Chapter VI
In February the weather became
warmer and summer-like. In Virginia there comes
often at this season a deceptive gleam of summer,
slipping in between heavy storm-clouds of sleet and
snow; days and sometimes weeks when the temperature
is like June; when the earliest plants begin to show
their hardy flowers, and when the bare branches of
the forest trees alone protest against the conduct
of the seasons. Then men and women are languid;
life seems, as in Italy, sensuous and glowing with
colour; one is conscious of walking in an atmosphere
that is warm, palpable, radiant with possibilities;
a delicate haze hangs over Arlington, and softens
even the harsh white glare of the Capitol; the struggle
of existence seems to abate; Lent throws its calm shadow
over society; and youthful diplomatists, unconscious
of their danger, are lured into asking foolish girls
to marry them; the blood thaws in the heart and flows
out into the veins, like the rills of sparkling water
that trickle from every lump of ice or snow, as though
all the ice and snow on earth, and all the hardness
of heart, all the heresy and schism, all the works
of the devil, had yielded to the force of love and
to the fresh warmth of innocent, lamb-like, confiding
virtue. In such a world there should be no guile—but
there is a great deal of it notwithstanding.
Indeed, at no other season is there so much.
This is the moment when the two whited sepulchres at
either end of the Avenue reek with the thick atmosphere
of bargain and sale. The old is going; the new
is coming. Wealth, office, power are at auction.
Who bids highest? who hates with most venom? who intrigues
with most skill? who has done the dirtiest, the meanest,
the darkest, and the most, political work? He
shall have his reward.
Senator Ratcliffe was absorbed and
ill at ease. A swarm of applicants for office
dogged his steps and beleaguered his rooms in quest
of his endorsement of their paper characters.
The new President was to arrive on Monday. Intrigues
and combinations, of which the Senator was the soul,
were all alive, awaiting this arrival. Newspaper
correspondents pestered him with questions. Brother
senators called him to conferences. His mind was
pre-occupied with his own interests. One might
have supposed that, at this instant, nothing could
have drawn him away from the political gaming-table,
and yet when Mrs. Lee remarked that she was going
to Mount Vernon on Saturday with a little party, including
the British Minister and an Irish gentleman staying
as a guest at the British Legation, the Senator surprised
her by expressing a strong wish to join them.
He explained that, as the political lead was no longer
in his hands, the chances were nine in ten that if
he stirred at all he should make a blunder; that his
friends expected him to do something when, in fact,
nothing could be done; that every preparation had
already been made, and that for him to go on an excursion
to Mount Vernon, at this moment, with the British
Minister, was, on the whole, about the best use he
could make of his time, since it would hide him for
one day at least.
Lord Skye had fallen into the habit
of consulting Mrs. Lee when his own social resources
were low, and it was she who had suggested this party
to Mount Vernon, with Carrington for a guide and Mr.
Gore for variety, to occupy the time of the Irish friend
whom Lord Skye was bravely entertaining.
This gentleman, who bore the title
of Dunbeg, was a dilapidated peer, neither wealthy
nor famous. Lord Skye brought him to call on
Mrs. Lee, and in some sort put him under her care.
He was young, not ill-looking, quite intelligent,
rather too fond of facts, and not quick at humour.
He was given to smiling in a deprecatory way, and
when he talked, he was either absent or excited; he
made vague blunders, and then smiled in deprecation
of offence, or his words blocked their own path in
their rush. Perhaps his manner was a little ridiculous,
but he had a good heart, a good head, and a title.
He found favour in the eyes of Sybil and Victoria Dare,
who declined to admit other women to the party, although
they offered no objection to Mr.
Ratcliffe’s admission.
As for Lord Dunbeg, he was an enthusiastic admirer
of General Washington, and, as he privately intimated,
eager to study phases of American society. He
was delighted to go with a small party, and Miss Dare
secretly promised herself that she would show him
a phase.
