her ladyship.
At this question the girl slipped
from her grasp and down upon her knees again, catching
at her rich petticoat and holding it, her eyes searching
the great lady’s in imploring piteousness, her
own streaming.
“I love him,” she wept—“I
love him so—I cannot leave the place where
he might be. He was so beautiful and grand a
gentleman, and, sure, he loved me better than all
else—and I cannot thrust away from me that
last night when he held me to his breast near our
cottage door, and the nightingale sang in the roses,
and he spake such words to me. I lie and sob
all night on my hard pillow—I so long to
see him and to hear his voice—and hearing
he had been with you that last morning, I dared to
come, praying that you might have heard him let drop
some word that would tell me where he may be, for
I cannot go away thinking he may come back longing
for me—and I lose him and never see his
face again. Oh! my lady, my lady, this place
is so full of wickedness and fierce people—and
dark kennels where crimes are done. I am affrighted
for him, thinking he may have been struck some blow,
and murdered, and hid away; and none will look for
him but one who loves him—who loves him.
Could it be so?—could it be? You
know the town’s ways so well. I pray you,
tell me—in God’s name I pray you!”
“God’s mercy!” Anne
breathed, and from behind her hands came stifled sobbing.
My Lady Dunstanwolde bent down, her colour dying.
“Nay, nay,” she said,
“there has been no murder done—none!
Hush, poor thing, hush thee. There is somewhat
I must tell thee.”
She tried to raise her, but the child
would not be raised, and clung to her rich robe, shaking
as she knelt gazing upward.
“It is a bitter thing,”
my lady said, and ’twas as if her own eyes were
imploring. “God help you bear it—God
help us all. He told me nothing of his journey.
I knew not he was about to take it; but wheresoever
he has travelled, ’twas best that he should
go.”
“Nay! nay!” the girl cried
out—“to leave me helpless. Nay!
it could not be so. He loved me—loved
me—as the great duke loves you!”
“He meant you evil,” said
my lady, shuddering, “and evil he would have
done you. He was a villain—a villain
who meant to trick you. Had God struck him dead
that day, ’twould have been mercy to you.
I knew him well.”
The young thing gave a bitter cry
and fell swooning at her feet; and down upon her knees
my lady went beside her, loosening her gown, and chafing
her poor hands as though they two had been of sister
blood.
“Call for hartshorn, Anne, and
for water,” she said; “she will come out
of her swooning, poor child, and if she is cared for
kindly in time her pain will pass away. God
be thanked she knows no pain that cannot pass!
I will protect her—ay, that will I, as I
will protect all he hath done wrong to and deserted.”
* * * * *
She was so strangely kind through
the poor victim’s swoons and weeping that the
very menials who were called to aid her went back to
their hall wondering in their talk of the noble grandness
of so great a lady, who on the very brink of her own
joy could stoop to protect and comfort a creature
so far beneath her, that to most ladies her sorrow
and desertion would have been things which were too
trivial to count; for ’twas guessed, and talked
over with great freedom and much shrewdness, that
this was a country victim of Sir John Oxon’s,
and he having deserted his creditors, was read enough
to desert his rustic beauty, finding her heavy on
his hands.
Below stairs the men closing the entrance
to the passage with brick, having caught snatches
of the servants’ gossip, talked of what they
heard among themselves as they did their work.
“Ay, a noble lady indeed,”
they said. “For ’tis not a woman’s
way to be kindly with the cast-off fancy of a man,
even when she does not want him herself. He
was her own worshipper for many a day, Sir John; and
before she took the old earl ’twas said that
for a space people believed she loved him. She
was but fifteen and a high mettled beauty; and he as
handsome as she, and had a blue eye that would melt
any woman—but at sixteen he was a town
rake, and such tricks as this one he hath played since
he was a lad. ’Tis well indeed for this
poor thing her ladyship hath seen her. She hath
promised to protect her, and sends her down to Dunstanwolde
with her mother this very week. Would all fine
ladies were of her kind. To hear such things
of her puts a man in the humour to do her work well.”