The morning was warm, the sky soft,
the little steamer lay at the quiet wharf with a few
negroes lazily watching her preparations for departure.
Carrington, with Mrs. Lee and the
young ladies, arrived first, and stood leaning against
the rail, waiting the arrival of their companions.
Then came Mr. Gore, neatly attired and gloved, with
a light spring overcoat; for Mr.
Gore was very careful of his personal
appearance, and not a little vain of his good looks.
Then a pretty woman, with blue eyes and blonde hair,
dressed in black, and leading a little girl by the
hand, came on board, and Carrington went to shake
hands with her. On his return to Mrs. Lee’s
side, she asked about his new acquaintance, and he
replied with a half-laugh, as though he were not proud
of her, that she was a client, a pretty widow, well
known in Washington. “Any one at the Capitol
would tell you all about her.
She was the wife of a noted lobbyist,
who died about two years ago.
Congressmen can refuse nothing to
a pretty face, and she was their idea of feminine
perfection. Yet she is a silly little woman, too.
Her husband died after a very short illness, and, to
my great surprise, made me executor under his will.
I think he had an idea that he could trust me with
his papers, which were important and compromising,
for he seems to have had no time to go over them and
destroy what were best out of the way. So, you
see, I am left with his widow and child to look after.
Luckily, they are well provided for.”
“Still you have not told me
her name.” “Her name is Baker—Mrs.
Sam Baker. But they are casting off, and Mr.
Ratcliffe will be left behind.
I’ll ask the captain to wait.” About
a dozen passengers had arrived, among them the two
Earls, with a footman carrying a promising lunch-basket,
and the planks were actually hauled in when a carriage
dashed up to the whatf, and Mr. Ratcliffe leaped out
and hurried on board. “Off with you as quick
as you can!” said he to the negro-hands, and
in another moment the little steamer had begun her
journey, pounding the muddy waters of the Potomac
and sending up its small column of smoke as though
it were a newly invented incense-burner approaching
the temple of the national deity. Ratcliffe explained
in great glee how he had barely managed to escape
his visitors by telling them that the British Minister
was waiting for him, and that he would be back again
presently. “If they had known where I was
going,” said he, “you would have seen
the boat swamped with office-seekers. Illinois
alone would have brought you to a watery grave.”
He was in high spirits, bent upon enjoying his holiday,
and as they passed the arsenal with its solitary sentry,
and the navy-yard, with its one unseaworthy wooden
war-steamer, he pointed out these evidences of national
grandeur to Lord Skye, threatening, as the last terror
of diplomacy, to send him home in an American frigate.
They were thus indulging in senatorial humour on one
side of the boat, while Sybil and Victoria, with the
aid of Mr. Gore and Carrington, were improving Lord
Dunbeg’s mind on the other.
Miss Dare, finding for herself at
last a convenient seat where she could repose and
be mistress of the situation, put on a more than usually
demure expression and waited with gravity until her
noble neighbour should give her an opportunity to
show those powers which, as she believed, would supply
a phase in his existence. Miss Dare was one of
those young persons, sometimes to be found in America,
who seem to have no object in life, and while apparently
devoted to men, care nothing about them, but find
happiness only in violating rules; she made no parade
of whatever virtues she had, and her chief pleasure
was to make fun of all the world and herself.
“What a noble river!”
remarked Lord Dunbeg, as the boat passed out upon
the wide stream; “I suppose you often sail on
it?”
“I never was here in my life
till now,” replied the untruthful Miss Dare;
“we don’t think much of it; it s too small;
we’re used to so much larger rivers.”
“I am afraid you would not like
our English rivers then; they are mere brooks compared
with this.”
“Are they indeed?” said
Victoria, with an appearance of vague surprise; “how
curious! I don’t think I care to be an Englishwoman
then. I could not live without big rivers.”
Lord Dunbeg stared, and hinted that
this was almost unreasonable.
“Unless I were a Countess!”
continued Victoria, meditatively, looking at Alexandria,
and paying no attention to his lordship; “I
think I could manage if I were a C-c-countess.
It is such a pretty title!”
“Duchess is commonly thought
a prettier one,” stammered Dunbeg, much embarrassed.
The young man was not used to chaff from women.
“I should be satisfied with
Countess. It sounds well. I am surprised
that you don’t like it.” Dunbeg looked
about him uneasily for some means of escape but he
was barred in. “I should think you would
feel an awful responsibility in selecting a Countess.
How do you do it?”
Lord Dunbeg nervously joined in the
general laughter as Sybil ejaculated:
“Oh, Victoria!” but Miss
Dare continued without a smile or any elevation of
her monotonous voice:
“Now, Sybil, don’t interrupt
me, please. I am deeply interested in Lord Dunbeg’s
conversation. He understands that my interest
is purely scientific, but my happiness requires that
I should know how Countesses are selected.
Lord Dunbeg, how would you recommend
a friend to choose a Countess?”
Lord Dunbeg began to be amused by
her impudence, and he even tried to lay down for her
satisfaction one or two rules for selecting Countesses,
but long before he had invented his first rule, Victoria
had darted off to a new subject.
“Which would you rather be,
Lord Dunbeg? an Earl or George Washington?”
“George Washington, certainly,”
was the Earl’s courteous though rather bewildered
reply.
“Really?” she asked with
a languid affectation of surprise; “it is awfully
kind of you to say so, but of course you can’t
mean it.
“Indeed I do mean it.”
“Is it possible? I never should have thought
it.”
“Why not, Miss Dare?”
“You have not the air of wishing to be George
Washington.”
“May I again ask, why not?”
“Certainly. Did you ever see George Washington?”
“Of course not. He died fifty years before
I was born.”
“I thought so. You see
you don’t know him. Now, will you give us
an idea of what you imagine General Washington to have
looked like?”
Dunbeg gave accordingly a flattering
description of General Washington, compounded of Stuart’s
portrait and Greenough’s statue of Olympian
Jove with Washington’s features, in the Capitol
Square. Miss Dare listened with an expression
of superiority not unmlxed with patience, and then
she enlightened him as follows:
“All you have been saying is
perfect stuff—excuse the vulgarity of the
expression. When I am a Countess I will correct
my language. The truth is that General Washington
was a raw-boned country farmer, very hard-featured,
very awkward, very illiterate and very dull; very
bad tempered, very profane, and generally tipsy after
dinner.”
“You shock me, Miss Dare!” exclaimed Dunbeg.
“Oh! I know all about General
Washington. My grandfather knew him intimately,
and often stayed at Mount Vernon for weeks together.
You must not believe what you read, and not a word
of what Mr. Carrington will say.
He is a Virginian and will tell you
no end of fine stories and not a syllable of truth
in one of them. We are all patriotic about Washington
and like to hide his faults. If I weren’t
quite sure you would never repeat it, I would not
tell you this. The truth is that even when George
Washington was a small boy, his temper was so violent
that no one could do anything with him. He once
cut down all his father’s fruit-trees in a fit
of passion, and then, just because they wanted to
flog him, he threatened to brain his father with the
hatchet. His aged wife suffered agonies from him.
My grandfather often told me how he had seen the General
pinch and swear at her till the poor creature left
the room in tears; and how once at Mount Vernon he
saw Washington, when quite an old man, suddenly rush
at an unoffending visitor, and chase him off the place,
beating him all the time over the head with a great
stick with knots in it, and all just because he heard
the poor man stammer; he never could abide s-s-stammering.”
Carrington and Gore burst into shouts
of laughter over this description of the Father of
his country, but Victoria continued in her gentle
drawl to enlighten Lord Dunbeg in regard to other
subjects with information equally mendacious, until
he decided that she was quite the most eccentric person
he had ever met. The boat arrived at Mount Vernon
while she was still engaged in a description of the
society and manners of America, and especially of
the rules which made an offer of marriage necessary.
According to her, Lord Dunbeg was in imminent peril;
gentlemen, and especially foreigners, were expected,
in all the States south of the Potomac, to offer themselves
to at least one young lady in every city: “and
I had only yesterday,” said Victoria, “a
letter from a lovely girl in North Carolina, a dear
friend of mine, who wrote me that she was right put
out because her brothers had called on a young English
visitor with shot guns, and she was afraid he wouldn’t
recover, and, after all, she says she should have refused
him.”
Meanwhile Madeleine, on the other
side of the boat, undisturbed by the laughter that
surrounded Miss Dare, chatted soberly and seriously
with Lord Skye and Senator Ratcliffe. Lord Skye,
too, a little intoxicated by the brilliancy of the
morning, broke out into admiration of the noble river,
and accused Americans of not appreciating the beauties
of their own country.
“Your national mind,”
said he, “has no eyelids. It requires a
broad glare and a beaten road. It prefers shadows
which you can cut out with a knife. It doesn’t
know the beauty of this Virginia winter softness.”
Mrs. Lee resented the charge.
America, she maintained, had not worn her feelings
threadbare like Europe. She had still her story
to tell; she was waiting for her Burns and Scott,
her Wordsworth and Byron, her Hogarth and Turner.
“You want peaches in spring,” said she.
“Give us our thousand years of summer, and then
complain, if you please, that our peach is not as
mellow as yours. Even our voices may be soft
then,” she added, with a significant look at
Lord Skye.
“We are at a disadvantage in
arguing with Mrs. Lee,” said he to Ratcliffe;
“when she ends as counsel, she begins as witness.
The famous Duchess of Devonshire’s lips were
not half as convincing as Mrs. Lee’s voice.”
Ratcliffe listened carefully, assenting
whenever he saw that Mrs. Lee wished it. He wished
he understood precisely what tones and half-tones,
colours and harmonies, were.
They arrived and strolled up the sunny
path. At the tomb they halted, as all good Americans
do, and Mr. Gore, in a tone of subdued sorrow, delivered
a short address—
“It might be much worse if they
improved it,” he said, surveying its proportions
with the æsthetic eye of a cultured Bostonian.
“As it stands, this tomb is a simple misfortune
which might befall any of us; we should not grieve
over it too much. What would our feelings be
if a Congressional committee reconstructed it of white
marble with Gothic pepper-pots, and gilded it inside
on machine-moulded stucco!”
Madeleine, however, insisted that
the tomb, as it stood, was the only restless spot
about the quiet landscape, and that it contradicted
all her ideas about repose in the grave. Ratcliffe
wondered what she meant.
They passed on, wandering across the
lawn, and through the house. Their eyes, weary
of the harsh colours and forms of the city, took pleasure
in the worn wainscots and the stained walls. Some
of the rooms were still occupied; fires were burning
in the wide fire-places. All were tolerably furnished,
and there was no uncomfortable sense of repair or
newness. They mounted the stairs, and Mrs. Lee
fairly laughed when she was shown the room in which
General Washington slept, and where he died.
Carrington smiled too. “Our
old Virginia houses were mostly like this,”
said he; “suites of great halls below, and these
gaunt barracks above. The Virginia house was
a sort of hotel. When there was a race or a wedding,
or a dance, and the house was full, they thought nothing
of packing half a dozen people in one room, and if
the room was large, they stretched a sheet a cross
to separate the men from the women. As for toilet,
those were not the mornings of cold baths. With
our ancestors a little washing went a long way.”
“Do you still live so in Virginia?” asked
Madeleine.
“Oh no, it is quite gone.
We live now like other country people, and try to
pay our debts, which that generation never did.
They lived from hand to mouth. They kept a stable-full
of horses. The young men were always riding about
the country, betting on horse-races, gambling, drinking,
fighting, and making love. No one knew exactly
what he was worth until the crash came about fifty
years ago, and the whole thing ran out.”
“Just what happened in Ireland!”
said Lord Dunbeg, much interested and full of his
article in the Quarterly; “the resemblance is
perfect, even down to the houses.”
Mrs. Lee asked Carrington bluntly
whether he regretted the destruction of this old social
arrangement.
“One can’t help regretting,”
said he, “whatever it was that produced George
Washington, and a crowd of other men like him.
But I think we might produce the men still if we had
the same field for them.”
“And would you bring the old
society back again if you could?” asked she.
“What for? It could not
hold itself up. General Washington himself could
not save it. Before he died he had lost his hold
on Virginia, and his power was gone.”
The party for a while separated, and
Mrs. Lee found herself alone in the great drawing-room.
Presently the blonde Mrs. Baker entered, with her
child, who ran about making more noise than Mrs. Washington
would have permitted.
Madeleine, who had the usual feminine
love of children, called the girl to her and pointed
out the shepherds and shepherdesses carved on the
white Italian marble of the fireplace; she invented
a little story about them to amuse the child, while
the mother stood by and at the end thanked the story-teller
with more enthusiasm than seemed called for.
Mrs. Lee did not fancy her effusive manner, or her
complexion, and was glad when Dunbeg appeared at the
doorway.
“How do you like General Washington
at home?” asked she.
“Really, I assure you I feel
quite at home myself,” replied Dunbeg, with
a more beaming smile than ever. “I am sure
General Washington was an Irishman.
I know it from the look of the place.
I mean to look it up and write an article about it.”
“Then if you have disposed of
him,” said Madeleine, “I think we will
have luncheon, and I have taken the liberty to order
it to be served outside.”
There a table had been improvised,
and Miss Dare was inspecting the lunch, and making
comments upon Lord Skye’s cuisine and cellar.
“I hope it is very dry champagne,”
said she, “the taste for sweet champagne is
quite awfully shocking.”
The young woman knew no more about
dry and sweet champagne than of the wine of Ulysses,
except that she drank both with equal satisfaction,
but she was mimicking a Secretary of the British Legation
who had provided her with supper at her last evening
party. Lord Skye begged her to try it, which she
did, and with great gravity remarked that it was about
five per cent. she presumed. This, too, was caught
from her Secretary, though she knew no more what it
meant than if she had been a parrot.
The luncheon was very lively and very
good. When it was over, the gentlemen were allowed
to smoke, and conversation fell into a sober strain,
which at last threatened to become serious.
“You want half-tones!”
said Madeleine to Lord Skye: “are there
not half-tones enough to suit you on the walls of
this house?”
Lord Skye suggested that this was
probably owing to the fact that Washington, belonging,
as he did, to the universe, was in his taste an exception
to local rules.
“Is not the sense of rest here
captivating?” she continued. “Look
at that quaint garden, and this ragged lawn, and the
great river in front, and the superannuated fort beyond
the river! Everything is peaceful, even down
to the poor old General’s little bed-room.
One would like to lie down in it and sleep a century
or two. And yet that dreadful Capitol and its
office-seekers are only ten miles off.”
“No! that is more than I can
bear!” broke in Miss Victoria in a stage whisper,
“that dreadful Capitol! Why, not one of
us would be here without that dreadful Capitol! except,
perhaps, myself.”
“You would appear very well
as Mrs. Washington, Victoria.”
“Miss Dare has been so very
obliging as to give us her views of General Washington’s
character this morning,” said Dunbeg, “but
I have not yet had time to ask Mr. Carrington for
his.”
“Whatever Miss Dare says is
valuable,” replied Carrington, “but her
strong point is facts.”
“Never flatter! Mr. Carrington,”
drawled Miss Dare; “I do not need it, and it
does not become your style. Tell me, Lord Dunbeg,
is not Mr. Carrington a little your idea of General
Washington restored to us in his prime?”
“After your account of General
Washington, Miss Dare, how can I agree with you?”
“After all,” said Lord
Skye, “I think we must agree that Miss Dare
is in the main right about the charms of Mount Vernon.
Even Mrs. Lee, on the way up, agreed that the General,
who is the only permanent resident here, has the air
of being confoundedly bored in his tomb. I don’t
myself love your dreadful Capitol yonder, but I prefer
it to a bucolic life here. And I account in this
way for my want of enthusiasm for your great General.
He liked no kind of life but this. He seems to
have been greater in the character of a home-sick
Virginia planter than as General or President.
I forgive him his inordinate dulness, for he was not
a diplomatist and it was not his business to lie,
but he might once in a way have forgotten Mount Vernon.”
Dunbeg here burst in with an excited
protest; all his words seemed to shove each other
aside in their haste to escape first. “All
our greatest Englishmen have been home-sick country
squires. I am a home-sick country squire myself.”
“How interesting!” said Miss Dare under
her breath.
Mr. Gore here joined in: “It
is all very well for you gentlemen to measure General
Washington according to your own private twelve-inch
carpenter’s rule. But what will you say
to us New Englanders who never were country gentlemen
at all, and never had any liking for Virginia?
What did Washington ever do for us? He never
even pretended to like us. He never was more than
barely civil to us. I’m not finding fault
with him; everybody knows that he never cared for
anything but Mount Vernon. For all that, we idolize
him. To us he is Morality, Justice, Duty, Truth;
half a dozen Roman gods with capital letters.
He is austere, solitary, grand; he ought to be deified.
I hardly feel easy, eating, drinking, smoking here
on his portico without his permission, taking liberties
with his house, criticising his bedrooms in his absence.
Suppose I heard his horse now trotting up on the other
side, and he suddenly appeared at this door and looked
at us. I should abandon you to his indignation.
I should run away and hide myself on the steamer.
The mere thought unmans me.”
Ratcliffe seemed amused at Gore’s
half-serious notions. “You recall to me,”
said he, “my own feelings when
I was a boy and was made by my father to learn the
Farewell Address by heart. In those days General
Washington was a sort of American Jehovah. But
the West is a poor school for Reverence. Since
coming to Congress I have learned more about General
Washington, and have been surprised to find what a
narrow base his reputation rests on. A fair military
officer, who made many blunders, and who never had
more men than would make a full army-corps under his
command, he got an enormous reputation in Europe because
he did not make himself king, as though he ever had
a chance of doing it. A respectable, painstaking
President, he was treated by the Opposition with an
amount of deference that would have made government
easy to a baby, but it worried him to death. His
official papers are fairly done, and contain good
average sense such as a hundred thousand men in the
United States would now write. I suspect that
half of his attachment to this spot rose from his
consciousness of inferior powers and his dread of responsibility.
This government can show to-day a dozen men of equal
abilities, but we don’t deify them. What
I most wonder at in him is not his military or political
genius at all, for I doubt whether he had much, but
a curious Yankee shrewdness in money matters.
He thought himself a very rich man, yet he never spent
a dollar foolishly. He was almost the only Virginian
I ever heard of, in public life, who did not die insolvent.”
During this long speech, Carrington
glanced across at Madeleine, and caught her eye.
Ratcliffe’s criticism was not to her taste.
Carrington could see that she thought it unworthy of
him, and he knew that it would irritate her.
“I will lay a little trap for
Mr. Ratcliffe,” thought he to himself; “we
will see whether he gets out of it.” So
Carrington began, and all listened closely, for, as
a Virginian, he was supposed to know much about the
subject, and his family had been deep in the confidence
of Washington himself.
“The neighbours hereabout had
for many years, and may have still, some curious stories
about General Washington’s closeness in money
matters. They said he never bought anything by
weight but he had it weighed over again, nor by tale
but he had it counted, and if the weight or number
were not exact, he sent it back. Once, during
his absence, his steward had a room plastered, and
paid the plasterer’s bill. On the General’s
return, he measured the room, and found that the plasterer
had charged fifteen shillings too much. Meanwhile
the man had died, and the General made a claim of
fifteen shillings on his estate, which was paid.
Again, one of his tenants brought him the rent.
The exact change of fourpence was required.
The man tendered a dollar, and asked
the General to credit him with the balance against
the next year’s rent. The General refused
and made him ride nine miles to Alexandria and back
for the fourpence. On the other hand, he sent
to a shoemaker in Alexandria to come and measure him
for shoes. The man returned word that he did
not go to any one’s house to take measures, and
the General mounted his horse and rode the nine miles
to him. One of his rules was to pay at taverns
the same sum for his servants’ meals as for
his own. An inn-keeper brought him a bill of
three-and-ninepence for his own breakfast, and three
shillings for his servant. He insisted upon adding
the extra ninepence, as he did not doubt that the
servant had eaten as much as he. What do you
say to these anecdotes? Was this meanness or not?”
Ratcliffe was amused. “The
stories are new to me,” he said. “It
is just as I thought. These are signs of a man
who thinks much of trifles; one who fusses over small
matters. We don’t do things in that way
now that we no longer have to get crops from granite,
as they used to do in New Hampshire when I was a boy.”
Carrington replied that it was unlucky
for Virginians that they had not done things in that
way then: if they had, they would not have gone
to the dogs.
Gore shook his head seriously; “Did
I not tell you so?” said he. “Was
not this man an abstract virtue? I give you my
word I stand in awe before him, and I feel ashamed
to pry into these details of his life. What is
it to us how he thought proper to apply his principles
to nightcaps and feather dusters? We are not his
body servants, and we care nothing about his infirmities.
It is enough for us to know that he carried his rules
of virtue down to a pin’s point, and that we
ought, one and all, to be on our knees before his tomb.”
Dunbeg, pondering deeply, at length
asked Carrington whether all this did not make rather
a clumsy politician of the father of his country.
“Mr. Ratcliffe knows more about
politics than I. Ask him,” said Carrington.
“Washington was no politician
at all, as we understand the word,” replied
Ratcliffe abruptly. “He stood outside of
politics. The thing couldn’t be done to-day.
The people don’t like that sort of royal airs.”
“I don’t understand!”
said Mrs. Lee. “Why could you not do it
now?”
“Because I should make a fool
of myself;” replied Ratcliffe, pleased to think
that Mrs. Lee should put him on a level with Washington.
She had only meant to ask why the thing could not be
done, and this little touch of Ratcliffe’s vanity
was inimitable.
“Mr. Ratcliffe means that Washington
was too respectable for our time,”
interposed Carrington.
This was deliberately meant to irritate
Ratcliffe, and it did so all the more because Mrs.
Lee turned to Carrington, and said, with some bitterness:
“Was he then the only honest public man we ever
had?”
“Oh no!” replied Carrington
cheerfully; “there have been one or two others.”
“If the rest of our Presidents
had been like him,” said Gore, “we should
have had fewer ugly blots on our short history.”
Ratcliffe was exasperated at Carrington’s
habit of drawing discussion to this point. He
felt the remark as a personal insult, and he knew
it to be intended. “Public men,” he
broke out, “cannot be dressing themselves to-day
in Washington’s old clothes. If Washington
were President now, he would have to learn our ways
or lose his next election. Only fools and theorists
imagine that our society can be handled with gloves
or long poles. One must make one’s self
a part of it. If virtue won’t answer our
purpose, we must use vice, or our opponents will put
us out of office, and this was as true in Washington’s
day as it is now, and always will be.”
“Come,” said Lord Skye,
who was beginning to fear an open quarrel; “the
conversation verges on treason, and I am accredited
to this government. Why not examine the grounds?”
A kind of natural sympathy led Lord
Dunbeg to wander by the side of Miss Dare through
the quaint old garden. His mind being much occupied
by the effort of stowing away the impressions he had
just received, he was more than usually absent in
his manner, and this want of attention irritated the
young lady. She made some comments on flowers;
she invented some new species with startling names;
she asked whether these were known in Ireland; but
Lord Dunbeg was for the moment so vague in his answers
that she saw her case was perilous.
“Here is an old sun-dial.
Do you have sun-dials in Ireland, Lord Dunbeg?”
“Yes; oh, certainly! What!
sun-dials? Oh, yes! I assure you there are
a great many sun-dials in Ireland, Miss Dare.”
“I am so glad. But I suppose
they are only for ornament. Here it is just the
other way. Look at this one! they all behave like
that. The wear and tear of our sun is too much
for them; they don’t last. My uncle, who
has a place at Long Branch, had five sun-dials in ten
years.”
“How very odd! But really
now, Miss Dare, I don’t see how a sun—dial
could wear out.”
“Don’t you? How strange!
Don’t you see, they get soaked with sunshine
so that they can’t hold shadow. It’s
like me, you know. I have such a good time all
the time that I can’t be unhappy. Do you
ever read the Burlington Hawkeye, Lord Dunbeg?”
“I don’t remember; I think
not. Is it an American serial?” gasped
Dunbeg, trying hard to keep pace with Miss Dare in
her reckless dashes across country.
“No, not serial at all!”
replied Virginia; “but I am afraid you would
find it very hard reading. I shouldn’t try.”
“Do you read it much, Miss Dare?”
“Oh, always! I am not really
as light as I seem. But then I have an advantage
over you because I know the language.”
By this time Dunbeg was awake again,
and Miss Dare, satisfied with her success, allowed
herself to become more reasonable, until a slight
shade of sentiment began to flicker about their path.
The scattered party, however, soon
had to unite again. The boat rang its bell for
return, they filed down the paths and settled themselves
in their old places. As they steamed away, Mrs.
Lee watched the sunny hill-side and the peaceful house
above, until she could see them no more, and the longer
she looked, the less she was pleased with herself.
Was it true, as Victoria Dare said, that she could
not live in so pure an air? Did she really need
the denser fumes of the city? Was she, unknown
to herself; gradually becoming tainted with the life
about her? or was Ratcliffe right in accepting the
good and the bad together, and in being of his time
since he was in it? Why was it, she said bitterly
to herself; that everything Washington touched, he
purified, even down to the associations of his house?
and why is it that everything we touch
seems soiled? Why do I feel unclean when I look
at Mount Vernon? In spite of Mr. Ratcliffe, is
it not better to be a child and to cry for the moon
and stars?
The little Baker girl came up to her
where she stood, and began playing with her parasol.
“Who is your little friend?” asked Ratcliffe.
Mrs. Lee rather vaguely replied that
she was the daughter of that pretty woman in black;
she believed her name was Baker.
“Baker, did you say?” repeated Ratcliffe.
“Baker—Mrs. Sam Baker;
at least so Mr. Carrington told me; he said she was
a client of his.”
In fact Ratcliffe soon saw Carrington
go up to her and remain by her side during the rest
of the trip. Ratcliffe watched them sharply and
grew more and more absorbed in his own thoughts as
the boat drew nearer and nearer the shore.
Carrington was in high spirits.
He thought he had played his cards with unusual success.
Even Miss Dare deigned to acknowledge his charms that
day.
She declared herself to be the moral
image of Martha Washington, and she started a discussion
whether Carrington or Lord Dunbeg would best suit
her in the rôle of the General.
“Mr. Carrington is exemplary,”
she said, “but oh, what joy to be Martha Washington
and a Countess too!”